As filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission on April 7, 2016

 

Registration No. 333-197767

 

UNITED STATES
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
Washington, D.C. 20549

 


  

POST-EFFECTIVE AMENDMENT NO. 3 TO

 

FORM S-11
FOR REGISTRATION UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
OF SECURITIES OF CERTAIN REAL ESTATE COMPANIES

 


 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.
(Exact name of registrant as specified in charter)

 


 

518 Seventeenth Street, 17th Floor
Denver, Colorado 80202
(303) 228-2200
(Address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of the registrant’s principal executive offices)

 


 

Jeffrey L. Johnson
Chief Executive Officer
Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.
518 Seventeenth Street, 17th Floor
Denver, Colorado 80202
(303) 228-2200
(Name, address, including zip code, and telephone number, including area code, of agent for service)

 


 

Copies to:
Robert H. Bergdolt, Esq.
Christopher R. Stambaugh, Esq.
DLA Piper LLP (US)
4141 Parklake Avenue, Suite 300
Raleigh, North Carolina 27612-2350
(919) 786-2000

 


 

Approximate date of commencement of proposed sale to the public : As soon as practicable after the registration statement becomes effective.

 

If any of the Securities being registered on this Form are to be offered on a delayed or continuous basis pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act, check the following box:

 

If this Form is filed to register additional securities for an offering pursuant to Rule 462(b) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering.

 

If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(c) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering.

 

If this Form is a post-effective amendment filed pursuant to Rule 462(d) under the Securities Act, check the following box and list the Securities Act registration statement number of the earlier effective registration statement for the same offering.

 

If delivery of this prospectus is expected to be made pursuant to Rule 434, check the following box.

 

Indicate by check mark whether the Registrant is a large accelerated filer, an accelerated filer, a non-accelerated filer, or a smaller reporting company. See the definitions of “large accelerated filer,” “accelerated filer” and “smaller reporting company” in Rule 12b-2 of the Exchange Act (Check One):

 

Large accelerated filer Accelerated filer Non-accelerated filer
(Do not check if a smaller reporting company)
Smaller reporting company

 

 

 

 
 

 

Explanatory Note

 

This Post-Effective Amendment No. 3 consists of the following:

 

  1. The Registrant’s base prospectus, dated April 7, 2016.

  2. Supplement No. 1, dated April 7, 2016, to the Registrant’s prospectus dated April 7, 2016, included herewith.

  3. Part II, included herewith.

  4. Signature, included herewith.

 

The Registrant hereby amends this registration statement on such date or dates as may be necessary to delay its effective date until the Registrant shall file a further amendment that specifically states that this registration statement shall thereafter become effective in accordance with Section 8(a) of the Securities Act of 1933 or until the registration statement shall become effective on such date as the Securities and Exchange Commission, acting pursuant to said Section 8(a), may determine.

 

 
 

 

$1,000,000,000 Maximum Offering of Class A, Class W and Class I Shares of Common Stock

 

(DIVIDEND CAPITAL LOGO)

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. is an externally managed real estate investment trust, or REIT, that invests in a diverse portfolio of real properties and real estate-related debt and securities. As of December 31, 2015, we had total gross investments with an estimated fair value of approximately $2.4 billion (calculated in accordance with our valuation procedures), comprised of approximately $2.4 billion in gross investments in real property and approximately $15.7 million in net debt-related investments. As of December 31, 2015, we had invested in a total of 60 operating properties located in 21 geographic markets in the United States, aggregating approximately 10.1 million net rentable square feet. We are managed by Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC, or the “Advisor.” We are not a mutual fund and do not intend to register as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.

 

We are offering on a continuous basis up to $1,000,000,000 of shares of our common stock, consisting of up to $750,000,000 of shares in our primary offering and up to $250,000,000 of shares pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan. We are offering to the public three classes of shares of our common stock: Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares. The share classes have different selling commissions and ongoing fees and expenses. As of April 1, 2016, we had outstanding 133,269,090 shares of our unclassified common stock, which we refer to herein as “Class E” shares, 1,928,810 shares of Class A common stock, 2,279,171 shares of Class W common stock and 23,345,096 shares of Class I common stock, held respectively by 26,859, 290, 366, and 2,302 stockholders.

 

We are offering to sell any combination of Class A, Class W and Class I shares with a dollar value up to the maximum offering amount. The per share purchase price varies from day to day and equals, for each class of common stock, our net asset value or “NAV” for such class, divided by the number of shares of that class outstanding as of the end of business each day, plus, for Class A shares sold in the primary offering only, applicable selling commissions. Subject to certain exceptions, you must initially invest at least $2,000 in shares of our common stock. This is a best efforts offering, which means that Dividend Capital Securities LLC, or the “Dealer Manager,” the underwriter of this offering and an entity related to the Advisor, will use its best efforts but is not required to sell any specific amount of shares.

 

We do not intend to list our shares of common stock for trading on an exchange or other trading market. In an effort to provide our stockholders with liquidity in respect of their investment in our shares, we have adopted a limited share redemption program whereby stockholders may request that we redeem all or any portion of their shares. The redemption price per share for each class of common stock equals the NAV per share for such class on the date of redemption. Subject to limited exceptions, Class A, Class W or Class I shares redeemed within 365 days of the date of purchase are subject to a short-term trading discount equal to 2% of the gross proceeds otherwise payable with respect to the redemption.

 

Investing in shares of our common stock involves a high degree of risk. You should purchase shares only if you can afford a complete loss of your investment. See “Risk Factors” beginning on page 25. These risks include, among others:

 

· There is no public trading market for shares of our common stock, and we do not anticipate that there will be a public trading market for our shares, so redemption of shares by us will likely be the only way to dispose of your shares.

 

· Our Class A, Class W and Class I share redemption program generally imposes a quarterly cap on aggregate net redemptions of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes equal to the amount of shares of such classes with a value of up to 5% of the aggregate NAV of the outstanding shares of such classes as of the last day of the previous quarter. We may also amend, suspend or terminate our share redemption program at any time. As a result, our shares have only limited liquidity and may become illiquid.

 

· A portion of the proceeds received in this offering is intended to be used to redeem or repurchase Class E shares, which will reduce the net proceeds available to retire debt or acquire additional properties, which may result in reduced liquidity and profitability.

 

· The purchase and redemption price for shares of our common stock will be based on the NAV of each class of common stock and will not be based on any public trading market. Our NAV does not currently represent our enterprise value and may not accurately reflect the actual prices at which our assets could be liquidated on any given day, the value a third party would pay for all or substantially all of our shares, or the price that our shares would trade at on a national stock exchange. Furthermore, our board of directors may amend our NAV procedures from time to time.

 

· Some of our executive officers, directors and other key personnel are also officers, directors, managers, key personnel and/or holders of an ownership interest in the Advisor, our Dealer Manager, our property manager and/or other entities related to Dividend Capital Total Advisors Group LLC, our “Sponsor.” As a result, they face conflicts of interest, including but not limited to conflicts arising from time constraints, allocation of investment opportunities and the fact that the fees the Advisor will receive for services rendered to us are based on our NAV, the procedures for which the Advisor assists our board of directors in developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating.

 

· If we fail to maintain our status as a REIT, it would adversely affect our results of operations and our ability to make distributions to our stockholders.

 

· The amount of distributions we may make is uncertain. We may pay distributions from sources other than cash flow from operations, including, without limitation, the sale of assets, borrowings or offering proceeds. The use of these sources for distributions would decrease the amount of cash we have available for new investments, share redemptions and other corporate purposes, and could reduce your overall return.

 

Neither the Securities and Exchange Commission nor any state securities regulator has approved or disapproved of these securities or determined if this prospectus is truthful or complete. In addition, the Attorney General of the State of New York has not passed on or endorsed the merits of this offering. Any representation to the contrary is unlawful. The use of forecasts in this offering is prohibited. Any representation to the contrary and any predictions, written or oral, as to the amount or certainty of any present or future cash benefit or tax consequence which may flow from an investment in our common stock is not permitted.  

    Per Share (1)     Total Maximum Primary Offering (2)     Total Maximum
Distribution
Reinvestment Plan (2)
    Total Maximum  
Gross offering proceeds (3)           $ 750,000,000     $ 250,000,000     $ 1,000,000,000  
Public offering price, Class A shares   $ 7.5863                          
Public offering price, Class W shares   $ 7.3587                          
Public offering price, Class I shares   $ 7.3587                          
Selling commissions and primary dealer fee (3) (4)   $ 0.0927     $ 12,500,000     $     $ 12,500,000  
Proceeds to us, before expenses (4)   $ 7.3216     $ 737,500,000     $ 250,000,000     $ 987,500,000  

 

 
(1) The price per share presented is based on the NAV as of April 1, 2016. The actual per share offering price for each class will equal the daily NAV per share for such class, plus, for Class A shares sold in the primary offering only, applicable selling commissions. On each business day, our NAV per share for each class is (1) posted on our website, www.dividendcapitaldiversified.com , and (2) made available on our toll-free, automated telephone line, (888) 310-9352.

(2) We reserve the right to reallocate the offering amount between the primary offering and our distribution reinvestment plan.

(3) Table assumes that 1/3 of primary offering gross proceeds come from sales of Class A shares, 1/3 of primary offering gross proceeds come from sales of Class W shares and 1/3 of primary offering gross proceeds come from sales of Class I shares, and that we pay the maximum 5.0% primary dealer fee on $100,000,000 in gross proceeds from sales of Class I shares in the primary offering. We pay selling commissions on Class A shares sold in the primary offering of up to 3.0% of the public offering price per share, which may be higher or lower due to rounding. Selling commissions may be reduced or eliminated to or for the account of certain categories of purchasers. Subject to Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc., or FINRA, limitations on underwriting compensation, we pay our dealer manager (1) a dealer manager fee equal to 1/365th of 0.60% of our NAV per share for Class A shares and Class W shares for each day, (2) a dealer manager fee equal to 1/365th of 0.10% of our NAV per share for Class I shares for each day and (3) for Class A shares only, a distribution fee equal to 1/365th of 0.50% of our NAV per share for Class A shares for each day. We will continue paying such dealer manager fee and distribution fee until the earlier to occur of the following: (i) a listing of the class of such shares on a national securities exchange or (ii) such shares no longer being outstanding. See “Plan of Distribution.”

(4) The per share amount represents an average of all shares under the primary offering and distribution reinvestment plan based on the foregoing assumptions and the sale of the total maximum offering. There will be additional items of value paid by us in connection with this offering, which are viewed by FINRA as underwriting compensation. Payment of this additional underwriting compensation will reduce the proceeds to us, before expenses. See “Plan of Distribution.”

 

The date of this prospectus is April 7, 2016  

 
 

 

HOW TO SUBSCRIBE

 

Investors who meet the suitability standards described herein may purchase shares of our common stock. See “Suitability Standards” below, for the suitability standards. Investors seeking to purchase shares of our common stock must proceed as follows:

 

· Read this entire prospectus and any appendices and supplements accompanying this prospectus.

 

· Complete the execution copy of the applicable subscription agreement. Specimen copies of the subscription agreements, including instructions for completing them, are included in this prospectus as Appendix A.

