Category: AIMSAMPIReit
MIREIT – SGX
Singapore, 30 November 2009 – Further to its announcement dated 6 November 2009 in relation to the proposed Equity Fund Raising and Acquisition by MacarthurCook Industrial REIT (“MIREIT”), MacarthurCook Investment Managers (Asia) Limited, as manager of MI-REIT (the “Manager”) is pleased to announce that it has today lodged with the Monetary Authority of Singapore (the “Authority”) the Offer Information Statement in relation to the fully underwritten renounceable Rights Issue of 975,627,332 Rights Units following the approval by Unitholders, inter alia, the Rights Issue at the EGM held on 23 November 2009.
The Offer Information Statement is available on the website of the Authority at www.mas.gov.sg on 30 November 2009 and will in due course be despatched to Eligible Unitholders.
The timetable for the Rights Issue is set out below:
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EVENT |
DATE AND TIME |
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Rights Issue Books Closure Date |
30 November 2009 at 5.00 p.m. |
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Despatch of the Offer Information Statement together with the application forms) to Eligible Unitholders |
By 3 December 2009 |
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Commencement of trading of Rights Entitlements |
3 December 2009 from 9.00 a.m |
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Close of trading of Rights Entitlements |
11 December 2009 at 5.00 p.m |
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Last date and time for acceptance of and payment for Rights Units |
17 December 2009 at 5.00 p.m (9.30 p.m. for Electronic Applications through ATMs of Participating Banks) |
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Last date and time for application and payment for Excess Rights Units |
17 December 2009 at 5.00 p.m. (9.30 p.m. for Electronic Applications through ATMs of Participating Banks) |
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Last date and time for acceptance of and payment by the renounce |
17 December 2009 at 5.00 p.m. |
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Completion of the Acquisition and the expected date for issue of the Rights Units |
24 December 2009 |
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Commencement of trading of Rights Units on the SGX-ST |
28 December 2009 from 9.00 a.m. |
MI-REIT – BT
MI-Reit moves ahead with its plans
Its strategy will involve leaning on cornerstone investors
WITH the dust finally settling after the tumultuous past few weeks, the folks behind MacarthurCook Industrial Reit (MI-Reit) are understandably keen to leave the past behind them.
But, perhaps of greater interest to its unitholders are the plans that its managers have for the trust, which they shared with The Business Times yesterday.
‘I think it’s important that we draw a line across what has happened and leave the past behind us,’ said Nicholas McGrath, CEO of MI-Reit’s manager, referring to the very public spat that it had with rival and substantial shareholder, Cambridge Industrial Reit (CIT).
‘What we need to do now is look ahead and focus on our future plans. I believe we have a very strong platform for growth, thanks to our sponsors, as well as great intellectual capital and Reit management expertise from them, and now, a strong balance sheet,’ he said.
Mr McGrath’s first job would be to pay off the debt accumulated as a result of decisions undertaken by the previous management – namely, the $226 million in loans and the $90 million obligation to buy a property, for which MI-Reit had to recently mount a highly controversial refinancing plan.
This refinancing plan was heavily criticised by CIT, which had bought a near 10 per cent stake in MI-Reit after the latter announced plans to raise $217 million from a placement to cornerstone investors and $215 million from a rights issue. CIT said that the recapitalisation exercise destroyed value for unitholders as the discount to net asset value was too steep – and proposed itself as manager of MI-Reit. What followed was a weeks-long slugging match that saw both sides take out advertisements in the newspapers to defend their positions.
Eventually, CIT’s bid to take control of MI-Reit was blocked by the Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), and CIT’s chief, Chris Calvert, was forced to backtrack on what he had said. But disgruntled MI-Reit unitholders, already stirred up by the debate that had gone on before, continued to take MI-Reit’s managers to task at Monday’s extraordinary general meeting to vote on the refinancing plan. While the plan was voted through at the meeting, Mr McGrath recognises that the issue is not entirely resolved – and will need to be dealt with, along with his other plans for the Reit.
‘There will have to be lots of communication with our investors, both retail and institutional, over the next 12 months. We will maintain a very transparent and open environment,’ he said.
Desmond Ong, managing partner of Eversheds Singapore and adviser to the MI-Reit board, noted: ‘The board is determined to repay the faith shown in them by the majority of the unitholders after the events of last week.’
