
Minieri told the Journal: The availability of capital to do these terrific developments and stimulate the economy concerns me... Liquidity and the availability of funds is always something I try not to lose too much sleep over, but it can keep me up at night. Value creation is impacted tremendously when you have to pay more for financing proceeds.
(Two-year stock chart from Yahoo Finance.)
Ratings revision
The reasons include a tougher market for homebuilding and office space, but also, more crucially, "an overstretched balance sheet in a difficult financing market" and a requirement to sell assets "to fund the big development pipeline."
The ratings revision was the subject of an AP story last month; the nine-page document was provided to me by a reader who got it from his broker. Moore is the top-rated analyst of FCE.
Optimism remains
Beyond general economic trends like demand for commercial space and access to capital, the report also cites "higher raw material and labor costs" as well as "additional risks, including the threat of terrorism, weather and key personnel changes," which FCE has outlined in documents (as I've noted) filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.
AY delay?
Does that pipeline include Atlantic Yards? Probably not. Moore's report also refers to the "shadow pipeline," projects in development. Remember, FCE categorizes Atlantic Yards in the "initial development stage," one step behind the "shadow pipeline."
But the report also states that FCE "will likely face some near term difficulty funding its development pipeline," which suggests potential delays in moving ahead projects like Atlantic Yards. (Another potential delay: the "crisis" in availability of finance for affordable housing.)
Minieri, to the Journal, was philosophical: We will probably encounter a couple of different market cycles as we move through that development.
Moore hinted at potential delays to the New York Observer in September 2006:
āThe quality that Forest City has is that they are very disciplined about moving forward in stages,ā said Rich Moore, an analyst at RBC Capital Markets who covers Forest City Enterprises. āThey build one office tower and see if they are doing well, and if they are not, there is always the option of waiting until the market catches up to them or of altering their plans.ā
In other words, Forest City will build as it sees fit, not necessarily to produce the project's stated public purposes, among them affordable housing and open space, within the stated project timeline.
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