Popular Sells Banco de Andalucía’s HQ In Sevilla For €25M

18 February 2016 – Expansion

New real estate fever is making a large number of transactions boom in Andalusia, especially assets on sale for years. According to EXPANSIÓN, the latest major deal has been featured by Banco Popular, to close a sale agreement of the historic headquarters of Banco Andalucía in Sevilla for EUR 25 million.

The Andalusian company was taken over by Popular, which already had a 80% capital stake in 2009. The remaining stake was largely in the hands of Solis family. 
Two years after this move, the bank chaired by Ángel Ron cleared out the building, located in the heart of Seville. Specifically, it is located at Calle Fernández y González 4 y 6.

The asset has 7,000 square meters distributed in basement, ground floor and six more floors in height. The project of the new owner is opening a hotel, as well as marketing  other street level premises. 
According to sources close to the deal, the purchase has been mediated by Drago Capital on behalf of a company whose identity has not been given. This firm was founded by Oleguer Pujol and Luis Iglesias, currently under investigation for tax fraud and money laundering due to its relationship with the plot of the Catalonian president´s family. One of its most important transaction was the purchase of Santander branch network for 2,000 million.

Original story: Expansion (by Lydia Velasco)

Translation: Aura Ree

Santander’s Landlord Finalises The Sale Of 400 Branches

5 March 2015 – El Confidencial

Uro Property, the name given to the company formerly known as Samos, will begin trading on the MAB (‘Mercado Alternativo Bursátil’ or Alternative Investment Market) with the minimum legal amount, given that its ultimate aim is to move onto the main stock market.

Another one of the Socimi giants is counting down the hours until its goes public. Uro Property, the name give to the company formerly known as Samos, and the company through which several investment funds advised by Oleguer Pujol purchased a one third stake in Santander’s branches, will list on the MAB within the next few days and will continue to put the pieces in place to fulfil its aim of listing on the main stock market, with a healthier financial structure.

With this challenge in mind, the company chaired by Carlos Martínez Campos and led by Simon Blaxland is finalising the sale of 400 of the 1,316 branches that it owns, a transaction that it is already negotiating with an institutional investor and that will allow it to repay some of its €1,424 million loans ahead of time. This debt was already financed last year, when Samos’s creditor entities, led by Santander and CaixaBank, took control of the company, by capitalising €424 million of mezzanine debt and creating Uro.

This transaction turned Santander into the main shareholder of the Socimi, with a 24% stake, whilst CaixaBank took ownership of 14.89%; BNP Paribas holds a 8.81% stake and Société Générale holds 3.14%. In addition, several hedge funds and other entities, including Barclays and Bayerische Landesbank were left with stakes of less than 1%; whilst the former shareholders, Sun Capital, now known as Atisha Holding and the Pearl Group, now Phoenix Life, hold 21.7% and 14.38%, respectively.

All of the shareholders have committed to retaining their stakes for a minimum period of 12 months, during which time Uro Property is confident that it will close a new financing deal that will allow it to reduce its spread from its current level of 300 basis points to closer to 200 basis points.

In fact, the listing on MAB is seen as another step in this process, given that by law, all of the Socimis are obliged to go public within a period of two years. Although Uro Property’s deadline in this sense does not expire until after 2015, it has chosen to go public as soon as possible precisely because it believes that its status as a listed company will facilitate its refinancing.

This explains why Santander’s landlord is going to limit its initial placement to the minimum established by law: two million euros, a paltry figure, considering that its assets have been valued by CB Richard Ellis to amount to €2,000 million and given that forecasts suggest its market value amounts to around €500 million.

An independent audit to separate the company from Pujol

Renta 4 has been hired as the liquidity provider, whilst EY has performed the valuation of the company ahead of the placement. Aware that all eyes are focused on it, given its historical ties with Oleguer Pujol, the company commissioned Deloitte to conduct an independent audit (the auditor of the Socimi’s accounts is PwC), which certified that the maximum investment made in the Socimi by the son of the former President of Cataluña amounted to €67,000.

The Socimi has signed a new lease agreement with Santander, which has committed to occupy the properties for a minimum period of 25 years, and it may extend that period by 14 more years for a third of the assets, which the bank, chaired by Ana Botín, has identified as more strategic for its business. In return, the company has been granted the right to review the portfolio each year, as well as the ability to exchange some branches for others, provided these exchanges do not represent more than 1% per year, under any circumstances.

Santander will pay Uro rent amounting to €125 million net, since the bank itself will bear all of the costs relating to the properties. This guaranteed income, together with the refinancing deal signed last year, allowed the Socimi to generate profits in 2014. Moreover, with the new financial structure that it is negotiating, which it is hoped will extend the current six year maturity period, the Socimi is confident that it will significantly improve its results; this is key for a vehicle such as this, whose main attraction is the fact that it is obliged to distribute the majority of its profits in the form of dividends.

