Extended Stay America, Inc. (“ESA”) and its paired-share REIT, ESH
Hospitality, Inc. (“ESH” and, together with ESA, “Extended Stay” or
the “Company”) (NASDAQ: STAY) today sent a new letter to
shareholders detailing the strategic and economic factors that
support the transaction with Blackstone and Starwood Capital, and
addressing the misleading and highly flawed arguments from Tarsadia
Capital LLC (“Tarsadia”).
The transaction has received all regulatory approvals and is on
track to close on June 11, 2021 pending shareholder approval. The
letter urges shareholders to vote to approve the transaction at the
Company’s Special Meetings of Shareholders scheduled for June
8.
Compelling Shareholder Value: The Right Price, The Right
Process, The Right Time
The letter provides a comprehensive discussion of the history,
and the compelling strategic and economic rationale for the
transaction with Blackstone and Starwood, which includes:
- The Right Price:
At $19.50, the transaction values the Company’s paired shares at
more than a 50% premium to their pre-pandemic price, and at a 15.6x
trailing 2020 EBITDA multiple, 13.0x forward 2021E EBITDA multiple
and 11.0x pro-forma 2019 EBITDA multiple, compared to its one-year
pre-COVID average next twelve month multiple of 9.1x. Further,
since the sale transaction announcement on March 15th, the lodging
sector has traded down 9.5% implying an even greater transaction
premium amidst an increasingly more volatile market.
- The Right Process:
The transaction marks the culmination of the Company’s thorough,
multi-year actions to explore value-enhancing alternatives, during
which time only Blackstone and Starwood emerged as interested
parties despite proactive outreach to others and the Company’s
publicly acknowledged “strategic review” process in 2019. Rigorous
negotiations driving five price increases over two months resulted
in $19.50 as the buyers’ “best and final” offer.
- The Right Time:
The Company’s unique extended stay business model and recently
implemented strategic initiatives led to significant operating and
share price outperformance during the pandemic. The transaction
comes at a time and at a valuation such that the future upside
expected in the Company’s 5-year business plan, which projects 2023
EBITDA to exceed 2019 by approximately 10%, is reflected in the
transaction price on a time and risk-adjusted basis.
Tarsadia’s Misleading Claims and Highly Flawed Arguments
Offer No Clear Path to Value Creation
Extended Stay welcomes open communication with its shareholders
and constructive input toward the shared goal of enhancing
shareholder value. However, many of Tarsadia’s claims are
misleading, as detailed in the letter, and provide no credible
alternative path to value creation. Among them:
- Tarsadia is focused on an
agenda of ill-advised alternatives for the Company: After
nine months of engagement, Tarsadia has offered no new and credible
ideas for value creation, and instead has focused on ill-conceived
and even irresponsible ideas of levered share repurchases and
variations on OpCo/PropCo that bear no merit.
- Tarsadia’s valuation claims
are flawed and hypocritical: In Tarsadia’s own “white
paper,” shared with the Company in October 2020, Tarsadia asserted
that Extended Stay should be valued at 10x EBITDA, directionally
in-line with the Company’s 5-year pre-COVID average of 9.5x, yet
today argues the Company should only transact at EBITDA multiples
more in line with luxury hotel businesses (15-20x). Comparing
Extended Stay to these fundamentally different businesses – ones
that the market clearly does not consider as Extended Stay’s peers
– is simply not credible.
- Tarsadia’s claims that the
two dissenting directors were “ignored” and “brushed aside” are
patently false: Strong and diverse opinions are to be
expected, particularly following a pandemic when views of operating
outlook, risk tolerance and value may vary. The Boards are proud of
having created a forum for opposing views to be voiced, listened to
and respected. The lack of unanimity reflects best-in-class
governance and a highly qualified board with independence and
diversity of thought.
Extended Stay strongly recommends that shareholders vote
“FOR” the proposal on the WHITE
proxy card to approve the transaction and secure the certain,
immediate and compelling value of $19.50 per paired share in
cash.
The full text of the letter to shareholders follows:
Dear Extended Stay America Shareholders,
The Special Meetings of Shareholders to vote on the proposed
sale of Extended Stay America, Inc. (“ESA”) and its paired-share
REIT, ESH Hospitality, Inc. (“ESH” and, together with ESA,
“Extended Stay” or the “Company”) are scheduled for June 8, 2021,
and your vote “FOR” the transaction on the WHITE proxy card is
extremely important regardless of the number of paired shares you
own. With all required regulatory approvals now in hand, the
transaction is on track to close on June 11, 2021 pending
shareholder approval.
