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Displaying items by tag: Commercial Real Estate
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Friday, 21 December 2012 13:56

Bigger Tax Payer Bank Bailouts Cometh? If You Think Taxes Are Gonna Be Higher You Ain't Seen Nothing Yet!!!

While perusing the news today, I came across this most interesting article in Bloomberg, Swaps ‘Armageddon’ Lingers as New Rules Concentrate Risk'. Before we delve into it, I want to review how vehemently I've sounded the alarm on this topic over the last 6 years. Let's start with So, When Does 3+5=4? When You Aggregate A Bunch Of Risky Banks & Then Pretend That You Didn't?, where I've aggregated my warnings into a single article. In a nutshell, 5 banks bear 96% of the global derivatives risk. The argument to defend such ass backwards risk concentration is "but it's mostly hedged, offset and netted out". Right! You know that old trader's saying about liquidity? It's always available, that is until you need it!

Even though I've made this point of netting = nonsense multiple times, I must admit, ZH did a more loquacious job, as follows:

..Wrong. The problem with bilateral netting is that it is based on one massively flawed assumption, namely that in an orderly collapse all derivative contracts will be honored by the issuing bank (in this case the company that has sold the protection, and which the buyer of protection hopes will offset the protection it in turn has sold). The best example of how the flaw behind bilateral netting almost destroyed the system is AIG: the insurance company was hours away from making trillions of derivative contracts worthless if it were to implode, leaving all those who had bought protection from the firm worthless, a contingency only Goldman hedged by buying protection on AIG. And while the argument can further be extended that in bankruptcy a perfectly netted bankrupt entity would make someone else who on claims they have written, this is not true, as the bankrupt estate will pursue 100 cent recovery on its claims even under Chapter 11, while claims the estate had written end up as General Unsecured Claims which as Lehman has demonstrated will collect 20 cents on the dollar if they are lucky.

The point of this detour being that if any of these four banks fails, the repercussions would be disastrous. And no, Frank Dodd's bank "resolution" provision would do absolutely nothing to prevent an epic systemic collapse. 

Hey, there ain't no concentration risk in US banks, and any blogger with two synapses to spark together should know this... From An Independent Look into JP Morgan.

Click graph to enlarge

 image001.pngimage001.pngimage001.pngimage001.pngimage001.png

Cute graphic above, eh? There is plenty of this in the public preview. When considering the staggering level of derivatives employed by JPM, it is frightening to even consider the fact that the quality of JPM's derivative exposure is even worse than Bear Stearns and Lehman‘s derivative portfolio just prior to their fall. Total net derivative exposure rated below BBB and below for JP Morgan currently stands at 35.4% while the same stood at 17.0% for Bear Stearns (February 2008) and 9.2% for Lehman (May 2008). We all know what happened to Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers, don't we??? I warned all about Bear Stearns (Is this the Breaking of the Bear?: On Sunday, 27 January 2008) and Lehman ("Is Lehman really a lemming in disguise?": On February 20th, 2008) months before their collapse by taking a close, unbiased look at their balance sheet. Both of these companies were rated investment grade at the time, just like "you know who".

So, the Bloomberg article that got this rant started basically says that the risk is being shifted from the banks to clearing houses, who demand above board, translucent collateral for transactions. This should solve the problem, right? Hardly! You see, the Fed and US banking regulators have made it legal and acceptable for banks to outright lie about the qualit of their collateral and the condition of their finances. It all came to light with my research on Lehman (and Bear Stearns, amonst others). These mistakes are so repetitive of the ones made in the past, I literally do not have to right any new material, let's just re-read what was written several years ago:

Lehman Brothers and Its Regulators Deal the Ultimate Blow to Mark to Market Opponents

Let's get something straight right off the bat. We all know there is a certain level of fraud sleight of hand in the financial industry. I have called many banks insolvent in the past. Some have pooh-poohed these proclamations, while others have looked in wonder, saying "How the hell did he know that?"

  • Is this the Breaking of the Bear? It wasn't hard to see Bear Stearns collapsing 3 month before bankruptcy. Why didn't our regulators see what I saw?
  • As I see it, 32 commercial banks and thrifts may see the feces hit the fan blades It wasn't hard to see that nearly all of these 32 banks would be facing the threat of insolvency. Why didn't our regulators see what I saw?
  • The Commercial Real Estate Crash Cometh, and I know who is leading the way! It wasn't hard to see that commercial real estate was ready to implode and that GGP was about to collapse under its own weight. Why didn't our regulators see what I saw?
  • Yeah, Countrywide is pretty bad, but it ain’t the only one at the subprime party… Comparing Countrywide Countrywide and Washington Mutual's collapse were visible AT LEAST a year in advance!
  • The Next Shoe to Drop: Credit Default Swaps (CDS) and Counterparty Risk - Beware what lies beneath! 'Nuff said...
  • ... and even Lehman Brothers: Is Lehman a Lying Lemming?

The list above is a small, relevant sampling of at least dozens of similar calls. Trust me, dear reader, what some may see as divine premonition is nothing of the sort. It is definitely not a sign of superior ability, insider info, or heavenly intellect. I would love to consider myself a hyper-intellectual, but alas, it just ain't so and I'm not going to lie to you. The truth of the matter is I sniffed these incongruencies out because 2+2 never did equal 46, and it probably never will either. An objective look at each and every one of these situations shows that none of them added up. In each case, there was someone (or a lot of people) trying to get you to believe that 2=2=46.xxx. They justified it with theses that they alleged were too complicated for the average man to understand (and in business, if that is true, then it is probably just too complicated to work in the long run as well). They pronounced bold new eras, stating "This time is different", "There is a new math" (as if there was something wrong with the old math), etc. and so on and associated bullshit.

So, the question remains, why is it that a lowly blogger and small time individual investor with a skeleton staff of analysts can uncover systemic risks, frauds and insolvencies at a level that it appears the SEC hasn't even gleaned as of yet? Two words, "Regulatory Capture". You see, and as I reluctantly admitted, it is not that I am so smart, it is that the regulator's goals are not the same as mine. My efforts are designed to ferret out the truth for enlightenment, profit and gain. Regulators' goals are to serve a myriad constituency that does not necessarily have the individual tax payer at the top of the hierarchical pyramid. Before we go on, let me excerpt from a piece that I wrote on the topic at hand so we are all on the same page: How Regulatory Capture Turns Doo Doo Deadly.

