Thursday, April 25, 2013

MPG Office Trust To Be Acquired By Brookfield

In a deal that will make Brookfield Office Properties the biggest office owner in downtown Los Angeles, MPG Office Trust has agreed to be acquired. The deal is valued at more than $2.2 billion, including debt and after cash proceeds from the planned sale of MPG's U.S. Bank Tower, said Wilkes Graham, a senior vice president at Compass Point Research & Trading LLC. Brookfield and its partners agreed to pay $3.15 a share for MPG Office Trust Inc.'s common stock, a 21% premium to Wednesday's closing price, and will take control of four skyscrapers totaling five million square feet. Taken with a purchase of preferred stock, the Brookfield-led group would pay more than $425 million in cash for the company, which has about $1.9 billion in debt, according to a Wall Street Journal report.

"We have found a strategic buyer who has the capital and the market presence to appreciate the potential long-term value of our assets," MPG Chief Executive Officer David Weinstein said in the company's statement. "This transaction potentially offers both our common and preferred shareholders a liquidity event that would remain uncertain if the company were to continue on as an independent entity."

"It's the best outcome for downtown L.A. because we now have a well-capitalized ownership, which can at least reinvest in the buildings and in the community," said Carl Muhlstein, a managing director at brokerage Jones Lang LaSalle Inc. "Whereas a nearly insolvent MPG never had enough money to even take care of day-to-day stuff."

"Brookfield buying the rest of MPG's portfolio is like putting together Chrysler, Ford and General Motors. It's that impactful," said John Cushman, the Los Angeles-based chairman of real estate brokerage Cushman & Wakefield. "They will totally control the high end of the market."

For more news and information visit Blumberg Capital Partners.

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