Showing posts with label Seaport Entertainment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Seaport Entertainment. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 7, 2024

Howard Hughes: PSH Considering a Take-Private Offer

Just a brief news post, I'll use the comment section to update my thoughts as this situation develops.  Last night, 8/6, Pershing Square (37.5% owner) updated their 13D in Howard Hughes (HHH) ($3.2B market cap) disclosing the following change:
“The Reporting Persons are and intend to continue evaluating the possibility of various potential alternatives with respect to their investment in the Issuer, including a possible transaction in which the Reporting Persons and/or one or more of their affiliates (either alone or together with one or more potential co-investors) may acquire all or substantially all of the shares of Common Stock in the Issuer not owned by them and their affiliates and in connection therewith take the Issuer private (a “take-private”). Jefferies LLC began advising the Reporting Persons on August 6, 2024 in connection with this evaluation. The Reporting Persons may discuss their evaluation and the potential alternatives, including a potential take-private, with one or more prospective co-investors, which discussions are expected to be conducted on a confidential basis. In the event the Reporting Persons explore such a potential transaction, there can be no guarantee that an agreement regarding such potential transaction can be reached and/or consummated.

I find the timing rather odd so soon after the spinoff of Seaport Entertainment (SEG), the spinoff was designed to remove some of the complexity and cash burning assets from Howard Hughes, return it to a pure play master planned community developer story.  In theory, HHH then might re-rate closer to its NAV of $100+.  If the plan all along was really to dump Seaport Entertainment, come in to scoop up HHH on the cheap, why is Pershing Square backstopping the SEG rights offering?  Just strange to spend $30 million in cash expense to spin SEG, backstop SEG, and then take HHH private so soon after.  Should have just bought it before the spin and save the legal bills.

Possibly this is the result of Ackman pulling the IPO of his closed end fund after selling a stake in his GP raising expectations for growth, he could need an investment vehicle or non-securities assets to redomicile Pershing Square Holdings Ltd to the United States and avoid being under the 1940 Act.

As for the potential price or structure, I'm prepared to be disappointed, NAV is likely well over $100 per share, but is unlikely to be realized in a transaction.  As a reminder for those newer to the company, back in 2019, Howard Hughes did run a full strategic process that failed to produce a buyer willing to pay the asking price.  Have things changed much since?  Brookfield (who notoriously don't pay fair value) was involved in the GGP restructuring and was an HHC shareholder for a while, but otherwise, Pershing Square might be the only buyer so I'm not getting my hopes up for a large premium.  The language in the 13D suggests a cash offer to go-private, that's preferable in mind than some convoluted structure where Howard Hughes shareholders trade discounted HHH shares for discounted PSHZF in some share-for-share merger.

Disclosure: I own shares of HHH and SEG 

Tuesday, May 28, 2024

Seaport Entertainment: Initial Form 10 Thoughts, Spinoff, Rights Offering

The first public draft of the Seaport Form 10-12 came out on Friday, I took a quick read of it, here are some initial thoughts that I'll likely come back to as the spinoff approaches sometime in Q3.  Howard Hughes Holdings (HHH) is going to be spinning four main assets into the newly created Seaport Entertainment (SEG) that will focus on "intersection of entertainment and real estate":

