In a real estate market with significant development potential, Park Life took a step towards the stock market with an Initial Public Offering (IPO) under a FIBRA-type scheme. The goal is to scale a model that positions rental housing as an institutional and attractive asset for investors.
The strategy aims to consolidate a more efficient, standardized, and scalable rental housing model. The IPO thus marks a starting point for the company's growth and, at the same time, an opportunity for investors to participate in a segment with solid fundamentals and long-term development prospects.
In this context, rental housing is beginning to position itself as an increasingly relevant alternative within the real estate market, driven by demographic, urban, and financial trends that favor its expansion in Mexico.
Currently, Park Life's portfolio includes apartments in high-demand areas such as Polanco, Condesa, Santa Fe, and Querétaro, with a clear expansion strategy to reach one thousand units in the next three years.
In this way, investors can participate in the income generated by rents and in the appreciation of the real estate portfolio. The roadshow was completed in a short period, driven by strong demand from specialized investors, which allowed for rapid progress and favorable terms for the issuance.
Beyond this placement, Park Life is planning new issuances to continue expanding its portfolio and strengthening its market presence. Growth is based on acquiring developments in advanced stages, stabilizing them through rentals, and reinvesting capital to continue expanding the portfolio.
This combination, along with greater demand for leasing in urban areas, opens up a structural opportunity for scalable and professionalized models like Park Life's.
Market interest drives the placement
Through Real Estate Investment Trust Certificates (CBFIs), the offer involves raising up to 1.3 million certificates with a total valuation of nearly 1.5 billion pesos.
The context favors this strategy. In Mexico, the share of rental housing is still low compared to comparable economies, while the market's institutionalization is incipient.
Founded by Skyway Equities, the FIBRA bets on the acquisition and management of building portfolios under homogeneous operational, financial, and technological standards. This approach allows for generating constant cash flows, high occupancy levels, and centralized operation, differentiating it from the traditional scheme based on individual rentals.