You see, the banking industry lobbied the regulators to allow them to lie about the value and quality of their assets and liabilities and just like that, the banking problem was solved. Literally! At least from a equity market pricing and public disinformation campaign point of view...

A picture is worth a thousand words...

fasb_mark_to_market_chart.pngfasb_mark_to_market_chart.pngfasb_mark_to_market_chart.pngfasb_mark_to_market_chart.png

So, how does this play into today's big headlines in the alternative, grass roots media? Well, on the front page of the Huffington Post and ZeroHedge, we have a damning expose of Lehman Brothers (we told you this in the first quarter of 2008, though), detailing their use of REPO 105 financing to basically lie about their
liquidity positions and solvency. The most damning and most interesting tidbit lies within a more obscure ZeroHedge article that details findings from the recently released Lehman papers, though:

On September 11, JPMorgan executives met to discuss significant valuation problems with securities that Lehman had posted as collateral over the summer. JPMorgan concluded that the collateral was not worth nearly what Lehman had claimed it was worth, and decided to request an additional $5 billion in cash collateral from Lehman that day. The request was communicated in an executive?level phone call, and Lehman posted $5 billion in cash to JPMorgan by the afternoon of Friday, September 12. Around the same time, JPMorgan learned that a security known as Fenway, which Lehman had posted to JPMorgan at a stated value of $3 billion,was actually asset?backed commercial paper credit?enhanced by Lehman (that is, it was Lehman, rather than a third party, that effectively guaranteed principal and interest payments). JPMorgan concluded that Fenway was worth practically nothing as collateral.

Well, I'm sure many are saying that this couldn't happen in this day and age, post Lehman debacle, right? Well, it happened in 2007 with GGP and I called it -  The Commercial Real Estate Crash Cometh, and I know who is leading the way! As a matter of fact, we all know it happened many times throughout that period. Wait a minute, it's now nearly 2013, and lo and behold.... When A REIT Trading Over $15 A Share Is Shown To Have Nearly All Of Its Properties UNDERWATER!!!

Paid subscribers are welcome to download the corporate level valuation of PEI as well as all of the summary stats of our findings on its various properties. The spreadsheet can be found here - File Icon Results of Properties Analysis, Valuation of PEI with Lenders' Names. In putting a realistic valuation on PEI, we independently valued a sampling of 27 of its properties. We found that many if not most of those properties were actually underwater. Most of those that weren't underwater were mortgaged under a separate credit facility.   

PEI Underwater  Overly Encumbered PropertiesPEI Underwater Overly Encumbered Properties

What are the chances that the properties, whole loans and MBS being pledged by PEI's creditors are being pledged at par? Back to the future, it's the same old thing all over again. Like those banks, PEI is trading higher with its public equity despite the fact that its private equity values are clearly underwater - all part of the perks of not having to truly mark assets to market prices.  

 From Bloomberg: Swaps ‘Armageddon’ Lingers as New Rules Concentrate Risk

Clearinghouses cut risk by collecting collateral at the start of each transaction, monitoring daily price moves and making traders put up more cash as losses occur. Traders have to deal through clearing members, typically the biggest banks and brokerages. Unlike privately traded derivatives, prices for cleared trades are set every day and publicly disclosed.

And what happens when everybody lies about said prices? Is PEI's debt really looking any better than GGP's debt of 2007?

GGP Leverage Summary 2007

Properties with negative equity and leverage >80% 32
Properties with leverage >80% 44
% of properties with negative equity (based on CFAT after debt service) 72.7%

PEI Summary 2012

PEI Underwater  Overly Encumbered PropertiesPEI Underwater Overly Encumbered Properties

Both of these companies have debt that have been pledged by banks as collateral. Would you trust either of them? The banks then use the collateral to do other deals leading to more bubbles. What's next up in bubble land? I warned of it in 2009...

Check this out, from "On Morgan Stanley's Latest Quarterly Earnings - More Than Meets the Eye???" Monday, 24 May 2010:

Those who don't subscribe should reference my warnings of the concentration and reliance on FICC revenues (foreign exchange, currencies, and fixed income trading).  Morgan Stanley's exposure to this as well as what I have illustrated in full detail via the  the Pan-European Sovereign Debt Crisis series, has increased materially. As excerpted from "The Next Step in the Bank Implosion Cycle???":

The amount of bubbliciousness, overvaluation and risk in the market is outrageous, particularly considering the fact that we haven't even come close to deflating the bubble from earlier this year and last year! Even more alarming is some of the largest banks in the world, and some of the most respected (and disrespected) banks are heavily leveraged into this trade one way or the other. The alleged swap hedges that these guys allegedly have will be put to the test, and put to the test relatively soon. As I have alleged in previous posts (As the markets climb on top of one big, incestuous pool of concentrated risk... ), you cannot truly hedge multi-billion risks in a closed circle of only 4 counterparties, all of whom are in the same businesses taking the same risks.

Click to expand!

bank_ficc_derivative_trading.pngbank_ficc_derivative_trading.pngbank_ficc_derivative_trading.png

So, How are Banks Entangled in the Mother of All Carry Trades?

Trading revenues for U.S Commercial banks have witnessed robust growth since 4Q08 on back of higher (although of late declining) bid-ask spreads and fewer write-downs on investment portfolios. According to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, commercial banks' reported trading revenues rose to a record $5.2 bn in 2Q09, which is extreme (to say the least) compared to $1.6 bn in 2Q08 and average of $802 mn in past 8 quarters.

bank_trading_revenue.pngbank_trading_revenue.pngbank_trading_revenue.png

High dependency on Forex and interest rate contracts

Continued growth in trading revenues on back of growth in overall derivative contracts, (especially for interest rate and foreign exchange contracts) has raised doubt on the sustainability of revenues over hear at the BoomBustBlog analyst lab. According to the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, notional amount of derivatives contracts of U.S Commercial banks grew at a CAGR of 20.5% to $203 trillion by 2Q-09 from $87.9 trillion in 2004 with interest rate contracts and foreign exchange contracts comprising a substantial 84.5% and 7.5% of total notional value of derivatives, respectively. Interest rate contracts have grown at a CAGR of 20.1% to $171.9 trillion between 4Q-04 to 2Q-09 while Forex contracts have grown at a CAGR of 13.4% to $15.2 trillion between 4Q-04 to 2Q-09.

