- Ongoing Effects of COVID-19
- Blackstone is Back
- Ongoing Impact of Shareholder Activism
- Alternative Structuring
- Continued Consolidation Among NTRs
- Higher Premiums to Unaffected Trading Price
- Go-Shops and Window-Shops Index of Transactions
Overview
As in most other market sectors, REIT M&A activity came to a screeching halt in March 2020 as the COVID-19 pandemic took hold in the United States and globally. In the face of significant uncertainty surrounding the ability of tenants to make rent payments, REITs in many sectors (but not all) effectively went into survival mode during the second and third quarters of 2020 and new deal activity virtually ceased from March 1, 2020 through August 1, 2020.1 Through late 2020 and early 2021, as the pandemic was perceived to be easing, M&A activity in the REIT sector began to show signs of life, with a trickle of new deals announced primarily in the non-traded REIT space. In March 2021, the first significant new transaction involving the acquisition of a publicly-traded REIT since the start of the pandemic was announced, followed closely by several others in April and May 2021. In the full year that has followed, one or more new REIT M&A transactions have been announced in every month other than October 2021, and transaction volume over the last 12 months has rivaled or outpaced pre-pandemic levels.
In total, 42 new REIT transactions were announced between August 1, 2020 and May 30, 2022, with an aggregate transaction value of approximately $158 billion. In 2018 we released our advisory alert "Trends in Public REIT M&A: 2012–2017," chronicling select metrics across the 50+ REIT M&A transactions announced during the 2012-2017 period. We updated the sample set and findings in our 2019 update alert and again in 2021. We are pleased to share in this article our findings with respect to the terms of REIT M&A transactions through the pandemic, in addition to our thoughts on the outlook for REIT and Real Estate sector M&A in 2022 and beyond.
A full listing of the reviewed transactions is included at the end of this article.2
Selected Data | |
Of the 42 new REIT M&A transactions announced since August 1, 2020: | |
31 (74%) | were public-to-public transactions |
11 (26%) | were go-private transactions |
17 (40%) | involved the acquisition of non-exchange traded public REITs |
11 (26%) | were related-party transactions, involving the acquisition of a non-exchange traded REIT by its sponsor or other affiliated entity |
12 (48%) | of all targets of transactions involving publicly-traded REITs had a history of recent activist investor campaigns |
26.95% | was the average premium (and 22.50% the median premium) to unaffected share price for the transactions involving publicly-traded targets, with a high of 70.6% and a low of 7.9% |
16 (38%) | provided for all-cash consideration |
22 (52%) | provided for all-stock consideration |
4 (10%) | provided for mixed cash and stock consideration |
28 (74%) | generally permitted continued payment by target of regular periodic dividends to stockholders (24 of which were stock, or partly stock, deals) |
10 (26%) | restricted payment of ongoing dividends by target (nine of which were all-cash deals) |
8 (19%) | included an affirmative "go-shop" provision (typically between 30-45 days) |
14 (33%) | included either "go-shop" or "window-shop" two-tiered termination fee provisions, whereby a substantially lower fee was payable during the go-shop or window-shop periods |
1.6% | of target equity value was the average (and 1.5% was the median) first-tier termination fee to be applicable during any go-shop or window shop period, with a high of 3.5% and a low of 1.0% |
3.0% | of target equity value was the average (and 3.29% was the median) of final or single termination fees, with a high of 5.4% and low of 1.0% |
20 (48%) | limited target's remedies to a "reverse breakup fee" if buyer failed to close, typically from 7-10% of equity value for cash deals |
Key Takeaways
- Ongoing Effects of COVID-19.
COVID-19's impact on REIT M&A activity took several
different forms, including:
- One immediate effect of the global economic shutdown and prolonged stay-at-home orders was the devastating effect on valuations in most commercial real estate sectors. With the worst of the pandemic hopefully now behind us, traditional buyers and sellers of assets can, at least in theory, more reliably consider recent dealmaking, historical precedent and reasonable assumptions in reaching agreement on post-pandemic valuations.
- The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated pre-existing secular trends in the REIT sector. For example, the retail and CBD office sectors were experiencing adverse changes in demand fundamentals pre-pandemic, which were only exacerbated by the global economic shutdown. Conversely, sectors tied to growing areas such as e-commerce and the technology-based economy, such as logistics/industrial, data center and tower REITs, were strong performers pre-COVID-19 and this continued through the pandemic.3
- While 2021 demonstrated the resiliency of the public REIT sector as a whole, the share prices of many REITs in the most-directly impacted subsectors have not yet recovered to pre-pandemic levels and are currently facing headwinds resulting from rising interest rates, global uncertainties and inflation. These companies remain more vulnerable to activism, unsolicited offers and general consolidation pressures. In addition, as valuation challenges persist even for highly attractive portfolios (with the exception of selected bright spots, such as for example logistics and datacenter assets), the universe of possible buyers who have the ability to write the equity check in a transaction increases.
