
Canada Pension Plan Investment Board (CPPIB), one of the world’s top 10 global pension fund managers, is joining other foreign asset managers to seize opportunities in the private rental housing market in South Korea amid easing regulations and tight supply.
According to sources in the real estate development industry on Friday, CPPIB, or CPP Investments, and Korean property developer MGRV will set up a 95-5% joint venture to invest in Korean rental homes with an equity capital of 500 billion won ($344 million).
This is the first direct investment by the Canadian pension fund’s investment arm, managing assets worth 675.1 billion Canadian dollars ($466.2 billion) as of September 2024, in the Korean residential sector, CPPIB said in a statement released on Jan. 23.
Its advance follows suit of other global real estate asset managers, such as US-based Hines and UK-based M&G Real Estate, which have announced their plans to advance into the rental housing market in Seoul.
Last November, Morgan Stanley also formed a JV with local developer SK D&D Co., a real estate development unit of Korea’s SK Group, to invest in the country’s residential properties.
Global household names in the real estate investment sector have shown greater interest in the Korean rental home market since the Korean government eased regulations on institutionalized rental housing in August last year.

EASED REGULATIONS
Korea’s Ministry of Land, Infrastructure and Transport introduced measures to promote institutional investment in the Korean rental home market heavily relying on the country’s unique jeonse system, under which tenants pay a lump sum of a refundable deposit, up to 60-70% of the property value, to the private landlord in lieu of monthly rent payments.
The jeonse agreement, typically on a two-year contract, however, has been under scrutiny due to growing housing rental scams in recent years, leading the Korean government to promote other rental home options.
As part of them, the Korean government announced it will supply more than 1,000,000 multifamily homes for long-term leasing by 2035 to create the institutionalized rental housing market beyond the person-to-person jeonse market.
Under the new plan, real estate investment trust managers, developers and insurers are allowed to operate rental homes for 20-year and greater leases.
The government also vowed to relax a ban on rent from increasing despite a change in tenants.

Following the introduction of the new measures, real estate asset managers and capital at home and abroad have rushed to tap the Korean rental housing market to unlock opportunities.
TO DEVELOP PROPERTIES IN SEOUL
CPPIB is one of them, and its JV with MGRV will develop properties in central Seoul.
The Canadian pension fund manager has committed up to 133 billion won to the JV’s seed projects in Seoul.
“This joint venture offers an excellent opportunity to enter the residential sector in Korea and meet the strong demand for high-quality rental housing in the greater Seoul area where half of Korea’s population resides,” said Sophie van Oosterom, managing director and head of Real Estate at CPPIB.
“We are pleased to work alongside an experienced local partner like MGRV to enter this market segment, which we believe can generate attractive long-term returns for the CPP Fund.”
More foreign capitals are expected to enter the Korean rental housing market as there is room for a rise in Seoul’s monthly housing rent prices, which are relatively lower than those in other big cities like Tokyo, Hong Kong and New York, according to industry observers.
By Oh-Sang Yoo
osyoo@hankyung.com
Sookyung Seo edited this article.