
Analyses on SH.I.R Shlomo (4)
- March 30, 2026March 30, 2026
- Follow-up
Shlomo Real Estate after 2025: how much of the stability rests on related parties, and what the control transition changes
Shlomo Real Estate's 2025 stability rested materially on tenants, services and agreements inside the same control group; the March 1, 2026 control transition does not remove that dependence, but makes it more governance-sensitive from a credit perspective.

- Follow-up
Kiryat Shlomo after 2025: tenant concentration, 2026 options and the real valuation question
Kiryat Shlomo remains a strong Israeli anchor asset, but it is an unusually concentrated one: two related-party tenants account for all property income, hard public lease visibility ends in 2026, and the NIS 425 million value is a gross property appraisal that is sensitive to re…

- Follow-up
HOPE TOWN after completion: what still stands between reported value and a real income asset
HOPE TOWN has moved from construction into proof mode, but at the end of 2025 it still looked closer to a maturing asset than to a stabilized income property: the value is recorded, while the actual NOI still does not support long-term financing on its own.

Shlomo Real Estate in 2025: the portfolio got bigger, but the story shifted to refinancing and the lease-up of HOPE TOWN
2025 proved that Shlomo Real Estate has a broader asset base and longer lease support, but the bottleneck has shifted to funding, the maturation of HOPE TOWN and the renewal quality of the Israeli anchors.














































