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Sale Leaseback and Build to Suit News

Thursday, May 13th, 2010

Thursday, May 13, 2010

Bellevue Office Tower Leased to Microsoft Trades for $310 Million

CoStar Group - May 12, 2010

What do you do in this market if you’re raising money like crazy to invest in commercial real estate — as much as $100 million a month? If you’re Cole Credit Property Trust III Inc., a non-traded REIT in Phoenix, AZ, you spend like crazy, too.

The registered REIT sponsored by Cole Real Estate Investments is in the midst of a two-year public stock offering that has been ongoing since October 2008. As of May 1, Cole Credit III had raised $1.5 billion. So far, it has invested primarily in retail-related buildings net leased to investment-grade and other creditworthy tenants, typically necessity retailers such as drug stores, family restaurants and home improvement stores.

But now the REIT has an even bigger fish on the line. On April 30, one of its subsidiaries agreed to spend $310 million to purchase the 583,000-square-foot City Center at 555 110th St. in Bellevue, WA - a hefty $530 per square foot.

The property is 99.6% occupied, of which approximately 96.3% is subject to a net lease with Microsoft Corp. that expires in June 2024. Microsoft is currently paying an annual base rent of $18.8 million - an amount that increases annually by approximately 2.4% of the then-current annual base rent.

An affiliate of Beacon Capital in Boston, MA, currently owns the building and up until last month had reportedly been in discussions to the sell the building to a German investment fund for about $286 million.

Cole Credit III is expected to close on the deal by June 18, 2010.

This is not the typical deal for the Cole Credit III. As of May 5, it owned 205 properties in 37 states, comprising approximately 5.3 million gross rentable square feet of commercial space and approximately 6.3 million square feet of land subject to ground leases. The typical deal size has been in the $1 million to $6 million range. And that still makes up the bulk of its activity

Besides, the City Center, it is also under contract to make the following purchases this month.
LA Fitness - League City, TX, 45,000 SF, for $7,335,000.

Walgreens - Rocky Mount, NC, 14,820 SF, for $5,863,000.

O’Reilly Automotive - Central, LA, 6,800 SF, for $927,000.

Evans Exchange - Evans, GA, 194,960 SF, for $19,500,000.

Lowe’s - South Lebanon, OH, ground lease, for $4,808,000.

Kohl’s - South Lebanon, OH, ground lease, for $3,125,000.

White Castle - South Lebanon, OH, ground lease, for $467,000.

Northern Tool - Ocala, FL, 26,054 SF, for $3,518,000.

Walgreens - Lancaster (Palmdale), CA, 13,650 SF, for $5,537,000.

Walgreens - Beloit, WI, 14,820 SF, for $4,310,000.

sale leaseback, sale and leaseback, sale-leaseback, leaseback

Sale Leaseback Financing

Tuesday, April 27th, 2010

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For many years the promoters of using corporate property to generate sale-leaseback financing have advised, “Turn concrete into cash”. In light of the stock market gyrations, recession and mounting corporate losses, that counsel is gaining national vogue with both lessors and investors.

Developments in the corridors of capital, on Wall Street and at the Federal Reserve have seemingly intersected to restrict access to traditional cash resources by mainstream companies. Subsequently, firms finding it increasingly difficult to attract cash for bricks-and-mortar growth, geographical expansion or competitive marketing are rethinking the concept of sale-leaseback transactions and the benefits they afford.

No less than the authoritative National Real Estate Investor has reported, “The sale-leaseback industry has restructured the ownership of trillions of dollars worth of the nation’s corporate real estate assets.” The CPA Journal commented: “National franchise and chain businesses have led the way in using sale/leaseback to benefit business owners, but the system can work for any business — small or large.”

Fact is, funds from sale-leaseback financing have fueled leveraged buyouts, mergers and acquisitions; underwritten the cost of maintenance and technology to remain competitive, and erased obligations from countless corporate balance sheets nationwide.

The importance of the sale-leaseback as a capital resource is reflected in a February 2000 comment to the Dow Jones Newswire by the SVP-CFO of a national chain of theaters (458 facilities, 2,848 screens, 36 states) in February 2000: “The ability to turn high-performing assets into cash when so much investment capital is flowing into other industries offers us fresh

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Page 2 – Sale-Leaseback Financing

resources to maintain our steady pattern of growth and to improve existing properties”

His firm completed the sale and leaseback of $23.5 million in three properties – critical cash that helped sustain the firm as the multiscreen cinema industry collapsed this past year.

There is no question that industries with single-tenant facilities are ideal for triple-net (NNN) deals. Turning non-performing as well as high-performing assets into available capital for additional growth makes sense in an unstable stock market.

A more traditional example is Colorado-based Wild Oats Markets, Inc., a natural foods supermarket chain in North America, which turned to sale-leaseback financing as an effective technique for “capital recapture” to fuel its growth. Specialty retailers, such as Wild Oats, realize its primary profit potential is in its core business operations, not in the hassles of property ownership.

