Archive for the ‘REITs’ Category

Same-Store Sales Rise in May in Results Many Call “Disappointing.”

In results analysts called “disappointing,” same-store sales rose in May by about 2.6 percent.
The early months of the year saw consumers spend based on pent-up demand. But high unemployment and other pressures seem to be bringing that run to an end. There are indications that the jobs report coming Friday will be strong with perhaps more than 500,000 jobs added in May. But the unemployment rate will not move much and should still be near 10 percent.
In addition, consumer credit is less available and the housing market remains problematic. Low unemployment, cheap credit and rising housing values all helped drive consumer spending during the boom years. Without robust recoveries in one or more of those areas, it will be difficult to sustain a recovery in consumer spending.

Retailers, in general, said sales were slow early in the month and reported differing levels of spending on discretionary items. Despite that, retailers are expected to report higher sales for the month. The erratic results follow a strong holiday season and start to the year, when consumers showed a willingness to spend again and even pay closer to full price.
The results validate the posture many retailers adopted last month when reporting first-quarter results. While many reported strong growth, companies restrained from being overly optimistic for the full year.

Retail Forward and Retail Metrics recorded the gain as 2.7 percent. ICSC said sales rose 2.6 percent.
ICSC’s tally shows that same-store sales rose 2.6 percent in April. Read the rest of this entry »

Disney Remodels May Be Too Expensive; Westfield Won’t Bid on General Growth (Tuesday’s News & Notes)

Now that General Growth Properties made clear it prefers to go ahead with its reorganization with the help of Brookfield Asset Management, Australian listed property trust the Westfield Group revealed it has no plans to bid on the company. Meanwhile, U.S. regulators have received complaints stock brokers may have concealed the risks of buying shares of nonlisted REITs from investors. For this and other stories about retail and retail real estate, follow the links below:

Is Cedar the Victim of a Misunderstanding?

Business Insider noticed that Cedar Shopping Centers’ stock was down about 6 percent for the day and wondered if it was because of the big Bloomberg write-up about the firm CDR Financial Products. Cedar’s stock symbol happens to be CDR.

The brief piece speculates that Cedar may be getting hit because some people may be confused about the difference between the two companies. It might just be an innocent victim being taken down because of another company’s wrongdoing and some misunderstandings in the market about who is who.

Then again, just about every retail REIT is down today. Kite Realty Group, for example, is down about 7 percent right now–even more than Cedar. And the trading volume on Cedar isn’t out of whack either. So it may have nothing to do with the Bloomberg story at all.

Either way, it just goes to show the vagaries of the market these days.

GGP Wins Court Approval of Brookfield Bid; Simon Withdraws

Updated at 4:13

It looks like General Growth Properties will remain independent. A bankruptcy court today approved a Brookfield Asset Management-led recapitalization plan for the second largest operator of regional malls in the U.S. Almost immediately after that hearing was announced, Simon issued a press release saying it has withdrawn both its acquisition and recapitalization offers.

U.S. Bankruptcy Judge Allan Gropper in Manhattan today approved General Growth’s plan to give Brookfield, Fairholme Capital Management LLC and Pershing Square Capital Management LP warrants to buy stock in the reorganized company in exchange for funding. Testimony at today’s hearing focused on whether the warrants might chill bidding.

General Growth, based in Chicago, said the Brookfield-led bid is intended to serve as a so-called stalking-horse for higher offers or the raising of money from capital markets. Simon said the warrants would dilute General Growth’s value and the Indianapolis-based company would stop bidding if Gropper approved their issue.

Update: The Wall Street Journal’s recap of the hearing provides a few more details. Importantly, it notes that Simon is not prevented from continuing to make bids for General Growth. But all indications seem to be that Simon will drop its pursuit of General Growth.

However, little precludes Simon from rejoining the bidding in coming months, because Friday’s ruling simply establishes Brookfield’s bid as the front-runner rather than the victor. General Growth executives and attorneys say the board chose the Brookfield offer as an “insurance policy” to have in place for several months in case the company eventually accepts a buyout bid from Simon that is later derailed by antitrust regulators.

“I certainly hope your client would reconsider its position, but that’s entirely its call,” Judge Gropper told Simon’s lawyers. With “the way the process is intended to unfold, the [approval] of the debtor’s motion today is not intended to cut off any opportunity to make an offer for the company. It’s intended to continue that” until a final winning bid is selected in early July.

Text of Simon’s release after the jump. Read the rest of this entry »

Simon Makes Final Offer; GGP Still Favors Brookfield Bid

Simon Property Group made what it called its best and final offer last night–a $20 per share bid for General Growth Properties. But it appears it’s not enough as GGP is reportedly still leaning towards recommending that the bankruptcy court should approve a recapitalization bid fueled by Canadian giant Brookfield Asset Management in a hearing that will take place today. If that happens, Brookfield will attain “stalking horse” status. Simon will continue to be able to bid, but it likely won’t because Brookfield and its partners would control millions of warrants, meaning that at any company that subsequently acquires General Growth must pay the Brookfield group to eliminate those warrants at a cost estimated in the hundreds of millions of dollars.

General Growth believes that court approval of the Brookfield-led bid would protect its downside and give it greater flexibility in negotiating with Simon, which has bid $6.5 billion for all of the company, the source said.

General Growth understands, however, that the warrants, which are worth several hundred million dollars, would make a competing bid more expensive and so it would be willing to negotiate with Simon on a price that adjusts for them, the source said.

The investment gives General Growth room to negotiate around antitrust issues with Simon that could arise from a merger of the two largest U.S. mall owners, the source said.

The source declined to be named because the talks are not public.

