TOKYO, March 16 (Reuters) - Patience Capital Group, the Singapore-based investor behind a $1.42 billion luxury ski project in northern Japan, is in talks to reopen its fund to new investors eager to get in before tightening by the Bank of Japan.
PCG's initial 35 billion yen ($237 million) fund, announced last year to transform Myoko Kogen in Japan's Niigata prefecture into a winter sports destination at par with Aspen and Whistler, may grow to 60 billion yen as new money from domestic and foreign investors piles in, said PCG founder Ken Chan.
Japan is riding twin booms in investment and inbound visitors, boosted by a weak yen that makes the country a bargain for foreigners. Chan set up PCG in 2019 to benefit from both, investing in accommodation and resort properties.
The BOJ is expected to move as early as next week, beginning a lengthy normalisation from about two decades of easy money policy. That shift, along with possible interest rate cuts by the Federal Reserve, is likely to drive the yen up from the near three-decade lows it trades at now, Chan said.
"It's clear from a macro perspective, this year is a very important year to put funds into yen assets, because the yen is too cheap right now," said Chan, who founded PCG after 19 years with Singapore's GIC sovereign wealth fund, where he acted as its Japan head.
"I think in the next few months, you will continue to see investors coming in to take an investment position in this market," he added.
Chan, who was born in Japan and spent his early childhood there, last year sketched out a plan to turn the Myoko Kogen area into a high-end winter paradise that can attract wealthy, globe-trotting snow fans.
And there's more near-term
His fund, which caters to institutional and high-net worth investors, has bought about 350 hectares of land which includes two existing ski slopes. Chan is also working with the Tokyu group, which owns the nearby Madarao Tangram resort, to manage the mountain there as one operation. He added that if any resorts in the vicinity were willing to sell, PCG would be happy to consider taking them over.
Although the full build-out will take about a decade, Chan aims to have the first two luxury hotels ready by 2028. That is a year later than originally planned due to a major earthquake on Noto peninsula on Jan. 1 that has pulled away construction resources.
PCG expects to raise money for the project in two additional funds around the 35 billion yen size, with the spending power of all funds doubled through borrowing leverage. Total spending is still benchmarked at the 210 billion yen level, but it could "absolutely go beyond (that figure) because there's so much land waiting to be developed," Chan said.