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				 The 
				U.S. asset manager is discussing the sale of properties it had 
				bought from investors, including in a deal with General Electric 
				Co <GE.N> in 2014, according to the sources, who asked not to be 
				identified. 
				 
				The talks are in an advanced stage, one of the sources said. 
				 
				For Anbang, seeking to diversify its assets globally, the deal 
				would be its first foray into Japanese real estate. The Chinese 
				firm last year lost out to a Japanese developer Hulic Co 
				<3003.T> in bidding for property asset manager Simplex 
				Investment. 
				 
				A Blackstone official declined to comment. Anbang officials did 
				not provide an immediate comment. 
				 
				The deal could fetch about 260 billion yen, the sources said, 
				marking the biggest Japan property transaction since a fund 
				managed by Morgan Stanley <MS.N> bought 13 hotels from ANA 
				Holdings Inc <9202.T> for 281 billion yen in 2007, the height of 
				the property investment boom. 
				 
				Japan's property market has rebounded since Prime Minister 
				Shinzo Abe took office in late 2012 and championed ultra-easy 
				money policies that have driven down interest rates and boosted 
				asset prices in a bid to pull Japan out of decades of deflation. 
				 
				Prices for office properties have rebounded to levels where 
				investors find it hard to justify future returns, but some say 
				residential prices can rise further on housing demand in the 
				biggest cities, where growth is robust. 
				 
				The assets Blackstone is planning to sell are chiefly apartment 
				buildings aimed at middle-class residents. They include 
				properties in Japan's largest cities - Tokyo, Nagoya and Osaka - 
				that Blackstone bought in 2014 from GE's property unit for 190 
				billion yen. The U.S. asset manager bought some residential 
				assets from other investors that are also part of the deal. 
				 
				It is not immediately clear how much of a return on its 
				investment Blackstone may make through a sale to Anbang. 
				 
				Privately owned Anbang has assets worth more than 800 billion 
				yuan ($116 billion). It agreed in March to buy Strategic Hotels 
				& Resorts also from Blackstone for $6.5 billion as it expands 
				its U.S. hotels portfolio. In the same month the Chinese 
				insurance group aborted a $14 billion bid for Starwood Hotels & 
				Resorts Worldwide Inc. 
				 
				It also owns New York's famous Waldorf Astoria Hotel. 
				 
				(Reporting by Junko Fujita; Editing by William Mallard and 
				Martin Howell) 
				
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