By Greg Roumeliotis and Carl O'Donnell
(Reuters) - Commercial real estate company Brookfield Property Partners LP
The deal comes as many malls struggle to retain tenants amid the brick-and-mortar retail sector's downturn. The acquisition will strengthen Brookfield Property's negotiating power with retailers and allow it to repurpose some GGP properties.
"Having Brookfield's expertise in offices, hotels and multi-family residential properties will allow the combined company to draw more value from the GGP mall assets," Brookfield Property Chief Executive Brian Kingston told Reuters in an interview.
The agreement comes four months after a special board committee of GGP rejected a $14.8 billion cash-and-stock offer from Brookfield Property as inadequate.
Also Read
Brookfield Property, which is also a major owner of U.S. office properties, is currently GGP's largest shareholder with a 34 percent stake.
Under Brookfield Property's latest offer, which was first reported by Reuters earlier this month, GGP shareholders can elect to receive $23.50 in cash per share, or either one Brookfield unit or one newly created share that trades as a real estate investment trust (REIT). GGP shares ended trading on Monday at $21.21.
The complex deal structure is the result of a compromise between Brookfield Property, which wanted to continue to trade as a publicly listed partnership, and GGP's special committee, which wanted GGP shareholders to continue to own a REIT security, if they so choose.
The cash consideration in the deal was increased by $1.85 billion to $9.25 billion. Instead of a 50/50 split under Brookfield Property's previous offer, cash now represents 61 percent of the total deal.
With about 127 "Class A" high-end mall properties, mostly in the United States, GGP's tenants include carmaker Tesla Inc
It is not the first time Brookfield Property's attempt to take over a REIT in which it already owns a big stake was rejected, only for it to subsequently succeed.
In 2016, Rouse Properties Inc, another U.S. mall owner, rejected an offer by Brookfield Property, its largest shareholder. It eventually agreed to a sweetened $2.8 billion offer.
Goldman Sachs Group Inc
(Reporting by Greg Roumeliotis and Carl O'Donnell in New York; Additional reporting by Manas Mishra and Sanjana Shivdas in Bengaluru; Editing by Leslie Adler and Lisa Shumaker)
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content


