e424b1
Filed Pursuant to Rule 424(b)(1)
Registration Statement 333-163016
8,750,000 Shares
Terreno Realty
Corporation
Common Stock
Terreno Realty Corporation is an internally managed, newly
organized Maryland corporation focused on acquiring industrial
real estate located in six major coastal U.S. markets.
This is an initial public offering of shares of Terreno Realty
Corporation. All of the 8,750,000 shares of common stock
are being sold by the company. It is currently anticipated that
the initial public offering price per share will be $20.00. Our
common stock has been approved for listing on the New York Stock
Exchange, or NYSE, subject to official notice of issuance, under
the symbol TRNO.
Concurrently with the completion of this offering, Blake Baird,
our chairman and chief executive officer, and Mike Coke, our
president and chief financial officer, will acquire an aggregate
of 350,000 shares of our common stock in a private
placement at the same price per share as in this offering but
without payment of any underwriting discount.
We intend to elect and qualify to be taxed as a real estate
investment trust, or REIT, for federal income tax purposes,
commencing with our taxable year ending December 31, 2010.
To assist us in qualifying as a REIT, as described in greater
detail below, ownership of the outstanding shares of our common
stock by any individual and, subject to certain exceptions, any
other person generally is limited to 9.8%. We designed our
ownership limits solely to protect our status as a REIT and not
for the purpose of serving as an anti-takeover device.
Investing in our common stock involves risk. See Risk
Factors beginning on page 11 of this prospectus, for
a discussion of the following and other risks:
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We have no operating history and may not be able to successfully
operate our business or generate sufficient operating cash flows
to make or sustain distributions to our stockholders.
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We have not yet identified any specific industrial properties to
acquire or committed any portion of the net proceeds of this
offering and the concurrent private placement to specific
investments. Investors will not be able to evaluate the economic
merits of any investment we make with the net proceeds prior to
purchasing common stock in this offering, and our failure to
apply these proceeds effectively, or at all, could cause our
operating results and the value of our common stock to decline.
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We may change our business, investment, leverage and financing
strategies without stockholder approval.
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Our success will depend upon the efforts and expertise of our
chairman and chief executive officer and our president and chief
financial officer to manage our
day-to-day
operations and direct our business strategy. The loss of their
services, and our inability to find suitable replacements, would
have an adverse impact on our business.
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If we do not qualify as a REIT or fail to remain qualified as a
REIT in any taxable year, we will be subject to
U.S. federal income tax at regular corporate rates and
potentially state and local taxes and could face substantial tax
liability, which would reduce the amount of cash available for
distribution to our stockholders and adversely affect the value
of our common stock.
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Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor any other
regulatory body has approved or disapproved of these securities
or passed upon the accuracy or adequacy of this prospectus. Any
representation to the contrary is a criminal offense.
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Per Share
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Total
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Initial public offering price
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$
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20.00
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$
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175,000,000
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Underwriting discount(1)
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$
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1.20
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$
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10,500,000
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Proceeds, before expenses, to Terreno Realty Corporation
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$
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18.80
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$
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164,500,000
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(1)
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At the closing of this offering,
the underwriters will be entitled to receive $0.40 from us for
each share sold in this offering. The underwriters will forego
the receipt of payment of $0.80 per share, until such time as we
purchase assets in accordance with our investment strategy as
described in this prospectus with an aggregate purchase price
(including the amount of any outstanding indebtedness assumed or
incurred by us) at least equal to the net proceeds from this
offering (after deducting the full underwriting discount and
other estimated offering expenses payable by us), at which time,
we have agreed to pay the underwriters an amount equal to $0.80
per share sold in this offering. See Underwriting.
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To the extent that the underwriters sell more than
8,750,000 shares of common stock, the underwriters have the
option to purchase up to an additional 1,312,500 shares
from Terreno Realty Corporation at the initial public offering
price less the underwriting discount.
The underwriters expect to deliver the shares against payment in
New York, New York on February 16, 2010.
Goldman,
Sachs & Co.
KeyBanc Capital
Markets
Prospectus dated February 9,
2010.
TABLE OF
CONTENTS
Prospectus
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F-1
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No dealer, salesperson or other person is authorized to give any
information or to represent anything not contained in this
prospectus. You must not rely on any unauthorized information or
representations. This prospectus is an offer to sell only the
shares offered hereby, but only under circumstances and in
jurisdictions where it is lawful to do so. The information
contained in this prospectus is current only as of its date.
PROSPECTUS
SUMMARY
This summary highlights some of the information in this
prospectus. It does not contain all of the information that you
should consider before investing in our common stock. You should
read carefully the more detailed information set forth under the
heading Risk Factors and the other information
included in this prospectus. Except where the context suggests
otherwise, the terms our company, we,
us and our refer to Terreno Realty
Corporation, a Maryland corporation.
Our
Company
We are an internally managed, newly organized Maryland
corporation focused on acquiring industrial real estate located
in six major coastal U.S. markets: Los Angeles Area;
Northern New Jersey/New York City; San Francisco Bay Area;
Seattle Area; Miami Area; and Washington, D.C./Baltimore.
We intend to invest in several types of industrial real estate,
including warehouse/distribution, flex (including light
manufacturing and research and development, or R&D) and
trans-shipment. We will target functional buildings in infill
locations that may be shared by multiple tenants and that cater
to customer demand within the various submarkets in which we
operate.
The founding members of our management team and our promoters
are Blake Baird, our chairman and chief executive officer, and
Mike Coke, our president and chief financial officer. In 2007,
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke jointly founded Terreno Capital
Partners LLC and subsequently assembled a team of real estate
professionals that began actively analyzing and seeking
industrial investment opportunities in our targeted markets.
These senior executive officers have deep industrial real estate
expertise across markets and cycles, as well as extensive public
REIT operating experience, from Mr. Bairds eight
years of experience and Mr. Cokes nine years of
experience at AMB Property Corporation, a NYSE-listed industrial
REIT, or AMB. AMB is a leading global developer, owner and
operator of industrial real estate. The management teams
expertise encompasses all aspects of industrial real estate
acquisition, development, redevelopment, operations and finance.
Upon completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement of an aggregate of 350,000 shares to Mr. Baird
and Mr. Coke, we expect to have approximately
$169.8 million in cash available to execute our business
strategy.
Market
Opportunities
Overview
We believe that the economic recession and corresponding credit
crisis present an attractive environment to acquire industrial
properties in infill coastal U.S. locations. The
U.S. industrial property sector is experiencing significant
stress from declining operating fundamentals and difficult
credit conditions. Declining operating fundamentals are the
result of industrial tenants reacting to weak macro economic
trends including reduced consumer spending and declining trade
flows. In addition, many property owners took advantage of
abundant capital availability and placed excessive leverage on
properties. The current reduction in credit availability and
weak operating conditions make refinancing near-term debt
maturities more difficult. Furthermore, ownership of industrial
properties is highly fragmented. According to CBRE Econometric
Advisors, or CBRE, there are approximately 13 billion
industrial square feet in the United States, and the seven
publicly traded industrial REITs in the FTSE NAREIT Equity
Industrial Index currently account for less than 5% of that
total based on public filings. The FTSE NAREIT Equity Industrial
Index currently consists of ProLogis, AMB, EastGroup Properties,
Inc., DCT Industrial Trust, Inc., First Potomac Realty Trust,
First Industrial Realty Trust, Inc. and Monmouth Real Estate
Investment Corporation. We believe that operators that have
ready access to equity and debt capital, which we refer to as
well-capitalized operators, with no legacy issues (such as
over-leveraged properties, significant vacancy and currently
underproductive land and recently developed buildings) will have
a competitive advantage in acquiring high quality industrial
assets at attractive current returns and at a discount relative
to both replacement cost and valuations from recent years. As we
do not currently own any assets and initially will be an
all-cash
1
buyer, we are not restricted by legacy operating or legacy
leverage issues that some of our private and public peers are
presently facing. Once we invest the net proceeds of this
offering and the concurrent private placement, our capital
structure will include indebtedness as described in Our
Business Our Financing Strategy.
Projected
Improvement in Operating Fundamentals
Although operating fundamentals remain weak across the
U.S. real estate markets, and may weaken further,
industrial operating fundamentals are expected to improve in the
future. Significant industrial development activity,
particularly from
2006-2008,
followed by falling demand caused by the economic recession, has
left large blocks of vacant space across many U.S. markets.
Given the recent dramatic reduction in development activity in
response to falling demand, we anticipate improvements in the
availability rate and a rebound in rent growth when demand
ultimately returns. According to CBRE, the industrial
availability rate will peak at 15.5% in 2010, its highest level
since at least 1990, with steady improvement thereafter through
2014. CBRE projects that industrial warehouse rents will fall
through 2011 with growth projected in
2012-2014.
In Our Business Market
Opportunities Projected Improvement in Operating
Fundamentals, Chart 2 illustrates historical and projected
industrial availability rates, and Chart 3 illustrates the
historical and projected industrial warehouse rent growth.
Historical
Outperformance of Industrial Real Estate and Our Targeted
Markets
According to the National Council of Real Estate Investment
Fiduciaries, or NCREIF, industrial real estate has historically
outperformed national real estate returns by over 30 basis
points per year on average with lower volatility. In addition,
over time our targeted markets have demonstrated superior
operating fundamentals relative to all other
U.S. industrial markets, including lower availability and
higher rent growth.
Transaction
Landscape Advantageous to Well-Capitalized Investors with No
Legacy Issues
Low-cost and abundant debt led to a significant increase in
transaction and development activity in industrial real estate
between 2004 and 2007 with sales transactions more than doubling
during the period and capitalization rates, or cap rates,
reaching their lowest level in at least two decades. The credit
crisis and declining operating fundamentals that followed have
resulted in a significant increase in troubled loans. The
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, or FDIC, reports that as
of September 30, 2009, the amount of loans and leases that
were noncurrent (90 days or more past due or in nonaccrual
status) among all FDIC-insured institutions increased for a
14th consecutive
quarter and the average noncurrent rate on all loans reached a
new 26-year
record. The percentage of nonfarm nonresidential real estate
loans that are noncurrent reached 3.4%, or $37.1 billion,
while the percentage of construction and development real estate
loans that are noncurrent reached 15.0%, or $73.8 billion.
According to Trepp, LLC, or Trepp, as of October 31, 2009,
the percentage of commercial mortgage-backed securities, or
CMBS, loans included in Trepps database that are
delinquent by 30 days or more is at 4.83%, the highest
level recorded by Trepp since 1998, which represents
$35.2 billion in outstanding loan balances. As lenders
react to this environment, obtaining new loans or extending
existing ones for property owners has become significantly more
difficult. We believe this will lead to increases in foreclosure
activities and distressed sales.
According to Real Capital Analytics, as of November 2009, the
total market for distressed U.S. commercial real estate
totaled 7,518 properties valued at approximately
$155 billion with industrial properties representing
$4.9 billion of that total. According to the National
Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts, or NAREIT, as of
October 2009, the seven publicly traded industrial equity REITs
in the U.S. have an average debt ratio (total debt divided
by total market capitalization) of 59.0%, with a range of 42.6%
to 87.7%. We believe this may cause these REITs to raise equity
or sell assets.
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While industrial cap rates (net operating income divided by
sales price) troughed at 6.8% in 2007 according to Real Capital
Analytics, recent transactions suggest a return to the long-term
average of 8.0% to 9.0%. We believe well-capitalized investors
without legacy issues will be able to take advantage of this
environment.
Competitive
Strengths
We believe we distinguish ourselves from our competitors through
the following competitive advantages:
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Management Team with Deeply Specialized Industrial
Expertise. Our management team is led by
Blake Baird, our chairman and chief executive officer, and Mike
Coke, our president and chief financial officer. These senior
executive officers have deep industrial real estate expertise
across markets and cycles, as well as extensive public REIT
operating experience, from Mr. Bairds
eight years of experience and Mr. Cokes nine years of
experience most recently as president and chief financial
officer, respectively, at AMB. In 2007, Mr. Baird and
Mr. Coke jointly founded Terreno Capital Partners LLC, and
subsequently assembled a team of real estate professionals that
began actively analyzing and seeking industrial investment
opportunities in our targeted markets. Mr. Baird and
Mr. Coke each have approximately 20 years of
commercial real estate industry experience.
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Demonstrated Track Record. During their
tenures at AMB, Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke helped
transform AMB from an owner of shopping centers and industrial
buildings with 64 million square feet of space in 30
U.S. markets into a leading global developer, owner and
operator of industrial real estate with interests in over 1,000
buildings comprising 125 million square feet located in 12
countries across North America, Europe and Asia. During this
period, AMB acquired approximately $4.6 billion of real
estate assets.
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Focused Investment Strategy with No Legacy
Issues. We selected our target markets based
upon Mr. Bairds and Mr. Cokes experiences
investing and operating in over 50 global industrial
markets located in North America, Europe and Asia and also in
anticipation of trends in logistics patterns resulting from
population changes, regulatory and physical constraints,
potential long term increases in carbon prices and other
factors. As we do not currently own any assets and initially
will be an all-cash buyer, we are not restricted by the
operational or liquidity issues that some of our private and
public peers are presently facing. Upon completion of this
offering and the concurrent private placement, we expect to have
approximately $169.8 million in cash to invest and our
management can focus on new investment opportunities.
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Conservative Targeted Leverage with Growth Oriented
Capital Structure. We expect to maintain
financial flexibility and a conservative capital structure using
retained cash flows, long-term debt and the issuance of common
and perpetual preferred stock to finance our growth. We intend
to limit the sum of the outstanding principal amount of our
consolidated indebtedness and the liquidation preference of any
outstanding preferred stock to less than 40% of our total
enterprise value and to maintain a fixed charge coverage ratio
in excess of 2.0x.
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Highly Aligned Compensation
Structure. We believe that executive
compensation should be closely aligned with long term
stockholder value creation. As a result, at the closing of this
offering, all of Mr. Bairds and Mr. Cokes
incentive compensation will be based solely on our total
stockholder return exceeding certain rolling targets versus
benchmarks. Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke will not be eligible to
receive any payouts under our long-term incentive program until
early 2012. In addition, Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke will
each receive 50,000 shares of restricted stock upon
completion of this offering that will vest ratably in annual
installments over a five-year period. Mr. Baird and
Mr. Coke also will purchase in the aggregate
350,000 shares of our common stock in a private placement
concurrently with this offering at the same price per share as
in this offering but without the payment of any underwriting
discount.
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Commitment to Strong Corporate
Governance. We are committed to strong
corporate governance, as demonstrated by the following:
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all members of our board of directors will serve annual terms;
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we have adopted a majority voting standard in non-contested
director elections;
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we have opted out of two Maryland anti-takeover provisions and,
in the future, we may not opt back in to these provisions
without stockholder approval;
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we designed our ownership limits solely to protect our status as
a REIT and not for the purpose of serving as an anti-takeover
device; and
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we have no stockholder rights plan. In the future, we will not
adopt a stockholder rights plan unless our stockholders approve
in advance the adoption of a plan or, if adopted by our board of
directors, we will submit the stockholder rights plan to our
stockholders for a ratification vote within 12 months of
adoption or the plan will terminate.
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Our Investment
Strategy
We intend to invest in industrial properties located in six
major coastal U.S. markets: Los Angeles Area; Northern
New Jersey/New York City; San Francisco Bay Area; Seattle
Area; Miami Area; and Washington, D.C./Baltimore. We intend
to invest in several types of industrial real estate, including
warehouse/distribution, flex (including light manufacturing and
R&D) and trans-shipment. We will target functional
buildings in infill locations that may be shared by multiple
tenants and that cater to customer demand within the various
submarkets in which we operate. We do not expect to invest
outside of the United States.
We selected our target markets by drawing upon
Mr. Bairds and Mr. Cokes experiences in
investing and operating in over 50 global industrial markets
located in North America, Europe and Asia and in anticipation of
trends in logistics patterns resulting from population changes,
regulatory and physical constraints, potential long term
increases in carbon prices and other factors. We believe that
our target markets have attractive long term investment
attributes. We will target assets with characteristics that
include, but are not limited to, the following:
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located in high population coastal markets;
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close proximity to transportation infrastructure (such as sea
ports, airports, highways and railways);
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situated in supply-constrained submarkets with barriers to new
industrial development, as a result of physical
and/or
regulatory constraints;
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functional and flexible layout that can be modified to
accommodate single and multiple tenants;
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acquisition price at a significant discount to the replacement
cost of the property;
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potential for enhanced return through re-tenanting or
operational improvements; and
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opportunity for higher and better use of the property over time.
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We will utilize local third party property managers for
day-to-day property management. We believe outsourcing property
management is cost effective and provides us with operational
flexibility to scale our investments within any chosen market.
In addition, property management firms can be an important
source of investment opportunities.
While not prohibited from doing so, we have no current intention
to acquire industrial land or to pursue ground up development.
However, we may pursue redevelopment opportunities of properties
that we own.
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We expect the significant majority of our investments will be
equity interests. We will opportunistically target investments
in debt secured by industrial real estate that would otherwise
meet our investment criteria with the intention of ultimately
acquiring the underlying real estate.
Our Financing
Strategy
The primary objective of our financing strategy is to maintain
financial flexibility with a conservative capital structure
using retained cash flows, long-term debt and the issuance of
common and perpetual preferred stock to finance our growth. We
intend to:
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limit the sum of the outstanding principal amount of our
consolidated indebtedness and the liquidation preference of any
outstanding perpetual preferred stock to less than 40% of our
total enterprise value;
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maintain a fixed charge coverage ratio in excess of 2.0x;
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over the
long-term,
limit the principal amount of our outstanding floating rate debt
to less than 20% of our total consolidated indebtedness; and
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have staggered debt maturities that are aligned to our expected
average lease term (5-7 years), positioning us to re-price
parts of our capital structure as our rental rates change with
market conditions.
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We intend to preserve a flexible capital structure with a
long-term goal to obtain an investment grade rating and be in a
position to issue unsecured debt and perpetual preferred stock.
Prior to attaining an investment grade rating, we intend to
primarily utilize non-recourse debt secured by individual
properties or pools of properties with a targeted maximum
loan-to-value
of 60% at the time of financing.
After completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement, we expect to consummate a proposed senior revolving
credit facility to finance acquisitions and for working capital
requirements. We have obtained a commitment, which is subject to
the negotiation of definitive loan documents and the
satisfaction of closing conditions, for a three-year,
$50.0 million senior revolving credit facility from KeyBank
National Association (an affiliate of KeyBanc Capital Markets
Inc., which is a lead manager in this offering), as
administrative agent, and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., in its
capacity as the lead arranger.
Summary Risk
Factors
An investment in shares of our common stock involves various
risks. You should consider carefully the risks discussed below
and under the heading Risk Factors beginning on
page 11 of this prospectus before purchasing our common
stock. If any of these risks occur, our business, financial
condition, liquidity, results of operations and prospects could
be materially and adversely affected. In that case, the trading
price of our common stock could decline, and you may lose some
or all of your investment.
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We have no operating history and may not be able to successfully
operate our business or generate sufficient operating cash flows
to make or sustain distributions to our stockholders.
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We have not yet identified any specific industrial properties to
acquire. Investors will be unable to evaluate the allocation of
net proceeds of this offering and the concurrent private
placement or the economic merits of our investments prior to
making an investment decision. Our failure to apply the net
proceeds of this offering and the concurrent private placement
effectively or find suitable industrial properties to acquire in
a timely manner or on acceptable terms could result in returns
that are substantially below expectations or result in losses.
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Our success will depend upon the efforts and expertise of our
chairman and chief executive officer and our president and chief
financial officer to manage our
day-to-day
operations and
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direct our business strategy. The loss of their services, and
our inability to find suitable replacements, would have an
adverse impact on our business.
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Failure of the projected improvement in industrial operating
fundamentals may adversely affect our ability to execute our
business plan.
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Our long-term growth will depend upon future acquisitions of
industrial properties, and we may be unable to consummate
acquisitions on advantageous terms, the acquired properties may
not perform as we expect, or we may be unable to quickly and
efficiently integrate our new acquisitions into our existing
operations.
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Adverse economic and geopolitical conditions could negatively
affect our returns and profitability. Among others, the
following market and economic challenges may adversely affect
our operating results: poor economic times may result in tenant
defaults under our leases and reduced demand for industrial
space; overbuilding may increase vacancies at any of the
properties that we may acquire; and maintaining occupancy levels
at the properties that we may acquire may require increased
concessions, tenant improvement expenditures or reduced rental
rates. Our operations could be negatively affected to the extent
that an economic downturn is prolonged or becomes more severe.
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We will be dependent on tenants for our revenues. Our operating
results and distributable cash flows would be adversely affected
if a significant number of our tenants were unable to meet their
lease obligations or failed to renew their leases.
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The failure to generate sufficient cash flows to cover future
debt service obligations could adversely affect our overall
operating results, may require us to sell industrial properties,
may jeopardize our qualification as a REIT and could adversely
affect our ability to make distributions to our stockholders and
the market price of our common stock.
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We may change our business, investment, leverage and financing
strategies without stockholder approval.
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Covenants in our future debt agreements, including our proposed
senior revolving credit facility, could adversely affect our
financial condition. We will rely on debt financing to finance
our acquisition activities and for working capital. If we are
unable to obtain debt financing from these or other sources, or
to refinance existing indebtedness upon maturity, our financial
condition and results of operations would likely be adversely
affected. If we breach covenants in our future debt agreements,
the lenders can declare a default and, if the debt is secured,
can take possession of the property securing the defaulted loan.
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If we do not qualify as a REIT or fail to remain qualified as a
REIT in any taxable year, we will be subject to
U.S. federal income tax at regular corporate rates and
potentially increased state and local taxes and could face
substantial tax liability, which would reduce the amount of cash
available for distributions to our stockholders and adversely
affect the value of our common stock.
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We have not established a minimum distribution payment and we
may be unable to generate sufficient cash flows from our
operations to make distributions to our stockholders at any time
in the future.
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Our Formation and
Structure
We were organized as a Maryland corporation on November 6,
2009. We are not structured as an umbrella partnership REIT, or
UPREIT. Currently, we have no subsidiaries. In the future, we
will own our properties indirectly through subsidiaries and may
utilize one or more taxable REIT subsidiaries as appropriate.
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Distribution
Policy
We intend over time to make regular quarterly distributions to
our common stockholders. However, until we invest a substantial
portion of the net proceeds of this offering and the concurrent
private placement in industrial properties, we expect our
quarterly distributions will be nominal. We currently do not
intend to use the net proceeds from this offering and the
concurrent private placement to make distributions to our
stockholders.
Our ability to make distributions to our stockholders also will
depend on our levels of retained cash flows, which we intend to
use as a source of investment capital. In order to qualify for
taxation as a REIT, we intend to make annual distributions to
our stockholders of at least 90% of our taxable income,
determined without regard to the deduction for dividends paid
and excluding any net capital gains. We cannot assure you as to
when we will begin to generate sufficient cash flows to make
distributions to our stockholders or our ability to sustain
those distributions. Distributions will be authorized by our
board of directors and declared by us based upon a variety of
factors deemed relevant by our board of directors. Distributions
to our stockholders generally will be taxable to our
stockholders as ordinary income; however, because a significant
portion of our investments will be equity ownership interests in
industrial properties, which will generate depreciation and
other non-cash charges against our income, a portion of our
distributions may constitute a tax-free return of capital.
Our Tax
Status
We intend to elect to be taxed as a REIT under Sections 856
through 860 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, or
the Code, commencing with our taxable year ending
December 31, 2010. We believe that our organization and
proposed method of operation will enable us to meet the
requirements for qualification and taxation as a REIT for
federal income tax purposes. To maintain REIT status we must
meet a number of organizational and operational requirements,
including a requirement that we annually distribute at least 90%
of our net taxable income to our stockholders, excluding net
capital gains. As a REIT, we generally will not be subject to
federal income tax on REIT taxable income we currently
distribute to our stockholders. If we fail to qualify as a REIT
in any taxable year, we will be subject to federal income tax at
regular corporate rates. Even if we qualify for taxation as a
REIT, we may be subject to some federal, state and local taxes
on our income or property and the income of our taxable REIT
subsidiaries, if any, will be subject to taxation at regular
corporate rates.
Material Benefits
to Related Parties
Purchase of
Shares of Common Stock by Certain Executive
Officers
Concurrently with the completion of this offering,
Mr. Baird will acquire 250,000 shares of our common
stock and Mr. Coke will acquire 100,000 shares of our
common stock in a private placement at the same price per share
as in this offering but without payment of any underwriting
discount. The aggregate of 350,000 shares that
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke will acquire in the private
placement represent 3.8% of the shares of our common stock
issued in this offering and the concurrent private placement.
Severance
Agreements
We intend to enter into severance agreements with each of
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke, which will become effective
upon the completion of this offering, as described in
Compensation Discussion and Analysis Severance
Agreements. These agreements will provide benefits to each
of Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke in the event his employment
is terminated under certain circumstances. We may enter into
similar agreements with certain executive officers that we hire
in the future.
7
IPO Grants and
Performance Shares
At the completion of this offering, we will grant
50,000 shares of restricted stock to each of Mr. Baird
and Mr. Coke, with such shares having an approximate value
of $1,000,000, based on the assumed initial public offering
price of $20.00 per share. Also, we will grant performance share
awards to each of Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke contingent on
our achieving certain benchmarks as described in
Compensation Discussion and Analysis IPO
Grants of Plan-Based Awards. In addition, at the
completion of this offering, we expect to grant
21,250 shares of restricted stock to our employees, with
such shares having an aggregate approximate value of $425,000,
based on the assumed initial offering price of $20.00 per share.
The restricted stock granted at the completion of this offering
will vest ratably in annual installments over a five-year period
commencing on the first anniversary of the closing of this
offering.
Contribution
of Fixed Assets
Concurrently with the completion of this offering, Terreno
Capital Partners LLC, of which Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke
are managing partners and co-founders, will contribute its fixed
assets to us at their net book value of approximately $240,000.
In exchange for the contribution of these fixed assets, we will
issue to Terreno Capital Partners LLC approximately
12,000 shares of our common stock. These shares may be
distributed to each of Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke.
Indemnification
of Officers and Directors
Effective upon the completion of this offering, we expect to
enter into an indemnification agreement with each of our
executive officers and directors as described in
Management Indemnification Agreements.
Other Benefits
to Related Parties and Related Party Transactions
We intend to use approximately $265,000 of the net proceeds of
this offering and the concurrent private placement to reimburse
Terreno Capital Partners LLC for
out-of-pocket
expenses it incurred in connection with the formation of our
company and this offering. We will also use $1,000 of the net
proceeds of this offering and the concurrent private placement
to repurchase the shares of our common stock that Mr. Baird
and Mr. Coke acquired in connection with the formation and
initial capitalization of our company. See Use of
Proceeds.
Corporation
Information
Our offices are located at 16 Maiden Lane, Fifth Floor,
San Francisco, California, 94108, and our telephone number
is
(415) 655-4580.
We maintain an internet site of www.terreno.com that contains
information concerning us. The information included or
referenced to on, or otherwise accessible through, our website
is not intended to form a part of or be incorporated by
reference into this prospectus.
8
The
Offering
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Common stock offered by us |
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8,750,000 shares |
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Common stock to be outstanding after this offering and the
concurrent private placement
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9,253,250 shares |
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Use of proceeds |
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We will invest the net proceeds of this offering and the
concurrent private placement in industrial properties in
accordance with our investment strategy described in this
prospectus and for general business purposes. We expect this
investment in industrial properties to be completed within six
to twelve months after the completion of this offering. Prior to
the full investment of the net offering proceeds in industrial
properties, we intend to invest the net proceeds in
interest-bearing short-term U.S. government and government
agency securities, which are consistent with our intention to
qualify as a REIT. These initial investments are expected to
provide a lower net return than we will seek to achieve from
investments in industrial properties. We will use approximately
$265,000 of the net proceeds to reimburse Terreno Capital
Partners LLC for
out-of-pocket
expenses it incurred in connection with the formation of our
company and this offering and $1,000 to repurchase the shares
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke acquired in connection with the
formation and initial capitalization of our company. See
Use of Proceeds. |
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Ownership and transfer restrictions |
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Due to limitations on the concentration of ownership of REIT
stock imposed by the Code, commencing with the last day of the
first half of the second taxable year for which we have elected
to be classified as a REIT, our charter generally prohibits any
individual (as defined in the Code to include certain entities)
from actually or constructively owning more than 9.8% in value
of the aggregate of our outstanding shares of stock or more than
9.8% in value or number of shares, whichever is more
restrictive, of the outstanding shares of our common stock.
Subject to certain exceptions, our charter further prohibits any
person or entity from owning shares of our stock in excess of
these limits after the completion of this offering in order to
facilitate compliance with the related party tenant
rules that apply to REITs. Upon request, our board of directors
will waive this related party tenant limit with respect to a
stockholder that is not an individual unless such
stockholders increased ownership would result in our
failing to qualify as a REIT or our board of directors
determines in its sole judgment that such stockholders
increased ownership could result in any of our rental income to
fail to qualify as such for REIT testing purposes as a result of
the related party tenant provisions of the Code. |
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Risk factors |
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Investing in our common stock involves risks. You should
carefully read and consider the information set forth under
Risk Factors and all other information in this
prospectus before investing in our common stock. |
9
Unless otherwise indicated, information in this prospectus:
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excludes up to 1,312,500 shares of our common stock
issuable upon exercise of the underwriters option to
purchase additional shares;
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excludes 313,750 shares issuable in the future under our
2010 Equity Incentive Plan, or the 2010 Equity Plan;
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excludes performance shares that may be earned in the future by
our executive officers contingent on our achieving certain
benchmarks (see Compensation Discussion and
Analysis IPO Grants of Plan-Based Awards);
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includes an aggregate of 350,000 shares of our common stock
to be issued to Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke in the
concurrent private placement;
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includes approximately 12,000 shares of our common stock to
be issued to Terreno Capital Partners LLC in exchange for the
contribution of fixed assets; and
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includes 141,250 shares of restricted stock to be granted
under the 2010 Equity Plan to our independent directors,
executive officers and employees concurrently with the
completion of this offering.
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10
RISK
FACTORS
An investment in our common stock involves a high degree of
risk. Before making an investment decision, you should carefully
consider the following risk factors, which address the material
risks concerning our business and an investment in our common
stock, together with the other information contained in this
prospectus. If any of the risks discussed in this prospectus
occur, our business, prospects, financial condition, results of
operation and our ability to make cash distributions to our
stockholders could be materially and adversely affected, the
trading price of our common stock could decline significantly
and you could lose all or a part of your investment. Some
statements in this prospectus, including statements in the
following risk factors constitute forward-looking statements.
Please refer to the section entitled Forward-Looking
Statements.
Risks Related to
Our Business and Our Properties
We have no
operating history and may not be able to successfully operate
our business or generate sufficient operating cash flows to make
or sustain distributions to our stockholders.
We were organized in November 2009, have no operating history
and have no agreements to acquire any properties. We will only
commence operations upon completion of this offering and the
concurrent private placement. Our ability to make or sustain
distributions to our stockholders will depend on many factors,
including our ability to identify attractive acquisition
opportunities consistent with our investment strategy, our
success in consummating acquisitions on favorable terms, the
level and volatility of interest rates, readily accessible
short-term and long-term financing on favorable terms and
conditions in the financial markets, the real estate market and
the economy. We will face competition in acquiring attractive
industrial properties on advantageous terms. The value of the
industrial properties that we acquire may decline substantially
after we purchase them. We may not be able to successfully
operate our business or implement our operating policies and
investment strategy. Furthermore, we may not be able to generate
sufficient operating cash flows to pay our operating expenses,
service any debt we may incur in the future and make
distributions to our stockholders.
As a newly formed company, we are subject to the risks of any
newly established business enterprise, including risks that we
will be unable to attract and retain qualified personnel, create
effective operating and financial controls and systems or
effectively manage our anticipated growth, any of which could
have a material adverse effect on our business and our operating
results.
We have not
yet identified any specific industrial properties to acquire,
and you will be unable to evaluate the allocation of net
proceeds of this offering and the concurrent private placement
or the economic merits of our investments prior to making your
investment decision.
We currently do not own any properties and have no agreements to
acquire any properties. Because we have not yet identified any
specific industrial properties to acquire or committed any
portion of the net proceeds of this offering to any specific
industrial property investment, you will be unable to evaluate
the allocation of the net proceeds of this offering and the
concurrent private placement or the economic merits of our
investments before making an investment decision to purchase our
common stock. We will have broad authority to invest the net
proceeds of this offering and the concurrent private placement
in any real estate investments that we may identify in the
future, and we may use those proceeds to make investments with
which you may not agree. In addition, our investment policies
may be amended or revised from time to time at the discretion of
our board of directors, without a vote of our stockholders.
These factors will increase the uncertainty, and thus the risk,
of investing in our common stock. Although we intend to invest
the net proceeds of this offering and the concurrent private
placement in industrial properties within six to twelve months
after the completion of this offering, we cannot assure you that
we will be able to do so. Our failure to apply the net proceeds
of this offering and the concurrent private placement
effectively or find suitable industrial
11
properties to acquire in a timely manner or on acceptable terms
could result in returns that are substantially below
expectations or result in losses.
Prior to the full investment of the net offering proceeds in
industrial properties, we intend to invest the net offering
proceeds in interest-bearing short-term U.S. government and
government agency securities, which are consistent with our
intention to qualify as a REIT. These investments are expected
to provide a lower net return than we will seek to achieve from
our investments in industrial properties. We may not be able to
identify industrial investments that meet our investment
criteria, we may not be successful in completing any investment
we identify and our investments may not produce acceptable, or
any, returns. We may be unable to invest the net offering
proceeds on acceptable terms, or at all.
Our senior
managements past experience in operating a publicly traded
REIT may not be sufficient to successfully operate our
company.
We cannot assure you that the past experience of our chairman
and chief executive officer and our president and chief
financial officer in operating a publicly traded industrial REIT
will be sufficient to successfully operate our company as a REIT
or a publicly traded company, including the requirements to
timely meet disclosure requirements and comply with the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. Failure to maintain REIT status
would have an adverse effect on our financial condition, results
of operations, cash flows, per share trading price of our common
stock and ability to satisfy our debt service obligations and to
pay distributions to you.
Our
investments will be concentrated in the industrial real estate
sector, and our business would be adversely affected by an
economic downturn in that sector.
Our investments in real estate assets will be concentrated in
the industrial real estate sector. This concentration may expose
us to the risk of economic downturns in this sector to a greater
extent than if our business activities included a more
significant portion of other sectors of the real estate industry.
Events or
occurrences that affect areas in which our properties will be
located may impact financial results.
In addition to general, regional, national and international
economic conditions, our operating performance will be impacted
by the economic conditions of the specific markets in which we
operate. We intend to acquire industrial properties primarily in
the following markets: Los Angeles Area; Northern New Jersey/New
York City; San Francisco Bay Area; Seattle Area; Miami
Area; and Washington, D.C./Baltimore. Many of these markets
experienced downturns in recent years. If the recent downturn in
the economy in any of these markets persists and we fail to
accurately predict the timing of economic improvement in these
markets, our operations and our revenue and cash available for
distribution, including cash available to pay distributions to
our stockholders, could be materially adversely affected.
We depend on
key personnel.
Our success depends to a significant degree upon the
contributions of certain key personnel including, but not
limited to, our chairman and chief executive officer and our
president and our chief financial officer, each of whom would be
difficult to replace. If any of our key personnel were to cease
employment with us, our operating results could suffer. Our
ability to retain our senior management group or to attract
suitable replacements should any members of the senior
management group leave is dependent on the competitive nature of
the employment market. The loss of services from key members of
the management group or a limitation in their availability could
adversely impact our financial condition and cash flows.
Further, such a loss could be negatively perceived in the
capital
12
markets. We have not obtained and do not expect to obtain key
man life insurance on any of our key personnel.
We also believe that, as we expand, our future success depends,
in large part, upon our ability to hire and retain highly
skilled managerial, investment, financial and operational
personnel. Competition for such personnel is intense, and we
cannot assure our stockholders that we will be successful in
attracting and retaining such skilled personnel.
Failure of the
projected improvement in industrial operating fundamentals may
adversely affect our ability to execute our business
plan.
A substantial part of our business plan is based on our belief
that industrial operating fundamentals are expected to improve
significantly over the next several years. We cannot assure you
as to whether or when industrial operating fundamentals will in
fact improve or to what extent they improve. In the event
conditions in the industry do not improve when and as we expect,
or deteriorate, our ability to execute our business plan may be
adversely affected.
Our long-term
growth will depend upon future acquisitions of properties, and
we may be unable to consummate acquisitions on advantageous
terms, the acquired properties may not perform as we expect, or
we may be unable to quickly and efficiently integrate our new
acquisitions into our existing operations.
We intend to acquire high quality industrial properties
primarily in six coastal markets in the United States. The
acquisition of properties entails various risks, including the
risks that our investments may not perform as we expect, that we
may be unable to quickly and efficiently integrate our new
acquisitions into our existing operations and that our cost
estimates for bringing an acquired property up to market
standards may prove inaccurate. In addition, we cannot assure
you of the availability of investment opportunities in our
targeted markets at attractive pricing levels. In the event that
such opportunities are not available in our targeted markets as
we expect, our ability to execute our business plan may be
adversely affected. Further, we face significant competition for
attractive investment opportunities from other well-capitalized
real estate investors, including pension funds and their
advisors, bank and insurance company investment accounts, other
public and private real estate investment companies and REITs,
real estate limited partnerships, owner-users, individuals and
other entities engaged in real estate investment activities,
some of which have a history of operations, greater financial
resources than we do and a greater ability to borrow funds to
acquire properties. This competition increases as investments in
real estate become increasingly attractive relative to other
forms of investment. As a result of competition, we may be
unable to acquire properties as we desire or the purchase price
may be significantly elevated.
In addition, we expect to finance future acquisitions through a
combination of borrowings under the proposed senior revolving
credit facility that we expect to consummate after completion of
this offering and the concurrent private placement and the use
of retained cash flows, long-term debt and the issuance of
common and perpetual preferred stock, which may not be available
at all or on advantageous terms and which could adversely affect
our cash flows. Any of the above risks could adversely affect
our financial condition, results of operations, cash flows and
ability to pay distributions on, and the market price of, our
common stock.
We may be
unable to source off-market deal flow in the
future.
The main component of our growth strategy is to acquire
industrial real estate assets. Properties that are acquired
off-market are typically more attractive to us as a purchaser
because of the absence of a formal sales process, which could
lead to higher prices. If we cannot obtain off-market deal flow
in the future, our ability to locate and acquire industrial
properties at attractive prices could be adversely affected.
13
Our real
estate redevelopment strategies may not be
successful.
In connection with our business strategy, we may pursue
redevelopment opportunities of industrial properties that we own
and construct improvements at a fixed contract price. We will be
subject to risks associated with our redevelopment and
renovation activities that could adversely affect our financial
condition, results of operations, cash flows and ability to pay
distributions on, and the market price of, our common stock,
including, but not limited to:
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the risk that redevelopment projects in which we have invested
may be abandoned and the related investment will be impaired;
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the risk that we may not be able to obtain, or may experience
delays in obtaining, all necessary zoning, land-use, building,
occupancy and other governmental permits and authorizations;
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the risk that we may not be able to obtain financing for
redevelopment projects on favorable terms;
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the risk that construction costs of a renovation project may
exceed the original estimates or that construction may not be
concluded on schedule, making the project less profitable than
originally estimated or not profitable at all (including the
possibility of contract default, the effects of local weather
conditions, the possibility of local or national strikes and the
possibility of shortages in materials, building supplies or
energy and fuel for equipment);
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the risk that delays in completion of construction could also
give tenants the right to terminate preconstruction leases for
space at a newly redeveloped project;
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the risk that the contractors failure to perform may
result in legal action by us to rescind the purchase or
construction contract or to enforce the contractors
obligations;
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the risk that, upon completion of a renovation, we may not be
able to obtain, or obtain on advantageous terms, permanent
financing for activities that we have financed through
construction loans;
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the risk that occupancy levels and the rents that can be charged
for a completed project will not be met, making the project
unprofitable;
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the risk that we may expend funds on and devote
managements time to projects which we do not
complete; and
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the risk that we may be unable to complete redevelopment
and/or
leasing of a property on schedule or on budget.
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Actions of our
joint venture partners could negatively impact our
performance.