 

· Deliver a check or submit an ACH or wire transfer for the full purchase price of the shares of our common stock being subscribed for along with the completed subscription agreement to the soliciting broker-dealer. Your check should be made payable, or wire transfer directed, to “Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.” and the completed subscription agreement, along with the check or wire transfer, should be delivered to Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., PO Box 219079, Kansas City, Missouri 64121-9079 or sent overnight to Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., c/o DST Systems, Inc., 430 West 7th Street, Suite 219079, Kansas City, Missouri 64105. After you have satisfied the applicable minimum purchase requirement of $2,000, additional purchases must be in increments of $100, except for purchases made pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan.

 

· By executing the subscription agreement and paying the total purchase price for the shares of our common stock subscribed for, each investor attests that he meets the suitability standards as stated in the subscription agreement and agrees to be bound by all of its terms.

 

Certain participating broker-dealers may require supplementary disclosure materials or additional forms or documentation. You should consult with your financial advisor when purchasing shares. Subscriptions will be effective only upon our acceptance, and we reserve the right to reject any subscription in whole or in part. We are not permitted to accept a subscription for shares of our common stock until at least five business days after the date you receive a final prospectus. See “Plan of Distribution” for additional information regarding subscriptions for shares of our common stock in this offering.

 

An approved trustee must process and forward to us subscriptions made through individual retirement accounts, or “IRAs,” Keogh plans and 401(k) plans. In the case of investments through IRAs, Keogh plans and 401(k) plans, we will send the confirmation and notice of our acceptance to the trustee.

 

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SUITABILITY STANDARDS

 

The shares of common stock we are offering are suitable only for a person of adequate financial means, who desires a long-term investment and who will not need immediate liquidity from their investment. We do not expect to have a public market for shares of our common stock, which means that it may be difficult for you to sell your shares. On a limited basis, you may be able to have your shares redeemed through our share redemption program. You should not buy shares of our common stock if you need to sell them immediately or if you will need to sell them quickly in the future.

 

The Sponsor, the Dealer Manager and each participating broker-dealer shall make every reasonable effort to determine that the purchase of shares of our common stock is a suitable and appropriate investment for each investor based on information concerning the investor’s financial situation and investment objectives. In consideration of these factors, we have established suitability standards that require that a purchaser of shares of our common stock in this offering have either:

 

· a net worth (excluding the value of an investor’s home, home furnishings and automobiles) of at least $250,000; or

 

· a gross annual income of at least $70,000 and a net worth (excluding the value of an investor’s home, home furnishings and automobiles) of at least $70,000.

 

The minimum purchase amount is $2,000, except as described below. In order to satisfy the minimum purchase requirements for retirement plans, unless otherwise prohibited by state law, a husband and wife may jointly contribute funds from their separate IRAs, provided that each such contribution is made in increments of $100. You should note that an investment in shares of our common stock will not, in itself, create a retirement plan and that, in order to create a retirement plan, you must comply with all applicable provisions of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, which we refer to as the “Code.”

 

The minimum purchase for New York residents is $2,500, except for IRAs which must purchase a minimum of $2,000. The minimum purchase for North Dakota and Tennessee investors is also $2,500.

 

Purchases of shares of our common stock pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan may be in amounts less than set forth above and are not required to be made in increments of $100.

 

Several states have established suitability standards different from those we have outlined above. Shares of our common stock will be sold only to investors in these states who meet the special suitability standards set forth below.

 

Alabama —In addition to our suitability requirements, Alabama investors must represent that they have a liquid net worth of at least ten times their investment in us and our affiliates.

 

Iowa —Iowa investors must have either (i) a net worth (excluding the value of an investor’s home, home furnishings and automobiles) of at least $300,000 or (ii) a gross annual income of at least $100,000 and a net worth (excluding the value of an investor’s home, home furnishings and automobiles) of at least $100,000. Additionally, Iowa investors may not invest more than 10% of their liquid net worth in us.

 

Kansas —In addition to our suitability requirements, the Kansas Securities Commissioner recommends that Kansas investors not invest, in the aggregate, more than 10% of their liquid net worth in this and other non-traded real estate investment trusts.

 

Kentucky —In addition to our suitability requirements, Kentucky investors may not invest more than 10% of their liquid net worth in shares of our common stock or the shares of affiliated non-publicly traded real estate investment trusts.

 

Maine —In addition to our suitability requirements, the Maine Office of Securities recommends that an investor’s aggregate investment in this offering and similar direct participation investments not exceed 10% of the investor’s liquid net worth.

 

Massachusetts —In addition to our suitability requirements, Massachusetts investors may not invest more than 10% of their liquid net worth in us and other direct participation programs.

 

Nebraska —In addition to our suitability requirements, Nebraska investors must limit their aggregate investment in this offering and in the securities of other non-publicly traded real estate investment trusts (REITs) to 10% of such investor’s net worth (exclusive of home, home furnishings, and automobiles). An investment by a Nebraska investor who is an accredited investor within the meaning of the Federal securities laws is not subject to the foregoing limitations.

 

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New Jersey —New Jersey investors must have either (i) a liquid net worth of $100,000 and a gross annual income of $70,000 or (ii) a liquid net worth of $350,000. Additionally, a New Jersey investor’s total investment in this offering and similar direct participation investments shall not exceed 10% of his or her liquid net worth.

 

New Mexico —In addition to our suitability requirements, New Mexico investors may not invest more than 10% of their liquid net worth in us, our affiliates and other non-traded real estate investment trusts.

 

North Dakota —In addition to our suitability requirements, North Dakota investors must have a net worth of at least ten times their investment in us.

 

Ohio —In addition to our suitability requirements, Ohio investors may not invest more than 10% of their liquid net worth in us, our affiliates and other non-traded real estate investment trusts.

 

Oregon —In addition to our suitability requirements, Oregon investors must have a net worth of at least 10 times their investment in us and other Dividend Capital real estate programs.

 

Pennsylvania —In addition to our suitability requirements, Pennsylvania investors may not invest more than 10% of their net worth (exclusive of home, home furnishings and automobiles) in us.

 

Tennessee —Tennessee investors must have either (i) a net worth (excluding the value of an investor’s home, home furnishings and automobiles) of at least $500,000 or (ii) a gross annual income of at least $100,000 and a net worth (excluding the value of an investor’s home, home furnishings and automobiles) of at least $100,000. Additionally, Tennessee investors may not invest more than 10% of their liquid net worth in us. In addition, it is recommended that a Tennessee investor’s aggregate investment in direct participation program investments not exceed 10% of their liquid net worth.

 

For the purposes of these suitability standards, “liquid net worth” is defined as that portion of net worth that consists of cash, cash equivalents and readily marketable securities.

 

In the case of sales to fiduciary accounts, these suitability standards must be met either by the fiduciary account, by the person who directly or indirectly supplied the funds for the purchase of the shares of our common stock or by the beneficiary of the account. These suitability standards are intended to help ensure that, given the long-term nature of an investment in shares of our common stock, our investment objectives and the relative illiquidity of shares of our common stock, shares of our common stock are an appropriate investment for those of you who become stockholders. Each participating broker-dealer must make every reasonable effort to determine that the purchase of shares of our common stock is a suitable and appropriate investment for each stockholder based on information provided by the stockholder. Each participating broker-dealer is required to maintain for six years records of the information used to determine that an investment in shares of our common stock is suitable and appropriate for a stockholder.

 

Determination of Suitability

 

In determining suitability, the Sponsor, the Dealer Manager and participating broker-dealers who sell shares on our behalf may rely on, among other things, relevant information provided by the prospective investors. Each prospective investor should be aware that participating broker-dealers are responsible for determining suitability and will be relying on the information provided by prospective investors in making this determination. In making this determination, participating broker-dealers have a responsibility to ascertain that each prospective investor:

 

· meets the minimum income and net worth standards set forth under the “Suitability Standards” section of this prospectus;

 

· can reasonably benefit from an investment in our shares based on the prospective investor’s investment objectives and overall portfolio structure;

 

· is able to bear the economic risk of the investment based on the prospective investor’s net worth and overall financial situation; and

 

· has apparent understanding of:

 

· the fundamental risks of an investment in the shares;

 

iii
 

 

· the risk that the prospective investor may lose his or her entire investment;

 

· the lack of liquidity of the shares;

 

· the restrictions on transferability of the shares;

 

· the tax consequences of an investment in the shares; and

 

· the background of the Advisor.

 

Participating broker-dealers are responsible for making the determinations set forth above based upon information relating to each prospective investor concerning his age, investment objectives, investment experience, income, net worth, financial situation and other investments of the prospective investor, as well as other pertinent factors. Each participating broker-dealer is required to maintain records of the information used to determine that an investment in shares is suitable and appropriate for an investor. These records are required to be maintained for a period of at least six years.

 

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IMPORTANT INFORMATION ABOUT THIS PROSPECTUS

 

Please carefully read the information in this prospectus and any accompanying prospectus supplements, which we refer to collectively as the prospectus. You should rely only on the information contained in this prospectus and incorporated herein by reference. We have not authorized anyone to provide you with different information. This prospectus may only be used where it is legal to sell these securities. You should not assume that the information contained in this prospectus is accurate as of any date later than the date hereof or such other dates as are stated herein or as of the respective dates of any documents or other information incorporated herein by reference.

 

In addition to this prospectus, we may utilize certain sales material in connection with the offering of shares of our common stock, although only when accompanied by or preceded by the delivery of this prospectus. In certain jurisdictions, some or all of such sales material may not be available. This material may include information relating to this offering, the past performance of the Advisor and its affiliates, property brochures and articles and publications concerning real estate. In addition, the sales material may contain certain quotes from various publications without obtaining the consent of the author or the publication for use of the quoted material in the sales material.

 

The offering of shares of our common stock is made only by means of this prospectus. Although the information contained in such sales material will not conflict with any of the information contained in this prospectus, such material does not purport to be complete, and should not be considered a part of this prospectus or the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part, or as incorporated by reference in this prospectus or said registration statement or as forming the basis of the offering of the shares of our common stock.

 

This prospectus is part of a registration statement that we filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission, which we refer to as the “Commission,” using a continuous offering process. Periodically, as we make material investments or have other material developments, we will provide a prospectus supplement that may add, update or change information contained in this prospectus, including the information incorporated by reference. Any statement that we make in this prospectus, including statements made in the information incorporated by reference, will be modified or superseded by any inconsistent statement made by us in a subsequent prospectus supplement. The registration statement we filed with the Commission includes exhibits that provide more detailed descriptions of the matters discussed in this prospectus. You should read this prospectus, including the information incorporated by reference, and the related exhibits filed with the Commission and any prospectus supplement, together with additional information described below under “Additional Information.” In this prospectus, we use the term “day” to refer to a calendar day, and we use the term “business day” to refer to each day that the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading.

 

On each business day, our NAV per share for each class of common stock is (1) posted on our website, www.dividendcapitaldiversified.com , and (2) made available on our toll-free, automated telephone line, (888) 310-9352. In addition, on at least a monthly basis, we disclose in a prospectus or prospectus supplement filed with the Commission our NAV per share for each share class for each business day during the prior month. On at least a quarterly basis, we disclose in a prospectus or prospectus supplement filed with the Commission the principal valuation components of our NAV. In order to avoid interruptions in the continuous offering of our shares of common stock, we will file an amendment to the registration statement with the Commission on or before such time as the most recent offering price per share for any of the classes of our shares being offered by this prospectus represents a 20% change from the per share price set forth in the registration statement filed with the Commission, as amended from time to time. There can be no assurance, however, that our continuous offering will not be suspended while the Commission reviews any such amendment, until it is declared effective, if at all.

