Thursday, May 24, 2012

Blackstone Planting Its Flag Even More Firmly in CRE


In the current lackluster environment for huge private-equity deals and leveraged M&A buyouts that marked the previous boom cycle, Blackstone Group LP has increasingly shifted its focus tocommercial real estate investments. The firm, credited with timing the market perfectly in the previous cycle with its acquisition and subsequent sell-off of the former Equity Office Properties portfolio, is hoping to again capture lightning in a bottle as investor demand heightens for core property assets in leading U.S. and European markets.

Despite the improving economic landscape, Blackstone's net income for its four main business segments fell 24% in the first quarter as the growth in the values of its asset slowed, including a 23% drop in Blackstone's real estate business from first-quarter 2011.

There appears to be a strong foundation behind the volatile quarterly numbers, however. Blackstone reported $190 billion in assets under management as of the end of the first quarter -- up almost 27% from a year earlier -- including $48.3 billion in real estate, which was up 38% from a year ago.

CRE generated the firm's highest revenue volume during the quarter at $427.2 million. Steadily improving fundamentals drove a 4% increase, or $1 billion, in the value of Blackstone’s carried portfolio, with the majority of value appreciation in the firm’s office and retail properties.

Blackstone’s credit business posted $50.8 billion under management, up 61% from last year, followed by smaller growth in private equity and hedge funds.

Tony James, president and chief operating officer, and Stephen A. Schwarzman, CEO and co-founder of the private-equity and alternative investment titan, attributed the decline in profits to continuing global uncertainty. But in calls with reporters and investors, they both expect business conditions will improve in the second half of 2012 and into 2013, and also noted that Blackstone has accumulated nearly $38 billion in dry powder for acquisitions.

"[CRE] deal flow is robust as the investing environment has remained favorable given the amount of distressed assets that need to deleverage around the globe," said Schwarzman, the legendary private equity financier and investment banker. "With little new supply and slowly increasing demand for commercial space, fundamentals continue to improve from the lows of the cycle. This has resulted in occupancy improvement and rent growth in most of our core markets."

"For key office assets in the United States, occupancy is up 300 basis points versus the prior year. In Northern California, our strongest office market, site of the tech boom in the United States, office rents are up more than 15% from the prior year. This gives you some sense of what happens when the law of supply and demand reasserts itself."

To take advantage of the upswing, Blackstone's James noted that the company could divert more of its capital raising efforts into core commercial properties, as well as funds in Asia and other emerging markets. The firm already tops all private-equity fundraisers in CRE, with its Blackstone Real Estate Partners VII accumulating $6.6 billion in the first quarter.

"Investors are hungry for yield, they’re hungry for inflation hedge, and we have, of course, tremendous market knowledge and ownership of assets throughout all the major regions," James said, noting Blackstone's successful closing of its global flagship fund in February.

In an asset class where fundraising has proven extremely difficult of late, Blackstone has raised over $10 billion of total capital, with a couple of billion more in commitments over the course of the year, "which will make it the largest real estate opportunity fund ever raised and multiples in terms of size of our nearest competitors, where that multiple of size gives us the ability for competitive purposes to do larger and more complex deals," Schwarzman said.

Blackstone is seeing similar trends in hospitality as in office and retail, with virtually no new supply and modest increases in demand leading to U.S. RevPAR gains.

"Positive absorption and declining vacancy is also evident in our industrial, retail, and senior living assets," Schwarzman said.

He also noted that Blackstone acquired a large portfolio of grocery-anchored shopping centers last year from Brixmor, formerly Centro Properties, in the largest deal in the world of any leverage type since the collapse of Lehman Bros. nearly five years ago, where occupancy is at its highest level since 2009 due to accelerating leasing activity.

Schwarzman said although improving, real estate debt markets are still constrained and competition for large complex transactions remains limited -- which is a good thing for Blackstone, one of the world’s largest providers of debt and equity capital. The firm deployed or committed $2.3 billion in capital in the first quarter, with 40% of this in Europe.

In addition to the retail power center portfolio acquired in an off-market transaction from highly leveraged Brixmor, Blackstone has acquired high-quality distressed industrial portfolios in the U.S. and the U.K., and most recently agreed to buy 65 U.S. warehouse properties from Australia-based Dexus Property Group, for $770 million. Blackstone also recapitalized Parc 55, a 1,000 room hotel in San Francisco, one of the nation’s strongest hotel markets.

"This is the distressed wave that people have been talking about. All are being purchased at a significant discount to replacement cost."

In terms of dispositions, Blackstone has sold or has under contract to sell nearly $800 million in assets so far in 2012, includes the sale of Pearlridge, a mall in Hawaii which closed in the second quarter. Schwarzman noted Blackstone's sale of $1 billion in assets in the last 12 months, completed largely at significant premiums to carrying value.

"Although we were delayed in the second half of last year with some of our plans for realizations due to market turbulence, the market appears to be opening up more, particularly for properties that are stabilized. As such, we expect more asset sales in the second half of this year and into next year."

Schwarzman acknowledged that the limited partner investors that drove such deals as the EOP acquisition "have been basically traumatized by their experience in opportunity real estate," with many casualties in the private-equity space during the downturn due to loan maturities that couldn’t be refinanced.

"A large number of our competitors have gone out of business and they’ve gone out of business because they were buying leveraged real estate at very high prices," he said.

Company proposals to Blackstone for potential equity infusions and refinancing offer "almost the same deal with different names, where some piece of real estate was bought by somebody, it’s valuation is in some cases down 20%, it needs sometimes more, it needs way more equity to refinance it to the extent that they can live in a world of changed (lending) ratios."

"Who’s going to put that money up? There are very few people around who will actually do that and we are the dominant group left in the world that will do that, so people come to us all the time."

Capital providers and their consultants who funded those busted deals remain extremely cautious about exposing more money to this sector, passing on opportunistic deals in favor of reliable core real estate that don’t required much additional reinvestment or debt.

"What they’re worried about isn’t maximizing return; they want some exposure to the asset class. They just don’t want to live through these losses again."

"So I think this asset class is going to stay under invested in, even though the opportunities are actually terrific. There will be a few firms that raise funds, as they have, but those will be relatively small funds compared to what most of them have done previously."

Blackstone does not expect realized income from investments to peak until late this year and into 2013, mostly because its assets, especially real estate are appreciating rapidly, with robust underlying portfolio performance.

"Why give that away? We’ve got a wonderful compounding going on. We’ve got rents going up, we’ve got occupancies going up, we’ve got debt going down, and they’re leveraged. And I don’t understand, frankly, this focus on premature liquidations. We’re in the business of managing money."

James attributed that to a combination of factors, including shrinking stock, no new supply, the improving economy and the release of pent-up leasing demand from 2008-10.

"All of that is coming through now and I think it’s going to be good. I hope it will be even better, that the economy will at some point get a bit more robust growth. We want to wait for that to happen, if it’s going to."

In explaining the delayed realizations in real estate disposition, "we tend to actually realize significantly more than that mark," Schwarzman said. "And given the volatility of the market, it’s very hard to get this right."

As lending ratios improve from 60%-65% to 75%-80% of loan to value, the rising value of properties that Blackstone holds "will go almost dollar for dollar to us as the holder of the real estate," Schwarzman said. At disposition, the return on equity for the new owner will be about the same, but will push up the sale price beyond the simple fundamentals of increasing rents and increasing occupancies.

"Giving that up to satisfy some type of target for realizations is something we just wouldn’t do," he said.