We may acquire
and/or
redevelop properties through joint ventures, limited liability
companies and partnerships with other persons or entities when
warranted by the circumstances. Such partners may share certain
approval rights over major decisions. Such investments may
involve risks not otherwise present with other methods of
investment in real estate, including, but not limited to:
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that our co-member, co-venturer or partner in an investment
might become bankrupt, which would mean that we and any other
remaining general partners, members or co-venturers would
generally remain liable for the partnerships, limited
liability companys or joint ventures liabilities;
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that such co-member, co-venturer or partner may at any time have
economic or business interests or goals that are or become
inconsistent with our business interests or goals;
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that such co-member, co-venturer or partner may be in a position
to take action contrary to our instructions or requests or
contrary to our policies or objectives, including our current
policy with respect to maintaining our qualification as a REIT;
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that, if our partners fail to fund their share of any required
capital contributions, we may be required to contribute such
capital;
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that joint venture, limited liability company and partnership
agreements often restrict the transfer of a co-venturers,
members or partners interest or may otherwise
restrict our ability to sell the interest when we desire or on
advantageous terms;
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that our relationships with our partners, co-members or
co-venturers are contractual in nature and may be terminated or
dissolved under the terms of the agreements and, in such event,
we may not continue to own or operate the interests or assets
underlying such relationship or may need to purchase such
interests or assets at an above-market price to continue
ownership;
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that disputes between us and our partners, co-members or
co-venturers may result in litigation or arbitration that would
increase our expenses and prevent our officers and directors
from focusing their time and effort on our business and result
in subjecting the properties owned by the applicable
partnership, limited liability company or joint venture to
additional risk; and
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that we may in certain circumstances be liable for the actions
of our partners, co-members or co-venturers.
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We generally will seek to maintain sufficient control of our
partnerships, limited liability companies and joint ventures to
permit us to achieve our business objectives; however, we may
not be able to do so, and the occurrence of one or more of the
events described above could adversely affect our financial
condition, results of operations, cash flows and ability to pay
distributions on, and the market price of, our common stock.
If we invest
in a limited partnership as a general partner, we could be
responsible for all liabilities of such
partnership.
In some joint ventures or other investments we may make, if the
entity in which we invest is a limited partnership, we may
acquire all or a portion of our interest in such partnership as
a general partner. As a general partner, we could be liable for
all the liabilities of such partnership. Additionally, we may be
required to take our interests in other investments as a
non-managing general partner. Consequently, we would be
potentially liable for all such liabilities without having the
same rights of management or control over the operation of the
partnership as the managing general partner or partners may
have. Therefore, we may be held responsible for all of the
liabilities of an entity in which we do not have full management
rights or control, and our liability may far exceed the amount
or value of the investment we initially made or then had in the
partnership.
We will
utilize local third party managers for day-to-day property
management.
We will utilize local third party managers for day-to-day
property management. Our cash flows from our industrial
properties may be adversely affected if our managers fail to
provide quality services. In addition, our managers or their
affiliates may manage, and in some cases may own, invest in or
provide credit support or operating guarantees to industrial
properties that compete with industrial properties that we
acquire, which may result in conflicts of interest and decisions
regarding the operation of our industrial properties that are
not in our best interests.
We may not
realize any investment opportunities from our use of third
parties to manage our properties.
We will utilize local third party property managers for
day-to-day
property management. While property management firms can be an
important source of investment opportunities, we cannot assure
you that we will realize any investment opportunities from these
relationships.
15
The
availability and timing of cash distributions is
uncertain.
We intend over time to make regular quarterly distributions to
holders of our common stock. However, we bear all expenses
incurred by our operations, and the funds generated by our
operations, after deducting these expenses, may not be
sufficient to cover desired levels of distributions to our
stockholders. In addition, our board of directors, in its
discretion, may retain any portion of such cash for working
capital. Our ability to make distributions to our stockholders
also will depend on our levels of retained cash flows, which we
intend to use as a source of investment capital. We cannot
assure our stockholders that sufficient funds will be available
to pay distributions. Our corporate strategy is to fund the
payment of quarterly distributions to our stockholders entirely
from distributable cash flows. However, we may fund our
quarterly distributions to our stockholders from a combination
of available cash flows, net of recurring capital expenditures,
and proceeds from borrowings. In the event we are unable to
consistently fund future quarterly distributions to our
stockholders entirely from distributable cash flows the value of
our shares may be negatively impacted.
We will be
dependent on tenants for our revenues.
After we commence operations and acquire industrial properties,
we will be dependent on tenants for our revenues. Our operating
results and distributable cash flows would be adversely affected
if a significant number of our tenants were unable to meet their
lease obligations or failed to renew the leases we will enter
into with such tenants. In addition, certain of our properties
may be occupied by a single tenant. As a result, the success of
those properties will depend on the financial stability of a
single tenant. Lease payment defaults by tenants could cause us
to reduce the amount of distributions to stockholders. A default
by a tenant on its lease payments could force us to find an
alternative source of revenues to pay any mortgage loan or
operating expenses on the property. In the event of a tenant
default, we may experience delays in enforcing our rights as
landlord and may incur substantial costs, including litigation
and related expenses, in protecting our investment and
re-leasing our property. If a lease is terminated, we may be
unable to lease the property for the rent previously received or
sell the property without incurring a loss.
We may not
have funding for future tenant improvements.
When a tenant at one of the properties we acquire after we
commence operations does not renew the lease we will enter into
with such tenant or otherwise vacates its space in one of our
buildings, it is likely that, in order to attract one or more
new tenants, we will be required to expend funds to construct
new tenant improvements in the vacated space. Although we intend
to manage our cash position or financing availability to pay for
any improvements required for re-leasing, we cannot assure our
stockholders that we will have adequate sources of funding
available to us for such purposes in the future.
We may be
unable to renew leases, lease vacant space or re-lease space as
leases expire.
We cannot assure you that after we commence operations, acquire
industrial properties and enter into leases with respect to the
properties, such leases will be renewed or that such properties
will be re-leased at net effective rental rates equal to or
above the then current average net effective rental rates. If
the rental rates for our properties decrease, our tenants do not
renew their leases or we do not re-lease a significant portion
of our available space and space for which leases are scheduled
to expire, our financial condition, results of operations, cash
flow, cash available for distribution to you, per share trading
price of our common stock and our ability to satisfy our debt
service obligations could be materially adversely affected. In
addition, if we are unable to renew leases or re-lease a
property, the resale value of that property could be diminished
because the market value of a particular property will depend
principally upon the value of the leases of such property.
16
We face
potential adverse effects from the bankruptcies or insolvencies
of tenants.
The bankruptcy or insolvency of the tenants of the properties we
acquire may adversely affect the income produced by our
properties. The tenants of the properties we acquire,
particularly those that are highly leveraged, could file for
bankruptcy protection or become insolvent in the future. Under
bankruptcy law, a tenant cannot be evicted solely because of its
bankruptcy. On the other hand, a bankrupt tenant may reject and
terminate its lease with us. In such case, our claim against the
bankrupt tenant for unpaid and future rent would be subject to a
statutory cap that might be substantially less than the
remaining rent actually owed under the lease, and, even so, our
claim for unpaid rent would likely not be paid in full. This
shortfall could adversely affect our cash flows and results of
operations.
Declining real
estate valuations and impairment charges could adversely affect
our earnings and financial condition.
We intend to review the carrying value of our properties when
circumstances, such as adverse market conditions (including
conditions resulting from the current global economic
recession), indicate potential impairment may exist. We intend
to base our review on an estimate of the future cash flows
(excluding interest charges) expected to result from the real
estate investments use and eventual disposition. We intend
to consider factors such as future operating income, trends and
prospects, as well as the effects of leasing demand, competition
and other factors. If our evaluation indicates that we may be
unable to recover the carrying value of a real estate
investment, an impairment loss will be recorded to the extent
that the carrying value exceeds the estimated fair value of the
property. These losses would have a direct impact on our net
income because recording an impairment loss results in an
immediate negative adjustment to net income. The evaluation of
anticipated cash flows is highly subjective and is based in part
on assumptions regarding future occupancy, rental rates and
capital requirements that could differ materially from actual
results in future periods. A worsening real estate market may
cause us to reevaluate the assumptions used in our impairment
analysis. Impairment charges could adversely affect our
financial condition, results of operations, cash available for
distribution, including cash available for us to pay
distributions to our stockholders and per share trading price of
our common stock.
If we cannot
obtain financing, our growth will be limited.
To qualify as a REIT, we will be required to distribute at least
90% of our taxable income (determined before the deduction for
dividends paid and excluding any net capital gains) each year to
our stockholders, and we generally expect to make distributions
in excess of such amount. As a result, our ability to retain
earnings to fund acquisitions, redevelopment and development, if
any, or other capital expenditures will be limited. After
completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement, we expect to consummate a proposed senior revolving
credit facility to finance acquisitions and for working capital
requirements. We have obtained a commitment, which is subject to
the negotiation of definitive loan documents and the
satisfaction of closing conditions, for a three-year,
$50.0 million senior revolving credit facility from KeyBank
National Association (an affiliate of KeyBanc Capital Markets
Inc., which is a lead manager in this offering), as
administrative agent, and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., in its
capacity as the lead arranger. There can be no assurance that
all of the closing conditions necessary to enter into the credit
facility, including the agreement on definitive documentation
with the lenders, will be satisfied.
If adverse conditions in the credit markets in
particular with respect to real estate materially
deteriorate, our business could be materially and adversely
affected. Our long-term ability to grow through investments in
industrial properties will be limited if we cannot obtain
additional financing on favorable terms. Market conditions may
make it difficult to obtain financing, and we cannot assure you
that we will be able to obtain additional debt or equity
financing or that we will be able to obtain it on favorable
terms.
17
Future debt
service obligations could adversely affect our overall operating
results, may require us to sell industrial properties and could
adversely affect our ability to make distributions to our
stockholders and the market price of our shares of common
stock.
Our business strategy contemplates the use of both non-recourse
secured and unsecured debt to finance long-term growth. While we
intend to limit the sum of the outstanding principal amount of
our consolidated indebtedness and the liquidation preference of
any outstanding shares of preferred stock to less than 40% of
our total enterprise value, our governing documents contain no
limitations on the amount of debt that we may incur, and our
board of directors may change our financing policy at any time
without stockholder approval. We also intend to maintain a fixed
charge coverage ratio in excess of 2.0x and over the long-term,
limit the principal amount of our outstanding floating rate debt
to less than 20% of our total consolidated indebtedness. Our
board of directors may modify or eliminate these limitations at
any time without the approval of our stockholders. As a result,
we may be able to incur substantial additional debt, including
secured debt, in the future. Incurring debt could subject us to
many risks, including the risks that:
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our cash flows from operations will be insufficient to make
required payments of principal and interest;
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our debt may increase our vulnerability to adverse economic and
industry conditions;
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we may be required to dedicate a substantial portion of our cash
flows from operations to payments on our debt, thereby reducing
cash available for distribution to our stockholders, funds
available for operations and capital expenditures, future
business opportunities or other purposes;
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the terms of any refinancing will not be as favorable as the
terms of the debt being refinanced; and
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the use of leverage could adversely affect our ability to make
distributions to our stockholders and the market price of our
shares of common stock.
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If we incur debt in the future, including debt under the
proposed senior revolving credit facility, and do not have
sufficient funds to repay such debt at maturity, it may be
necessary to refinance the debt through additional debt or
additional equity financings. If, at the time of any
refinancing, prevailing interest rates or other factors result
in higher interest rates on refinancings, increases in interest
expense could adversely affect our cash flows, and,
consequently, cash available for distribution to our
stockholders. If we are unable to refinance our debt on
acceptable terms, we may be forced to dispose of industrial
properties on disadvantageous terms, potentially resulting in
losses. We may place mortgages on industrial properties that we
acquire to secure a revolving credit facility or other debt. To
the extent we cannot meet any future debt service obligations,
we will risk losing some or all of our industrial properties
that may be pledged to secure our obligations to foreclosure.
Also, covenants applicable to any future debt could impair our
planned investment strategy and, if violated, result in a
default.
Higher interest rates could increase debt service requirements
on any floating rate debt that we incur and could reduce the
amounts available for distribution to our stockholders, as well
as reduce funds available for our operations, future business
opportunities, or other purposes. In addition, an increase in
interest rates could decrease the amount third parties are
willing to pay for our assets, thereby limiting our ability to
change our portfolio promptly in response to changes in economic
or other conditions. We may obtain in the future one or more
forms of interest rate protection in the form of
swap agreements, interest rate cap contracts or similar
agreements to hedge against the possible
negative effects of interest rate fluctuations. However, such
hedging has costs and we cannot assure you that any hedging will
adequately relieve the adverse effects of interest rate
increases or that counterparties under these agreements will
honor their obligations thereunder. Adverse economic conditions
could also cause the terms on which we borrow to be unfavorable.
We could be required to
18
liquidate one or more of our industrial properties in order to
meet our debt service obligations at times which may not permit
us to receive an attractive return on our investments.
Failure to
hedge effectively against interest rate changes may adversely
affect results of operations.
We may seek to manage our exposure to interest rate volatility
by using interest rate hedging arrangements, such as cap
agreements and swap agreements. These agreements involve the
risks that these arrangements may not be effective in reducing
our exposure to exchange or interest rate changes and that a
court could rule that such agreements are not legally
enforceable. Hedging may reduce overall returns on our
investments. Failure to hedge effectively against interest rate
changes may materially adversely affect our results of
operations.
We expect our
future indebtedness, including the proposed credit facility,
will contain covenants that could limit our operations and our
ability to make distributions to our stockholders.
We have obtained a commitment, which is subject to the
negotiation of definitive loan documents and the satisfaction of
closing conditions, for a three-year, $50.0 million senior
revolving credit facility from KeyBank National Association (an
affiliate of KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., which is a lead
manager in this offering), as administrative agent, and KeyBanc
Capital Markets Inc., in its capacity as the lead arranger. We
expect our future indebtedness, including our proposed credit
facility, will contain financial and operating covenants, such
as fixed charge coverage and debt ratios and other limitations
that will restrict our ability to make distributions or other
payments to our stockholders and may restrict our investment
activities. These covenants may restrict our ability to engage
in transactions that we believe would otherwise be in the best
interests of our stockholders. Failure to meet our financial
covenants could result from, among other things, changes in our
results of operations, the incurrence of debt or changes in
general economic conditions. If we violate covenants in our
future agreements, including the proposed senior revolving
credit facility, we could be required to repay all or a portion
of our indebtedness before maturity at a time when we might be
unable to arrange financing for such repayment on attractive
terms, if at all.
In the future, we will rely on debt financing, including
borrowings under the proposed senior revolving credit facility
that we expect to consummate after completion of this offering
and the concurrent private placement, issuances of unsecured
debt securities and debt secured by individual properties, to
finance our acquisition activities and for working capital. If
we are unable to obtain debt financing from these or other
sources, or to refinance existing indebtedness upon maturity,
our financial condition and results of operations would likely
be adversely affected. In addition, any unsecured debt
agreements we enter into may contain specific cross-default
provisions with respect to specified other indebtedness, giving
the unsecured lenders the right to declare a default if we are
in default under other loans in some circumstances. Defaults
under our debt agreements could materially and adversely affect
our financial condition and results of operations.
We may be
unable to close on the proposed credit facility on the terms
described in the prospectus or at all.
Although we have obtained a commitment for a three-year,
$50.0 million senior revolving credit facility from KeyBank
National Association (an affiliate of KeyBanc Capital Markets
Inc., which is a lead manager in this offering), as
administrative agent, and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., in its
capacity as the lead arranger, we may be unable to close on the
facility based on the terms described in this prospectus or at
all. The lenders are not obligated to enter into the credit
facility unless we have complied with all conditions precedent
to the credit facility. These conditions include the absence of
any material adverse change to our business, assets, operations,
condition (financial or otherwise) or prospects, payment of all
fees associated with the loan, the negotiation, execution and
delivery of definitive documentation satisfactory to KeyBank
National Association and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., the
raising of at least $150 million of gross proceeds in this
offering and the listing of our common
19
stock on the NYSE. The credit facility lenders will not be
obligated to close the credit facility after March 31, 2010
if we do not enter into definitive agreements on or before that
date. There can be no assurance that all of the closing
conditions necessary to enter into the credit facility,
including the agreement on definitive documentation with the
lenders, will be satisfied by March 31, 2010.
We may acquire
outstanding debt secured by an industrial property, which may
expose us to risks.
We may consider acquiring outstanding debt secured by an
industrial property from lenders and investors if we believe we
can acquire ownership of the underlying property in the
near-term through foreclosure,
deed-in-lieu
of foreclosure or other means. However, if we do acquire such
debt, borrowers may seek to assert various defenses to our
foreclosure or other actions and we may not be successful in
acquiring the underlying property on a timely basis, or at all,
in which event we could incur significant costs and experience
significant delays in acquiring such properties, all of which
could adversely affect our financial performance and reduce our
expected returns from such investments. In addition, we may not
earn a current return on such investments particularly if the
loan that we acquire is in default.
Adverse
changes in our credit ratings could negatively affect our
financing activity.
The credit ratings of the senior unsecured long-term debt that
we may incur in the future and preferred stock we may issue in
the future are based on our operating performance, liquidity and
leverage ratios, overall financial position and other factors
employed by the credit rating agencies in their rating analyses
of us. Our credit ratings can affect the amount of capital we
can access, as well as the terms and pricing of any debt we may
incur. There can be no assurance that we will be able to obtain
or maintain our credit ratings, and in the event our credit
ratings are downgraded, we would likely incur higher borrowing
costs and may encounter difficulty in obtaining additional
financing. Also, a downgrade in our credit ratings may trigger
additional payments or other negative consequences under our
future credit facilities and debt instruments. For example, if
our credit ratings of any future senior unsecured long-term debt
are downgraded to below investment grade levels, we may not be
able to obtain or maintain extensions on certain of our then
existing debt. Adverse changes in our credit ratings could
negatively impact our refinancing activities, our ability to
manage our debt maturities, our future growth, our financial
condition, the market price of our stock, and our acquisition
activities.
Our business
could be adversely impacted if we have deficiencies in our
disclosure controls and procedures or internal control over
financial reporting.
We are a newly formed company with no existing operations. We
intend to undertake substantial work to prepare and implement
adequate disclosure controls and procedures and internal
controls over financial reporting. However, the design and
effectiveness of our disclosure controls and procedures and
internal control over financial reporting may not prevent all
errors, misstatements or misrepresentations. While management
will review the effectiveness of our disclosure controls and
procedures and internal control over financial reporting, there
can be no guarantee that our internal control over financial
reporting will be effective in accomplishing all control
objectives all of the time. Deficiencies, including any material
weakness, in our internal control over financial reporting which
may occur in the future could result in misstatements of our
results of operations, restatements of our financial statements,
a decline in our stock price, or otherwise materially adversely
affect our business, reputation, results of operations,
financial condition or liquidity.
We may make
acquisitions, which pose integration and other risks that could
harm our business.
Upon the completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement, we will commence operations. Although we have not yet
identified any specific industrial properties to acquire, we
intend
20
to acquire industrial properties in the future. As a result of
these acquisitions, we may be required to incur debt and
expenditures and issue additional shares of our common stock to
pay for the acquired industrial properties, which may dilute our
stockholders ownership interests and may delay, or
prevent, our profitability. These acquisitions may also expose
us to risks such as:
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the possibility that we may not be able to successfully
integrate acquired properties into our operations;
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the possibility that additional capital expenditures may be
required;
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the possibility that senior management may be required to spend
considerable time negotiating agreements and integrating
acquired properties;
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the possible loss or reduction in value of acquired properties;
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the possibility of pre-existing undisclosed liabilities
regarding acquired properties, including but not limited to
environmental or asbestos liability, of which our insurance may
be insufficient or for which we may be unable to secure
insurance coverage; and
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the possibility that a concentration of our industrial
properties in the Los Angeles Area, the San Francisco Bay
Area and the Seattle Area may increase our exposure to seismic
activity, especially if these industrial properties are located
on or near fault zones.
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We expect acquisition costs, including capital expenditures
required to render industrial properties operational, to
increase in the future. If our revenue does not keep pace with
these potential acquisition costs, we may not be able to
maintain our current or expected earnings as we absorb these
additional expenses. There is no assurance we would successfully
overcome these risks or any other problems encountered with
these acquisitions.
Our property
taxes could increase due to property tax rate changes or
reassessment, which would impact our cash flows.
Even if we qualify as a REIT for federal income tax purposes, we
will be required to pay some state and local taxes on properties
that we may acquire in the future. The real property taxes on
the properties we acquire may increase as property tax rates
change or as our properties are assessed or reassessed by taxing
authorities. Therefore, the amount of property taxes we pay in
the future may increase substantially. If the property taxes we
pay increase, our cash flows will be impacted, and our ability
to pay expected distributions to our stockholders could be
adversely affected.
The conflict
of interest policies we have adopted may not adequately address
all of the conflicts of interest that may arise with respect to
our activities.
In order to avoid any actual or perceived conflicts of interest
with our directors, officers or employees, we have adopted
certain policies to specifically address some of the potential
conflicts relating to our activities. In addition, our board of
directors is subject to certain provisions of Maryland law,
which are also designed to eliminate or minimize conflicts.
Although under these policies the approval of a majority of our
disinterested directors will be required to approve any
transaction, agreement or relationship in which any of our
directors, officers or employees has an interest, there is no
assurance that these policies will be adequate to address all of
the conflicts that may arise or will address such conflicts in a
manner that is favorable to us. In addition, our current board
of directors consists only of Messrs. Baird and Coke, and
as a result, the transactions and agreements entered into in
connection with our formation and this offering have not been
approved by any independent or disinterested directors.
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Risks Related to
the Real Estate Industry
Our
performance and value are subject to general economic conditions
and risks associated with our real estate assets.
The investment returns available from equity investments in real
estate depend on the amount of income earned and capital
appreciation generated by the properties, as well as the
expenses incurred in connection with the properties. If the
properties we acquire do not generate income sufficient to meet
operating expenses, including debt service and capital
expenditures, then our ability to pay distributions to our
stockholders could be adversely affected. In addition, there are
significant expenditures associated with an investment in real
estate (such as mortgage payments, real estate taxes and
maintenance costs) that generally do not decline when
circumstances reduce the income from the property. Income from
and the value of the properties we acquire may be adversely
affected by:
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downturns in national, regional and local economic conditions
(particularly increases in unemployment);
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the attractiveness of the properties we acquire to potential
tenants and competition from other industrial properties;
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changes in supply of or demand for similar or competing
properties in an area;
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bankruptcies, financial difficulties or lease defaults by the
tenants of the properties we acquire;
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changes in interest rates, availability and terms of debt
financing;
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changes in operating costs and expenses and our ability to
control rents;
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changes in, or increased costs of compliance with, governmental
rules, regulations and fiscal policies, including changes in
tax, real estate, environmental and zoning laws, and our
potential liability thereunder;
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our ability to provide adequate maintenance and insurance;
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changes in the cost or availability of insurance, including
coverage for mold or asbestos;
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unanticipated changes in costs associated with known adverse
environmental conditions or retained liabilities for such
conditions;
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periods of high interest rates and tight money supply;
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tenant turnover;
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general overbuilding or excess supply in the market
area; and
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disruptions in the global supply chain caused by political,
regulatory or other factors including terrorism.
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In addition, periods of economic slowdown or recession, rising
interest rates or declining demand for real estate, or public
perception that any of these events may occur, would result in a
general decrease in rents or an increased occurrence of defaults
under existing leases, which would adversely affect our
financial condition and results of operations. Future terrorist
attacks may result in declining economic activity, which could
reduce the demand for, and the value of, the properties we
acquire. To the extent that future attacks impact the tenants of
the properties we acquire, their businesses similarly could be
adversely affected, including their ability to continue to honor
their existing leases. For these and other reasons, we cannot
assure our stockholders that we will be profitable or that we
will realize growth in the value of our real estate properties.
22
Actions by our
competitors may decrease or prevent increases in the occupancy
and rental rates of the properties we acquire.
We compete with other developers, owners and operators of real
estate, some of which own properties similar to the properties
we may acquire in the same markets and submarkets in which the
properties we acquire may be located. If our competitors offer
space at rental rates below current market rates or below the
rental rates we will charge the tenants of the properties we
acquire, we may lose potential tenants, and we may be pressured
to reduce our rental rates in order to retain tenants when such
tenants leases expire. In addition, if our competitors
sell assets similar to assets we intend to divest in the same
markets
and/or at
valuations below our valuations for comparable assets, we may be
unable to divest our assets at all or at favorable pricing or on
favorable terms. As a result of these actions by our
competitors, our financial condition, cash flows, cash available
for distribution, trading price of our common stock and ability
to satisfy our debt service obligations could be materially
adversely affected.
Real estate
investments are not as liquid as other types of assets, which
may reduce economic returns to investors.
Real estate investments are not as liquid as other types of
investments, and this lack of liquidity may limit our ability to
react promptly to changes in economic, financial, investment or
other conditions. In addition, significant expenditures
associated with real estate investments, such as mortgage
payments, real estate taxes and maintenance costs, are generally
not reduced when circumstances cause a reduction in income from
the investments. In addition, we intend to comply with the safe
harbor rules relating to the number of properties that can be
disposed of in a year, the tax bases and the costs of
improvements made to these properties, and meet other tests
which enable a REIT to avoid punitive taxation on the sale of
assets. Thus, our ability at any time to sell assets or
contribute assets to property funds or other entities in which
we have an ownership interest may be restricted. This lack of
liquidity may limit our ability to vary our portfolio promptly
in response to changes in economic financial, investment or
other conditions and, as a result, could adversely affect our
financial condition, results of operations, cash flows and our
ability to pay distributions on, and the market price of, our
common stock.
Uninsured or
underinsured losses relating to real property may adversely
affect our returns.
We will attempt to ensure that all of the properties we acquire
are adequately insured to cover casualty losses. However, there
are certain losses, including losses from floods, fires,
earthquakes, acts of war, acts of terrorism or riots, that are
not generally insured against or that are not generally fully
insured against because it is not deemed economically feasible
or prudent to do so. In addition, changes in the cost or
availability of insurance could expose us to uninsured casualty
losses. In the event that any of the properties we acquire
incurs a casualty loss that is not fully covered by insurance,
the value of our assets will be reduced by the amount of any
such uninsured loss, and we could experience a significant loss
of capital invested and potential revenues in these properties
and could potentially remain obligated under any recourse debt
associated with the property. Inflation, changes in building
codes and ordinances, environmental considerations and other
factors might also keep us from using insurance proceeds to
replace or renovate a property after it has been damaged or
destroyed. Under those circumstances, the insurance proceeds we
receive might be inadequate to restore our economic position on
the damaged or destroyed property. Any such losses could
adversely affect our financial condition, results of operations,
cash flows and ability to pay distributions on, and the market
price of, our common stock. In addition, we may have no source
of funding to repair or reconstruct the damaged property, and we
cannot assure that any such sources of funding will be available
to us for such purposes in the future.
We intend to acquire properties in the Los Angeles Area, the
San Francisco Bay Area and the Seattle Area, which are
located in areas that are known to be subject to earthquake
activity. Although we intend to carry replacement-cost
earthquake insurance on all of the properties we acquire located
in
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areas historically subject to seismic activity, subject to
coverage limitations and deductibles that we believe are
commercially reasonable, we may not be able to obtain coverage
to cover all losses with respect to such properties on
economically favorable terms, which could expose us to uninsured
casualty losses. We intend to evaluate our earthquake insurance
coverage annually in light of current industry practice.
We intend to acquire properties in the Seattle Area, which is
known to be subject to flood risk, and in the Miami Area, which
is known to be subject to hurricane
and/or flood
risk. Although we intend to carry replacement-cost hurricane
and/or flood
hazard insurance on all of the properties we acquire located in
areas historically subject to such activity, subject to coverage
limitations and deductibles that we believe are commercially
reasonable, we may not be able to obtain coverage to cover all
losses with respect to such properties on economically favorable
terms, which could expose us to uninsured casualty losses. We
intend to evaluate our insurance coverage annually in light of
current industry practice.
Contingent or
unknown liabilities could adversely affect our financial
condition.
We may in the future acquire properties that are subject to
liabilities and without any recourse, or with only limited
recourse, with respect to unknown liabilities. As a result, if a
liability were asserted against us based upon ownership of any
of these entities or properties, then we might have to pay
substantial sums to settle it, which could adversely affect our
cash flows. Unknown liabilities with respect to entities or
properties acquired might include:
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liabilities for
clean-up or
remediation of adverse environmental conditions;
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accrued but unpaid liabilities incurred in the ordinary course
of business;
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tax liabilities; and
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claims for indemnification by the general partners, officers and
directors and others indemnified by the former owners of the
properties.
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Environmentally
hazardous conditions may adversely affect our operating
results.
Under various federal, state and local environmental laws, a
current or previous owner or operator of real property may be
liable for the cost of removing or remediating hazardous or
toxic substances on such property. Such laws often impose
liability whether or not the owner or operator knew of, or was
responsible for, the presence of such hazardous or toxic
substances. Even if more than one person may have been
responsible for the contamination, each person covered by
applicable environmental laws may be held responsible for all of
the clean-up
costs incurred. In addition, third parties may sue the owner or
operator of a site for damages based on personal injury, natural
resources or property damage or other costs, including
investigation and
clean-up
costs, resulting from the environmental contamination. The
presence of hazardous or toxic substances on one of our
properties, or the failure to properly remediate a contaminated
property, could give rise to a lien in favor of the government
for costs it may incur to address the contamination, or
otherwise adversely affect our ability to sell or lease the
property or borrow using the property as collateral.
Environmental laws also may impose restrictions on the manner in
which property may be used or businesses may be operated. A
property owner who violates environmental laws may be subject to
sanctions which may be enforced by governmental agencies or, in
certain circumstances, private parties. In connection with the
acquisition and ownership of our properties, we may be exposed
to such costs. The cost of defending against environmental
claims, of compliance with environmental regulatory requirements
or of remediating any contaminated property could materially
adversely affect our business, assets or results of operations
and, consequently, amounts available for distribution to our
stockholders.
Environmental laws in the U.S. also require that owners or
operators of buildings containing asbestos properly manage and
maintain the asbestos, adequately inform or train those who may
come into contact with asbestos and undertake special
precautions, including removal or other abatement, in the event
that
24
asbestos is disturbed during building renovation or demolition.
These laws may impose fines and penalties on building owners or
operators who fail to comply with these requirements and may
allow third parties to seek recovery from owners or operators
for personal injury associated with exposure to asbestos. Some
of the properties we acquire may contain asbestos-containing
building materials.
We intend to invest in properties historically used for
industrial, manufacturing and commercial purposes. Some of these
properties contain, or may have contained, underground storage
tanks for the storage of petroleum products and other hazardous
or toxic substances. All of these operations create a potential
for the release of petroleum products or other hazardous or
toxic substances. Some of the properties we acquire may be
adjacent to or near other properties that have contained or
currently contain underground storage tanks used to store
petroleum products or other hazardous or toxic substances. In
addition, certain of the properties we acquire may be on or are
adjacent to or near other properties upon which others,
including former owners or tenants of such properties, have
engaged, or may in the future engage, in activities that may
release petroleum products or other hazardous or toxic
substances. As needed, we may obtain environmental insurance
policies on commercially reasonable terms that provide coverage
for potential environmental liabilities, subject to the
policys coverage conditions and limitations. From time to
time, we may acquire properties, or interests in properties,
with known adverse environmental conditions where we believe
that the environmental liabilities associated with these
conditions are quantifiable and that the acquisition will yield
a superior risk-adjusted return. In such an instance, we
underwrite the costs of environmental investigation,
clean-up and
monitoring into the cost. Further, in connection with property
dispositions, we may agree to remain responsible for, and to
bear the cost of, remediating or monitoring certain
environmental conditions on the properties.
We generally anticipate that our properties may be subject to a
Phase I or similar environmental assessment by independent
environmental consultants at the time of acquisition. Phase I
assessments are intended to discover and evaluate information
regarding the environmental condition of the surveyed property
and surrounding properties. Phase I assessments generally
include a historical review, a public records review, an
investigation of the surveyed site and surrounding properties,
and preparation and issuance of a written report, but do not
include soil sampling or subsurface investigations and typically
do not include an asbestos survey. Even if none of our
environmental assessments of our properties reveal an
environmental liability that we believe would have a material
adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results
of operations taken as a whole, we cannot give any assurance
that such conditions do not exist or may not arise in the
future. Material environmental conditions, liabilities or
compliance concerns may arise after the environmental assessment
has been completed. Moreover, there can be no assurance that
(i) future laws, ordinances or regulations will not impose
any material environmental liability or (ii) the
environmental condition of the properties we acquire will not be
affected by tenants, by the condition of land or operations in
the vicinity of such properties (such as releases from
underground storage tanks), or by third parties unrelated to us.
Costs of
complying with governmental laws and regulations with respect to
properties we acquire may adversely affect our income and the
cash available for any distributions.
All real property and the operations conducted on real property
are subject to federal, state and local laws and regulations
relating to environmental protection and human health and
safety. Tenants ability to operate and to generate income
to pay their lease obligations may be affected by permitting and
compliance obligations arising under such laws and regulations.
Some of these laws and regulations may impose joint and several
liability on tenants, owners or operators for the costs to
investigate or remediate contaminated properties, regardless of
fault or whether the acts causing the contamination were legal.
Leasing properties we acquire to tenants that engage in
industrial, manufacturing, and commercial activities will cause
us to be subject to the risk of liabilities under environmental
laws and regulations. In addition, the presence of hazardous or
toxic substances, or the failure to
25
properly remediate these substances, may adversely affect our
ability to sell, rent or pledge such property as collateral for
future borrowings.
Some of these laws and regulations have been amended so as to
require compliance with new or more stringent standards as of
future dates. Compliance with new or more stringent laws or
regulations or stricter interpretation of existing laws may
require us to incur material expenditures. Future laws,
ordinances or regulations may impose material environmental
liability. Additionally, the operations of the tenants of the
properties we acquire, the existing condition of land when we
buy it, operations in the vicinity of such properties, such as
the presence of underground storage tanks, or activities of
unrelated third parties may affect such properties. In addition,
there are various local, state and federal fire, health,
life-safety and similar regulations with which we may be
required to comply and which may subject us to liability in the
form of fines or damages for noncompliance. Any material
expenditures, fines or damages we must pay will reduce our
ability to make distributions and may reduce the value of our
common stock. In addition, changes in these laws and
governmental regulations, or their interpretation by agencies or
the courts, could occur.
Compliance or
failure to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act and
other similar regulations could result in substantial
costs.
Under the Americans with Disabilities Act, places of public
accommodation must meet certain federal requirements related to
access and use by disabled persons. Noncompliance could result
in the imposition of fines by the federal government or the
award of damages to private litigants. If we are required to
make unanticipated expenditures to comply with the Americans
with Disabilities Act, including removing access barriers, then
our cash flows and the amounts available for distributions to
our stockholders may be adversely affected. If we are required
to make substantial modifications to the properties we acquire,
whether to comply with the Americans with Disabilities Act or
other changes in governmental rules and regulations, our
financial condition, cash flows, results of operations, the
market price of our shares of common stock and our ability to
make distributions to our stockholders could be adversely
affected.
We may be
unable to sell a property if or when we decide to do so,
including as a result of uncertain market conditions, which
could adversely affect the return on an investment in our common
stock.
We expect to hold the various real properties in which we invest
until such time as we decide that a sale or other disposition is
appropriate given our investment objectives. Our ability to
dispose of properties on advantageous terms depends on factors
beyond our control, including competition from other sellers and
the availability of attractive financing for potential buyers of
the properties we acquire. We cannot predict the various market
conditions affecting real estate investments which will exist at
any particular time in the future. Due to the uncertainty of
market conditions which may affect the future disposition of the
properties we acquire, we cannot assure our stockholders that we
will be able to sell such properties at a profit in the future.
Accordingly, the extent to which our stockholders will receive
cash distributions and realize potential appreciation on our
real estate investments will be dependent upon fluctuating
market conditions.
Furthermore, we may be required to expend funds to correct
defects or to make improvements before a property can be sold.
We cannot assure our stockholders that we will have funds
available to correct such defects or to make such improvements.
In acquiring a property, we may agree to restrictions that
prohibit the sale of that property for a period of time or
impose other restrictions, such as a limitation on the amount of
debt that can be placed or repaid on that property. These
provisions would restrict our ability to sell a property.
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If we sell
properties and provide financing to purchasers, defaults by the
purchasers would adversely affect our cash flows.
If we decide to sell any of the properties we acquire, we
presently intend to sell them for cash. However, if we provide
financing to purchasers, we will bear the risk that the
purchaser may default, which could negatively impact our cash
distributions to stockholders and result in litigation and
related expenses. Even in the absence of a purchaser default,
the distribution of the proceeds of sales to our stockholders,
or their reinvestment in other assets, will be delayed until the
promissory notes or other property we may accept upon a sale are
actually paid, sold, refinanced or otherwise disposed of.
Risks Related to
Our Organizational Structure
Our board of
directors may change significant corporate policies without
stockholder approval.
Our investment, financing, borrowing and distribution policies
and our policies with respect to all other activities, including
growth, debt, capitalization and operations, will be determined
by our board of directors. These policies may be amended or
revised at any time and from time to time at the discretion of
the board of directors without a vote of our stockholders. In
addition, the board of directors may change our policies with
respect to conflicts of interest provided that such changes are
consistent with applicable legal and regulatory requirements,
including the listing standards of the NYSE. A change in these
policies could have an adverse effect on our financial
condition, results of operations, cash flows, per share trading
price of our common stock and ability to satisfy our debt
service obligations and to pay distributions to you.
We could
increase the number of authorized shares of stock and issue
stock without stockholder approval.
Subject to applicable legal and regulatory requirements, our
charter authorizes our board of directors, without stockholder
approval, to increase the aggregate number of authorized shares
of stock or the number of authorized shares of stock of any
class or series, to issue authorized but unissued shares of our
common stock or preferred stock and to classify or reclassify
any unissued shares of our common stock or preferred stock and
to set the preferences, rights and other terms of such
classified or unclassified shares. Although our board of
directors has no such intention at the present time, it could
establish a series of preferred stock that could, depending on
the terms of such series, delay, defer or prevent a transaction
or a change of control that might involve a premium price for
our common stock or otherwise be in the best interest of our
stockholders.
Certain
provisions of Maryland law could inhibit changes in
control.
Certain provisions of the Maryland General Corporation Law, or
MGCL, may have the effect of inhibiting or deterring a third
party from making a proposal to acquire us or of impeding a
change of control under circumstances that otherwise could
provide the holders of shares of our common stock with the
opportunity to realize a premium over the then-prevailing market
price of such shares, including:
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Business Combination provisions that, subject
to limitations, prohibit certain business combinations between
us and an interested stockholder (defined generally
as any person who beneficially owns 10% or more of the voting
power of our shares or an affiliate or associate of ours who, at
any time within the two-year period prior to the date in
question, was the beneficial owner of 10% or more of our then
outstanding voting shares) or an affiliate of an interested
stockholder for five years after the most recent date on which
the stockholder becomes an interested stockholder, and
thereafter may impose special appraisal rights and special
stockholder voting requirements on these combinations; and
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Control Share provisions that provide that
control shares of our company (defined as shares
which, when aggregated with other shares controlled by the
stockholder, entitle the stockholder to exercise one of three
increasing ranges of voting power in electing directors)
acquired in a control share acquisition (defined as
the direct or indirect acquisition of ownership or control of
control shares) have no voting rights except to the
extent approved by our stockholders by the affirmative vote of
at least two-thirds of all the votes entitled to be cast on the
matter, excluding all interested shares.
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We have opted out of these provisions of the MGCL, in the case
of the business combination provisions of the MGCL by resolution
of our board of directors, and in the case of the control share
provisions of the MGCL pursuant to a provision in our bylaws.
However, in the future, only upon the approval of our
stockholders, our board of directors may by resolution elect to
opt in to the business combination provisions of the MGCL and we
may, only upon the approval of our stockholders, by amendment to
our bylaws, opt in to the control share provisions of the MGCL.
In addition, the provisions of our charter on removal of
directors and the advance notice provisions of our bylaws could
delay, defer or prevent a transaction or a change of control of
our company that might involve a premium price for holders of
our common stock or otherwise be in their best interest.
Likewise, if our companys board of directors were to opt
in to the business combination provisions of the MGCL or the
provisions of Title 3, Subtitle 8 of the MGCL, or if the
provision in our bylaws opting out of the control share
acquisition provisions of the MGCL were rescinded by our board
of directors and our stockholders, these provisions of the MGCL
could have similar anti-takeover effects. See Material
Provisions of Maryland Law and of Our Charter and
Bylaws Business Combinations and
Material Provisions of Maryland Law and of Our Charter and
Bylaws Control Share Acquisitions and
Material Provisions of Maryland Law and of Our Charter and
Bylaws Certain Elective Provisions of Maryland
Law.
Our rights and
the rights of our stockholders to take action against our
directors and officers are limited.
Maryland law provides that a director or officer has no
liability in that capacity if he or she satisfies his or her
duties to us and our stockholders. Upon completion of this
offering, as permitted by the MGCL, our charter will limit the
liability of our directors and officers to us and our
stockholders for money damages, except for liability resulting
from:
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actual receipt of an improper benefit or profit in money,
property or services; or
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a final judgment based upon a finding of active and deliberate
dishonesty by the director or officer that was material to the
cause of action adjudicated.
