Investor Presentaiton

Made public by

sourced by PitchSend

25 of 33

Creator

PitchSend logo
PitchSend

Category

Pending

Published

Unknown

Slides

Transcriptions

#1FIBRA Macquarie O México MACQUARIE FIBRA Macquarie México Investor Presentation May 2022 1#2Important information FIBRA Macquarie México MACQUARIE This document has been prepared by Macquarie Asset Management México, S.A. de C.V. ("MAM Mexico"), as manager, acting in the name and on behalf of CIBanco, S.A., Institución de Banca Múltiple ("CIBanco"), as trustee, of FIBRA Macquarie México ("FIBRA Macquarie"). As used herein, the name "Macquarie" or "Macquarie Group" refers to Macquarie Group Limited and its worldwide subsidiaries, affiliates and the funds that they manage. Unless otherwise noted, references to "we" "us", "our" and similar expressions are to MAM Mexico, as manager, acting in the name and on behalf of CIBanco, as trustee, of FIBRA Macquarie. This document does not constitute an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to buy any securities in the United States, and securities may not be offered or sold in the United States absent registration or an exemption from registration under the U.S. Securities Act of 1933, as amended. This document is an outline of matters for discussion only and no representations or warranties are given or implied. This document does not contain all the information necessary to fully evaluate any transaction or investment, and you should not rely on the contents of this document. Any investment decision should be made based solely upon appropriate due diligence and, if applicable, upon receipt and careful review of any offering memorandum or prospectus. This document includes forward-looking statements that represent our opinions, expectations, beliefs, intentions, estimates or strategies regarding the future, which may not be realized. These statements may be identified by the use of words like "anticipate," "believe," "estimate," "expect," "intend," "may," "plan," "will," "should," "seek," and similar expressions. The forward-looking statements reflect our views and assumptions with respect to future events as of the date of this document and are subject to risks and uncertainties. Actual and future results and trends could differ materially from those described by such statements due to various factors, including those beyond our ability to control or predict. Given these uncertainties, you should not place undue reliance on the forward-looking statements. We do not undertake any obligation to update or revise any forward- looking statements, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise. No risk control mitigant is failsafe. Notwithstanding the mitigants described herein, losses may occur as a result of identified or unidentified risks. Past performance is no indication of future performance. Certain information in this document identified by footnotes has been obtained from sources that we consider to be reliable and is based on present circumstances, market conditions and beliefs. We have not independently verified this information and cannot assure you that it is accurate or complete. The information in this document is presented as of its date. It does not reflect any facts, events or circumstances that may have arisen after that date. We do not undertake any obligation to update this document or correct any inaccuracies or omissions in it. Any financial projections have been prepared and set out for illustrative purposes only and do not in any manner constitute a forecast. They may be affected by future changes in economic and other circumstances and you should not place undo reliance on any such projections. Recipients of this document should neither treat nor rely on the contents of this document as advice relating to legal, taxation or investment matters and are advised to consult their own professional advisers. No member of the Macquarie Group accepts any liability whatsoever for a direct, indirect, consequential or other loss arising from any use of this document and/or further communication in relation to this document. Any discussion in this document of past or proposed investment opportunities should not be relied upon as any indication of future deal flow. Qualitative statements regarding