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GE: Globetrotting For Real Estate.
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Author: Der Hovanesian, Mara
Section: Finance: Real Estate
| GE: Globetrotting For Real Estate |
New rivals and the frothy market are forcing its property unit to look overseas
Meet the world's
biggest landlord, General Electric Co. famous for lightbulbs and jet
engines, GE has quietly built one of the most profitable empires of
office buildings, shopping centers, and apartment houses around the
globe. Last year the business, GE Commercial Finance Real Estate,
earned more than a cool $1 billion on its 7,500 properties, part of a
portfolio valued at $29 billion. That was seven times the profits at
one of GE's largest public rivals, developer Sam Zell's Equity Office
Properties Trust in Chicago, which held $25 billion in properties.
Generating returns of more than 25% in each of the past 12 years, the
real estate business now accounts for 7% of GE's bottom line. "Under
the umbrella of GE, which is involved in so many businesses, we don't
get a lot of attention," says Michael E. Pralle, the unit's chief
executive since 2000.
GE's real estate arm
may get overshadowed, but the backing of a cash-rich parent comes in
handy during acquisition sprees. That is, until lately. All the money
sloshing into real estate these days is changing the game. "There was a
time when the balance sheet was a weapon," says Mark Finerman, head of
real estate finance for RBS Greenwich Capital. "Today, you'd better
bring something more than just money to the table."
So GE's Stamford
(Conn.)-based unit is increasingly shifting its focus overseas --
especially toward emerging markets such as India, China, and Eastern
Europe -- where it believes there are better values. That squares with
GE CEO Jeffrey R. Immelt's goal of eventually getting 60% of the
conglomerate's revenue from emerging markets. This year it is paring
its North American assets from 54% of its portfolio to 47%. Last year
profits from outside the U.S. rose to 54% of overall earnings, up from
just 22% in 1999. "Our single biggest challenge is to grow, so we have
to get into new markets," says Pralle. "We are having to push out of
our very traditional strike zone." In all, GE will invest $16 billion
in real estate this year, most of it overseas. It now manages $35
billion in assets.
GE is far from alone
in scouring foreign markets for lucrative deals. Private-equity players
such as Blackstone Group, Goldman Sachs' Whitehall Funds, and Lone Star
Partners are jumping into overseas markets. Still, GE, may have a big
advantage over its rivals: New players can have a tough time breaking
into new markets, especially without a network of contacts on the
ground. "There's a learning curve," says Gordon F. DuGan, CEO of W.P.
Carey & Co., a New York investment firm that owns more than 650
commercial and industrial properties worldwide. "You can't just show up
with a suitcase of money."
Back in the last real
estate boom, GE was primarily a big lender -- and got burned. It wound
up with $7 billion in bad loans on its books when the frenzied market
of the late '80s came to an end. "We got hit badly," recalls Pralle.
"The real estate industry was on its back, and nobody had any cash."
Nobody, that is,
except GE. The company decided to become a buyer as well as lender,
scooping up shopping centers in Florida, apartment houses in New
Jersey, and office buildings in San Francisco. The deals were often
done for pennies on the dollar, but they added up to some $2 billion.
By 1993, GE was one of the largest buyers of distressed real estate
from the Resolution Trust Corp., the government agency set up after the
savings and loan debacle.
Today, GE finds itself in a very different
market. Increasingly, it's elbow-to-elbow with flush hedge funds,
private-equity folks, life insurers, and foreign investors, all hungry
to diversify their portfolios and bolster returns with high-yielding
real estate. Sales of commercial properties valued at more than $5
million, for example, totaled $187 billion this year through Sept. 1;
in all of 2003, only $130 billion in deals got done, according to Real
Capital Analytics Inc., a New York real estate research firm. "We're
having a $100 million, trophy-building-a-day kind of year in sales,"
says Dan Fasulo, Real Capital's director of market analysis.
GE avoids trophy buildings. Its average
acquisition is only $7 million. And it often finds itself outmaneuvered
on bigger deals. In June, for example, GE lost out to ING Clarion
Partners, a unit of Amsterdam-based ING Group, in a bid for Boca Raton
(Fla.)-based Gables Residential Trust. ING Clarion sees Gables' 20,000
apartments as ripe for condo conversions, the hottest slice of the
commercial real-estate market. It paid $3.6 billion, or $43.50 a share,
edging out GE's $41 offer. "The other bidder clearly didn't value the
business for its potential and its land inventory," says ING Clarion's
managing director, Frank L. Sullivan, Jr. Says Pralle: "If someone has
a differing view, we get outbid. That's happening more."
Pralle concedes that some deals he has lost
over the last five years turned out to be good investments for the
buyers. But he says that if GE made less money as a result, so be it.
"We won't lose as much money when real estate markets turn -- and
eventually they will turn," he quips. Expect GE to have its checkbook
ready when it does.
The McGraw-Hill Companies, Copyright 2005
PHOTO (COLOR): HEADQUARTERS OF SOPHIA PROPERTY
MANAGEMENT The building on Paris' Champs Elysees is GE's largest
purchase. $5.4 billion
PHOTO (COLOR): BUSINESS TECHNOLOGY PARKS IN
INDIA Office buildings in Bangalore and Hyderabad cater to IT
outsourcing. $63 million
~~~~~~~~ By Mara Der Hovanesian, in New York
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