Australian National Storage Set For $3.4 Billion Take Over By Brookfield And GIC 

Australian National Storage Set For $3.4 Billion Take Over By Brookfield And GIC

Australian National Storage Set For $3.4 Billion Take Over By Brookfield And GIC

National Storage has quietly become a defensive yet growthy jewel in Australia’s real-assets universe. Founded in 1995, the company today operates more than 270 self-storage centres across Australia and New Zealand and is widely regarded as the market leader in a sector that has attracted institutional interest for its resilient cash flows and asset light expansion potential.

A consortium led by Brookfield Asset Management and Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC has secured a binding agreement to take Australia‘s largest self-storage operator, National Storage REIT, private in a transaction valued at roughly A$4.0 billion – a deal widely reported in US dollar terms as about $2.7-$3.4 billion, depending on the conversion used. 

The deal announced to the ASX on Monday will see National Storage securityholders receive A$2.86 in cash per stapled security – a c.26% premium to the group’s late-November trading price – a figure that catalysed a fresh high for the stock as investors digested the offer. 

National Storage has quietly become a defensive yet growthy jewel in Australia’s real-assets universe. Founded in 1995, the company today operates more than 270 self-storage centres across Australia and New Zealand and is widely regarded as the market leader in a sector that has attracted institutional interest for its resilient cash flows and asset light expansion potential. That strategic profile helps explain the apparent urgency from heavyweight buyers to secure scale in the category. 

Australia’s beloved storage operating company’s board unanimously recommended securityholders vote in favour of the transaction, subject to the absence of a superior proposal and an independent expert concluding that the scheme is in the best interests of holders. The company’s scheme booklet filed on the ASX sets out customary conditions including regulatory approvals and investor votes, and points to an expected completion in the second quarter of 2026 if all hurdles are cleared. 

For Brookfield and GIC, the acquisition is illustrative of a broader strategy: both have been active buyers in global real estate markets as they hunt for stable long-term cash yield and defensive inflation linkage. For Brookfield, it is yet another extension of its property platform in the region, while for GIC, the deal deepens its exposure to a sector where occupancy and demand dynamics have held up even as other property subsectors face cyclical pressure. Analysts have noted that one factor offsetting the modest control premium is the scale of the asset base and the operational upside the consortium believes it can unlock. 

While the headline price has captured attention, market commentators are also watching for two subsequent effects. First, the privatisation of a leading REIT may spur further consolidation in a fragmented self-storage market where scale drives both margin and site-sourcing efficiency. Second, a successful scheme could act as a shot in the arm for M&A activity in Australia-a market which has seen muted deal flow at various points in 2025 amid tighter financing conditions and valuation caution. 

The agreement is still subject to regulatory approvals and the independent expert’s report. Rival bidders were not reported as of this date but may appear over the scheme period; history tells that compelling asset classes encourage peer interest when a process is announced publicly. In addition, real-asset transactions at this scale require thoughtful integration planning: asset management, capital spending plans for site refurbishment, and possible expansion into ancillary service offerings will be put under a microscope as the consortium operationalizes the bid into a longer business plan. 

The independent expert’s report, any rival approaches, and the timing of shareholder meetings needed to approve the scheme are what investors and industry watchers should look for. If completed, the transaction would rank among larger take-private deals in Australia this year and provide a case study in how global capital is deploying into niche yet resilient real-estate plays. 

In short, Brookfield and GIC’s bid for National Storage represents a bet on the secular resilience of self-storage and an indicator of how deep pockets are willing to pay significant premiums for market leadership and scale-even in cautious M&A times. Whether that translates into ownership and, ultimately, value creation for the new private owners will be determined in the following months. 

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