political, regulatory, market and economic environments and opportunities are based on our opinion, belief and judgment. Such statements do not reflect or constitute legal advice or conclusions. Investment highlights reflect our subjective judgment of the primary features that may make investment in the relevant sector attractive. They do not represent an exclusive list of features, and are inherently based on our opinion and belief based on our own analysis of selected market and economic data and our experience in Mexico. The growth opportunities described herein are not necessarily reflective of all potential investments, which may have significantly different prospects and other terms and conditions. No assurance can be given that any such growth opportunities will be pursued by FIBRA Macquarie. This document is not for release in any member state of the European Economic Area. Unless otherwise stated all information presented here in is as of March 31, 2022. Other than Macquarie Bank Limited ABN 46 008 583 542 ("Macquarie Bank"), any Macquarie Group entity noted in this document is not an authorized deposit-taking institution for the purposes of the Banking Act 1959 (Commonwealth of Australia). The obligations of these other Macquarie Group entities do not represent deposits or other liabilities of Macquarie Bank. Macquarie Bank does not guarantee or otherwise provide assurance in respect of the obligations of these other Macquarie Group entities. In addition, if this document relates to an investment, (a) the investor is subject to investment risk including possible delays in repayment and loss of income and principal invested and (b) none of Macquarie Bank or any other Macquarie Group entity guarantees any particular rate of return on or the performance of the investment, nor do they guarantee repayment of capital in respect of the investment. 2#3Overview FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE FIBRA Macquarie México is a premier owner of institutional quality industrial and retail real estate with a best-in-class internal property management platform and attractive growth pipeline. B 236 Industrial properties 34.5M sqft¹ 79%2 Gross leasable area of rents are US$-linked 171 Retail properties 1. Includes 100% of the property information with respect to each of the nine retail properties held through a 50/50 joint venture. 2. Results for the nine retail properties held through a 50/50 joint venture are shown at 50%. US$2.5bn Total asset value 1.3x AFFO distribution coverage (LTM) M#4FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE 01 Favorable market dynamics Compelling Mexico market tailwinds 4#5An unwavering focus on creating value FIBRA Macquarie México MACQUARIE Favorable market dynamics Compelling Mexico market tailwinds Growth pipeline Attractive development strategy 70 Prudent capital management Track record of disciplined capital allocation & well-positioned balance sheet Reliable financial performance Consistently strong cash flows CIUDAD JUÁREZ آ Quality portfolio Strategically located properties managed by internal property administration Sustainability focus Sustainability is at the core of our business strategies MONTERREY REYNOSA or LO 5#6Dynamic market fundamentals supporting growth FIBRA Macquarie México MACQUARIE Growth of ecommerce logistics, nearshoring & Mexico's favorable position in the global supply chain provide strong tailwinds to the industrial real estate sector. Do Increased competitiveness Location Competitiveness and reliability of Mexican exports as a result of regional trade alliances such as USMCA and increasing tensions in global trade that result in increased tariffs and sanctions to other countries Proximity to customers & markets means favorable shipping times, costs, convenience Labor Access to a skilled, competitive and young labor market Resilience Increase in warehousing requirements to support additional inventory and increasing supply chain resiliency whilst minimizing the impact of supply chain disruptions and trade conflicts Supply Constrained supply driven by a high market occupancy, high net absorption and limited land availability paired with disciplined supply under construction Ecommerce Increasing demand from logistics users driven by the accelerated growth in ecommerce sales 