 

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CAUTIONARY NOTE REGARDING FORWARD LOOKING STATEMENTS

 

Statements included or incorporated by reference in this prospectus that are not historical facts (including any statements concerning investment objectives, other plans and objectives of management for future operations or economic performance or assumptions or forecasts related thereto) are forward looking statements. These statements are only predictions. We caution that forward looking statements are not guarantees. Actual events or our investments and results of operations could differ materially from those expressed or implied in the forward looking statements. Forward looking statements are typically identified by the use of terms such as “may,” “will,” “should,” “expect,” “could,” “intend,” “plan,” “anticipate,” “estimate,” “believe,” “continue,” “predict,” “potential” or the negative of such terms and other comparable terminology.

 

The forward looking statements included or incorporated by reference herein are based upon our current expectations, plans, estimates, assumptions and beliefs that involve numerous risks and uncertainties. Assumptions relating to the foregoing involve judgments with respect to, among other things, future economic, competitive and market conditions and future business decisions, all of which are difficult or impossible to predict accurately and many of which are beyond our control. Although we believe that the expectations reflected in such forward looking statements are based on reasonable assumptions, our actual results and performance could differ materially from those set forth in the forward looking statements. Factors which could have a material adverse effect on our operations and future prospects include, but are not limited to:

 

· the impact of macroeconomic trends, such as the unemployment rate and availability of credit, which may have a negative effect on the following, among other things:

 

· the fundamentals of our business, including overall market occupancy, tenant space utilization, and rental rates;

 

· the financial condition of our tenants, some of which are financial, legal and other professional firms, our lenders, and institutions that hold our cash balances and short-term investments, which may expose us to increased risks of breach or default by these parties; and

 

· the value of our real estate assets, which may limit our ability to dispose of assets at attractive prices or obtain or maintain debt financing secured by our properties or on an unsecured basis;

 

· general risks affecting the real estate industry (including, without limitation, the inability to enter into or renew leases, and dependence on tenants’ financial condition);

 

· competition from other developers, owners and operators of real estate for real estate investments, which may have a negative effect on our ability to acquire real property assets or attract tenants on favorable terms, if at all, and the returns from our real property assets;

 

· our ability to effectively raise and deploy proceeds from this offering of Class A, Class W and Class I shares;

 

· risks associated with the availability and terms of debt and equity financing and refinancing and the use of debt to fund acquisitions and developments, including the risk associated with interest rates impacting the cost and/or availability of financing and refinancing;

 

· the business opportunities that may be presented to and pursued by us, changes in laws or regulations (including changes to laws governing the taxation of real estate investment trusts);

 

· conflicts of interest arising out of our relationships with Dividend Capital Total Advisors Group LLC (the “Sponsor”), Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC (the “Advisor”), and their affiliates;

 

· changes in accounting principles, policies and guidelines applicable to real estate investment trusts;

 

· environmental, regulatory and/or safety requirements; and

 

· the availability and cost of comprehensive insurance, including coverage for terrorist acts and earthquakes.

 

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Any of the assumptions underlying forward looking statements could be inaccurate. You are cautioned not to place undue reliance on any forward looking statements included or incorporated by reference in this prospectus. All forward looking statements are made as of the date of this prospectus and the risk that actual results will differ materially from the expectations expressed in this prospectus will increase with the passage of time. Except as otherwise required by the federal securities laws, we undertake no obligation to publicly update or revise any forward looking statements after the date of this prospectus, whether as a result of new information, future events, changed circumstances or any other reason. In light of the significant uncertainties inherent in the forward looking statements included or incorporated by reference in this prospectus, including, without limitation, the risks described under “Risk Factors,” the inclusion of such forward looking statements should not be regarded as a representation by us or any other person that the objectives and plans set forth in this prospectus will be achieved.

 

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

 

  Page
PROSPECTUS SUMMARY   1
Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.   1
Class A, Class W and Class I Shares of Common Stock   1
Our UPREIT Structure   2
Our Operating Partnership   2
Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures   2
NAV and NAV Per Share Calculation   3
Estimated Use of Proceeds   4
Investment Strategy and Objectives   4
Leverage   6
DST Program   6
Summary Risk Factors   6
Compensation to the Advisor and its Affiliates   8
Conflicts of Interest   12
Our Board   13
The Advisor   13
Our Dealer Manager   14
Other Affiliates of the Advisor and Related Entities   14
Our Joint Ventures   14
Our Subsidiaries   14
Structure Chart   15
Distribution Policy   16
Distribution Reinvestment Plan   16
Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program   16
Class E Share Redemption Program and Tender Offers   17
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ABOUT THIS OFFERING   18
Questions and Answers Relating to our Structure, Management and Business   18
Questions and Answers Relating to this Offering   20
RISK FACTORS   25
Risks Related to Investing in Shares of Our Common Stock   25
Risks Related to Conflicts of Interest   34
Risks Related to Adverse Changes in General Economic Conditions   37
Risks Related to Our General Business Operations and Our Corporate Structure   39
Risks Related to Investments in Real Property   44
Risks Related to Investments in Real Estate-Related Debt and Securities   51
Risks Associated with Debt Financing   53
Risks Related to Our Taxation as a REIT   55
Investment Company Risks   59
Retirement Plan Risks   59
ESTIMATED USE OF PROCEEDS   61
INVESTMENT STRATEGY, OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES   63
Investment Objectives   63
Investment Strategy   63
Portfolio Diversification   64
Real Estate Portfolio   64
Real Estate-Related Debt and Securities Portfolio   65
Development and Construction of Properties   66
Acquisition of Properties from the Advisor, its Affiliates and Other Related Entities   66
Joint Ventures   66
Real Property Ownership   68
Due Diligence   68
Terms of Leases and Tenant Creditworthiness   68
Disposition Policies—Real Estate Portfolio   69

 

8
 

 

Disposition Policies—Real Estate-Related Debt and Securities   69
Borrowing Policies   70
Acquisitions Through Equity Issuances   71
DST Program   71
Investment Limitations   72
Investment Company Act Considerations   73
INVESTMENTS IN REAL PROPERTIES AND REAL ESTATE-RELATED DEBT AND SECURITIES   74
Real Properties   76
Net Operating Income   77
Debt-Related Investments   79
Borrowings   79
MANAGEMENT   81
Board of Directors   81
Duties of Directors   81
Committees of the Board   83
Investment Committee   83
Audit Committee   83
Conflicts Resolution Committee   83
Compensation Committee   83
Nominating Committee   84
Management Committee   84
Compensation of Directors   84
Equity Incentive Plans   85
Efforts to Align Independent Director and Management Interests with Stockholders   86
Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation   86
Limited Liability and Indemnification of Directors, Officers and Others   86
Directors and Executive Officers   88
THE ADVISOR AND THE ADVISORY AGREEMENT   92
General   92
The Advisor   92
The Advisory Agreement   94
Restricted Stock Unit Agreements   97
Holdings of Shares of Common Stock, OP Units and Special Units   98
Companies Affiliated with the Advisor   99
Management Decisions of the Advisor   100
Management Compensation   100
Summary of Fees, Commissions and Reimbursements   101
Product Specialists   106
Related Party Transactions   106
THE OPERATING PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT   107
General   107
Classes of OP Units   107
Capital Contributions   107
Operations   107
Redemption Rights   108
Transferability of Operating Partnership Interests   109
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST   110
Interests in Other Real Estate Programs   110
Allocation of Advisor’s Time   110
Competition   110
Dealer Manager   111
Property Manager   111
DST Program   111
Joint Ventures with Affiliates of the Sponsor or Other Entities Advised by the Affiliates of the Sponsor   111
Fees and Other Compensation to the Advisor and its Affiliates   112
Valuation Conflicts   112

 

9
 

 

Conflict Resolution Procedures   113
SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT   117
NET ASSET VALUE CALCULATION AND VALUATION PROCEDURES   118
Valuation Procedures   118
Independent Valuation Firm   118
Real Property Portfolio Valuation   118
Valuation of Real Estate-Related Assets   120
Valuation of Real Estate-Related Liabilities   121
NAV and NAV per Share Calculation   121
Probability-Weighted Adjustments   122
NAV of our Operating Partnership and OP Units   122
Oversight by our Board of Directors   122
Review of and Changes to Our Valuation Procedures   122
Limitations on the Calculation of NAV   123
Our Current and Historical NAV Calculations   123
SELECTED INFORMATION REGARDING OUR OPERATIONS   126
Selected Financial Data   126
Share Redemptions and Repurchases   127
Distribution Information   128
How We Measure Our Operating Performance   128
DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK   132
Common Stock   132
Preferred Stock   133
Meetings, Special Voting Requirements and Access to Records   134
Tender Offers   134
Restriction On Ownership of Shares of Capital Stock   134
Distributions   135
Distribution Reinvestment Plan   136
Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program   137
Class E Share Redemption Program and Tender Offers   142
Liquidity Events   143
Subsequent Offerings   143
Business Combinations   143
Business Combination with the Advisor   144
Control Share Acquisitions   144
Subtitle 8   145
Restrictions on Roll-Up Transactions   145
Forum for Certain Litigation   146
Reports to Stockholders   146
Restrictions on Transfer   146
FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS   147
General   147
REIT Qualification   147
Requirements for Qualification as a REIT   149
Taxable Income for Which Cash Has Not Been Received Created by Investments in Debt Obligations   155
Operational Requirements—Recordkeeping   156
Failure to Qualify as a REIT   156
Sale-Leaseback Transactions   156
Taxation of Taxable U.S. Stockholders   156
Treatment of Tax-Exempt Stockholders   159
Special Tax Considerations for Non-U.S. Stockholders   160
Statement of Share Ownership   162
Federal Income Tax Aspects of the Operating Partnership   162
Other Tax Considerations   165
ERISA CONSIDERATIONS   166

 

10
 

 

Plan Asset Considerations   166
Other Prohibited Transactions   167
Annual Valuation   168
PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION   169
General   169
Purchase of Shares   170
Frequent Trading Policies   171
Underwriting Compensation   171
SUPPLEMENTAL SALES MATERIAL   176
QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK   176
LEGAL MATTERS   176
EXPERTS   176
INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN INFORMATION BY REFERENCE   177
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION   178
Appendix A          FORMS OF SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT   A-1
Appendix B          FOURTH AMENDED AND RESTATED DISTRIBUTION REINVESTMENT PLAN   B-1

 

xi
 

 

PROSPECTUS SUMMARY

 

This prospectus summary summarizes information contained elsewhere in this prospectus. You should read the entire prospectus carefully, including the “Risk Factors” section. As used herein, “the Company,” “we,” “our” and “us” refer to Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. and its operating partnership, Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP and related subsidiaries, except where the context otherwise requires.

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.