In terms of absolute dollar exposure, JP Morgan has the largest exposure towards both Interest rate and Forex contracts with notional value of interest rate contracts at $64.6 trillion and Forex contracts at $6.2 trillion exposing itself to volatile changes in both interest rates and currency movements (non-subscribers should reference An Independent Look into JP Morgan, while subscribers should referenceFile Icon JPM Report (Subscription-only) Final - Professional, and File Icon JPM Forensic Report (Subscription-only) Final- Retail). However, Goldman Sachs with interest rate contracts to total assets at 318.x and Forex contracts to total assets at 11.2x has the largest relative exposure (see Goldman Sachs Q2 2009 Pre-announcement opinion Goldman Sachs Q2 2009 Pre-announcement opinion 2009-07-13 00:08:57 920.92 Kb,  Goldman Sachs Stress Test ProfessionalGoldman Sachs Stress Test Professional 2009-04-20 10:06:45 4.04 Mb, Goldman Sachs Stress Test Retail Goldman Sachs Stress Test Retail 2009-04-20 10:08:06 720.25 Kb,). As subscribers can see from the afore-linked analysis, Goldman is trading at an extreme premium from a risk adjusted book value perspective.

bank_forex_exposure.pngbank_forex_exposure.pngbank_forex_exposure.png


Back to the Bloomberg article:

Disaster Scenario

The need for a Fed rescue isn’t out of the question, said Satyajit Das, a former Citicorp and Merrill Lynch & Co. executive who has written books on derivatives. Das sketched a scenario where a large trader fails to make a margin call. This kindles rumors that a bank handling the trader’s transactions -- a clearing member -- is short on cash.

Remaining clients rush to pull their trading accounts and cash, forcing the lender into bankruptcy. Questions begin to swirl about whether the remaining clearing members can absorb billions in losses, spurring more runs.

“Bank customers panic, and they start to withdraw money,” he said. “The amount of money needed starts to become problematic. None of this is quantifiable in advance.” The collateral put up by traders and default fund sizes are calculated using data that might not hold up, he said.

The collateral varies by product and clearinghouse. At CME, the collateral or “margin” for a 10-year interest-rate swap ranges between 2.89 percent and 4.06 percent of the trade’s notional value, according to Morgan Stanley. At LCH, it’s 3.2 percent to 3.41 percent, the bank said in a November note.

How Much?

The number typically is based on “value-at-risk,” and is calculated to cover the losses a trader might suffer with a 99 percent level of confidence. That means the biggest losses might not be fully covered.

It’s a formula like the one JPMorgan used and botched earlier this year in the so-called London Whale episode, when it miscalculated how much risk its chief investment office was taking and lost at least $6.2 billion on credit-default swaps. Clearinghouses may fall into a similar trap in their margin calculations, the University of Houston’s Pirrong wrote in a research paper in May 2011.

“Levels of margin that appear prudent in normal times may become severely insufficient during periods of market stress,” wrote Pirrong, whose paper was commissioned by an industry trade group.


Oh, but wait a minute? Didn't I clearly outline such a scenario in 2010 for French banks overlevered on Greek and Italian Debt (currently trading at a fractiono of par)? See The Anatomy Of A European Bank Run: Look At The Banking Situation BEFORE The Run Occurs!

The problem then is the same as the European problem now, leveraging up to buy assets that have dropped precipitously in value and then lying about it until you cannot lie anymore. You see, the lies work on everybody but your counterparties - who actually want to see cash!

 

image012image012image012

Using this European bank as a proxy for Bear Stearns in January of 2008, the tall stalk represents the liabilities behind Bear's illiquid level 2 and level 3 assets (including the ill fated mortgage products). Equity is destroyed as the assets leveraged through the use of these liabilities are nearly halved in value, leaving mostly liabilities. The maroon stalk represents the extreme risk displayed in the first chart in this missive, and that is the excessive reliance on very short term liabilities to fund very long term and illiquid assets that have depreciated in price. Wait, there's more!

The green represents the unseen canary in the coal mine, and the reason why Bear Stearns and Lehman ultimately collapsed. As excerpted from "The Fuel Behind Institutional “Runs on the Bank" Burns Through Europe, Lehman-Style":

The modern central banking system has proven resilient enough to fortify banks against depositor runs, as was recently exemplified in the recent depositor runs on UK, Irish, Portuguese and Greek banks – most of which received relatively little fanfare. Where the risk truly lies in today’s fiat/fractional reserve banking system is the run on counterparties. Today’s global fractional reserve bank get’s more financing from institutional counterparties than any other source save its short term depositors.  In cases of the perception of extreme risk, these counterparties are prone to pull funding are request overcollateralization for said funding. This is what precipitated the collapse of Bear Stearns and Lehman Brothers, the pulling of liquidity by skittish counterparties, and the excessive capital/collateralization calls by other counterparties. Keep in mind that as some counterparties and/or depositors pull liquidity, covenants are tripped that often demand additional capital/collateral/ liquidity be put up by the remaining counterparties, thus daisy-chaining into a modern day run on the bank!

image006image006image006

I'm sure many of you may be asking yourselves, "Well, how likely is this counterparty run to happen today? You know, with the full, unbridled printing press power of the ECB, and all..." Well, don't bet the farm on overconfidence. The risk of a capital haircut for European banks with exposure to sovereign debt of fiscally challenged nations is inevitable.

You see, the risk is all about velocity and confidence. If the market moves gradually, the clearing house system is ok. If it moves violently and all participants move for cash at the same time against bogus collateral... BOOMMMM!!!!!!!

Back to the Bloomberg article...

Stress Levels

What’s more, clearinghouses can’t use their entire hoard of collateral to extinguish a crisis because it’s not a general emergency fund. The sum represents cash posted by investors to cover their own trades and can’t be used to cover defaults of other people.

Clearinghouses can turn to default funds to cover the collapse of the two largest banks or securities firms with which they do business. They have the power to assess the remaining solvent members for billions more, enough to cover the demise of their third- and fourth-largest members.

But wait a minute, the other members are only solvent because they have hedges against the insolvency of the insolvent members. If those hedges fail, then the so-called solvent members are insolvent too! Or did nobody else think of that?

After all, this circular reasoning worked out very well for Greece, didn't it? See Greece's Circular Reasoning Challenge Moves From BoomBustBlog to the Mainstream...