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In addition, our charter will authorize us to obligate our
company, and our bylaws will require us, to indemnify our
directors and officers for actions taken by them in those
capacities to the maximum extent permitted by Maryland law. As a
result, we and our stockholders may have more limited rights
against our directors and officers than might otherwise exist.
Accordingly, in the event that actions taken in good faith by
any of our directors or officers impede the performance of our
company, your ability to recover damages from such director or
officer will be limited. In addition, we may be obligated to
advance the defense costs incurred by our directors and
executive officers, and may, in the discretion of our board of
directors, advance the defense costs incurred by our employees
and other agents in connection with legal proceedings.
Risks Related to
Our Status as a REIT
Failure to
qualify as a REIT would cause us to be taxed as a regular
corporation, which would substantially reduce funds available
for distributions to stockholders.
We intend to operate in a manner so as to qualify as a REIT for
federal income tax purposes. We believe that our organization
and proposed method of operation will enable us to meet the
28
requirements for qualification and taxation as a REIT. However,
we cannot assure you that we will qualify as such. This is
because qualification as a REIT involves the application of
highly technical and complex provisions of the Code as to which
there are only limited judicial and administrative
interpretations and involves the determination of facts and
circumstances not entirely within our control. Future
legislation, new regulations, administrative interpretations or
court decisions may significantly change the tax laws or the
application of the tax laws with respect to qualification as a
REIT for federal income tax purposes or the federal income tax
consequences of such qualification.
If we fail to qualify as a REIT in any taxable year we will face
serious tax consequences that will substantially reduce the
funds available for distributions to our stockholders because:
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we would not be allowed a deduction for distributions paid to
stockholders in computing our taxable income and would be
subject to federal income tax at regular corporate rates;
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we could be subject to the federal alternative minimum tax and
possibly increased state and local taxes; and
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unless we are entitled to relief under statutory provisions, we
could not elect to be taxed as a REIT for four taxable years
following the year during which we were disqualified.
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In addition, if we fail to qualify as a REIT, we will no longer
be required to pay distributions. As a result of all these
factors, our failure to qualify as a REIT could impair our
ability to expand our business and raise capital, and it would
adversely affect the value of our common stock. See
Material U.S. Federal Income Tax Considerations
for a discussion of material federal income tax consequences
relating to us and our common stock.
Even if we
qualify as a REIT, we may face other tax liabilities that reduce
our cash flows.
Even if we qualify for taxation as a REIT, we may be subject to
certain federal, state and local taxes on our income and assets,
including taxes on any undistributed income, tax on income from
some activities conducted as a result of a foreclosure, and
state or local income, property and transfer taxes. Any of these
taxes would decrease cash available for distributions to
stockholders.
REIT
distribution requirements could adversely affect our liquidity
and may force us to borrow funds or sell assets during
unfavorable market conditions.
In order to maintain our REIT status and to meet the REIT
distribution requirements, we may need to borrow funds on a
short-term basis or sell assets, even if the then-prevailing
market conditions are not favorable for these borrowings. To
qualify as a REIT, we generally must distribute to our
stockholders at least 90% of our net taxable income each year,
excluding capital gains. In addition, we will be subject to
corporate income tax to the extent we distribute less than 100%
of our net taxable income including any net capital gain. We
intend to make distributions to our stockholders to comply with
the requirements of the Code for REITs and to minimize or
eliminate our corporate income tax obligation to the extent
consistent with our business objectives. Our cash flows from
operations may be insufficient to fund required distributions as
a result of differences in timing between the actual receipt of
income and the recognition of income for federal income tax
purposes, or the effect of non-deductible capital expenditures,
the creation of reserves or required debt service or
amortization payments. The insufficiency of our cash flows to
cover our distribution requirements could have an adverse impact
on our ability to raise short- and long-term debt or sell equity
securities in order to fund distributions required to maintain
our REIT status. In addition, we will be subject to a 4%
nondeductible excise tax on the amount, if any, by which
distributions paid by us in any calendar year are less than the
sum of 85% of our ordinary income, 95% of our capital gain net
income and 100% of our undistributed income from prior years.
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The opinion of
our tax counsel regarding our status as a REIT does not
guarantee our ability to remain a REIT.
Our tax counsel, Goodwin Procter LLP, has rendered an opinion to
us that, commencing with our taxable year ending
December 31, 2010, we will be organized in conformity with
the requirements for qualification as a REIT and our proposed
method of operation will enable us to meet the requirements for
qualification and taxation as a REIT. This opinion will be based
upon our representations as to the manner in which we will be
owned, invest in assets, and operate, among other things. The
validity of Goodwin Procters opinion and our qualification
as a REIT will depend on our satisfaction of certain asset,
income, organizational, distribution, stockholder ownership and
other requirements on a continuing basis, the results of which
will not be monitored by Goodwin Procter. Accordingly, no
assurances can be given that we will satisfy the REIT
requirements in any one taxable year. Also, the opinion of
Goodwin Procter will represent counsels legal judgment
based on the law in effect as of the date of the commencement of
this offering, is not binding on the Internal Revenue Service
(the IRS) or any court and could be subject to
modification or withdrawal based on future legislative, judicial
or administrative changes to the federal income tax laws, any of
which could be applied retroactively. Goodwin Procter will have
no obligation to advise us or the holders of our common stock of
any subsequent change in the matters stated, represented or
assumed in its opinion or of any subsequent change in applicable
law.
Dividends
payable by REITs generally do not qualify for reduced tax
rates.
The maximum tax rate for dividends payable to individual
U.S. stockholders (as defined in Material
U.S. Federal Income Tax Considerations below) is
currently 15% (through 2010). Dividends payable by REITs,
however, are generally not eligible for the reduced rates.
However, to the extent such dividends are attributable to
certain dividends that we receive from a taxable REIT
subsidiary, such dividends generally will be eligible for the
reduced rates that apply to qualified dividend income. The more
favorable rates applicable to regular corporate dividends could
cause investors who are individuals to perceive investments in
REITs to be relatively less attractive than investments in the
stocks of non-REIT corporations that pay dividends, which could
adversely affect the value of the stock of REITs, including our
common stock.
We may in the
future choose to pay dividends in our stock instead of cash, in
which case stockholders may be required to pay income taxes in
excess of the cash dividends they receive.
Although we have no current intention to do so, we may, in the
future, distribute taxable dividends that are payable in cash
and common stock at the election of each stockholder or
distribute other forms of taxable stock dividends. Taxable
stockholders receiving such dividends or other forms of taxable
stock dividends will be required to include the full amount of
the dividend as ordinary income to the extent of our current and
accumulated earnings and profits for U.S. federal income
tax purposes. As a result, stockholders may be required to pay
income taxes with respect to such dividends in excess of the
cash dividends received. If a U.S. stockholder sells the
stock that it receives as a dividend in order to pay this tax,
the sales proceeds may be less than the amount included in
income with respect to the dividend, depending on the market
price of our stock at the time of the sale. Furthermore, with
respect to certain
non-U.S. stockholders,
we may be required to withhold U.S. federal income tax with
respect to such dividends, including in respect of all or a
portion of such dividend that is payable in stock. In addition,
if a significant number of our stockholders determine to sell
common stock in order to pay taxes owed on dividends, it may put
downward pressure on the trading price of our common stock.
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Complying with
REIT requirements may cause us to forego otherwise attractive
opportunities or to liquidate otherwise attractive
investments.
To qualify as a REIT for federal income tax purposes, we must
continually satisfy tests concerning, among other things, the
sources of our income, the nature and diversification of our
assets, the amounts we distribute to our stockholders and the
ownership of our capital stock. In order to meet these tests, we
may be required to forego investments we might otherwise make.
Thus, compliance with the REIT requirements may hinder our
performance.
In particular, we must ensure that at the end of each calendar
quarter, at least 75% of the value of our assets consists of
cash, cash items, government securities and qualified real
estate assets. The remainder of our investments in securities
(other than government securities and qualified real estate
assets) generally cannot include more than 10% of the total
voting power of the outstanding securities of any one issuer or
more than 10% of the total value of the outstanding securities
of any one issuer. In addition, in general, no more than 5% of
the value of our assets (other than government securities and
qualified real estate assets) can consist of the securities of
any one issuer, and no more than 25% of the value of our total
assets can be represented by the securities of one or more
taxable REIT subsidiaries, or TRSs. If we fail to comply with
these requirements at the end of any calendar quarter, we must
correct the failure within 30 days after the end of the
calendar quarter or qualify for certain statutory relief
provisions to avoid losing our REIT qualification and suffering
adverse tax consequences. As a result, we may be required to
liquidate otherwise attractive investments. These actions could
have the effect of reducing our income and amounts available for
distribution to our stockholders.
If we fail to
invest a sufficient amount of the net offering proceeds of this
offering and the concurrent private placement in real estate
assets within one year from the receipt of the proceeds of this
offering, we could jeopardize our REIT status.
Temporary investment of the net offering proceeds of this
offering and the concurrent private placement in short-term
securities and income from such investment generally will allow
us to satisfy various REIT income and asset qualifications, but
only during the one-year period beginning on the date we receive
the net offering proceeds. If we are unable to invest a
sufficient amount of the net proceeds of this offering and of
the concurrent private placement in industrial properties and
other qualifying real estate assets within such one-year period,
we could fail to satisfy one of the gross income tests
and/or we
could be limited to investing all or a portion of any remaining
funds in cash or cash equivalents. See Material
U.S. Federal Income Tax Considerations
Requirements for Qualification as a REIT Income
Tests Applicable to REITs. If we fail to satisfy such
income test, unless we are entitled to relief under certain
provisions of the Code, we could fail to qualify as a REIT. See
Material U.S. Federal Income Tax
Considerations Requirements for Qualification as a
REIT Failure to Qualify as a REIT.
Our
relationship with any TRS will be limited, and a failure to
comply with the limits would jeopardize our REIT qualification
and may result in the application of a 100% excise
tax.
A REIT may own up to 100% of the stock of one or more TRSs.
While we have no current intention to own any interest in a TRS,
we may own any such interest in the future. A TRS may earn
income that would not be qualifying income if earned directly by
the parent REIT. Overall, no more than 25% of the value of a
REITs assets may consist of stock or securities of one or
more TRSs. A domestic TRS will pay federal, state and local
income tax at regular corporate rates on any income that it
earns. In addition, the TRS rules limit the deductibility of
interest paid or accrued by a TRS to its parent REIT to assure
that the TRS is subject to an appropriate level of corporate
taxation. The rules also impose a 100% excise tax on certain
transactions between a TRS and its parent REIT that are not
conducted on an arms-length basis.
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Any TRS of ours will pay federal, state and local income tax on
its taxable income, and its after-tax net income is available
for distribution to us but is not required to be distributed to
us. We anticipate that the aggregate value of any TRS stock and
securities owned by us will be significantly less than 25% of
the value of our total assets (including the TRS stock and
securities). Furthermore, we will monitor the value of our
investments in TRSs for the purpose of ensuring compliance with
the rule that no more than 25% of the value of our assets may
consist of TRS stock and securities (which is applied at the end
of each calendar quarter). In addition, we will scrutinize all
of our transactions with TRSs for the purpose of ensuring that
they are entered into on arms-length terms in order to
avoid incurring the 100% excise tax described above. No
assurance, however, can be given that we will be able to comply
with the 25% limitation on ownership of TRS stock and securities
on an ongoing basis so as to maintain our REIT qualification or
avoid application of the 100% excise tax imposed on certain
non-arms-length transactions.
The ability of
our board of directors to revoke our REIT qualification without
stockholder approval may subject us to federal income tax and
reduce distributions to our stockholders.
Our charter provides that our board of directors may revoke or
otherwise terminate our REIT election, without the approval of
our stockholders, if it determines that it is no longer in our
best interest to continue to be qualified as a REIT. If we cease
to be a REIT, we would become subject to federal income tax on
our taxable income and would no longer be required to distribute
most of our taxable income to our stockholders, which may have
adverse consequences on our total return to our stockholders and
on the market price of our common stock.
We may be
subject to adverse legislative or regulatory tax changes that
could reduce the market price of our common stock.
At any time, the federal income tax laws governing REITs or the
administrative interpretations of those laws may be amended. We
cannot predict when or if any new federal income tax law,
regulation, or administrative interpretation, or any amendment
to any existing federal income tax law, regulation or
administrative interpretation, will be adopted, promulgated or
become effective and any such law, regulation, or interpretation
may take effect retroactively. We and our stockholders could be
adversely affected by any such change in, or any new, federal
income tax law, regulation or administrative interpretation.
Risks Related to
This Offering
Level of cash
distributions, market interest rates and other factors may
affect the value of our common stock.
The market value of the equity securities of a REIT is based
upon the markets perception of the REITs growth
potential and its current and potential future cash
distributions, whether from operations, sales or refinancings,
and is based upon the real estate market value of the underlying
assets. For that reason, our common stock may trade at prices
that are higher or lower than our net asset value per share. To
the extent we retain operating cash flows for investment
purposes, working capital reserves or other purposes, these
retained funds, while increasing the value of our underlying
assets, may not correspondingly increase the market price of our
common stock. Our failure to meet the markets expectations
with regard to future earnings and cash distributions likely
would adversely affect the market price of our common stock. In
addition, the price of our common stock will be influenced by
the dividend yield on the common stock relative to market
interest rates. An increase in market interest rates, which are
currently at low levels relative to historical rates, could
cause the market price of our common stock to go down. The
trading price of the shares of common stock will also depend on
many other factors, which may change from time to time,
including:
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the market for similar securities;
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the attractiveness of REIT securities in comparison to the
securities of other companies, taking into account, among other
things, the higher tax rates imposed on dividends paid by REITs;
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government action or regulation;
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general economic conditions; and
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our financial condition, performance and prospects.
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The number of
shares of our common stock available for future sale could
adversely affect the market price of our common
stock.
Sales of substantial amounts of shares of our common stock in
the public market or the perception that such sales might occur
could adversely affect the market price of the shares of our
common stock. The vesting of any restricted stock granted to
certain directors, executive officers and other employees under
the 2010 Equity Plan, the issuance of our common stock in
connection with property, portfolio or business acquisitions and
other issuances of our common stock could have an adverse effect
on the market price of our common stock. Future sales of shares
of our common stock may be dilutive to existing stockholders.
There has been
no public market for our common stock prior to this
offering.
Prior to this offering, there has been no public market for our
common stock, and there can be no assurance that an active
trading market will develop or be sustained or that shares of
our common stock will be resold at or above the initial public
offering price. In the absence of a public trading market, an
investor may be unable to liquidate an investment in our common
stock. The initial public offering price of our common stock has
been determined by agreement between us and the representative
of the underwriters, but there can be no assurance that our
common stock will not trade below the initial public offering
price following the completion of this offering. The market
value of our common stock could be substantially affected by
general market conditions, including the extent to which a
secondary market develops for our common stock following the
completion of this offering, the extent of institutional
investor interest in us, the general reputation of REITs and the
attractiveness of their equity securities in comparison to other
equity securities (including securities issued by other real
estate-based companies), our financial performance and general
stock and bond market conditions.
The market
price and trading volume of our common stock may be
volatile.
The market price of our common stock may be volatile. In
addition, the trading volume in our common stock may fluctuate
and cause significant price variations to occur. If the market
price of our common stock declines significantly, you may be
unable to resell your shares at or above the initial public
offering price. We cannot assure you that the market price of
our common stock will not fluctuate or decline significantly in
the future.
Some of the factors that could negatively affect our share price
or result in fluctuations in the price or trading volume of our
common stock include:
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actual or anticipated variations in our quarterly operating
results or distributions;
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changes in our funds from operations (as defined by NAREIT and
discussed in Managements Discussion and Analysis of
Financial Condition and Results of Operations elsewhere in
this prospectus) or earnings;
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publication of research reports about us or the real estate
industry;
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increases in market interest rates that lead purchasers of our
shares to demand a higher yield;
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changes in market valuations of similar companies;
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adverse market reaction to any additional debt we incur in the
future;
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additions or departures of key management personnel;
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actions by institutional stockholders;
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speculation in the press or investment community;
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the realization of any of the other risk factors presented in
this prospectus; and
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general market and economic conditions.
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Future
offerings of debt, which would be senior to our common stock
upon liquidation,
and/or
preferred stock which may be senior to our common stock for
purposes of dividend distributions or upon liquidation, may
adversely affect the market price of our common
stock.
After completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement, we expect to consummate a proposed senior revolving
credit facility to finance acquisitions and for working capital
requirements. We have obtained a commitment, which is subject to
the negotiation of definitive loan documents and the
satisfaction of closing conditions, for a three-year,
$50.0 million senior revolving credit facility from KeyBank
National Association (an affiliate of KeyBanc Capital Markets
Inc., which is a lead manager in this offering), as
administrative agent, and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., in its
capacity as the lead arranger. Upon liquidation, holders of our
debt securities and shares of preferred stock and lenders with
respect to other borrowings will receive distributions of our
available assets prior to the holders of our common stock.
Additional equity offerings may dilute the holdings of our
existing stockholders or reduce the market price of our common
stock, or both. Holders of our common stock are not entitled to
preemptive rights or other protections against dilution. Our
preferred stock, if issued, could have a preference on
liquidating distributions and a preference on dividend payments
that could limit our ability to pay a dividend or make another
distribution to the holders of our common stock. Because our
decision to issue securities in any future offering will depend
on market conditions and other factors beyond our control, we
cannot predict or estimate the amount, timing or nature of our
future offerings. Thus, our stockholders bear the risk of our
future offerings reducing the market price of our common stock
and diluting their stock holdings in us.
We have not
established a minimum distribution payment level and we may be
unable to generate sufficient cash flows from our operations to
make distributions to our stockholders at any time in the
future.
We have not established a minimum distribution payment level,
and our ability to make distributions to our stockholders may be
adversely affected by the risk factors described in this
prospectus. Because we currently have no industrial properties
and will commence operations only upon completion of this
offering, we may not generate sufficient income to make
distributions to our stockholders and cannot predict when
distributions consisting, in part, of cash flow from the
industrial properties we expect to acquire will commence. We
currently do not intend to use the net proceeds from this
offering and the concurrent private placement to make
distributions to our stockholders but are not prohibited from
doing so. However, to the extent we do so, the amount of cash we
have available to invest in industrial properties or for other
purposes would be reduced. Our board of directors has the sole
discretion to determine the timing, form and amount of any
distributions to our stockholders. The amount of such
distributions may be limited until we have a portfolio of
income-generating industrial properties. Our board of directors
will make determinations regarding distributions based upon,
among other factors, our financial performance, any debt service
obligations, any debt covenants, and capital expenditure
requirements. Among the factors that could impair our ability to
make distributions to our stockholders are:
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our inability to invest the net proceeds of this offering and
the concurrent private placement;
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our inability to realize attractive risk-adjusted returns on our
investments;
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unanticipated expenses or reduced revenues that reduce our cash
flow or non-cash earnings; and
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decreases in the value of our industrial properties that we
acquire.
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As a result, no assurance can be given that we will be able to
make distributions to our stockholders at any time in the future
or that the level of any distributions we do make to our
stockholders will increase or even be maintained over time, any
of which could materially and adversely affect the market price
of our shares of common stock.
34
FORWARD-LOOKING
STATEMENTS
This prospectus contains forward-looking statements within the
meaning of the federal securities laws. We caution investors
that forward-looking statements are based on managements
beliefs and on assumptions made by, and information currently
available to, management. When used, the words
anticipate, believe,
estimate, expect, intend,
may, might, plan,
project, result, should,
will, and similar expressions which do not relate
solely to historical matters are intended to identify
forward-looking statements.
These statements are subject to risks, uncertainties, and
assumptions and are not guarantees of future performance, which
may be affected by known and unknown risks, trends,
uncertainties, and factors that are beyond our control. Should
one or more of these risks or uncertainties materialize, or
should underlying assumptions prove incorrect, actual results
may vary materially from those anticipated, estimated, or
projected. We expressly disclaim any responsibility to update
our forward-looking statements, whether as a result of new
information, future events, or otherwise. Accordingly, investors
should use caution in relying on past forward-looking
statements, which are based on results and trends at the time
they are made, to anticipate future results or trends.
Some of the risks and uncertainties that may cause our actual
results, performance, or achievements to differ materially from
those expressed or implied by forward-looking statements
include, among others, the following:
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the factors included in this prospectus, including those set
forth under the headings Risk Factors,
Managements Discussion and Analysis of Financial
Condition and Results of Operations and Our
Business;
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our lack of operating history;
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our ability to identify and acquire industrial properties on
terms favorable to us;
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general volatility of the capital markets and the market price
of our common stock;
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adverse economic or real estate conditions or developments in
the industrial real estate sector
and/or in
the markets in which we acquire properties;
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our dependence on key personnel;
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our ability to source off-market deal flow in the future;
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availability of investment opportunities in the industrial real
estate sector;
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our reliance on third parties to property manage our industrial
properties;
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general economic conditions;
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our dependence upon tenants;
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our inability to comply with the laws, rules and regulations
applicable to companies, and in particular, public companies;
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our inability to manage our growth effectively;
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defaults on or non-renewal of leases by tenants;
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decreased rental rates or increased vacancy rates;
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tenant bankruptcies;
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increased interest rates and operating costs;
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declining real estate valuations and impairment charges;
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our expected leverage;
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estimates related to our ability to make distributions to our
stockholders;
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our failure to obtain necessary outside financing including the
proposed senior revolving credit facility;
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future debt service obligations;
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our failure to successfully hedge against interest rate
increases;
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our failure to successfully operate acquired properties and
operations;
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our failure to maintain our status as a REIT;
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possible adverse changes to tax laws;
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uninsured or underinsured losses relating to our properties;
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environmental uncertainties and risks related to natural
disasters;
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financial market fluctuations; and
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changes in real estate and zoning laws and increases in real
property tax rates.
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Market
Data
Certain market and industry data used in this prospectus has
been obtained from independent industry sources and publications
and third party sources as well as from research reports
prepared for other purposes. We have not independently verified
the data obtained from these sources and we cannot assure you of
the accuracy or completeness of the data. These industry sources
have not reviewed this prospectus and disclaim any and all
liability with respect to this prospectus in the event any
information, commentary, analysis, opinions, advice,
recommendations or forecasts in such material prove to be
inaccurate, incomplete or unreliable, or result in any
investment or other losses. Any forecasts prepared by such
sources are based on data (including third party data), models,
and experience of various professionals, and are based on
various assumptions, all of which are subject to change without
notice.
36
USE OF
PROCEEDS
We estimate that the net proceeds of this offering will be
approximately $162.8 million after deducting the full
underwriting discount and other estimated offering expenses. If
the underwriters option to purchase additional shares in
this offering is exercised in full, we estimate that our net
proceeds will be approximately $187.5 million.
The underwriters will forego the receipt of payment of
$0.80 per share, until such time as we purchase assets in
accordance with our investment strategy as described in this
prospectus with an aggregate purchase price (including the
amount of any outstanding indebtedness assumed or incurred by
us) at least equal to the net proceeds from this offering (after
deducting the full underwriting discount and other estimated
offering expenses payable by us), at which time, we have agreed
to pay the underwriters an amount equal to $0.80 per share
sold in this offering.
Concurrently with the completion of this offering, we will sell
an aggregate of 350,000 shares of our common stock
(representing 3.8% of the shares of our common stock issued in
this offering and the concurrent private placement) to Mr. Baird
and Mr. Coke in a private placement at the same price per share
as in this offering but without payment of any underwriting
discount. We estimate that we will receive net proceeds of
approximately $7.0 million from the concurrent private
placement.
We will invest the net proceeds of this offering and the
concurrent private placement in industrial properties in
accordance with our investment strategy described in this
prospectus and for general business purposes. We expect this
investment in industrial properties to be completed within six
to twelve months after the completion of this offering. Prior to
the full investment of the net offering proceeds in industrial
properties, we intend to invest the net proceeds in
interest-bearing short-term U.S. government and government
agency securities, which are consistent with our intention to
qualify as a REIT. These initial investments are expected to
provide a lower net return than we will seek to achieve from
investments in industrial properties. We will use approximately
$265,000 of the net proceeds to reimburse Terreno Capital
Partners LLC for
out-of-pocket
expenses it incurred in connection with the formation of our
company and this offering and $1,000 to repurchase the shares
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke acquired in connection with the
formation and initial capitalization of our company.
37
CAPITALIZATION
The following table sets forth (1) our actual
capitalization as of November 9, 2009, and (2) our pro
forma capitalization as adjusted to give effect to (i) the
sale of 8,750,000 shares of our common stock in this
offering at an assumed initial public offering price of $20.00
per share after deducting the underwriting discount and
estimated organizational and offering expenses payable by us,
(ii) the concurrent private placement of an aggregate of
350,000 shares of our common stock to Mr. Baird and Mr.
Coke at the same price per share as in this offering but without
payment of any underwriting discount, (iii) the issuance of
approximately 12,000 shares of our common stock to Terreno
Capital Partners LLC in exchange for the contribution of fixed
assets and (iv) 141,250 shares of restricted stock to be
granted under the 2010 Equity Plan to our executive officers,
independent directors and employees concurrently with the
closing of this offering. This table should be read in
conjunction with the sections captioned Use of
Proceeds and Managements Discussion and
Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations.
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As of November 9, 2009
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Actual
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As Adjusted(1)
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(Unaudited)
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Stockholders equity:
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Common stock, $0.01 par value per share;
100,000 shares authorized, 1,000 shares issued and
outstanding, actual; 400,000,000 shares authorized,
9,253,250 shares issued and outstanding, as adjusted
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10
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92,533
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Preferred stock, $0.01 par value per share; none
authorized, none issued or outstanding, actual;
100,000,000 shares authorized, none issued or
outstanding, as adjusted
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Additional paid in capital
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990
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169,947,467
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Retained earnings
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Total stockholders equity
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$
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1,000
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$
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170,040,000
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(1) |
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Excludes (1) 1,000 shares of common stock that we sold
to Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke in connection with our
formation because we will use $1,000 of the net proceeds of this
offering to repurchase those shares at their issue price,
(2) 1,312,500 additional shares of common stock that the
underwriters have the option to purchase and
(3) 313,750 shares issuable in the future under the
2010 Equity Plan. |
38
DISTRIBUTION
POLICY
We intend over time to make regular quarterly distributions to
holders of shares of our common stock when, as and if authorized
by our board of directors and declared by us. However, until we
invest a substantial portion of the net proceeds of this
offering and the concurrent private placement in industrial
properties, we expect our quarterly distributions will be
nominal. Our ability to make distributions to our stockholders
also will depend on our levels of retained cash flows, which we
intend to use as a source of investment capital. In order to
qualify for taxation as a REIT, we must distribute to our
stockholders an amount at least equal to:
(i) 90% of our REIT taxable income (determined before the
deduction for dividends paid and excluding any net capital
gain); plus
(ii) 90% of the excess of our after-tax net income, if any,
from foreclosure property over the tax imposed on such income by
the Code; less
(iii) the sum of certain items of non-cash income.
Generally, we expect to distribute 100% of our REIT taxable
income so as to avoid the income and excise tax on undistributed
REIT taxable income. However, we cannot assure you as to when we
will begin to generate sufficient cash flows to make
distributions to our stockholders or our ability to sustain
those distributions.
See the section entitled Material U.S. Federal Income
Tax Considerations below.
The timing and frequency of distributions will be authorized by
our board of directors and declared by us based upon a variety
of factors, including:
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actual results of operations;
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our level of retained cash flows;
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the timing of the investment of the net proceeds of this
offering and the concurrent private placement;
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any debt service requirements;
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capital expenditure requirements for our properties;
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our taxable income;
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the annual distribution requirement under the REIT provisions of
the Code;
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our operating expenses;
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restrictions on the availability of funds under Maryland law; and
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other factors that our board of directors may deem relevant.
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To the extent that, in respect of any calendar year, cash
available for distribution is less than our REIT taxable income,
we could be required to sell assets or borrow funds to make cash
distributions or make a portion of the required distribution in
the form of a taxable share distribution or distribution of debt
securities. In addition, prior to the time we have fully
invested the net proceeds of this offering and the concurrent
private placement, we currently do not expect to, although we
are not prohibited from, funding our quarterly distributions out
of such net proceeds. The use of our net proceeds for
distributions could be dilutive to our financial results. In
addition, funding our distributions from our net proceeds may
constitute a return of capital to our investors, which would
have the effect of reducing each stockholders basis in its
shares of common stock. Income as computed for purposes of the
tax rules described above will not necessarily correspond to our
income as determined for financial reporting purposes.
Distributions to our stockholders generally will be taxable to
our stockholders as ordinary income; however, because a
significant portion of our investments will be equity ownership
interests in industrial properties, which will generate
depreciation and other non-cash charges against our income, a
portion of our distributions may constitute a tax-free return of
capital.
39
MANAGEMENTS
DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS
OF FINANCIAL CONDITION AND RESULTS OF OPERATIONS
You should read the following discussion in conjunction with the
sections of this prospectus entitled Risk Factors,
Forward-Looking Statements, Our Business
and our audited balance sheet as of November 9, 2009 and
the related notes thereto included elsewhere in this prospectus.
This discussion contains forward-looking statements reflecting
current expectations that involve risks and uncertainties.
Actual results and the timing of events may differ materially
from those contained in these forward-looking statements due to
a number of factors, including those discussed in the section
entitled Risk Factors and elsewhere in this
prospectus.
Overview
We are an internally managed, newly organized Maryland
corporation focused on acquiring industrial real estate located
in six major coastal U.S. markets: Los Angeles Area;
Northern New Jersey/New York City; San Francisco Bay Area;
Seattle Area; Miami Area; and Washington, D.C./Baltimore.
We intend to invest in several types of industrial real estate,
including warehouse/distribution, flex (including light
manufacturing and R&D) and trans-shipment. We will target
functional buildings in infill locations that may be shared by
multiple tenants and that cater to customer demand within the
various submarkets in which we operate.
The founding members of our management team and our promoters
are Blake Baird, our chairman and chief executive officer, and
Mike Coke, our president and chief financial officer. In 2007,
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke jointly founded Terreno Capital
Partners LLC and subsequently assembled a team of real estate
professionals that began actively analyzing and seeking
industrial investment opportunities in our targeted markets.
These senior executive officers have deep industrial real estate
expertise across markets and cycles, as well as extensive public
REIT operating experience, from Mr. Bairds
eight years of experience and Mr. Cokes
nine years of experience at AMB. AMB is a leading global
developer, owner and operator of industrial real estate. The
management teams expertise encompasses all aspects of
industrial real estate acquisition, development, redevelopment,
operations and finance. Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke each
have approximately 20 years of commercial real estate industry
experience.
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke are currently our only
executive officers. We currently have six employees and we
currently expect to hire five additional experienced
professionals over the next six months based on the anticipated
pace of our investment activities and operations.
We intend to elect to be taxed as a REIT under Sections 856
through 860 of the Code, commencing with our taxable year ending
December 31, 2010.
Liquidity and
Capital Resources
The primary objective of our financing strategy is to maintain
financial flexibility with a conservative capital structure
using retained cash flows, long-term debt and the issuance of
common and perpetual preferred stock to finance our growth. We
intend to:
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limit the sum of the outstanding principal amount of our
consolidated indebtedness and the liquidation preference of any
outstanding perpetual preferred stock to less than 40% of our
total enterprise value;
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maintain a fixed charge coverage ratio in excess of 2.0x;
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over the long-term, limit the principal amount of our
outstanding floating rate debt to less than 20% of our total
consolidated indebtedness; and
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have staggered debt maturities that are aligned to our expected
average lease term
(5-7 years),
positioning us to re-price parts of our capital structure as our
rental rates change with market conditions.
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We intend to preserve a flexible capital structure with a
long-term goal to obtain an investment grade rating and be in a
position to issue unsecured debt and perpetual preferred stock.
Prior to attaining an investment grade rating, we intend to
primarily utilize non-recourse debt secured by
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individual properties or pools of properties with a targeted
maximum loan-to-value of 60% at the time of financing.
After completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement, we expect to consummate a proposed senior revolving
credit facility to finance acquisitions and for working capital
requirements. We have obtained a commitment, which is subject to
the negotiation of definitive loan documents and the
satisfaction of closing conditions, for a three-year, $50.0
million senior revolving credit facility from KeyBank National
Association (an affiliate of KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., which
is a lead manager in this offering), as administrative agent,
and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., in its capacity as the lead
arranger. See Our Business Our Proposed Senior
Revolving Credit Facility for a more detailed description
of the commitment we obtained for the proposed senior revolving
credit facility.
Upon completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement of an aggregate of 350,000 shares of our common
stock to Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke, we expect to have approximately
$169.8 million in cash available to acquire industrial
properties in accordance with our investment strategy.
We expect to meet our short-term liquidity requirements
generally through net cash provided by operations, existing cash
balances and, if necessary, short-term borrowings under our
anticipated credit facility. We believe that our net cash
provided by operations will be adequate to fund operating
requirements, pay interest on any borrowings and fund
distributions in accordance with the REIT requirements of the
federal income tax laws. In the near-term, we intend to fund
future investments in properties with the net proceeds of this
offering and the concurrent private placement. We expect to meet
our long-term liquidity requirements, including with respect to
other investments in industrial properties, property
acquisitions and scheduled debt maturities, through the cash we
will have available upon completion of this offering and the
concurrent private placement and borrowings under our
anticipated credit facility and periodic issuances of common
stock, perpetual preferred stock, and long-term secured and
unsecured debt. The success of our acquisition strategy may
depend, in part, on our ability to obtain and borrow under our
anticipated credit facility and to access additional capital
through issuances of equity and debt securities.
Quantitative and
Qualitative Disclosure About Market Risk
Market risk includes risks that arise from changes in interest
rates, foreign currency exchange rates, commodity prices, equity
prices and other market changes that affect market sensitive
instruments. In pursuing our business strategies, the primary
market risk which we expect to be exposed to in the future is
interest rate risk. We may be exposed to interest rate changes
primarily as a result of debt used to maintain liquidity, fund
capital expenditures and expand our investment portfolio and
operations. We will seek to limit the impact of interest rate
changes on earnings and cash flows and to lower our overall
borrowing costs. We expect that some of our outstanding debt
will have variable interest rates. We may use interest rate caps
to manage our interest rate risks relating to our variable rate
debt. We expect to replace variable rate debt on a regular basis
with fixed rate, long-term debt to finance our assets and
operations.
Critical
Accounting Policies
Below is a discussion of the accounting policies that we believe
will be critical once we commence operations. We consider these
policies critical because they require estimates about matters
that are inherently uncertain, involve various assumptions and
require significant management judgment, and because they are
important for understanding and evaluating our reported
financial results. These judgments will affect the reported
amounts of assets and liabilities and our disclosure of
contingent assets and liabilities at the dates of the financial
statements and the reported amounts of revenue and expenses
during the reporting periods. Applying different estimates or
assumptions may result in materially different amounts reported
in our financial statements.
Property Acquisitions. Upon acquisition
of a property, we will estimate the fair value of acquired
tangible assets (consisting of land, buildings and improvements)
and intangible assets and liabilities (consisting of the above
and below market leases and the origination value of all
in-place leases). We
41
will determine fair values using estimated cash flow projections
and other valuation techniques and applying appropriate discount
and capitalization rates based on available market information.
The fair value of the tangible assets is based on the value of
the property as if it were vacant. The fair value of the above
and below market leases is based on the present value of the
difference between the contractual amounts to be received
pursuant to the acquired leases and our estimate of the market
lease rates measured over a period equal to the remaining
noncancelable term of the leases. The capitalized values of
above market leases (acquired above market leases) and below
market leases (acquired lease obligations) are amortized to rent
revenue over the noncancelable term of the respective leases.
The origination value of in-place leases (acquired in-place
leases) is based on costs to execute similar leases including
commissions and other related costs. The origination value of
in-place leases also includes real estate taxes, insurance and
an estimate of lost rent revenue at market rates during the
estimated time required to lease up the property from vacant to
the occupancy level at the date of acquisition.
Carrying values for financial reporting purposes will be
reviewed for impairment on a
property-by-property
basis whenever events or changes in circumstances indicate that
the carrying value of a property may not be fully recoverable.
When the carrying value of a property or land parcel is greater
than its estimated fair value, based on the intended use and
holding period, an impairment charge to earnings will be
recognized for the excess over its estimated fair value less
costs to sell. The intended use of an asset, either held for
sale or held for the long term, can significantly impact how
impairment is measured. If an asset is intended to be held for
the long term, the impairment analysis will be based on a
two-step test. The first test measures estimated expected future
cash flows over the holding period, including a residual value
(undiscounted and without interest charges), against the
carrying value of the property. If the asset fails the test,
then the asset carrying value will be measured against the lower
of cost or the present value of expected cash flows over the
expected hold period. An impairment charge to earnings will be
recognized for the excess of the assets carrying value
over the lower of cost or the present values of expected cash
flows over the expected hold period. If an asset is intended to
be sold, impairment will be determined using the estimated fair
value less costs to sell. The estimation of expected future net
cash flows is inherently uncertain and relies on assumptions,
among other things, regarding current and future economic and
market conditions and the availability of capital. We will
determine the estimated fair values based on our assumptions
regarding rental rates, costs to complete,
lease-up and
holding periods, as well as sales prices or contribution values.
When available, current market information will be used to
determine capitalization and rental growth rates. When market
information is not readily available, the inputs will be based
on our understanding of market conditions and the experience of
the management team. Actual results could differ significantly
from our estimates. The discount rates used in the fair value
estimates will represent a rate commensurate with the indicated
holding period with a premium layered on for risk. In a few
instances, current comparative sales values will be available
and used to establish fair value.
Revenue Recognition. We will record
rental revenue from operating leases on a straight-line basis
over the term of the leases and maintain an allowance for
estimated losses that may result from the inability of our
customers to make required payments. If customers fail to make
contractual lease payments that are greater than our allowance
for doubtful accounts, security deposits and letters of credit,
then we may have to recognize additional doubtful account
charges in future periods. We will monitor the liquidity and
creditworthiness of our customers on an on-going basis by
reviewing their financial condition periodically as appropriate.
Each period we will review our outstanding accounts receivable,
including straight-line rents, for doubtful accounts and provide
allowances as needed. We will also record lease termination fees
when a customer has executed a definitive termination agreement
with us and the payment of the termination fee is not subject to
any conditions that must be met or waived before the fee is due
to us. If a customer remains in the leased space following the
execution of a definitive termination agreement, the applicable
termination fees will be deferred and recognized over the term
of such customers occupancy.
42
Income Taxes. We intend to elect to be
taxed as a REIT under the Code and intend to operate as such
beginning with our taxable year ending December 31, 2010.
We expect to have little or no taxable income prior to electing
REIT status. To qualify as a REIT, we must meet certain
organizational and operational requirements, including a
requirement to distribute at least 90% of our annual REIT
taxable income to our stockholders (which is computed without
regard to the dividends paid deduction or net capital gain and
which does not necessarily equal net income as calculated in
accordance with U.S. generally accepted accounting principles,
or U.S. GAAP). As a REIT, we generally will not be subject
to federal income tax to the extent we distribute qualifying
dividends to our stockholders. If we fail to qualify as a REIT
in any taxable year, we will be subject to federal income tax on
our taxable income at regular corporate income tax rates and
generally will not be permitted to qualify for treatment as a
REIT for federal income tax purposes for the four taxable years
following the year during which qualification is lost unless the
IRS grants us relief under certain statutory provisions. Such an
event could materially adversely affect our net income and net
cash available for distribution to stockholders. However, we
intend to organize and operate in such a manner as to qualify
for treatment as a REIT.
Share-Based Compensation. We have
adopted the 2010 Equity Plan, which provides for the grant of
restricted stock awards, performance share awards, unrestricted
shares or any combination of the foregoing. Equity-based
compensation will be recognized as an expense in the financial
statements and measured at the fair value of the award on the
date of grant. The amount of the expense may be subject to
adjustment in future periods depending on the specific
characteristics of the equity-based award and the application of
the accounting guidance.
Recently Issued
Accounting Standards
In June 2009, the Financial Accounting Standards Board, or FASB,
issued Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 166,
Accounting for Transfers of Financial Assets, an amendment
of FASB Statement No. 140, or SFAS 166.
SFAS 166 amends various components of the guidance under
SFAS 140 governing sale accounting, including the
recognition of assets obtained and liabilities assumed as a
result of a transfer, and considerations of effective control by
a transferor over transferred assets. In addition, SFAS 166
removes the exemption for qualifying special purpose entities
from the guidance of FASB Interpretation No. 46(R), as
amended by SFAS 167, Amendments to FASB Interpretation
FIN 46(R). SFAS 166 is effective January 1, 2010,
with early adoption prohibited.
Results of
Operations
As of the date of this prospectus, we have not commenced any
operations and will not commence any operations until we have
completed this offering and the concurrent private placement.