 

We are currently invested in a diverse portfolio of real properties and, to a lesser extent, real estate-related debt. We may target investments in four primary property categories of office, industrial, retail and multifamily. Although we may own properties in each of these categories, we are not tied to specific allocation targets and we may not always have significant holdings, or any holdings at all, in each category. To a lesser extent we may invest in other types of real estate including, but not limited to, hospitality, medical offices, student housing and unimproved land. We anticipate that the majority of our real property investments will be made in the United States, although we may also invest in Canada and Mexico, and potentially elsewhere on a limited basis, to the extent that opportunities exist that may help us meet our investment objectives. To provide diversification to our portfolio, we have invested and may continue to invest in real estate-related debt, which will generally include mortgage loans secured by real estate, mezzanine debt and other related investments. Any investments in real estate-related securities generally will focus on equity issued by public and private real estate companies and certain other securities, with the primary goal of such investments being the preservation of liquidity in support of our share redemption programs

 

We were formed as a Maryland corporation on April 11, 2005. We believe we have operated in such a manner as to qualify as a real estate investment trust, or “REIT,” for federal income tax purposes. As of April 1, 2016, we had outstanding 133,269,090 shares of our unclassified common stock, which we refer to herein as “Class E” shares, 1,928,810 shares of Class A common stock, 2,279,171 shares of Class W common stock and 23,345,096 shares of Class I common stock, held respectively by 26,859, 290, 366, and 2,302 stockholders. We intend to operate as a perpetual-life REIT, which means that we intend to offer Class A, Class W and Class I shares continuously through ongoing primary offerings. We also offer Class E, Class A, Class W and Class I shares through our distribution reinvestment plan.

 

As of December 31, 2015, we had total gross investments with an estimated fair value of approximately $2.4 billion (calculated in accordance with our valuation procedures), comprised of approximately $2.4 billion in gross investments in real property and approximately $15.7 million in net debt-related investments. Here and throughout this prospectus, when we refer to the “fair value” of our real properties, we are referring to the fair value calculated in accordance with our valuation procedures. As of December 31, 2015, we owned 60 operating properties located in 21 geographic markets in the United States, aggregating approximately 10.1 million net rentable square feet.

 

Our office is located at 518 Seventeenth Street, 17th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202 and our main telephone number is (303) 228-2200.

 

Class A, Class W and Class I Shares of Common Stock

 

In this offering, we are offering to the public three classes of shares of our common stock: Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares. The table below summarizes the fees generally payable to the Dealer Manager with respect to the Class A, Class W and Class I shares (other than the primary dealer fee, described in “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Primary Dealer Fee”) and does not include the other fees and expenses payable to the Advisor and its affiliates, which are allocable based on the respective NAV of our classes. The selling commission is a percentage of the public offering price per Class A share. Subject to FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation and certain other limitations, the dealer manager and distribution fee accrue daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of the percentage of our NAV per such share for such day set forth below on a continuous basis. 

           
  Class A   Class W   Class I
Selling Commission 3.00%   None   None
Dealer Manager Fee 0.60%   0.60%   0.10%
Distribution Fee 0.50%   None   None

 

The fees listed above are allocated on a class-specific basis and differ for each class, even when the NAV of each class is the same. The payment of class-specific expenses results in different amounts of distributions being paid with respect to each class of shares. In addition, as a result of the different ongoing fees and expenses allocable to each share class, each share class, including the Class E shares, could have a different NAV per share. If the NAV of our classes are different, then changes to our assets and liabilities that are allocable based on NAV may also be different for each class. See “Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures” and “Description of Capital Stock—Distributions” for more information.

 

1
 

 

Because the dealer manager fee and distribution fee are allocated on a class-specific basis and are borne by all holders of the applicable class, you will be allocated a share of class-specific expenses of our other offerings. Even if the FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation are reached with respect to this offering, you will be allocated a share of class-specific expenses of our other offerings. Accordingly, with respect to the shares that you own, you should expect to be allocated the maximum dealer manager fee and distribution fee described above, for as long as you own your shares.

 

Our four classes of common stock also have different rights upon liquidation to the extent that their NAV per share differs. In the event of any voluntary or involuntary liquidation, dissolution or winding up of us, or any liquidating distribution of our assets, then such assets, or the proceeds therefrom, will be distributed among the holders of Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares ratably in proportion to the respective NAV for each class until the NAV for each class has been paid. Each holder of shares of a particular class of common stock will be entitled to receive, ratably with each other holder of shares of such class, that portion of such aggregate assets available for distribution as the number of outstanding shares of such class held by such holder bears to the total number of outstanding shares of such class then outstanding. If there are remaining assets available for distribution to our common stockholders after each class has received its NAV (which is not likely because NAV would be adjusted upward prior to the liquidating distribution), then holders of our Class E, Class A, Class W and Class I shares will be treated the same, with each such holder receiving the same per share distribution of any such excess.

 

Other than the differing allocable fees and expenses, the differing NAVs per share and the potential differing liquidation rights described above, Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares have identical rights and privileges, such as identical voting rights. See “Description of Capital Stock—Common Stock” for more details regarding our classes of common stock.

 

Our UPREIT Structure

 

An “Umbrella Partnership Real Estate Investment Trust,” which we refer to as an “UPREIT,” is a REIT that holds all or substantially all of its assets through a partnership in which the REIT holds an interest. We use this structure because a sale of property directly to the REIT in exchange for cash or REIT shares or a combination of cash and REIT shares, is generally a taxable transaction to the selling property owner. In an UPREIT structure, a seller of a property who desires to defer taxable gain on the disposition of his property may transfer the property to the partnership in exchange for units in the partnership and defer taxation of gain until the seller later sells the units in the partnership or exchanges them, normally on a one-for-one basis, for REIT shares. If the REIT shares are publicly traded, the former property or securities owner will achieve liquidity for his investment. We believe that using an UPREIT structure gives us an advantage in acquiring desired properties from persons who may not otherwise sell their properties because of unfavorable tax results.

 

Our Operating Partnership

 

We own all of our interests in our investments through our operating partnership, Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership (the “Operating Partnership”), or its subsidiaries. We are the sole general partner of our Operating Partnership. In addition, we have contributed 100% of the proceeds received from our public offerings of common stock to our Operating Partnership in exchange for partnership units (“OP Units”) representing our interest as a limited partner of the Operating Partnership. As of December 31, 2015, we held a 92.8% limited partnership interest in the Operating Partnership. As of December 31, 2015, our Operating Partnership had outstanding OP Units held by third-party investors representing approximately a 7.2% limited partnership interest. These units were issued by the Operating Partnership in connection with its exercise of options to acquire certain fractional interests in real estate that were previously sold to such investors pursuant to private placements previously conducted by the Operating Partnership. The holders of OP Units (other than us) generally have the right to cause the Operating Partnership to redeem all or a portion of their OP Units for, at our sole discretion, shares of our common stock, cash, or a combination of both. As discussed further below under “—DST Program,” we, through the Operating Partnership, launched a similar program of private placements in March 2016.

 

Our Operating Partnership has classes of OP Units that correspond to our four classes of common stock: Class E OP Units (which are further separated into Series 1 and Series 2), Class A OP Units, Class W OP Units and Class I OP Units. The OP Units of each class are economically equivalent to the same respective class of our common stock. We sometimes refer to our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with the OP Units held by third parties, collectively as “Fund Interests” because they all represent interests held by investors in our Operating Partnership, through which we own all of our investments and conduct all of our operations. We sometimes refer to the NAV of all of the Fund Interests as the “Aggregate Fund NAV.”

 

Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures

 

Our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, has adopted valuation procedures, as amended from time to time, that contain a comprehensive set of methodologies to be used in connection with the calculation of our NAV. One fundamental element of the valuation process, the valuation of our real property portfolio, is managed by Altus Group U.S., Inc., an independent valuation firm (“the Independent Valuation Firm”) approved by our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors. Altus Group is a multidisciplinary provider of independent, commercial real estate consulting and advisory services in multiple offices around the world, including Canada, the U.K., Australia, the United States and Asia Pacific. Altus Group is engaged in the business of valuing commercial real estate properties and is not affiliated with us or the Advisor.

 

2
 

 

The real property portfolio valuation, which is the largest component of our NAV calculation, is provided to us by the Independent Valuation Firm on each business day. The foundation for this valuation is periodic appraisals. The overarching principle of these appraisals is to produce valuations that represent fair and accurate estimates of the unencumbered values of our real estate or the prices that would be received for our real properties in arm’s-length transactions between market participants before considering underlying debt. The valuation of our real properties determined by the Independent Valuation Firm may not always reflect the value at which we would agree to buy or sell such assets and the value at which we would buy or sell such assets could materially differ from the Independent Valuation Firm’s estimate of fair value. We obtain ongoing appraisals pursuant to schedules prepared by the Independent Valuation Firm and our Advisor that are designed to conduct appraisals on each of our properties throughout any given calendar year. In order to provide a smooth and orderly appraisal process, we seek to have approximately 1/12th of the portfolio appraised each month, although we may have more or less appraised in a month. In no event will a calendar year pass without having each and every property valued by appraisal unless such asset is bought or sold in such calendar year. However, on each business day, the Independent Valuation Firm adjusts a real property’s valuation, as necessary, based on known events that have a material impact on the most recent value (adjustments for non-material events may also be made).

 

Each calendar year our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, reviews the appropriateness of our valuation procedures. With respect to the valuation of our properties, the Independent Valuation Firm provides the board of directors with periodic valuation reports. From time to time our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, may adopt changes to the valuation procedures if it (1) determines that such changes are likely to result in a more accurate reflection of NAV or a more efficient or less costly procedure for the determination of NAV without having a material adverse effect on the accuracy of such determination or (2) otherwise reasonably believes a change is appropriate for the determination of NAV. We will publicly announce material changes to our valuation procedures or the identity or role of the Independent Valuation Firm.

 

While the methodologies contained in the valuation procedures are designed to operate reliably within a wide variety of circumstances, it is possible that in certain unanticipated situations or after the occurrence of certain extraordinary events (such as a terrorist attack or an act of nature), our ability to implement and coordinate our NAV procedures may be impaired or delayed, including in circumstances where there is a delay in accessing or receiving information from vendors or other reporting agents. Further, the NAV per share should not be viewed as being determinative of the value of our common stock that may be received in a sale to a third party or the value at which our stock would trade on a national exchange. We may suspend this offering and the share redemption program if our board of directors determines that the calculation of NAV may be materially incorrect or there is a condition that restricts the valuation of a material portion of our assets. See “Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures” for more details regarding our valuation procedures.

 

NAV and NAV Per Share Calculation

 

We are offering to the public three classes of shares of our common stock: Class A shares, Class I shares and Class W shares. Our NAV is calculated for each of these classes and our Class E shares after the end of each business day that the New York Stock Exchange is open for unrestricted trading by ALPS Fund Services Inc. (“ALPS” or the “NAV Accountant”), a third-party firm approved by our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors. Our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, may replace ALPS with another party, including our Advisor, if it is deemed appropriate to do so.

 

At the end of each such trading day, before taking into consideration accrued dividends or class-specific expense accruals, any change in the Aggregate Fund NAV (whether an increase or decrease) is allocated among each class of Fund Interest (i.e., our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with any classes of OP Units held by third parties) based on each class’s relative percentage of the previous Aggregate Fund NAV. Changes in the Aggregate Fund NAV reflect factors including, but not limited to, unrealized/realized gains (losses) on the value of our real property portfolio, real estate-related assets and liabilities, and daily accruals for income and expenses (including accruals for performance based fees, if any, asset management, dealer manager and distribution fees) and distributions to investors.

 

Our most significant source of net income is property income. We accrue estimated income and expenses on a daily basis based on annual budgets as adjusted from time to time to reflect changes in the business throughout the year. For the first month following a property acquisition, we calculate and accrue portfolio income with respect to such property based on the performance of the property before the acquisition and the contractual arrangements in place at the time of the acquisition, as identified and reviewed through our due diligence and underwriting process in connection with the acquisition. For the purpose of calculating our NAV, all organization and offering costs reduce NAV as part of our estimated income and expense accrual. On a periodic basis, our income and expense accruals are adjusted based on information derived from actual operating results.