16#7Mexico plays an important and growing role in the global supply chain. FIBRA Macquarie México MACQUARIE FIBRAMQ has recently closed nearshoring-related transactions across diverse manufacturing tenants including clean drinking water systems, semi-finished metals and auto parts. Avg. manufacturing wages (US$/hr) 1 Mexico China Impact of tariffs on US imports (%)² Without tariffs With tariffs 4.5 2.0 6.5 4.8 2.3% 1.6% 1.3% • China labor costs have outpaced Mexico's in the past 10 years 0.3% 0.5% 0.6% I 0.4% 0.1% 0.2% 0.3% 0.5% -0.3% -0.9% 1-0.9% -1.7% • Mexico has been benefited from U.S. tariffs imposed on Chinese imports -4.1% 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 China Avg. transit time - Mexico to US (days)³ | India Japan South Mexico Taiwan Vietnam Rest of Korea I World Free trade agreements (# of countries)4 2.4 2.4 1.5 1.1 1.1 0.3 3.1 3.1 2.4 2.4 2.2 1.5 Chicago Houston Los Angeles New York Mexico City ■Monterrey ■Guadalajara 7 20 21 21 46 46 42 Brazil United States China Colombia Mexico • Mexico's proximity to the U.S. allows companies to shorten their supply chains while having increased oversight of their production • Nearshoring driven by lower carbon emissions, higher dependability, shorter lead times and lower shipping costs 1. PwC analysis of data from International Labor Comparison and IHS Markit. 2. Peterson Institute for International Economics - Changes in market share reflect change in each partner's average US import market share during the period July 2016-December 2017 and the period July 2018-December 2019. 3. AlixPartners with information from Freightos (May 2021). 4. Secretaria de Economia. 7#8Fundamentals supporting Mexico's real estate sector FIBRA Macquarie México Ecommerce sales growth (2010 - 2025, US$bn)¹ MACQUARIE Auto parts sector recovery to continue in 2022 (US$bn)2 Domestic Market Ecommerce sales growth (2019 - 2020): MXN: 61% | USD: 44% CAGR 42% 81 57 40 40 30% 17% 6% 6% 1% 2% 2% 87 78 82 88 88 Exports % Change YoY 26 76 21% 7% 1% 86 6% -20% 90 97 98 99 90 91 95 99 78 60 51 28 52 52 58 65 59 68 88 71 73 79 81 20 15 55 65 79 79 100 1 1 2 3 4 4 4 6 8 10 38 46 26 24 22 13 14 19 19 18 18 17 13 16 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022F 2023F 2024F 2025F 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 2022F 880088 High growth industries continuing to increase their presence in Mexico Ecommerce logistics Increasing penetration of ecommerce drive demand for logistics real estate. Electronics manufacturing Competitive tensions between US and China is structurally changing electronics supply chain. 1. Source: AMVO (2022) and Euromonitor "E-commerce in Mexico" April 2021. 2. Source: INEGI and Industria Nacional de Autopartes, FY 2021. Medical device manufacturing Accelerating due to reduced reliance on China, nearshoring and aging population. Automotive USMCA driving increase in regional content. 8#9FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE 02 FY21 Highlights 9#101Q22 highlights FIBRA Macquarie México Financial / balance sheet AFFO 1Q22 Ps. 0.6558/CBFI¹ (+6.0% QoQ / +17.1% YoY) FY22 guidance Ps. 2.50-2.55/CBFI¹ Operational Rental Rates Industrial 5.26 US$/sqm/m (+1.5% QoQ / +3.7% YoY) 19 Retail 160.13 Ps./sqm/m (0.6% QoQ / +4.1% YoY) Strategic initiatives Developments ~900k sqft of GLA under construction in industrial portfolio Distribution 1Q22 Ps. 0.50/CBFI (+5.3% QoQ / +5.3% YoY) FY22 guidance Ps. 2.00/CBFI (Up 5.3% YoY) Occupancy Industrial 97.1% (+108 bps QoQ / +279 bps YoY) Retail 89.8% (-32 bps QoQ / -131 bps YoY) Consolidated 96.1% (+89 bps QoQ / +225 bps YoY) Balance Sheet NAV of Ps. 40.5/CBFI (-1.1% QoQ / +18.4% YoY) Regulatory LTV of 32.2%2 Net debt/ EBITDA 5.0x3 Margins4 NOI 88.2% (+31 bps QoQ / +65 bps YoY) . AFFO 47.4% (+225 bps QoQ / +448 bps YoY) • ESG • GRESB 3 Green Stars5 Added to S&P/BMV Total Mexico ESG Index Recognized as Green Lease Leader MACQUARIE Customer satisfaction6 • 4.15 rating in overall satisfaction (vs. 3.76 MX index & 4.07 US index) 82% renewal likelihood (vs. 80% MX index & 63% US index) 1. Calculated using weighted average outstanding CBFIs for the respective period. 2. Regulatory LTV calculated as (total debt + interest payable) / total assets, Net real estate LTV calculated as proportionally combined (debt + tenant security deposits - cash - deferred sales proceeds) / (fair market valued property values + land reserves + work in progress). 