Login

Norges in talks to buy London's Fruit & Wool Exchange for circa £300 million

M&G selling Spitalfields building
The Fruit & Wool Exchange campus. (CoSar)
The Fruit & Wool Exchange campus. (CoSar)
CoStar News
December 4, 2025 | 12:25 P.M.

Norwegian sovereign wealth fund Norges is in talks to buy the Fruit & Wool Exchange in the City of London for circa £300 million in what would be a market-moving transaction for 2025, CoStar News can reveal.

M&G appointed JLL to find an investment partner to inject as much as £1 billion into a £2.5 billion UK office portfolio including the historic building in 2021. The fund manager has been seeking the investment for its Prudential With-Profits Fund.

It has instead entered talks to sell all of the building to Norges.

The London Fruit & Wool Exchange, developed by Exemplar and funded by M&G Real Estate, is a 308,454-square-foot mixed-use development encompassing offices and shops in Spitalfields.

Designed by Bennetts Associates, the building comprises seven storeys and maintains the original 1928 brick and Portland stone façade.

Norges Bank Investment Management is the investment fund for Norges, Norway's £1.3 trillion sovereign wealth fund, and is focused on the long-term management of revenue from the country's oil and gas resources.

It has long focused on UK real estate as a favoured investment, with its ownership of Sheffield's Meadowhall shopping example a notable example. This year it has stepped up its investment, especially in London.

In March it bought a 25% stake in Shaftesbury Capital's £2.7 billion Covent Garden estate in London. It already owned a 23.5% stake in the listed overall business, Shaftesbury Capital.

In January it signed a joint venture with Grosvenor to acquire a 25% stake in a mixed-use portfolio of predominately office and retail assets, around Grosvenor Street and Mount Street, Mayfair, as reported. In May it upped its stake in the Pollen Estate.

M&G, CBRE, JLL and Norges declined to comment.

IN THIS ARTICLE


News | Norges in talks to buy London's Fruit & Wool Exchange for circa £300 million