- Blackstone is Back. Blackstone began
the post-pandemic public markets activity with its acquisition of
Extended Stay America, announced in March 2021. Indeed, 50% of all
cash transactions announced in the post pandemic period involved a
Blackstone entity as the buyer, for a total of $44 billion in
aggregate transaction value. Notably, four of these transactions
involved BREIT, Blackstone's $100+ billion non-traded REIT
vehicle. In 2022 to date alone, Blackstone has announced four
material transactions in the residential space. In our 2019 update, we observed the "big
two" effect of Blackstone and Brookfield on REIT M&A,
noting their uniqueness in terms of ability deploy capital nimbly,
and in size. Through BREIT, a retail-focused vehicle, as well as in
its traditional institutional private real estate funds, Blackstone
continues to raise amounts of capital unmatched in the industry
(perhaps in the history of equity REITs) that can largely be
deployed on a moment's notice in just about any geography
across any property segment. Moreover, the BREIT platform provides
Blackstone with a perpetual ownership structure that does not
require recycling acquired assets back into the public markets via
IPO, as Blackstone has done historically with REIT portfolios
acquired in its institutional real estate funds. This allows
Blackstone to avoid the risk of downturns in the REIT capital
markets generally, and IPO market specifically, while providing
BREIT with permanent capital and growth portfolios that can
generate higher recurring earnings. We are aware of a number of
large, credentialed asset management platforms seeking to challenge
BREIT's pre-eminence, particularly with the creation of large
non-traded REIT vehicles that would offer state-of-the-art
structures and economics to investors of all types. We would expect
to see further significant transactions in 2022 and beyond
involving Blackstone-affiliated entities and new entrants into the
non-traded REIT quadrant of the industry.
- Ongoing Impact of
Shareholder Activism. As we noted in our
2019 and 2021 update articles, shareholder activism
continues to be a recurring theme in the REIT sector. Of the 25 new
transactions announced in the post-pandemic period involving
publicly-traded targets, nearly half (48%) of these targets had a
history of recent activist investor campaigns.
- Pre-pandemic, we noted a sharp increase in the number of activist campaigns in the sector, due in part to shares in some sub-sectors trading at persistent discounts to NAV. While active campaigns subsided during the heart of the 2020 economic shutdown, activism in the sector has since returned in full force. In 2021 and in 2022 to date, a total of 34 new activist campaigns were launched targeting publicly-traded REITs. Indeed, continued economic dislocation in the commercial real estate space has made underperformers more conspicuous — and more vulnerable — than ever to activist campaigns. In certain sectors, activists will argue that market fundamentals have irreversibly changed and that the "same old" is no longer viable in the commercial real estate sector. We expect activism in the sector to continue in 2022 and beyond, leading inevitably in some cases to sale or combination transactions as activists clamor for short-term value.
- Alternative Structuring. A growing
number of transactions in the pandemic period included
non-traditional elements in terms of structure. Where a traditional
REIT M&A transaction structure typically includes a corporate
consolidation, whereby target company shares are exchanged for a
fixed amount of cash, stock or both, some recent deals have
included some more atypical features, including:
- Pre-closing spin-off of discrete business segment to target shareholders;
- Reverse merger, in which target nominally acquires buyer, accompanied by pre-closing cash dividend to target shareholders;
- Whole portfolio asset sale, followed by liquidation;
- Asset sales of core portfolio, followed by merger for balance of target; and
- Contingent consideration component tied to outcome of regulatory matter.
To be certain, every M&A transaction is different and there are any number of unique factors and contingencies that might drive a particular structure over another. Nevertheless, a contributing factor in the increased number of transactions with novel features is the allocation of risk and uncertain values among parties in the post-pandemic environment. Target companies and their boards may be reluctant to transact at flat values that reflect pandemic-era discounts to NAV and are increasingly open to novel structures and contingent payment opportunities in an effort to maximize shareholder value in a market where fundamentals may have moved significantly against them.