Off-Balance Sheet
Arrangements
As of the date of this prospectus, we have no off-balance sheet
arrangements.
Non-GAAP Financial
Measures
We intend to use the following non-GAAP financial measure that
we believe is useful to investors as a key measure of our
operating performance: funds from operations, or FFO. FFO should
not be considered in isolation or as a substitute for measures
of performance in accordance with GAAP.
We intend to compute FFO in accordance with standards
established by NAREIT, which defines FFO as net income (loss)
(determined in accordance with GAAP), excluding gains (losses)
from sales of property, plus depreciation and amortization and
after adjustments for unconsolidated partnerships and joint
ventures (which are calculated to reflect FFO on the same
basis). We believe that presenting FFO provides useful
information to investors regarding our operating performance
because it is a measure of our operations without regard to
specified non-cash items, such as real estate depreciation and
amortization and gain or loss on sale of assets.
43
OUR
BUSINESS
Our
Company
We are an internally managed, newly organized Maryland
corporation focused on acquiring industrial real estate located
in six major coastal U.S. markets: Los Angeles Area;
Northern New Jersey/New York City; San Francisco Bay
Area; Seattle Area; Miami Area; and
Washington, D.C./Baltimore. We intend to invest in several
types of industrial real estate, including
warehouse/distribution, flex (including light manufacturing and
R&D) and trans-shipment. We will target functional
buildings in infill locations that may be shared by multiple
tenants and that cater to customer demand within the various
submarkets in which we operate. Infill locations are geographic
locations surrounded by high concentrations of already developed
land and existing buildings.
The founding members of our management team and our promoters
are Blake Baird, our chairman and chief executive officer, and
Mike Coke, our president and chief financial officer. In 2007,
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke jointly founded Terreno Capital
Partners LLC and subsequently assembled a team of real estate
professionals that began actively analyzing and seeking
industrial investment opportunities in our targeted markets.
These senior executive officers have deep industrial real estate
expertise across markets and cycles, as well as extensive public
REIT operating experience, from Mr. Bairds eight
years of experience and Mr. Cokes nine years of
experience at AMB. AMB is a leading global developer, owner and
operator of industrial real estate. The management teams
expertise encompasses all aspects of industrial real estate
acquisition, development, redevelopment, operations and finance.
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke are currently our only
executive officers. We currently have six employees and we
currently expect to hire five additional experienced
professionals over the next six months based on the
anticipated pace of our investment activities and operations.
Upon completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement of an aggregate of 350,000 shares to Mr. Baird
and Mr. Coke, we expect to have approximately
$169.8 million in cash available to execute our business
strategy.
Market
Opportunities
Overview
We believe that the economic recession and corresponding credit
crisis present an attractive environment to acquire industrial
properties in infill coastal U.S. locations. The
U.S. industrial property sector is experiencing significant
stress from declining operating fundamentals and difficult
credit conditions. Declining operating fundamentals are the
result of industrial tenants reacting to weak macro economic
trends including reduced consumer spending and declining trade
flows. In addition, many property owners took advantage of
abundant capital availability and placed excessive leverage on
properties. The current reduction in credit availability and
weak operating conditions make refinancing near-term debt
maturities more difficult. Furthermore, ownership of industrial
properties is highly fragmented. According to CBRE, there are
approximately 13 billion industrial square feet in the
United States, and the seven publicly traded industrial REITs in
the FTSE NAREIT Equity Industrial Index currently account for
less than 5% of that total based on public filings. The FTSE
NAREIT Equity Industrial Index currently consists of ProLogis,
AMB, EastGroup Properties, Inc., DCT Industrial Trust, Inc.,
First Potomac Realty Trust, First Industrial Realty Trust, Inc.
and Monmouth Real Estate Investment Corporation. We believe that
well-capitalized operators with no legacy issues (such as
over-leveraged properties, significant vacancy and currently
underproductive land and recently developed buildings) will have
a competitive advantage in acquiring high quality industrial
assets at attractive current returns and at a discount relative
to both replacement cost and valuations from recent years. As we
do not currently own any assets and initially will be an
all-cash buyer, we are not restricted by legacy operating or
legacy leverage issues that some of our private and public peers
are presently facing. Once we invest the net proceeds of this
offering and the concurrent private placement, our capital
structure will include indebtedness as described in Our
Business Our
44
Financing Strategy. As illustrated in Chart 1, the
Moodys / REAL Industrial Property Price Index
has fallen 37.4% as of the third quarter of 2009 from its peak
in the fourth quarter of 2007.
Projected
Improvement in Operating Fundamentals
Although operating fundamentals remain weak across
U.S. real estate markets, and may weaken further,
industrial operating fundamentals are expected to improve in the
future. Significant industrial development activity,
particularly from
2006-2008,
followed by falling demand caused by the economic recession, has
left large blocks of vacant space across many U.S. markets.
Given the recent dramatic reduction in development activity in
response to falling demand, we anticipate improvements in the
availability rate and a rebound in rent growth when demand
ultimately returns. According to CBRE, the industrial
availability rate will peak at 15.5% in 2010, its highest level
since at least 1990, with steady improvement thereafter through
2014. CBRE projects that industrial warehouse rents will fall
through 2011 with growth projected in
2012-2014.
Chart 2 illustrates historical and projected industrial
availability rates, and Chart 3 illustrates the historical and
projected industrial warehouse rent growth.
45
Historical
Outperformance of Industrial Real Estate and Our Targeted
Markets
According to NCREIF, industrial real estate has historically
outperformed national real estate returns by over 30 basis
points per year on average with lower volatility. In addition,
over time our targeted markets have demonstrated superior
operating fundamentals relative to all other
U.S. industrial markets, including lower availability and
higher rent growth. Chart 4 illustrates U.S. annual
property returns (income and appreciation, on an unleveraged
basis) in the industrial sector compared to all real estate
asset classes. Chart 5 illustrates a comparison of historical
and projected availability rates between our targeted markets
and all other U.S. industrial markets tracked by CBRE.
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(1) |
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All Property Types consist of Apartment, Hotel, Industrial,
Office and Retail properties. |
46
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(1) |
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Targeted markets covered by CBRE Econometric Advisors consist
of Baltimore, Edison, Fort Lauderdale, Los Angeles, Miami,
New York, Newark, Oakland, Orange County, Riverside,
San Francisco, San Jose, Seattle, and
Washington D.C. |
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(2) |
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All other U.S. markets covered by CBRE Econometric Advisors
consist of Akron, Albuquerque, Ann Arbor, Atlanta, Austin,
Boston, Charlotte, Chicago, Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus,
Dallas, Denver, Fort Worth, Gary, Hartford, Houston,
Indianapolis, Jacksonville, Kansas City, Las Vegas, Long Island,
Memphis, Minneapolis, Nashville, Orlando, Philadelphia, Phoenix,
Pittsburgh, Portland, Raleigh, Sacramento, Salt Lake City,
San Diego, St. Louis, Stamford, Tampa, Trenton,
Tucson, Vallejo, Ventura, West Palm Beach and Wilmington. |
Transaction
Landscape Advantageous to Well-Capitalized Investors with No
Legacy Issues
Low-cost and abundant debt led to a significant increase in
transaction and development activity in industrial real estate
between 2004 and 2007 with sales transactions more than doubling
during the period and cap rates reaching their lowest level in
at least two decades. The credit crisis and declining operating
fundamentals that followed have resulted in a significant
increase in troubled loans. The FDIC reports that as of
September 30, 2009, the amount of loans and leases that
were noncurrent (90 days or more past due or in nonaccrual
status) among all FDIC-insured institutions increased for a 14th
consecutive quarter and the average noncurrent rate on all loans
reached a new
26-year
record. The percentage of nonfarm nonresidential real estate
loans that are noncurrent reached 3.4%, or $37.1 billion,
while the percentage of construction and development real estate
loans that are noncurrent reached 15.0%, or $73.8 billion.
According to Trepp, as of October 31, 2009, the percentage
of CMBS loans included in Trepps database that are
delinquent by 30 days or more is at 4.83%, the highest
level recorded by Trepp since 1998, which represents
$35.2 billion in outstanding loan balances. As lenders
react to this environment, obtaining new loans or extending
existing ones for property owners has become significantly more
difficult. We believe this will lead to increases in foreclosure
activities and distressed sales.
According to Real Capital Analytics, as of November 2009, the
total market for distressed U.S. commercial real estate
totaled 7,518 properties valued at approximately
$155 billion with industrial properties representing
$4.9 billion of that total. According to NAREIT, as of
October 2009, the seven publicly traded industrial equity REITs
in the U.S. have an average debt ratio (total debt divided
by total market capitalization) of 59.0%, with a range of 42.6%
to 87.7%. We believe this may cause these REITs to raise equity
or sell assets.
47
While industrial cap rates (net operating income divided by
sales price) troughed at 6.8% in 2007 according to Real Capital
Analytics, recent transactions suggest a return to the long-term
average of 8.0% to 9.0%. We believe well-capitalized investors
without legacy issues will be able to take advantage of this
environment. Chart 6 illustrates historical industrial cap rates
(net operating income divided by sales price).
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(1) |
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Represents the three month rolling average cap rate of all U.S.
industrial property level sale transactions over $5 million in
size from January 2001 to October 2009 in the markets tracked by
Real Capital Analytics. |
Overview of
Industrial Property Transactions in Our Targeted Markets in
2009
We believe that our targeted markets present attractive
opportunities to acquire industrial properties in infill coastal
U.S. locations as evidenced by recent transactions in our
targeted markets. According to Real Capital Analytics, 250
industrial property transactions occurred in 2009 in our
targeted markets representing a total transaction volume of
approximately $3.4 billion at an average price per square
foot of approximately $86. The information from Real Capital
Analytics indicates that the dollar volume of industrial
property transactions in our targeted markets increased over the
course of 2009. According to Real Capital Analytics,
approximately $1.2 billion of industrial property
transactions closed in the fourth quarter of 2009, or
approximately 35% of the total volume of industrial property
transactions in our targeted markets in 2009, compared to an
average of approximately $745 million of industrial
property transactions that closed during each of the first three
quarters of 2009. We believe that recent industrial property
transactions in our targeted markets also suggest that pricing
has become more attractive than in the first half of 2009.
According to Real Capital Analytics, the pricing of industrial
property transactions that occurred in our targeted markets fell
from a weighted average of approximately $95 per square foot in
the first half of 2009 to a weighted average of approximately
$80 per square foot in the second half of 2009.
Transactions
Consistent with Our Investment Strategy
Based on our analysis of the 250 industrial property
transactions in 2009 in our targeted markets included in the
data from Real Capital Analytics, we believe that the physical
location and functionality of 12 of those industrial property
transactions would have been consistent with our investment
strategy and executed at pricing attractive to us. According to
Real Capital Analytics, those 12 industrial property
transactions represented a total dollar volume of approximately
$200 million at an average
48
transaction price of approximately $16.7 million, or $53
per square foot, which is below the average price per square
foot of approximately $86 reflected in all 250 industrial
property transactions in our targeted markets in 2009. Based on
the data from Real Capital Analytics, 11 of those 12 industrial
property transactions occurred in the second half of 2009, which
we believe reflects a growing trend in the volume of
transactions that may be available in our targeted markets at
attractive pricing levels. The Real Capital Analytics data
reflects that 6 of those 12 industrial property transactions
occurred during the fourth quarter of 2009 for a total volume of
approximately $100 million, 5 of those 12 industrial
property transactions occurred during the third quarter of 2009
for a total volume of approximately $70 million, 1 of those
12 industrial property transactions occurred during the second
quarter of 2009 for a total volume of $30 million and none
of those 12 industrial property transactions occurred during the
first quarter of 2009.
Competitive
Strengths
We believe we distinguish ourselves from our competitors through
the following competitive advantages:
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Management Team with Deeply Specialized Industrial
Expertise. Our management team is led by
Blake Baird, our chairman and chief executive officer, and Mike
Coke, our president and chief financial officer. These senior
executive officers have deep industrial real estate expertise
across markets and cycles, as well as extensive public REIT
operating experience, from Mr. Bairds eight years of
experience and Mr. Cokes nine years of
experience most recently as president and chief financial
officer, respectively, at AMB. In 2007, Mr. Baird and
Mr. Coke jointly founded Terreno Capital Partners LLC and
subsequently assembled a team of real estate professionals that
began actively analyzing and seeking industrial investment
opportunities in our targeted markets. Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke
each have approximately 20 years of commercial real estate
industry experience.
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Demonstrated Track
Record. During their tenures at AMB,
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke helped transform AMB from an
owner of shopping centers and industrial buildings with
64 million square feet of space in 30 U.S. markets
into a leading global developer, owner and operator of
industrial real estate with interests in over 1,000 buildings
comprising 125 million square feet located in 12 countries
across North America, Europe and Asia. During this period, AMB
acquired approximately $4.6 billion of real estate assets.
From January 20, 1999, the date that Mr. Baird joined
AMB, to November 20, 2006, the date that both
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke announced their departure from
AMB, the total return (stock price appreciation and dividends
paid) to AMB stockholders was 313%, outperforming the 285% total
return for the MSCI U.S. REIT Index over the same period.
The MSCI U.S. REIT Index is a market capitalization
weighted index that is comprised of equity REITs that are
included in the MSCI U.S. Investable Market 2500 Index, with the
exception of specialty equity REITs that do not generate a
majority of their revenue and income from real estate rental and
leasing operations. The MSCI U.S. REIT Index represents
approximately 85% of the U.S. REITs. AMB is a constituent
company of the MSCI U.S. REIT Index. The information about
AMBs historical performance is a reflection of the past
performance of AMB and is not a guarantee or prediction of our
future returns.
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Focused Investment Strategy with No Legacy
Issues. We selected our target markets based
upon Mr. Bairds and Mr. Cokes experiences
investing and operating in over 50 global industrial markets
located in North America, Europe and Asia and also in
anticipation of trends in logistics patterns resulting from
population changes, regulatory and physical constraints,
potential long term increases in carbon prices and other
factors. As we do not currently own any assets and initially
will be an
all-cash
buyer, we are not restricted by the operational or
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49
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liquidity issues that some of our private and public peers are
presently facing. Upon completion of this offering and the
concurrent private placement, we expect to have approximately
$169.8 million in cash to invest and our management can
focus on new investment opportunities.
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Conservative Targeted Leverage with Growth Oriented
Capital Structure. We expect to maintain
financial flexibility and a conservative capital structure using
retained cash flows, long-term debt and the issuance of common
and perpetual preferred stock to finance our growth. We intend
to limit the sum of the outstanding principal amount of our
consolidated indebtedness and the liquidation preference of any
outstanding preferred stock to less than 40% of our total
enterprise value and to maintain a fixed charge coverage ratio
in excess of 2.0x.
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Highly Aligned Compensation
Structure. We believe that executive
compensation should be closely aligned with long term
stockholder value creation. As a result, at the closing of this
offering, all of Mr. Bairds and Mr. Cokes incentive
compensation will be based solely on our total stockholder
return exceeding certain rolling targets versus benchmarks.
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke will not be eligible to receive
any payouts under our long-term incentive program until early
2012. In addition, Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke will each receive
50,000 shares of restricted stock upon completion of this
offering that will vest ratably in annual installments over a
five-year period. Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke also will purchase
in the aggregate 350,000 shares of our common stock in a private
placement concurrently with this offering at the same price per
share as in this offering but without the payment of any
underwriting discount.
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Commitment to Strong Corporate
Governance. We are committed to strong
corporate governance, as demonstrated by the following:
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all members of our board of directors will serve annual terms;
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we have adopted a majority voting standard in non-contested
director elections;
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we have opted out of two Maryland anti-takeover provisions and,
in the future, may not opt back in to these provisions without
stockholder approval;
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we designed our ownership limits solely to protect our status as
a REIT and not for the purpose of serving as an anti-takeover
device; and
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we have no stockholder rights plan. In the future, we will not
adopt a stockholder rights plan unless our stockholders approve
in advance the adoption of a plan or, if adopted by our board of
directors, we will submit the stockholder rights plan to our
stockholders for a ratification vote within 12 months of
adoption or the plan will terminate.
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Our Investment
Strategy
We intend to invest in industrial properties located in six
major coastal U.S. markets: Los Angeles Area; Northern
New Jersey/New York City; San Francisco Bay Area; Seattle
Area; Miami Area; and Washington, D.C./Baltimore. We intend
to invest the net proceeds of this offering and the concurrent
private placement in these industrial properties within six to
twelve months after the completion of this offering.
As described in more detail in the table below, we intend to
invest in several types of industrial real estate, including
warehouse/distribution, flex (including light manufacturing and
R&D) and trans-shipment. We will target functional
buildings in infill locations that may be shared by multiple
tenants and that cater to customer demand within the various
submarkets in which we operate. We do not expect to invest
outside of the United States.
50
Industrial
Facility General Characteristics
Warehouse /
distribution
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Single and multiple tenant facilities that typically serve
tenants greater than 30,000 square feet of space
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Less than 10% office space
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Typical clear height from 18 feet to 36 feet
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May include production/manufacturing areas
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Adequate interior access via dock high
and/or grade
level doors
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Adequate truck court for large and small truck distribution
options, possibly including staging for a high volume of truck
activity
and/or
trailer storage
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Flex (including
light industrial and R&D)
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Single and multiple tenant facilities that typically serve
tenants less than 30,000 square feet of space
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Facilities generally accommodate both office and
warehouse/manufacturing activities
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Typically has a larger amount of office space and shallower bay
depths than other classes of industrial facilities
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Adequate parking consistent with increased office use
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Adequate interior access via grade level
and/or dock
high doors
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Staging for moderate truck activity
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Sometimes has a showroom, service center, or assembly/light
manufacturing component
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Enhanced landscaping
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Trans-shipment
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Includes truck terminals, cross docking and airport on-tarmac
facilities, which serve both single and multiple tenants
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Typically has a high number of dock high doors, shallow bay
depth and lower clear height
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Staging for a high volume of truck activity and trailer storage
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We selected our target markets by drawing upon
Mr. Bairds and Mr. Cokes experiences in
investing and operating in over 50 global industrial markets
located in North America, Europe and Asia and in anticipation of
trends in logistics patterns resulting from population changes,
regulatory and physical constraints, potential long term
increases in carbon prices and other factors. We believe that
our target markets have attractive long term investment
attributes. We will target assets with characteristics that
include, but are not limited to, the following:
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located in high population coastal markets;
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close proximity to transportation infrastructure (such as sea
ports, airports, highways and railways);
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situated in supply-constrained submarkets with barriers to new
industrial development, as a result of physical
and/or
regulatory constraints;
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functional and flexible layout that can be modified to
accommodate single and multiple tenants;
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acquisition price at a significant discount to the replacement
cost of the property;
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potential for enhanced return through re-tenanting or
operational improvements; and
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opportunity for higher and better use of the property over time.
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51
We will utilize local third party property managers for
day-to-day property management. We believe outsourcing property
management is cost effective and provides us with operational
flexibility to scale our investments within any chosen market.
In addition, property management firms can be an important
source of investment opportunities.
While not prohibited from doing so, we have no current intention
to acquire industrial land or to pursue ground up development.
However, we may pursue redevelopment opportunities of properties
that we own.
We expect the significant majority of our investments will be
equity interests in individual properties or portfolios of
properties. We may also acquire industrial properties through
the acquisition of other corporations or entities that own
industrial real estate. We will opportunistically target
investments in debt secured by industrial real estate that would
otherwise meet our investment criteria with the intention of
ultimately acquiring the underlying real estate.
We currently do not intend to target specific percentages of
holdings of particular types of industrial properties, although
we currently expect that our initial portfolio will include less
than 10% of debt secured by industrial properties. This
expectation is based upon prevailing market conditions and may
change over time in response to different prevailing market
conditions.
We currently expect to acquire target assets based on their
anticipated total return, which consists of income and any
capital appreciation. We currently expect to be a long-term
owner in the properties we acquire, but we may sell properties
at any time, subject to REIT provisions of the Code, including
the prohibited transaction rules, if our management determines
it is in our best interests to do so.
Our Investment
Process
Sourcing and
Initial Screening
Through their extensive industry experience, our management team
has built a network of relationships from which to source
investment opportunities in our targeted markets. All of these
relationships are focused on the industrial asset class, and
include owners, property managers, developers, leasing and
investment sales brokers, financiers, lenders, institutional
investors, lawyers and accountants. These broad connections are
expected to help source not only marketed transactions, but also
potential transactions outside of a competitive bid environment.
Once an investment opportunity is identified, we intend to
analyze the location, functionality and basic investment
returns. In particular, we intend to grade a given assets
functionality by its specific access, bay depth, dock door
locations and count, office percentage, clear height and site
coverage ratio. The key criteria of this initial screening will
be our prior experience within submarkets, replacement cost and
the competitive landscape. If an asset meets our criteria,
including our current risk adjusted return hurdle, we intend to
proceed further into our investment process.
Underwriting
and Analysis
Once identified as having potential, an opportunity will undergo
both a bottom up and top down analysis. We intend to first focus
on the property level, the submarket and finally the target
market overall. The officer running the process will tour the
asset, and meet with local market resources. The team will
create a preliminary underwriting that analyzes the assets
price per square foot, replacement cost, actual cap rate, market
cap rate, stabilized cap rate and internal rate of return. In
particular, we intend to focus on tenancy, rollover, market
rents, expenses and taxes. The team will review the expected
capital expenditures and their impact on cash flows. If we
expect to use
non-recourse
secured debt, we will analyze the appropriate loan to value,
debt service coverage ratio and current market terms to
determine the optimal capital structure, both for the asset
itself and our corporate balance sheet.
52
On the submarket and target market levels, our investment team
(acquisition and asset management professionals) will consult
with our local outside market resources to test and confirm our
assumptions and the current market conditions. We expect to
focus on current vacancy rates, rental growth, tenant demand and
recent market sale and lease comparables. We also expect to
review submarket and market employment drivers and demographic
drivers and intend to closely monitor other local economic
drivers including trade flows. We will also determine the local
property management and leasing teams that will be engaged to
represent the property in the market. Once we have completed our
analysis, we will present an investment memorandum for approval
by our investment committee or our board of directors, as
applicable.
Approval by
Our Investment Committee or Our Board of Directors
The acquisition officer in charge of a given transaction will
complete an investment memorandum, outlining the investment
hypothesis, including the assets return projections,
compliance with our capital allocation targets, property
comparable transactions, risks, market conditions and exit
strategy. The acquisition officer will then submit the
investment memorandum to our investment committee, which is
currently composed of Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke, or to
our board of directors, as applicable. Our board of directors
has delegated to our investment committee the authority to
approve any investment under $100 million. Our board of
directors must approve any investments of $100 million or
more. Approval by our investment committee requires a unanimous
vote and may be given with conditions. After the investment team
has given its initial approval, we will engage in due diligence
and negotiate definitive documentation.
Due Diligence
and Closing
We believe that we undertake a detailed approach to due
diligence. We intend to engage legal counsel to review title,
insurance and local regulatory compliance. As necessary, we will
engage outside counsel to review complex leases. Third party
consultants may be retained to provide a Phase I environmental
report, physical/structural report, updated ALTA survey and any
other applicable inspections as needed. As part of the physical
report, our investment team will review its capital cost
estimates versus the engineers projected capital needs. In
addition, we intend to typically perform additional property
inspections and tenant interviews. Once due diligence is
complete, our investment team again presents the findings and
final underwriting to our investment committee or our board of
directors, as applicable.
Asset
Management
We will make all operating and leasing decisions on our
properties. We will utilize local third property managers for
day-to-day property management. We believe outsourcing property
management is cost effective and provides us with operational
flexibility to scale our investments within any chosen market.
We expect that our property management contracts typically will
be for a one-year term cancellable upon 30 days notice or
upon the sale of the property. In addition, we expect that our
property management contracts typically will provide for
compensation to our third party property managers of
approximately 2% to 3% of rental revenues and expense
reimbursements collected at the property. We do not believe that
property management contracts that are cancellable on short
notice involve increased costs or risks to us and instead will
enable us to incentivize performance and provide us with
flexibility to replace property managers to the extent that we
determine to do so.
We intend to review our property performance quarterly and make
changes to the asset management plan approved by our investment
committee as conditions warrant. This review will generally
include operational statistics, collections, market trends,
significant lease rollovers, marketing strategy and capital
improvements. In particular, the assets capital
expenditures and insurance will be closely monitored in order to
mitigate large risks across the portfolio. In rapidly changing
leasing markets, these reviews may be more frequent. Property
tours and walk-throughs will be regularly scheduled by the asset
manager, including meetings with the local leasing team and
other market resources.
53
Finally, on a regular basis we intend to review performance
versus our underwriting in order to improve our overall
performance and to assess the performance of our investment team.
Our Financing
Strategy
The primary objective of our financing strategy is to maintain
financial flexibility with a conservative capital structure
using retained cash flows, long-term debt and the issuance of
common and perpetual preferred stock to finance our growth. We
intend to:
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limit the sum of the outstanding principal amount of our
consolidated indebtedness and the liquidation preference of any
outstanding perpetual preferred stock to less than 40% of our
total enterprise value;
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maintain a fixed charge coverage ratio in excess of 2.0x;
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over the long-term, limit the principal amount of our
outstanding floating rate debt to less than 20% of our total
consolidated indebtedness; and
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have staggered debt maturities that are aligned to our expected
average lease term (5-7 years), positioning us to re-price
parts of our capital structure as our rental rates change with
market conditions.
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We intend to preserve a flexible capital structure with a
long-term goal to obtain an investment grade rating and be in a
position to issue unsecured debt and perpetual preferred stock.
Prior to attaining an investment grade rating, we intend to
primarily utilize non-recourse debt secured by individual
properties or pools of properties with a targeted maximum
loan-to-value of 60% at the time of financing.
Our Proposed
Senior Revolving Credit Facility
Availability
We have obtained a commitment for a $50 million, three-year
senior revolving credit facility from KeyBank National
Association (an affiliate of KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., which
is a lead manager in this offering), as administrative agent,
and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., in its capacity as the lead
arranger. We collectively refer to KeyBank National Association
and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc. as KeyBank. The
credit facility will be guaranteed by substantially all of our
to-be-formed subsidiaries that own a borrowing base
property. The credit facility will be secured by a pledge
of our equity interests in the subsidiaries that hold each of
the borrowing base properties. Properties that fit our
investment strategy as described in this prospectus will be
eligible to be included in the borrowing base, subject to the
required lenders approval and delivery of certain
documentation. We may also request to add additional properties
to the borrowing base that do not fit within our investment
strategy, subject to the required lenders approval and
delivery of certain documentation.
Outstanding borrowings on the credit facility are limited to the
lesser of $50 million or 50% of the value of the borrowing
base properties. However, if the gross proceeds of this offering
were to be less than $175 million, outstanding borrowings on the
credit facility would be limited to $35 million until such time,
if any, as we raise at least $200 million in aggregate net
proceeds in this offering and any follow-on equity offerings.
The initial availability of the facility is also subject to a
borrowing base having no less than four properties with an
aggregate borrowing base value of $50 million. We may
remove properties from the borrowing base in connection with a
sale or refinancing of such property as long as at least five
borrowing base properties remain and the value of the remaining
borrowing base properties is not less than $60 million and
subject to our continued compliance with certain financial
covenants described below. If completed, we may elect to
increase the amount of the facility up to $150 million,
subject to the approval of the administrative agent and the
identification of a lender or lenders willing to make available
the additional amounts.
54
Payment
Terms
We will be obligated to pay interest on a monthly basis, with
all outstanding principal and accrued but unpaid interest due at
maturity. We have the right to repay all or any portion of the
loan from time to time without penalty or premium, other than
customary early payment fees if we repay a LIBOR loan before the
end of the contract period. In addition, we will be required to
make earlier principal reduction payments in the event of
certain changes in the borrowing base availability.
Interest is paid on the periodic advances under the credit
facility at varying rates, based upon, at our option, either
(i) LIBOR, subject to a floor of 1.50%, plus the applicable
LIBOR margin or (ii) the applicable base rate which is the
greater of the administrative agents prime rate plus
1.00%, 0.50% above the fed funds effective rate, or
thirty-day
LIBOR (incorporating the floor of 1.50%) plus the applicable
LIBOR margin for LIBOR rate loans under the facility. The
applicable LIBOR margin depends upon the ratio of our
outstanding consolidated total indebtedness to the value of our
consolidated gross asset value, as follows:
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Greater than 55% but less than or equal to 60%
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Greater than 50% but less than or equal to 55%
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Greater than 45% but less than or equal to 50%
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Less than or equal to 45%
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LIBOR Margin
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4.25%
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3.75%
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3.25%
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3.00%
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We will be required to pay quarterly an annual amount equal to
0.50% of the unused portion of the credit facility if usage is
less than 50% and 0.35% of the unused portion of the credit
facility if usage is greater than or equal to 50%. We will also
be required to pay other fees, including customary arrangement,
administrative and fronting fees.
Financial and
Other Covenants
In addition, we will be required to comply with a series of
financial and other covenants in order to borrow under the
facility. A summary of the material covenants is as follows:
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Corporate Leverage Ratio(1)
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60%
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Fixed Charge Coverage Ratio
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1.75x
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(1) |
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Corporate Leverage Ratio is determined by dividing
the total liabilities outstanding by the gross asset value of
our real estate assets. Gross asset value is generally
calculated based on the application of a contractual
capitalization rate (8.5%) to the net operating income of all of
the real estate assets owned by us for two full fiscal quarters.
Gross asset value for real estate assets owned less than two
fiscal quarters is the cost basis. |
55
We also are required to maintain a specific pool of unencumbered
borrowing base properties, which are subject to the following
material limitations and covenants:
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Borrowing Base Leverage(1)
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May not exceed 50%
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Debt Service Coverage Ratio(2)
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1.60x
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Occupancy Covenants
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Minimum aggregate occupancy of 80% at all times
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Additionally, until the value of the borrowing base properties
exceeds $100 million, the weighted average remaining lease term
of each borrowing base property must be at least four years
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Borrowing Base Diversification
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No one property may comprise 35% or greater of the borrowing
base property value; no one market may comprise 40% or greater
of the borrowing base value; no single tenant may comprise 20%
or greater of the adjusted net operating income of the borrowing
base
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(1) |
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Borrowing Base Leverage is calculated as the
outstanding amounts under the credit facility divided by the
borrowing base property value. Borrowing base property value is
generally calculated based on the application of a contractual
capitalization rate (8.5%) to the net operating income of all
real estate assets owned by us for two full fiscal quarters. For
real estate assets owned less than two fiscal quarters, the
value is the cost basis. |
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Debt Service Coverage Ratio is calculated as the
adjusted net operating income divided by the implied facility
debt service. The implied facility debt service is
calculated as outstanding amounts under the credit facility
multiplied by (i) the greater of the actual weighted
average interest rate on the outstanding amounts under the
credit facility or 7.0% and (ii) a
30-year
amortization schedule. |
We are also subject to other covenants, including restrictions
on payments of dividends and investments, absence of additional
security interests on the borrowing base assets and maintenance
of our REIT status. The credit facility will also contain
customary events of default, including failure to make payments
when due under any of the credit facility documents, breach of
any representation or warranty, breach of any covenant
continuing beyond the cure period, bankruptcy or insolvency,
unpaid judgment, adverse ERISA event, material adverse change to
our business, invalidity of any of the credit facility
documents, a change in control and cross defaults to
non-recourse debt in excess of $10 million or recourse debt
in excess of $1 million.
Closing
Conditions
KeyBank is not obligated to enter into the credit facility
unless we have complied with all of the closing conditions,
including the absence of any material adverse change to our
business, assets, operations, condition (financial or otherwise)
or prospects, payment of all fees associated with the loan, the
negotiation, execution and delivery of definitive documentation
satisfactory to KeyBank, the raising of at least
$150 million of gross proceeds in this offering and the
listing of our common stock on the NYSE. KeyBank will not be
obligated to fund the credit facility after March 31, 2010,
if we do not enter into definitive agreements on or before that
date. We also have agreed to actively assist KeyBank in
syndicating the credit facility. There can be no assurance that
all of the closing conditions necessary to enter into the credit
facility, including the agreement on definitive documentation
with KeyBank, will be satisfied by March 31, 2010.
Competition
We believe the current market for industrial real estate
acquisitions to be competitive. We expect to compete for real
property investments with pension funds and their advisors, bank
and insurance
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company investment accounts, other public and private real
estate investment companies, real estate limited partnerships,
owner-users, individuals and other entities engaged in real
estate investment activities, some of which have greater
financial resources than we do. In addition, we believe the
leasing of real estate to be highly competitive. We experience
competition for customers from owners and managers of competing
properties. As a result, we may have to provide free rental
periods, incur charges for tenant improvements or offer other
inducements, all of which may have an adverse impact on our
results of operations.
Environmental
Matters
The industrial properties that we acquire will be subject to
various federal, state and local environmental laws. Under these
laws, courts and government agencies have the authority to
require us, as owner of a contaminated property, to clean up the
property, even if we did not know of or were not responsible for
the contamination. These laws also apply to persons who owned a
property at the time it became contaminated, and therefore it is
possible we could incur these costs even after we sell some of
the properties we acquire. In addition to the costs of cleanup,
environmental contamination can affect the value of a property
and, therefore, an owners ability to borrow using the
property as collateral or to sell the property. Under applicable
environmental laws, courts and government agencies also have the
authority to require that a person who sent waste to a waste
disposal facility, such as a landfill or an incinerator, pay for
the clean-up
of that facility if it becomes contaminated and threatens human
health or the environment.
Furthermore, various court decisions have established that third
parties may recover damages for injury caused by property
contamination. For instance, a person exposed to asbestos at one
of our properties may seek to recover damages if he or she
suffers injury from the asbestos. Lastly, some of these
environmental laws restrict the use of a property or place
conditions on various activities. An example would be laws that
require a business using chemicals to manage them carefully and
to notify local officials that the chemicals are being used.
We could be responsible for any of the costs discussed above.
The costs to clean up a contaminated property, to defend against
a claim, or to comply with environmental laws could be material
and could adversely affect the funds available for distribution
to our stockholders. We generally expect to obtain Phase I
environmental site assessments, or ESAs, on each property
prior to acquiring it. However, these ESAs may not reveal all
environmental costs that might have a material adverse effect on
our business, assets, results of operations or liquidity and may
not identify all potential environmental liabilities.
We will utilize local third party property managers for
day-to-day property management and will rely on these third
parties to operate our industrial properties in compliance with
applicable federal, state and local environmental laws in their
daily operation of the respective properties and to promptly
notify us of any environmental contaminations or similar issues.
As a result, we may become subject to material environmental
liabilities of which we are unaware. We can make no assurances
that (1) future laws or regulations will not impose
material environmental liabilities on us, or (2) the
environmental condition of our industrial properties will not be
affected by the condition of the properties in the vicinity of
our industrial properties (such as the presence of leaking
underground storage tanks) or by third parties unrelated to us.
Legal
Proceedings
We are not involved in any material litigation nor, to our
knowledge, is any material litigation threatened against us.
57
MANAGEMENT
Our Directors and
Executive Officers
Currently, our board of directors consists of two directors.
Upon the completion of this offering, our board of directors
will consist of six members, including our current two directors
and four individuals each of whom has consented to serve as a
director and will be a director upon completion of this
offering. We expect our board of directors to determine that
each of the four independent director nominees satisfies the
listing standards for independence of the NYSE. Pursuant to our
charter, our directors will be elected annually by our
stockholders to serve until the next annual meeting or until
their successors are duly elected and qualify. The first annual
meeting of our stockholders after this offering will be held in
2011. Our officers serve at the discretion of our board of
directors. Our bylaws provide that a majority of the entire
board of directors may at any time increase or decrease the
number of directors. However, unless our bylaws are amended, the
number of directors may never be less than one, which is the
minimum number required by the MGCL, nor more than 11.
Certain information regarding our directors, director nominees
and executive officers is set forth below:
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Name
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Age
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Position
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W. Blake Baird
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Chairman, chief executive officer and director
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Michael A. Coke
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President, chief financial officer and director
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LeRoy E. Carlson
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Independent Director
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Peter J. Merlone
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Independent Director
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Douglas M. Pasquale
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Independent Director
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Dennis Polk
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Independent Director
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Biographical
Information
The following are biographical summaries of the experience of
the persons who will serve as our executive officers and
directors upon the completion of this offering:
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W. Blake Baird will serve as chairman of our
board of directors and our chief executive officer.
Mr. Baird was managing partner and co-founder of Terreno
Capital Partners LLC, a private real estate investment firm,
from September 2007 to February 2010. Mr. Baird served
as president of AMB, a leading global developer, owner and
operator of industrial real estate, from January 2000 to
December 2006. Mr. Baird also served as a director of AMB
from 2001 to 2006 and chairman of its investment committee.
Mr. Baird joined AMB as its chief investment officer in
1999. Prior to that, Mr. Baird was a managing director of
Morgan Stanley & Co., most recently as head of Real
Estate Investment Banking for the Western United States.
Mr. Baird spent 15 years at Morgan Stanley and Dean
Witter, the last 11 focusing on real estate. Mr. Baird
currently serves as a director of Alexander & Baldwin,
Inc. (NYSE: ALEX), a Honolulu-headquartered ocean
transportation, real estate and agribusiness company.
Mr. Baird is a member of the Young Presidents
Organization and a former member of the Board of Governors of
the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts.
Mr. Baird holds a B.S. in Economics from the Wharton School
(magna cum laude) and a B.A. in History from the College of Arts
and Sciences (magna cum laude) at the University of
Pennsylvania. He also holds an M.B.A. from New York University.
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Michael A. Coke will serve as our president and
chief financial officer and as a director. Mr. Coke was
managing partner and co-founder of Terreno Capital Partners LLC,
a private real estate investment management firm, from September
2007 to February 2010. From January 1999 to March 2007, Mr.
Coke served as chief financial officer of AMB, a leading global
developer, owner and operator of industrial real estate. While
at AMB, Mr. Coke also served as executive vice president until
May 2007, and was AMBs chief accounting officer from 1998
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until January 2007. Mr. Coke was a member of
AMBs investment committee and was responsible for capital
markets, accounting, tax, information systems, dispositions,
valuations, risk management and financial planning groups
totaling more than 130 officers and associates in five
countries. During his tenure at AMB, Mr. Coke was a three
time recipient of Realty Stock Reviews Annual Outstanding
CFO Award. From October 2005 to May 2007, Mr. Coke served
as president and chief executive officer of IAT Aviation
Facilities, Inc., a listed Canadian Income Trust. Prior to AMB,
Mr. Coke spent seven years with Arthur Andersen LLP, where
he most recently served as an audit manager. At Arthur Andersen,
he primarily served public and private real estate companies,
including several public real estate investment trusts, and
specialized in real estate auditing and accounting, mergers,
initial public offerings and business acquisition due diligence.
Mr. Coke is a director and chairman of the audit committee
of DuPont Fabros Technology, Inc. (NYSE: DFT), a leading owner,
developer, operator and manager of wholesale data centers
headquartered in Washington, D.C. Mr. Coke received a
bachelors degree in business administration and accounting
from California State University at Hayward. He is a former
Certified Public Accountant.
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LeRoy E. Carlson has agreed to serve on our board
of directors and will be a director upon the closing of this
offering. Mr. Carlson has been a principal of NNC Apartment
Ventures, LLC, a well established firm specializing in the
long-term investment in multi-family assets on the West Coast,
since 1999. Mr. Carlson formerly served as executive vice
president, chief operating officer, chief financial officer and
board member of BRE Properties, Inc. BRE Properties, Inc. is a
large multi-family NYSElisted real estate investment trust
based in San Francisco, California. In his role as chief
operating officer, Mr. Carlson oversaw the companys
capital market activities, asset management and development and
played a key role in two company mergers with an aggregate value
of two billion dollars. Mr. Carlson retired from BRE
Properties, Inc. in October 2002. Prior to joining BRE
Properties, Inc., Mr. Carlson served as vice president,
chief financial officer and as a director of Real Estate
Investment Trust of California from 1990 to March 1996. He was a
partner and chief financial officer of William Walters Company,
a southern California based asset management company and
investor, from 1976 to 1990. Mr. Carlson is a Certified
Public Accountant in California. He is a graduate of the
University of Southern California where he serves as a member of
the board at the Lusk Center for Real Estate.
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Peter J. Merlone has agreed to serve on our board
of directors and will be a director upon the closing of this
offering. Mr. Merlone is a founder, co-owner and
co-managing partner of the general partner entities of Merlone
Geier Partners, or MGP, a private real estate investment firm
focused on the acquisition, development and redevelopment of
retail and mixed-use properties in California and other western
states, and Merlone Geier Management, or MGM, which provides all
management, leasing and construction services for all MGP and
M&H funds. Mr. Merlone is also a founder, co-owner and
president of the general partner entities of M&H Realty
Partners, or M&H, the predecessor to MGP, and was a founder
and president of M&H Property Management, or MHPM, the
predecessor to MGM. From 1986 to 1993, prior to the formation of
the first M&H fund, Mr. Merlone was the founder and
owner of The Merlone Company, MHPMs predecessor.