3. Net debt/EBITDA ratio is in USD using 1Q22 average FX Rate: 20.3322 for 1Q22 LTM EBITDA and EOP FX Rate: 19.9942 for debt balances. 4. Margins are calculated as a % of total revenues. 5. GRESB: Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark. Internationally-recognized benchmarks to track environmental, social and governance (ESG) performance of commercial real estate and infrastructure (Macquarie hold a 3/5 star rating as of 1Q22); 6. Results from Kingsley's 2021 Tenant Experience Assessment. 10#11FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE 03 Quality portfolio Prime markets managed by internal property administration platform 11#12High quality industrial-focused portfolio in prime markets FIBRA Macquarie México MACQUARIE Key market presence • Industrial assets in strategic manufacturing and logistics markets. • Industrial assets in US Border and Northern states comprise ~80% of industrial ABR. • Retail assets in high density urban areas. • 92.4% of industrial rents denominated in US$. • 88.5% of LTM NOI contribution from industrial portfolio. Tijuana 25/6.5% Mexicali 13/3.2% Nogales 2/2.9% Hermosillo 11/5.5% Los Mochis 1/0.7% Irapuato 1/0.5% Guadalajara Industrial 8/2.8% Retail¹ 1/0.4% Querétaro 11/5.6% Combined MCMA¹ 10/9.2% 7/1.2% Note: data as of 1Q22 1. MCMA; Mexico City Metropolitan Area. Cd. Juárez 35/13.4% Chihuahua 12/3.6% Reynosa Nuevo Laredo 9/3.3% 19/8.0% Matamoros Monterrey 4/2.2% 38/16.5% 1/1.1% Saltillo 11/3.8% San Luis Potosí Cancún 7/2.3% 2/1.0% Puebla 23/5.5% Tuxtepec 2/1.0% 12#13FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE Select industrial properties CD. JUAREZ REYNOSA MONTERREY 17 16 0000000000#14Ideally positioned to support Mexico's manufacturing and logistics industries FIBRA Macquarie México MACQUARIE Industrial highlights • Strongest presence in Northern states of Mexico, a high industrial demand region, benefiting from compelling tailwinds. • 92.4% of rents in US$ with annual contractual increases. • Customer focused internal property administration platform with local team of real estate professionals. • Opportunity to further diversify in industries such as logistics and medical device manufacturing. 80% ABR¹ from the Northern and Border states 25% ABR¹ contribution of Top 10 customers ABR% by region ABR% by customers Bajio 12% Central 9% , North 80% Logistics 26% Other 1% 3.3 Weighted average lease term remaining in years ABR% by segment Other 9% Medical 5% Automotive 36% Packaging 6% Logistics 8% Electronics 13% Manufacturing 73% Consumer Goods 23% Note: data as of 1Q22 1. ABR: Annualized Base Rent. 14#15FIBRAMQ's vertically-integrated property administration platform positioned to drive organic growth FIBRA Macquarie México MACQUARIE Scalable • Scalable platform with capacity to integrate additional properties Leasing, Engineering and • Property Management Customer focused • Direct relationship with 280+ customers • Delivering high-quality customer service Market expertise • Local professionals • Deep real estate knowledge and relationships Growth • Capability to provide expansion and development solutions to fulfill customer needs Industry Leading Customer Satisfaction¹ 4.15 3.76 4.07 FIBRAMQ MX Index US Index 2021 Survey According to Kinglsey Tenant Experience Assessment. Kingsley is considered the a leader in customer satisfaction assessments. 15#16FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE Select retail properties TECAMAC POWER CENTER, MCMA CITY SHOPS DEL VALLE, MCMA Superama Chieno: maiti TECAMAC Walmart SSuburbia BBVA Bancomer Banamex Marti OUTLET ZIPOTTON AT&T COACALCO POWER CENTER, MCMA IHOP BEDB DEATH & Funcentral dico OfficeMax LCLORS Sotobank CFE QUARRY CITY SHOPS VALLE DORADO, MCMA Superama sportlum Cinemex Banco BASE#17Defensive, high quality retail portfolio Retail highlights 38 • Defensive portfolio primarily in Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA), Mexico's top retail market. • Majority of leases are inflation protected and provide for recovery of repairs & maintenance and insurance. • 100% of leases denominated in Mexican Pesos. • Utilization of green building certifications. 