Your vote “FOR” the transaction is critical to protecting your
opportunity to realize immediate, certain and compelling value
through a sale of the Company for $19.50 per paired share in cash –
a value that is the product of the right timing, the right price,
the right process, and the right transaction.
Tarsadia Capital LLC (“Tarsadia”) first invested in the Company
in May of last year and is soliciting proxies against this
compelling transaction. Tarsadia has offered no new and credible
ideas for value creation and has repeatedly bought and sold our
paired shares at values well below the $19.50 deal price. We had
extensive dialogue with Tarsadia numerous times over several months
and have not heard any proposals from them that we have not already
explored ourselves or that would otherwise offer shareholders a
more attractive path forward than the proposed transaction. We urge
you to discard any proxy card sent to you by Tarsadia.
At the announcement of this transaction on March 15th, and on
multiple occasions since, we have articulated why the sale of the
Company to Blackstone and Starwood at a greater than 50% premium to
our pre-pandemic share price is a compelling, value-maximizing
opportunity for shareholders. We have also been transparent that
two of our 11 Directors chose not to support the transaction. We
had robust boardroom debate regarding this transaction, and we are
proud of having created within the boardroom a forum and a culture
where differing perspectives can be voiced, heard and respected.
Strong and diverse opinions are to be expected. We believe a robust
Board process that involved extensive debate and complete
transparency is the epitome of good governance.
The Right Timing: Why We Support the
Transaction “Now”
We fundamentally believe that the transaction as proposed today,
at $19.50 per paired share in cash, provides shareholders with a
compelling value that fully and fairly captures the future growth
we expect in our strategic plan on a time and risk-adjusted
basis.
Extended Stay America was founded 26 years ago on the notion
that American workers and families value an accommodation model
that can offer the in-room and on-site amenities of a home
necessary for an extended hotel stay, at an affordable price. Over
decades, the Company has grown to 652 hotels with locations in 44
states. Throughout its history, the Company has remained focused on
fulfilling its mission of seeking value creation for shareholders
and keeping in-tune with guest preferences and standards for our
highly distinctive business model.
Unique Platform Drives Unique Results
Over many years, the market has told us quite clearly that the
value for such a platform, regardless of ownership, management team
or specific strategy, is roughly 9-10x EBITDA. It has been our
constant objective to seek to improve both our EBITDA and the
valuation multiple of that EBITDA. As our track record over the
last eight years as a public company has shown, we have considered
and explored value creating opportunities through strategic
initiatives, a separation of our operations from our real estate,
asset sale transactions – and everything in between. When the
global pandemic shined a spotlight on our truly unique and
resilient business model – as evidenced by our significant
outperformance versus other lodging companies from a fundamental
and market valuation standpoint (as referenced in the charts below)
– the substantial outperformance of our shares suggested an overdue
and welcome recognition of performance and value. And when we
received a proposal from Blackstone earlier this year to purchase
our already substantially appreciated shares at a substantial
premium, finally closing the valuation gap with which we have been
wrestling, we had a duty to our shareholders to engage and consider
what was in their best interests.
Extended Stay Has Dramatically Outperformed the
Broader Lodging Sector Since COVID On Fundamentals…1
Figure 1 is available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/5aeeb251-ee95-4995-9c82-b43dcc2dad71
…Leading to Dramatic Outperformance Not Only
Compared to Lodging Companies Through the Pandemic, but Also the
Broader Markets2
Figure 2 is available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/24811b9d-e23c-4d9f-8981-b5fab846bf61
Extended Stay is a unique business, with unique opportunities
and risks. We do not view the Company as a “traditional” lodging
company, nor do our guests, associates, shareholders and broader
stakeholders for that matter. Central to our consideration of the
pending transaction is our assessment of company-specific
opportunities reflected in our strategic plan, associated execution
and broader market risks, and probability-weighted outcomes. We are
optimistic about our prospects as we implement our strategic plan.
At the same time, in evaluating a premium proposal such as the one
that these negotiations brought before us, we needed to translate
our optimism into specific expectations for the future, with
related sensitivities, and then consider associated upside and
downside possibilities, to determine the best outcome for
shareholders.
To assess the execution risk of our business plan, the Boards
placed significant weight on the people in the best position to
provide that informed input – our management team. Management’s
plan projects EBITDA to recover to above 2019 levels by
2023 -- and that is only if we are able to realize
the benefit of over $60 million of EBITDA attributable to new
revenue-enhancing initiatives, some of which are still in their
early days of implementation. In addition, management’s plan
anticipates a minimum level of capital spending in 2021-2022 that
is nearly 50% greater than historical levels, and management
recognizes that even more capital may be required over this period.