Mr. Merlones primary responsibilities are to
formulate and oversee the strategy, financial and operating
affairs of MGP and the activities of MGM. Since 1993,
Mr. Merlone has overseen nine institutional limited
partnerships with aggregate equity capital commitments of
$1.6 billion which have acquired approximately 70 operating
properties aggregating more than 11 million square feet of
retail improvements, and land developments totaling
1,500 acres. Mr. Merlone graduated from UCLA in 1979,
simultaneously earning an undergraduate degree in economics,
summa cum laude, and a masters degree in education; he was
also elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Mr. Merlone is a member of
the International Council of Shopping Centers and is a licensed
real estate broker.
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Douglas M. Pasquale has agreed to serve on our
board of directors and will be a director upon the closing of
this offering. Mr. Pasquale has served as president and
chief executive
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officer of Nationwide Health Properties, Inc., or NHP (NYSE:
NHP), a publicly traded real estate investment trust that
invests in senior housing facilities, long-term care facilities
and medical office buildings throughout the United States, since
April, 2004 and as executive vice president, chief operating
officer and a director of NHP since November 2003. On
February 10, 2009, Mr. Pasquale was elected to serve
as chairman of the board of NHP, effective immediately prior to
NHPs annual meeting on May 5, 2009. Mr. Pasquale
served as the chairman and chief executive officer of ARV
Assisted Living, an operator of assisted living facilities, from
December 1999 to September 2003. From April 2003 to September
2003, Mr. Pasquale concurrently served as president and
chief executive officer of Atria Senior Living Group. From March
1999 to December 1999, Mr. Pasquale served as the president
and chief executive officer at ARV, and he served as the
president and chief operating officer at ARV from June 1998 to
March 1999. Previously, Mr. Pasquale served as president
and chief executive officer of Richfield Hospitality Services,
Inc. and Regal Hotels International North America a
hotel ownership and hotel management company from 1996 to 1998,
and as its chief financial officer from 1994 to 1996.
Mr. Pasquale is a director of Alexander &
Baldwin, Inc. (NYSE: ALEX), a Honolulu-headquartered ocean
transportation, real estate and agribusiness company.
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Dennis Polk has agreed to serve on our board of
directors and will be a director upon the closing of this
offering. Mr. Polk joined SYNNEX Corporation (NYSE: SNX) in
2002 as senior vice president of corporate finance and chief
financial officer. In July 2006, he was promoted to his current
position of chief operating officer. SYNNEX is a business
process services company, including the distribution of
information technology products, manufacturing and logistics
services and business process outsourcing. Prior to SYNNEX, Mr.
Polk held senior executive positions in finance and operations
at DoveBid, Inc. and Savoir Technology Group. Prior to Savoir,
Mr. Polk was an audit manager for Grant Thornton LLP. A
graduate of Santa Clara University, Mr. Polk received
his bachelors degree in accounting.
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Board of
Directors and Committees
Upon completion of this offering, our board of directors will
form an audit committee, a compensation committee and a
nominating and corporate governance committee and will adopt
charters for each of these board committees. Under these
charters, the composition of each of these committees will be
required to comply with the listing standards and rules and
regulations of the NYSE as amended or modified from time to
time. Initially, each of these committees will have
four directors and will be composed exclusively of
independent directors, as defined by the listing standards of
the NYSE. Moreover, the compensation committee will be composed
exclusively of individuals intended to be, to the extent
provided by
Rule 16b-3
of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, or the
Exchange Act, non-employee directors and will, at such times as
we are subject to Section 162(m) of the Code, qualify as
outside directors for purposes of Section 162(m) of the
Code. Our board of directors may from time to time establish
certain other committees to facilitate the management of our
company.
Audit
Committee
The audit committee will be composed of Messrs. Carlson,
Merlone, Pasquale and Polk, each of whom will be an independent
director and financially literate under the rules of
the NYSE. In addition, our audit committee is required to have a
designated audit committee financial expert within
the meaning of the rules of the Securities and Exchange
Commission, or SEC. Mr. Carlson will chair our audit committee
and has been determined by our board of directors to be an audit
committee financial expert.
60
The purposes of the audit committee are to:
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assist our board of directors in its oversight of (1) the
integrity of our financial statements, (2) our compliance
with legal and regulatory requirements, (3) the
qualifications, independence and performance of our independent
auditors and (4) our internal audit function; and
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prepare the report required by the rules of the SEC to be
included in our annual proxy statement.
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The audit committee is also responsible for engaging our
independent registered public accounting firm, reviewing with
the independent registered public accounting firm the plans and
results of the audit engagement, approving professional services
provided by the independent registered public accounting firm,
reviewing the independence of the independent registered public
accounting firm, considering the range of audit and non-audit
fees and reviewing the adequacy of our internal accounting
controls.
Compensation
Committee
The compensation committee will be composed of Messrs. Carlson,
Merlone, Pasquale and Polk, each of whom will be an independent
director. Mr. Merlone will chair our compensation committee.
The purposes of the compensation committee are to:
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discharge our board of directors responsibilities relating
to compensation of our directors and executives;
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oversee our overall compensation structure, policies and
programs;
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review our processes and procedures for the consideration and
determination of director and executive compensation; and
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prepare the compensation committee report to be included in our
proxy statement in accordance with the applicable rules and
regulations of the SEC, the NYSE and any other rules and
regulations applicable to us.
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Nominating and
Corporate Governance Committee
The nominating and corporate governance committee will be
composed of Messrs. Carlson, Merlone, Pasquale and Polk,
each of whom will be an independent director. Mr. Polk will
chair our nominating and corporate governance committee.
The purposes of the nominating and corporate governance
committee are to:
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identify individuals qualified to become members of our board of
directors, consistent with criteria approved by our board of
directors, and recommend that our board of directors select the
director nominees for election at each annual meeting of
stockholders;
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review and make recommendations to our board of directors for
committee appointments to our board of directors;
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develop and recommend to our board of directors a set of
corporate governance guidelines applicable to us and
periodically review and recommend any changes to such
guidelines; and
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oversee the evaluation of our board of directors.
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Lead
Director
Our board of directors intends to select Mr. Pasquale to serve
as our initial lead director. The lead directors duties
include chairing executive sessions of the independent
directors, facilitating communications and resolving conflicts,
if any, between the independent directors, other members of
61
our board of directors and the management of our company, and
consulting with and providing counsel to our chief executive
officer as needed or requested. It is expected that the lead
director will be rotated among our independent directors every
two years.
Code of Business
Conduct and Ethics
We will adopt a corporate code of business conduct and ethics
relating to the conduct of our business by our employees,
officers and directors. We intend to maintain the highest
standards of ethical business practices and compliance with all
laws and regulations applicable to our business.
Compensation
Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation
There are no compensation committee interlocks and none of our
employees participates on the compensation committee.
Director
Compensation
We have approved a compensation program for our independent
directors in the form of cash and equity awards.
Although we do not intend to pay our independent directors an
annual retainer fee, we will pay the following fees, payable
quarterly in cash:
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our lead director will be paid an annual fee of $15,000;
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the chair of our audit committee will be paid an annual fee of
$12,000;
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the chair of our compensation committee will be paid an annual
fee of $10,000; and
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the chair of our nominating and corporate governance committee
will be paid an annual fee of $5,000.
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We will pay independent directors cash fees of $1,500 for each
board meeting attended, $1,000 for each committee meeting
attended, and $500 for each telephonic meeting attended. In
addition, we will reimburse our directors for reasonable
out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with performance
of their duties as directors, including, without limitation,
travel expenses in connection with their attendance at board and
committee meetings. We will also reimburse our directors for
approved director education programs. Furthermore, directors
will not receive any perquisites or above-market nonqualified
deferred compensation plan earnings.
Upon completion of this offering, each of our independent
directors will receive $100,000 payable in the form of
restricted common stock. Vesting for the grants made at the
completion of this offering will occur on the first anniversary
of this offering, with acceleration upon termination due to
death, disability or involuntary termination of service as a
result of a change in control.
Following completion of this offering, in connection with each
annual meeting of stockholders commencing in 2011, each of our
independent directors will receive $75,000 payable in the form
of unrestricted common stock.
Dividends on unvested shares of restricted stock generally will
be paid in cash.
Indemnification
Agreements
We expect to enter into customary indemnification agreements
with each of our executive officers and directors. We expect the
form of indemnification agreement will provide that if a
director or executive officer is a party or is threatened to be
made a party to any proceeding by reason of the directors
or executive officers status as a director, officer,
employee or agent of our company or as a director, trustee,
officer, partner, manager, managing member, fiduciary, employee
or agent of any other foreign or domestic corporation,
partnership, limited liability company, joint venture, trust,
employee benefit plan or other
62
enterprise that the director or executive officer is or was
serving in such capacity at our request, we must indemnify such
director or executive officer for all expenses and liabilities
actually and reasonably incurred by him or her, or on his or her
behalf, unless it has been established that:
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the act or omission of the director or executive officer was
material to the matter giving rise to the proceeding and was
committed in bad faith or was the result of active and
deliberate dishonesty;
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the director or executive officer actually received an improper
personal benefit in money, property or other services; or
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with respect to any criminal action or proceeding, the director
or executive officer had reasonable cause to believe that his or
her conduct was unlawful.
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Except as described below, our directors and executive officers
will not be entitled to indemnification pursuant to the
indemnification agreement:
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if the proceeding was one brought by us or in our right and the
director or executive officer is adjudged to be liable to us;
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if the director or executive officer is adjudged to be liable on
the basis that personal benefit was improperly received; or
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in any proceeding brought by the director or executive officer
other than to enforce his or her rights under the
indemnification agreement, and then only to the extent provided
by the agreement, and except as may be expressly provided in our
charter, our bylaws, a resolution of our board of directors or
of our stockholders entitled to vote generally in the election
of directors or an agreement approved by our board of directors.
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Notwithstanding the limitations on indemnification described
above, upon application of a director or executive officer of
our company to a court of appropriate jurisdiction, the court
may order indemnification of such director or executive officer
if:
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the court determines that the director or executive officer is
entitled to mandatory indemnification under the MGCL, in which
case the director or executive officer will be entitled to
recover from us the expenses of securing indemnification; or
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the court determines that the director or executive officer is
fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnification in view of all
the relevant circumstances, whether or not the director or
executive officer has met the standards of conduct described
above or has been adjudged liable to us or for receipt of an
improper personal benefit; however, our indemnification
obligations to the director or executive officer will be limited
to the expenses actually and reasonably incurred by him or her,
or on his or her behalf, in connection with any proceeding by us
or in our right or in which the officer or director was adjudged
liable for receipt of an improper personal benefit.
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Without limiting any other provisions of the indemnification
agreements, if a director or executive officer is a party or is
threatened to be made a party to any proceeding by reason of the
directors or executive officers status as a
director, officer or employee of our company, and the director
or executive officer is successful, on the merits or otherwise,
as to one or more (even if fewer than all) claims, issues or
matters in such proceeding, we must indemnify the director or
executive officer for all expenses actually and reasonably
incurred by him or her, or on his or her behalf, in connection
with each successfully resolved claim, issue or matter,
including any claim, issue or matter in such a proceeding that
is terminated by dismissal, with or without prejudice.
We must pay all indemnifiable expenses in advance of the final
disposition of any proceeding without requiring any preliminary
determination of the director or executive officers
ultimate entitlement to indemnification if the director or
executive officer furnishes us with a written affirmation of the
directors or executive officers good faith belief
that the standard of conduct necessary for indemnification by
our company has been met and a written undertaking to reimburse
us if a court of
63
competent jurisdiction determines that the director or executive
officer is not entitled to indemnification. We will not be
required to advance the expenses of any director or executive
officer in any proceeding brought by the director or executive
officer except for a proceeding brought by the director or
executive officer to enforce his or her rights under the
indemnification agreement, and then only to the extent provided
by the agreement, and except as may be expressly provided in our
charter, our bylaws, a resolution of our board of directors or
of our stockholders entitled to vote generally in the election
of directors or an agreement approved by our board of directors.
In addition, our bylaws obligate us, to the fullest extent
permitted by the MGCL, to indemnify our directors and officers
and to advance expenses to our directors and officers as
discussed in Material Provisions of Maryland Law and of
Our Charter and Bylaws Indemnification and
Limitation of Directors and Officers Liability
included elsewhere in this prospectus.
These agreements and provisions may discourage stockholders from
bringing a lawsuit against our directors for breach of their
duties under applicable law. These provisions may also have the
effect of reducing the likelihood of derivative litigation
against directors and officers, even though such an action, if
successful, might otherwise benefit us and our stockholders.
Furthermore, a stockholders investment may be adversely
affected to the extent we pay the costs of settlement and damage
awards against directors and officers pursuant to these
indemnification provisions. We believe that these provisions,
the indemnification agreements and the insurance are necessary
to attract and retain talented and experienced directors and
officers.
Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, which we refer to as the
Act, may be permitted to directors, officers or persons
controlling the registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions,
the registrant has been informed that in the opinion of the SEC
such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in
the Act and is therefore unenforceable.
64
COMPENSATION
DISCUSSION AND ANALYSIS
We will pay base salaries and long-term incentive compensation
and expect to make grants of awards under the 2010 Equity Plan
to certain of our executive officers, effective upon the
completion of this offering. Effective upon the completion of
this offering, awards will be granted under the 2010 Equity Plan
to recognize such individuals efforts on our behalf in
connection with our formation and this offering and to provide a
retention element to their compensation. In addition, our
compensation committee may determine to make awards to new
executive officers in order to attract talented professionals to
serve us.
Neither our board of directors nor the compensation committee of
our board of directors has yet adopted compensation policies
with respect to, among other things, setting base salaries,
awarding bonuses or making future grants of equity awards to our
executive officers. We anticipate that such determinations will
be made by our compensation committee in order to achieve the
following objectives:
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align the interests of our executives and stockholders by
motivating executives to increase stockholder value and
rewarding executives when stockholder value increases;
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motivate our executives to manage our business to meet our
near , medium , and long-term objectives;
and reward them for meeting these objectives and for exceptional
performance;
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assist in attracting and retaining talented and well-qualified
executives;
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be competitive with other industrial real estate investment
trusts; and
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encourage executives to achieve meaningful levels of ownership
of our stock.
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We may retain a compensation consultant to review our policies
and procedures with respect to executive compensation and assist
our compensation committee in implementing and maintaining
compensation plans.
Summary of
Executive Officer Compensation
The following is a summary of the elements of and amounts
expected to be paid under our compensation plans for fiscal year
2010. Because we were formed only recently, individual
compensation information is not available for prior periods.
Annual Base
Salary
We will pay our executives a base salary, which our compensation
committee intends to review and determine annually. We believe
that a competitive base salary is a necessary element of any
compensation program that is designed to attract and retain
talented and experienced executives. We also believe that
attractive base salaries can motivate and reward executives for
their overall performance. Although base salaries are
established in part based on the individual experience, skills
and expected contributions during the coming year of our
executive and our executives performance during the prior
year, we do not view base salaries as primarily serving our
objective of paying for performance. We expect the initial
annual base salaries of each of Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke
to be $400,000.
Annual Cash
Incentive Bonus
We are not currently planning to adopt an annual cash incentive
bonus plan for our executives, although we reserve our right to
do so in the future.
65
Long Term
Incentive Compensation
To encourage our executives to work towards generating
significant total stockholder returns, our executives will be
eligible to participate in our long-term incentive compensation
program, with rolling performance periods. The size of any
long-term incentive compensation award earned will depend on the
level of our total stockholder return over the performance
period as compared to the returns of two different indices (the
MSCI U.S. REIT Index and the FTSE NAREIT Equity Industrial
Index). The target award is measured in dollars but will be
payable in shares of our common stock after the end of each
performance period. The first performance period will begin on
the closing of this offering and end on December 31, 2011.
The second performance period will begin on the closing of this
offering and end on December 31, 2012. All other
performance periods will run for three calendar years and begin
on January 1, 2011 and each anniversary thereof. This
long-term incentive compensation program is more fully described
in Narrative Discussion of IPO Grants
set forth below.
Equity-Based
Incentive Compensation
An important element of our total executive compensation is our
equity award program. We believe that our equity award program
serves a number of important corporate objectives, most
importantly the alignment of our executives interests with
our stockholders interests. Our equity award program helps
to ensure that each of our executives has a significant portion
of his net worth tied to the performance of our stock. We plan
to grant restricted stock with time-based vesting under our
long-term equity incentive program. Our long-term equity
incentive compensation is more fully described in
Narrative Discussion of IPO Grants set
forth below.
2010 Equity
Incentive Plan
The 2010 Equity Incentive Plan, or the 2010 Equity Plan, will be
adopted by our board of directors and approved by our
stockholders prior to the completion of this offering. The 2010
Equity Plan permits us to make grants of restricted stock
awards, performance share awards, unrestricted shares, or any
combination of the foregoing. The number of shares of common
stock that may be issued under the 2010 Equity Plan (including
those to be granted upon completion of this offering) is equal
to 5% of the shares of our common stock issued in this offering
(not including any shares issuable upon the underwriters
option to purchase additional shares) and the concurrent private
placement. The 2010 Equity Plan does not provide for stock
options, stock appreciation rights or dividend equivalent rights.
The number of shares reserved under the 2010 Equity Plan is
subject to adjustment in the event of a stock split, stock
dividend or other change in our capitalization. Generally,
shares that are forfeited or canceled from awards under the 2010
Equity Plan also will be available for future awards.
No awards will be outstanding prior to completion of this
offering. The initial grants described below will become
effective upon the completion of this offering.
The 2010 Equity Plan is administered by our compensation
committee. Our compensation committee may interpret the 2010
Equity Plan and may make all determinations necessary or
desirable for the administration of the plan and has full power
and authority to select the participants to whom awards will be
granted, to make any combination of awards to participants, to
accelerate the exercisability or vesting of any award and to
determine the specific terms and conditions of each award,
subject to the provisions of the 2010 Equity Plan. All full-time
and part-time officers, employees, directors and other key
persons (including consultants and prospective employees) are
eligible to participate in the 2010 Equity Plan.
Restricted stock may be granted under the 2010 Equity Plan.
Restricted stock awards are shares of our common stock that vest
in accordance with terms and conditions established by our
compensation committee. Our compensation committee may impose
whatever vesting conditions it determines
66
to be appropriate, including attainment of performance goals.
Shares of restricted stock that do not satisfy the vesting
conditions are subject to our right of repurchase or forfeiture.
Performance share awards may also be granted under our equity
incentive plan. Such an award entitles a participant to receive
shares of our common stock at the end of a performance period,
the number of which will be tied to attainment of
pre-established performance goals. Dividends will not be paid on
performance shares during the performance period.
Unrestricted shares may also be granted under the 2010 Equity
Plan. These are shares of our common stock that have no vesting
requirements and are not subject to any risk of forfeiture.
Unless the compensation committee provides otherwise, the 2010
Equity Plan does not generally allow for the transfer of awards,
and only the participant may exercise an award during his or her
lifetime.
The terms of the 2010 Equity Plan provide that we may amend,
suspend or terminate the plan at any time, but stockholder
approval of any such action will be obtained if required to
comply with applicable law or NYSE listing standards. Further,
no action may be taken that adversely affects any rights under
outstanding awards without the holders consent. The 2010
Equity Plan will terminate on the tenth anniversary of the date
on which stockholder approval is received.
If we experience a Corporate Transaction (as defined below), our
compensation committee will have full authority to determine the
effect, if any, on the vesting, exercisability, settlement,
payment or lapse of restrictions applicable to an award. The
effect of a Corporate Transaction may be specified in a
participants award agreement or determined at a subsequent
time, including, without limitation, the substitution of new
awards, the termination or the adjustment of outstanding awards,
the acceleration of awards or the removal of restrictions on
outstanding awards. A Corporate Transaction under
our 2010 Equity Plan means (1) a sale of substantially all
of our assets to another person or entity; or (2) any
transaction (including without limitation a merger or
reorganization in which we are the surviving entity) which
results in any person or entity (other than already existing
stockholders or affiliates) owning 50% or more of the combined
voting power of all classes of our shares of capital stock.
We intend to file with the SEC a registration statement on
Form S-8
covering the shares of our common stock issuable under the 2010
Equity Plan.
Other
Compensation
All of our executive officers are eligible to participate in our
employee benefit plans, including medical and dental insurance
and health and wellness plans. We also expect to adopt a 401(k)
plan. These plans are generally available to all employees and
do not discriminate in favor of executive officers. We do not
provide any perquisites to our executives.
The following table sets forth the annual base salary and other
compensation payable to our executive officers as of the
completion of this offering. We expect to enter into severance
agreements, which will become effective upon the completion of
this offering. See Severance Agreements.
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Name and
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Non-Equity
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Principal
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Stock
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Incentive Plan
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Position
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Salary ($)
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Awards ($)
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Compensation ($)
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Total ($)
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W. Blake Baird
Chairman and Chief Executive Officer
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400,000
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200,000
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(1)
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(2
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600,000
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Michael A. Coke
President and Chief Financial Officer
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400,000
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200,000
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(3)
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(2
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600,000
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(1) |
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At the completion of this offering, Mr. Baird will receive
shares of restricted stock with an initial value of $1,000,000,
vesting ratably in annual installments over a five-year period
commencing on the completion of this offering, with the first
vesting to occur on the first anniversary of this offering. See
Narrative Discussion of IPO Grants.
Amount represents the expected compensation |
67
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expense associated with these awards that will be recorded in
2010. Dividends will be paid on the time-based shares of
restricted stock when declared and paid on our common stock
generally. |
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(2) |
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Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke will participate in the
long-term incentive compensation program. The first payout, if
earned, will be in early 2012. See Narrative
Discussion of IPO Grants. |
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(3) |
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At the completion of this offering, Mr. Coke will receive
shares of restricted stock with an initial value of $1,000,000,
vesting ratably in annual installments over a five-year period
commencing on the completion of this offering, with the first
vesting to occur on the first anniversary of this offering. See
Narrative Discussion of IPO Grants.
Amount represents the expected compensation expense associated
with these awards that will be recorded in 2010. Dividends will
be paid in cash on the time-based shares of restricted stock
when declared and paid on our common stock generally. |
Introduction
Initially, we do not expect Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke or
any executive officer to participate in our non-equity annual
incentive plan. Instead, in addition to receiving shares of
restricted stock which will vest ratably in annual installments
over a five-year period commencing with the completion of this
offering, Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke will participate in
our long-term incentive compensation program. Under this
program, the size of the award for each performance period will
depend on our achievement of specified performance metrics
during the performance period. There will be rolling three-year
performance periods, although the first two performance periods
will be shorter, with the first performance period beginning on
the closing of this offering and ending on December 31,
2011 and the second performance period beginning on the closing
of this offering and ending on December 31, 2012. The
awards, if earned, are measured in dollars, but will be payable
in shares of our common stock after the end of each performance
period. The target award for each performance period would
generally be equal to the executives annualized base
salary at the beginning of the performance period.
IPO Grants of
Plan-Based Awards
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Estimated Future
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Payouts
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All Other Stock
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Under Non-Equity
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Awards; Number of
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Grant Date
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Incentive Plan Awards
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Shares or Stock or
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Fair Value of Share
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Grant Date
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Target ($)
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Maximum ($)
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Units (#)
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Awards ($)
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W. Blake Baird
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(1
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50,000(2
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1,000,000(3
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(4
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400,000
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1,200,000
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(5
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400,000
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1,200,000
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Michael A. Coke
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(1
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50,000(2
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1,000,000(3
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(4
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400,000
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1,200,000
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(5
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400,000
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1,200,000
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(1) |
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Each of the awards is expected to be issued upon completion of
this offering. |
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(2) |
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Represents shares of restricted common stock that will be issued
upon completion of this offering, which will vest ratably in
equal installments over a five-year period commencing on the
first anniversary of this offering. See
Narrative Discussion of IPO Grants. |
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Represents the estimated grant date fair value of the restricted
common stock. |
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(4) |
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This represents the payout under our long-term incentive program
for the performance period beginning on the closing of this
offering and ending on December 31, 2011. The size of the
actual award will depend on our achievement of specified
performance metrics during the performance period. Actual
awards, if earned, are measured in dollars but will be paid out
in shares of our |
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common stock in early 2012. See Narrative
Discussion of IPO Grants. No dividends will accrue or be
paid on performance shares during the performance period. |
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(5) |
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This represents the payout under our long-term incentive program
for the performance period beginning on the closing of this
offering and ending on December 31, 2012. The size of the
actual award will depend on our achievement of specified
performance metrics during the performance period. Actual
awards, if earned, are measured in dollars but will be paid out
in shares of our common stock in early 2013. See
Narrative Discussion of IPO Grants. No
dividends will accrue or be paid on performance shares during
the performance period. |
Narrative
Discussion of IPO Grants
In addition to base salary, our named executive officers will be
entitled to receive equity compensation. At the completion of
this offering, each of Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke will
receive a grant of restricted stock with an approximate value of
$1,000,000, based on the assumed initial public offering price
of $20.00 per share. In addition, at the completion of this
offering, we expect to grant restricted stock with an aggregate
initial value of $425,000 to other employees of our company.
These grants will vest ratably in annual installments over a
five-year period commencing on the completion of this offering,
with the first vesting to occur on the first anniversary of this
offering.
All time-based restricted stock will vest upon the death or
disability of the executive officer, if the executive
officers employment is terminated by us without cause, or
if the executive officer resigns for a good reason.
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke will also participate in our
long-term incentive compensation program designed to provide
additional motivation over a rolling performance period. The
first performance measurement period will begin on the closing
of this offering and end on December 31, 2011. The second
performance measurement period will begin on the closing of this
offering and end on December 31, 2012. All subsequent
performance measurement periods will be for a three-year period
beginning on January 1, 2011 and each anniversary thereof.
The amount that will be earned under our long-term incentive
compensation program for any performance measurement period will
be determined by our success in attaining or exceeding
performance goals linked to each of two metrics during the
performance measurement period:
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50% of the determination will be based on our total stockholder
return for the performance measurement period, measured at the
end of the period compared to the total stockholder return for
the same period of the MSCI U.S. REIT Index; and
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50% of the determination will be based on our total stockholder
return for the performance measurement period, measured at the
end of the period compared to the total stockholder return for
the same period of the FTSE NAREIT Equity Industrial Index.
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The two main performance goals were established to focus our
named executive officers on generating significant total
stockholder returns over time. Our management believes that
achievement of the target level of performance of
the two main performance goals, i.e., exceeding the applicable
indices, will require significant effort and substantial
progress toward the goals of our strategic plan. At the target
level for each performance goal, each participating executive
will receive an award equal to 50% of his target award.
Accordingly, if we achieve the target level for both performance
goals, each participating executive will receive an award equal
to 100% of his target award for the performance period. If our
performance is below the target level for either of the
performance goals, then no payouts will be made with respect to
such goal. To the extent that our performance exceeds the
applicable index by at least 100 basis points per year,
each participating executive will receive an award equal to 150%
of his target award. Accordingly, if our performance exceeds
both indices by at least 100 basis points per year, each
participating executive will receive an award equal to 300% of
his target award. In the event that our total stockholder return
is negative for any performance period, even if we have
outperformed the applicable indices, any incentive compensation
earned for that
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performance period will be reduced by 50%. Once we have
determined the dollar value of the award earned for any
performance period, such amount will be converted to shares of
our common stock based on the average closing price of our
common stock for the last ten business days immediately
preceding the day the shares are issued. The target award for
each performance period would generally be equal to the
executives annualized base salary at the beginning of the
performance period. In the case of Mr. Baird and
Mr. Coke, the target award is $400,000 for the first two
performance periods.
Severance
Agreements
We intend to enter into severance agreements with Mr. Baird
and Mr. Coke, which will become effective upon the
completion of this offering, and we may in the future enter into
similar agreements with certain executive officers that we hire
in the future, to provide benefits to each in the event his
employment is terminated under certain circumstances.
Each of these executives will be entitled to receive benefits
under the agreements if (1) we terminate the
executives employment without cause, or (2) the
executive resigns with good reason. Under these scenarios, each
of the executives is entitled to receive a severance payment
equal to one times current salary plus the dollar value of the
target award under the long-term incentive compensation program.
In addition, all time-based restricted stock will fully vest but
all long-term incentive awards will be forfeited. The executive
will also receive health insurance coverage for a period of
18 months. If such termination of employment occurs after a
change in control, the severance payment will be doubled. No
payments will be made to compensate the executive for additional
taxes, if any, imposed under Section 4999 of the Code for
receipt of excess parachute payments.
In the event an executives employment is terminated on
account of death or disability, all his time-based restricted
stock will fully vest. Additionally, to compensate the executive
for the loss of opportunity to earn his long-term incentive
awards, we will also provide him (or his estate in the case of
death) with a cash payment equal to his target award under the
long-term incentive compensation program.
Section 162(m)
The SEC requires that we comment upon our policy with respect to
Section 162(m) of the Code, which limits the deductibility
on our tax return of compensation over $1 million to any of
the named executive officers unless, in general, the
compensation is paid pursuant to a plan which is
performance-related, non-discretionary and has been approved by
our stockholders. We believe that, because we intend to qualify
as a REIT under the Code and pay distributions sufficient to
minimize federal income taxes, the payment of compensation that
does not satisfy the requirements of Section 162(m) will
generally not affect our net income. To the extent that
compensation does not qualify for a deduction under
Section 162(m), a larger portion of stockholder
distributions may be subject to federal income taxation as
dividend income rather than return of capital. We do not believe
that Section 162(m) will materially affect the taxability
of stockholder distributions, although no assurance can be given
in this regard due to the variety of factors that affect the tax
position of each stockholder. For these reasons, our
compensation committees compensation policy and practices
are not directly guided by considerations relating to
Section 162(m).
70
PRINCIPAL
STOCKHOLDERS
Immediately prior to the completion of this offering, there will
be 1,000 shares of common stock outstanding and two
stockholders of record. At that time, we will have no other
shares of capital stock outstanding. The following table sets
forth certain information regarding the beneficial ownership of
our common stock immediately prior to and immediately following
the completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement by:
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each person who is expected to be the beneficial owner of 5% or
more of the outstanding shares of common stock immediately
following the completion of this offering and the concurrent
private placement;
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each person who will be a director upon the completion of this
offering and each named executive officer; and
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all directors and executive officers as a group.
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Unless otherwise indicated, all shares are owned directly, and
the indicated person has sole voting and investment power.
Further, unless otherwise indicated, the address of each named
person is c/o Terreno Realty Corporation, 16 Maiden Lane,
Fifth Floor, San Francisco, California 94108.
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Immediately Prior to this Offering
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Immediately After this Offering
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and the Concurrent Private
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and the Concurrent Private
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Placement
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Placement
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Number of Shares
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Number of Shares
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Beneficially
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Percent of All
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Beneficially
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Percent of
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Name of Beneficial Owner
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Owned(1)
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Shares
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Owned(1)
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All Shares(2)
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W. Blake Baird(3)(4)
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500
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(6)
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50
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%
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312,000
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3.4
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%
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Michael A. Coke(3)(5)
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500
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(6)
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50
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%
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162,000
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1.8
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%
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LeRoy E. Carlson
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5,000
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(7)
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*
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Peter J. Merlone
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5,000
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(7)
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*
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Douglas M. Pasquale
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5,000
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(7)
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*
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Dennis Polk
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5,000
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(7)
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*
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All directors and executive officers as a group (6 persons)
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1,000
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100
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%
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494,000
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5.3
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%
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*
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Represents less than 1% of the
shares of common stock outstanding upon the closing of this
offering and the concurrent private placement.
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(1)
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Beneficial ownership is determined
in accordance with
Rule 13d-3
of the Exchange Act. A person is deemed to be the beneficial
owner of any shares of common stock if that person has or shares
voting power or investment power with respect to those shares,
or has the right to acquire beneficial ownership at any time
within 60 days of the date of the table. As used herein,
voting power is the power to vote or direct the
voting of shares and investment power is the power
to dispose or direct the disposition of shares.
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(2)
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Assumes a total of
9,253,250 shares of common stock are outstanding
immediately after the closing of this offering and the
concurrent private placement, including 120,000 shares of
restricted stock granted under the 2010 Equity Plan to our
executive officers and independent directors concurrently with
the closing of this offering. Does not include shares of common
stock issuable upon exercise of the underwriters option to
purchase additional shares.
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(3)
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We will sell 250,000 shares to
Mr. Baird and 100,000 shares to Mr. Coke in a
private placement concurrent with the closing of this offering
at the same price per share as in this offering but without
payment of any underwriting discount. Includes approximately
12,000 shares of common stock that will be issued to
Terreno Capital Partners LLC in exchange for the contribution of
fixed assets. Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke are the managing
partners and co-founders of Terreno Capital Partners LLC and
have shared voting and investment power of such shares. These
shares may be distributed to each of Mr. Baird and
Mr. Coke. See Certain Relationships and Related
Transactions Contribution of Fixed Assets.
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(4)
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Includes 50,000 shares of
restricted common stock to be granted to Mr. Baird at the
completion of this offering, which vest ratably in annual
installments over a five-year period commencing on the
completion of this offering, with the first vesting to occur on
the first anniversary of this offering.
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(5)
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Includes 50,000 shares of
restricted common stock to be granted to Mr. Coke at the
completion of this offering, which vest ratably in annual
installments over a five-year period commencing on the
completion of this offering, with the first vesting to occur on
the first anniversary of this offering.
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(6)
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Consists of 500 shares of our
common stock purchased by each of Mr. Baird and
Mr. Coke in connection with the formation and initial
capitalization of our company. We will use $1,000 of the net
proceeds of this offering and the concurrent private placement
to repurchase these shares.
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(7)
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We will grant 5,000 shares of
restricted common stock to each independent director upon
completion of this offering, which shares will vest on the first
anniversary of this offering.
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72
CERTAIN
RELATIONSHIPS AND RELATED TRANSACTIONS
Purchase of
Shares of Common Stock by Certain Executive Officers
Concurrently with the completion of this offering,
Mr. Baird will acquire 250,000 shares of our common
stock and Mr. Coke will acquire 100,000 shares of our
common stock in a private placement at the same price per share
as in this offering but without payment of any underwriting
discount. The aggregate of 350,000 shares that
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke will acquire in the private
placement represent 3.8% of the shares of our common stock
issued in this offering and the concurrent private placement.
Severance
Agreements
We intend to enter into severance agreements with each of
Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke, which will become effective
upon the completion of this offering, as described in
Compensation Discussion and Analysis Severance
Agreements. These agreements will provide benefits to each
of Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke in the event his employment
is terminated under certain circumstances. We may enter into
similar agreements with certain executive officers that we hire
in the future.
IPO Grants and
Performance Shares
At the completion of this offering, we will grant
50,000 shares of restricted stock to each of Mr. Baird
and Mr. Coke, with such shares having an approximate value
of $1,000,000, based on the assumed initial public offering
price of $20.00 per share. Also, we will grant performance share
awards to each of Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke contingent on
our achieving certain benchmarks as described in
Compensation Discussion and Analysis IPO
Grants of Plan-Based Awards. In addition, at the
completion of this offering, we expect to grant
21,250 shares of restricted stock to our employees, with
such shares having an aggregate approximate value of $425,000,
based on the assumed initial offering price of $20.00 per share.
The restricted stock granted at the completion of this offering
will vest ratably in annual installments over a five-year period
commencing on the first anniversary of the closing of this
offering.
Contribution of
Fixed Assets
Concurrently with the completion of this offering, Terreno
Capital Partners LLC, of which Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke
are managing partners and co-founders, will contribute its fixed
assets to us at their net book value of approximately $240,000.
In exchange for the contribution of these fixed assets, we will
issue to Terreno Capital Partners LLC approximately
12,000 shares of our common stock. These shares may be
distributed to each of Mr. Baird and Mr. Coke.
Indemnification
of Officers and Directors
Effective upon the completion of this offering, we expect to
enter into an indemnification agreement with each of our
executive officers and directors as described in
Management Indemnification Agreements.
Other Benefits to
Related Parties and Related Party Transactions
We intend to use approximately $265,000 of the net proceeds of
this offering and the concurrent private placement to reimburse
Terreno Capital Partners LLC for
out-of-pocket
expenses it incurred in connection with the formation of our
company and this offering. We will also use $1,000 of the net
proceeds of this offering and the concurrent private placement
to repurchase the shares of our common stock that Mr. Baird
and Mr. Coke acquired in connection with the formation and
initial capitalization of our company. See Use of
Proceeds.
73
POLICIES WITH
RESPECT TO CERTAIN ACTIVITIES
The following is a discussion of certain of our investment,
financing and other policies. These policies have been
determined by our board of directors and, in general, may be
amended or revised from time to time by our board of directors
without stockholder approval.
Investments in
Real Estate or Interests in Real Estate
We intend to invest in industrial properties located in six
major coastal U.S. markets: Los Angeles Area; Northern
New Jersey/New York City; San Francisco Bay Area; Seattle Area;
Miami Area; and Washington, D.C./Baltimore. We intend to invest
in several types of industrial real estate, including
warehouse/distribution, flex (including light manufacturing and
R&D) and trans-shipment. We will target functional
buildings in infill locations that may be shared by multiple
tenants and that cater to customer demand within the various
submarkets in which we operate. We do not expect to invest
outside of the United States.
We selected our target markets by drawing upon
Mr. Bairds and Mr. Cokes experiences in
investing and operating in over 50 global industrial markets
located in North America, Europe and Asia and in anticipation of
trends in logistics patterns resulting from population changes,
regulatory and physical constraints, potential long term
increases in carbon prices and other factors. We believe that
our target markets have attractive long term investment
attributes. We will target assets with characteristics that
include, but are not limited to, the following:
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located in high population coastal markets;
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close proximity to transportation infrastructure (such as sea
ports, airports, highways and railways);
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situated in supply-constrained submarkets with barriers to new
industrial development, as a result of physical
and/or
regulatory constraints;
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functional and flexible layout that can be modified to
accommodate single and multiple tenants;
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acquisition price at a significant discount to the replacement
cost of the property;
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potential for enhanced return through re-tenanting or
operational improvements; and
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opportunity for higher and better use of the property over time.
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We will utilize local third party property managers for
day-to-day
property management. We believe outsourcing property management
is cost effective and provides us with operational flexibility
to scale our investments within any chosen market.
While not prohibited from doing so, we have no current intention
to acquire industrial land or to pursue ground up development.
However, we may pursue redevelopment opportunities of properties
that we own.
We expect the significant majority of our investments will be
equity interests. We will opportunistically target investments
in debt secured by industrial real estate that would otherwise
meet our investment criteria with the intention of ultimately
acquiring the underlying real estate.
There are no limitations on the amount or percentage of our
total assets that may be invested in any one property.
Additionally, no limits have been set on the concentration of
investments in any one location or property type.
Investments in
Securities of or Interests in Persons Primarily Engaged in Real
Estate Activities and Other Issuers
Generally speaking, we do not expect to engage in any
significant investment activities with other entities, although
we may consider joint venture investments with other investors.
We may also invest in the securities of other issuers in
connection with acquisitions of indirect interests in properties
(normally general or limited partnership interests in special
purpose partnerships owning properties). We may in the future
acquire some, all or substantially all of the securities or
assets of other REITs or similar entities where that investment
would be consistent with our investment policies and the REIT
74
qualification requirements. There are no limitations on the
amount or percentage of our total assets that may be invested in
any one issuer, other than those imposed by the gross income and
asset tests that we must satisfy to qualify as a REIT. However,
we do not currently anticipate investing in other issuers of
securities for the purpose of exercising control or acquiring
any investments primarily for sale in the ordinary course of
business or holding any investments with a view to making
short-term profits from their sale, but we may engage in these
activities in the future.
We do not intend that our investments in securities will require
us to register as an investment company under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and we intend to
divest securities before any registration would be required. We
do not intend to engage in trading, underwriting, agency
distribution or sales of securities of other issuers.
Investments in
Mortgages, Structured Financings and Other Lending
Policies
We may invest in loans secured by industrial properties or make
loans to persons. We do not have a policy limiting our ability
to invest in loans secured by other properties or to make loans
to other persons. We may make loans to joint ventures in which
we may participate in the future. However, we do not intend to
engage in significant lending activities.
Disposition
Policy
We will consider dispositions of properties that we may acquire
in the future, subject to REIT qualification and prohibited
transaction rules, if our management determines that a sale of a
property would be in our best interests based on the price being
offered for the property, the operating performance of the
property, the tax consequences of the sale and other factors and
circumstances surrounding the proposed sale.
Our Financing
Policy
The primary objective of our financing strategy is to maintain
financial flexibility with a conservative capital structure
using retained cash flows, long-term debt and the issuance of
common and perpetual preferred stock to finance our growth.