Uro will be able to begin working on its plans to list on the main stock market and expand its portfolio of assets from 2016, in line with the steps being taken by its competitors, such as Merlin, which acquired BBVA’s offices.

Original story: El Confidencial (by Ruth Ugalde)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Santander To List 2% Of Its Socimi And Whereby Avoid CIT

6 February 2015 – El Confidencial

Desperate times call for desperate measures. That is the proverb that Banco Santander is going to apply to a problem that has arisen after it sold a network of 1,152 bank branches bearing the red flame to a group of investment funds in 2007. The entity, which had to take the branches back when the investment company that had taken ownership of them filed for bankruptcy, is going to float that company on the stock exchange as a Socimi, and whereby avoid paying Corporation Tax. Oleguer Pujol, amongst others, was involved with the original investment company.

The main objective of the transaction that Santander and the other creditors that seized control of Samos Servicios for the non-payment of a €2,000 million loan is to float the newly named Uro Properties on the Alternative Investment Market (Mercado Alternativo Bursátil or MAB). In fact, none of the current shareholders, which includes Santander itself – the largest, with a stake of almost 25% – as well as Caixabank, which entered through the back door and BNP Paribas, all primary lenders, are planning to sell or reduce their stakes in the Socimi.

The transaction will involve listing the company with the placement of a maximum of 2% of its capital, the minimum requirement. With such a small amount of floating capital or free floating capital, Uro Properties is only allowed to list on the MAB, even though its total assets are worth €1,600 million. As such, it will become the largest real estate company on the Spanish stock market. None of the other Socimis that followed the same path in 2013, such as Hispania, Lar, Axia or Merlin Properties, are equal in size.

Since the shareholders are not going to sell their old shares or proceed to offer new ones, like the other Socimis mentioned above have done, the only apparent purpose for listing Uro Properties is to benefit from the tax regimes offered to these kinds of companies. According to Law 11/2009, dated 29 October 2009, these real estate companies pay Corporation Tax at a rate of 0%.

To maximise the tax savings even further, the shareholders of Uro Properties Holding SA have created a parent company in Luxembourg, under the name Ziloti Holding SARL. The shareholders have already asked the MAB for permission to list their shares, as soon as possible, specifically, before the end of February.

From success to failure

The background to Uro Properties dates back to 2007, when Emilio Botín invented a transaction, which other large multinationals later went onto to make fashionable in Spain: the sale of properties to investment funds to obtain sizeable gains in exchange for staying as tenants and paying rent. It is what is called sale and leaseback. The purchasers of Santander’s 1,152 branches were Pearl Insurance, Sun Capital and Drago Real Estate, which were advised by Oleguer Pujol, now accused of crimes against the Treasury, and Luis Iglesias, who was arrested after his home was search, but not charged, according to an official spokesman.

The three funds paid €2,040 million and Santander generated profits of €850 million. But the collapse in the valuation of the real estate assets themselves and the loss of the bank’s credit rating led to an adjustment in the appraisal value of the branches – which were guaranteeing the loan – of more than €400 million. This meant that the purchasers were no longer able to service the loans they had taken out to finance the purchase.

Following the bankruptcy of Samos Servicers, Santander, which had borne most of the financing risk by granting mezzanine debt, had to convert that loan into capital. This meant that it went from being a creditor of the company to a shareholder in the renamed Uro Properties. BNP Paribas, Caixabank, Société General, Royal Bank of Scotland, Barclays and a group of German and Austrian banks, including Bayerische and Raiffessen, did the same thing.

Original story: El Confidencial (by Agustín Marco)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Santander Branches of Oleguer Pujol Foreclosed by Creditors

25/11/2014 – Expansion

A group of creditors led by Santander, CaixaBank and BNP Paribas capitalizes debt of Samos, renames the company and hires the president of Barclays, Carlos Martinez Campos.

The banks seize 1.150 Santander branches (one-fourth of all in Spain) sold to a group of investors for more than €2 billion in 2007 and prepare them to go public. According to financial sources, a banking consortium which financed the purchase renamed Samos Servicios y Gestiones the ‘Uro Property Holdings Socimi‘.

The operations put an end to the relation of the company owning the offices with its former managers, Oleguer Pujol and his ex-partner from Drago Capital, Luis Iglesias, both being investigated by the Supreme Court for money laundering and fraud. Precisely, the origin of the equity with which Mr. Pujol had paid for the branches was quite shady.

The new Socimi (Spanish counterpart of a REIT vehicle) is expected to go public in January 2015. In order to clear the name of the new investment trust and dissociate with the youngest son of Pujol Ferrusola, the new owners of 91% of the firm asked for an official statement proving that Uro Property Holdings is free from any irregularity. According to the acquisition agreement, Santander preserves a right to repurchase some of the offices.

 

Original article: Expansión (by Jorge Zuloaga), Bolsamania

Translation: AURA REE