- Consolidation among NTRs. Partially
continuing a trend we noted in our previous alerts, of the 42 REIT
transactions announced since August 1, 2020, 10 (24%) involved the
combination of companies externally managed by the same
sponsor/advisor. Strategically, combinations of similarly-focused
companies in the non-traded REIT space under the same management
team can streamline operations and rationalize advisory fees ahead
of significant financing transactions and possible liquidity
events. Practically, the G&A cost of running multiple
"sister" platforms in a largely retail investor market
may no longer be tenable in many circumstances, particularly in
light of the fact that capital raising in the NTR space for
companies not named Blackstone has slowed significantly in recent
years. From a process standpoint and in order to cleanse the
potential application of a heightened fiduciary standard of review,
we reiterate that proposed business combination transactions among
related parties present conflicts of interest concerns and that
each party would do well to establish its own special committee of
independent directors, advised by its own independent counsel and
financial adviser(s), to negotiate and approve all material
transaction terms. Notable in the post-pandemic period, however, is
that over 40% of the transactions involving NTR targets were
between unrelated parties. In some transactions, a higher-bidding
interloper even jumped the initial deal,4 a phenomenon that has traditionally been
rare in the NTR space.
- Higher Premiums to Unaffected Share
Price. Among transactions involving publicly-traded
targets in our sample set, the average premium to unaffected share
price was 26.95%, with a median of 22.50%. This is markedly higher
than the historical average of 22.5%, and median of 16.7%, premium
to unaffected share price we calculate using all publicly-traded
transactions in our database going back to 2012.5 A factor likely at play here is the
pronounced disparity in recent years between NAV and share prices
across many sectors, which, as noted above, has been only
exacerbated by the lingering effects of the pandemic. Even while
share prices are down, target boards and management teams have not
entirely discarded pre-COVID-19 views of intrinsic value —
meaning that the market-clearing price for capital transactions is
increasingly at a higher premium to current share price.
- Go-Shops and Window-Shops. Eight of the 42 deals in our post-pandemic sample included a go-shop provision and a further 6 transactions included a two-tiered termination fee without a go-shop (a so-called "window-shop" provision). Altogether, approximately 33% of the sampled transactions featured two-tiered termination fee provisions, pursuant to which a substantially lower fee is payable by target if it terminated the agreement to pursue a competing offer received during the go-shop or window-shop period. As noted above, the median first-tier termination fee in our sample was 1.5%, rising to a median 3.0% for the second-tier/final termination fee.
As we have noted in our past alerts, parties to REIT M&A transactions are increasingly leaving the door open, sometimes fairly wide open, to possible competing bids that might maximize shareholder value. The current rate of inclusion of go-shop and window-shop provisions is markedly higher than the overall incidence of go-shops and window-shops when considering all public REIT transactions going back to 2012, which was only 26%. Part of this is attributable to the higher incidence of related-party transactions in recent years, as noted above. Likewise, in transactions where the target board or special committee has not been able to conduct a sufficiently thorough pre-market check, it may choose to include a go-shop or window-shop provision in an effort to ensure it has sufficient information on potential bidders and maximized pricing in the marketplace. In a handful of recent cases, however, target boards simply insisted on having a two-tiered termination fee structure, whether strictly necessary or not.
Ironically, as discussed in our 2021 alert, market studies have found that
while the incidence of go-shop and similar provisions may be
increasing in M&A agreements, their ultimate effectiveness at
getting a better price for target shareholders is
decreasing.6 The persistence of the
trend should nonetheless caution transaction participants when
considering the optimal structure for balancing more flexible deal
protections for a first mover-buyer and preserving the ability of
target to pivot to more favorable opportunities should they arise
post-announcement of a transaction.
