NEW YORK, Sept. 25, 2018 /PRNewswire/ -- Senvest
Management, LLC ("Senvest"), a $1.5 billion investment management firm that advises investment
funds that own approximately 9.55% of NorthStar Realty Europe Corp ("NRE" or the "Company") (NYSE: NRE), sent a letter to the NRE
Board of Directors proposing several potential solutions to the Company stock trading at a significant discount to net asset
value.
Specifically, Senvest believes the most significant factor behind NRE's substantial discount to NAV is the Company's
unjustified and unusual reliance on an external manager, an affiliate of Colony Capital Inc.("CLNY")(NYSE: CLNY), which charges a
management fee that further increases the Company's expense ratio. To address this issue, Senvest believes that the Board
should immediately change its "investment guidelines" as established under the terms of the Management Agreement and begin
selling assets and returning the net cash proceeds to investors by way of stock buybacks or dividends. As an alternative to
selling NRE assets, Senvest believes CLNY should take the Company private at a price at or above the aggregate price that would
be received in asset sales and which should represent a valuation close to or potentially greater than NAV.
The full text of the letter the stockholders sent to the NRE Board follows:
September 24, 2018
The Board of Directors
NorthStar Realty Europe Corp.
590 Madison Avenue, 34th Floor
New York, New York 10022
Dear Members of the Board:
Senvest Management, LLC ("Senvest Management" or "we") advises private investment funds that, as of September 24, 2018, own 4,757,009 shares of common stock of NorthStar Realty Europe Corp. ("NRE" or the
"Company"), equal to approximately 9.55% of its shares outstanding, and have an even larger economic interest in the Company via
a total-return swap position. As you know, we have been a NRE shareholder since its inception in October 2015 stemming from its spin-off from former parent NorthStar Realty Finance and have also steadily
increased our NRE investment. A key consideration in our investment has been the strong execution by NRE's management team
in acquiring valuable assets, investing capital where needed, managing the leasing and tenant roll and selling assets. We
further applaud the efforts of the Company's Board of Directors (the "Board") to create shareholder value through both the
buyback of stock trading at significant discounts to net asset value per share and the renegotiation of the Company's management
agreement with an affiliate of Colony Capital Inc. ("CLNY") (the "Management Agreement").
Despite all the commendable actions by management and the Board, NRE's stock still trades at a significant discount to net
asset value. Based on its closing price on September 24 of $12.87/share and the latest reported NAV at June 30, 2018 of $20.95/share, NRE's stock trades at a discount of approximately 40% of NAV. This discount massively
exceeds the median discount exhibited by a peer group of public European commercial office REITs by over 30 percentage
points1. Since Q4 2016, NRE has generated among the highest NAV/share growth of any of its peers, which makes its
discount to NAV especially frustrating2.
We believe that NRE's persistent and outsized discount to NAV stems from a number of potential factors. NRE, with a
market capitalization of about $600 million, lacks the scale of its public peers which have a
median market cap of about $5 billion. Because it lacks scale, NRE's G&A expenses as a
percentage of NAV exceed peers by a factor of about 2x3.
However, we believe the most significant factor behind NRE's substantial discount to NAV is the Company's unjustified reliance
on an external manager, CLNY, which charges a management fee that further pressures the Company's expense ratio. Moreover, this
is also contrary to the practices of virtually all publicly traded European commercial real estate equity REITs, which are
internally managed for good reason. Even if NRE were to eliminate all internal expenses (e.g., audit, legal fees, public
company costs and other corporate expenses), the management fee alone would represent ~1.5% of NRE's NAV, still well above the
average expense load of peers.
NRE's association with CLNY has not helped the stock price. A review of CLNY's and NRE's historical stock price
performance appears to show a correlation. Further to this point, since CLNY's stock price started its precipitous decline
in December 2017 from $12/share to $6/share over the course of three months, NRE's shares followed suit. The comparison is even starker when
viewed against the performance of European office peers over the same time frame4. Since NRE's 4Q17 earnings
report, when the Company reported 2H17 NAV per share sequential growth of ~15% (better than the peer median growth by a factor of
over 2x) and announced the authorization of a $100 million buyback, the stock only temporarily
outperformed both CLNY and European office peers before once again selling off over the last month5. In any event, for
all of the above factors, we believe that NRE's stock price discount to NAV will persist for the foreseeable future.
We believe that NRE shareholders have waited long enough for the efforts of management and the Board to collapse the NAV/share
discount. The private market, which provides the basis for the NAV calculation, clearly assigns more value to NRE's assets
than the value ascribed by public market investors. Indeed, we think that institutional investors would have great interest
in the assets but clearly have no interest in the shares. Moreover, we believe the timing for asset sales is ideal given
the close to all-time low cap rates and the healthy institutional demand for prime European office assets. NRE could also
earn a premium to NAV for its French and German assets given their scarcity value and scale if each were sold as country
portfolios.