While there is an opportunity to grow Extended Stay’s revenue,
EBITDA and cash flow over the next five years to above pre-COVID
levels, the capital required to support our outlook for growth and
the associated execution and market risks must be considered
alongside our optimism about the future. All of these
considerations, among many other inputs, have translated into our
current valuation judgments regarding this transaction.
Transaction Value Trumps Prospects of Unlikely Long-Term
Multiple Re-Rating
The value of the Company’s paired shares is a function of both
its earnings and the valuation multiple applied to those earnings.
And so, the evaluation of a purchase offer also must consider the
opportunities and risks associated with potential future earnings
multiples. In our case, that requires an assessment of the
likelihood that the Company will garner a significant premium to
historical multiple levels in the years ahead. As depicted in the
chart below, when evaluating the proposed purchase offer against
the prospects of remaining public, we estimate that the
Company would need to sustain close to an 11x EBITDA multiple in
the future, nearly a 2x multiple premium to its pre-pandemic level
and a level the Company has never come close to sustaining in its
near decade as a public company, in order to justify not
transacting at $19.50. And that, of course, assumes the flawless
achievement of management’s plan and favorable financial market
conditions.
Figure 3 is available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/457d6274-debc-4374-a926-7820038e3b88
The Right Price: Unpacking ESA’s
Valuation Multiple and Transaction Premium
As illustrated in the chart above, price and timing are
inextricably linked. Said differently, $19.50 per share today is
not the same as $19.50 per share two years ago or two years from
today. We evaluated the pending transaction on its standalone
merits, while leveraging the insights from our past engagements
with Blackstone and Starwood, and insights gathered from our
multiple attempts over the years to attract interest from other
credible potential investors with possible interest in our business
model, as well as our understanding of “typical” acquisition
premia.
By any measure, $19.50 per share delivers a significant premium
to shareholders across multiple time horizons, including at the
high end of precedent REIT transactions based on the trailing
30-trading day VWAP, 3-month VWAP and 52-week high prior to
announcement.3
The $19.50 per share all cash price represents a:
- 51% premium to the company’s pre-pandemic share price4
- 15% premium to the $16.94 closing price the day prior to the
announcement
- 23% premium to the 30-trading day volume weighted average
price
- 28% premium to the 3-month volume weighted average price
- 44% premium to the 6-month volume weighted average price
- 76% premium to the 12-month volume weighted average price
- 15% premium to the 52-week high closing price
Further, since the sale transaction announcement on March 15th,
the broader lodging sector has traded down 9.5% implying an even
greater transaction premium amidst an increasingly more volatile
market. Not only does this correction highlight the risks inherent
in the market, but it was most pronounced during the Q1 earnings
season where nearly every lodging company beat Q1 consensus
estimates, validating the widely held market view that the COVID
recovery was already largely priced into lodging stocks.5
Figure 4 is available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/36dce966-1e9d-47af-ba84-7f8862a0b6c6
The Facts About Our Valuation Multiple
Extended Stay’s valuation multiple is a central pillar to the
assessment of whether or not to transact at $19.50 per share. The
transaction values the Company at 11.0x EBITDA for 20196, the most
recently completed fiscal year prior to the pandemic, which
reflects EBITDA that was 42% above that achieved in 2020, 19% above
2021 estimated consensus EBITDA and a level that is not expected to
be achieved again until at least 2023, assuming successful
implementation and execution of STAY’s strategic plan and favorable
financial market conditions.
The transaction values the Company at 15.6x 2020 EBITDA, 13.0x
2021 estimated consensus EBITDA and 11.6x 2022 estimated consensus
EBITDA. These represent significant premiums to where Extended Stay
has consistently traded over its time as a public company,
averaging a 9.5x NTM EBITDA multiple over the five years prior to
the pandemic, and 9.1x NTM EBITDA for the year prior to the
pandemic.7
Implied Transaction Multiple Far Exceeds Extended
Stay’s Past Trading Multiples Over Any Measurable Period
Figure 5 is available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/e96b61c5-4643-48a8-971b-6e9d02a62caa
Tarsadia’s opposition to this transaction is premised on
misleading and hypocritical claims about the Company’s multiple.