Mr McGrath believed that the Reit will have a better story to tell. Once its existing debt is cleared off its books, by the end of the year, MI-Reit will be left with a stronger capital position – with 29 per cent leverage.
Greg Bundy, deputy chairman of AIMS, added: ‘That will also coincide with a re-rating of property assets, when the economy recovers. Nicholas has been conservative in rating MI-Reit’s assets – booking a 16 per cent decrease in property values when others like CIT have gone with 10 per cent and Mapletree Logistics with 5 per cent. So, MI-Reit should benefit nicely when property assets appreciate.’
Mr McGrath said that he intends to pursue a ‘prudent capital management plan’ which includes keeping the trust’s leverage at between 29 and 35 per cent, and ensuring that it only invests in assets that will boost its yield.
‘I will guard the distribution (to investors) with my life,’ he told BT yesterday.
Part of that valiant strategy will involve leaning heavily on the Reit’s cornerstone investors, AMP Capital Holdings and present sponsor AIMS Financial Group. MI-Reit intends to capitalise on their connections to boost its yields.
Mr McGrath shared that AMP has a warehouse facility which MI-Reit could soon add to its portfolio. While AIMS, an Australian company focusing on funds management, investment banking and real estate investment, has a very strong relationship with Singapore’s United Engineers Limited – whose biggest asset is its UE Tech Park warehouse – which MI-Reit could benefit from.
‘We have a very good pipeline of assets in Singapore; we could easily do $200 million worth of transactions in the next year,’ Mr McGrath said.
He also shared that AIMS would be able to take MI-Reit beyond Singapore – to Vietnam and China.
AIMS executive chairman George Wang, who now personally owns 40 million shares in MI-Reit, told BT: ‘MI-Reit cannot just buy assets in Singapore. It has to look at growth potential beyond that. And I believe China is the future, with its booming economic growth and massive logistics and manufacturing potential.’
Mr Wang said that he looked to the example of market leaders such as CapitaLand, which have recognised China’s potential.
‘During my next two years as chairman of MI-Reit, I intend to bring my resources and contacts to the table, and help the trust’s management to understand the Chinese market. I will introduce my connections to them and help them to understand the Chinese system, the Chinese people and the sort of risks and investments they can undertake.’
Mr Wang, who was born in Hainan, works very closely with China’s Tianjin government – a region which sees 15 per cent annual growth. ‘Tianjin is the next Shanghai. Many large companies have set up there – Samsung, Motorola – and it has a lot of potential for growth,’ he said, adding that he intends to position MI-Reit to tap on that growth.
He said that he intends to hire more locals – more Singaporeans for MI-Reit’s presence in Singapore, and mainland Chinese for its future expansion into China – including for senior positions. ‘I believe that if you want to do business in Asia, you need to have people who understand Asia.’
‘When I step down as chairman in two years’ time, there will be a difference in MI-Reit. I intend to work very hard for shareholders,’ Mr Wang said.
MI-REIT – BT
MI-Reit gets its way after sound and fury
Resolutions passed despite noise from unhappy minority
MacArthurCook Industrial Reit (MI-Reit) hired pistol-toting security guards to keep the peace at an acrimonious meeting of unitholders yesterday – but other than the customary dash for the buffet line, no violence broke out.
The meeting approved a controversial plan to recapitalise the troubled real estate investment trust but failed to satisfy querulous minority shareholders.
MI-Reit needs $315 million by the end of the year to stave off liquidation, and earlier this month unveiled a combined debt-and-equity-raising plan involving the placement of new shares to new investors AMP Capital Holdings, present sponsor AIMS Financial Group and other cornerstone investors, followed by a rights issue and a new term loan.
The plan would raise $430 million, part of which would be used to buy four properties from AMP, which would come in as a co-sponsor. But it has attracted heavy criticism from unitholders because of the heavily preferential prices given to the new investors, which would dilute existing unitholders.
The five resolutions were passed by margins of 4 to 30 per cent but there were suggestions that MI-Reit should have introduced just one resolution since all five were interdependent.
MI-Reit’s manager’s chief executive Nicholas McGrath told unitholders they came as a complete package and that a vote against any one of them was a vote against all the resolutions.
But small unitholder Ang Kong Meng said splitting up the resolutions allowed interested parties – such as AIMS and some of the cornerstone investors – to vote in support of resolutions which did not directly concern them, but which still had to be approved so that their investments could go ahead.
