“Cash in on a free ride” Simon Thompson points out that if the sale of CH8 completes that “after the repayment of the bank loan secured against it, First Property will receive €19.6m (£17.8m) of cash proceeds to boost its proforma cash pile to £26.4m, a sum that is only £2m shy of the company’s market value of £28.5m. Non-recourse borrowings will be slashed to around €52m (£47.3m), secured against the remaining eight directly held properties that are worth €70m (£63.6m). Effectively, you are getting a free ride on the £16.3m equity in the eight remaining directly held properties even though they generate an annualised yield of around 10 per cent on market value, significantly higher than the 1.84 per cent average annual interest charged on the debt, so produce strong cash flow. You also have a free ride on First Property’s investments in 10 of the 13 funds it manages…worth a further £30.3m. The depressed market capitalisation also fails to attribute any value whatsoever to the asset management business which should generate an operating profit of £2m on £4m of management fee income in the 12 months to 31 March 2020.”
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