Tarsadia claims that the Company’s multiple should be more in-line
with luxury hotel brands, luxury and upper upscale hotel REITs and
pure play hotel franchise companies, which have typically been
valued in the 15-20x range. The market disagrees and has
consistently valued Extended Stay at a much lower relative EBITDA
multiple than these companies. In its prepared materials, Tarsadia
has inaccurately claimed the NTM EBITDA multiple implied by the
pending transaction is “11.6x”, which is in fact the 2022E or
2-year forward multiple (see chart above indicating the 2021E
multiple is 13.0x). Comparing Extended Stay to these fundamentally
different businesses and passing fiction as fact is not useful,
practical or responsible in making this decision for our
shareholders.
Any suggestion that Extended Stay should trade or transact at a
run-rate multiple more in line with luxury and upper upscale hotel
brands and REITs (i.e. 15-20x) is simply not credible. In fact,
these recent claims from Tarsadia run directly counter to the views
they previously shared with us. While their recent public
disclosures reference some of their ideas for value creation, they
fail to disclose that just a few months ago, in their so-called
“white paper” shared with the Company, they asserted that Extended
Stay should be valued at 10x EBITDA as a standalone public company,
which, according to their analysis, yielded a valuation for the
Company of $14.83 per share. They also provided us their LBO
analysis showing that the Company could potentially achieve a value
of $17.00 per share in a sale for cash, premised, among other
assumptions, on an 11.5x trailing EBITDA exit multiple. We
interacted with Tarsadia more than 100 times over the course of a
year via Zoom meetings, phone calls and emails. Not once did they
claim that the Company should trade at the multiples they are now
conveniently applying to attack this transaction today.
We agree that Extended Stay’s valuation discount compared to
other lodging companies warrants further exploration. It is perhaps
one of the most important questions our Boards and management team
over the years have endeavored to understand and address. After
all, closing the persistent ~2x multiple discount to the select
service lodging REITs (arguably our “closest” comparison group)
would create massive value uplift.
In order to understand our multiple discount, one must first
understand the unique nature of our business. Our business model
has many advantages compared to other publicly traded lodging
companies: operational control of our assets, earnings visibility
with ~30-day average length of stay, higher margins and more stable
performance. But our model has many disadvantages as well: slower
growth in upcycles compared to higher chain scales and an outsized
capital expenditure burden that comes with long-duration guest
stays and the oldest average age portfolio among all lodging REITs
(21 years vs. <10 years for select service lodging REITs). This
incremental capex burden relative to select service lodging REITs
alone accounts for the 2x historical EBITDA multiple turn gap as
highlighted in the charts below.8
EBITDA Multiple Gap vs. Select Service Lodging
REITs Can Be Explained by Extended Stay’s Structurally Higher Capex
Burden8
Figure 6 is available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/7cc1d206-d5a3-4b50-ac8d-4971e238f254
We have spent our entire public market existence lobbying
analysts and investors as to why such an EBITDA multiple gap should
not exist and why our unique business model and corporate structure
should warrant a premium to other lodging companies. We are firm
believers in the benefits of our platform, but as fiduciaries, in
evaluating a purchase offer, we must also be realistic about the
timing and likelihood of achieving such multiple expansion relative
to the broader lodging sector, with the benefit of observing,
living and grappling with the market’s long-standing point of view.
Fortunately, the pending transaction, on the back of our
extraordinary operating and share price outperformance versus other
lodging companies during the pandemic, provided a mechanism to
instantly close that multiple gap and deliver that value to our
shareholders in cash.
The Right Transaction: The Optimal Path
to Maximize Shareholder Value
Maximizing value for shareholders is the guiding principle for
our Boards. As a matter of best practice, we consistently assess
the optimal path forward, such as pursuing value-enhancing
strategic initiatives or transactions, exploring a sale of the
company, or simply maintaining the status quo. We have thoroughly
assessed this range of alternatives over time and in the context of
the recent outreach from the buyers, and we believe that the
transaction before us, at this time, at this price, is the optimal
path to maximize shareholder value.
While Tarsadia has been coy in its public disclosures regarding
its vision for the Company, we have had the benefit of engaging
with them for more than nine months to truly understand their
perspectives. And yet, after nine months of engagement, Tarsadia
has still not articulated any specific plans or ideas that are
different from management's current strategy or are otherwise
credible cases for value-enhancement.
Deciphering Tarsadia’s Ill-Advised Ideas for Value Creation
After first becoming shareholders in Extended Stay in May 2020,
Tarsadia initially approached us in September 2020 suggesting that
we undertake an enhanced share repurchase program, essentially
levering up to return capital to shareholders, including increasing
long-term leverage by 1.5x multiple turns of EBITDA to 5.0-5.5x.