The sharpest opposition was to the proposal to buy four properties from AMP at a slight discount to market value. One shareholder said that was just moving money from one pocket to another, since AMP would recoup whatever equity it had pumped in.
Many were furious that they were being asked to approve what amounted to a fait accompli. ‘Everything is timed so properly that we have no choice,’ said one.
Unitholders said selling some of the Reit’s properties to raise money to pay down $226 million in debt and meet a $90 million obligation to buy an industrial building was far preferable, given the Reit’s net asset value of 94 cents a unit – far above the share placement price of 28 cents a unit. MI-Reit last traded at 35 cents.
‘We’ve considered all the options,’ Mr McGrath said. He said it was not feasible to sell assets at a decent price and that other options, including an issue of convertibles and private equity funding, were all unworkable.
Cambridge Industrial Reit (CIT), which owns just under 10 per cent of MI-Reit, led a vocal week-long campaign to get unitholders to reject the plan and install CIT’s manager to manage MI-Reit instead. But it remained largely on the sidelines yesterday.
Chris Calvert, who runs CIT’s manager, was in attendance but said little beyond a short prepared comment. He said CIT had bought into MI-Reit ‘to pursue a strategy which included becoming manager of MI-Reit’. But the plan was blocked last Friday by the Monetary Authority of Singapore because of possible conflicts of interest if a single manager took charge of two industrial Reits.
MI-REIT – TODAY
Recapitalisation plan approved
Approval came after gruelling face-off between unitholders and company managers
After a gruelling three-and-a-half-hour long meeting, unitholders of MacarthurCook Industrial (MI) Reit eventually approved the controversial plan to raise $217.1 million needed to recapitalise the Reit yesterday.
However, this came amid a heated exchange that took place between disgruntled unitholders and managers of MI Reit at an extraordinary general meeting (EGM) at Marina Mandarin Hotel. The tense exchanges also reached a point when unitholders even demanded a vote recount.
MI Reit unitholders queued up 30 minutes in advance to get into the EGM, and top on their minds were five resolutions which would allow the trust to raise $217.1 million to refinance its existing debt and buy properties in Singapore.
Failing which, the Reit was at risk of being liquidated when its debt obligations mature at the end of the year.
Controversy erupted last week, when Cambridge Industrial Trust (CIT) – which controls nearly 10 per cent of MI Reit – said it would block the recapitalisation plan.
Some unitholders were also not happy with MI Reit’s plan to raise capital through the issuance of new units to certain institutional investors which, at 28 cents a piece, represent a hefty 70.2-per-cent discount to the Reit’s net asset value of 94 cents.
The investors for the recapitalisation plan are AMP Capital Holdings, present sponsor AIMS Financial Group and other “cornerstone” investors.
It was a full house at the EGM with more than 250 investors present.
MI Reit’s chief executive Nick McGrath started the session with a 40 minute-long presentation to convince unitholders that the management’s plans are in their best interest and the only way to save the Reit.
Still, more than six unitholders stood up and mainly lambasted the board for its failure to secure a less dilutive deal for unitholders.
Investors were also not happy with MI Reit’s agreement to purchase properties from AMP, which are priced at “full market valuation”. One unitholder described this as a case of “left pocket putting in money and right pocket taking out more money from us”.
Others wanted to know why the management could not arrange for a more orderly sale of its assets since June to fund its debts, when the property market was already improving and the Reit had also secured a six-month extension for its debts then.
In defence, Mr McGrath told the media later that the Reit did continue to evaluate on the sale of its assets after June but any proceeds will be used to repay its debts of $226 million and there was still the question of its $90 million property at International Business Park that needed funding.
“An equity recapitalisation is critical to the survival of this trust,” he said.
Mr McGrath also noted that property purchases from AMP were part of a “complete suite of transactions”.
CIT chief executive Chris Calvert, who had launched an offensive against MI Reit’s recapitalisation plans since last Monday, was also present at the EGM.
In the end, unitholders voted narrowly in favour for the Reit and out of the five resolutions, two were won by a hair’s breadth.
The two resolutions, which garnered only 52.3 per cent and 52.6 per cent of total unitholder votes cast, were for the investment by AIMS and to buy properties from AMP for $68.6 million.