84% located in top three retail markets of Mexico¹ 45% ABR² contribution of Top 10 customers FIBRA Macquarie México 3.2 MACQUARIE Weighted average lease term remaining in years ABR% by geography³ ABR% by space type³ ABR% by tenant type³ Tuxtepec 7% Monterrey 10% Cancun 6% Irapuato Guadalajara 3% 3% Sub-anchors 13% Office 7% Other 5% Other 25% Anchor 40% Services 9% Supermarket 24% Derpatment stores & apparel 11% Note: data as of 1Q22 1. Refers to Mexico City Metropolitan Area (MCMA), Monterrey and Guadalajara. 2. ABR: Annualized Base Rent. 3. Includes 100% of rents from properties held in 50/50 joint venture. MCMA 71% Small shops 35% Offices 7% Restaurants 10% Gyms Cinemas 7% 9% 17#18FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE 04 Prudent capital management Track record of disciplined growth and well-positioned balance sheet 18#19FIBRA Focus on disciplined growth Macquarie México Funding growth while controlling leverage through earnings retention (FY17-1Q22): 1 Stable cash generation from operating assets with further growth coming from new developments. ~Ps. 2.9bn in retained AFFO from FY17 through 1Q22. 2 Distribution is ~1.3x covered and aligned with earnings growth 3 Asset sales exceeded book value by aggregate 2.2%. 4 ― Over Ps. 2.2bn in proceeds from asset sales from FY17 through 1Q22. 1.7m sqft of GLA in completed developments at a NOI yield of 11.8%¹. 5 Progressing on three growth capex projects in CDMX and Monterrey. 6 Pragmatic use of certificate buyback program to create value - Ps. 1.0bn authorized through June 2023. Over Ps. 1,065m in certificate buybacks at an avg. price of Ps. 21.3, representing 6.2% of market cap. 1. The NOI yield is presented on the basis of the agreed upon terms for the expansion or development and does not reflect actual NOI yield received, which amounts may differ from the agreed upon terms.. MACQUARIE 19#20Well-positioned balance sheet¹ 97% 5.2% $ Average cost of debt of debt denominated in US$ 92% % Fixed rate debt 1111 5.1x Net debt/EBITDA ratio³ FIBRA Macquarie México US$228m Undrawn revolver MACQUARIE 35.1%² Real estate net LTV 4.5 years Average debt tenor remaining 3.8x Interest coverage ratio4 Balance sheet is comprised primarily of unsecured debt. 1. As of April 5, 2022 (post refinancing transaction). 2. Real estate net LTV calculated as proportionally combined (debt + tenant security deposits - cash - deferred sales proceeds) / (fair market valued property values + land reserves + work in progress). 3. Net debt/EBITDA ratio is in USDe using 1Q22 average FX Rate: 20.5242 for 1Q22 LTM EBITDA and EOP FX Rate: 19.8435 for debt balances. 4. 1Q22 LTM NOI/1Q22 LTM interest expense. 5. Calculated using percentage of investment properties value. 70.8% Assets unencumbered 5 20 20#21FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE 05 Growth pipeline Attractive development strategy 21#22Development platform FIBRA Macquarie México Prudently expanding portfolio through developments in core industrial markets. Expanding portfolio Completed/In progress developments • 5 target markets: MCMA, Monterrey, Guadalajara, Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez. 39 US$137.2m • Over next five years targeting to add ~5 million sqft. Total Developments / Expansions¹ Total Investment Tijuana Ciudad Juarez Guadalajara Monterrey MCMA 2.7m sqft Total GLA added² ~11% Development yield³ 8.5 years Average lease term4 Includes 100% of the property information with respect to properties held through joint ventures. Note: data as of 1Q22 1. 2. 3. 4. Considers proportionally combined figures from joint ventures. The NOI yield is presented on the basis of the agreed upon terms for the expansion or development and does not reflect actual NOI yield received, which amounts may differ from the agreed upon terms.. Metric considers the initial lease term of the completed projects. MACQUARIE 100% Occupancy of completed projects 22#23~1m sqft of construction GLA for delivery in FY22 Current projects Targeting stabilized NOI yield of 9% to 11% Buildings under development: 3 GLA: 917K sqft Locations: Mexico City (734k sqft of GLA) Total Investment: US$55.0m Monterrey (183k sqft of GLA) Land bank for future industrial development: Potential GLA of 858k sqft Expansion project in Hermosillo Monterrey E E Hermosillo Monterrey Reynosa Incremental GLA: 46K sqft