 

3
 

 

Our liabilities are included as part of our NAV calculation generally based on U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting Principles (“GAAP”). Our liabilities include, without limitation, property-level mortgages, accrued distributions, the fees payable to the Advisor and the Dealer Manager, accounts payable, accrued company-level operating expenses, any company or portfolio-level financing arrangements and other liabilities.

 

Following the calculation and allocation of changes in the Aggregate Fund NAV as described above, the NAV for each class is adjusted for accrued dividends, the distribution fee and the dealer manager fee, to determine the current day’s NAV. Selling commissions, which are effectively paid by purchasers of Class A shares in the primary offering at the time of purchase, because the purchase price of such shares is equal to the NAV per Class A share plus the selling commission, have no effect on the NAV of any class.

 

NAV per share for each class is calculated by dividing such class’s NAV at the end of each trading day by the number of shares outstanding for that class on such day. See “Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures” for more details regarding our NAV per share calculations.

 

Estimated Use of Proceeds

 

After paying selling commissions, the primary dealer fee and organization and offering expenses, and assuming that we sell the maximum offering, we estimate net proceeds from this offering in an amount equal to $974,663,700, or approximately 97.47% of the gross proceeds from this offering, to be available to us. Selling commissions are effectively paid by purchasers of Class A shares in the primary offering at the time of purchase, because the purchase price of such shares is equal to the NAV per Class A share plus the selling commission, and such selling commissions therefore have no effect on our NAV. Accordingly, if we fund additional underwriting compensation and issuer organization and offering expenses entirely out of cash flow from operations (which would not reduce the net offering proceeds), and assuming that we pay the maximum 5.0% primary dealer fee on $100,000,000 in gross proceeds from sales of Class I shares in the primary offering, then as a percentage of the NAV of the shares sold (measured as of the date of sale), approximately 99.49% of the proceeds will be available to us. We expect to use the net proceeds of this offering to make investments in accordance with our investment strategy and policies, to provide liquidity to our stockholders and for general corporate purposes (which may include repayment of our debt or any other corporate purposes we deem appropriate). We may use the proceeds of this offering to fund stockholder distributions, although we do not currently intend to do so. The specific amounts of the net proceeds that are used for such purposes, and the priority of such uses, will depend on the amount of proceeds raised in this offering, the timing of our receipt of such proceeds and the best uses of the proceeds at such time. The foregoing figures are estimates derived at the beginning of this offering and are not updated throughout the offering. The actual percentage of net proceeds available to use will depend on a number of factors, including the amount of capital we raise, the actual offering costs and the portion of capital raised with respect to which we pay a primary dealer fee. For example, if we raise less than the maximum offering amount, we would expect the percentage of net offering proceeds available to us to be less (and may be substantially less) than that set forth above because many offering costs are fixed and do not depend on the amount of capital raised in the offering.

 

Investment Strategy and Objectives

 

Our primary investment objectives are:

 

· providing current income to our stockholders in the form of quarterly cash distributions;

 

· preserving and protecting our stockholders’ capital investments;

 

· realizing capital appreciation in our share price from active investment management and asset management; and

 

· providing portfolio diversification in the form of multi-asset class investing in direct real estate.

 

There is no assurance that we will attain our investment objectives. Our charter places numerous limitations on us with respect to the manner in which we may invest our funds. In most cases these limitations cannot be changed unless our charter is amended, which may require the approval of our stockholders.

 

Our investment strategy is designed to focus on generating income to support the quarterly dividend, protecting capital and growing net asset value over time. We seek to leverage our extensive knowledge of targeted real estate markets and property types to capitalize on opportunities where there is a disconnect between our assessment of an investment’s intrinsic value relative to its market value. In addition, we seek to optimize the value of our portfolio through strategic financing, diligent asset management and selective asset disposition.

 

4
 

 

We believe that the real estate market is cyclical, with different demand for property types at different times. Although we do not invest for the short term, we are active portfolio managers and we will seek to take advantage of opportunities to acquire or dispose of assets presented to us by real estate markets. One reason we focus on multiple property types and markets is to increase our ability to take advantage of these market cycles. We believe that the more opportunities we see in which to invest our capital, the more selective we can be in choosing strategic and accretive investments, which we believe may result in attractive total returns for our stockholders. Seeing more opportunities also may allow us to be consistent and meaningful investors throughout different cycles. When we believe one market is overvalued, we patiently wait and focus on another market that we believe is overlooked.

 

We also believe that value generally is based on the investment’s ability to produce cash flow and not what the next buyer will pay at any point in time. We generally focus on select, targeted markets that exhibit characteristics of being supply-constrained with strong demand from tenants seeking quality space.

 

We may target investments in four primary property categories of office, industrial, retail and multifamily. Although we may own properties in each of these categories, we are not tied to specific allocation targets and we may not always have significant holdings, or any holdings at all, in each category. For example, we do not currently own multifamily investments, although we intend to consider multifamily investment opportunities in the future. Also, through the disposition of assets, our ownership of industrial assets has declined to less than 5% of our portfolio as of the date of this prospectus. Our recent investment strategy has primarily been focused on multi-tenant office and necessity-oriented retail investments located in what we believe are strong markets poised for long-term growth. We currently intend that our near term investment strategy will continue to focus on these multi-tenant office and necessity-oriented retail investments. We may also look for opportunities to increase our holdings of industrial assets over the next year. However, there can be no assurance that we will be successful in this investment strategy, including with respect to any particular asset class. To a lesser extent we may invest in other types of real estate including, but not limited to, hospitality, medical offices, student housing and unimproved land. We anticipate that the majority of our real property investments will be made in the United States, although we may also invest in Canada and Mexico, and potentially elsewhere on a limited basis, to the extent that opportunities exist that may help us meet our investment objectives.

 

To provide diversification to our portfolio, we have invested and may continue to invest in real estate-related debt, which will generally include mortgage loans secured by real estate, mezzanine debt and other related investments. Any investments in real estate-related securities generally will focus on equity issued by public and private real estate companies and certain other securities, with the primary goal of such investments being the preservation of liquidity in support of our share redemption programs.

 

In 2015, we disposed of approximately $496.2 million of assets and we acquired approximately $341.3 million of assets. The assets that we sold were generally higher-yielding than the new assets we acquired, although we believe the acquired assets exhibit greater potential for future revenue growth. We believe that market conditions may cause us to continue to explore in certain markets the disposition of higher-yielding assets and in certain target markets the acquisition of assets that may generate lower yields but with greater growth potential. Although there can be no assurance that we will continue to pursue this strategy or be successful in its execution, for some period of time this may mean that higher-yielding assets are sold from our portfolio in exchange for assets that initially may produce lower current income but which we believe will generate increased income over time through increased tenant demand and rental rate growth in order to generate long term growth in net asset value.

 

Our objective is to continue to build a high-quality, diversified real estate portfolio. Although there can be no assurance that we will achieve this objective, we intend to diversify our portfolio by key portfolio attributes including, but not limited to, (1) property type, (2) target market, with consideration given to geographic concentrations, (3) average lease terms and portfolio occupancy expectations, (4) tenant concentrations, including credit and exposure to particular businesses or industries and (5) debt profile with the goal of maximizing flexibility while seeking to minimize cost and mitigate the risks associated with changes in interest rates and debt maturities.

 

There is no public trading market for our shares of common stock. On a limited basis, you may be able to redeem shares through our share redemption program. In addition, we do not intend to pursue a “Liquidity Event” with respect to our Class A, Class W or Class I shares within any period of time. A “Liquidity Event” includes, but is not limited to, (a) a listing of our common stock on a national securities exchange (or the receipt by our stockholders of securities that are listed on a national securities exchange in exchange for our common stock); (b) our sale, merger or other transaction in which our stockholders either receive, or have the option to receive, cash, securities redeemable for cash and/or securities of a publicly traded company; or (c) the sale of all or substantially all of our assets where our stockholders either receive, or have the option to receive, cash or other consideration. Although we will not be precluded from pursuing a Liquidity Event (or series thereof) if our board of directors determines that is in the best interest of our stockholders, we intend to operate as a perpetual-life REIT.

 

5
 

 

Leverage

 

We use financial leverage to provide additional funds to support our investment activities. We calculate our leverage for reporting purposes as our total borrowings, calculated on the basis of GAAP, divided by the fair value of our real property and debt-related investments. Based on this methodology, as of December 31, 2015, our leverage was 45.3%. There are other methods of calculating our overall leverage ratio that may differ from this methodology, such as the methodology used in determining our compliance with corporate borrowing covenants. Our current leverage target is between 40-60%. Although we will generally work to maintain the targeted leverage ratio over the near term, we may change our targeted leverage ratio from time to time. In addition, we may vary from our targeted leverage ratio from time to time, and there are no assurances that we will maintain the targeted range disclosed above or achieve any other leverage ratio that we may target in the future. Our board of directors may from time to time modify our borrowing policy in light of then-current economic conditions, the relative costs of debt and equity capital, the fair values of our properties, general conditions in the market for debt and equity securities, growth and acquisition opportunities or other factors. Our charter restricts the amount of indebtedness that we may incur to 300% of our net assets, which approximates 75% of the cost of our investments, but does not restrict the amount of indebtedness we may incur with respect to any single investment. Notwithstanding the foregoing, our aggregate indebtedness may exceed the limit set forth in our charter, but only if such excess is approved by a majority of our independent directors. See “Investment Strategy, Objectives and Policies—Borrowing Policies” for more details regarding our borrowing policies.

 

DST Program

 

In March 2016, we, through the Operating Partnership, initiated a program to raise capital in private placements exempt from registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the “Securities Act” through the sale of beneficial interests in specific Delaware statutory trusts holding real properties, including properties currently indirectly owned by the Operating Partnership (the “DST Program”). From 2006 through 2009, we, through our subsidiaries conducted similar private placement offerings of fractional interests in which we raised a total of $183.1 million in gross proceeds. These fractional interests were all subsequently acquired by the Operating Partnership in exchange for an aggregate of 17.7 million OP Units.

  

Under the DST Program, each private placement will offer interests in one or more real properties placed into one or more Delaware statutory trust(s) by the Operating Partnership or its affiliates (“DST Properties”). We anticipate that these interests may serve as replacement properties for investors seeking to complete like-kind exchange transactions under Section 1031 of the Code. Additionally, any interests sold to investors pursuant to such private placements will be leased-back by an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of the Operating Partnership on a long term basis of up to 29 years. The lease agreements are expected to be fully guaranteed by the Operating Partnership. Additionally, the Operating Partnership will retain a fair market value purchase option giving it the right, but not the obligation, to acquire the Interests from the investors at a later time in exchange for OP Units.

  

In connection with the DST Program, in March 2016, Dividend Capital Exchange LLC (“DCX”), a wholly owned subsidiary of our taxable REIT subsidiary that is wholly owned by the Operating Partnership, entered into a dealer manager agreement with our Dealer Manager, pursuant to which the Dealer Manager agreed to conduct the private placements for interests reflecting an indirect ownership of up to $500 million of interests. DCX Manager LLC (the “DST Manager”), an affiliate of the Advisor, will be engaged to act as the manager of each Delaware statutory trust holding a DST Property.

 

Summary Risk Factors

 

An investment in shares of our common stock involves significant risks, including among others:

 

· There is no public trading market for shares of our common stock, and it will therefore be difficult for you to sell your shares.

 

· There are limits on the ownership, transferability and redemption of shares of our common stock which significantly limit the liquidity of an investment in shares of our common stock.

