January 09, 2008
Generally Negative Growth in General Growth Properties - GGP Part II
by Reggie Middleton
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This is the General Growth Properties summary valuation under a mild US recession
scenario. A much more in depth analysis and presentation is on its way next
week. Please see the original
summary analysis for the non-recessionary outlook and if you are not versed
in commercial real estate, see my quick and dirty CRE
valuation primer. Remember, it is my opinion that many in this space are
underestimating the potential downside to be had here. This summary analysis
is based on the following assumptions:
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We expect recession to impact GGP's NOI primarily in 2008 and 2009 post
which we expect the US economy to drift back to recovery though gradually.
Thus negative growth in rentals is estimated in 2008 and 2009 and near
flat growth for 2010 and 2011. Thereafter, we expect conditions to start
normalizing, and have hence built in long-term normalized growth in rentals.
This is a conservative showing, and my gut (empirically calculated, but
investors gut feeling) says that we are in for a much harder landing than
presented here. I don't have the resources to run full macro scenarios,
thus I stay on the conservative side unless extremely obvious that I should
do otherwise. If you have been a regular reader of my blog from the days
of typepad.com, you will probably realize that my conservative estimates
are the equivalent of the consensus "doomsday" scenario. I believe that
I am more realistic, but then again I would, wouldn't I?
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We also expect interest rates in the recession scenario to be higher than
in the base case as the company treads through highly difficult credit
conditions in the next few years, particularly when that a large chunk
of its debt is due for repayment/refinancing. I made it clear to the mod
squad (my analytical team) that I wanted them to be conservative in their
expectations. In my opinion, we are already several months into a recession,
but we will not know for sure 'til the near future.
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We have also lowered the occupancy rates in the recession version expecting
lowering demand for shopping space in the wake of falling retail sales
and consumer demand
Giving effect to the above assumptions, we expect GGP's consolidated valuation
to be around $6.6 bn on CFAT basis converting into a share price of $27.
This is a 25% downside to the current share price of $36. Please note (again)
that we have taken a realistic/conservative approach while assuming the
duration and extent of the recessionary conditions. However, if the recession
were to prolong beyond 2009 or the economy were to take longer to normalize,
the impact on GGP's valuation could be worse (probably another 5-7% downside
to the valuation could be expected in case the recession were to continue
into 2010 or beyond).
Due to the extent of the research performed and the quantity and quality of
data gathered and analyzed, the time lapse from analysis inception to completion
has allowed for GGP's share price to register a fall of 11% over the last week
indicating a portion of the expected downside since we started building our
analysis could already have been registered. This could also mean that given
the high prospects of recession setting in over the next few months, GGP valuation
could be expected to worsen going forward now that market has strongly reacted
to the company's performance.
The team is hard at work consolidating the Base assumption files and I expect
the valuation under that case could be nearly $6 per share or 17% down from
the current share price of $36. I will probably post the Base case output together
with a comparison of all the three scenarios tomorrow. Till I post it, I urge
my blog readers to download and read a sample of the supporting calculations
for the valuation model that is yet to come (caution: this stuff is probably
only for hard core real estate junkies or someone with a real interest in GGP).
It is also the methodology that will be used in future commercial real estate
analysis and represents an awful lot of work. Keep in mind that this is the
driver for 260 individual custom property valuation models, an aggregate portfolio
valuation model, and a corporate model for the GGP entity itself. I may have
found a few more companies that are deserving of my attention. See GGP
advanced mini-sample (877.07 kB).
If I get the chance, I will continue my Brokers, Banks and Bullsh1+ series
with numbers, my opinions and findings on Bear Stearns some time after the
market closes.
| Scenario analysis |
Assumptions |
| |
Rental growth rates |
Interest
rate |
Occupancy
rate |
| |
2007 |
2008 |
2009 |
2010 |
2011 |
2012 |
Worst Case
(Recession) |
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6.3% |
89.9% |
| - California |
1.1% |
-1.5% |
-1.3% |
-1.1% |
0.2% |
0.6% |
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| - Florida |
1.3% |
-1.8% |
-1.5% |
-1.3% |
0.3% |
0.7% |
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| -Texas |
1.5% |
-2.1% |
-1.8% |
-1.5% |
0.3% |
0.8% |
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| Overall GGP |
| Valuation |
| PV (CFAT) |
PV (NOI) |
Share Price |
Share Price |
NOI ($ bn) |
Cash Flow before tax($ bn) |
| $ bn |
$ bn |
(CFAT) |
(NOI) |
2008 |
2009 |
2008 |
2009 |
| $6.59 |
$7.28 |
$27.04 |
$29.85 |
$1,483 |
$1,528 |
($2,325) |
($1,685) |
| Summary of GGP Valuation (Base case assuming recession) |
| |
$ |
| NOI Basis |
| Consolidated valuation as per Portfolio Valuation sheet |
$28,886,725,819 |
| less: Debt |
$24,073,812,000 |
| Estimated value using PV of NOI basis |
$ 4,812,913,819 |
| Add: PV of other income |
$ 2,462,669,720 |
| GGP's estimated market cap (NOI basis) |
$ 7,275,583,539 |
| |
| No of shares |
243,775,000 |
| Estimated share price ( PV NOI basis) |
$ 29.8 |
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| Current share price |
$ 36.0 |
| Upward (Downward) - NOI basis |
(17.07%) |
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| Cash Flow After Tax basis |
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| Estimated Value using Cash flow basis |
4,129,853,902 |
| Add: PV of other income |
2,462,669,720 |
| GGP's estimated market cap (CFAT basis) |
6,592,523,622 |
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| No of shares |
243,775,000 |
| Estimated share price (PV CFAT basis) |
$ 27.0 |
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| Current share price |
$ 36.0 |
| Upward (Downward) - CFAT basis |
(24.86%) |
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Reggie Middleton
http://boombustblog.com/
Reggie
Middleton is the personification of the freethinking maverick--the penultimate
nonconformist as it applies to macro strategies, investment, and analysis.
He uses his background and knowledge in new media, distributed computing, risk
management, insurance, financial engineering, real estate, corporate valuation,
and financial analysis to pursue, analyze, and capitalize on global macroeconomic
opportunities.
Finding most available research lacking, both in quality
and quantity, Mr. Middleton assembled his own talented research staff. As forensic
research is a lynchpin for his own investing, "to actually put food on the
table," he stands behind it as doing what it is supposed to do - illustrate,
elucidate and educate.
He does not sell advice or research. He is an entrepreneur
who exists outside of mainstream corporate America and Wall Street. This allows
him the freedom to do things that many cannot--perform without conflicts of
interest and corporate politics. He prides himself on developing some of the
highest quality, actionable research available - regardless of price. He welcomes
any and all to peruse his blog of freely available analysis, opinion and participatory
social media; use his custom tools, download files, interact with the community
and make critical comparisons from a results orientated perspective. Reggie
believes ideas and implementations are improved and fine-tuned when bounced
off of the collective intellect of the many, in lieu of that of the few - in
essence, a form of collaborative open source financial analysis.
Visit his blog Boom
Bust Blog.
Copyright © 2007-2008 Reggie Middleton
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