Sunday, November 19, 2017

The Dice are Rolling in Mall Land

Last May we wrote "Thus if private equity or sovereign wealth funds don't come in soon to scoop up the apparent bargain, the Street, as I argued, is way off." (https://shulmaven.blogspot.com/2017/05/a-new-look-at-mall-reit-valuations-part.html) Of a sudden, after a long period of sustained discounts to Street estimates of net asset value the dice are starting to roll in Mall Land. First Brookfield Property Partners offered to take in the 64% of GGP that it doesn't already own with a  cash and stock offer valued at $23/share. To be sure the offer was well above the $19/share the stock was trading at, but still well below the $28/share of value ascribed by the Street. As of this writing GGP is trading about 3% above the Brookfield offer price.

We then found out that hedge funds Starboard Value and Third Point have taken a position in Macerich causing its stock to rise from the mid-50s to the mid-60s, still below the $73 valuation estimated by the Street. Further Elliott Management, a $30 billion hedge fund, has taken a position in Taubman that elevated its stock price from the high 40s to the mid-50s again well below the $85 Street valuation. Remember the hedge funds are intermediaries and are ultimately looking for a final buyer like Brookfield to take them out. If no final buyer appears they will find themselves with dead money positions that will be sold back to the market.

Sitting on the sidelines watching and waiting are David Simon of Simon Property Group, the largest mall owner and Jonathan Gray of Blackstone, the largest private equity firm in the real estate arena. How they respond could very well be despositive as to how the price discovery process works out.

My guess is that the potential buyers of mall companies and/or mall assets are looking for what they perceive to be a bargain and with the Street still estimating mall cap rates in the 4-5% range, they will not find a bargain at those prices. Simply put the bid-offer spread is too wide, and as result I do not foresee transactions at anywhere close to the offer side of the market. But again, as we noted in May, time will tell.





1 comment:

  1. I'm minded to think rather than 'Platform Premiums' we might see portfolio discounts apply at this point in the cycle.

    ReplyDelete