After a Busy Fall, Mall Mergers Slow
February 13 2018 - 1:11PM
Dow Jones News
By Esther Fung
Deal fervor in mall REITs appears to have notched down a
peg.
Expectations for a flurry of acquisitions following
multibillion-dollar offers for GGP Inc. and Westfield Corp. last
year have dimmed as big potential buyers of large portfolios have
stepped back.
Simon Property Group, which in the past has made unsolicited
offers to buy out rival real-estate investment trusts Macerich Co.
in 2015, GGP in 2010 and Taubman Centers Inc. in 2002, said on Jan.
31 it is out of the big deals business. Blackstone Group LP,
another potential buyer, also isn't interested in acquiring mall
real-estate investment trusts, according to a person familiar with
the matter.
Brookfield Property Partners started the ball rolling in
November when it made a public offer of $14.8 billion to acquire
the shares of Chicago-based GGP that it didn't already owned. A few
weeks later, Paris-based mall landlord Unibail-Rodamco SE offered
$15.7 billion for Westfield Corp., which owns marquee properties
such as Westfield Century City in Los Angeles and Westfield World
Trade Center in New York. No competing bids have emerged.
"Here's what's ironic and funny about all this M&A activity.
The market was dying to have a mark on a portfolio," said David
Simon, chief executive officer of Simon Property in a recent
earnings call. But even though Unibail-Rodamco's offer for
Westfield was at a very healthy valuation, "the market yawned on
it."
"Remember when the market puked all over [the] Aéropostale
[deal]? I'm happy to tell you it had a record year," said Mr.
Simon, referring to the flak Simon Property and GGP received when
they joined a consortium in September 2016 to rescue distressed
retailer Aéropostale Inc.
Some commentators had criticized Simon Property for previous
acquisitions, including the Mills Corp. and Corporate Property
Investors, but these deals have proved successful over time, said
James Sullivan, managing director at BTIG Research.
Other mall REITs such as Bloomfield Hills, Mich-based Taubman
and Santa Monica, Calif.-based Macerich received attention from
activist investors last year and implemented change-of-control
provisions for senior executives, fueling expectations of deal
activity. But those expectations have ebbed, at least for now.
"The odds of Macerich being acquired or privatized appear to
have moved lower, even with two activists [believed to still be] in
the mix," said real-estate research firm Green Street Advisors in a
research note.
In a Feb. 1 regulator filing, Ontario Teachers' Pension Plan,
which has a 17% stake in Macerich, said its stake is "for
investment purposes only, " quashing rumors it was in talks to take
Macerich private.
Write to Esther Fung at esther.fung@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
February 13, 2018 12:56 ET (17:56 GMT)
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