Reyal Urbis Files For Spain’s Second Largest Bankruptcy

21 June 2017 – Cinco Días

The long-awaited death of Reyal Urbis is approaching. The real estate company has failed to convince a majority of its creditors to accept the proposed agreement presented by the entity chaired by Rafael Santamaría, which included significant discounts of between 80% and 90% of a total debt balance amounting to €4,600 million. It is the second largest liquidation ever in history, following that of the property developer Martinsa-Fadesa, which folded with a debt of around €7,000 million.

The proposed agreement presented by the company has not received sufficient backing given that in the case of the ordinary debt, it only obtained favourable votes from 32.7% of the creditors; another 37.79% voted against the proposal and the remaining 29% abstained, according to legal sources. In the case of the syndicated loan, the votes did not reach the 75% threshold either.

The bankruptcy administrator, namely, the audit firm BDO, is obliged to communicate the result of the vote that takes place in Commercial Court number 6 in Madrid, where the judge will issue the proposed liquidation ruling, with an equity black hole of €3,436 million.

The liquidation of Reyal Urbis was finalised after its major creditors, including Sareb and the opportunistic funds that had acquired some of the liabilities in recent weeks, rejected the proposed agreement, as disclosed by Cinco Días at the end of May.

The company has liabilities worth more than €3,200 million corresponding to a syndicated loan, in which Sareb holds a crucial stake, with more than €1,000 million proceeding from loans from the former savings banks. In addition, Reyal Urbis owed almost €900 million in ordinary debt and more than €400 million to the Tax Authorities. In fact, the real estate company is the largest debtor on the list of overdue debtors published by the Tax Authorities.

The property developer is dying just a decade after its merger which saw it become one of the large real estate companies in the country, together with Martinsa-Fadesa, Colonial and Astroc. Its President, Rafael Santamaría, a technical architect by training, has spent his whole life working for the family business. He was appointed CEO in 1985 and took over from his father as President in 1997. In 2006, he starred in one of the largest deals in the sector, after acquiring Urbis from Banesto for €3,300 million.

But that joy was short-lived. The burst of the real estate bubble dragged him down, just like it did Martinsa, Habitat and Nozar. The company filed for voluntary creditors’ bankruptcy in February 2013 after Sareb, BBVA and Santander refused to refinance its debt.

Santamaría’s last ditch attempt to save the company came with an aggressive liquidation proposal. That plan included discounts of 90% on the ordinary loans. In the case of the syndicated loan, the offer included the “dación en pago” of assets, which would have meant accepting discounts of around 80%. In turn, the Tax Authorities negotiated a unilateral payment plan for the €400 million owed.

That aggressive plan did not seduce the creditors, who have seen the possibility of recovering their capital go up in smoke, choosing instead the option of liquidating the company’s remaining assets, which are currently worth almost €1,200 million.

Original story: Cinco Días (by Alfonso Simón Ruiz)

Translation: Carmel Drake

Reyal Urbis Faces Key Week In Its Effort To Avoid Liquidation

29 May 2017 – Expansión

Reyal Urbis is facing a key week for determining whether or not it will receive sufficient backing from its banks and creditors to allow it to emerge from the bankruptcy in which the real estate company has been immersed since 2013 and whereby avoid liquidation.

The deadline for the creditors of the company, which is controlled and chaired by Rafael Santamaría, to communicate whether or not they accept the debt payment plan proposed by the firm, is this Wednesday 31 May.

The Tax Authority is one of Reyal Urbis’ largest creditors, given that the company owes around €400 million to the public purse, as well as to Sareb and the main financial institutions.

In the event that the real estate company does not obtain sufficient backing from its creditors, it would be forced to file for liquidation. That would constitute the second disappearance of a large real estate company after Martinsa Fadesa’s demise.

Reyal Urbis owes debt amounting to €3,572 million to the banks alone, and at the end of the first quarter of this year, it reported negative equity of €3,436 million.

The plan through which the company hopes to ensure its viability involves agreeing a unilateral payment plan with the Tax Authorities, different from the one offered to the other creditors.

The real estate company is proposing paying off the debt it owes to the financial institutions using real estate assets, an offer that, given the depreciations in values, would represent a discount (on the debt).

Overcoming paralysis

By emerging from bankruptcy, Reyal is also looking to overcome the paralysation that it has been immersed in for the last four years, during which time it has not constructed a single home and has barely managed to sell any assets or manage the hotels for rent in its real estate portfolio, covering 123,000 m2.

In this way, at the end of 2016, the company reported losses of €155 million, similar to the previous year.

In addition, Reyal Urbis’ bankruptcy procedure has been delayed, given that, at the end of 2015, Commercial Court number 6 in Madrid rejected the proposed agreement that had been presented by the company at the beginning of that year. After appealing to the Provincial Court, the real estate company managed to get the proposal agreed and processed more than a year later, at the beginning of 2017.

Original story: Expansión

Translation: Carmel Drake