 

 


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Thursday, 09 August 2012 14:15

Another Potential CRE Bust?

I received this message about a CRE REIT via the blog discsussion forums about a week ago and thought I would share it with subscribers...
-----
Some of this research might be a little dated since I was researching towards the end of May but:
- 76% of the CMBS held were acquired during 2004-2007
- Most of the recent increases in revenues are noncash accretion from the "consolidation" of CDOs
- Generally retained the lowest portions of their CDO originations
- Holding up small (if not negative) cash flows with sales of the only portions of the portfolio that would realize a gain
- As of 3/31/2012, CRE securities held for sales had a un realized loss of 750M against on a 3B plus portfolio half of their CDOs are currently undercollateralized
- Purchased 1.2B of CDOs to lower liabilities at 40cents  on the dollar but marks at roughly 50
- Somehow, provision for loan losses decreased  by 115M in 2011 when credit quality deteriorated
- $636 million of our debt investments have their initial maturity date during 2012 (10-K)

Please take a look at this Reggie if you can.  Pays a huge dividend (~11%) right now which makes for an expensive short but its seemingly been running a shortfall for most of the past 4-5 quarters.  Wells Fargo seems to be supporting this company to high hell with credit facilities and the company issues preferred shares to those desperate funds searching for yield in any way, without taking a peek under the hood of what I believe to be a lemon.
-----

CRE REITCRE REIT

Key Points:

  • There is a huge difference in current yield and coupon rate, indicating the value of these various asset classes has taken a major hit in the last few years
  • The cumulative unrealized loss / profit column substantiates the above observation

Subscribers may download the full report here: File Icon CRE Observations

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Thursday, 02 August 2012 12:25

PEI 2nd Quarter Earnings Review - Why Aren't Analysts Asking The Hard, Or Even The Obvious Questions???

I got this in my mailbox the other day:

How did PEI just refinance the Christiana Center with a $50 million loan when they are carrying the asset at a value of $30 million on its balance sheet?

Refinancing: http://finance.yahoo.com/news/preit-reports-second-quarter-2012-115500466.html 

Asset Value: 2011 10-K

 Well, that's a damn good question. If you recall, I went over PEI's portfolio with fine toothed, valuation comb in Q4 - reference When A REIT Trading Over $15 A Share Is Shown To Have Nearly All Of Its Properties UNDERWATER!!!

Paid subscribers are welcome to download the corporate level valuation of PEI as well as all of the summary stats of our findings on its various properties. The spreadsheet can be found here -  Results of Properties Analysis, Valuation of PEI with Lenders' Names. In putting a realistic valuation on PEI, we independently valued a sampling of 27 of its properties. We found that many if not most of those properties were actually underwater. Most of those that weren't underwater were mortgaged under a separate credit facility.   

PEI Underwater  Overly Encumbered PropertiesPEI Underwater Overly Encumbered Properties

If you haven't yet read parts one or two or three or four or five or six or seven in this series, its some engaging reading. Trust me! On that note, let's review my observations of the most recent quarter. Subscribers can download File Icon PEI Q2 Earnings Review _July 2012 to view the document in full.

Overall, the quarter has seen better performance compared to the previous ones. However, the negatives are:

  • The higher base rent achieved this quarter was due to a higher occupancy rate while the per square foot rental metrics continued to slide. I don’t foresee this trend reversing in the near future.  As a matter of fact, the likely course of the US, EU and Chino-Japan is that of recession. Reference RGE Monitor’s Christian Menegatti on US: No more risks of stall speed…stall speed is here, recession next?
  1. The US is witnessing 1.5% real growth through Q2 GDP - Sad.
    July ISM manufacturing data (with a headline still in contraction territory at 49.8) confirms last month’s weak reading. Most components moved roughly sideways- the exceptions included a jump up in inventories from 44 to 49 (which should be viewed as a negative development, amid falling new orders and exports) and a step down in employment (from 56.6 to 52).
    Employment is still positive, but note that it is a lagging indicator—the contraction territory reading of new orders and a worsening of export orders lead us to expect continued pressure on the labor market going forward.
  2. The drop economic outlook is most important when viewing PEI’s quarterly results. Despite the fact that PEI pulled some impressive base rent growth, a closer look at said growth is illuminating…

PEI rentsPEI rents

  1. Average base rent (per square feet basis) has decreased

(US$ per square feet)              

June 2011

June 2012

% Change

Malls Weighted Average

32.40

31.74

-2.0%

Consolidated Properties

31.54

30.87

-2.1%

Unconsolidated Properties

41.73

41.23

-1.2%

Same Properties

32.40

31.74

-2.0%

Pertinent observations:

Base rent (on a total rented basis) is growing in 93% of PEI’s properties (@1.17%) considerably slower than average base rent is decreasing (@-2.0%). Moving up 1.17 inches for every 2.0 inches you have moved down results in a lower position – period!

This means that if we revalue the Company’s property portfolio, it should be negatively impacted by lower average base rent, with that negative impact offset roughly 59% by the higher occupancy rate - which has increased. Of course, that still leaves us 41% underwater, doesn't it?

  1. The company has about 10% of its leases due for renewal in 2013, which if impacted by worsening economic condition described above, could negatively and materially impact the Company’s rental income.
  1. We see the Company as marginally being able to meet its debt obligations for 2012, and that’s assuming nothing else goes wrong in a macro environment that has new things going wrong nearly every weak!!! 

I will most likely launch my TV show sometime next week via YouTube as I shop it around to various networks, and I will included significant PEI analysis in the pilots. I welcome one and all to view and participate. Feel free to tell all of your friends, colleagues and associates about the guy kicking Wall Street in the balls...

PEI analystsPEI analysts

Compare everyone above to my analysis of PEI, then feel free to look at our track record throughout this malaise, starting from 2007. As a matter of fact, don't compare analysis, compare me against the entire banking establishment!!! 

We believe Reggie Middleton and his team at the BoomBust bests ALL of Wall Street's sell side research: Did Reggie Middleton, a Blogger at BoomBustBlog, Best Wall Streets Best of the Best?

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Wednesday, 25 July 2012 13:21

The Canadian Real Estate Bubble?