 

· Generally, our share redemption program imposes a quarterly cap on aggregate net redemptions of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes equal to the amount of shares of such classes with a value (based on the redemption price per share on the day the redemption is effected) of up to 5% of the aggregate NAV of the outstanding shares of such classes as of the last day of the previous calendar quarter. In addition, the vast majority of our assets consist of properties that cannot generally be liquidated on short notice without impacting our ability to realize full value upon their disposition. Therefore, we may not have sufficient resources to satisfy redemption requests. Our board of directors has the right to modify, suspend or terminate our share redemption program if it deems such action to be in the best interest of our stockholders. As a result, our shares should be considered as having only limited liquidity and at times may be illiquid. See “Description of Capital Stock—Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program” for more information.

 

· There is significant pent up demand from Class E holders to have their shares purchased pursuant to a tender offer or to have their shares redeemed under our Class E share redemption program, and we plan to use a portion of the proceeds from this offering to purchase or redeem Class E shares. As a result, we may have fewer offering proceeds available to retire debt or acquire additional properties, which may result in reduced liquidity and profitability or restrict our ability to grow our NAV.

 

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· The purchase and redemption price for our Class A, Class W and Class I shares, and the redemption price for our Class E shares, will be determined at the end of each business day based upon the NAV for such class and will not be based on any established trading price. Each accepted purchase order and redemption request will be executed at a price equal to our NAV per share for the class of shares being purchased or redeemed, next determined after the purchase order or redemption request is received in good order (subject to commissions for the purchase of Class A shares in our primary offering and, subject to limited exceptions, a 2% discount for the redemption of Class A, Class W or Class I shares held less than 365 days). In addition, there may be a delay between your purchase or redemption decision and the execution date caused by time necessary for you and your participating broker-dealer to put a purchase order or redemption request in “good order,” which means, for these purposes, that all required information has been completed, all proper signatures have been provided, and, for purchase orders, funds for payment have been provided. As a result, you will not know the purchase or redemption price at the time you submit your purchase order or redemption request. The price at which your purchase is executed could be higher than our NAV per share at the time you submit your purchase order, and the price at which your redemption is executed could be lower than our NAV per share at the time you submit your redemption request.

 

· In connection with this offering, we incur fees and expenses. Excluding selling commissions (which are effectively paid by purchasers of Class A shares in the primary offering at the time of purchase, because the purchase price of such shares is equal to the NAV per Class A share plus the selling commission, and therefore have no effect on our NAV), we expect to incur up to $5 million in primary dealer fees and approximately $12.8 million in organization and offering expenses, which will decrease the amount of cash we have available for operations and new investments. In the future we may conduct other offerings of common stock (whether existing or new classes), preferred stock, debt securities or of interests in our Operating Partnership. We may also amend the terms of this offering. We may structure or amend such offerings to attract institutional investors or other sources of capital in connection with efforts to provide additional Class E liquidity or otherwise. The terms of this offering will reduce the NAV of your shares over time in accordance with our valuation procedures and the terms of this offering and future offerings (such as the offering price and the distribution fees and expenses) may negatively impact our ability to pay distributions and your overall return.

 

· Our NAV does not currently represent our enterprise value and may not accurately reflect the actual prices at which our assets could be liquidated on any given day, the value a third party would pay for all or substantially all of our shares, or the price that our shares would trade at on a national stock exchange. Our management’s assessment of the market values of our properties may also differ from the appraised values of our properties. Further, it is possible that the annual appraisals of our properties may not be spread evenly throughout the year, and rapidly changing market conditions or material events may not be fully reflected in our daily NAV. The resulting potential disparity in our NAV may inure to the benefit of redeeming stockholders or non-redeeming stockholders and new purchasers of our common stock, depending on whether our published NAV per share for such class is overstated or understated.

 

· Some of our executive officers, directors and other key personnel are also officers, directors, managers, key personnel and/or holders of an ownership interest in the Advisor, our Dealer Manager, our property manager and/or other entities related to our Sponsor. As a result, they face conflicts of interest, including but not limited to conflicts arising from time constraints, allocation of investment and leasing opportunities and the fact that the fees the Advisor receives for services rendered to us are based on our NAV, the procedures for which the Advisor assists our board of directors in developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating.

 

· We are subject to risks generally incident to the ownership of real property, including changes in global, national, regional or local economic, demographic, political, real estate or capital market conditions and other factors particular to the locations of our respective real property investments. We are unable to predict future changes in these market conditions. For example, an economic downturn or rise in interest rates could make it more difficult for us to lease properties or dispose of them. In addition, rising interest rates could make alternative interest-bearing and other investments more attractive and, therefore, potentially lower the relative value of our existing real estate investments.

 

· Our use of leverage increases the risk of loss on our investments and places certain restrictions upon us which may limit us from realizing the most optimal value for such investments.

 

· If we fail to maintain our status as a REIT, it would adversely affect our results of operations and our ability to make distributions to our stockholders.

 

· You will not have the opportunity to evaluate future investments we will make with the proceeds raised in this offering prior to purchasing shares of our common stock.

 

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· The amount of distributions we may pay is uncertain. We may pay distributions from sources other than cash flow from operations, including, without limitation, the sale of assets, borrowings or offering proceeds. The use of these sources for distributions would decrease the amount of cash we have available for new investments, repayment of debt, share redemptions and other corporate purposes, and could potentially reduce your overall return and adversely impact and dilute the value of your investment in shares of our common stock.

 

· Because the dealer manager fee and distribution fee are allocated on a class-specific basis and are borne by all holders of the applicable class, you will be allocated a share of class-specific expenses of our other offerings.

 

· Our NAV per share may suddenly change if the valuations of our properties materially change from prior valuations or the actual operating results materially differ from what we originally budgeted. For example, we regularly face lease expirations across our portfolio, and as we move further away from lease commencement toward the end of a lease term, the valuation of the underlying property generally will be expected to drop depending on the likelihood of a renewal or a new lease on similar terms.

 

Compensation to the Advisor and its Affiliates

 

The Advisor and its affiliates receive fees and reimbursements for services related to this offering and for the investment and management of our assets, subject to the review and approval of our independent directors. Set forth below is a summary of the fees and expenses we expect to pay these entities in connection with this offering or the operation of the Company. The maximum amount that we may pay with respect to such fees and expenses is also set forth below, assuming the maximum gross proceeds from the primary offering and distribution reinvestment plan. See “The Advisor and the Advisory Agreement—Management Compensation” for a more detailed explanation of the fees and expenses payable to the Advisor and its affiliates.

 

The selling commissions listed below are effectively paid by purchasers of Class A shares in the primary offering at the time of purchase, because the purchase price of such shares is equal to the NAV per Class A share plus the selling commission, and such selling commissions therefore have no effect on our NAV. The dealer manager fee and the distribution fee listed below are allocated on a class-specific basis and differ for each class, even when the NAV of each class is the same. Such class-specific fees are generally expected to affect distributions of the applicable classes rather than the NAV per share of such classes. The other fees and expenses below, including the primary dealer fee, are not class-specific. Accordingly, they are allocated among all holders of Fund Interests ratably according to the NAV of their units or shares.

 

Because the dealer manager fee and distribution fee are allocated on a class-specific basis and are borne by all holders of the applicable class, you will be allocated a share of class-specific expenses of our other offerings. Even if the FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation are reached with respect to this offering, you will be allocated a share of class-specific expenses of our other offerings. Accordingly, with respect to the shares that you own, you should expect to be allocated the maximum dealer manager fee and distribution fee described below, for as long as you own your shares.

 

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SUMMARY OF COMPENSATION TO THE ADVISOR AND ITS AFFILIATES

 

Type of Compensation
and Recipient  

Description and Method of Computation 

Maximum Amount  

     
Selling Commission—the Dealer Manager

We pay the Dealer Manager selling commissions of up to 3.0% of the public offering price per Class A share. The actual selling commission expressed as a percentage of the public offering price per Class A share may be higher or lower than 3.0% due to rounding. Selling commissions may be waived at the direction of the Dealer Manager and may be reduced for volume purchases. Substantially all of the sales commissions are expected to be reallowed to third-party broker-dealers participating in this offering.

 

We do not pay selling commissions with respect to purchases of Class W shares, Class I shares, shares of any class sold pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan, or Class A shares sold through fee-based programs, also known as wrap accounts, or through investment advisers registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or applicable state law.

 

The actual amount will depend on the number of Class A shares sold, the NAV per share and the type of accounts that purchase shares. Aggregate selling commissions will equal $22,500,000 if we sell the maximum offering, assuming that all shares sold are Class A shares, the maximum selling commission is paid for each primary offering share and there is no reallocation of shares between our primary offering and our distribution reinvestment plan.
Dealer Manager Fee—the Dealer Manager

Subject to FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation, we pay the Dealer Manager a dealer manager fee that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.60% of our NAV per share for each of our Class A and Class W shares and an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.10% of our NAV per share for our Class I shares for such day on a continuous basis from year to year. We will cease paying the dealer manager fee on the earlier to occur of the following: (i) a listing of the class of such shares on a national securities exchange or (ii) such shares no longer being outstanding.

 

The Dealer Manager may reallow a portion of the dealer manager fee to participating broker-dealers that meet certain thresholds of our shares under management and certain other metrics and broker-dealers servicing investors’ accounts, referred to as servicing broker-dealers. The dealer manager fee is payable monthly in arrears. The dealer manager fee is payable with respect to all Class A, Class W and Class I shares, including Class A, Class W and Class I shares issued under our distribution reinvestment plan. We do not pay a dealer manager fee with respect to Class E shares.

 

Actual amounts depend upon the number of shares of each class outstanding, our daily NAV and when shares are outstanding, and, therefore, cannot be determined at this time. The additional dealer manager fee with respect to shares sold in this offering will equal $6,000,000 per annum if we sell the maximum offering, assuming that all shares sold are Class W shares and that the NAV per Class W share remains the same throughout this offering.  
Distribution Fee—the Dealer Manager

Subject to FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation, we pay the Dealer Manager a distribution fee with respect to our Class A shares only that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.50% of the amount of our NAV per share for the Class A shares for such day on a continuous basis from year to year. We will cease paying the distribution fee on the earlier to occur of the following: (i) a listing of the class of such shares on a national securities exchange, (ii) or such shares no longer being outstanding.

 

The Dealer Manager may reallow the distribution fee to participating broker-dealers and servicing broker-dealers. The distribution fee is payable monthly in arrears. The distribution fee is payable with respect to all Class A shares, including Class A shares issued under our distribution reinvestment plan.

 

We do not pay a distribution fee with respect to Class E shares, Class W shares or Class I shares.

 

Actual amounts depend upon our daily NAV, the number of Class A shares outstanding and when shares are outstanding, and, therefore, cannot be determined at this time. The additional distribution fee with respect to shares sold in this offering will equal $4,887,500 per annum if we sell the maximum offering, assuming that all shares sold are Class A shares, that the NAV per Class A share remains the same throughout this offering and that there is no reallocation of shares between our primary offering and our distribution reinvestment plan.