While we agreed that our shares were undervalued at the time
(trading around $12 per share), levering up in the midst of a
pandemic when capital preservation was at an all-time premium and
staffing and compensation levels were being reduced company-wide
was not appropriate. We have regularly evaluated the optimal
capital structure for the Company, and are convinced, now more than
ever, that moderate leverage (i.e. 3.5-4.0x) is both a prudent
long-term target, and also the right level to balance financial
risk with capital returns to shareholders as a standalone business.
That view has been reinforced by our lenders, credit rating
agencies and, most importantly, our shareholders.
In October 2020, Tarsadia approached us again, summarizing their
latest vision for value creation in their now re-labeled “white
paper,” which hinged on five key
tenets: 1) The
Company’s management team, led by Bruce Haase, is the most capable
in the Company’s history and should be trusted to deliver strong
execution;
2) On a
“status quo” basis, the Company should be valued at a run-rate
EBITDA multiple of 10x, yielding a value per share of $14.83, and
thus stating a view that the “status quo” is not the path to value
maximization relative to other “available”
alternatives; 3) A
sale for cash could theoretically be achieved at a range of
$15.00-$19.00 per share (notably, the transaction price of $19.50
per share is higher than the range that Tarsadia even considered a
possibility);
4) The Company
should lever up to accelerate return of capital to shareholders (as
described above);
and 5) The best
path to maximizing value is through a separation of OpCo and
PropCo, which could yield future values in the range of $20.13 to
$23.80 per share.While the first four points speak for themselves,
particular context should be provided on the fifth point.
As we have discussed on multiple occasions in earnings calls and
described in detail in our proxy filing and other recent
communications, we have given tremendous focus to the topic of
OpCo/PropCo over several years. We explored a transaction in depth
with two potential OpCo counterparties in 2018-2019. Our Board
concluded that this transaction would not create value for
shareholders. Tarsadia itself ultimately acknowledged that a
“traditional” OpCo/PropCo transaction is not a good idea.
Instead, Tarsadia developed a “spin” on OpCo/PropCo where OpCo
is taken private through a management-led buyout rather than
selling it to a multi-branded franchising company. After an
evaluation, we determined that this concept creates more
public/private conflicts of interest than it solves, and eliminates
important advantages of a traditional OpCo/PropCo approach, while
not addressing key disadvantages.
Tarsadia’s valuation range for this scenario assumes that
maintaining an independent OpCo aligns interests with the remaining
standalone REIT to such an extent that the REIT should enjoy a
multiple re-rating to the tune of 12-12.5x EBITDA, compared to
their view of 10x for the standalone company, and the Company’s
9.1x pre-pandemic average. If only the structural, regulatory,
operational and market issues were so simple.
We value input from all shareholders and we strive to listen to
and act upon feedback and value creation ideas from our
shareholders. While we remain open to creative ideas, we also
remain grounded in reality. The notion that separating our OpCo
from our REIT actually increases the alignment of interests between
the entities and results in a 3-3.5x multiple turn uplift for the
REIT is simply not realistic. In fact, it’s irresponsible to
suggest that such an alternative, which Tarsadia believes would
yield a value of approximately $20-23 per share in the future,
would be advisable in comparison to a riskless $19.50 per share in
cash today.
Finally, after a number of additional off-base overtures,
Tarsadia’s final act prior to nominating three directors in
February was to reiterate their regularly expressed warning to us
that our own Boards were not supportive of our CEO Bruce Haase and
his team. In reality, the Boards’ support of Bruce could not have
been stronger or more united (as it remains today) as evidenced by
their full support behind Bruce’s recently implemented strategic
plan. What Tarsadia did not understand at the time, and may very
well still fail to fully grasp, is that Bruce was not only an
advocate for the sale transaction at $19.50 per share, he was a
leading voice in its support.
The Myth of the “Lost Asset Sale
Opportunity”
Over time, we have regularly considered asset sales as a
strategy to unlock value for shareholders. In fact, between 2015
and 2021 we divested 133 assets generating gross proceeds of $772
million. Until 2019, our asset sale strategy revolved primarily
around our initiative to grow our franchising business, thus we
retained franchise agreements on the vast majority of those
divested assets. Under Bruce Haase’s leadership, we pivoted to a
strategy of select asset divestitures as a source of capital rather
than an augmentation of our franchising strategy. The Company’s
asset management team has been keenly focused on identifying asset
sale opportunities in which buyers could pay substantial premiums
for assets where there is an opportunity for repositioning to an
alternative use (i.e. the asset leaves the ESA system).