Below is an email that I recieved from a reader:

shadowleaf rlhopRIO Canada is one of the biggest reit's in Canada I know some of there management and from what I can see they are buying property's left right and center that are in bad locations and are doomed to negative cap rates and are destine to fail. I think they would be a great REIT company here in Canada to analyze as a short candidate. As you may know the residential and commercial property bubble here in Canada has hit levels never seen in America or any where else in the world. The potential for gain in shorting these company's with the most exposure to down turn risk would be greater then any where else as they are so over valued and carry a much greater risk then company's involved in the property market any where else in the world. It would be great if you and your wonderful analyst team could analyze these Canadian property company's. The down turn is already on the way in Canada with Vancouver correct already 17 % and Toronto having the most condos being built in the world right now. I literally see cranes ever where with 142 condos projected to come on to the already oversupplied market by 2014. I own business here and know the real economy has stagnated and declined plain and simple people are becoming "broke" or the harsh times are starting to hit them.Canada's economy can not support the property bubble her and the collapse will be mush greater then what will come or already has come in the United States. With my stores and there retail sales falling already by 50-60 percent year over year since 2008. I speak with many tenants who own business who are struggling to pay there rents and some have not made a profit in almost a year the "thresh hold" has be reached people are either going to walk away or renegotiate there leases heavily. Yet these REIT continue to buy property's hand over fist paying outrages price with negative cap rates and outstanding leverage. The biggest residential and commercial property bubble will fall here in Canada and I thought I should bring it to your attention Reggie if it wasn't already because you do a great job of simply but completely analyzing a company and debunking there fallacies. Thank you for your time.

We looked into Rio Canada for BoomBustBlog subscribers, and this is what we found. 

All paying subscribers:File Icon Rio Canada Analysis

Professional and institutional subscribers can download a deeper dive: File Icon Rio Canada Analysis Back-up data

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Monday, 23 July 2012 13:27

PEI Fire Sale? Unlikely... Why? Because There's So Little Worth Selling - Yes, It's That Bad!!!

This is part seven and the last (I think) of my forensic rant on what I believe to be the CRE Short of the Year and the dead REIT walking known as PEI. In this installment, I will show that PEI can't even sell off it's portfolio due to a lack of value add to its rather dire situation - nearly all of the properties are either underwater, negative cash flowing or fully leveraged. As concluded in my previous analyses, the company's assets are, in essence, of null or negative value to the shareholder. If you haven't yet read parts one or two or three or four or five or six, please do for there is a wealth of data and analysis behind them that will bring the new reader up to speed. Please refer to PEI Cashflows and Debt Preliminary Analysis, PEI Sample Property Valuation  and  PEI Foreclosure Scenario Analysis for the background to this document which is the 3rd of 3 scenario analyses that detail the likely bankruptcy of PEI.

Scenario III : Sale of properties to fund debt repayment

The “fire sale” or distressed asset disposition scenario seems like the least possible, least likely and the least practical scenario. The reason is that the Company’s portfolio has either properties (1) which have negative valuation after considering debt due on them or (2) have properties that don’t have specific debt against them but are mortgaged under the revolving credit facility.

Please see the details on valuation of 27 properties we have valued…


PEI Underwater  Overly Encumbered Properties
PEI Underwater Overly Encumbered Properties
PEI Underwater Overly Encumbered Properties

The properties that we didn't specifically value had similar characteristics. Those properties that are highlighted in blue do not have a mortgage, but are used to collateralize credit facilities that are being actively used and are expected to be maxxed out.

PEI Properties Not Valued By BoomBustBlogPEI Properties Not Valued By BoomBustBlogPEI Properties Not Valued By BoomBustBlog

As illustrated above, almost all properties with a positive valuation (see Column L) lack property-specific debt against them. But all of these properties have been encumbered under the revolving credit facility. The properties not covered under the revolving credit facility and having positive valuation after deduction of debt due on them are (1) Exton Mall (2) Moorestown Mall (3) Patrick Henry Mall. The total positive value of these three properties is around USD 36 mn which is insufficient to meet net refinancing requirement of USD 295 mn (as of Nov. 2011) as detailed below:

Amount (USD million) – 2012

Cash at the beginning – Jan 2012

93.94

Cash flows from operations

77.34

Unused credit lines

155.00

Debt due for repayment

621.08

Shortfall (before proceeds from sale of properties)

294.80

Paid subscribers are welcome to download the corporate level valuation of PEI as well as all of the summary stats of our findings on its various properties. The spreadsheet can be found here - File Icon Results of Properties Analysis, Valuation of PEI with Lenders' Names

The complete REIT analysis referred to in the chart can be found here for subscribers (the property by property valuations are for Professional/Institutional subscribers only):

  • File Icon Fire Sale Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Foreclosure Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Sample Property Valuation
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Cashflows and Debt Preliminary Analysis
Published in BoomBustBlog
Read more...
Tuesday, 17 July 2012 14:46

When A REIT Trading Over $15 A Share Is Shown To Have Nearly All Of Its Properties UNDERWATER!!!

This is part six, and the second to last of my forensic rant on what I believe to be the CRE Short of the Year and the dead REIT walking known as PEI. In this installment, I will simply show that much of PEI's portfolio is either underwater, negative cash flowing or fully leveraged - in essence of null or negative value to the shareholder. If you haven't yet read parts one or two or three or four and five, please do for there is a wealth of data and analysis behind them that will bring the new reader up to speed. 

I'm releasing this proprietary blog research for two reasons:

  1. the share price has risen materially since the research was released, primarily due to the fact that so very little has been done to shed light on this company's true financial situation, and
  2. this gives us a prime opportunity to once again demonstrate the thoroughness and rigor of BoomBustBlog forensic analysis.

I'll keep this one short and simple. Most of PEI is U-N-D-E-R-W-A-T-E-R!!! That translates to the majority of its portfolio being of no value to equity shareholders or bondholders upon sale. In addition, at least 4 properties are kick negative cashflows, draining valuable and much needed cash from the rest of the company. See below and  Click to enlarge to print quality...PEI negative cash flow propertiesPEI negative cash flow properties

 

Paid subscribers are welcome to download the corporate level valuation of PEI as well as all of the summary stats of our findings on its various properties. The spreadsheet can be found here - File Icon Results of Properties Analysis, Valuation of PEI with Lenders' Names. In putting a realistic valuation on PEI, we independently valued a sampling of 27 of its properties. We found that many if not most of those properties were actually underwater. Most of those that weren't underwater were mortgaged under a separate credit facility.   