US$2.0m of investment at ~11.8% Land bank by location ('000s sqft) GLA under Additional Total MCMA Land size construction potential GLA potential GLA MCMA1 1,580.7 734.2 734.2 Monterrey Reynosa Total 2,216.0 183.0 604.2 787.3 523.6 253.6 253.6 4,320.3 917.3 857.8 1,775.1 1. MCMA; Mexico City Metropolitan Area. 3 23#24Development: JUA044 Ciudad Juarez Development Project comprising 217k sqft of new GLA completed and fully leased prior to completion. Ciudad Juárez development Constructed a 217k sqft, Class A building in a premier location in Ciudad Juárez. • Successfully leased upon completion to a US-based electrical equipment manufacturer. • 10-year lease helping to extend WALT industrial portfolio. • Represents successful execution of FIBRAMQ´s development program. • Key goals of the program include: - Creating a pipeline of Class A buildings in core locations. - Disciplined capital deployment. LEED Gold building certification S.GREEN BUILDING COUN LEED GOLD USGBC 24 24#25Developments: Mexico City and Monterrey FIBRA Macquarie México 36 hectares of land to develop two Class A industrial parks of up to 1.5M sqft of GLA. Mexico City - Cuautitlan • 15ha site in Mexico City. • Developing two Class A industrial buildings. • 700k+ sqft of GLA: - Anticipate attracting logistics users, but designed to provide space solutions to a variety of industrial end-users. Focus on Sustainability - designed to LEED standard. Monterrey - Apodaca MACQUARIE • 21ha site in Monterrey's most prominent industrial submarket, Apodaca. • Developing five Class A industrial buildings. • Up to 800k sqft of GLA: - - Located in sought-after Apodaca submarket of Monterrey, which comprises ~40% of Class A industrial inventory in Monterrey and ~35% of the 12.9m sqft of GLA absorbed by the market in 2021. Focus on Sustainability - targeting highest LEED certification. MTY046 7,392 m2 79,567 SF MTY045 10,628 m2 114,399 SF PUNTADE MTY042 MTY043 17,005 m2 18.551 m2 183,040 FT 199,681 SF MTY044 19,655 m2 211,564 SF 25#26FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE 06 Reliable financial performance Consistently strong cash flows and well-positioned balance sheet 26#27Solid performance and prudent distribution payout ratio Net operating income (NOI)1 (Ps. m) FIBRA Macquarie México 4,000 3,087 3,222 3,307 3,403 3,693 3,542 3,602 3,000 2,521 1,990 2,000 1,534 1,000 0 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 1Q22 LTM NOI Margin (%) 89.6% 85.0% 85.7% 86.6% 87.0% 87.5% 87.8% 87.0% 87.7% 87.9% Adjusted funds from Operations (AFFO)¹ and Distribution (Ps. m) 4,000 MACQUARIE AFFO Distribution 2,000 1,054 1,149 1,395 1,320 1,688 1,428 1,828 1,907 1,980 1,976 1,814 1,887 1,207 1,248 1,365 1,447 1,447 1,465 AFFO Payout Ratio 0 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 1Q22 LTM 112.4% 99.1% 84.6% 66.0% 65.4% 68.9% 68.8% 79.7% 77.7% 1. Margins are calculated as a % of total revenues. 27#28FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE 07 Sustainability focus Industry-leading focus on ESG driving value for all stakeholders 28#29Sustainability is at the core of our business strategies ে ------- SUSTAINABILITY AND CORPORATE COMMITMENTS • Green Building Certification program • Certified 18.8% of total portfolio GLA with BOMA Best, LEED for Core and Shell, and EDGE certifications Recognized by the International Finance Corporation as an EDGE Champion in February 2022 Green leasing program Recognized in May 2021 as a Green Lease Leader by the Institute for Market Transformation and US Dept of Energy's Better Buildings Alliance, the first Mexican real estate participant in the Green Lease Leader program Stakeholder engagement Strong Industrial portfolio tenant satisfaction, with 2021 survey results showing FIBRAMQ outperforming the Kingsley US and Mexico indices FIBRA Macquarie México O MACQUARIE At FIBRA Macquarie, we are aligning our ESG commitments, investment strategies, and business operations to globally recognize and adopt sustainability objectives. With sustainability being at the core of our business strategies, we contribute directly to 10 goals adopted in the United Nation's 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development GREEN LEASE LEADER First to achieve the Green Lease Leader Award in Mexico Silver Award (2021) GRES B Edge by IFC