Since Bruce took over as CEO in 2019, he and the management team
have been vocal about this strategy and realized the first such
sale of an asset for an alternative use in November 2020 for $65
million at a valuation of 20.2x 2019 property adjusted EBITDA. We
have been clear that such an extraordinary valuation was not
representative of our portfolio as a whole, but rather was
indicative of an opportunity to unlock value embedded in individual
owned real estate assets. The Company continues to actively engage
with potential asset buyers and has developed a healthy pipeline of
potential transactions of this type working with government
agencies, local developers and realtors, and a variety of
consultants to supplement internal resources.
Tarsadia, with limited knowledge of the extent of those efforts
and of the pipeline of potential transactions we have developed,
has been critical of the extent of the Company’s efforts to pursue
such sales – a strategy they did not author and an execution about
which they are largely uninformed. Such criticisms reflect a lack
of appreciation of the complex issues in transactions that involve
a change of use, zoning and unique diligence issues and often
issues of public process and funding that slow closing and produce
a relatively high level of pipeline mortality.
There is no debating that harvesting assets at premium multiples
can have positive value implications, hence the Company’s decision
to pursue such sales. The debate lies in the realistic timing,
valuation and volume of such potential asset sales, and the extent
to which such embedded value was priced into the Company’s shares
prior to the transaction announcement, as well as the transaction
price itself.
As we disclosed in our proxy statement, we considered scenarios
whereby we would monetize up to 150 assets at a range of multiples
(14-18x 2019 property EBITDA) generating gross proceeds of
approximately $1-2 billion over a three-year period. The Boards
paid careful consideration not only to the financial merits of such
transactions, but also the practicalities of executing on such
divestitures at such valuations in such timeframe, as well as
considering the impact that such an asset base contraction would
have on the overall platform.
Tarsadia would like to trumpet a narrative that such value
creation from asset sales is automatic, frictionless and riskless.
In reality, that is not the case. The Boards reached the
conclusion, with management’s input, that the risk-adjusted,
after-tax benefits of a realistic set of assumptions around asset
sales was appropriately captured in the transaction price. In fact,
understanding the Company’s portfolio stratification to assess
potential asset sales was a critical aspect of the buyers’ due
diligence.
Taken together with their calls for levered share repurchases,
OpCo/PropCo machinations and claiming our disregard for accretive
asset sales, Tarsadia has twisted reality in its attempt to derail
the sale of the Company. This is no longer just a matter of soaking
up management time with Tarsadia’s fantasies. This is now a direct
threat to the interests of the holders of the 96.1% of the Company
that Tarsadia does not own. We urge shareholders not to fall for
Tarsadia’s latest gambit.
The Right Process: Culmination of
Thorough Actions and Rigorous Negotiations to Maximize
Value The
pending transaction marks the culmination of our thorough actions
to explore value-enhancing alternatives. Over the last four years
the Company has conducted numerous strategic review processes,
including asset sales and a separation of OpCo and PropCo as
referenced earlier, none of which, in the Boards’ judgment, yielded
compelling value alternatives for the Company's shareholders in
comparison to the risk-adjusted value of management’s plan at the
time. Through multiple processes where the Boards solicited and
entertained offers for the whole Company, Blackstone and Starwood
have been the only credible bidders who expressed an interest in
acquiring the entire company.
We can’t be any clearer. Over the past seven years, only
Blackstone and Starwood have emerged as serious bidders for the
Company. And no other party has expressed interest in exploring the
possibility of making a superior offer since the announcement of
this transaction more than two months ago, through the date of this
letter. The plain fact is that the universe of potential buyers for
Extended Stay is extremely limited and well-known to those in the
industry. To the extent that any such potential buyers are
interested in an acquisition, they have had ample opportunity to
make their interest known.
The risks of running a broad auction process and exposing the
Company to potential leaks, distractions, delays, market rumors and
resulting employee and customer attrition are real. These risks
were carefully considered by the Boards and weighed against the
hypothetical benefits of running such a process, taking into
account that the Boards had recently explored and solicited third
party interest, including most recently with a public strategic
review in 2019 – a review that Tarsadia itself has criticized in
this campaign for being disruptive and disappointing shareholders
(while at the same time criticizing the Company for not running
such an alternatives review again).
Rigorous Negotiation Extracting Maximum Value
We negotiated vigorously to achieve this compelling transaction
for our shareholders. In fact, Blackstone increased the proposed
transaction value on five separate occasions following the initial
outreach at “$17.00+”, and the Boards only accepted the $19.50
offer when they determined, in consultation with their advisors,
that the offer was compelling, in the best interests of the
shareholders and the buyers’ best and final offer.
