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TAG | KBS Real Estate Investment Trust I Inc

May/12

11

SEC Investigating Inland American Real Estate Trust and Other Non-Traded REITs

Today, in a Wall Street Journal article, Craig Karmin writes that the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), is currently investigating an $11 billion real-estate company for potential violations of federal securities laws, looking at the business of real estate investment trusts that aren’t traded on exchanges.

They are looking at the activity of Inland American Real Estate Trust to determine if the REIT committed violations related to management fees, the timing and amount of distributions paid to investors, and transactions with affiliates, according to a company filing with the SEC on Monday.

The WSJ article reported that Thomas McGuinness, an Inland American executive, said the company has been “fully cooperating” with the SEC and that “Inland American does not believe it has done anything improper and it continues to execute its business plan and strategy.”

Inland American, with $11.2 billion in property, is the largest in the non-traded REIT industry of about 90 nontraded REITs that have raised more than $73 billion, mostly from small investors. The investigation comes at a time when other nontraded
REITs are drawing attention from regulators or reporting weaker valuations and dividend cuts.

Karmin writes that the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA), which oversees the financial advisers that market these REITs, has proposed new guidelines on adviser disclosure of REITs. Last year, Finra also sued New York brokerage David Lerner Associates Inc., which sold a series of funds known as Apple REITs. Finra reported that Lerner targeted unsophisticated investors with products ill-suited for them. Lerner has described the Finra action, which is still pending, as “rife with falsehoods.”

The WSJ article goes on to say that the SEC has previously said that it has been pressing some nontraded REITs to provide better disclosure on their share valuations. Unlike public stocks, whose values are set in the marketplace, valuations for nontraded REITs have varied. Some have relied on outside appraisers, others on their own management. Lately, some of the nontraded REITs have started to provide more up-to-date valuations, but this has occasionally resulted in sharp declines in share prices.

Karmin writes that Inland American, which closed the fund in 2009, owns 964 properties, including retail, hotels, office, industrial and apartment buildings. The REIT’s parent company, Inland Real Estate Group of Companies, is a 40-year-old real-estate company in Oak Brook, Ill., with $25 billion in assets. They were also the sponsor of a publicly traded REIT now known as Retail Properties of America, RPAI -0.22% an owner of strip malls and shopping centers. Last month, the REIT sold shares publicly at a price that struck many as lower than expected. The shares valued last June at $6.95 were valued during the IPO at $3.20, before a reverse stock split.

Many other nontraded REITs have disappointed their investors by cutting or eliminating dividends. KBS Real Estate Investment Trust I informed shareholders in March that it was suspending the monthly payments of 5.25% and it marked its share price down 30% to $5.16.

Securities Lawyer, Lars K. Soreide, of Soreide Law Group, PLLC, has represented clients nationwide. If you or a family member have sustained investment losses due to your stock broker or financial advisor’s recommendations, call for a free consultation on how to potentially recover your losses. To speak with an attorney call 888-760-6552, or visit our website at: www.securitieslawyer.com.

Soreide Law Group, PLLC., representing investors nationwide before FINRA the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

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Apr/12

2

KBS REIT I Share Price Down; Dividends to Investors Cut to ZERO

In a March 30, 2012, article from InvestmentNews.com, Bruce Kelly writes that another major nontraded real estate investment trust has seen a sharp drop in its value — but is also stopping paying distributions to investors.

The KBS Real Estate Investment Trust Inc., or KBS REIT I, told investors Monday it was cutting the value of the REIT to $5.16 per share, from $7.32, a drop of 29%. The REIT’s offering price was $10 per share. A number of REITs have seen valuations decline this year as the commercial real estate market continues to struggle and debt weighs on REITs’ balance sheets.

“The new pricing of KBS REIT I reflects the current status of the portfolio, and the discontinuation of distributions was made with the goal of managing the REIT’s debt obligations and cash flows, and attempting to maximize the total return to investors over time,” said Keith Hall, executive vice president of KBS REIT I.

Kelly writes that the REIT is substantial, having raised $1.7 billion in equity in its initial offering, according to an investor presentation the company filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on Monday. It has $3.4 billion in property assets, and holds loans and other debt of $2.3 billion.

KBS announced that distributions to investors will be cut to zero. The REIT “will discontinue paying monthly distributions to shareholders in an effort to maximize the total amount of capital returned to shareholders over time,” according to the filing. Since July 2009, annual distributions had been 53 cents per share, according to the filing.

KBS said cash flow will be used to meet four objectives: paying down debt, strategically reinvesting capital, attempting to improve the overall return of the company and managing the REIT’s reduced cash flow.

The InvestmentNews.com article said that when asked to clarify what the last objective meant, Mr. Hall noted that it was simply one of the stated company objectives. The KBS REIT has been hit by the broad decline in the commercial real estate market since 2008. Occupancy of the REIT’s real estate holdings declined last year to 85%, from 92% in 2010, according to the filing. Added to that, rents are in decline. “REIT I’s existing rents are rolling downward into this moderately improving rental market that still remains well below peak levels,” according to the filing.

Kelly adds that eighty-one percent of the REIT’s portfolio is in office space, with 10% in bank branches and 9% in industrial real estate. KBS REIT I “has not been immune” to the broad real estate market’s difficulties,” Mr. Hall said. “While some markets have recently made slight recoveries, many markets are still challenged with decreasing occupancy and/or new lease rates at substantially lower levels from the 2007-08 peaks.”

Securities Lawyer, Lars K. Soreide, of Soreide Law Group, PLLC, has represented clients nationwide. If you or a family member have sustained investment losses due to your stock broker or financial advisor’s recommendations, call for a free consultation on how to potentially recover your losses. To speak with an attorney call 888-760-6552, or visit our website at: www.securitieslawyer.com.

Soreide Law Group, PLLC., representing investors nationwide before FINRA the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

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