We intend to limit the sum of the outstanding principal amount
of our consolidated indebtedness and the liquidation preference
of any outstanding preferred shares to less than 40% of our
total enterprise value, maintain a fixed charge coverage ratio
in excess of 2.0x and over the long-term, limit the principal
amount of our outstanding floating rate debt to less than 20% of
our total consolidated indebtedness. However, our governing
documents contain no limitations on the amount of debt that we
may incur, and our board of directors may change our financing
policy at any time without stockholder approval.
We intend to have staggered debt maturities that are aligned to
our expected average lease term (5-7 years), positioning us
to re-price parts of our capital structure as our rental rates
change with market conditions. We intend to preserve a flexible
capital structure with a long-term goal to obtain an investment
grade rating and be in a position to issue unsecured debt and
perpetual preferred stock. Prior to attaining an investment
grade rating, we intend to primarily utilize non-recourse debt
secured by individual properties or pools of properties with a
targeted maximum
loan-to-value
of 60% at the time of financing.
After completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement, we expect to consummate a proposed senior revolving
credit facility to finance acquisitions. We have obtained a
commitment, which is subject to the negotiation of definitive
loan documents and the satisfaction of closing conditions, for a
three-year, $50.0 million senior revolving credit facility
from KeyBank National Association (an affiliate of KeyBanc
Capital Markets Inc., which is a lead manager in this offering),
as administrative agent, and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., in
its capacity as the lead arranger.
Equity Capital
Policies
Subject to applicable law and the requirements for listed
companies on the NYSE, our board of directors has the authority,
without further stockholder approval, to amend our charter to
increase or
75
decrease the aggregate number of shares of stock we are
authorized to issue or the number of authorized shares of any
class or series, to authorize us to issue additional authorized
shares of common and preferred stock or otherwise raise capital,
including through the issuance of senior securities, in any
manner and on the terms and for the consideration it deems
appropriate, including in exchange for property. Existing
stockholders will have no preemptive right to additional shares
issued in any offering, and any offering might cause a dilution
of investment. We may in the future issue shares of common stock
in connection with acquisitions.
Our board of directors may authorize the issuance of shares of
preferred stock with terms and conditions that could have the
effect of delaying, deterring or preventing a transaction or a
change in control in us that might involve a premium price for
holders of our shares of common stock or otherwise might be in
their best interests. Additionally, shares of preferred stock
could have distribution, voting, liquidation and other rights
and preferences that are senior to those of our shares of common
stock.
We may, under certain circumstances, purchase shares of common
stock in the open market or in private transactions with our
stockholders, if those purchases are approved by our board of
directors or a committee thereof. Our board of directors has no
present intention of causing us to repurchase any shares, and
any action would only be taken in conformity with applicable
federal and state laws and the applicable requirements for
qualifying as a REIT.
Conflict of
Interest Policies
We have adopted certain policies that are designed to eliminate
or minimize certain potential conflicts of interest. We have
also adopted a code of business conduct and ethics that
prohibits conflicts of interest between our employees, officers
and directors and our company. However, there can be no
assurance that these policies will always be successful in
eliminating the influence of such conflicts, and if they are not
successful, decisions could be made that might fail to reflect
fully the interests of all stockholders. We do not currently
intend to enter into agreements with third party property
managers that are our affiliates or affiliates of our officers
or directors, but we are not prohibited from entering into such
agreements.
Interested
Director and Officer Transactions
Pursuant to the MGCL, a contract or other transaction between us
and a director or between us and any other corporation or other
entity in which any of our directors is a director or has a
material financial interest is not void or voidable solely on
the grounds of such common directorship or interest, the
presence of such director at the meeting at which the contract
or transaction is authorized, approved or ratified or the
counting of the directors vote in favor thereof, provided
that:
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the fact of the common directorship or interest is disclosed or
known to our board of directors or a committee of our board, and
our board or committee authorizes, approves or ratifies the
transaction or contract by the affirmative vote of a majority of
disinterested directors, even if the disinterested directors
constitute less than a quorum;
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the fact of the common directorship or interest is disclosed or
known to our stockholders entitled to vote thereon, and the
transaction or contract is authorized, approved or ratified by a
majority of the votes cast by the stockholders entitled to vote
other than the votes of shares owned of record or beneficially
by the interested director or corporation, firm or other
entity; or
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the transaction or contract is fair and reasonable to us.
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Reporting
Policies
We intend to make available to our stockholders our annual
reports, including our audited financial statements. After this
offering, we will become subject to the information reporting
requirements of the Exchange Act. Pursuant to those
requirements, we will be required to file annual and periodic
reports, proxy statements and other information, including
audited financial statements, with the SEC.
76
STRUCTURE AND
FORMATION OF OUR COMPANY
We were organized as a Maryland corporation on November 6,
2009. We are not structured as an UPREIT. Currently, we have no
subsidiaries. In the future, we will own our properties
indirectly through subsidiaries and may utilize one or more
taxable REIT subsidiaries as appropriate.
77
DESCRIPTION OF
CAPITAL STOCK
The following summary of our capital stock does not purport
to be complete and is subject to and qualified in its entirety
by reference to Maryland law and to our charter and bylaws,
copies of which are filed as exhibits to the registration
statement of which this prospectus forms a part. See Where
You Can Find More Information.
General
Our charter provides that we may issue up to
400,000,000 shares of common stock and
100,000,000 shares of preferred stock, both having par
value $0.01 per share. Upon completion of this offering and the
concurrent private placement, 9,253,250 shares of common
stock will be issued and outstanding and no shares of preferred
stock will be issued and outstanding. Our board of directors,
without any action on the part of our stockholders, may
establish the terms of any stock to be issued and, with the
approval of a majority of the entire board, may amend our
charter from time to time to increase or decrease the aggregate
number of authorized shares of stock or the number of shares of
stock of any class or series. Under Maryland law, our
stockholders generally are not personally liable for our debts
and obligations solely as a result of their status as
stockholders.
Common
Stock
All shares of our common stock have equal rights as to earnings,
assets, dividends and voting. Subject to our charter
restrictions on the transfer and ownership of our stock and the
preferential rights of holders of any other class or series of
our stock, distributions may be paid to the holders of our
common stock if, as and when authorized by our board of
directors and declared by us out of funds legally available
therefor. Shares of our common stock generally have no
preemptive, appraisal, preferential exchange, conversion,
sinking fund or redemption rights and are freely transferable,
except where their transfer is restricted by federal and state
securities laws, by contract or by the restrictions in our
charter. In the event of our liquidation, dissolution or winding
up, each share of our common stock would be entitled to share
ratably in all of our assets that are legally available for
distribution after payment of or adequate provision for all of
our known debts and other liabilities and subject to any
preferential rights of holders of our preferred stock, if any
preferred stock is outstanding at such time, and our charter
restrictions on the transfer and ownership of our stock. Subject
to our charter restrictions on the transfer and ownership of our
stock and except as may otherwise be specified in the terms of
any class or series of common stock, each share of our common
stock entitles the holder to one vote on all matters submitted
to a vote of stockholders, including the election of directors.
Except as may be provided with respect to any other class or
series of stock, the holders of our common stock will possess
exclusive voting power. In an uncontested election, a director
is elected if he or she receives more for votes than
against or withheld votes, and there is
no cumulative voting in the election of directors, which means
that holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of common
stock can elect all of our directors.
Power to
Reclassify Shares of Our Stock
Our charter authorizes our board of directors to classify and
reclassify any unissued shares of stock into other classes or
series of stock, including preferred stock. Prior to the
issuance of shares of each class or series, the board of
directors is required by Maryland law and by our charter to set,
subject to our charter restrictions on the transfer and
ownership of our stock and the terms of any outstanding class or
series of our stock, the preferences, conversion or other
rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends
or other distributions, qualifications and terms or conditions
of redemption for each class or series. Thus, the board of
directors could authorize the issuance of shares of common stock
or preferred stock with terms and conditions which could have
the effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a transaction or
a change in control that might involve a premium price for
holders of our common stock or that stockholders may believe is
in their best interests. No
78
shares of our preferred stock are presently outstanding and we
have no present plans to issue any preferred stock.
Power to Increase
Authorized Stock and Issue Additional Shares of Our Common Stock
and Preferred Stock
We believe that the power of our board of directors to increase
the number of authorized shares of stock, issue additional
authorized but unissued shares of our common stock or preferred
stock and to classify or reclassify unissued shares of our
common stock or preferred stock and thereafter to cause us to
issue such classified or reclassified shares of stock will
provide us with increased flexibility in structuring possible
future financings and acquisitions and in meeting other needs
which might arise. Shares of additional classes or series of
stock, as well as of common stock, will be available for
issuance without further action by our stockholders, unless
stockholder consent is required by the rules of any stock
exchange or automated quotation system on which our securities
may be listed or traded. Although our board of directors does
not intend to do so, it could authorize us to issue a class or
series that could, depending upon the terms of the particular
class or series, delay, defer or prevent a transaction or a
change of control of our company that might involve a premium
price for our stockholders or otherwise be in their best
interest.
Restrictions on
Transfer
In order for us to qualify as a REIT under the Code, our stock
must be beneficially owned by 100 or more persons during at
least 335 days of a taxable year of 12 months or
during a proportionate part of a shorter taxable year (other
than the first year for which an election to be a REIT has been
made). Also, not more than 50% of the value of the outstanding
shares of stock may be owned, directly or indirectly, by five or
fewer individuals (as defined in the Code to include
certain entities) during the last half of a taxable year (other
than the first year for which an election to be a REIT has been
made).
Our charter contains restrictions on the ownership and transfer
of our stock. The relevant sections of our charter provide that,
commencing with the last day of the first half of the second
taxable year for which we have elected to be classified as REIT,
no individual (as defined under the Code to include certain
entities) may actually or constructively own more than 9.8% in
value of the aggregate of our outstanding shares of stock or
more than 9.8% in value or number of shares, whichever is more
restrictive, of the outstanding shares of our common stock.
Subject to the exceptions described below, our charter further
prohibits any person or entity from beneficially or
constructively owning shares in excess of these limits after the
completion of this offering. We refer to these restrictions as
the ownership limits and we sometimes refer to the
restrictions on ownership by a person or entity separately as
the related party tenant limit. We refer to a person
or entity that would, but for the restrictions in our charter,
have beneficially or constructively owned shares of our stock in
violation of the ownership limit or the other restrictions on
ownership and transfer of our stock described below and, if
appropriate in the context, any person or entity that would have
been the record owner of such shares as a prohibited
owner.
The beneficial and constructive ownership rules under the Code
are complex and may cause stock owned actually or constructively
by a group of related individuals
and/or
entities to be owned constructively by one individual or entity.
As a result, the acquisition of less than 9.8% in value of our
outstanding stock or less than 9.8% in value or number of our
common stock (or the acquisition of an interest in an entity
that owns, actually or constructively, our stock) by an
individual or entity could, nevertheless, cause that individual
or entity, or another individual or entity, to own
constructively in excess of 9.8% in value of our outstanding
stock or 9.8% in value or number of our outstanding common stock
and thereby violate the applicable ownership limit.
Our charter provides that, subject to our directors duties
under applicable law, upon request, our board of directors will,
prospectively or retroactively, waive the related party tenant
limit with respect to a particular stockholder, and establish a
different limitation ownership for the stockholder, unless such
stockholders increased ownership of our stock would result
in us failing to qualify as a REIT or our
79
board of directors determines in its sole judgment that such
stockholders increased ownership could result in any of
our rental income to fail to qualify as such for REIT testing
purposes as a result of the related party tenant
rules that apply to REITs. As a condition of such waiver, our
board of directors may require certain representations and
undertakings from the stockholder
and/or an
opinion of counsel or IRS ruling satisfactory to our board of
directors with respect to preserving our REIT status.
Our board of directors may from time to time increase the
ownership limits for one or more persons or entities and
decrease the ownership limits for all other persons and entities
unless, after giving effect to such modification of the
ownership limits, five or fewer individuals could beneficially
own more than 49.9% in value of our outstanding stock or we
would otherwise fail to qualify as a REIT. Any such decrease in
the ownership limits will not apply to any person or entity
whose ownership of our stock exceeds the decreased ownership
limits until the persons or entitys ownership of our
stock equals or falls below the decreased ownership limits, but
any further acquisition of our stock by such a person or entity
will violate the decreased ownership limits.
Our charter provisions further prohibit:
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any person from transferring shares of our stock if such
transfer would result in shares of our stock being beneficially
owned by fewer than 100 persons (determined without
reference to any rules of attribution); and
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any person from owning shares of our stock after the completion
of this offering if such ownership would result in our failing
to qualify as a REIT for federal income tax purposes.
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Any person who acquires or attempts or intends to acquire
beneficial or constructive ownership of shares of our stock that
will or may violate the ownership limits or any of the other
foregoing restrictions on transferability and ownership will be
required to give notice immediately to us and provide us with
such other information as we may request in order to determine
the effect of such transfer on our status as a REIT. The
foregoing provisions on transferability and ownership will not
apply if our board of directors determines that it is no longer
in our best interests to attempt to qualify, or to continue to
qualify, as a REIT or that compliance with any or all of the
restrictions on ownership and transfer of our stock is no longer
required in order for us to qualify as a REIT, but only to the
extent thereof.
Pursuant to our charter, if any purported transfer of our stock
or any other event would otherwise result in any person
violating the ownership limit or such other limit as established
by our board of directors or would result in our failing to
qualify as a REIT, then that number of shares in excess of the
ownership limit or causing us to fail to qualify as a REIT
(rounded up to the nearest whole share) will be automatically
transferred to, and held by, a trust for the exclusive benefit
of one or more charitable organizations selected by us. The
automatic transfer will be effective as of the close of business
on the business day prior to the date of the violative transfer
or other event that results in a transfer to the trust. Any
dividend or other distribution paid to the prohibited owner,
prior to our discovery that the shares had been automatically
transferred to a trust as described above must be repaid to the
trustee upon demand for distribution to the beneficiary of the
trust. If the transfer to the trust as described above is not
automatically effective, for any reason, to prevent violation of
the applicable ownership limit or our failing to qualify as a
REIT, then our charter provides that the transfer of the shares
resulting in such violation will be void. If any transfer would
result in shares of our stock being beneficially owned by fewer
than 100 persons, then any such purported transfer will be
void and of no force or effect.
Shares of our stock transferred to the trustee are deemed to be
offered for sale to us or our designee at a price per share
equal to the lesser of (i) the price per share in the
transaction that resulted in such transfer to the trust (or, in
the case of a devise or gift, the market price at the time of
such devise or gift) and (ii) the market price on the date
we accept, or our designee accepts, such offer. We may reduce
the amount so payable to the trustee by the amount of any
dividends or other distributions paid to the prohibited owner
and owed by the prohibited owner to the trustee as
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described above and pay such amount to the trustee for
distribution to the beneficiary of the trust. We have the right
to accept such offer until the trustee has sold the shares of
our stock held in the trust as discussed below. Upon a sale to
us, the interest of the charitable beneficiary in the shares
sold terminates and the trustee must distribute the net proceeds
of the sale to the prohibited owner and any dividends or other
distributions held by the trustee with respect to such stock to
the charitable beneficiary.
If we do not buy the shares, the trustee must, within
20 days of receiving notice from us of the transfer of
shares to the trust, sell the shares to a person or entity
designated by the trustee who could own the shares without
violating the ownership limits or other restrictions on
ownership and transfer of our stock. After that, the trustee
must distribute to the prohibited owner an amount equal to the
lesser of (i) the price paid by the prohibited owner for
the shares or, if the prohibited owner did not give value for
the shares in connection with the event causing the shares to be
held in trust (e.g., in the cause of a gift, devise or other
such transaction), the market price of the shares on the day of
the event causing the shares to be held in the trust, and
(ii) the sales proceeds (net of commissions and other
expenses of sale) received by the trustee for the shares. The
trustee may reduce the amount payable to the prohibited owner by
the amount of any dividends or other distributions paid to the
prohibited owner and owed by the prohibited owner to the trustee
as described above. Any net sales proceeds in excess of the
amount payable to the prohibited owner will be immediately paid
to the charitable beneficiary, together with any dividends or
other distributions thereon. In addition, if prior to discovery
by us that shares of our stock have been transferred to a trust,
such shares of stock are sold by a prohibited owner, then such
shares shall be deemed to have been sold on behalf of the trust
and to the extent that the prohibited owner received an amount
for or in respect of such shares that exceeds the amount that
such prohibited owner was entitled to receive, such excess
amount shall be paid to the trustee upon demand. The prohibited
owner has no rights in the shares held by the trustee.
The trustee shall be designated by us and shall be unaffiliated
with us and with any prohibited owner. Prior to the sale of any
shares by the trust, the trustee will receive, in trust for the
beneficiary, all dividends and other distributions paid by us
with respect to the shares, and may also exercise all voting
rights with respect to the shares.
Subject to Maryland law, effective as of the date that the
shares have been transferred to the trust, the trustee shall
have the authority, at the trustees sole discretion:
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to rescind as void any vote cast by a prohibited owner prior to
our discovery that the shares have been transferred to the
trust; and
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to recast the vote in accordance with the desires of the trustee
acting for the benefit of the beneficiary of the trust.
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However, if we have already taken irreversible corporate action,
then the trustee may not rescind and recast the vote.
In addition, if our board of directors determines in good faith
that a proposed transfer or other event has occurred that would
result in a violation of the restrictions on ownership and
transfer of our stock set forth in our charter, our board of
directors will take such action as it deems advisable to refuse
to give effect to or to prevent such transfer or other event,
including, but not limited to, causing the company to redeem
shares of common stock or preferred stock, refusing to give
effect to the transfer on our books or instituting proceedings
to enjoin the transfer.
Every owner of 5% or more (or such lower percentage as required
by the Code or the regulations promulgated thereunder) of the
outstanding shares of our stock, upon request following the end
of each of our taxable years, must give us written notice
stating the persons name and address, the number of shares
of each class and series of our stock that the person
beneficially owns
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and a description of the manner in which the shares are held.
Each such owner must also provide us with any additional
information that we request in order to determine the effect, if
any, of such beneficial ownership on our qualification as a REIT
and to ensure compliance with the ownership limits. In addition,
any person or entity that is a beneficial owner or constructive
owner of shares of our stock and any person or entity (including
the stockholder of record) who is holding shares of our stock
for a beneficial owner or constructive owner shall, on request,
disclose to us in writing such information as we may request in
order to determine our status as a REIT and to comply with
requirements of any taxing authority or governmental authority
or to determine such compliance.
All certificates representing shares of our common stock bear a
legend referring to the restrictions described above.
Transfer Agent
and Registrar
We expect the transfer agent and registrar for our shares of
common stock to be Computershare Trust Company, N.A.
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MATERIAL
PROVISIONS OF MARYLAND LAW AND OF OUR CHARTER AND
BYLAWS
The following summary of certain provisions of Maryland law
and of our charter and bylaws does not purport to be complete
and is subject to and qualified in its entirety by reference to
Maryland law and to our charter and bylaws, copies of which are
filed as exhibits to the registration statement of which this
prospectus forms a part. See Where You Can Find More
Information.
The MGCL and our charter and bylaws contain provisions that
could make it more difficult for a potential acquirer to acquire
us by means of a tender offer, proxy contest or otherwise. These
provisions are expected to discourage certain coercive takeover
practices and inadequate takeover bids and to encourage persons
seeking to acquire control of us to negotiate first with our
board of directors. We believe that the benefits of these
provisions outweigh the potential disadvantages of discouraging
any such acquisition proposals because, among other things, the
negotiation of such proposals may improve their terms.
Board of
Directors; Vacancies; Removals
Our charter provides that the number of directors will be set
only by a majority of our entire board of directors within
specified limits set forth in our bylaws. Our bylaws provide
that a majority of our entire board of directors may at any time
increase or decrease the number of directors. However, the
number of directors may never be less than the minimum number
required by the MGCL, which is one, nor, unless our bylaws are
amended, more than 11. Because our board of directors and our
stockholders have the power to amend this provision of our
bylaws, either our board of directors or our stockholders, by a
vote of a majority of the votes entitled to be cast by holders
of outstanding shares of our common stock, could modify this
provision of our bylaws to change that range. Our bylaws also
provide that, in an uncontested election, a director is elected
if he or she receives more for votes than
against or withheld votes to serve until
our next annual meeting of stockholders and until his or her
successor is duly elected and qualifies. Under our corporate
governance guidelines, any director who fails to be elected by a
majority vote is required to tender his or her resignation to
our board of directors, subject to acceptance. Our nominating
and corporate governance committee will make a recommendation to
our board of directors on whether to accept or reject the
resignation, or whether other action should be taken. Our board
of directors will then act on our nominating and corporate
governance committees recommendation and publicly disclose
its decision and the rationale behind it within 90 days
from the date of the certification of election results. If the
resignation is not accepted, the director will continue to serve
until the next annual meeting and until the directors
successor is duly elected and qualifies. The director who
tenders his or her resignation will not participate in our
boards decision.
Our charter provides that, subject to the rights, if any, of
holders of any class or series of preferred stock to elect or
remove one or more directors, a director may be removed only for
cause, as defined in our charter, and then only by the
affirmative vote of at least a majority of the votes entitled to
be cast generally in the election of directors. This provision
precludes stockholders from removing incumbent directors without
cause and filling the vacancies created by such removal with
their own nominees.
Our bylaws empower our stockholders to fill vacancies on our
board of directors that are caused by the removal of a director.
Our board of directors may also fill vacancies that are caused
by an increase in the number of directors, the death,
resignation or removal of a director. Any director appointed by
our board of directors to fill a vacancy on the board will hold
office until the next annual meeting of our stockholders and
until his or her successor is duly elected and qualifies.
However, our corporate governance guidelines will require an
individual elected by our board of directors to fill a vacancy
created by the removal of a director by our stockholders to
tender his or her resignation if a special meeting to approve
such election is requested by our stockholders and held in
accordance with the provisions of our bylaws prior to the next
annual meeting of stockholders and the directors election
is not approved by our stockholders at the special meeting.
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Action by
Stockholders
Under the MGCL, stockholder action can be taken only at an
annual or special meeting of stockholders or by unanimous
written consent in lieu of a meeting unless the charter provides
for a lesser percentage (which our charter currently does not).
These provisions, combined with the requirements of our bylaws
regarding advance notice of nominations and other business to be
considered at a meeting of stockholders and the calling of a
stockholder-requested special meeting of stockholders discussed
below, may have the effect of delaying consideration of a
stockholder proposal.
Advance Notice
Provisions for Stockholder Nominations and Stockholder
Proposals
Our bylaws provide that, with respect to an annual meeting of
stockholders, nominations of individuals for election to the
board of directors and the proposal of business to be considered
by stockholders may be made only (i) pursuant to our notice
of the meeting, (ii) by or at the direction of the board of
directors or (iii) by a stockholder who was a stockholder
of record both at the time of giving of notice by such
stockholder as provided for in our bylaws and at the time of the
annual meeting and who is entitled to vote at the meeting in the
election of each individual so nominated or on any such other
business and who has complied with the advance notice procedures
and provided the information required by our bylaws. With
respect to special meetings of stockholders, only the business
specified in the notice of the meeting may be brought before the
meeting. Nominations of individuals for election to the board of
directors at a special meeting may be made only (i) by or
at the direction of the board of directors (ii) by the
stockholder that has requested that the special meeting be
called for the purpose of electing directors and has complied
with the procedures and provided the information required by our
bylaws in connection with such request or (iii) provided
that the special meeting has been called for the purpose of
electing directors, by a stockholder who was a stockholder of
record both at the time of giving of notice by such stockholder
as provided for in our bylaws and at the time of the special
meeting, and who is entitled to vote at the meeting in the
election of each individual so nominated and who has complied
with the advance notice provisions and provided the information
required by our bylaws.
The purpose of requiring stockholders to give us advance notice
of nominations and other business is to afford our board of
directors a meaningful opportunity to consider the
qualifications of the proposed nominees and the advisability of
any other proposed business and, to the extent deemed necessary
or desirable by our board of directors, to inform stockholders
and make recommendations about such qualifications or business,
as well as to provide a more orderly procedure for conducting
meetings of stockholders. Although our bylaws do not give our
board of directors any power to disapprove stockholder
nominations for the election of directors or proposals
recommending certain action, they may have the effect of
precluding a contest for the election of directors or the
consideration of stockholder proposals if proper procedures are
not followed and of discouraging or deterring a third party from
conducting a solicitation of proxies to elect its own slate of
directors or to approve its own proposal without regard to
whether consideration of such nominees or proposals might be
harmful or beneficial to us and our stockholders.
Calling of
Special Meetings of Stockholders
Our bylaws provide that special meetings of stockholders may be
called by our board of directors and certain of our officers.
Additionally, our bylaws provide that, subject to the
satisfaction of certain procedural and informational
requirements by the stockholders requesting the meeting, a
special meeting of stockholders to act on any matter that may
properly be considered at a meeting of stockholders shall be
called by the secretary of the corporation upon the written
request of stockholders entitled to cast a majority of all the
votes entitled to be cast on such matter at such meeting.
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Approval of
Extraordinary Corporate Action; Amendment of Charter and
Bylaws
Under Maryland law, a Maryland corporation generally cannot
dissolve, amend its charter, merge, consolidate, sell all or
substantially all of its assets or engage in a share exchange,
unless recommended by our board of directors and approved by the
affirmative vote of stockholders entitled to cast at least
two-thirds of the votes entitled to be cast on the matter.
However, a Maryland corporation may provide in its charter for
approval of these matters by a lesser percentage, but not less
than a majority of all of the votes entitled to be cast on the
matter. As permitted by Maryland law, any of these actions may
be approved by the affirmative vote of the stockholders entitled
to cast at least a majority of the votes entitled to be cast on
the matter.
Our bylaws may be amended by our board of directors or by a vote
of a majority of the votes entitled to be cast by holders of
outstanding shares of our common stock, except for the
provisions of our bylaws regarding advance notice of nominations
and other business to be considered at a meeting of stockholders
or the calling of a stockholder-requested special meeting of
stockholders, which may be amended only by our board of
directors, and except the following bylaw provisions, each of
which may be amended only with the affirmative vote of a
majority of the votes cast on such an amendment by holders of
outstanding shares of common stock:
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provisions opting out of the control share acquisition statute;
and
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provisions prohibiting our board or directors without the
approval of a majority of the votes entitled to be the cast by
holders of outstanding shares of our common stock, from revoking
altering or amending any resolution, or adopting any resolution
inconsistent with any previously-adopted resolution of our board
of directors, that exempts any business combination between us
and any other person or entity from the business combination
provisions of the MGCL.
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In addition, any amendment to the provisions governing
amendments of our bylaws requires the approval of a majority of
the votes entitled to be cast by holders of outstanding shares
of our common stock.
No Stockholder
Rights Plan
We have no stockholder rights plan. In the future, we do not
intend to adopt a stockholder rights plan unless our
stockholders approve in advance the adoption of a plan or, if
adopted by our board of directors, we submit the stockholder
rights plan to our stockholders for a ratification vote within
12 months of adoption or the plan will terminate.
No Appraisal
Rights
As permitted by the MGCL, our charter provides that stockholders
will not be entitled to exercise appraisal rights unless a
majority of our entire board of directors determines that
appraisal rights will apply, with respect to all or any classes
and series of stock, to one or more transactions occurring after
the date of such determination in connection with which holders
of such shares would otherwise be entitled to exercise appraisal
rights. This is in addition to Maryland law provisions that
generally eliminate appraisal rights for exchange-listed
securities.
Business
Combinations
Under the MGCL, certain business combinations
(including a merger, consolidation, share exchange or, in
certain circumstances, an asset transfer or issuance or
reclassification of equity securities) between a Maryland
corporation and an interested stockholder (defined as any person
who beneficially owns 10% or more of the voting power of the
corporations shares or an affiliate of the corporation
who, at any time within the two-year period prior to the date in
question, was the beneficial owner of 10% or more of the voting
power of the then-outstanding voting stock of the corporation),
or an affiliate of an interested stockholder are prohibited for
five years after the most recent date on which the interested
stockholder becomes an interested stockholder. A person is not
an interested
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stockholder under the statute if the board of directors approved
in advance the transaction by which the person otherwise would
have become an interested stockholder. Our board of directors
may provide that its approval is subject to compliance with any
terms and conditions determined by it.
Any such business combination entered into after the five-year
prohibition must be recommended by the board of directors of
such corporation and approved by the affirmative vote of at
least (a) 80% of the votes entitled to be cast by holders
of outstanding shares of voting stock of the corporation and
(b) two-thirds of the votes entitled to be cast by holders
of voting stock of the corporation other than shares held by the
interested stockholder with whom (or with whose affiliate) the
business combination is to be effected, unless, among other
conditions, the corporations common stockholders receive a
minimum price (as defined in the MGCL) for their shares and the
consideration is received in cash or in the same form as
previously paid by the interested stockholder for its shares.
These provisions of the MGCL do not apply, however, to business
combinations that are approved or exempted by a board of
directors prior to the time that the interested stockholder
becomes an interested stockholder. Our board of directors has
adopted a resolution exempting any business combination between
us and any other person or entity from the business combination
provisions of the MGCL. Our bylaws provide that this resolution
or any other resolution of our board of directors exempting any
business combination from the business combination provisions of
the MGCL may only be revoked, altered or amended, and our board
of directors may only adopt any resolution inconsistent with any
such resolution, with the affirmative vote of a majority of the
votes cast on the matter by holders of outstanding shares of
common stock.
Control Share
Acquisitions
The MGCL provides that control shares of a Maryland
corporation acquired in a control share acquisition
have no voting rights except to the extent approved at a special
meeting by the affirmative vote of two-thirds of the votes
entitled to be cast on the matter, excluding shares of stock of
a corporation in respect of which any of the following persons
is entitled to exercise or direct the exercise of the voting
power of shares of stock of the corporation in the election of
directors: (i) a person who makes or proposes to make a
control share acquisition, (ii) an officer of the
corporation or (iii) an employee of the corporation who is
also a director of the corporation. Control shares
are voting shares of stock which, if aggregated with all other
such shares of stock previously acquired by the acquiror or in
respect of which the acquiror is able to exercise or direct the
exercise of voting power (except solely by virtue of a revocable
proxy), would entitle the acquiror to exercise voting power in
electing directors within one of the following ranges of voting
power: (i) one-tenth or more but less than one-third,
(ii) one-third or more but less than a majority, or
(iii) a majority or more of all voting power. Control
shares do not include shares the acquiring person is then
entitled to vote as a result of having previously obtained
stockholder approval. A control share acquisition
means the acquisition of control shares, subject to certain
exceptions.
A person who has made or proposes to make a control share
acquisition, upon satisfaction of certain conditions (including
an undertaking to pay expenses), may compel our board of
directors to call a special meeting of stockholders to be held
within 50 days of demand to consider the voting rights of
the shares. If no request for a meeting is made, the corporation
may itself present the question at any stockholders meeting.
If voting rights are not approved at the meeting or if the
acquiring person does not deliver an acquiring person statement
as required by the statute, then, subject to certain conditions
and limitations, the corporation may redeem any or all of the
control shares (except those for which voting rights have
previously been approved) for fair value determined, without
regard to the absence of voting rights for the control shares,
as of the date of the last control share acquisition by the
acquiror or of any meeting of stockholders at which the voting
rights of such shares are considered and not approved. If voting
rights for control shares are approved at a stockholders meeting
and the acquiror becomes entitled to vote a majority of the
shares entitled to vote, all other stockholders may exercise
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appraisal rights. The fair value of the shares as determined for
purposes of such appraisal rights may not be less than the
highest price per share paid by the acquiror in the control
share acquisition.
The control share acquisition statute does not apply (a) to
shares acquired in a merger, consolidation or share exchange if
the corporation is a party to the transaction or (b) to
acquisitions approved or exempted by the charter or bylaws of
the corporation.
Our bylaws exempt any and all acquisitions of shares of our
stock from the control share acquisition statute, and this
provision of our bylaws may not be amended without the
affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast on the matter
by holders of outstanding shares of our common stock.
Certain Elective
Provisions of Maryland Law
Title 3, Subtitle 8 of the MGCL permits a Maryland
corporation with a class of equity securities registered under
the Exchange Act and at least three independent directors to
elect to be subject, by provision in its charter or bylaws or a
resolution of its board of directors and notwithstanding any
contrary provision in the charter or bylaws, to any of
(1) a classified board, (2) a two-thirds vote
requirement for removing a director, (3) a requirement that
the number of directors be fixed only by vote of the directors,
(4) a requirement that a vacancy on the board be filled
only by the remaining directors and for the remainder of the
full term of the class of directors in which the vacancy
occurred, or (5) a majority requirement for the calling of
a special meeting of stockholders. We have not elected to be
governed by these specific provisions. However, at the
completion of this offering we expect to have four independent
directors and a class of equity securities registered under the
Exchange Act, so our board of directors could elect to provide
for any of the foregoing provisions.
Interested
Director and Officer Transactions
Pursuant to the MGCL, a contract or other transaction between us
and a director or between us and any other corporation or other
entity in which any of our directors is a director or has a
material financial interest is not void or voidable solely on
the grounds of such common directorship or interest, the
presence of such director at the meeting at which the contract
or transaction is authorized, approved or ratified or the
counting of the directors vote in favor thereof, if:
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the fact of the common directorship or interest is disclosed to
our board of directors or a committee of our board, and our
board or committee authorizes, approves or ratifies the
transaction or contract by the affirmative vote of a majority of
disinterested directors, even if the disinterested directors
constitute less than a quorum;
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the fact of the common directorship or interest is disclosed to
our stockholders entitled to vote thereon, and the transaction
or contract is authorized, approved or ratified by a majority of
the votes cast by the stockholders entitled to vote other than
the votes of shares owned of record or beneficially by the
interested director or corporation or other entity; or
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the transaction or contract is fair and reasonable to us.
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We will adopt a policy which requires that all contracts and
transactions between us or any of our subsidiaries, on the one
hand, and any of our directors or executive officers or any
entity in which such director or executive officer is a director
or has a material financial interest, on the other hand, must be
approved by the affirmative vote of a majority of the
disinterested directors, even if less than a quorum. Where
appropriate in the judgment of the disinterested directors, our
board of directors may obtain a fairness opinion or engage
independent counsel to represent the interests of non-affiliated
security holders, although our board of directors will have no
obligation to do so.
Indemnification
and Limitation of Directors and Officers
Liability
The MGCL permits a Maryland corporation to include in its
charter a provision limiting the liability of its directors and
officers to the corporation and its stockholders for money
damages except for
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liability resulting from actual receipt of an improper benefit
or profit in money, property or services or active and
deliberate dishonesty that is established by a final judgment
and is material to the cause of action. Our charter contains a
provision that eliminates such liability to the maximum extent
permitted by Maryland law.
Our charter authorizes us, to the maximum extent that Maryland
law in effect from time to time permits, to indemnify any
present or former director or officer or any individual who,
while a director or officer of our company and at our request,
serves or has served another corporation, real estate investment
trust, partnership, limited liability company, joint venture,
trust, employee benefit plan or other enterprise as a director,
officer, partner, member, manager or trustee, from and against
any claim or liability to which that individual may become
subject or which that individual may incur by reason of his or
her service in any such capacity and to pay or reimburse his or
her reasonable expenses in advance of final disposition of a
proceeding. Our bylaws obligate us, to the fullest extent
permitted by Maryland law in effect from time to time, to
indemnify and, without requiring a preliminary determination of
the ultimate entitlement to indemnification, pay or reimburse
reasonable expenses in advance of final disposition of a
proceeding to:
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any present or former director or officer who is made or
threatened to be made a party to the proceeding by reason of his
or her service in that capacity; or
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any individual who, while a director or officer of our company
and at our request, serves or has served another corporation,
real estate investment trust, partnership, limited liability
company, joint venture, trust, employee benefit plan or any
other enterprise as a director, officer, partner, member,
manager or trustee of such corporation, real estate investment
trust, partnership, limited liability company, joint venture,
trust, employee benefit plan or other enterprise and who is made
or threatened to be made a party to the proceeding by reason of
his or her service in that capacity.
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Our charter and bylaws also permit us to indemnify and advance
expenses to any person who served a predecessor of ours in any
of the capacities described above and to any employee or agent
of our company or a predecessor of our company.
The MGCL requires a corporation (unless its charter provides
otherwise, which our charter does not) to indemnify a director
or officer who has been successful, on the merits or otherwise,
in the defense of any proceeding to which he or she is made or
threatened to be made a party by reason of his or her service in
that capacity. The MGCL permits a corporation to indemnify its
present and former directors and officers, among others, against
judgments, penalties, fines, settlements and reasonable expenses
actually incurred by them in connection with any proceeding to
which they may be made or are threatened to be made a party by
reason of their service in those or other capacities unless it
is established that:
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the act or omission of the director or officer was material to
the matter giving rise to the proceeding; and
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was committed in bad faith; or
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was the result of active and deliberate dishonesty;
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the director or officer actually received an improper personal
benefit in money, property or services; or
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in the case of any criminal proceeding, the director or officer
had reasonable cause to believe that the act or omission was
unlawful.
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However, under the MGCL, a Maryland corporation may not
indemnify for an adverse judgment in a suit by or in the right
of the corporation or for a judgment of liability on the basis
that personal benefit was improperly received. A court may order
indemnification if it determines that the director or officer is
fairly and reasonably entitled to indemnification, even though
the director or officer did not meet the prescribed standard of
conduct, was adjudged liable to the corporation or was adjudged
liable on the basis that personal benefit was improperly
received. However, indemnification for an
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adverse judgment in a suit by or in the right of the
corporation, or for a judgment of liability on the basis that
personal benefit was improperly received, is limited to expenses.
In addition, the MGCL permits a corporation to advance
reasonable expenses to a director or officer upon the
corporations receipt of:
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a written affirmation by the director or officer of his good
faith belief that he has met the standard of conduct necessary
for indemnification by the corporation; and
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a written undertaking by the director or officer or on the
directors or officers behalf to repay the amount
paid or reimbursed by the corporation if it is ultimately
determined that the director or officer did not meet the
standard of conduct.
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Insofar as the foregoing provisions permit indemnification of
directors, officers or persons controlling us for liability
arising under the Securities Act, we have been informed that in
the opinion of the SEC, this indemnification is against public
policy as expressed in the Securities Act and is therefore
unenforceable.
Indemnification
Agreements
We intend to enter into an indemnification agreement with each
of our executive officers and directors as described in
Management Indemnification Agreements.
REIT
Qualification
Our charter provides that our board of directors may revoke or
otherwise terminate our REIT election, without approval of our
stockholders, if it determines that it is no longer in our best
interests to continue to qualify as a REIT.
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SHARES ELIGIBLE
FOR FUTURE SALE
General
Prior to this offering, there has been no public market for our
common stock. Trading of our common stock on the NYSE is
expected to commence immediately following the completion of
this offering. No prediction can be made as to the effect, if
any, that future sales of shares or the availability of shares
for future sale will have on the market price of our common
stock prevailing from time to time. Sales of substantial amounts
of our common stock in the public market, or the perception that
such sales could occur, could adversely affect the prevailing
market price of our common stock.
Upon completion of this offering and the concurrent private
placement, we will have outstanding an aggregate of
approximately 9,253,250 shares of our common stock. The
shares of common stock sold in this offering will be freely
tradable without restriction or further registration under the
Securities Act unless the shares are held by any of our
affiliates, as that term is defined in Rule 144
under the Securities Act. As defined in Rule 144, an
affiliate of an issuer is a person that directly, or
indirectly through one or more intermediaries, controls, is
controlled by or is under common control with the issuer. The
shares of common stock issued in the concurrent private
placement and all shares of our common stock held by our
affiliates, including our officers and directors, are restricted
securities as that term is defined in Rule 144 under the
Securities Act. Restricted securities may be sold in the public
market only if registered under the securities laws or if they
qualify for an exemption from registration under Rule 144,
as described below.
Rule 144
In general, Rule 144 provides that if (i) one year has
elapsed since the date of acquisition of common stock from us or
any of our affiliates and (ii) the holder is not, and has
not been, an affiliate of ours at any time during the three
months preceding the proposed sale, such holder may sell such
common stock in the public market under Rule 144(b)(1)
without regard to the volume limitations, manner of sale
provisions, public information requirements or notice
requirements under such rule. In general, Rule 144 also
provides that if (i) six months have elapsed since the date
of acquisition of common stock from us or any of our affiliates,
(ii) we have been a reporting company under the Exchange
Act for at least 90 days and (iii) the holder is not,
and has not been, an affiliate of ours at any time during the
three months preceding the proposed sale, such holder may sell
such common stock in the public market under Rule 144(b)(1)
subject to satisfaction of Rule 144s public
information requirements, but without regard to the volume
limitations, manner of sale provisions or notice requirements
under such rule.