The chart below illustrates that despite the decrease in STAY’s
consensus NTM EBITDA projections to well below pre-pandemic levels,
the Boards were able to achieve a price that was an approximately
50% premium to pre-pandemic levels through five rounds of price
increases.9
Figure 7 is available at
https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/63a77e16-dcba-42cd-9a07-faa0bc07cc87
Ultimately, we believe that shareholders will
appreciate the strength of the views of the overwhelming majority
of our Board members and management team, as well as the dangerous
alternate outcome of the ill-advised and inappropriate strategies
and views posited by Tarsadia.
The Boards and management believe strongly that this is the
right price, following the right
process, at the right time, and thus is
ultimately the right transaction to maximize value
for all shareholders.
Your vote is extremely important, as a failure to vote
will have the same effect as a vote against the
transaction. No matter how many shares you own, we urge
you to sign, date and return the enclosed WHITE proxy card and vote
“FOR” the proposal to approve the transaction and secure your
certain, immediate and compelling value of $19.50 per paired share
in cash.
Please vote your WHITE proxy card today, either by Internet,
telephone or mail. If you have any questions, or need assistance in
voting your shares, please immediately contact Okapi Partners LLC,
our proxy solicitor, at (877) 629-6357 (toll-free) or at
info@okapipartners.com.
Sincerely,Doug Geoga, Chairman of the Boards of the CompanyBruce
Haase, President and Chief Executive Officer
About the CompanyExtended Stay America, Inc.
(“ESA”) and its brand Extended Stay America® is the leading brand
in the mid-priced extended stay segment in the U.S. with 652
hotels. ESA’s subsidiary, ESH Hospitality, Inc., is the largest
lodging REIT in North America by unit and room count, with 564
hotels and approximately 62,500 rooms in the U.S. ESA also
franchises an additional 88 Extended Stay America® hotels. Visit
www.esa.com for more information.
Contacts:
Media:jim.fingeroth@kekstcnc.com or
ruth.pachman@kekstcnc.com
Investors:Rob Ballewir@esa.com (980)
345-1546
Additional Information and Where to Find It
This communication may be deemed to be solicitation material in
respect of the proposed acquisition of Extended Stay America, Inc.
and ESH Hospitality, Inc. (together, the “Companies”) by a joint
venture of Blackstone Real Estate Partners and Starwood Capital
Group. In connection with the proposed transaction, the Companies
filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) on April
13, 2021, a definitive joint proxy statement, and will file with
the SEC and furnish to their stockholders a definitive joint proxy
statement, accompanying WHITE proxy cards and other relevant
documents. STOCKHOLDERS OF THE COMPANIES ARE ADVISED TO READ THE
DEFINITIVE JOINT PROXY STATEMENT AND THE DEFINITIVE JOINT PROXY
STATEMENT WHEN IT BECOMES AVAILABLE (INCLUDING ALL AMENDMENTS AND
SUPPLEMENTS THERETO) BECAUSE IT CONTAINS OR WILL CONTAIN IMPORTANT
INFORMATION. Investors may obtain a free copy of the definitive
joint proxy statement and the definitive joint proxy statement
(when it becomes available) and other relevant documents filed by
the Companies with the SEC at the SEC’s Web site at
http://www.sec.gov. The definitive joint proxy statement and the
definitive joint proxy statement (when it becomes available), the
WHITE proxy cards accompanying the definitive joint proxy statement
(when furnished to stockholders) and such other documents filed
with the SEC may also be obtained for free from the Investor
Relations section of the Companies’ web site
(https://www.aboutstay.com/investor-relations) or by directing a
request to the Companies at ir@esa.com.
Participants in Solicitation
The Companies and their respective officers and directors may be
deemed to be participants in the solicitation of proxies from the
stockholders of the Companies in connection with the proposed
transaction. Information about the Companies’ executive officers
and directors and their respective direct and indirect interests in
the proposed transaction is set forth in the definitive joint proxy
statement with respect to the proposed transaction filed by the
Companies with the SEC on April 13, 2021, and will be set forth in
the definitive joint proxy statement with respect to the proposed
transaction (when filed by the Companies with the SEC).
Stockholders may obtain free copies of these documents as described
in the preceding paragraph.