Index of REIT M&A Transactions Announced Since April 2020 |
|||
Date Announced |
Target |
Acquirer |
Sector |
Aug-20 |
Jernigan Capital |
NexPoint Advisors |
Storage |
Aug-20 |
Cole Credit Property Trust V |
CIM Real Estate Finance Trust, Inc |
Retail |
Sep-20 |
Resource Real Estate Opportunity REIT |
Resource Real Estate Opportunity REIT II |
Residential |
Oct-20 |
Front Yard Residential Corp |
Pretium/Ares |
Residential |
Nov-20 |
Cole Office & Industrial REIT II |
Griffin Capital Essential Asset REIT |
Office/Industrial |
Nov-20 |
Strategic Storage TrustIV, Inc |
SmartStop Self Storage REIT |
Storage |
Dec-20 |
Anworth Mortgage Asset Corp |
Ready Capital Corporation |
Mortgage |
Jan-21 |
Cottonwood Residential I |
Cottonwood Communities Inc. |
Residential |
Mar-21 |
Extended Stay America, Inc. |
Blackstone/Starwood Capital |
Lodging |
Apr-21 |
VEREIT |
Realty Income Corp. |
Office/Diversified |
Apr-21 |
Weingarten Realty |
Kimco Realty |
Retail |
Apr-21 |
Tremont Mortgage Trust |
RMR Mortgage Trust |
Mortgage |
May-21 |
Monmouth Real Estate Investment Cor |
Equity Commonwealth |
Industrial |
Jun-21 |
QTS Realty Corp |
Blackstone |
Data Centers |
Jun-21 |
Griffin-American Healthcare REIT III |
Griffin-American Healthcare REIT IV |
Healthcare |
Jun-21 |
New Senior Investment Group |
Ventas |
Healthcare |
Jul-21 |
Capstead Mortgage Corp |
Benefit Street Partners Realty Trust |
Mortgage |
Jul-21 |
Steadfast Aparment REIT, Inc. |
Independence Realty Trust, Inc. |
Residential |
Jul-21 |
Retail Properties of America |
Kite Realty Group |
Retail |
Aug-21 |
MGM Growth Properties LLC |
VICI Properties, Inc. |
Specialty |
Sep-21 |
CIM Income NAV, Inc. |
CIM Real Estate Finance Trust, Inc. |
Mortgage |
Sep-21 |
Columbia Property Trust |
PIMCO |
Office |
Sep-21 |
Condor Hospitality Trust, Inc. |
Blackstone Real Estate Partners |
Lodging |
Nov-21 |
Monmouth Real Estate Investment Corp |
Industrial Logistics Properties Trust |
Industrial |
Nov-21 |
Corepoint Lodging Inc. |
Highgate/Cerberus Capital Management |
Lodging |
Nov-21 |
CyrusOne Inc. |
KKR/Global Infrastructure Partners |
Data Centers |
Nov-21 |
Coresite Realty Corporation |
American Tower Corporation |
Data Centers |
Dec-21 |
BlueRock Residential Growth REIT |
Blackstone Real Estate Partners |
Residential |
Jan-22 |
Resource REIT |
Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust, Inc. |
Residential |
Feb-22 |
Preferred Apartment Communities Inc. |
Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust, Inc. |
Residential |
Feb-22 |
Strategic Storage Growth Trust II, Inc. |
Smartstop Self Storage REIT, Inc. |
Storage |
Feb-22 |
CPA 18 Global, Inc. |
W.P. Carey Inc. |
Diversified |
Feb-22 |
Healthcare Trust of America |
Healthcare Realty Trust Inc. |
Healthcare |
Mar-22 |
Cedar Realty Trust, Inc. |
DRA Advisors/Wheeler Real Estate Investment Trust |
Retail |
Apr-22 |
American Campus Communities Inc |
Blackstone Real Estate Income Trust, Inc. |
Residential |
Apr-22 |
PS Business Parks, Inc |
Blackstone Real Estate Partners |
Diversified |
May-22 |
Terra Income Fund 6 |
Terra Property Trust |
Mortgage |
Footnotes
1 Through August 1, 2020, the last transactions to be completed in the ordinary course between unrelated parties involving a public equity REIT target were those first announced in Fall 2019. Simon's acquisition of Taubman, announced in February 2020, was litigated in a high-profile dispute and ultimately renegotiated (see below), and Front Yard Residential's sale to Amherst Residential, also announced in February 2020, was terminated before Front Yard Residential was ultimately sold to funds controlled by Pretium and Ares in early 2021.
2 Goodwin Procter LLP played a role in a number of the surveyed transactions. No nonpublic information about any of these transactions has been used in writing this alert.
4 E.g., the $1.2 billion acquisition of Cole Office & Industrial REIT II by Griffin Capital Essential Asset REIT, which trumped an earlier announced acquisition by CIM Real Estate Finance Trust, Inc. Another Cole NTR party to the same multi-company deal with CIM also received a post-signing topping bid, which was not ultimately accepted.
5 See, also, Green Street Advisors, "Twenty Years of U.S. REIT M&A", February 24, 2020, reporting a median premium to unaffected share price of approximately 15% in their review of 70 publicly-traded REIT transactions going back to 2000.
6 See, e.g., 133 Harv. L. Rev. 1215 (https://harvardlawreview.org/2020/02/go-shops-revisited/).
The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.