In addition, under Rule 144, if (i) one year (or,
subject to us being a reporting company under the Exchange Act
for at least the preceding 90 days, six months) has elapsed
since the date of acquisition of common stock from us or any of
our affiliates and (ii) the holder is, or has been, an
affiliate of ours at any time during the three months preceding
the proposed sale, such holder may sell such common stock in the
public market under Rule 144(b)(1) subject to satisfaction
of Rule 144s volume limitations, manner of sale
provisions, public information requirements and notice
requirements.
Grants under the
2010 Equity Incentive Plan
Following completion of this offering, we intend to file with
the SEC a registration statement on
Form S-8
covering the shares of common stock issuable under the 2010
Equity Plan. Shares of our common stock covered by this
registration statement, including any shares of restricted
stock, shares underlying performance awards or unrestricted
shares, will be eligible for transfer or resale without
restriction under the Securities Act unless held by affiliates.
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Lock-up
Agreements
We and each of our officers, directors, and holders of
substantially all of the our common stock have agreed with the
underwriters, subject to certain exceptions, not to dispose of
or hedge any of our common stock or securities convertible into
or exchangeable for shares of common stock during the period
from the date of this prospectus continuing through the date
180 days after the date of this prospectus, except with the
prior written consent of Goldman, Sachs & Co., as
representative of the underwriters. This agreement does not
apply to the 2010 Equity Plan. See Shares Eligible
for Future Sale for a discussion of certain transfer
restrictions.
The 180-day
restricted period described in the preceding paragraph will be
automatically extended if: (1) during the last 17 days
of the
180-day
restricted period we issue an earnings release or announce
material news or a material event; or (2) prior to the
expiration of the
180-day
restricted period, we announce that we will release earnings
results during the
15-day
period following the last day of the
180-day
period, in which case the restrictions described in the
preceding paragraph will continue to apply until the expiration
of the
18-day
period beginning on the issuance of the earnings release of the
announcement of the material news or material event.
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MATERIAL U.S.
FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS
General
The following is a summary of certain United States federal
income tax considerations associated with an investment in our
common shares that may be relevant to you as a stockholder. The
statements made in this section of the prospectus are based upon
current provisions of the Code and Treasury Regulations
promulgated thereunder, published administrative positions of
the Internal Revenue Service, or the IRS, and judicial
decisions, all of which are subject to change, either
prospectively or retroactively. We cannot assure you that any
changes will not modify the conclusions expressed in
counsels opinions described herein. This summary does not
address all possible tax considerations that may be material to
an investor and does not constitute legal or tax advice.
Moreover, this summary does not deal with all tax aspects that
might be relevant to you, as a prospective holder of common
stock in light of your personal circumstances, nor does it deal
with particular types of stockholders that are subject to
special treatment under the federal income tax laws, such as
insurance companies, holders whose shares are acquired through
the exercise of stock options or otherwise as compensation,
tax-exempt organizations except as provided below, financial
institutions or broker-dealers, regulated investment companies,
traders in securities that elect to use a mark-to-market method
of accounting for their security holdings, persons liable for
the alternative minimum tax, persons that hold securities as
part of a straddle or a hedging or conversion transaction, a
U.S. stockholder (as defined below) whose functional currency is
not the U.S. dollar, foreign corporations or persons who are not
citizens or residents of the United States except as provided
below, or others who are subject to special treatment under the
Code. The Code provisions governing the federal income tax
treatment of REITs and their stockholders are highly technical
and complex, and this summary is qualified in its entirety by
the express language of applicable Code provisions, Treasury
Regulations promulgated thereunder and administrative and
judicial interpretations thereof.
This discussion is not intended to be, and should not be
construed as, tax advice. We urge you, as a prospective
stockholder, to consult your tax advisor regarding the specific
tax consequences to you of a purchase of shares, ownership and
sale of the shares and of our election to be taxed as a REIT,
including the federal, state, local, foreign and other tax
consequences of such purchase, ownership, sale and election and
of potential changes in applicable tax laws.
REIT
Qualification
We intend to elect to be taxed as a REIT under the Code
commencing with our taxable year ending December 31, 2010.
A REIT generally is not subject to United States federal income
tax on the income that it distributes to stockholders if it
meets the applicable REIT distribution requirements and other
requirements for qualification.
We believe that our organization and proposed method of
operation will enable us to meet the requirements for
qualification and taxation as a REIT. In addition, Goodwin
Procter LLP has acted as our tax counsel in connection with this
offering and has rendered to us an opinion to the effect that,
commencing with our taxable year ending December 31, 2010,
we will be organized in conformity with the requirements for
qualification and taxation as a REIT, and our proposed method of
operation will enable us to meet the requirements for
qualification and taxation as a REIT under the Code. It must be
emphasized that this opinion will be based on various
assumptions and representations as to factual matters, including
representations made by us in a factual certificate provided by
one of our officers and our factual representations set forth in
this registration statement. Goodwin Procter LLP will have no
obligation to update its opinion subsequent to its date.
Moreover, our qualification and taxation as a REIT depend upon
our ability to meet the various qualification tests imposed
under the Code discussed below, including through actual annual
(or in some cases quarterly) operating results, requirements
relating to income, asset ownership, distribution levels and
diversity of share ownership and the various other REIT
qualification requirements imposed under the Code, the results
of which
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will not be monitored by Goodwin Procter LLP. Accordingly, no
assurance can be given that our actual results of operation for
any particular taxable year will satisfy those requirements.
Given the complex nature of the REIT qualification requirements,
the ongoing importance of factual determinations and the
possibility of future changes in our circumstances, we cannot
provide any assurance that our actual operating results will
satisfy the requirements for taxation as a REIT under the Code
for any particular taxable year.
Taxation as a
REIT
If we qualify for taxation as a REIT, we generally will not be
subject to federal corporate income tax on our net income that
is distributed currently to our stockholders. This treatment
substantially eliminates double taxation (that is,
taxation at both the corporate and stockholder levels) that
generally results from an investment in a corporation. However,
we will be subject to federal income tax as follows:
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We will be taxed at regular corporate rates on any undistributed
REIT taxable income. REIT taxable income is the
taxable income of the REIT, subject to specified adjustments,
including a deduction for dividends paid.
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Under some circumstances, we may be subject to the
alternative minimum tax on our items of tax
preference.
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If we have net income from the sale or other disposition of
foreclosure property that is held primarily for sale
to customers in the ordinary course of business, or other
nonqualifying income from foreclosure property, we will be
subject to tax at the highest corporate rate on this income.
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Our net income from prohibited transactions will be
subject to a 100% tax. In general, prohibited transactions are
sales or other dispositions of property held primarily for sale
to customers in the ordinary course of business, other than
foreclosure property.
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If we fail to satisfy either the 75% gross income test or the
95% gross income test discussed below, but nonetheless maintain
our qualification as a REIT because other requirements are met,
we will be subject to a tax equal to the greater of (1) the
amount by which 75% of our gross income exceeds the amount of
our income qualifying under the 75% test for the taxable year or
(2) the amount by which 95% of our gross income exceeds the
amount of our income qualifying for the 95% income test for the
taxable year, multiplied by a fraction intended to reflect our
profitability.
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If we fail to satisfy any of the asset tests (other than a
failure by a de minimis amount of the 5% or 10% asset tests) and
we qualify for and satisfy certain cure provisions, then we will
have to pay an excise tax equal to the greater of
(1) $50,000 and (2) an amount determined by
multiplying (x) the net income generated during a specified
period by the assets that caused the failure by (y) the
highest federal income tax rate applicable to corporations.
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If we fail to satisfy any REIT requirements other than the
income test or asset test requirements and we qualify for a
reasonable cause exception, then we may retain our REIT
qualification, but we will have to pay a penalty equal to
$50,000 for each such failure.
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We will be subject to a 4% excise tax on the excess of the
required distribution over the sum of amounts actually
distributed and amounts retained for which federal income tax
was paid, if we fail to distribute during each calendar year at
least the sum of:
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(1) 85% of our REIT ordinary income for the year;
(2) 95% of our REIT capital gain net income for the
year; and
(3) any undistributed taxable income from prior taxable
years.
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We will be subject to a 100% penalty tax on some payments we
receive (or on certain expenses deducted by a taxable REIT
subsidiary) if arrangements among us, our tenants and our
taxable REIT subsidiaries are not comparable to similar
arrangements among unrelated parties.
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If we should acquire any asset from a C corporation
in a carry-over basis transaction and we subsequently recognize
gain on the disposition of such asset during the ten-year
recognition period beginning on the date on which we acquired
the asset, then, to the extent of any built-in gain, such gain
will be subject to tax at the highest regular corporate rate.
Built-in gain means the excess of (a) the fair market value
of the asset as of the beginning of the applicable recognition
period over (b) the adjusted basis in such asset as of the
beginning of such recognition period.
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Income earned by our taxable REIT subsidiaries will be subject
to tax at regular corporate rates.
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We may be required to pay penalties to the IRS in certain
circumstances, including if we fail to meet recordkeeping
requirements intended to monitor our compliance with rules
relating to the composition of our stockholders.
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Requirements for
Qualification as a REIT
We intend to elect to be taxable as a REIT for federal income
tax purposes for our taxable year ending December 31, 2010
and do not intend to revoke such election for any subsequent
taxable years. In order to qualify as a REIT, we must meet the
requirements discussed below, relating to our organization,
sources of income, nature of assets and distributions of income
to stockholders.
The Code defines a REIT as a corporation, trust or association:
(1) that is managed by one or more trustees or directors;
(2) the beneficial ownership of which is evidenced by
transferable shares, or by transferable certificates of
beneficial interest;
(3) that would be taxable as a domestic corporation, but
for Sections 856 through 859 of the Code;
(4) that is neither a financial institution nor an
insurance company subject to applicable provisions of the Code;
(5) the beneficial ownership of which is held by 100 or
more persons;
(6) during the last half of each taxable year, not more
than 50% in value of the outstanding shares of which is owned
directly or indirectly by five or fewer individuals, as defined
in the Code to include specified entities;
(7) that makes an election to be taxable as a REIT, or has
made this election for a previous taxable year which has not
been revoked or terminated, and satisfies all relevant filing
and other administrative requirements established by the IRS
that must be met to elect and maintain REIT status;
(8) that uses a calendar year for federal income tax
purposes and complies with the recordkeeping requirements of the
Code and regulations promulgated thereunder; and
(9) that meets other applicable tests, described below,
regarding the nature of its income and assets and the amount of
its distributions.
Conditions (1), (2), (3) and (4) above must be met
during the entire taxable year and condition (5) above must
be met during at least 335 days of a taxable year of
12 months, or during a proportionate part of a taxable year
of less than 12 months. For purposes of determining stock
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ownership under condition (6) above, a supplemental
unemployment compensation benefits plan, a private foundation
and a portion of a trust permanently set aside or used
exclusively for charitable purposes generally are each
considered an individual. A trust that is a qualified trust
under Code Section 401(a) generally is not considered an
individual, and beneficiaries of a qualified trust are treated
as holding shares of a REIT in proportion to their actuarial
interests in the trust for purposes of condition (6) above.
To monitor its compliance with condition (6) above, a REIT
is required to send annual letters to its stockholders
requesting information regarding the actual ownership of its
shares. If we comply with the annual letters requirement and we
do not know or, exercising reasonable diligence, would not have
known of our failure to meet condition (6) above, then we
will be treated as having met condition (6) above.
To qualify as a REIT, we cannot have at the end of any taxable
year any undistributed earnings and profits that are
attributable to a non-REIT taxable year.
Qualified REIT Subsidiaries and Disregarded
Entities. We intend to hold our assets
through a limited liability company, which is a disregarded
entity because we own 100% of the interests in it, directly or
through other disregarded entities. If we own a corporate
subsidiary that is a qualified REIT subsidiary, or
if we own 100% of the membership interests in a limited
liability company or other unincorporated entity that does not
elect to be treated as a corporation for federal income tax
purposes, the separate existence of that subsidiary, limited
liability company or other unincorporated entity generally will
be disregarded for federal income tax purposes. Generally, a
qualified REIT subsidiary is a corporation, other than a taxable
REIT subsidiary (discussed below), all of the stock of which is
owned by the REIT. A limited liability company or other
unincorporated entity 100% owned by a single member that does
not elect to be treated as a corporation for federal income tax
purposes generally is disregarded as an entity separate from its
owner for federal income tax purposes. All assets, liabilities
and items of income, deduction and credit of the qualified REIT
subsidiary or disregarded entity will be treated as assets,
liabilities and items of income, deduction and credit of its
owner. Thus, in applying the requirements in this section, our
qualified REIT subsidiaries and disregarded entities will be
ignored and all assets, liabilities and items of income,
deduction and credit of these subsidiaries will be treated as
ours. Neither a qualified REIT subsidiary nor a disregarded
entity will be subject to federal corporate income taxation,
although such entities may be subject to state and local
taxation in some states.
Ownership of Partnership Interests by a
REIT. A REIT that is a partner in a
partnership (or a member in a limited liability company or other
entity that is treated as a partnership for federal income tax
purposes) will be deemed to own its proportionate share of the
assets of the partnership and will be deemed to earn its
proportionate share of the partnerships income. The assets
and gross income of the partnership retain the same character in
the hands of the REIT for purposes of the gross income and asset
tests applicable to REITs as described below. Thus, our
proportionate share of the assets and items of income of any
entity taxable as a partnership for federal income tax purposes
in which we hold an interest will be treated as our assets and
liabilities and our items of income for purposes of applying the
requirements described in this prospectus. The assets,
liabilities and items of income of any partnership in which we
own an interest include such entitys share of the assets
and liabilities and items of income with respect to any
partnership in which it holds an interest.
Taxable REIT Subsidiaries. A
taxable REIT subsidiary of a REIT is a corporation
in which the REIT directly or indirectly owns stock and that
elects, together with the REIT, to be treated as a taxable REIT
subsidiary under Section 856(l) of the Code. The election
can be revoked at any time as long as the REIT and the taxable
REIT subsidiary revoke such election jointly. In addition, if a
taxable REIT subsidiary owns, directly or indirectly, securities
representing more than 35% of the vote or value of a subsidiary
corporation (other than a REIT), that subsidiary will also be
treated as a taxable REIT subsidiary. A taxable REIT subsidiary
is a corporation subject to federal income tax, and state and
local income tax where applicable, as a regular C
corporation.
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Generally, a taxable REIT subsidiary can perform some
impermissible tenant services without causing us to receive
impermissible tenant services income under the REIT income
tests. Other than certain activities related to operating or
managing a lodging or health care facility, a taxable REIT
subsidiary also can recognize income that would be subject to
the 100% prohibited transaction tax, or income that would be
nonqualifying income under the gross income tests, if earned by
a REIT. However, several provisions regarding the arrangements
between a REIT and its taxable REIT subsidiaries ensure that a
taxable REIT subsidiary will be subject to an appropriate level
of federal income taxation. For example, a taxable REIT
subsidiary is limited in its ability to deduct interest payments
in excess of a certain amount made to us. In addition, we will
be obligated to pay a 100% penalty tax on some payments that we
receive or on certain expenses deducted by the taxable REIT
subsidiary if the economic arrangements among us, our tenants
and the taxable REIT subsidiary are not comparable to similar
arrangements among unrelated parties.
Income Tests Applicable to REITs. To
qualify as a REIT, we must satisfy two gross income tests.
First, at least 75% of our gross income, excluding gross income
from prohibited transactions and certain other income and gains
described below, for each taxable year must be derived directly
or indirectly from investments relating to real property or
mortgages on real property, including rents from real
property (which includes certain of our expenses that are
paid or reimbursed by tenants), gains on the disposition of real
estate assets, dividends paid by another REIT and interest on
obligations secured by mortgages on real property or on
interests in real property, or from temporary investments of new
capital in stock or debt securities during the one-year period
following our receipt of new capital that we raise through
equity offerings or issuance of debt obligations with at least a
five-year term. Second, at least 95% of our gross income,
excluding gross income from prohibited transactions and certain
other income and gains described below, for each taxable year
must be derived from any combination of income qualifying under
the 75% test and dividends, interest, and gain from the sale or
disposition of stock or securities.
Rents received by us will qualify as rents from real property in
satisfying the gross income requirements for a REIT described
above only if several conditions are met. First, the amount of
rent must not be based in whole or in part on the income or
profits of any person. However, an amount received or accrued
generally will not be excluded from the term rents from
real property solely by reason of being based on a fixed
percentage or percentages of receipts or sales. Second, rents
received from a related party tenant will not
qualify as rents from real property in satisfying the gross
income tests unless the tenant is a taxable REIT subsidiary and
at least 90% of the property is leased to unrelated tenants and
the rent paid by the taxable REIT subsidiary is substantially
comparable to the rent paid by the unrelated tenants for
comparable space. A tenant is a related party tenant if the
REIT, or an actual or constructive owner of 10% or more of the
REIT, actually or constructively owns 10% or more of the tenant.
Third, if rent attributable to personal property, leased in
connection with a lease of real property, is greater than 15% of
the total rent received under the lease, then the portion of
rent attributable to the personal property will not qualify as
rents from real property.
Generally, for rents to qualify as rents from real property for
the purpose of satisfying the gross income tests, we may provide
directly only a de minimis amount of services, unless those
services are customarily furnished or rendered in
connection with the rental of real property and not otherwise
considered rendered to the occupant. Accordingly, we
may not provide impermissible services to tenants
(except through an independent contractor from whom we derive no
revenue and that meets other requirements or through a taxable
REIT subsidiary) without giving rise to impermissible
tenant service income. Impermissible tenant service income
is deemed to be at least 150% of our direct cost of providing
the service. If the impermissible tenant service income exceeds
1% of our total income from a property, then all of the income
from that property will fail to qualify as rents from real
property. If the total amount of impermissible tenant service
income from a property does not exceed 1% of our total income
from the property, the services will not taint the
other income from the property (that is, it will not cause the
rent paid by tenants of that property to fail to qualify as
rents from real property), but the impermissible tenant service
income will not qualify as rents from real property.
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Any gain we realize on the sale of any property held as
inventory or other property held primarily for sale to customers
in the ordinary course of business will be treated as income
from a prohibited transaction that is subject to a 100% penalty
tax, unless such property has been held by us for at least two
years and certain other requirements are satisfied or the gain
is realized in a taxable REIT subsidiary. Under existing law,
whether property is held as inventory or primarily for sale to
customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business is a
question of fact that depends on all the facts and circumstances
of a particular transaction. We generally intend to hold its
properties for investment with a view to long-term appreciation,
to engage in the business of acquiring, developing, owning and
operating properties, and to make occasional sales of
properties, consistent with our investment objectives. We cannot
provide any assurance, however, that the IRS might not contend
that one or more of these sales are subject to the 100% penalty
tax.
For purposes of the gross income tests, temporary investment
income generally constitutes qualifying income if such income is
earned as a result of investing new capital raised through the
issuance of our common stock or certain long-term debt
obligations in stock and debt obligations, but only during the
one-year period beginning on the date we receive the new
capital. If we are unable to invest sufficient amount of the net
proceeds of this offering and of the concurrent private
placement in real estate assets, as detailed below, within such
one-year period, we could fail the 75% gross income test.
If we fail to satisfy one or both of the 75% or 95% gross income
tests for any taxable year, we may nevertheless qualify as a
REIT for that year if we are entitled to relief under the Code.
These relief provisions generally will be available if our
failure to meet the tests is due to reasonable cause and not due
to willful neglect and, following our identification of such
failure for any taxable year, we file a schedule describing each
item of our gross income described in the gross income tests in
accordance with the applicable Treasury Regulations. It is not
possible, however, to state whether in all circumstances we
would be entitled to the benefit of these relief provisions. For
example, if we fail to satisfy the gross income tests because
nonqualifying income that we intentionally incur exceeds the
limits on nonqualifying income, the IRS could conclude that the
failure to satisfy the tests was not due to reasonable cause. If
these relief provisions are inapplicable to a particular set of
circumstances involving us, we will fail to qualify as a REIT.
As discussed under Taxation as a REIT,
even if these relief provisions apply, a tax would be imposed
based on the amount of nonqualifying income.
Asset Tests Applicable to REITs. At the
close of each quarter of our taxable year, we must satisfy four
tests relating to the nature of our assets:
(1) at least 75% of the value of our total assets must be
represented by real estate assets, cash, cash items and
government securities. Real estate assets include, for this
purpose, stock or debt instruments held for less than one year
purchased with the proceeds of an offering of our shares or
publicly offered long-term debt;
(2) not more than 25% of our total assets may be
represented by securities other than those in the 75% asset
class;
(3) except for investments in qualified REIT subsidiaries,
taxable REIT subsidiaries, equity interests in REITs or other
securities that qualify as real estate assets for
purposes of the test described in clause (1), the value of any
one issuers securities owned by us may not exceed 5% of
the value of our total assets; we may not own more than 10% of
the total voting power of any one issuers outstanding
securities; and we may not own more than 10% of the total value
of the outstanding securities of any one issuer; and
(4) not more than 25% of our total assets may be
represented by securities of one or more taxable REIT
subsidiaries.
Securities for purposes of the asset tests may include debt
securities. However, the 10% value test does not apply to
certain straight debt and other excluded securities,
as described in the Code including, but not limited to, any loan
to an individual or estate, any obligation to pay rents from
real
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property and any security issued by a REIT. In addition,
(a) a REITs interest as a partner in a partnership is
not considered a security for purposes of applying the 10% value
test to securities issued by the partnership; (b) any debt
instrument issued by a partnership (other than straight debt or
another excluded security) will not be considered a security
issued by the partnership if at least 75% of the
partnerships gross income is derived from sources that
would qualify for the 75% gross income test; and (c) any
debt instrument issued by a partnership (other than straight
debt or another excluded security) will not be considered a
security issued by the partnership to the extent of the
REITs interest as a partner in the partnership. In
general, straight debt is defined as a written, unconditional
promise to pay on demand or at a specific date a fixed principal
amount, and the interest rate and payment dates on the debt must
not be contingent on profits or the discretion of the debtor. In
addition, straight debt may not contain a convertibility feature.
As provided above, stock or debt securities attributable to the
temporary investment of new capital that we raise through the
issuance of our common stock or certain long-term debt
obligations constitute good assets for purposes of the 75% asset
test, but only during the one-year period beginning on the date
we receive the new capital. We intend to invest the net proceeds
of this offering and the concurrent private placement in
interest-bearing short-term U.S. government and government
agency securities. If we are unable to invest sufficient amount
of the net proceeds of this offering and of the concurrent
private placement in real estate assets, we could be limited to
investing all or a portion of any remaining funds in cash or
cash equivalents.
After initially meeting the asset tests at the close of any
quarter, we will not lose our status as a REIT if we fail to
satisfy any of the asset tests (other than the 10% voting
limitation) at the end of a later quarter solely by reason of
changes in the relative values of our assets. If the failure to
satisfy any such asset tests results from an acquisition of
securities or other property during a quarter, the failure can
be cured by disposition of sufficient non-qualifying assets
within 30 days after the close of that quarter.
Moreover, if we fail to satisfy any of the asset tests at the
end of a calendar quarter during a taxable year and such failure
is not cured within 30 days as described above, we will not
lose our REIT status if one of the following additional
exceptions applies: (A) the failure is due to a violation
of the 5% or 10% asset tests and is de minimis (for
this purpose, a de minimis failure is one that
arises from our ownership of assets the total value of which
does not exceed the lesser of 1% of the total value of our
assets at the end of the quarter in which the failure occurred
and $10 million) and we either dispose of the assets that
caused the failure or otherwise satisfy the asset tests within
six months after the last day of the quarter in which our
identification of the failure occurred; or (B) the failure
is due to a violation of any of the asset tests (other than a
de minimis violations of the 5% or 10% asset tests)
and all of the following requirements are satisfied:
(i) the failure is due to reasonable cause and not willful
neglect, (ii) we file a schedule in accordance with
Treasury Regulations providing a description of each asset that
caused the failure, (iii) we either dispose of the assets
that caused the failure or otherwise satisfy the asset tests
within six months after the last day of the quarter in which our
identification of the failure occurred, and (iv) we pay an
excise tax equal to the greater of (x) $50,000 and
(y) an amount determined by multiplying the net income
generated during a specified period by the assets that caused
the failure by the highest federal income tax applicable to
corporations.
Foreclosure Property. Foreclosure
property is real property (including interests in real property)
and any personal property incident to such real property
(1) that is acquired by a REIT as a result of the REIT
having bid in the property at foreclosure, or having otherwise
reduced the property to ownership or possession by agreement or
process of law, after there was a default (or default was
imminent) on a lease of the property or a mortgage loan held by
the REIT and secured by the property, (2) for which the
related loan or lease was made, entered into or acquired by the
REIT at a time when default was not imminent or anticipated and
(3) for which such REIT makes an election to treat the
property as foreclosure property. REITs generally are subject to
tax at the maximum corporate rate (currently 35%) on any net
income from foreclosure property, including any gain from
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the disposition of the foreclosure property, other than income
that would otherwise be qualifying income for purposes of the
75% gross income test. Any gain from the sale of property for
which a foreclosure property election has been made will not be
subject to the 100% tax on gains from prohibited transactions
described above, even if the property is held primarily for sale
to customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business.
Hedging Transactions. We may enter into
hedging transactions with respect to one or more of our assets
or liabilities. Hedging transactions could take a variety of
forms, including interest rate swaps or cap agreements, options,
futures contracts, forward rate agreements or similar financial
instruments. Except to the extent as may be provided by future
Treasury Regulations, any income from a hedging transaction
which is clearly identified as such before the close of the day
on which it was acquired, originated or entered into, including
gain from the disposition or termination of such a transaction,
will not constitute gross income for purposes of the 95% and 75%
income tests if such hedging transaction is entered into
(i) in the normal course of our business primarily to
manage risk of interest rate or price changes or currency
fluctuations with respect to indebtedness incurred or to be
incurred by us to acquire or carry real estate assets or
(ii) primarily to manage the risk of currency fluctuations
with respect to any item of income or gain that would be
qualifying income under the 75% or 95% income tests (or any
property which generates such income or gain). To the extent we
enter into other types of hedging transactions, the income from
those transactions is likely to be treated as nonqualifying
income for purposes of both of the 75% and 95% gross income
tests. We intend to structure any hedging transactions in a
manner that does not jeopardize our ability to qualify as a REIT.
Annual Distribution Requirements Applicable to
REITs. To qualify as a REIT, we are required
to distribute dividends, other than capital gain dividends, to
our stockholders each year in an amount at least equal to
(1) the sum of (a) 90% of our REIT taxable income,
computed without regard to the dividends paid deduction and our
net capital gain, and (b) 90% of the net income, after tax,
from foreclosure property, minus (2) the sum of certain
specified items of noncash income. In addition, if we recognize
any built-in gain, we will be required, under Treasury
Regulations, to distribute at least 90% of the built-in gain,
after tax, recognized on the disposition of the applicable
asset. See Taxation as a REIT for a
discussion of the possible recognition of built-in gain. These
distributions must be paid either in the taxable year to which
they relate, or in the following taxable year if declared before
we timely file our tax return for the prior year and if paid
with or before the first regular dividend payment date after the
declaration is made.
We intend to make timely distributions sufficient to satisfy the
annual distribution requirements.
It is possible that we, from time to time, may choose to retain
cash to fund capital projects or future operations or may not
have sufficient cash or other liquid assets to meet this
distribution requirement or to distribute such greater amount as
may be necessary to avoid income and excise taxation, in part
due to timing differences between (a) the actual receipt of
income and the actual payment of deductible expenses and
(b) the inclusion of such income and the deduction of such
expenses in arriving at our taxable income, or as a result of
nondeductible expenses such as principal amortization or capital
expenditures in excess of noncash deductions. In such event, we
may find it necessary to arrange for borrowings or pay taxable
stock dividends in order to meet the dividend requirement.
Under some circumstances, we may be able to rectify a failure to
meet the distribution requirement for a year by paying dividends
to stockholders in a later year, which may be included in our
deduction for dividends paid for the earlier year. We will refer
to such dividends as deficiency dividends. Thus, we
may be able to avoid being taxed on amounts distributed as
deficiency dividends. We will, however, be required to pay
interest based upon the amount of any deduction taken for
deficiency dividends.
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To the extent that we do not distribute (and are not deemed to
have distributed, as described below) all of our net capital
gain or distribute at least 90%, but less than 100%, of our REIT
taxable income, as adjusted, we are subject to tax on these
retained amounts at regular corporate tax rates.
In addition, we will be subject to a 4% excise tax on the excess
of the required distribution over the sum of amounts actually
distributed and amounts retained for which federal income tax
was paid, if we fail to distribute during each calendar year at
least the sum of:
(1) 85% of our REIT ordinary income for the year;
(2) 95% of our REIT capital gain net income for the
year; and
(3) any undistributed taxable income from prior taxable
years.
A REIT may elect to retain rather than distribute all or a
portion of its net capital gains and pay the tax on the gains.
In that case, a REIT may elect to have its stockholders include
their proportionate share of the undistributed net capital gains
in income as long-term capital gains and receive a credit for
their share of the tax paid by the REIT. For purposes of the 4%
excise tax described above, any such retained amounts would be
treated as having been distributed.
Record-Keeping Requirements. We are
required to comply with applicable record-keeping requirements.
Failure to comply could result in monetary fines.
Failure to Qualify as a REIT. If we
fail to satisfy any REIT requirements (other than the income
test or asset test requirements, with respect to which specific
cure provisions apply), we generally will be eligible for relief
from REIT disqualification if the failure is due to reasonable
cause and not willful neglect and we pay a penalty of $50,000
with respect to such failure. It is not possible to state
whether in all circumstances we would be entitled to such
statutory relief.
If we fail to qualify for taxation as a REIT in any taxable year
and a relief provision does not apply, we will be subject to tax
on our taxable income at regular corporate rates, including any
applicable alternative minimum tax. Distributions to
stockholders in any year in which we fail to qualify will not be
deductible by us nor will they be required to be made. In such
event, to the extent of current or accumulated earnings and
profits, all distributions to stockholders will be taxable as
dividend income. Subject to limitations of the Code, corporate
stockholders may be eligible for the dividends-received
deduction and non-corporate stockholders may be eligible to
treat the dividends received from us as qualified dividend
income taxable as net capital gains under the provisions of
Section 1(h)(11) of the Code, for taxable years beginning
before January 1, 2011. Unless we are entitled to relief
under specific statutory provisions, we also will be
disqualified from electing to be taxed as a REIT for the four
taxable years following the year during which qualification was
lost.
Taxation of U.S.
Stockholders
When we refer to a U.S. stockholder, we mean a beneficial
owner of a share of our common stock that is, for United States
federal income tax purposes:
(1) a citizen or resident, as defined in Code
Section 7701(b), of the United States;
(2) a corporation, or other entity treated as a corporation
for federal income tax purposes, created or organized under the
laws of the United States, any state or the District of Columbia;
(3) an estate the income of which is subject to federal
income taxation regardless of its source; or
(4) a trust that is subject to the primary supervision of a
United States court and the control of one or more United States
persons or that has a valid election in effect under the
applicable Treasury Regulations to be treated as a United States
person under the Code.
Generally, in the case of a partnership (or other entity treated
as such for federal income tax purposes) that holds our common
stock, any partner that would be a U.S. stockholder if it
held the
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common stock directly is also a U.S. stockholder. A
non-U.S. stockholder
is a holder, including any partner in a partnership that holds
our common stock, that is not a U.S. stockholder.
Distributions by Us. So long as we
qualify as a REIT, distributions to U.S. stockholders out
of our current or accumulated earnings and profits that are not
designated as capital gain dividends will be taxable as dividend
income and will not be eligible for the dividends received
deduction generally available for corporations and generally
will not be eligible for treatment as qualified dividend income
by non-corporate stockholders except with respect to the portion
of any distribution (a) that represents income from
dividends we receive from a TRS or a corporation in which we own
shares (but only if such dividends would be eligible for the
lower rate on dividends if paid by the corporation to its
individual stockholders), or (b) that is equal to the sum
of our real estate investment trust taxable income (taking into
account the dividends paid deduction available to us) for our
previous taxable year and certain net built-in gain with respect
to property acquired from a C corporation in certain
transactions in which we must adopt the basis of the asset in
the hands of the C corporation for such previous taxable year
and less any taxes imposed on us for such previous taxable year.
Distributions in excess of our current and accumulated earnings
and profits will not be taxable to a U.S. stockholder to
the extent that the distributions do not exceed the adjusted tax
basis of the stockholders shares. Rather, such
distributions will reduce the adjusted basis of such shares, but
not below zero. Distributions in excess of current and
accumulated earnings and profits that exceed the
U.S. stockholders adjusted basis in its shares will
be treated as gain from the sale or exchange of such shares
taxable as capital gains in the amount of such excess if the
shares are held as a capital asset. If we declare a dividend in
October, November or December of any year with a record date in
one of these months and pay the dividend on or before January 31
of the following year, we will be treated as having paid the
dividend, and the stockholder will be treated as having received
the dividend, on December 31 of the year in which the dividend
was declared. This discussion applies equally to distributions
payable in cash and taxable stock distributions.
We may elect to designate distributions of our net capital gain
as capital gain dividends. Capital gain dividends
are taxed to stockholders as gain from the sale or exchange of a
capital asset held for more than one year, to the extent that
they do not exceed our actual net capital gain for the taxable
year, without regard to how long the U.S. stockholder has
held its shares. If we designate any portion of a dividend as a
capital gain dividend, a U.S. stockholder will receive an
IRS
Form 1099-DIV
indicating the amount that will be taxable to the stockholder as
capital gain. Corporate stockholders, however, may be required
to treat up to 20% of capital gain dividends as ordinary income.
Instead of paying capital gain dividends, we may choose to
retain all or part of our net capital gain and designate such
amount as undistributed capital gain. We will be
subject to tax at regular corporate rates on any undistributed
capital gains.
A U.S. stockholder:
(1) will include in its income as long-term capital gains
its proportionate share of such undistributed capital
gains; and
(2) will be deemed to have paid its proportionate share of
the tax paid by us on such undistributed capital gains and
receive a credit or a refund to the extent that the tax paid by
us exceeds the U.S. stockholders tax liability on the
undistributed capital gains.
A U.S. stockholder will increase the basis in its common
stock by the difference between the amount of capital gain
included in its income and the amount of tax it is deemed to
have paid. Our earnings and profits will be adjusted
appropriately.
We will classify portions of any designated capital gain
dividend or undistributed capital gains as either:
(1) a 15% rate gain distribution, which would be taxable to
non-corporate U.S. stockholders at a maximum rate of 15%
(for taxable years beginning before January 1,
2011); or
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(2) an unrecaptured Section 1250 gain
distribution, which would be taxable to non-corporate
U.S. stockholders at a maximum rate of 25%.
We must determine the maximum amounts that we may designate as
15% and 25% rate capital gain dividends by performing the
computation required by the Code as if the REIT were an
individual whose ordinary income were subject to a marginal tax
rate in excess of 25%.
Distributions made by us and gain arising from the sale or
exchange by a U.S. stockholder of shares of our common
stock will not be treated as passive activity income, and as a
result, U.S. stockholders generally will not be able to
apply any passive losses against this income or
gain. In addition, taxable distributions from our company
generally will be treated as investment income for purposes of
the investment interest limitations. A U.S. stockholder may
elect to treat capital gain dividends and capital gains from the
disposition of shares of our common stock as investment income
for purposes of the investment interest limitation, in which
case the applicable capital gains will be taxed at ordinary
income rates. We will notify stockholders regarding the portions
of distributions for each year that constitute ordinary income,
return of capital and capital gain. U.S. stockholders may
not include in their own income tax returns any net operating
losses or capital losses of our company. Our operating or
capital losses would be carried over for potential offset
against our future income, subject to applicable limitations.
We may make distributions to U.S. stockholders that are paid in
common stock and are intended to be treated as dividends for
U.S. federal income tax purposes. In that event, our U.S.
stockholders would generally have taxable income with respect to
such distributions of our common stock and may have tax
liability on account of such distributions in excess of cash (if
any) that is received.
Sales of Shares. Upon any taxable sale
or other disposition of shares, a U.S. stockholder will
recognize gain or loss for federal income tax purposes in an
amount equal to the difference between:
(1) the amount of cash and the fair market value of any
property received on the sale or other disposition; and
(2) the holders adjusted basis in the shares for tax
purposes.
This gain or loss will be a capital gain or loss if the shares
have been held by the U.S. stockholder as a capital asset.
The applicable tax rate will depend on the stockholders
holding period in the shares (generally, if an asset has been
held for more than one year it will produce long-term capital
gain) and the stockholders tax bracket. The IRS has the
authority to prescribe, but has not yet prescribed, regulations
that would apply a capital gain tax rate of 25% (which is
generally higher than the long-term capital gain tax rates for
non-corporate stockholders) to a portion of capital gain
realized by a non-corporate stockholder on the sale of REIT
shares that would correspond to the REITs
unrecaptured Section 1250 gain. Stockholders
are urged to consult with their own tax advisors with respect to
their capital gain tax liability. A corporate
U.S. stockholder will be subject to tax at a maximum rate
of 35% on capital gain from the sale of our common stock. In
general, any loss recognized by a U.S. stockholder upon the
sale or other disposition of shares that have been held for six
months or less, after applying the holding period rules, will be
treated as a long-term capital loss, to the extent of
distributions received by the U.S. stockholder from us that
were required to be treated as long-term capital gains. All or a
portion of any loss realized upon a taxable disposition of
shares may be disallowed if other shares are purchased within
30 days before or after the date of disposition.
Taxation of
Tax-Exempt Stockholders
Except as provided below, if a tax-exempt stockholder has not
held its common stock as debt financed property
within the meaning of the Code, the dividend income from our
company will not be unrelated business taxable income, referred
to as UBTI, to a tax-exempt stockholder. Similarly, gain from
the sale of shares will not constitute UBTI unless the
tax-exempt stockholder has held its shares as debt financed
property within the meaning of the Code or is a dealer with
respect to our shares.
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However, for tax-exempt stockholders that are social clubs,
voluntary employee benefit associations, supplemental
unemployment benefit trusts or qualified group legal services
plans exempt from federal income taxation under
Section 501(c)(7), (c)(9), (c)(17) or (c)(20) of the Code,
respectively, income from an investment in our shares will
constitute UBTI; however, an organization exempt under
Section 501(c)(9), (c)(17) or (c)(20) of the Code may
reduce UBTI if it properly sets aside or reserves such amounts
for certain purposes specified in the Code. These tax-exempt
stockholders should consult their own tax advisors concerning
these set aside and reserve requirements.
In addition, a portion of the dividends paid by a
pension-held REIT are treated as UBTI if received by
any trust which is described in Section 401(a) of the Code,
is tax-exempt under Section 501(a) of the Code and holds
more than 10%, by value, of the interests in the pension-held
REIT. Tax-exempt pension funds that are described in
Section 401(a) of the Code are referred to below as
pension trusts.
A REIT is a pension-held REIT if the following conditions apply:
(1) it qualified as a REIT only by reason of
Section 856(h)(3) of the Code, which provides that stock
owned by a pension trust will be treated, for purposes of
determining if the REIT is closely held, as owned by the
beneficiaries of the trust rather than by the trust
itself; and
(2) either (a) at least one pension trust holds more
than 25% of the value of the REITs stock, or (b) a
group of pension trusts each individually holding more than 10%
of the value of the REITs stock, collectively owns more
than 50% of the value of the REITs stock.
The percentage of any pension-held REIT dividend treated as UBTI
is equal to the ratio of the UBTI earned by the REIT, treating
the REIT as if it were a pension trust and therefore subject to
tax on UBTI, to the total gross income of the REIT. An exception
applies where such percentage is less than 5% for any taxable
year.
The rules described above under the heading
Taxation of U.S. Stockholders Distributions by
Us concerning the inclusion of our designated
undistributed capital gain in the income of our stockholders
will apply to tax-exempt stockholders. Thus, tax-exempt
stockholders will be allowed a credit or refund of the tax
deemed paid by them in respect of the includible gain.
U.S. Taxation of
Non-U.S.
Stockholders
Distributions by Us. Distributions by
us to a
non-U.S. stockholder
that are neither attributable to gain from sales or exchanges by
us of U.S. real property interests nor
designated by us as capital gains dividends will be treated as
dividends of ordinary income to the extent that they are made
out of our current or accumulated earnings and profits. These
distributions ordinarily will be subject to withholding of
federal income tax on a gross basis at a rate of 30%, or a lower
rate as permitted under an applicable income tax treaty, unless
the dividends are treated as effectively connected with the
conduct by the
non-U.S. stockholder
of a U.S. trade or business or are attributable to a
permanent establishment that the
non-U.S. stockholder
maintains in the United States if that is required by an
applicable income tax treaty as a condition for subjecting the
non-U.S. stockholder
to U.S. taxation on a net income basis. Under some
treaties, however, lower withholding rates generally applicable
to dividends do not apply to dividends from REITs. Dividends
that are effectively connected with a U.S. trade or
business or are attributable to a permanent establishment that
the
non-U.S. stockholder
maintains in the United States if that is required by an
applicable income tax treaty, will be subject to tax on a net
basis, that is, after allowance for deductions, at graduated
rates, in the same manner as such dividends are taxable to
U.S. stockholders, and are generally not subject to
withholding. Applicable certification and disclosure
requirements must be satisfied to obtain a reduced rate of
withholding under an applicable income tax treaty or to be
exempt from withholding under the effectively connected income
exemption. Any dividends received by a corporate
non-U.S. stockholder
that is engaged in a U.S. trade or business also may be
subject to an additional branch profits tax at a 30% rate, or
lower applicable treaty rate.
