Westfield Corporation

This article is about Westfield's current operations in Europe and the US. For operations until June 2014, see Westfield Group.
For Westfield's current operations in Australia and New Zealand, see Scentre Group.
Westfield Corporation
Public
Traded as ASX: WFD
OTC Pink: WFGPY
Industry Real estate development
Shopping centre management
Predecessor Westfield Group
Founded 1960 (1960)
(Westfield Development Corporation lists on the Sydney Stock Exchange)
Founder Frank Lowy
John Saunders
Headquarters Level 29, 85 Castlereagh Street, Sydney, Australia
Area served
United States
United Kingdom
Key people
Steven Lowy (Co-CEO)[1]
Peter Lowy (Co-CEO)[1]
Frank Lowy (Chairman)
Brian Schwartz
(Deputy Chairman)
Michael Gutman
(President & COO)[1]
Elliott Rusanow (CFO)[1]
Revenue A$635.5 million (2014)
Total assets A$29 billion (2016)[2]
Number of employees
1,700 worldwide (2016)[2]
Subsidiaries Westfield Management Limited
Westfield America Management Limited, and others
Website www.westfieldcorp.com

Westfield Corporation is a shopping centre company with retail destinations in England and the United States. It was created in June 2014 when Westfield Group separated its Australian and New Zealand businesses from its international operations.

The corporation undertakes ownership, development, design, construction, funds/asset management, property management, leasing, and marketing activities for its centres. It is listed on the Australian Stock Exchange and has a shopping centre portfolio that includes investment interests in 40 shopping centres across the United States and Europe, encompassing around 7,500 retail outlets and total assets under management in excess of $28.5 billion. It also operates Westfield Labs, a technology and design arm based inside the Westfield San Francisco Centre.

History

The Westfield Corporation has origins in the western suburbs of Sydney. The first development was named "Westfield Place", and opened in July 1959 in Blacktown.[3] The name Westfield is derived from "west" related to the West-Sydney location, and "field" due to having been located on subdivided farmland. The centre was opened by John Saunders and Frank Lowy.[3]

The company was floated on the Australian Stock Exchange in 1960 and built another five centres in New South Wales before expanding into Victoria and Queensland in 1966-67.[4]

The expansion into the United States began with the purchase of the Trumbull Shopping Park in Connecticut in 1977, and was followed by three centers in California, Michigan, and Connecticut in 1980 and three centers in California, New Jersey, and Long Island, New York in 1986.[4] In 1994, Westfield joined together with General Growth and Whitehall Real Estate to purchase 19 centers for US$1 billion. The company built considerable holdings on the east coast and in California before expanding in the Mid-West. By 2005, the company owned centrers in 15 US states.[4]

In the 1990s, Westfield began a major expansion to New Zealand, where they mostly bought existing shopping centres of the Fletchers company, and progressively rebranded them. In 2007, with Westfield Albany, the company opened a new centre in the country.[5]

In 2010, the Westfield Group split 50% of its Australian and New Zealand assets into the Westfield Retail Trust, trading on the Australian Stock Exchange as WRT. This trust was folded into the Scentre Group during the 2014 split.

Properties

Westfield currently has interests in 32 shopping malls in the United States, three in the United Kingdom, and one project under development in Italy.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Westfield Senior Management". www.westfieldcorp.com. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  2. 1 2 "Interactive Investor". westfield2016sustainability.onyxinteract.com. Retrieved 1 June 2016.
  3. 1 2 "Westfield History" (pdf). About us. p. 14. Retrieved 5 January 2007. |chapter= ignored (help)
  4. 1 2 3 Sammartino, André; Van Ruth, Frances (2007). "The Westfield Group". In Dick, H.; Merrett, D. The Internationalisation Strategies of Small-Country Firms: The Australian Experience of Globalisation. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar. pp. 308–318.
  5. Gibson, Anne (23 August 2007). "Countdown under way for Albany supermall rollout". New Zealand Herald.
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