Christie Ou
The Australian SWF sees an interesting opportunity in less developed markets, though its overall private debt allocation has fallen.
Two Korean investors have accounted for the entire mezzanine tranche in a leasing deal.
The Indian investment firm has returned to the market with a departure from its traditional pure private equity approach.
Two former employees of Shoreline, who started a new distressed investment house, have raised an RMB-denominated fund.
The Dubai alternative asset manager is planning to launch its first closed-ended credit fund in India.
The organisation sees the country as one of its top emerging market priorities.
This is the third time this year Crescent Capital has been selected by Korean investors to manage their debt commitments in US.
Favourable interest rates are offering those in the real estate market eased borrowing costs.
The alternative asset manager thinks both public and equities and parts of private credit are likely to deliver above-average returns over the next three to five years for global investors.
The two countries remain the NPL investment hotspots in Asia, but little foreign capital has entered the markets as local players predominate.