Awarded EDGE Champion status by the IFC for green building performance BOMA BEST BRONZE Empress Sustentable A member of the 2021 S&P/BMV Total Mexico ESG Index GREEN BUILDING LEED USGBC Supply chain Implementation of ESG Principles for Suppliers helps FIBRAMQ uphold its core values while fostering long-term, transparent, and collaborative relationships Transparency in reporting Disclose performance in alignment to recognized reporting standards such as: Global Real Estate Sustainability Benchmark (GRESB), SAM Corporate Sustainability Assessment (CSA), Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB), and Global Reporting Initiative (GRI). 3-star rating in the Real Estate Assessment SUSTAINABLE BUILDINGS Six retail properties certified under the BOMA Best program GRI TCFD TASK FORCE ON CLIMATE-RELATED FINANCIAL DISCLOSURES Achieved the first LEED C&S v4 Gold certification for industrial buildings in SUSTAINABILITY LatAm OUNTING SASB STANDARDS BOARD Source: Company information. Reporting aligned to international standards Disclaimer: The awards/rankings referred to herein were given to Macquarie by sources referenced, based on methodologies and criteria not known to Macquarie. Notice of awards/rankings is solely for informational purposes and should not be construed or relied upon as any indication of future performance of Macquarie or any of its funds or investments. Unless otherwise noted, information herein is presented as of its date and does not reflect any facts that may have arisen after. Macquarie has no obligation to update this document or correct any inaccuracies or omissions in it. 29#30Commitment with our communities FIBRA Macquarie México IMPAC(+) program in collaboration with Inroads • FIBRA Macquarie has partnered with the Mexican not-for-profit, INROADS de Mexico, to develop IMPAC(+), a talent support program that enables social mobility opportunities for emerging youth. Supporting the vulnerable population of markets where FIBRA Macquarie's projects are located, the main goal of IMPAC(+) is to provide an opportunity for career development to university level students, through: Scholarships (English, MS Excel, soft skills) • Mentoring program, including volunteer hours by FIBRAMQ's management Networking and collaborative events IMPAC(+) MPA A member of FIBRA Macquarie Group FIBRA Macquarle O MACQUARIE INROADS MEXICO MACQUARIE 30#31Aligned with investors FIBRA Macquarie Corporate governance and fee construct are aligned with investors interest. México MACQUARIE Structure • Follows Macquarie Asset Management's ("MAM") highly disciplined and institutional approach to fund management. • Access to MAM's broader real estate investment and fund management expertise. Technical committee • 88% of Technical Committee ("TC") is independent¹. · Appointed via annual consent from certificate holders². Required to reinvest at least 40% of annual FIBRAMQ TC member compensation earned in FIBRA Macquarie's certificates. Fees • Performance fees must be reinvested in FIBRA Macquarie certificates. • Base management fee of 1% per annum of market capitalization paid every six months. • No other fees (e.g. acquisition, development, leasing, or property administration) paid to Manager. Compensation of Manager staff (CEO, CFO, etc.) paid by the Manager, not by the FIBRA. 1. Including Investor appointees whose independence status is subject to approval by Investors. 2. Excludes TC members appointed by CBFI holders. 31

Download to PowerPoint

Download presentation as an editable powerpoint.

Related

Q4 & FY22 - Investor Presentation image

Q4 & FY22 - Investor Presentation

Financial Services

FY23 Results - Investor Presentation image

FY23 Results - Investor Presentation

Financial Services

Ferocious - Plant Growth Optimizer image

Ferocious - Plant Growth Optimizer

Agriculture

Market Outlook and Operational Insights image

Market Outlook and Operational Insights

Metals and Mining

2023 Investor Presentation image

2023 Investor Presentation

Financial

Leveraging EdTech Across 3 Verticals image

Leveraging EdTech Across 3 Verticals

Technology

Axis 2.0 Digital Banking image

Axis 2.0 Digital Banking

Sustainability & Digital Solutions

Capital One’s acquisition of Discover image

Capital One’s acquisition of Discover

Mergers and Acquisitions