As a result, we believe that the Board should immediately change its "investment guidelines" as established under the terms of
the Management Agreement and begin selling assets and return the net cash proceeds to investors by way of stock buybacks or
dividends. Based on a review of the Management Agreement with our legal counsel, we believe that NRE could sell and return
the proceeds to shareholders from a significant portion of its net assets over the next six to nine months. NRE could then
sell its remaining assets a year after that without resulting in a meaningful potential change-of-control payment to CLNY.
We further note that based on our market research, and the fact that the Company has sold approximately 28 properties for
$760 million at or above NAV, we believe that NRE has been conservative in its assessment of
property values and could garner a premium to NAV.
Of course this strategy will cause the total NAV of NRE to decline over time. Under the Management Agreement, CLNY earns
a management fee based on the Company's aggregate net asset value. Since the net asset value would eventually decline to
zero in this strategy, the management fee paid to CLNY will similarly decline to zero over time. As a result, CLNY may not
support this approach since a key tenet of their corporate strategy rests on collecting asset management fees from "…strategic GP
co-investment positions such as…NRE, where the company [CLNY] receives various management economics from the related third-party
capital in such vehicles."6. We remind the Board that it has a fiduciary obligation to the shareholders of
NRE, not the shareholders of CLNY, and should dismiss any potential opposition to this strategy from CLNY given the obvious
conflict of interest. We call on the Board to do the right thing for NRE shareholders and act to collapse the
discount to NAV.
As an alternative to selling NRE assets, we believe that CLNY should take the Company private at a price at or above the
aggregate price that would be received in asset sales and which should represent a valuation close to or potentially greater than
NAV. Again, we think the Company has been conservative in its valuation assumptions and could also get a premium to NAV for
the French and German assets, which compose more than two-thirds of NRE's rental income. CLNY states it "…is a leading
global investment management firm…"7 and touts its "world-class real estate and investment management
platform.8" CLNY directly manages approximately $6.2 billion in private
institutional fee paying investment funds9. It also manages $5 billion in fee paying
assets related to non-wholly owned Real Estate Investment Management ("REIM") platforms10. Given CLNY's supposed
fund raising capabilities and its stated strategy of raising capital around key verticals, an alternative for NRE would be for
CLNY to raise private capital, either directly via institutional funds or in conjunction with a third party REIM, and buy out the
public NRE shareholders at a price at least equal to the value that NRE could achieve via the sale of assets as suggested
above. This will benefit both NRE shareholders and CLNY, which can fulfill its strategy of "strategic GP co-investment
positions" and continue to earn management fees on third party capital from NRE assets but in a privately owned
structure.
We believe that the Board should immediately undertake a formal review of the strategies mentioned above, as taking action to
address the Company's trading discount to NAV is imperative to the Board's fulfillment of its fiduciary duties. We look
forward to further engaging with the Company on its progress in reviewing the aforementioned strategies and appropriate
alternatives in the coming weeks. We sincerely hope that shareholders can rely on this Board to take action and will not have to
resort to changing the composition of the Board to one that will take action to address NRE's persistent, significant share
discount.
Very truly yours,
Senvest Management, LLC
About Senvest Management
Senvest Management, LLC ("Senvest") is a registered investment advisor founded by Richard
Mashaal in 1997. Senvest is based in New York and employs a contrarian, value-based
investment strategy across more than $1.5 billion in assets under management. Senvest is registered
with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.
Warning Regarding Forward Looking Statements
This press release contains forward-looking statements. Forward-looking statements can be identified by use of words such as
"outlook", "believe", "intend", "expect", "potential", "will", "may", "should", "estimate", "anticipate", and derivatives or
negatives of such words or similar words. Forward-looking statements in this press release are based upon present beliefs or
expectations. However, forward-looking statements and their implications are not guaranteed to occur and may not occur as a
result of various risks, reasons and uncertainties. Except as required by law, Senvest Management, LLC and its affiliates and
related persons undertake no obligation to update any forward-looking statement, whether as a result of new information, future
developments or otherwise.
1 Appendix 1. Trading Discount to NAV Comparison – NRE vs. Public European Commercial Office REITs.
2 Appendix 2. NAV/Share Change since Q4 2016 Comparison – NRE vs. Public European Commercial Office REITs.
3 Appendix 3. General and Administrative Expenses as a % of NAV Comparison – NRE vs. Public European Commercial Office
REITs.
4 Appendix 4A: Stock Price Performance Comparison since Completion of CLNY / NRF / NSAM Merger – NRE vs. CLNY vs.
Public European Commercial Office REITs.
5 Appendix 4B: Stock Price Performance Comparison since NRE's FY 2017 Earnings Report –
NRE vs. CLNY vs. Public European Commercial Office REITs.
6 CLNY CFO Darren Tangen, CLNY earnings call, March 1,
2018.
7 CLNY Form 10-Q dated June 30, 2018. See Business description Footnote 1.
8 November 2017. CLNY Investor Presentation , Page 2.
9 Ibid.
10 Ibid.
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SOURCE Senvest Management, LLC