Simon Property makes ‘final’ General Growth offer

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Simon Property Group Inc. stepped up its three-month quest to acquire rival General Growth Properties Inc., making a “best
and final” $6.5 billion bid for the bankrupt mall company a day before a scheduled court hearing.

The offer is valued at $20 a share, Indianapolis-based Simon said Thursday in a statement. It consists of $5 in cash, $10
in shares of Simon stock and the distribution of shares in a new company, General Growth Opportunities, valued at $5.

General Growth previously said it supports a financing plan led by Brookfield Asset Management Inc. that would keep the mall
owner independent and issue stock warrants to the Toronto-based company and its partners. Simon said Thursday it’s also
willing to replace Brookfield in an investment plan, without warrants, to keep General Growth independent.

“These offers are best and final,” Simon CEO David Simon said in a letter to General Growth’s board. Simon
“will not participate in the bidding process in the GGP bankruptcy proceeding in any way once GGP commits to issue the
warrants associated with the latest Brookfield-sponsored plan.”

Simon’s original bid on Feb. 16 would have given General Growth stockholders $9 a share, including $6 in cash. That
was turned down as too low.

Both that plan and the new one pay all General Growth unsecured creditors, who hold about $7 billion in debt, in full.

Shares in General Growth, based in Chicago, closed Thursday at $15.84 each in New York Stock Exchange trading.

The Brookfield plan must be approved by the U.S. Bankruptcy Court overseeing the case. A hearing on the plan is scheduled
for Friday. Brookfield and its partners would get 40 percent of 120 million stock warrants they’re seeking once the
proposal is approved by the court. They would receive 20 percent more on July 12, and the remainder over the course of their
commitment to General Growth.

“The $20 offer is fair to GGP shareholders,” Cedrik Lachance, senior mall analyst at Newport Beach, Calif.-based
Green Street Advisors, said in an interview Thursday night. “You can take Simon’s cash today or you can wait for
Brookfield to potentially create a similar value.”

The rise in General Growth’s share price reflected investor expectation that Simon would make another offer, he said.

David Simon said last week that warrants would make a purchase of General Growth too expensive. Simon estimates the warrants
could cost General Growth shareholders $895 million, while General Growth puts the value at about $519 million.

David Keating, a spokesman for General Growth, said the company had no comment on Simon’s newest offer.

Katherine Vyse, a spokeswoman for Brookfield, didn’t respond to a request for comment after regular business hours.

Simon said Blackstone Group LP has committed to joining its proposed takeover of General Growth. It said it still would be
able to acquire General Growth even should Blackstone drop out.

Simon is willing to replace Brookfield in the recapitalization plan as an alternative to its own takeover bid, it said in
Thursday’s statement.

As it planned an investment in General Growth, the second- largest mall company, Simon has lined up partners ING Clarion
Real Estate Securities, Taconic Capital Advisors, Oak Hill Advisors LP and Deutsche Bank AG’s RREEF unit.

“In regards to the other alternative plan, the idea of an investment in General Growth by its largest competitor is
absurd,” Brookfield said Thursday before Simon revised its offer. “The value of the warrants is less than 2 percent
of enterprise value, and therefore not meaningful to the long-term value proposition of a $30 billion company.”

Simon’s proposals are “clearly superior to other options on the table,” Benjamin Yang, an analyst at Keefe
Bruyette & Woods Inc., wrote Thursday night in a note to clients. “SPG appears to have taken the lead in the sweepstakes
for GGP.”

General Growth filed the largest real estate bankruptcy in U.S. history in April 2009 after amassing $27 billion in debt
making acquisitions. Its properties include New York’s South Street Seaport, Boston’s Faneuil Hall and the Grand
Canal Shoppes and Fashion Show in Las Vegas.

 

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