 

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Primary Dealer Fee—the Dealer Manager We may pay to the Dealer Manager a primary dealer fee in the amount of up to 5.0% of the gross proceeds raised from the sale of Class I shares in the primary offering, provided that (i) the total gross proceeds raised with respect to which the primary dealer fee will apply may not exceed $100,000,000, subject to further increase by our board of directors, in its discretion; (ii) the primary dealer fee will only be paid with respect to sales made by participating broker-dealers specifically approved by us as being eligible; and (iii) the primary dealer fee will only be paid with respect to sales made at times approved by us. The Dealer Manager may reallow a portion of the primary dealer fee to the participating broker-dealers involved in selling such Class I shares based on the portion of the gross proceeds raised from their customers. The Dealer Manager will consider the primary dealer fee to be underwriting compensation. The primary dealer fee will be paid by us and will not be considered to be a class-specific expense. Accordingly, the expense will be allocated among all holders of Fund Interests ratably according to the NAV of their units or shares. Currently, the maximum primary dealer fee we will pay our Dealer Manager is $5 million, although in the future we may provide for additional primary dealer fee payments. Actual amounts depend upon the proceeds raised from the sale of Class I shares in transactions that entitle our Dealer Manager to a primary dealer fee. The primary dealer fee will equal $5,000,000 if we pay the maximum 5.0% primary dealer fee on $100,000,000 in gross proceeds from sales of Class I shares in the primary offering.
Additional Underwriting Compensation – the Dealer Manager or the Advisor We pay directly, or reimburse the Advisor and the Dealer Manager if they pay on our behalf, certain additional items of underwriting compensation described in “Plan of Distribution – Underwriting Compensation,” including legal fees of the Dealer Manager, reimbursements for customary travel, lodging, meals and reasonable entertainment expenses of registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager, the cost of educational conferences held by us, including costs reimbursement for registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager and registered representatives of participating broker-dealers to attend educational conferences sponsored by us, attendance fees and costs reimbursement for registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager to attend seminars conducted by participating broker-dealers, and promotional items. In addition to this additional underwriting compensation, the Advisor may also pay the Dealer Manager additional amounts to fund certain of the Dealer Manager’s costs and expenses related to the distribution of this offering, which will not be reimbursed by us, as described in “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Other Compensation.” Also, the Dealer Manager may pay supplemental fees or commissions to participating broker-dealers and servicing broker-dealers with respect to Class I shares sold in the primary offering, which will not be reimbursed by us, as described in “Plan of Distribution – Underwriting Compensation – Supplemental Fees and Commissions.” We estimate our additional underwriting compensation expenses to be approximately $3,270,000 if we sell the maximum offering amount.
Issuer Organization and Offering Expense Reimbursement—the Advisor or its affiliates, including the Dealer Manager We pay directly, or reimburse the Advisor and the Dealer Manager if they pay on our behalf, any organization and offering expenses (other than selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, distribution fee, the primary dealer fee, supplemental fees and commissions, and certain other amounts described in “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Other Compensation”) as and when incurred. After the termination of the primary offering and again after termination of the offering under our distribution reinvestment plan, the Advisor has agreed to reimburse us to the extent that total cumulative organization and offering expenses (including selling commissions, the primary dealer fee, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee and any additional underwriting compensation) that we incur exceed 15% of our gross proceeds from the applicable offering.   We estimate our issuer organization and offering expenses (which excludes underwriting compensation expenses, including selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee, the primary dealer fee, supplemental fees and commissions, the additional underwriting compensation described above and certain other amounts described in “Plan of Distribution – Underwriting Compensation – Other Compensation”) to be approximately $9,566,300 if we sell the maximum offering amount.

 

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Advisory Fees—the Advisor

In consideration for the asset management services it provides on our behalf, we pay the Advisor an advisory fee equal to (1) a fixed component, payable monthly in arrears, that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 1.15% of (a) the Aggregate Fund NAV (i.e., the aggregate NAV of our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with the OP Units held by third parties) for such day and (b) the consideration received by us or our affiliate for selling interests in DST Properties to third party investors, net of up-front fees and expense reimbursements payable out of gross sale proceeds from the sale of such interests, and (2) a performance component calculated on the basis of the overall non-compounded investment return provided to holders of Fund Interests (i.e., our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with the OP Units held by third parties) in any calendar year such that the Advisor will receive 25% of the overall return in excess of 6%; provided that in no event will the performance component exceed 10% of the overall return for such year. However, the performance component will not be earned on any increase in the weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest except to the extent that it exceeds the historically highest year-end weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest since the commencement of our daily NAV calculations (currently $7.47). The foregoing NAV thresholds are subject to adjustment by our board of directors. Additionally, the Advisor will provide us with a waiver of a portion of its fees generally equal to the amount of the performance component that would have been payable with respect to the Class E shares and the Class E OP Units held by third parties until the NAV of such shares or units exceeds $10.00 a share or unit, the benefit of which will be shared among all holders of Fund Interests. For a more comprehensive description of the performance fee and related calculations, see “The Advisor and the Advisory Agreement—Summary of Fees, Commissions and Reimbursements.”

 

We will also pay our Advisor a development management fee equal to 4.0% of the cost to develop, construct or improve any real property assets, including DST Properties.

 

In addition, we will pay the Advisor a fee of 1.0% of the total consideration we receive upon the sale of real property assets (excluding DST Properties). For these purposes, a “sale” means any transaction or series of transactions whereby we or the Operating Partnership directly or indirectly (including through the sale of any interest in a joint venture or through a sale by a joint venture in which we hold an interest) sells, grants, transfers, conveys, or relinquishes its ownership of any real property or portion thereof, including the lease of any real property consisting of a building only, and including any event with respect to any real property which gives rise to a significant amount of insurance proceeds or condemnation awards.

  

Further, for providing a substantial amount of services in connection with the sale of a property (excluding DST Properties), as determined by a majority of our independent directors, we will pay the Advisor up to 50.0% of the reasonable, customary and competitive commission paid for the sale of a comparable real property, provided that such amount shall not exceed 1.0% of the contract price of the property sold and, when added to all other real estate commissions paid to unaffiliated parties in connection with the sale, may not exceed the lesser of a competitive real estate commission or 6.0% of the sales price of the property.

 

Actual amounts depend upon our Aggregate Fund NAV, the distributions we pay, the changes in NAV and future development and sales of assets and, therefore, cannot be calculated at this time.

 

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Expense Reimbursement—the Advisor Subject to certain limitations, we reimburse the Advisor for all of the costs it incurs in connection with the services it provides to us, including, without limitation, our allocable share of the Advisor’s overhead, which includes but is not limited to the Advisor’s rent, utilities and personnel costs, as well as a portion of the compensation payable to our principal executive officer and our principal financial officer; provided, that we will not reimburse the Advisor or its affiliates for services for which the Advisor or its affiliates are entitled to compensation in the form of a separate fee, which services and fees are described in this table. Actual amounts are dependent upon actual expenses incurred and, therefore, cannot be determined at this time.
Property Management and Leasing Fees—the Property Manager

We may pay Dividend Capital Property Management LLC (the “Property Manager”), which is an affiliate of our Advisor, or other affiliates an amount equal to a market-based percentage of the annual gross revenues of each real property owned by us and managed by the Property Manager. Such fee is expected to range from 2% to 5% of annual gross revenues.

 

In addition, we may pay the Property Manager or other affiliates a separate fee for the one-time initial lease-up of newly constructed real properties. Such fee is generally expected to range from 2% to 8% of the projected first years’ annual gross revenues of the property.

 

Actual amounts are dependent upon actual gross revenues of each real property owned by us and managed by the Property Manager and, therefore, cannot be determined at this time.

In lieu of cash, the Advisor may elect to receive the payment of its fees and the reimbursement of its expenses in Class E, Class A, Class W or Class I shares of our common stock. Any such shares will be valued at the NAV per share applicable to such shares on the issue date and will not be eligible for redemption by the Advisor for six months from the issue date.

 

We have granted 565,789 restricted stock units (“Company RSUs”) to the Advisor that remain unvested and unsettled as of April 4, 2016. Each Company RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of our Class I common stock. The Company RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offsets of advisory fees and expenses otherwise payable from the Company to the Advisor based on a value of the NAV per Class I share on the grant date of the applicable Company RSU (the weighted average grant-date NAV per Class I share with respect to the unsettled Company RSUs is $7.14 as of April 4, 2016). As of April 4, 2016, all of the Class I shares that were issued upon settlement of Company RSUs have been used for fee offset.

 

The Advisor has granted 544,572 restricted stock units (“Advisor RSUs”) to certain employees of the Advisor and its affiliates that remain unsettled as of April 4, 2016. Each Advisor RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of our Class I common stock. The Advisor RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offsets of compensation otherwise payable from the Advisor or its affiliates to the applicable employee based on a value of the NAV per Class I share on the grant date of the applicable Advisor RSU (the weighted average grant-date NAV per Class I share with respect to the unsettled Advisor RSUs is $7.15 as of April 4, 2016). As of April 4, 2016, no Advisor RSUs have vested but have not been settled. Both Company RSUs and Advisor RSUs are entitled to dividend equivalents that mirror the dividends paid by us with respect to Class I shares. For more information, see “The Advisor and the Advisory Agreement—Restricted Stock Unit Agreements.”

 

Conflicts of Interest

 

The Advisor and certain of its affiliates are subject to conflicts of interest in connection with the management of our business affairs, including the following:

 

· The directors, officers and other employees of the Advisor or its affiliates must allocate their time between advising us and managing other real estate projects and business activities in which they may be involved.

 

· The compensation payable by us to the Advisor and its affiliates may not be on terms that would result from arm’s-length negotiations, is payable whether or not our stockholders receive distributions, and is based on our NAV, the procedures for which the Advisor assists our board of directors in developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating.

 

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· We cannot guarantee that the terms of any joint venture proposed by the Advisor to be entered into with entities affiliated with the Advisor or entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor will be equally beneficial to us as those that would result from arm’s-length negotiations.

 

· We may compete with other entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, whether existing or created in the future, including Logistics Property Trust Inc. (which we refer to herein as “LPT”) and Industrial Property Trust Inc. (which we refer to herein as “IPT”), for investments, subjecting the Advisor and its affiliates to certain conflicts of interest in evaluating the suitability of investment opportunities and making or recommending acquisitions on our behalf. As a result of this competition, certain investment opportunities may not be available to us. For example, in recognition of the fact that we also desire to acquire industrial properties and have a separate day-to-day acquisition team, the Sponsor and the Advisor have agreed, subject to changes approved or required by the Conflicts Resolution Committee, that (1) if an industrial property opportunity is a widely-marketed, brokered transaction, we, on the one hand, and LPT and/or IPT, on the other hand, may simultaneously and independently pursue such transaction, and (2) if an industrial property is not a widely-marketed, brokered transaction, then, as between us, on the one hand, and LPT and/or IPT, on the other hand, the management team and employees of each company generally are free to pursue any industrial opportunity at any time, subject to certain allocations if non-widely-marketed transactions are first sourced by certain shared employees, managers or directors. One of our independent directors, Mr. Charles Duke, is also an independent director for LPT and IPT. If there are any transactions or policies affecting us and LPT or IPT, Mr. Duke will recuse himself from making any such decisions for as long as he holds both positions.

 

· Regardless of the quality of the assets acquired, the services provided to us or whether we make distributions to our stockholders, the Advisor and its affiliates receive certain fees and reimbursements in connection with transactions involving the management and sale of our investments.

 

· The Property Manager and the Dealer Manager are affiliates of our Advisor. As a result, (i) we may not always have the benefit of independent property management, (ii) we do not have the benefit of an independent dealer manager and (iii) you do not have the benefit of an independent third-party review of this offering to the same extent as if we and the Dealer Manager were unaffiliated with our Advisor.