Forward-Looking Statements
Certain statements contained in this document constitute
“forward-looking statements” within the meaning of the federal
securities laws. All statements other than statements of historical
facts included in this document may be forward-looking, including
statements regarding, among other things, the Companies’ ability to
meet their debt service obligations, future capital expenditures
(including future acquisitions and hotel renovation programs),
their distribution policies, their development, growth and
franchise opportunities, anticipated benefits or use of proceeds
from dispositions, their plans, objectives, goals, beliefs,
business strategies, business conditions, results of operations,
financial position and business outlook, business trends and future
events, including the COVID-19 pandemic, its effects on the
foregoing, government actions taken in response to the COVID-19
pandemic and actions that the Companies have taken or plan to take
in response to the pandemic and such effects. When used in this
document, the words “believe,” “expect,” “anticipate,” “intend,”
“estimate,” “will,” “look forward to” and variations of such words
or similar expressions are intended to identify forward-looking
statements. The forward-looking statements are not historical
facts, and are based upon the Companies’ current expectations,
beliefs, estimates and projections, and various assumptions, many
of which, by their nature, are inherently uncertain and beyond
their control. There can be no assurance that management’s
expectations, beliefs, estimates and projections will be achieved,
and actual results may differ materially from what is expressed in
or indicated by the forward-looking statements.
There are a number of risks, uncertainties and other important
factors, many of which are beyond the Companies’ control, that
could cause their actual results to differ materially from the
forward-looking statements contained in this communication. The
potential risks and uncertainties include, among others, the
possibility that Extended Stay America, Inc. may be unable to
obtain required stockholder approvals or that other conditions to
closing the proposed mergers may not be satisfied, such that the
proposed mergers will not close or that the closing may be delayed;
general economic conditions; the proposed mergers may involve
unexpected costs, liabilities or delays; risks that the transaction
disrupts current plans and operations of the Companies; the outcome
of any legal proceedings related to the proposed mergers; and the
occurrence of any event, change or other circumstances that could
give rise to the termination of the merger agreement. For more
details on these and other potential risks and uncertainties,
please refer to the definitive joint proxy statement and the
documents that the Companies file with the SEC. All forward-looking
statements speak only as of the date of this communication or, in
the case of any document incorporated by reference, the date of
that document. The Companies are under no duty to update any of the
forward-looking statements after the date of this document to
conform to actual results, except as required by applicable
law.
____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
1 Source: Company filings, IBES; market data as of 12-Mar-2021.
STAY reflects management projections. Select Service Lodging REITs
include APLE, CLDT, CPLG, and INN. Lodging Companies include APLE,
CLDT, DRH, HST, INN, PEB, PK, RHP, RLJ, SHO, XHR, CHH, HLT, MAR,
and WH.2 Source: Bloomberg, Capital IQ. Data represents median of
comparable sets. Pre-COVID stock price calculated using VWAP from
01-Feb-2020 through 21-Feb-2020 for Select Service Lodging REITs,
Lodging Companies and FAANG stocks and average value for the same
period for the indices: RMZ, Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq.
FAANG includes FB, GOOGL, AMZN, NFLX, and AAPL.3 Compared to the
25th-75th percentile range for historical REIT premia to the
30-trading day VWAP, 3-month VWAP and 52-week high closing price of
16%-26%, 16%-28% and (7)%-11%, respectively.4 Pre-pandemic stock
price calculated using the VWAP from 01-Feb-2020 through
21-Feb-2020.5 Source: Bloomberg; market data as of 12-May-2021.
Based on Lodging Companies and includes APLE, CLDT, DRH, HST, INN,
PEB, PK, RHP, RLJ, SHO, XHR, CHH, HLT, MAR, and WH. STAY
Extrapolated reflects STAY’s share price extrapolated based on
undisturbed price of $16.94 as of 12-Mar-2021 and Lodging Companies
performance.6 FY 2019 pro forma for Nov-2020 asset sale.7
Represents the five- and one-year period preceding 21-Feb-2020, the
last day prior to the COVID sell-off.8 Source: Bloomberg, Capital
IQ, IBES estimates. Reflects the 1- and 3-year period ending
21-Feb-2020. Select Service Lodging REITs include APLE, CLDT, CPLG,
and INN.9 Source: Bloomberg, IBES estimates. Initial offer received
on 19-Jan-2021, with subsequent increases on 18-Feb-2021 (twice),
02-Mar-2021, and 07-Mar-2021 and final offer received on
13-Mar-2021. Pre-pandemic share price calculated using the VWAP
from 01-Feb-2020 through 21-Feb-2020. Change in NTM EBITDA reflects
IBES estimates as of 12-Mar-2021 vs. average between 01-Feb-2020
and 21-Feb-2020.
Extended Stay America (NASDAQ:STAY)
過去 株価チャート
から 10 2024 まで 11 2024
Extended Stay America (NASDAQ:STAY)
過去 株価チャート
から 11 2023 まで 11 2024