PEI Underwater  Overly Encumbered PropertiesPEI Underwater Overly Encumbered Properties

Of course, many may be asking, "Well, what about those properties that you didn't look into independently?". Well, the reason why we didn't look into the others independently (other than resource constraints - this stuff is a lot of work and consumes many man-months of analytical labor) is that the state of the properties were rather obvious without deep digging. Below is a list of those properties we did not value. Please keep in mind that we feel (and we're most likely quite correct) that the carrying value of assets on management's balance sheet are often heavily skewered to the optimistic side. Not to say that they are explicitly lying, per se, just that they may have been feeling particularly good the day they spit out the numbers. With that being said, notice the amount of red that you see below.

PEI Properties Not Valued By BoomBustBlogPEI Properties Not Valued By BoomBustBlog

Again, paid subscribers are welcome to download the corporate level valuation of PEI as well as all of the summary stats of our findings on its various properties. The spreadsheet can be found here - File Icon Results of Properties Analysis, Valuation of PEI with Lenders' Names.

I will continue this analysis with a conclusion in the Fire Sale scenario, and offer professional and institutional subscribers property by property analysis in full and complete detail (about 10 pages per property). In the meantime and in between time I'm available to discuss the finer aspects of the analysis in the subscriber retail investor's discussion forum and individual property valuation discussions and higher end questions will be answered in the professional/institutional discussion forums. I will also be available to chat there as well.

The complete REIT analysis referred to in the chart can be found here for subscribers (the property by property valuations are for Professional/Institutional subscribers only):

  • File Icon Fire Sale Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Foreclosure Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Sample Property Valuation
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Cashflows and Debt Preliminary Analysis
Published in BoomBustBlog
Read more...
Monday, 16 July 2012 11:20

Pennsylvania Real Estate Trust - CRE Short of the Year Foreclosure Scenario

This is part five of my forensic rant on what I believe to be the CRE Short of the Year and the dead REIT walking known as PEI. If you haven't yet read parts one or two or three or four, they are necessary in order for you to get the full picture. In the spirit of full disclosure, although BoomBustBlog is a subscription research site, I'm releasing this fee-only proprietary content for two reasons:

  1. the share price has risen materially since the research was released, primarily due to the fact that so very little has been done to shed light on this company's true financial situation, and
  2. this gives us a prime opportunity to once again demonstrate the thoroughness and rigor of BoomBustBlog forensic analysis.

If we look at PEI's response to the current weak macro economic environment, they are extremely defensive. Defensive - due to the reason that they realize where they stand. There has been no real capex over the last few quarters and (as I mentioned earlier conversations wiht clients) their strategy is to survive - moreso than to move ahead and fight with minimal odds. The mounting loan obligations and their struggle to fight each quarter is evident.

On top of this, a few of the properties have either been sold or have been used to raise mortgage finance, further making it tougher for the future years. In addition, the capacity to raise financing will dry up as all the properties stand 'effectively mortgaged' currently. Any imbalance in managing loan payouts can have a ripple effect. It will be interesting to see if the company manages to come out of it and if so, how it will do so. One thing for certain, with 3 senior managers getting a roughly $6 million slice of the cash flow pie while shareholders enjoy a mere $2 million slice in dividend increases, not only is there a lack of effective shareholder activism, but management appears to be ready, willing and able to drain the company's coffers via executive compensation faster than through cash return to shareholders. For a REIT whose mantra should be investor income, one would expect this to raise eyebrows at the very least. This REIT resembles the business/compensation model of Wall Street banks where employee compensation trumps ROI to investors as a corporate goal.

Subscribers, please refer to PEI Cashflows and Debt Preliminary Analysis and PEI Sample Property Valuation for the background to this document which is the 2nd of 3 scenario analyses that detail the likely potential bankruptcy of PEI. Those who are interested may subscribe to our research here.

Scenario II : Foreclosure of properties

In this scenario we assume that the Company would go the “Jingle Mail” route through allowing foreclosure on some of its properties, particularly those which have loans due for repayment in the next couple of years (2012-2014).

We looked at the portfolio of 27 properties that we valued and screened them to find out properties that are likely to have loans that would incentivize foreclosure. Below is the table showing such properties:

image001image001

We assume that in 2012 the company will possibly face foreclosure on (1) Beaver Valley Mall and (2) Cherry Hill Mall. The total amount of loans due on these properties in 2012 is USD 278 mn.

The following is likely to be the impact on revenues and operating expenses and net profit

Year – 2012

USD mn

Revenue loss

39.3

Operating expenses saved

24.2

Interest saved

15.9

Net Profit (negative impact)

0.8

Following is likely to be cash flow situation during 2012

Amount (USD million) – 2012

Cash at the beginning – Jan 2012

93.94

Cash flows from operations

91.8

Foreclosure of properties (Net WDV)

278.0

Proceeds from revolving credit facilities

155.0

Debt due for repayment

621.08

Shortfall

2.3

If the company forecloses both its properties having loans due for repayment in 2012, it may just be able to meet its loan obligations for 2012. However, this is going to have a cascading impact on the company in the form of the following:

  1. Interest rates on its existing debt will increase. As of now, in our assumptions for financial projections (below) we have assumed a reasonable increase of 120 bp, on average, for the company from around 6% currently.  This has materially increased its interest burden and its financial performance will deteriorate in kind.
  2. The Company has close to USD 443 mn and USD 140 mn in loans due in 2013 and 2014, respectively. A foreclosure scenario will make it almost impossible (considering its already stressed financial situation) for the company to refinance such loans or extend their maturity. The Company with the current deteriorating operating performance will be under more stress to refinance its obligations.
  3. The covenants under the revolving credit facility were recently revised under a modified agreement between the Company and the Lenders’ group led by Wells Fargo Group. Most of the revised covenants are considerably more stringent, making it highly unlikely the company will continue to have the credit facility under the agreement if the solvency ratios and interest coverage requirements are not met. These covenants are likely to be infringed if the interest rate on property loans is increased.

Projected Financials statements are furnished via the full foreclosure scenario document -File Icon Foreclosure Scenario Analysis
(Commercial Real Estate)
. Click here to subscribe.