  1. The Seaport District in Lower Manhattan, which includes the South Street Seaport itself, some neighboring buildings and the 250 Water St development site (which HHH/SEG recently won a lawsuit that sets the stage for construction), all of which Howard Hughes has sunk over $1B into over the last decade and is still bleeding cash (-$55MM in 2023).  Thus far, the Seaport has been a disaster (HHH took a $672.5MM impairment on the Seaport last year) and waste of capital, the project was started a year or two after Super Storm Sandy destroyed much of the old structure in 2012 and was underwritten at a 4-6% return on cost.  The development had many delays and hasn't come close to the original profitability projections a decade or so later, as a long term HHH shareholder, I blame the Seaport for much of the underperformance over the last 5-7 years (alongside the Ackman covid capital raise).  Maybe focused management can turn this around?  There are a total of 11 physical buildings at the Seaport, as a whole it is about 2/3rd's leased at this point.
  2. 25% interest in Jean-Georges Restaurants that was acquired for $45MM (potentially an Ackman vanity investment) with the stated strategy to partner with Jean-George in the future as an anchor tenant in new developments (Jean-Georges leases the entire Tin Building in a JV with SEG for a food hall concept).  This investment reminds me of MSGE/Sphere's investment in TAO Group where they argued TAO's nightclub expertise could be used at the Sphere and other entertainment venues, TAO was eventually divested.  The Jean-Georges investment feels very non-core and could be sold to raise capital for their two big development projects (250 Water St and Fashion Show Air Rights).
  3. The Las Vegas Aviators (highest revenue grossing minor league team), the Oakland A's AAA affiliate, and the corresponding newish Las Vegas Ballpark located in Howard Hughes' Summerlin master planned community.  The A's are moving to the Las Vegas strip (where the old Tropicana was located) in a couple years, the current plan is to keep the Aviators in Summerlin, but TBD on how that impacts attendance/revenue.  HHH did pay $16.4MM for the remaining 50% of the Aviators they didn't own in 2017 and the ballpark cost approximately $125MM in 2019.
  4. 80% interest in the air rights above the Fashion Show Mall on the Las Vegas strip, which is located on the north end of the strip near Treasure Island and the Wynn hotels.  Howard Hughes has brought in Anton Nikodemus as the CEO of Seaport, his previous stop was as the President/COO of MGM's City Center in Las Vegas and before that he led the development of MGM's National Harbor and Springfield, MA casinos.  I go annually to a conference in the City Center and have visited the National Harbor property, both are impressive gaming resorts that are well run.  The Fashion Show Mall and the other 20% of the air rights are owned/operated by Brookfield Properties (which acquired General Growth Properties (GGP), the original parent of Howard Hughes).  There's been a significant increase in supply on the north end of the Las Vegas strip in the past year with the opening of Resorts World and the Fontainebleau (both of which post-opening are relative ghost towns).  But with Nikodemus onboard, it clearly signals that they intend to redevelop the Fashion Show Mall in the medium-to-long term.
Each of these are a bit difficult to value and don't quite fit into a typical public real estate company (although HHH/HHC will still be a bit of an odd ball public stock following the spin, it helps on the margins).  My question prior to the Form 10-12 release was how this company would be capitalized given it loses money and likely will for the near future, plus the plan is clearly to sink money into their development assets, that question was answered with disclosure that Seaport intends to conduct a $175MM rights offering with Ackman's Pershing Square backing it up plus cash from HHC, giving SEG roughly ~$200MM in cash at closing:
Seaport Entertainment expects to conduct a $175 million Rights Offering of equity to our stockholders following the distribution. In connection with the Rights Offering, the Company is in serious discussions with Pershing Square Capital Management, L.P. (“Pershing Square”), which through investment funds advised by it is HHH’s largest shareholder, regarding a potential backstop agreement which would be entered into prior to the distribution. Pursuant to that agreement, if finalized, Pershing Square would agree to (i) exercise its pro rata subscription right with respect to the Rights Offering at a price of $100 per share of our common stock and (ii) purchase any shares not purchased upon the expiration of the Rights Offering at the Rights Offering price, up to $175 million in the aggregate. The backstop agreement could result in Pershing Square’s affiliated funds owning as much as       % of our common stock if no other stockholders participate in the Rights Offering. Any capital raised through the Rights Offering would further strengthen our balance sheet. With over $      million of liquidity, primarily consisting of (i) $23.4 million of cash contributed by HHH pursuant to the Separation Agreement, (ii) expected proceeds from the anticipated Rights Offering and (iii) amounts available under the Revolving Credit Agreement (as defined herein), we believe we will have ample capital to invest in and drive internal and external growth opportunities in the leisure, tourism, hospitality, gaming, food and beverage and live entertainment spaces.
Rights offerings can often be juicy special situations (is this a Greenblatt special, spin + rights offering?), they come around rarely, but often signal an opportunity because the company is offering all shareholders the opportunity re-up often at a discount.  

Ackman clearly wants more exposure to SEG, by backstopping the rights offering where it'll likely not be fully subscribed, he's increasing his exposure in more shareholder friendly way than he did with Howard Hughes during covid with a private placement that minority shareholders couldn't participate.  His interest in Seaport Entertainment is a bit puzzling to me, Ackman tends to like higher quality companies, something SEG is not.  New York real estate plays have always been challenging to me, especially ones that rely on development, 250 Water St will take several years to build (with original cost estimates of $850MM in 2021, likely higher now) and who knows what the apartment and office leasing environment will be at that point.  Add that with the underwritten low cap rates, the margin of safety in NY development seems extra slim.  It is also worth noting that Ackman has left the board of HHH, this is after he was famously on the cover of Forbes as Baby Buffett for his role in Howard Hughes.  I've seen some speculation that it clears the path for Ackman to make a bid for HHH, unlikely, but who knows.

The Seaport spin is going to be a challenge to value, can't really do a cap rate based SOTP.  HHH trades for 1.1x book value at this point (despite holding a lot of land/buildings at historical cost), HHH is the higher quality asset, guessing Seaport will trade at a discount to book.
We don't know the spin ratio yet, but at 80% of book, Seaport is roughly worth ~$6-7 per HHH share prior to the rights offering, or about 10% of the HHH market cap.  That likely means we see forced selling, could be an interesting one to keep on the watchlist.

Disclosure: I own shares of HHH (fka HHC)