-- Lowy family sells 7.1% stake in Westfield Retail Trust

-- Spokesman says family is "diversifying its investments"

-- Shares sold at A$3.09 each; a 2.8% discount to closing price

(Recasts to provide background on Westfield, Lowy family throughout; fund manager comment in ninth and tenth paragraphs.)

By Gillian Tan and Ross Kelly

SYDNEY--The founding family of Westfield Group (WDC.AU), which owns more than 100 malls globally, has raised 663.7 million Australian dollars (US$681.6 million) by selling its stake in a trust created to hold more mature assets in Australia and New Zealand.

A spokesman for the Lowy family provided scant detail on why it had sold its entire 7.1% holding in the Westfield Retail Trust (WRT.AU), a separately listed company created just over two years ago to hold interests in dozens of Westfield-branded malls.

"The sale was made as part of a broader investment strategy to diversify its investments internationally," the Lowy Family spokesman said in a statement Thursday. It didn't elaborate.

Westfield's first mall was opened by current Chairman Frank Lowy and business partner John Saunders in 1959 in the western Sydney suburb of Blacktown. The company was floated on the Australian Stock Exchange in 1960 and now owns malls or mall developments in the U.S., U.K., Australia, Brazil and Italy.

It spun off half of its Australian and New Zealand assets into the Westfield Retail Trust in December 2010 to raise as much as US$3.5 billion to invest in larger projects including the new World Trade Center retail development in New York, and provide flexibility to expand in emerging markets such as Brazil.

The Lowy family's stake in Westfield Retail Trust was being sold late Thursday to institutional investors through a process run by UBS, a person familiar with the matter said.

The stake was sold to UBS at A$3.09 a share in a block trade after the market closed. That represents a 9 cent discount to Westfield Retail Trust's A$3.18 closing price in Sydney, but is nevertheless higher than the original price at the time of its 2010 listing of A$2.75.

The spokesman said the Lowy family's 8% interest in the larger Westfield Group, the largest of any shareholder, remains unchanged as does its "continuing commitment" to the company.

The Lowy family is well known for its philanthropy, including the establishment of the Lowy Institute, a foreign policy think tank based in Sydney. Frank Lowy also led Australia's failed bid to host the 2022 soccer World Cup.

"I'm not surprised to see the family selling their stake in Westfield Retail Trust. It's logical because they've historically held their stake in the more active business," said Stuart Cartledge, managing director of fund manager Phoenix Portfolios, which owns shares in both Westfield Group and Westfield Retail Trust.

"The trust is still trading at a discount to the value of the underlying assets, so it's still an attractive price to us," Mr. Cartledge added.

Westfield Retail Trust this week booked a 2.2% fall in 2012 annual profit to A$572.6 million, underperforming an 18% profit jump at Westfield Group that was driven by the London Olympics boosting traffic through its malls and stronger U.S. consumer confidence.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch earlier Thursday upgraded Westfield Retail Trust to a buy recommendation with a A$3.30 price target due to its attractive dividend yield and steady earnings potential, while Credit Suisse cut it to a neutral call with a target price of A$3.31.

Write to Gillian Tan at gillian.tan@wsj.com and Ross Kelly at ross.kelly@wsj.com

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