I will continue this analysis in several other separate posts - there's a lot more material to cover, nearly all of it drastically negative!!! In the meantime and in between time I'm available to discuss the finer aspects of the analysis in the subscriber retail investor's discussion forum and individual property valuation discussions and higher end questions will be answered in the professional/institutional discussion forums. I will also be available to chat there as well.

The complete REIT analysis referred to in the chart can be found here for subscribers (the property by property valuations are for Professional/Institutional subscribers only):

  • File Icon Fire Sale Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Foreclosure Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Sample Property Valuation
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Cashflows and Debt Preliminary Analysis
Published in BoomBustBlog
Read more...
Friday, 13 July 2012 13:32

Will PEI Still Be The Short Of The Year If It Can Successfully Recapitalize? Hell Yeah!!!

 This is part four of my forensic rant on the the dead REIT walking known as PEI. If you haven't yet read parts one or two or three, they are necessary in order for you to get the full picture. As stated in my last missive on this topic, although BoomBustBlog is a subscription research site, I'm releasing this proprietary blog research for two reasons:

  1. the share price has risen materially since the research was released, primarily due to the fact that so very little has been done to shed light on this company's true financial situation, and
  2. this gives us a prime opportunity to once again demonstrate the thoroughness and rigor of BoomBustBlog forensic analysis.

Blog subscribers can access the full recapitalization document here - PEI Recapitalization Scenario. Those who are casual readers, please see below...

I left off demonstrating how PEI only had a mere handful of properties that were able to take on additional debt (assuming banks were to do a halfway decent job at underwriting), and the additional cash available from leveraging those properties would do very little to assist in digging PEI out of the hole. The incremental loans expected to be availed by the Company is detailed below:                                                                                                                        USD Million

Property Name

Debt

Cap Rate (%)

Market Value of Property

Incremental loan

New Debt-to-WDV ratio

Exton Square Mall

68.4

6.19%

98.5

30.1

82.4%

Moorestown Mall

55.2

7.67%

66.6

11.4

101.5%

Patrick Henry Mall

91.9

7.71%

98.6

6.7

93.5%

Total

48.3

The Company would be able to get 48.3 mn loan if it goes for refinancing based on recapitalization of its properties - and that's using sky high optimistic assumptions. The Incremental interest due to from the above financing based on the assumption that the lenders would raise  the interest on the loans roughly 50 basis-point (bp), roughly US 4.6 mn. The net cash-inflow would be USD 43.8 mn. This is grossly insufficient based on total requirement of around USD 295 mn. 

Our analysis was originally performed in the 4th quarter of last year, and since then PEI has raised $100 mln in a preferred offering. A few readers have asked if this alters our scenario, to which I reply - take the optimistic debt refinancing presented above, combined with the $100mln 8% preferred, and an addition $100 mln 8.5% preferred, and you are still observing PEI with a  roughly $50mln shortfall and a hell of a heftier debt service to boot. As I said, this is a dead REIT walking!!!

Alternate options

The other options before the Company are as under:

  1.  Raise finance against properties which have no specific mortgage against them. However, we looked at the covenants for loan facilities restricting company’s access to these properties for raising finance. Almost all of these properties have been mortgaged under revolving credit facilities.
  1. Raise finance against properties that we have not yet valued as part of the current analysis of valuation of PEI. We valued 27 properties. We looked at other properties to assess probability of raising finance against them.

Out of the remaining 19 properties, 10 properties were acquired between 2003 -2005 and the rest were acquired before 2000. The properties acquired between 2003-2005 are likely to have their valuation fallen in line with the valuation we have witnessed for the properties we valued. As such, probability of raising adequate finance on such properties is also quite minimal. The properties acquired before 2000 already have high debt-to-Net WDV ratio and therefore are likely to have less cushion for further debt.

Schedule of properties not valued

Properties highlighted in blue have been mortgaged under revolving credit facilities

 PEI unvalued propertiesPEI unvalued properties

Looking at the graphic above, it is plain to see that the company has leveraged its portfolio to the hilt, either through property depreciation or outright equity stripping. Those potential cash sources that were unlevered properties have been wrapped up as credit line collateral, while most of the other properties are dramatically underwater - I mean dramatically. What makes this even worse is that these numbers are from management's proclamations and history tells us (as well as BoomBustBlog analysis) that management's views are usually always much more rosy (read bullshitistically unrealistic) thine own hand borne calculations.

Forecasted Financial Statements

Below are PEI’s projected financial statements for 2012 based on the assumption that the shortfall (though unlikely) is met through additional borrowing and as a result the average interest increases to 6.7% annually.... Blog subscribers can access the rest of the full recapitalization document here - File Icon PEI Recapitalization Scenario. Click here to subscribe.

I will continue this analysis in several other separate posts - there's a lot more material to cover, nearly all of it drastically negative!!! In the meantime and in between time I'm available to discuss the finer aspects of the analysis in the subscriber retail investor's discussion forum and individual property valuation discussions and higher end questions will be answered in the professional/institutional discussion forums. I will also be available to chat there as well.

The complete REIT analysis referred to in the chart can be found here for subscribers (the property by property valuations are for Professional/Institutional subscribers only):

  • File Icon Fire Sale Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Foreclosure Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Sample Property Valuation
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Cashflows and Debt Preliminary Analysis
Published in BoomBustBlog
Read more...
Thursday, 12 July 2012 11:51

As ECB, Fed & the Bund Enjoy Negative Interest Rates, PEI Sports Negative Asset Values

In continuing my proclamation of truth, my rant in favor of that long lost art of investment valuation known as old fashioned fundamental analysis, I bring to the BoomBustBlog reading public my 3rd installment of PEI - Dead REIT Walking (or, the short candidate from hell). If you haven't yet read parts one and two, they are necessary in order for you to get the full picture. I'm releasing this proprietary blog research for two reasons:

  1. the share price has risen materially since the research was released, primarily due to the fact that so very little has been done to shed light on this company's true financial situation, and
  2. this gives us a prime opportunity to once again demonstrate the thoroughness and rigor of BoomBustBlog forensic analysis.

In Excellent Short Candidate Also Known As Dead REIT Standing! I left off posing the question of PEI breaking covenants. While it hasn't happened yet, methinks it's simply a matter of time. OF course, since the banks involved are engaged in their own incessant can kicking exercises, this may very well be a moot point - at least for now, but more on that later when I not only list the banks that have lent to PEI but show how far underwater their loans are and exactly how, why and where those properties have tanked.

