REITs Mergers and Acquisitions

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REITs Mergers and Acquisitions by David M. Einhorn Member of the New York Bar Adam O. Emmerich Member of the New York Bar Robin Panovka Member of the New York and Georgia Bars 2006 Law Journal Press 105 Madison Avenue New York, New York 10016 www.lawcatalog.com Reproduced with the permission of the publisher and copyright holder from Chapter 1 in REITs: Mergers and Acquisitions by David M. Einhorn, Adam O. Emmerich, and Robin Panovka. Published by Law Journal Press, a division of ALM. Copyright ALM Properties, Inc. All rights reserved. Copies of the complete work may be ordered from Law Journal Press, Book Fulfillment Department, 105 Madison Avenue, New York, New York 10016 or at www.lawcatalog.com or by calling 800-603-6571. W/1182315v1

CHAPTER 1 Introduction Chapter Contents 1.01 Introduction Real Estate Meets M&A 1.02 The REIT Revolution Background 1.03 Trends 1.04 REIT and UPREIT Basics 1.05 Clashes of Culture, Custom and Deal Structures at the Crest of the Revolution [1] Cultural Differences [2] Structural Differences 1.01 Introduction Real Estate Meets M&A The U.S. commercial real estate industry is in the midst of an ongoing transformation that is reshaping the transactional landscape. Until the early 1990s, private sources of equity capital dominated the industry, and public companies and the associated Wall Street players had an almost insignificant role. Real estate purchase and sale transactions were private and there was no need to address public company merger and acquisition (M&A) issues. Then, with the unleashing of the so-called REIT Revolution, 1 the rules of the game began to change. The traditionally private real estate world has been forced to adapt to the reality that many significant real estate owners are now publicly traded REITs and that major transactions involving public REITs blend traditional real estate deal components with corporate M&A structures. While M&A transactions involving public REITs have much in common with M&A transactions involving other public companies, REIT transactions have their own deal technology that is based on the unique structure of REITs, traditional real estate deal structures, peculiarities of the underlying real estate assets, and the special tax rules applicable to REITs. REITs combine the private Main Street real estate culture and the public Wall Street capital culture, creating a whole new set of issues to address when structuring and carrying out deals. 2 This treatise is intended to provide a roadmap for the emerging world of REIT and real estate M&A transactions. The remainder of this Chapter provides background and a statistical overview on the REIT Revolution and REITs, and then explains culture clashes that are influencing the new landscape. Chapter 2 addresses structural considerations in consensual REIT M&A transactions (including tax based impediments to the acquisition of REIT shares). Chapter 3 focuses on REIT directors duties, which often drive the way transactions get done. Chapters 4 and 5 provide a detailed look at the process and documentation for consensual REIT deals, and Chapter 6 focuses on the attendant tax issues. In Chapter 7, the authors address unsolicited transactions and the need to protect transactions from unsolicited competing bidders. Chapter 8 explains the process for taking 1 See 1.02 infra. 2 Id.

1-01 Introduction REITs REITs private. The remaining chapters focus on various specific types of transactions and issues that arise in the REIT M&A context.

1-02 Introduction REITs 1.02 The REIT Revolution Background The so-called REIT Revolution, which began in the early 1990s, unleashed a series of tidal waves that continue to alter the commercial real estate industry in the United States and globally. Prior to the early 1990s, the commercial real estate industry relied almost exclusively on private sources of capital. The REIT Revolution finally forced open the floodgates that had been holding back Wall Street and caused the long-predicted marriage of the capital-intensive commercial real estate industry with the largest and most efficient capital markets in the world, the publicly traded equity and debt markets. Almost overnight, two very different business cultures the private Main Street real estate culture and the public Wall Street capital culture were thrown together, often with the Main Street players being forced into the marriage. Real estate firms that accepted Wall Street capital often did so because the alternative was bankruptcy. 1 And, once they accepted the capital, the newly public firms were forced to play by Wall Street s structural and transactional rules, while the Wall Street firms that provided the capital were forced to take a crash course in real estate and to accept real estate business models and novel structures, like the Umbrella Partnership REIT (UPREIT). 2 The principal catalysts for the virtual avalanche of REIT initial public offerings in the early 1990s were, first, a major drought in debt financing which forced real estate firms to seek new sources of capital and, second, the development of the UPREIT structure. The debt crisis in the early 1990s left many real estate owners unable to find lenders or fresh private equity to refinance their maturing loans, resulting in an increased risk of foreclosure. Frequently, the only source of the required capital was Wall Street, which promised to provide the funds needed to repay the maturing debt by taking the owner-borrowers public. However, going public was often impractical because of the unmanageable tax bill that frequently resulted from the contribution of negative basis properties in exchange for stock or cash in a newly formed or existing REIT. 3 The solution to this tax-based impediment was the UPREIT structure, which allowed real estate owners to defer the realization of income that would have otherwise resulted from their contribution of negative basis assets to a trust or corporation in preparation for an IPO. An UPREIT is a REIT that holds all of its assets in, and conducts its business through, a subsidiary partnership in which the REIT is the sole general partner. The strength and attractiveness of the UPREIT structure lies in the ability of real estate owners to transfer real estate to an UPREIT, on a tax-deferred basis, in exchange for partnership units that can be converted into publicly traded stock of the general partner REIT, or cash, usually at the option of the general partner REIT. 4 After the first UPREIT s initial public offering in 1992, others quickly followed. The aggregate equity market capitalization of REITs grew from $8.7 billion in 1990 to roughly $438 billion in 2006, 5 a more than fifty-fold increase, with REIT debt rising from $10 billion in 1992 to approximately $69 billion in 2004. 6 1 NAREIT Press Release, REIT Improvements Signed into Law by President Bush, October 26, 2004, available at http://www.nareit.com/newsroom/ria.pdf (last visited Sept. 6, 2007). 2 See 1.03 and 6.04[1] infra for a detailed discussion of the UPREIT structure. 3 The term negative basis property refers to property the tax basis of which is less than the amount of the liability to which the property is subject. Debt-financed depreciable property becomes negative-basis property because the property is being depreciated for tax purposes at a rate that exceeds the rate at which principal payments are being made on the debt to which the property is subject. See 6.04[1] infra for a comprehensive discussion of the tax implications of contributing property for stock. 4 See 1.03 and 6.04[1] infra for a detailed discussion of the UPREIT structure. 5 See National Association for Real Estate Investment Trusts (NAREIT), Historical REIT Industry Market Capitalization: 1972-2006, available at http://www.nareit.com/library/industry/marketcap.cfm (last visited Sept. 6, 2007). 6 Gering, Bonds REIT Bonds, Real Estate Portfolio (Sept.-Oct. 2004).

1-02 Introduction REITs Chart 1 7 Error! Objects cannot be created from editing field codes. 7 Chart is from NAREIT, Real Estate Investment Trusts: Investing for Dividends and Diversification (June 30, 2007) (slide show), available at http://www.nareit.com (subscription only) (last visited Aug. 27, 2007). It is reproduced with the permission of NAREIT, the publisher and copyright holder.