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Distributions in excess of our current and accumulated earnings
and profits that exceed the
non-U.S. stockholders
basis in its common stock will be taxable to a
non-U.S. stockholder
as gain from the sale of common stock, which is discussed below.
Distributions in excess of our current or accumulated earnings
and profits that do not exceed the adjusted basis of the
non-U.S. stockholder
in its common stock will reduce the
non-U.S. stockholders
adjusted basis in its common stock, but not below zero, and will
not be subject to federal income tax, but will be subject to
U.S. withholding tax as described below.
We expect to withhold U.S. income tax at the rate of 30% on
any dividend distributions (including distributions that later
may be determined to have been in excess of current and
accumulated earnings and profits) made to a
non-U.S. stockholder
unless:
(1) a lower treaty rate applies and the
non-U.S. stockholder
files with us an IRS
Form W-8BEN
evidencing eligibility for that reduced treaty rate; or
(2) the
non-U.S. stockholder
files with us an IRS
Form W-8ECI
claiming that the distribution is income effectively connected
with such
non-U.S. stockholders
trade or business within the U.S.
We may be required to withhold at least 10% of any distribution
in excess of our current and accumulated earnings and profits,
even if a lower treaty rate applies and the
non-U.S. stockholder
is not liable for tax on the receipt of that distribution.
However, a
non-U.S. stockholder
may seek a refund of these amounts from the IRS if the
non-U.S. stockholders
U.S. tax liability with respect to the distribution is less
than the amount withheld.
Distributions to a
non-U.S. stockholder
that are designated by us at the time of the distribution as
capital gain dividends, other than those arising from the
disposition of a U.S. real property interest, generally
should not be subject to federal income taxation unless:
(1) the investment in our common stock is effectively
connected with the
non-U.S. stockholders
U.S. trade or business or are attributable to a permanent
establishment that the
non-U.S. stockholder
maintains in the United States if that is required by an
applicable income tax treaty, in which case the
non-U.S. stockholder
will be subject to the same treatment as U.S. stockholders
with respect to any gain, except that a stockholder that is a
foreign corporation also may be subject to the 30% branch
profits tax, as discussed above; or
(2) the
non-U.S. stockholder
is a nonresident alien individual who is present in the
U.S. for 183 days or more during the taxable year and
has a tax home in the U.S., in which case the
nonresident alien individual will be subject to a 30% tax on the
individuals capital gains.
Under the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act, which is
referred to as FIRPTA, subject to the exception
discussed below for 5% or smaller holders of regularly traded
classes of stock, distributions to a
non-U.S. stockholder
that are attributable to gain from sales or exchanges by us of
U.S. real property interests, whether or not designated as
a capital gain dividend, will cause the
non-U.S. stockholder
to be treated as recognizing gain that is income effectively
connected with a U.S. trade or business.
Non-U.S. stockholders
will be taxed on this gain at the same rates applicable to
U.S. stockholders, subject to a special alternative minimum
tax in the case of nonresident alien individuals. Also, this
gain may be subject to the 30% branch profits tax in the hands
of a
non-U.S. stockholder
that is a corporation.
We will be required to withhold and remit to the IRS 35% of any
distributions to
non-U.S. stockholders
that are designated as capital gain dividends, including any
distributions that could have been designated as capital gain
dividends. Distributions can be designated as capital gains to
the extent of our net capital gain for the taxable year of the
distribution. The amount withheld is creditable against the
non-U.S. stockholders
federal income tax liability. A
non-U.S. stockholder
who receives distributions attributable to gain from a sale or
exchange by us of U.S. real property interests will be
required to file a federal income tax return for the taxable
year.
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A
non-U.S. stockholder
that owns, actually or constructively, no more than 5% of our
common stock at all times during the one-year period ending on
the date of the distribution will not be subject to the 35%
FIRPTA withholding tax with respect to distributions that are
attributable to gain from our sale or exchange of U.S. real
property interests, if our common stock is regularly traded on
an established securities market. Instead, any distributions
made to such
non-U.S. stockholder
will be subject to the general withholding rules discussed above
which generally impose a withholding tax equal to 30% of the
gross amount of each dividend distribution (unless reduced by
treaty). We anticipate that our common stock will be regularly
traded on an established securities market in the United States
following this offering.
Although the law is not clear on the matter, it appears that
amounts designated by us as undistributed capital gains
generally should be treated with respect to
non-U.S. stockholders
in the same manner as actual distributions by us of capital gain
dividends. Under that approach,
non-U.S. stockholders
would be able to offset as a credit against their federal income
tax liability resulting therefrom an amount equal to their
proportionate share of the tax paid by us on the undistributed
capital gains, and to receive from the IRS a refund to the
extent their proportionate share of this tax paid by us exceeds
their actual federal income tax liability.
As described above, we may make distributions that are paid in
common stock and are intended to be treated as dividends for
U.S. Federal income tax purposes. Such distributions,
accordingly, would be treated in a manner consistent with the
discussion under this heading U.S. Taxation of
Non-U.S. Stockholders
Distributions by Us. If we are required to withhold an
amount in excess of any cash distributed along with the common
shares, we may retain and sell some of the common shares that
would otherwise be distributed in order to satisfy our
withholding obligations.
Sale of Common Stock. Gain recognized
by a
non-U.S. stockholder
upon the sale or exchange of our common stock generally would
not be subject to U.S. taxation unless:
(1) the investment in our common stock is effectively
connected with the
non-U.S. stockholders
U.S. trade or business, in which case the
non-U.S. stockholder
will be subject to the same treatment as U.S. stockholders
with respect to any gain;
(2) the
non-U.S. stockholder
is a nonresident alien individual who is present in the
U.S. for 183 days or more during the taxable year and
has a tax home in the U.S., in which case the nonresident alien
individual will be subject to a 30% tax on the individuals
net capital gains for the taxable year; or
(3) our common stock constitutes a U.S. real property
interest within the meaning of FIRPTA, as described below.
Our common stock will not constitute a U.S. real property
interest if we are a domestically controlled qualified
investment entity. We will be a domestically controlled
qualified investment entity if, at all times during a specified
testing period, we are a REIT and less than 50% in value of our
stock is held directly or indirectly by
non-U.S. stockholders.
We cannot guarantee that we will be a domestically controlled
qualified investment entity.
Even if we are a domestically controlled qualified investment
entity, upon disposition of our stock, a
non-U.S. stockholder
may be treated as having gain from the sale or exchange of a
U.S. real property interest if the
non-U.S. stockholder
(1) disposes of an interest in our stock during the
30-day
period preceding the ex-dividend date of a distribution, any
portion of which, but for the disposition, would have been
treated as gain from sale or exchange of a U.S. real
property interest and (2) directly or indirectly acquires,
enters into a contract or option to acquire, or is deemed to
acquire, other shares of our stock within 30 days before or
after such ex-dividend date. This rule does not apply if the
exception for distributions to 5% or smaller holders of
regularly traded classes of stock is satisfied.
105
Even if we do not qualify as a domestically controlled qualified
investment entity at the time a
non-U.S. stockholder
sells its common stock, our stock sold by such stockholder would
not be considered a U.S. real property interest if:
(1) the class or series of stock sold is considered
regularly traded under applicable Treasury Regulations on an
established securities market; and
(2) the selling
non-U.S. stockholder
owned, actually or constructively, 5% or less in value of the
outstanding class or series of stock being sold throughout the
shorter of the five-year period ending on the date of the sale
or exchange or the taxpayers holding period with respect
to such stock.
We anticipate that our common stock will be regularly traded on
an established securities market in the United States following
this offering.
If gain on the sale or exchange of our common stock were subject
to taxation under FIRPTA, a
non-U.S. stockholder
would be subject to regular U.S. income tax with respect to
any gain in the same manner as a taxable U.S. stockholder,
subject to any applicable alternative minimum tax and special
alternative minimum tax in the case of nonresident alien
individuals.
Information
Reporting and Backup Withholding Tax Applicable to
Stockholders
U.S. Stockholders. In general,
information reporting requirements will apply to distributions
on our common stock and payments of the proceeds of the sale of
our common stock to some stockholders, unless an exception
applies. Further, the payee will be subject to backup
withholding on any payments if:
(1) the payee fails to furnish a taxpayer identification
number, or TIN, to the payor or to establish an exemption from
backup withholding;
(2) the IRS notifies the payor that the TIN furnished by
the payee is incorrect;
(3) There has been a notified payee under-reporting with
respect to interest, dividends, or original issue discount
described in Section 3406(c) of the Code; or
(4) the payee fails to certify under the penalty of perjury
that the payee is not subject to backup withholding under the
Code.
Some stockholders, including corporations and tax exempt
organizations, will be exempt from backup withholding. Any
amounts withheld under the backup withholding rules from a
payment to a stockholder will be allowed as a credit against the
stockholders federal income tax and may entitle the
stockholder to a refund, provided that the required information
is furnished to the IRS.
Non-U.S. Stockholders. Generally,
information reporting will apply to payments of distributions on
our common stock, and backup withholding may apply, unless the
payee certifies that it is not a U.S. person or otherwise
establishes an exemption.
The payment of the proceeds from the disposition of our common
stock to or through the U.S. office of a U.S. or
foreign broker will be subject to information reporting and,
possibly, backup withholding unless the
non-U.S. stockholder
certifies as to its
non-U.S. status
or otherwise establishes an exemption, provided that the broker
does not have actual knowledge that the stockholder is a
U.S. person or that the conditions of any other exemption
are not, in fact, satisfied. The proceeds of the disposition by
a
non-U.S. stockholder
of our common stock to or through a foreign office of a broker
generally will not be subject to information reporting or backup
withholding. However, if the broker is a U.S. person, a
controlled foreign corporation for U.S. tax purposes or a
foreign person 50% or more of whose gross income from all
sources for specified periods is from activities that are
effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business,
information reporting generally will apply unless the broker has
documentary evidence as to the
non-U.S. stockholders
foreign status and has no actual knowledge to the contrary. Any
amount withheld under the backup withholding rules from a
106
payment to a stockholder will be allowed as a credit against
such stockholders U.S. federal income tax liability
(which might entitle such stockholder to a refund), provided
that the required information is furnished to the IRS.
Applicable Treasury Regulations provide presumptions regarding
the status of stockholders when payments to the stockholders
cannot be reliably associated with appropriate documentation
provided to the payer. Because the application of the these
Treasury Regulations varies depending on the stockholders
particular circumstances, you are urged to consult your tax
advisor regarding the information reporting requirements
applicable to you.
Other Tax
Consequences
Our company and its stockholders may be subject to state and
local taxation in various state or local jurisdictions,
including those in which it or they transact business or reside.
The state and local tax treatment of our company and its
stockholders may not conform to the federal income tax
consequences discussed above. Consequently, prospective
investors should consult their own tax advisors regarding the
effect of state and local tax laws on an investment in our
securities. To the extent that we and any of our subsidiaries
are required to pay federal, state or local taxes, we will have
less cash available for distribution to stockholders.
Legislative or
Other Actions Affecting REITs
The rules dealing with federal income taxation are constantly
under review by persons involved in the legislative process and
by the IRS and the U.S. Treasury Department. No assurance
can be given as to whether, when, or in what form, the federal
income tax laws applicable to us and our stockholders may be
enacted. Changes to the federal tax laws and interpretations of
federal tax laws could adversely affect an investment in our
common stock.
107
ERISA
CONSIDERATIONS
The advice set forth below was not intended or written to
be used, and it cannot be used, by any taxpayer for the purpose
of avoiding United States federal tax penalties that may be
imposed on the taxpayer. The advice was written to support the
promotion or marketing of the transaction(s) or matter(s)
addressed herein. Each taxpayer should seek advice based upon
the taxpayers particular circumstances from an independent
tax advisor. The foregoing language is intended to satisfy the
requirements under the regulations in Section 10.35 of
Circular 230.
General
The Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended
(ERISA), imposes certain requirements on employee
benefit plans (as defined in Section 3(3) of ERISA) subject
to the provisions of Title I of ERISA, including entities
such as collective investment funds and separate accounts whose
underlying assets include the assets of such plans
(collectively, ERISA Plans), and on those persons
who are fiduciaries with respect to ERISA Plans. Investments by
ERISA Plans are subject to ERISAs general fiduciary
requirements, including the requirement of investment prudence
and diversification. In addition, ERISA requires the fiduciary
of an ERISA Plan to maintain the indicia of ownership of the
ERISA Plans assets within the jurisdiction of the United
States district courts. The prudence of a particular investment
must be determined by the responsible fiduciary of an ERISA Plan
by taking into account the ERISA Plans particular
circumstances and all of the facts and circumstances of the
investment including, but not limited to, the matters discussed
above under Risk Factors, the nature of our
business, the length of our operating history and the fact that
in the future there may be no market in which such fiduciary
will be able to sell or otherwise dispose of our common stock.
Section 406 of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Code
prohibit certain transactions involving the assets of an ERISA
Plan (as well as those plans that are not subject to ERISA but
which are subject to Section 4975 of the Code, such as
individual retirement accounts (together with ERISA Plans,
Plans)) and certain persons (referred to as
parties in interest or disqualified
persons) having certain relationships to such Plans,
unless a statutory or administrative exemption is applicable to
the transaction. A party in interest or disqualified person who
engages in a non-exempt prohibited transaction may be subject to
non-deductible excise taxes and other penalties and liabilities
under ERISA and the Code, and the transaction might have to be
rescinded.
Governmental plans and certain church plans, while not subject
to the fiduciary responsibility provisions of ERISA or the
provisions of Section 4975 of the Code, may nevertheless be
subject to local, state or other federal laws that are
substantially similar to the foregoing provisions of ERISA and
the Code. Fiduciaries of any such plans should consult with
their counsel before purchasing our common stock.
The Plan Assets
Regulation
The United States Department of Labor has issued a regulation,
29 CFR
Section 2510.3-101
(as modified by Section 3(42) of ERISA, the Plan
Assets Regulation), describing what constitutes the assets
of a Plan with respect to the Plans investment in an
entity for purposes of certain provisions of ERISA, including
the fiduciary responsibility provisions of Title I of
ERISA, and Section 4975 of the Code. Under the Plan Assets
Regulation, if a Plan invests in an equity interest
of an entity (which is defined as an interest in an entity other
than an instrument that is treated as indebtedness under
applicable local law and which has no substantial equity
features) that is neither a publicly offered
security nor a security issued by an investment company
registered under the Investment Company Act, the Plans
assets include both the equity interest and an undivided
interest in each of the entitys underlying assets, unless
it is established that the entity is an operating
company or that benefit plan investors hold
less than 25% of the equity interests in the entity. Our common
stock would constitute an equity interest for
purposes of the Plan Assets Regulation.
108
Publicly Offered
Security
Under the Plan Assets Regulation, a publicly offered
security is a security that is:
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freely transferable;
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part of a class of securities that is widely held; and
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either part of a class of securities that is registered under
section 12(b) or 12(g) of the Exchange Act or sold to an
ERISA Plan as part of an offering of securities to the public
pursuant to an effective registration statement under the
Securities Act, and the class of securities of which this
security is a part is registered under the Exchange Act within
120 days, or longer if allowed by the SEC, after the end of
the fiscal year of the issuer during which this offering of
these securities to the public occurred.
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Whether a security is considered freely transferable
depends on the facts and circumstances of each case. Under the
Plan Assets Regulation, if the security is part of an offering
in which the minimum investment is $10,000 or less, then any
restriction on or prohibition against any transfer or assignment
of the security for the purposes of preventing a termination or
reclassification of the entity for federal or state tax purposes
will not ordinarily prevent the security from being considered
freely transferable. Additionally, limitations or restrictions
on the transfer or assignment of a security which are created or
imposed by persons other than the issuer of the security or
persons acting for or on behalf of the issuer will ordinarily
not prevent the security from being considered freely
transferable.
A class of securities is considered widely held if
it is a class of securities that is owned by 100 or more
investors independent of the issuer and of one another. A
security will not fail to be widely held because the
number of independent investors falls below 100 subsequent to
the initial public offering as a result of events beyond the
issuers control.
The shares of our common stock offered in this prospectus may
meet the criteria of the publicly offered securities exception
to the look-through rule.
First, the common stock could be considered to be freely
transferable, as the minimum investment will be less than
$10,000 and the only restrictions upon its transfer are those
generally permitted under the Plan Assets Regulation, those
required under federal tax laws to maintain our status as a
REIT, resale restrictions under applicable federal securities
laws with respect to securities not purchased pursuant to this
prospectus and those owned by our officers, directors and other
affiliates, and voluntary restrictions agreed to by the selling
stockholder regarding volume limitations.
Second, we expect (although we cannot confirm) that our common
stock will be held by 100 or more investors, and we expect that
at least 100 or more of these investors will be independent of
us and of one another.
Third, the shares of our common stock will be part of an
offering of securities to the public pursuant to an effective
registration statement under the Securities Act and the common
stock is registered under the Exchange Act.
The 25%
Limit
Under the Plan Assets Regulation, and assuming no other
exemption applies, an entitys assets would be deemed to
include plan assets subject to ERISA on any date if,
immediately after the most recent acquisition of any equity
interest in the entity, 25% or more of the value of any class of
equity interests in the entity is held by benefit plan
investors (the 25% Limit). For purposes of
this determination, the value of equity interests held by a
person (other than a benefit plan investor) that has
discretionary authority or control with respect to the assets of
the entity or that provides investment advice for a fee with
respect to such assets (or any affiliate of such a person) is
disregarded. The term benefit plan investor is
defined in the Plan Assets Regulation as (a) any employee
benefit plan (as defined in Section 3(3) of ERISA) that is
subject to the provisions of Title I of ERISA, (b) any
plan that is subject to
109
Section 4975 of the Code and (c) any entity whose
underlying assets include plan assets by reason of a plans
investment in the entity (to the extent of such plans
investment in the entity). Thus, while our assets would not be
considered to be plan assets for purposes of ERISA
so long as the 25% Limit is not exceeded, no assurance can be
given that the 25% Limit will not be exceeded at all times.
Operating
Companies
Under the Plan Assets Regulation, an entity is an
operating company if it is primarily engaged,
directly or through a majority-owned subsidiary or subsidiaries,
in the production or sale of a product or service other than the
investment of capital. In addition, the Plan Assets Regulation
provides that the term operating company includes an entity
qualifying as a real estate operating company (REOC)
or a venture capital operating company (VCOC). An
entity is a REOC if: (i) on its initial valuation
date and on at least one day within each annual valuation
period, at least 50% of the entitys assets, valued
at cost (other than short-term investments pending long-term
commitment or distribution to investors) are invested in real
estate that is managed or developed and with respect to which
such entity has the right to substantially participate directly
in management or development activities; and (ii) such
entity in the ordinary course of its business is engaged
directly in the management and development of real estate during
the 12-month
period. The initial valuation date is the date on
which an entity first makes an investment that is not a
short-term investment of funds pending long-term commitment. An
entitys annual valuation period is a
pre-established period not exceeding 90 days in duration,
which begins no later than the anniversary of the entitys
initial valuation date. Certain examples in the Plan Assets
Regulation clarify that the management and development
activities of an entity looking to qualify as a REOC may be
carried out by independent contractors (including, in the case
of a partnership, affiliates of the general partners) under the
supervision of the entity. An entity will qualify as a VCOC if
(i) on its initial valuation date and on at least one day
during each annual valuation period, at least 50% of the
entitys assets, valued at cost, consist of venture
capital investments, and (ii) the entity, in the
ordinary course of business, actually exercises management
rights with respect to one or more of its venture capital
investments. The Plan Assets Regulation defines the term
venture capital investments as investments in an
operating company (other than a VCOC) with respect to which the
investor obtains management rights. We have not endeavored to
determine whether we will satisfy the REOC or VCOC exceptions.
Our Status Under
ERISA
We believe, on the basis of the Plan Assets Regulation, that our
assets should not constitute plan assets for
purposes of ERISA. However, no assurance can be given that this
will be the case.
If for any reason our assets are deemed to constitute plan
assets under ERISA, certain of the transactions in which
we might normally engage could constitute a non-exempt
prohibited transaction under ERISA or
Section 4975 of the Code. In such circumstances, we, in our
sole discretion, may void or undo any such prohibited
transaction. In addition, if our assets are deemed to be
plan assets, our management may be considered to be
fiduciaries under ERISA.
A fiduciary of an ERISA Plan or other plan that proposes to
cause such entity to purchase our common stock should consult
with its counsel regarding the applicability of the fiduciary
responsibility and prohibited transaction provisions of ERISA
and Section 4975 of the Code to such an investment, and to
confirm that such investment will not constitute or result in a
non-exempt prohibited transaction or any other violation of
ERISA.
The sale of our common stock to a Plan is in no respect a
representation by us or any other person associated with the
offering of our common stock that such an investment meets all
relevant legal requirements with respect to investments by Plans
generally or any particular Plan, or that such an investment is
appropriate for Plans generally or any particular Plan.
110
UNDERWRITING
The company and Goldman, Sachs & Co., as
representative of the underwriters named below, have entered
into an underwriting agreement with respect to the shares being
offered. Subject to certain conditions, each underwriter has
severally agreed to purchase the number of shares indicated in
the following table.
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Underwriters
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Number of Shares
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Goldman, Sachs & Co.
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5,687,500
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KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc.
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2,187,500
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Robert W. Baird & Co. Incorporated
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437,500
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Stifel, Nicolaus & Company, Incorporated
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437,500
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Total
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8,750,000
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The underwriters are committed to take and pay for all of the
shares being offered, if any are taken, other than the shares
covered by the option described below unless and until this
option is exercised.
If the underwriters sell more shares than the total number set
forth in the table above, the underwriters have an option to buy
up to an additional 1,312,500 shares from the company. They
may exercise that option for 30 days. If any shares are
purchased pursuant to this option, the underwriters will
severally purchase shares in approximately the same proportion
as set forth in the table above.
The following table shows the per share and total underwriting
discounts and commissions to be paid to the underwriters by the
company. Such amounts are shown assuming both no exercise and
full exercise of the underwriters option to purchase
1,312,500 additional shares.
Paid by the
Company
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No Exercise
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Full Exercise
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Per Share(1)
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$
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1.20
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$
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1.20
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Total(1)
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$
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10,500,000
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$
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12,075,000
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At the closing of this offering, the underwriters will be
entitled to receive $0.40 from us for each share sold in this
offering. The underwriters will forego the receipt of payment of
$0.80 per share, until such time as we purchase assets in
accordance with our investment strategy as described in this
prospectus with an aggregate purchase price (including the
amount of any outstanding indebtedness assumed or incurred by
us) at least equal to the net proceeds from this offering (after
deducting the full underwriting discount and other estimated
offering expenses payable by us), at which time, we have agreed
to pay the underwriters an amount equal to $0.80 per share sold
in this offering. |
The following table presents information about the underwriting
discount, payable by us:
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Per Share
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Public offering price
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$
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20.00
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Underwriting discount paid by us at closing (2%)
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$
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0.40
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Underwriting discount paid by us upon purchase of assets with a
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purchase price described above (4%)
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$
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0.80
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Total underwriting discount paid by us (6%)
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$
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1.20
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Deferral by the underwriters of a portion of the underwriting
discount reduces the underwriting discount immediately payable
by us at closing. However, once we purchase assets with an
aggregate purchase price at least equal to the net proceeds from
this offering, as described above, we will pay
111
the underwriters the deferred amount. By deferring a portion of
the underwriting discount, full payment will only occur when we
have purchased assets with the specified aggregate purchase
price, instead of at the closing when we have not yet invested
any of the proceeds raised in this offering.
Shares sold by the underwriters to the public will initially be
offered at the initial public offering price set forth on the
cover of this prospectus. Any shares sold by the underwriters to
securities dealers may be sold at a discount of up to $0.24 per
share from the initial public offering price. If all the shares
are not sold at the initial public offering price, the
representative may change the offering price and the other
selling terms. The offering of the shares by the underwriters is
subject to receipt and acceptance and subject to the
underwriters right to reject any order in whole or in part.
The company and its officers, directors, and holders of
substantially all of the companys common stock have agreed
with the underwriters, subject to certain exceptions, not to
dispose of or hedge any of its common stock or securities
convertible into or exchangeable for shares of common stock
during the period from the date of this prospectus continuing
through the date 180 days after the date of this
prospectus, except with the prior written consent of the
representative. This agreement does not apply to any existing
employee benefit plans. See Shares Eligible for
Future Sale for a discussion of certain transfer
restrictions.
The 180-day
restricted period described in the preceding paragraph will be
automatically extended if: (1) during the last 17 days
of the
180-day
restricted period the company issues an earnings release or
announces material news or a material event; or (2) prior
to the expiration of the
180-day
restricted period, the company announces that it will release
earnings results during the
15-day
period following the last day of the
180-day
period, in which case the restrictions described in the
preceding paragraph will continue to apply until the expiration
of the
18-day
period beginning on the issuance of the earnings release of the
announcement of the material news or material event.
Prior to the offering, there has been no public market for the
shares. The initial public offering price has been negotiated
among the company and the representative. Among the factors to
be considered in determining the initial public offering price
of the shares, in addition to prevailing market conditions, will
be estimates of the business potential and earnings prospects of
the company, an assessment of the companys management and
the consideration of the above factors in relation to market
valuation of companies in related businesses.
Our common stock has been approved for listing on the NYSE,
subject to official notice of issuance, under the symbol
TRNO. In order to meet one of the requirements for
listing our shares of common stock on the NYSE, the underwriters
have undertaken to sell 100 or more shares of our common stock
to a minimum of 400 United States holders and to ensure
that the shares of our common stock have a minimum price of
$4.00 per share at the time of listing, that there is an
aggregate market value of publicly held shares of at least
$40 million in the United States and that there are at
least 1,100,000 publicly held shares of our common stock in the
United States following completion of this offering.
In connection with the offering, the underwriters may purchase
and sell shares of common stock in the open market. These
transactions may include short sales, stabilizing transactions
and purchases to cover positions created by short sales. Short
sales involve the sale by the underwriters of a greater number
of shares than it is required to purchase in the offering.
Covered short sales are sales made in an amount not
greater than the underwriters option to purchase
additional shares from the company in the offering. The
underwriters may close out any covered short position by either
exercising their option to purchase additional shares or
purchasing shares in the open market. In determining the source
of shares to close out the covered short position, the
underwriters will consider, among other things, the price of
shares available for purchase in the open market as compared to
the price at which they may purchase additional shares pursuant
to the option granted to them. Naked short sales are
any sales in excess of such option. The underwriters must close
out any naked short position by purchasing shares in the open
market. A naked short position is more likely to be created if
the underwriters are concerned that there may be downward
pressure on the
112
price of the common stock in the open market after pricing that
could adversely affect investors who purchase in the offering.
Stabilizing transactions consist of various bids for or
purchases of common stock made by the underwriters in the open
market prior to the completion of the offering.
The underwriters may also impose a penalty bid. This occurs when
a particular underwriter repays to the underwriters a portion of
the underwriting discount received by it because the
representative has repurchased shares sold by or for the account
of such underwriter in stabilizing or short covering
transactions.
Purchases to cover a short position and stabilizing
transactions, as well as other purchases by the underwriters for
their own account, may have the effect of preventing or
retarding a decline in the market price of the companys
stock, and together with the imposition of the penalty bid, may
stabilize, maintain or otherwise affect the market price of the
common stock. As a result, the price of the common stock may be
higher than the price that otherwise might exist in the open
market. If these activities are commenced, they may be
discontinued at any time. These transactions may be effected on
the NYSE, in the
over-the-counter
market or otherwise.
In relation to each Member State of the European Economic Area
which has implemented the Prospectus Directive (each, a Relevant
Member State), each underwriter has represented and agreed that
with effect from and including the date on which the Prospectus
Directive is implemented in that Relevant Member State (the
Relevant Implementation Date) it has not made and will not make
an offer of shares to the public in that Relevant Member State
prior to the publication of a prospectus in relation to the
shares which has been approved by the competent authority in
that Relevant Member State or, where appropriate, approved in
another Relevant Member State and notified to the competent
authority in that Relevant Member State, all in accordance with
the Prospectus Directive, except that it may, with effect from
and including the Relevant Implementation Date, make an offer of
shares to the public in that Relevant Member State at any time:
(a) to legal entities which are authorized or regulated to
operate in the financial markets or, if not so authorized or
regulated, whose corporate purpose is solely to invest in
securities;
(b) to any legal entity which has two or more of
(1) an average of at least 250 employees during the
last financial year; (2) a total balance sheet of more than
43,000,000 and (3) an annual net turnover of more
than 50,000,000, as shown in its last annual or
consolidated accounts;
(c) to fewer than 100 natural or legal persons (other than
qualified investors as defined in the Prospectus Directive)
subject to obtaining the prior consent of the representative for
any such offer; or
(d) in any other circumstances which do not require the
publication by the Issuer of a prospectus pursuant to
Article 3 of the Prospectus Directive.
For the purposes of this provision, the expression an
offer of shares to the public in relation to any
shares in any Relevant Member State means the communication in
any form and by any means of sufficient information on the terms
of the offer and the shares to be offered so as to enable an
investor to decide to purchase or subscribe the shares, as the
same may be varied in that Relevant Member State by any measure
implementing the Prospectus Directive in that Relevant Member
State and the expression Prospectus Directive means Directive
2003/71/EC and includes any relevant implementing measure in
each Relevant Member State.
Each underwriter has represented and agreed that:
(a) it has only communicated or caused to be communicated
and will only communicate or cause to be communicated an
invitation or inducement to engage in investment activity
(within the meaning of Section 21 of the FSMA) received by
it in connection with the issue or sale of the shares in
circumstances in which Section 21(1) of the FSMA would not,
if the Issuer was not an authorized person, apply to the
Issuer; and
113
(b) it has complied and will comply with all applicable
provisions of the FSMA with respect to anything done by it in
relation to the shares in, from or otherwise involving the
United Kingdom.
The shares may not be offered or sold by means of any document
other than (i) in circumstances which do not constitute an
offer to the public within the meaning of the Companies
Ordinance (Cap.32, Laws of Hong Kong), or (ii) to
professional investors within the meaning of the
Securities and Futures Ordinance (Cap.571, Laws of Hong Kong)
and any rules made thereunder, or (iii) in other
circumstances which do not result in the document being a
prospectus within the meaning of the Companies
Ordinance (Cap.32, Laws of Hong Kong), and no advertisement,
invitation or document relating to the shares may be issued or
may be in the possession of any person for the purpose of issue
(in each case whether in Hong Kong or elsewhere), which is
directed at, or the contents of which are likely to be accessed
or read by, the public in Hong Kong (except if permitted to do
so under the laws of Hong Kong) other than with respect to
shares which are or are intended to be disposed of only to
persons outside Hong Kong or only to professional
investors within the meaning of the Securities and Futures
Ordinance (Cap. 571, Laws of Hong Kong) and any rules made
thereunder.
This prospectus has not been registered as a prospectus with the
Monetary Authority of Singapore. Accordingly, this prospectus
and any other document or material in connection with the offer
or sale, or invitation for subscription or purchase, of the
shares may not be circulated or distributed, nor may the shares
be offered or sold, or be made the subject of an invitation for
subscription or purchase, whether directly or indirectly, to
persons in Singapore other than (i) to an institutional
investor under Section 274 of the Securities and Futures
Act, Chapter 289 of Singapore (the SFA),
(ii) to a relevant person, or any person pursuant to
Section 275(1A), and in accordance with the conditions,
specified in Section 275 of the SFA or (iii) otherwise
pursuant to, and in accordance with the conditions of, any other
applicable provision of the SFA.
Where the shares are subscribed or purchased under
Section 275 by a relevant person which is: (a) a
corporation (which is not an accredited investor) the sole
business of which is to hold investments and the entire share
capital of which is owned by one or more individuals, each of
whom is an accredited investor; or (b) a trust (where the
trustee is not an accredited investor) whose sole purpose is to
hold investments and each beneficiary is an accredited investor,
shares, debentures and units of shares and debentures of that
corporation or the beneficiaries rights and interest in
that trust shall not be transferable for 6 months after
that corporation or that trust has acquired the shares under
Section 275 except: (1) to an institutional investor
under Section 274 of the SFA or to a relevant person, or
any person pursuant to Section 275(1A), and in accordance
with the conditions, specified in Section 275 of the SFA;
(2) where no consideration is given for the transfer; or
(3) by operation of law.
The securities have not been and will not be registered under
the Financial Instruments and Exchange Law of Japan (the
Financial Instruments and Exchange Law) and each underwriter has
agreed that it will not offer or sell any securities, directly
or indirectly, in Japan or to, or for the benefit of, any
resident of Japan (which term as used herein means any person
resident in Japan, including any corporation or other entity
organized under the laws of Japan), or to others for re-offering
or resale, directly or indirectly, in Japan or to a resident of
Japan, except pursuant to an exemption from the registration
requirements of, and otherwise in compliance with, the Financial
Instruments and Exchange Law and any other applicable laws,
regulations and ministerial guidelines of Japan.
The underwriters do not expect sales to discretionary accounts
to exceed five percent of the total number of shares offered.
The company estimates that its share of the total expenses of
the offering, excluding underwriting discounts and commissions,
will be approximately $1.7 million.
The company has agreed to indemnify the several underwriters
against certain liabilities, including liabilities under the
Securities Act of 1933.
114
The underwriters and their respective affiliates are full
service financial institutions engaged in various activities,
which may include securities trading, commercial and investment
banking, financial advisory, investment management, principal
investment, hedging, financing and brokerage activities. Certain
of the underwriters and their respective affiliates may, from
time to time, perform various financial advisory and investment
banking services for the company, for which they will receive
customary fees and expenses. The company has obtained a
commitment for a three-year senior revolving credit facility
from KeyBank National Association (an affiliate of KeyBanc
Capital Markets Inc., which is a lead manager in this offering),
as administrative agent, and KeyBanc Capital Markets Inc., in
its capacity as the lead arranger. See Our
Business Our Proposed Senior Revolving Credit
Facility for a summary of the terms of the credit
facility. In the ordinary course of their various business
activities, the underwriters and their respective affiliates may
make or hold a broad array of investments and actively trade
debt and equity securities (or related derivative securities)
and financial instruments (including bank loans) for their own
account and for the accounts of their customers and may at any
time hold long and short positions in such securities and
instruments. Such investment and securities activities may
involve securities and instruments of the company.
LEGAL
MATTERS
Certain legal matters, including the validity of common stock
offered hereby and our qualification as a real estate investment
trust, will be passed upon for us by Goodwin Procter LLP. The
validity of the common stock offered hereby will be passed upon
for the underwriters by Sullivan & Cromwell LLP, Los
Angeles, California. Sullivan & Cromwell LLP will rely on
Goodwin Procter LLP as to matters of Maryland law.
EXPERTS
The balance sheet included in this prospectus has been audited
by Deloitte & Touche LLP, an independent registered
public accounting firm, as stated in their report appearing
herein. Such balance sheet is included in reliance upon the
report of such firm given upon their authority as experts in
accounting and auditing.
WHERE YOU CAN
FIND MORE INFORMATION
We have filed with the SEC a registration statement on
Form S-11,
including exhibits and schedules filed with the registration
statement of which this prospectus is a part, under the
Securities Act of 1933, as amended, with respect to the common
stock to be sold in this offering. This prospectus does not
contain all of the information set forth in the registration
statement and exhibits and schedules to the registration
statement. For further information with respect to our company
and the shares of common stock to be sold in this offering,
reference is made to the registration statement, including the
exhibits and schedules to the registration statement. Copies of
the registration statement, including the exhibits and schedules
to the registration statement, may be examined without charge at
the public reference room of the SEC, 100 F Street,
N.E. Room 1580, Washington, DC 20549. Information about the
operation of the public reference room may be obtained by
calling the SEC at
1-800-SEC-0300.
Copies of all or a portion of the registration statement can be
obtained from the public reference room of the SEC upon payment
of prescribed fees. Our SEC filings, including our registration
statement, are also available to you on the SECs website
at www.sec.gov.
As a result of this offering, we will become subject to the
information and periodic reporting requirements of the Exchange
Act, and will file periodic reports and other information with
the SEC. These periodic reports and other information will be
available for inspection and copying at the SECs public
reference facilities and the website of the SEC referred to
above.
115
REPORT OF
INDEPENDENT REGISTERED PUBLIC ACCOUNTING FIRM
To the Board of
Directors of
Terreno Realty Corporation
San Francisco, California
We have audited the accompanying balance sheet of Terreno Realty
Corporation (the Company) as of November 9,
2009. This balance sheet is the responsibility of the
Companys management. Our responsibility is to express an
opinion on this balance sheet based on our audit.
We conducted our audit in accordance with the standards of the
Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (United States). Those
standards require that we plan and perform the audit to obtain
reasonable assurance about whether the balance sheet is free of
material misstatement. The Company is not required to have, nor
were we engaged to perform, an audit of its internal control
over financial reporting. Our audit included consideration of
internal control over financial reporting as a basis for
designing audit procedures that are appropriate in the
circumstances, but not for the purpose of expressing an opinion
on the effectiveness of the Companys internal control over
financial reporting. Accordingly, we express no such opinion. An
audit also includes examining, on a test basis, evidence
supporting the amounts and disclosures in the balance sheet,
assessing the accounting principles used and significant
estimates made by management, as well as evaluating the overall
balance sheet presentation. We believe that our audit provides a
reasonable basis for our opinion.
In our opinion, such balance sheet presents fairly, in all
material respects, the financial position of Terreno Realty
Corporation as of November 9, 2009, in conformity with
accounting principles generally accepted in the United States of
America.
/s/ Deloitte &
Touche LLP
San Francisco, California
January 4, 2010
F-2
Terreno Realty
Corporation
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|
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November 9, 2009
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|
|
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Assets
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|
|
|
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Cash
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$
|
1,000
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|
|
|
|
|
|
Total Assets
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$
|
1,000
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|
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Liabilities & Stockholders Equity
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Liabilities
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Stockholders Equity
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Common shares ($0.01 par value, 100,000 shares
authorized, 1,000 shares issued and outstanding)
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$
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10
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Additional Paid in Capital
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990
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Retained Earnings
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Total Stockholders Equity
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$
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1,000
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|
|
|
|
|
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Total Liabilities & Stockholders Equity
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$
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1,000
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|
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See accompanying notes to financial statement.
F-3
Terreno Realty
Corporation
November 9,
2009
Terreno Realty Corporation (Terreno) is a newly
organized Maryland corporation focused on acquiring industrial
real estate located in six major coastal U.S. markets: Los
Angeles Area; Northern New Jersey/New York City;
San Francisco Bay Area; Seattle Area; Miami Area; and
Washington, D.C./Baltimore.
Terreno has no assets other than cash and has not commenced
operations. Terreno has not entered into any contracts to
acquire industrial properties or other assets.
Terreno plans to conduct an initial public offering of shares of
its common stock, which it expects to complete during the first
quarter of 2010.
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Note 2.
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Significant
Accounting Policies
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Basis of Presentation. The balance
sheet includes all of the accounts of Terreno as of
November 9, 2009, presented in accordance with
U.S. generally accepted accounting principles
(U.S. GAAP).
Use of Estimates. The preparation of
the balance sheet in conformity with U.S. GAAP requires
management to make estimates and assumptions that affect the
reported amounts of assets and liabilities and disclosure of
contingent assets and liabilities at the date of the balance
sheet. Actual results could differ from those estimates.
Underwriting Commissions and Offering
Costs. Underwriting commissions and offering
costs to be incurred in connection with Terrenos common
stock offering will be reflected as a reduction of additional
paid in capital. Such costs are contingent on the offering being
completed. Costs incurred as of December 31, 2009 are
estimated to be $900,000.
Organization Costs. Costs incurred to
organize Terreno will be expensed as incurred.
Cash. Cash is comprised of cash held in
a major banking institution.
Subsequent Events. Terreno has
evaluated subsequent events through January 4, 2010, the
date the balance sheet was issued.
F-4
8,750,000 Shares
Terreno Realty
Corporation
Common Stock
PROSPECTUS
Goldman,
Sachs & Co.
KeyBanc Capital
Markets
Baird
Stifel Nicolaus
Through and including March 6, 2010 (25 days after
the date of this prospectus), all dealers that effect
transactions in these securities, whether or not participating
in this offering, may be required to deliver a prospectus. This
is in addition to the dealers obligation to deliver a
prospectus when acting as an underwriter and with respect to
unsold allotments or subscriptions.