January 2006: Fortune. Interview with Richard Rainwater. "This is the first scenario I've seen where I question the survivability of mankind." He's 112th on the Forbes 400, worth $2.3 billion: "Most people invest and then sit around worrying what the next blowup will be. I do the opposite. I wait for the blowup, then invest." He waited with a half-billion-dollar war chest.
One year later- look at the deal Morgan closed on May 22, 2007
Morgan Stanley Real Estate Acquires Crescent Real Estate Equities (CEI) for $22.80/Sh
Crescent Real Estate Equities Company (NYSE: CEI) entered into a definitive agreement pursuant to which funds managed by Morgan Stanley Real Estate will acquire Crescent in an all cash transaction for $22.80 per share and the assumption of liabilities for total consideration of approximately $6.5 billion. Shares of Crescent Real Estate Equities closed at $21.62 today.
Crescent Real Estate Equities Co. (NYSE: CEI) has finally found a buyer, and one that seems to like its mixed-use approach. Morgan Stanley Real Estate has agreed to acquire the Fort Worth, Texas-based REIT for a deal that totals $6.5 billion, including the assumption of debt.
Crescent, a mixed-use REIT owned by Texas billionaire Richard Rainwater, was in the midst of morphing itself into a pure-play office REIT. After evaluating its strategic options, the company came to the conclusion that it could "take advantage of the void left by rabid industry consolidation" as a remade office REIT. More likely, it was positioning itself better for an outright sale.
The Crescent deal just underscores the notion that the private equity boom is still in full swing. According to a New York Times article citing data from Thomson Financial, there have been $281 billion worth of private equity deals in the U.S. so far this year -- that's triple the amount compared to the same period last year, which ended up breaking all sorts of records.
There seems to be plenty of momentum left for REIT take-private deals, too. Year to date, 12 REITs have gone private for a total of $16.2 billion. But, there's still a ways to go to catch up to the lofty levels of 2006, when 23 deals totaling $64.3 billion, including the mammoth EOP buyout, took place, according to SNL Financial data listed in an article by The Wall Street Journal.
Greenhill & Co. LLC served as Crescent's financial advisor and Pillsbury Winthrop Shaw Pittman LLP provided legal
Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley decided—while fearing for their own existence—to transform themselves into bank holding companies in September (bringing with it the ability to access the Federal Reserve's discount window), they essentially brought to an end the era of the standalone investment bank.
Bank of America said it couldn't even close its Merrill Lynch acquisition without substantial extra government help, and is likely to get billions of dollars in federal guarantees.
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Morgan Stanley Real Estate - Corporate Real Estate Toxic Mortgages
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