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General Growth Properties, owner of Sierra Vista mall, risks default

By ASHLEY M. HEHER
Published/Last Modified on Thursday, Nov 13, 2008 - 08:13:01 pm MST

Associated Press

CHICAGO — General Growth Properties Inc. shares plummeted Tuesday after the mall owner warned it faces solvency trouble and may be forced to file for bankruptcy if it can’t refinance or extend nearly $1 billion in debt due next month.

The real estate investment trust, which is the nation’s second-largest mall owner whose big-name holdings include Chicago’s Water Tower Place and Fashion Show in Las Vegas, as well as the Mall at Sierra Vista in Sierra Vista, also disclosed in a regulatory filing late Monday that it may default on certain debt obligations.


Making matters worse is another $3.07 billion in property and corporate debt slated to come due next year.

“Given the continued weakness of the retail and credit markets, there can be no assurance that we can obtain such extensions or refinance our existing debt or obtain the additional capital necessary to satisfy our short-term cash needs on satisfactory terms,” the Chicago-based REIT said in filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission. “… Our potential inability to address our 2008 and 2009 debt maturities in a satisfactory fashion raises substantial doubts as to our ability to continue as a going concern.”

General Growth, beset by falling funds from operations and plagued by a tightening global credit market that’s making it difficult for companies to obtain financing, is trying to sell off properties and cut costs to weather the rocky economic climate. It’s also suspended its dividend and ousted a cadre of top executives.

But that hasn’t calmed investors, who’ve sent the company’s shares into a virtual free-fall since September.

After filing the quarterly report late Monday, the company’s shares shed another 76 percent Tuesday, reaching an all-time low of 33 cents per share before recovering slightly.

Spokesman David Keating couldn’t immediately comment Tuesday.

Citigroup analyst Michael Bilerman said General Growth’s equity holders may still be at risk, even if the company opts not to file for bankruptcy protection.

General Growth shares fell 92 cents, or 67 percent, to 45 cents per share in mid-afternoon trading Tuesday.

• General Growth Properties: www.ggp.com

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    Here We Go wrote on Nov 15, 2008 6:43 AM:

    " "Santaz," it means the mall could be sold to someone else, and it would "business as usual," or it could mean that General Growth Properties, Inc will go belly up, and there will be no mall until someone steps in and buys it. The businesses rent their spaces so they might be out of luck until a new owner took over. "

    a little cheese with that whine wrote on Nov 12, 2008 1:47 PM:

    " Has anyone but me noticed how many private businesses are now whining about going bankrupt unless the government bails them out? I say don't accept their bankruptcy papers; let them go out of business. "

    sandtaz wrote on Nov 12, 2008 10:39 AM:

    " OK. What impact will this have on the mall here in Sierra Vista? "

    bob wrote on Nov 12, 2008 9:07 AM:

    " Could this be another proposed need for the government to "bail out". They are bailing out the banks, and possibly the automakers, why not the retailers? "

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