The Money Chase

Let’s first examine some of the reasons many traditional corporations, “old economy,” if you prefer, are finding it increasingly more expensive to borrow money in 2000:

· Until last spring technology issues were the darlings of investment bankers and hungry investors, venture capital firms and “angels” couldn’t wait to crown the next dot-com entrepreneur with a garland of greenbacks. Telecom, wireless, biotech, and dot-coms operations – ongoing and aspiring — sucked billions of dollars into what was the longest sustained bull market in Wall Street

· Until the presidential election was decided, the Federal Reserve Board had raised the key short-term interest rates six or seven times since June 1999, setting off a chain reaction as banks ratcheted upward their own interest charges to reflect their new costs. Only the slow consumer spending and economic growth, as well as some heart-stopping corrections in the market, seems to have changed Mr. Greenspan’s thinking.

· Although rates are dropping, financing spreads continue to widen.

Basic Tenets of Sale-Leaseback and NNN

Sale-leaseback financing most commonly involves a company selling one or more single-tenant properties to an investor (individual, company, pension fund or group), usually for fair market value. The investor/landlord provides the seller with a triple-net lease for a negotiated period of 10 to 25 years. The seller/tenant usually pays the investor a negotiated annual rent

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Page 3 – Sale-Leaseback Financing

equal to 8% to 15% of the contracted sale price. Most often, the lease rate is credit-driven and

constant.

Net (NNN) refers to the payment of property taxes, maintenance and insurance. In a NNN lease, the single tenant agrees to pay all the expenses associated with the property use and occupancy, including the cost of insurance, real estate taxes, improvements, on-site property management and maintenance, in exchange for control of the property and a favorable long-term lease. There are derivatives of the NNN called “bond-lease,” “absolute NNN” and “double-net lease.” These names invariably change across the United States and with different investors.

NNN investments are available for all types of existing or build-to-suit real estate, including service centers, fast food establishments, industrial and health care facilities, office and educational buildings, distribution warehouses and retail stores.

Corporation/Tenant Viewpoint:

Most companies require real estate to conduct their businesses, however few firms profit from owning those properties. The cash and credit they have tied-up in facilities and land represent assets that could be employed much more productively in the corporation’s core business operations. Directors and officers are constantly faced with the question of how the company will pay for or finance the cost of the properties without tying up operating dollars, without severely impacting its credit facility and loading up their balance sheet with debt.

The question is fraught with a variety of uncertain variables, including the present and future costs of money, projected tax benefits, maintenance and rental costs, and the accounting treatment. Then there is the guessing game on the expected future value of the real estate in 10, 20 or 30 years.

A NNN leasehold obligation that qualifies as an operating lease under the criteria set by the Financial Accounting Standards Board, however, will not appear on the tenant’s balance sheet as either debt or long-term obligation. The corporation pays off the mortgage obligations and/or just receives the unlocked cash from the sale of its depreciated real estate.

The improved debt-to-equity ratio and current ratios can make a corporation//tenant much more attractive to banks and other traditional lenders, as well as to shareholders, prospective investors and potential acquisition partners. Short-term borrowing can be avoided and a need for credit lines possibly eliminated.

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Page 4 – Sale-Leaseback Financing

In addition to expense reduction and the conversion of the corporation/tenant’s illiquid real estate assets to capital, a sale-leaseback with a properly structured operating lease can provide the corporation/tenant company with the following business advantages:

  • 100% financing based on the assessed value of the property, in contrast to the 50% to 85% usually provided by mortgage financing;
  • Full operating control of the real estate under the tenant’s lease provisions;
  • Operating leases that do not appear on the corporate balance sheet as debt or as a long-term lease obligation;
  • Tax deductible lease payments, that is a lower after-tax cost;
  • Effective land depreciation; (NOTE: Since the value of the land acquired is factored into the rent, the tenant can effectively depreciate the land by deducting the rent under the lease attributable to the land.)
  • Cash realized from the sale-leaseback transactions that can be used to enhance liquidity, expand operations, acquire other businesses, reduce debt, invest in 1031 exchanges, etc.

In the area of acquisitions and leveraged buy-outs (LBOs), a sale-leaseback can be utilized

as part of the overall transaction. A corporation planning to acquire another firm – or even their own companies through an LBO – can use the assets of the acquired company to reduce total acquisition cost. The need for higher-cost debt and lengthening the maturities of the overall financing is reduced.

Taking a long view, many executives express concern about their options when the lease expires. Three choices emerge: a) the tenant can renew the lease at a new negotiated rate, or b) if the tenant had a renewal clause in its initial lease, it could exercise its option and re-lease the property from the landlord at the rate specified in the clause. And c) the tenant can also move to a new location.

Sale Leaseback, Sale-leaseback, Sale and Leaseback, Leaseback, Off balance Sheet

Who are some of the tenants with whom Horn Capital Realty, Inc. has facilitated a triple net lease transaction?

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

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Horn Capital Realty, Inc. has closed over a half billion in sale-leasback financing, triple net lease sales, debt and equity placments with such national tenants as Blockbuster Entertainment, Dairy Mart, Eckerd Drug, Haverty Furniture, Home Depot, KFC, Kmart, Monro Muffler, NorAm Energy, NYNEX, Payless Shoe Source, Taco Bell, , Tire Wholesale Warehouse, United Auto Group, Wal-Mart, Walgreen Drug Stores, and Whole Foods (Wild Oats Markets) to name just a few.

Sale-Leaseback, Sale and Leaseback, Sale Leaseback, Leaseback