PEI OBservations page 5PEI OBservations page 5

There are only three options of PEI:

Scenario I : Refinancing through debt based on recapitalization of properties

Scenario II: Foreclosure of select properties

Scenario III: Firesale of select properties

Of course, there's always the possibility of the company mixing and matching these three scenarios. 

Scenario I : Refinancing through debt based on recapitalization of properties

Refinancing requirement for 2012...

PEI has a total shortfall of around USD 295 million which it needs to finance. We have projected its operating results and have looked at available resources (cash balance, unused credit lines, etc). The following table shows the summary of the Company’s finances for 2012.

Amount (USD million) – 2012

Cash at the beginning – Jan 2012

93.94

Cash flows from operations

77.34

Unused credit lines

155.00

Debt due for repayment

621.08

Shortfall

294.80

Under the current scenario, we have assumed that the Company would try to avail itself of an increased loan on its properties, particularly on those which have (relatively) reasonable cap rates and debt-to-market value (LTV) ratios. Consequently, we looked at the company’s portfolio of 27 properties, each of which were valued independently by our team.

The table below shows that while there are quite a few properties with Debt-to-Net WDV (written down value) ratio of less than 100%, those with Debt-to-Market Value ratio are only three in number (where market values is defined as teh value derived by our proprietary analysis based upon market-based inputs and actual cashflows). Put another way, out of 27 properties analyzed, only three of them actually had any value to shareholders from a sale perspective. That's right, 88% of the properties of examined by us were underwater!!! Of the three that weren't underwater, all had reasonably good cap rates (more than 6% in all cases) and would therefore, in our opinion, enable the company to avail itself of incremental loans from its existing lenders on the properties. We (over)optimistically assume that the Company would be able to raise up to 100% of market value on these loans. From a realistic perspective, this is probably unlikely - highly unlikely actually. Remember, we are being optimistic here.

Portfolio of 27 properties valued – Table showing incremental finance that can be availed.thumb PEI Assets Eligible for Cash Out Refinancingthumb PEI Assets Eligible for Cash Out Refinancing

 

Despite all of this, the stock is actually close to its highs! 

I will continue this analysis in several other separate posts - there's a lot more material to cover, nearly all of it drastically negative!!! In the meantime and in between time I'm available to discuss the finer aspects of the analysis in the subscriber retail investor's discussion forum and individual property valuation discussions and higher end questions will be answered in the professional/institutional discussion forums. I will also be available to chat there as well.

The complete REIT analysis referred to in the chart can be found here for subscribers (the property by property valuations are for Professional/Institutional subscribers only):

  • File Icon Fire Sale Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Foreclosure Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Sample Property Valuation
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Cashflows and Debt Preliminary Analysis

Our valuation is based upon the independent analysis of the key properties of the company, which together accounted 78% of the total portfolio in value terms. The actual valuation models are available (on an individual basis) upon request by institutional and pro subscribers.

Published in BoomBustBlog
Read more...
Tuesday, 10 July 2012 19:58

Excellent Short Candidate Also Known As Dead REIT Standing!

In continuing with yesterday's empirical rant Lazy Analysis Allows For Outright Silly Pricing Of Near Insolvent REITS: A Forensic Analysis Of A Prime Example (a must read for anyone with exposure to - or interest in - this company, whether short or long), I continue with the piece meal release of Q4's BoomBustBlog primary CRE short candidate...

 PEI's share price has surged despite an absolute dearth of positive prospects for the company....PEI stock chartPEI stock chart

As a matter of fact, the company has clocked continuous and increasing losses into an ever darkening fundamental and macro outlook. PEI has accomplished a net increase in occupancy due to its strip malls, unfortunately that net occupancy increase comes with a dramatic decrease in revenues - i.e. base rents.

PEI OBservations page 3PEI OBservations page 3

From a balance sheet solvency perspective, one of PEI's primary problems is the average cost of its portfolio and points of acquisition. Net-net, the overpaid for many properties during the peak of the bubble. Now that prices are normalizing (facing reality), PEI faces a dramatic portion of its portfolio underwater. Let's take a look at the mall CRE picture during the bubble...

 

As you can see, Q4 2005 marks the absolute tippy top of the bubble in terms of rents (which drive prices). Now, let's take a look at when PEI acquired the bulk of its portfolio...

PEI OBservations page 4PEI OBservations page 4

My subscribers and team actually know precisely what properties are underwater and what properties aren't since we actually valued roughly 78% of the properties by hand using discrete, individual and independently derived inputs. I will be releasing both the summary of that exercise as well as some individual property analysis throughout this week.

Of course, if the company acquired the bulk of its portfolio at the peak of the CRE bubble, and rents have basically trended nearly straight down from that point, one need not wonder which direction cashflows are headed, no? As European banks choke on sovereign debt issues and they face a historically high CRE debt rollover period (now that should be fun), and American banks choking from 360 degree fraud (LIeBORgate, Fraudclosuregate and mortgage putbacks) and litigation contingent liabilities on top of having balance sheets full of the stuff that funded companies's CRE acquisitions such as PEI's in the first place, I really don't see who is going to give PEI the cash to dig itself out of the hole. Of course you can always rely on the foolish equity investors, after all, just look at the share price. It's not as if some smart ass blogger or independent investor is going to snatch the covers off to show these guys naked and completely under-endowed, is it????

Despite all of this, the stock is actually close to its highs!

I'm available to discuss the finer aspects of the analysis in the subscriber retail investor's discussion forum and individual property valuation discussions and higher end questions will be answered in the professional/institutional discussion forums. I will also be available to chat there as well.

The complete REIT analysis referred to in the chart can be found here for subscribers (the property by property valuations are for Professional/Institutional subscribers only):

  • File Icon Fire Sale Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Foreclosure Scenario Analysis
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Sample Property Valuation
    (Commercial Real Estate)
  • File Icon Cashflows and Debt Preliminary Analysis

Our valuation is based upon the independent analysis of the key properties of the company, which together accounted 78% of the total portfolio in value terms. The actual valuation models are available (on an individual basis) upon request by institutional and pro subscribers.

The next installment of the PEI saga (24 hours from now on BoomBustBlog) will go into intricate detail as to the reasons this REIT has close to no way out besides bankruptcy or a foreclosure/fire sale routes. As a precursor to that, we will go over covenant issues, though.

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