A key detail in what led General Growth to favor Brookfield’s offer was a concession by Pershing Square Capital Managment. The Journal piece described it like this:

Swinging General Growth’s decision in the Brookfield group’s favor for the time being was a pledge by one of the Brookfield partners, Pershing Square Capital Management LP, to delay receiving its 17 million General Growth warrants until the Brookfield deal were to close. Brookfield and its other partner, Fairholme Capital Management, still will receive 40% of their 103 million warrants as soon as the bid wins stalking-horse status, with the remainder vesting over the coming months.

With that move, Pershing Chief Executive William Ackman is gambling that either Brookfield’s proposal will prevail and he will eventually receive the warrants or that Simon will come back with a significantly higher offer price. Pershing controls roughly 25% of General Growth’s shares.

“GGP’s bankruptcy is one of the most successful in history,” Mr. Ackman wrote in a letter to General Growth’s board on Friday. “For GGP to hand over its keys to its main competitor subject to government approval is reckless in our view. Simon has as much, if not more, to gain from the destruction of General Growth than from its acquisition.”

Westfield Plans $10B Redevelopment Campaign; GGP Bankruptcy Hearing Postponed Again (Tuesday’s News & Notes)

The retail real estate marketplace continues to provide more good news this week. The General Growth Properties bankruptcy court hearing had to be postponed again as the REIT needs more time to examine revised bids from both Brookfield and Simon. And Australian listed property trust the Westfield Group reported that sales at its U.S. centers rose at the fastest pace in three years in the first quarter. Westfield currently plans to embark on a $10 billion global redevelopment of its mall portfolio. For this and other news about retail and retail real estate, follow the links below:

  • Sales at Westfield’s U.S. centers rose 5.3 percent in the first quarter of 2010, the largest increase in three years, according to Bloomberg Businessweek. The Sydney Morning Herald reports that Westfield has set aside $200 million out of a global budget of $10 billion to redevelop its U.S. malls.
  • The hearing that will determine the stalking horse bidder in the General Growth Properties reorganization has been rescheduled for Friday, according to Chicago Real Estate Daily.
  • Bankrupt movie rental chain the Movie Gallery announced it will liquidate, resulting in thousands of store closures over the next several months, according to Zerohedge.com.
  • A private equity firm agreed to buy casual dining restaurant chain Dave & Buster’s for $570 million, reports the Dallas Morning News. This jibes with observations from last week about private equity players looking at a number of struggling retail chains as potential acquisition targets, according to bnet.com.
  • While consumer spending might be on an upswing, Americans will remain cautious spenders for some time.
  • The Patriot Ledger reports that in order to save on real estate costs, many retail chains are looking at downsizing new stores.

Simon Raises Bid for GGP

Simon Property Group is not giving up without a fight. Shortly after General Growth announced that it still preferred Brookfield’s offer, Simon came back with a revised buyout offer for the firm worth $18.25 per share.

Simon Property Group Inc. has offered to buy all of General Growth Properties Inc. for $18.25 per share, even as its bid to purchase a minority stake in its rival was rejected, sources familiar with the situation said on Monday.

General Growth said in a court filing on Monday it had accepted a recapitalization plan from Brookfield Asset Management over the Simon offer, but was reviewing Simon’s proposal to buy all of the company, in the latest twist in the battle for the No. 2 U.S. mall owner.

Simon teamed up with Blackstone Group LP to make a cash and stock offer for all of General Growth and made the offer along with a separate bid to bankroll its rival’s exit from bankruptcy, the sources said.

Blackstone has committed more than $1 billion to support a Simon deal for all of General Growth , one of the sources said.

Reviving the Commercial Real Estate Market

This comes via Deal Junkie. It’s a video of an interesting panel discussion on reviving the commercial real estate market.

The discussion featured Harvey Green, President and CEO, Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services; Richard LeFrak, Chairman, President and CEO, LeFrak Organization; Peter Lowy, Group Managing Director, Westfield Group; Barry Sternlicht, Chairman and CEO; Starwood Capital Group, and D. Michael Van Konynenburg, President, Eastdil Secured. Moderator was Lewis Feldman, Partner/Los Angeles Office Chair, Goodwin Procter LLP.

Watch it here.

Sears Sells Stores Online; How is Commercial Real Estate Like a Shot of Tequila? (Monday’s News & Notes)

Hard times call for innovation. In an effort to unload its excess real estate, Sears Holdings Corp. has reportedly launched a Web site dedicated to selling its closed stores. For this and other stories about retail and retail real estate, follow the links below:

Fairholme Makes it Clear That It’s Not On Board with SPG Plan

Simon and General Growth are talking and Simon sent a letter earlier today. Now Bruce Berkowitz has chimed in again.

Fairholme Capital Management L.L.C. on behalf of The Fairholme Fund (Ticker: FAIRX) and The Fairholme Focused Income Fund (Ticker: FOCIX), each a series of Fairholme Funds, Inc. sent the attached letter to Adam Metz, CEO of General Growth Properties, Inc. (”GGP”)

April 22, 2010

Mr. Adam Metz

Chief Executive Officer

General Growth Properties, Inc.

110 North Wacker Drive

Chicago, Illinois 60606

Dear Adam,

There have been some rumors about our intentions, so please allow me to reiterate that Fairholme is not willing to invest in GGP if equity ownership is concentrated in the hands of Simon Property Group (”SPG”), passive or not. Our concern is not antitrust or execution risk. We are not experts in those areas. We simply find the value proposition for the public float unsupportable assuming successful execution of anything like the SPG proposal. We continue to support a stand-alone GGP and hope for a long-term relationship.

Do not hesitate to call if I can be of assistance.

With kind regards,

Bruce R. Berkowitz

Founder and Managing Member