 

Our Board

 

We operate under the direction of our board of directors, the members of which are accountable to us and our stockholders as fiduciaries. The board of directors is responsible for the management and control of our affairs. We currently have five members on our board, three of whom are independent of us, the Advisor and our respective affiliates. Our directors are elected annually by the stockholders. Our board of directors has established an Audit Committee and an Investment Committee. Our board of directors has delegated the responsibility to consider and resolve all conflicts that may arise between us and either LPT or IPT to a conflicts resolution committee (the “Conflicts Resolution Committee”). Our board of directors has also delegated certain responsibilities with respect to certain disposition, leasing, capital expenditure, borrowing and refinancing decisions to a management committee (the “Management Committee”).

 

The Advisor

 

Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC, our Advisor, was formed as a Delaware limited liability company in April 2005 and is wholly owned by our Sponsor. Subject to our board of directors’ oversight, we rely on the Advisor to manage our day-to-day activities and to implement our investment strategy. In addition, subject to the oversight, review and approval of our board of directors, the Advisor undertakes to, among other things, research, identify, review and make investments in and dispositions of real property and real estate-related investments on our behalf consistent with our investment policies and objectives. The Advisor performs its duties and responsibilities under an advisory agreement with us (the “Advisory Agreement”) as a fiduciary of ours and our stockholders. The term of the Advisory Agreement is for one year, subject to renewals by our board of directors for an unlimited number of successive one-year periods. The current term of the Advisory Agreement expires on June 30, 2016. Our officers and our two interested directors are all employees of the Advisor or its affiliates. The names and biographical information of our directors and officers are contained under “Management—Directors and Executive Officers.”

 

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Our Dealer Manager

 

Dividend Capital Securities LLC, which we refer to as the Dealer Manager, is distributing the shares of our common stock offered hereby on a “best efforts” basis. The Dealer Manager is an entity related to the Advisor and is a member of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc., or FINRA. The Dealer Manager will coordinate our distribution effort and manage our relationships with participating broker-dealers and financial advisors and provide assistance in connection with compliance matters relating to marketing this offering. Separately, the Dealer Manager has also been engaged by us to conduct the private placements of our DST Program.

 

Other Affiliates of the Advisor and Related Entities

 

In addition to our Advisor and our Dealer Manager, other affiliates of the Advisor are involved in this offering and our operations. The Property Manager may perform certain property management services for us and the Operating Partnership. The DST Manager will be engaged to act as the manager of each Delaware statutory trust holding a DST Property. We and the Advisor have engaged BCG TRT Advisors LLC, which we refer to as “BCG TRT Advisors,” to provide non-discretionary advice and recommendations with respect to our investment in securities. BCG TRT Advisors is wholly owned by BCG Advisors LLC, a registered investment advisor.

 

Our Joint Ventures

 

A component of our investment strategy may include entering into joint venture agreements with partners in connection with certain property acquisitions and debt-related investments or investments in funds managed by an affiliate of our Sponsor. With respect to these agreements, we may make varying levels of contributions in such ventures, including, without limitation, contributions of existing assets, and may take varying levels of management, control and decision rights. These agreements may allow us or our joint venture partners to be entitled to profit participation upon the sale of a property. With respect to any joint venture, we may enter into an advisory or sub-advisory agreement with an affiliate of the Advisor. We may also enter into arrangements with the Advisor in which the Advisor receives fees (directly or indirectly, including through a subsidiary of ours) from the joint venture entity or from the joint venture partner. Fees received from joint venture entities or partners and paid, directly or indirectly (including without limitation, through us or our subsidiaries), to the Advisor may be more or less than similar fees that we pay to the Advisor pursuant to the Advisory Agreement.

 

In certain circumstances, we have entered and may enter into a joint venture with a partner who is a product specialist. Typically, such product partners are affiliated with the Advisor or third-party product specialists that have specialized expertise and dedicated resources in specific areas of real property or real estate-related debt or securities and assist the Advisor in connection with identifying, evaluating and recommending potential investments, performing due diligence, negotiating purchases and managing our assets on a day-to-day basis. These partnerships are intended to allow the Advisor to leverage the organizational infrastructure of experienced real estate developers, operators and investment managers, and to potentially give us access to a greater number of high-quality real property and other investment opportunities. The use of product specialists or other service providers does not eliminate or reduce the Advisor’s fiduciary duty to us. The Advisor retains ultimate responsibility for the performance of all of the matters entrusted to it under the Advisory Agreement. Pursuant to the Advisory Agreement with the Advisor, we pay the Advisor certain fees. Where we have entered and may enter into a joint venture with a partner who is a product specialist of our Advisor, a portion of the Advisor’s fees are generally reallowed to the product specialist in exchange for services provided. The product specialists may or may not make an equity capital contribution to any such arrangement and may or may not participate in any potential profits of the relevant portfolio assets. Such profit participations are separate from and have no impact on fees paid by us to the Advisor.

 

As of December 31, 2015, all of our joint venture partners also serve as product specialists with regard to the properties held in their respective joint venture. We had joint venture agreements with the following joint venture partners and/or their affiliates as of December 31, 2015: 

                 
Joint Venture Partner   Investment Type   Number of
Investments
    % of Fair Value  
Amerimar Enterprises LLC   Office property     1       1.3 %
DCT Industrial Trust   Industrial properties     4       1.2 %
Alliance Commercial Properties LLC   Office properties     2       1.2 %
          7       3.7 %

 

Our Subsidiaries

 

We primarily own interests in our real properties through DCTRT Real Estate Holdco LLC or wholly owned subsidiaries thereof, and all of our real estate-related debt and securities through DCTRT Securities Holdco LLC or wholly owned subsidiaries thereof. Both DCTRT Real Estate Holdco LLC and DCTRT Securities Holdco LLC are direct wholly owned subsidiaries of the Operating Partnership.

 

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Structure Chart

 

The chart below shows the relationships among the Advisor, the Sponsor, the Dealer Manager, the Property Manager, the DST Manager and other of our Advisor’s affiliates. Our Sponsor and the Advisor are presently each directly or indirectly majority owned, controlled and/or managed by John A. Blumberg, James R. Mulvihill, Evan H. Zucker and/or their affiliates. The Dealer Manager, the Property Manager and the DST Manager are also presently each directly or indirectly majority owned, controlled and/or managed by Messrs. Blumberg, Mulvihill, Zucker, and/or their affiliates. Our Sponsor has issued, and may in the future issue, equity interests or derivatives thereof to certain of their employees, affiliated or other unaffiliated individuals, consultants or other parties. However, none of such transactions has or is expected to result in a change in control of our Sponsor.

 

(FLOW CHART)  

 

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Distribution Policy

 

We currently are, and expect that in the future we will continue to be, organized and operate in a manner intended to qualify as a REIT for U.S. federal income tax purposes. In order to qualify as a REIT, we are required to distribute at least 90% of our annual taxable income to our stockholders. We intend to accrue distributions daily and make distributions on a quarterly basis. However, we reserve the right to adjust the periods during which distributions accrue and are paid. In connection with a distribution to our stockholders, our board of directors has historically authorized, and intends to continue to authorize, a quarterly distribution of a certain dollar amount per share of our common stock. We then calculate each stockholder’s specific distribution amount for the quarter using daily record and declaration dates. Your distributions will begin to accrue on the date and time that you become a record owner of our common stock, subject to our board of directors declaring a distribution for record owners as of such date and time. We accrue the amount of declared distributions as our liability on a daily basis, and such liability is accounted for in determining the NAV. See “Selected Information Regarding Our Operations—Distribution Information” and “Description of Capital Stock—Distributions.”

 

Distribution Reinvestment Plan

 

You may participate in our distribution reinvestment plan and elect to have the cash distributions attributable to the class of shares that you own automatically reinvested in additional shares of the same class. The cash distributions you receive will be reinvested in shares of our common stock at a price equal to our NAV per share applicable to the class of shares purchased, calculated as of the distribution date. Our board of directors may amend, suspend or terminate the distribution reinvestment plan in its discretion at any time upon 10 days’ notice to you. We may provide notice by including such information (a) in a Current Report on Form 8-K or in our annual or quarterly reports, all publicly filed with the Commission or (b) in a separate mailing to the participants. Following any termination of the distribution reinvestment plan, all subsequent distributions to stockholders would be made in cash.

 

Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program

 

We expect that there will be no regular secondary trading market for shares of our common stock. While you should view your investment as long term with limited liquidity, we have adopted a Class A, Class W and Class I share redemption program, whereby stockholders may request that we redeem all or any portion of their Class A, Class W or Class I shares. We also have a separate share redemption program for holders of our Class E shares, described below. Unless the context otherwise requires, when we describe our share redemption program in this prospectus, we are referring to our share redemption program for holders of Class A, Class W and Class I shares.

 

Generally, our share redemption program imposes a quarterly cap on the aggregate net redemptions of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes equal to the amount of shares of such classes with a value (based on the redemption price per share on the day the redemption is effected) of up to 5% of the aggregate NAV of the outstanding shares of such classes as of the last day of the previous calendar quarter. Because these volume limitations are based, in part, on the aggregate NAV of the outstanding shares of the Class A, Class W and Class I share classes as of the last day of the quarter preceding the redemption request, the availability of redemptions in any quarter is dependent upon, among other things, the success of this offering. Subject to limited exceptions, shares redeemed within 365 days of the date of purchase are subject to a short-term trading discount equal to 2% of the gross proceeds otherwise payable with respect to the redemption, which inures indirectly to the benefit of our remaining stockholders. See “Description of Capital Stock—Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program” for more information.

 

Although the vast majority of our assets consist of properties that cannot generally be readily liquidated on short notice without impacting our ability to realize full value upon their disposition, we intend to maintain a number of sources of liquidity including (i) cash equivalents (e.g. money market funds), other short-term investments, U.S. government securities, agency securities and liquid real estate-related securities and (ii) one or more borrowing facilities. In order to maintain a reasonable level of liquidity, we intend to generally maintain under normal circumstances the following aggregate allocation to the above sources of liquidity (collectively, referred to as “liquid assets”): (1) 10% of the aggregate NAV of our outstanding Class A, Class W and Class I shares up to $1 billion of collective Class A, Class W and Class I share NAV and (2) 5% of the aggregate NAV of our outstanding Class A, Class W and Class I shares in excess of $1 billion of collective Class A, Class W and Class I share NAV. However, no assurance can be given that we will maintain this allocation to liquid assets. In addition, we may also fund redemptions from any available source of funds, including operating cash flows, borrowings, proceeds from this offering and/or sales of our assets.

 

Despite these sources of liquidity, we may not always have sufficient liquid resources to satisfy redemption requests and you may not be able to redeem your shares under the program. If a redemption request with respect to Class A, Class W or Class I shares is made and accepted, the redemption price per share will be equal to the NAV per share on the date of redemption of the class of shares being redeemed. Our board of directors may modify, suspend or terminate our share redemption program if it deems such action to be in the best interest of our stockholders. Our board of directors will assess the overall level of liquidity available in our portfolio and the need for available funds prior to taking any action that will result in limiting our redemptions. See “Description of Capital Stock—Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program—Redemption Limitations.”

 

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Class E Share Redemption Program and Tender Offers

 

We also have a separate Class E share redemption program for holders of our Class E shares under which, pursuant to an amendment effective on December 12, 2015, redemptions are only available with respect to Class E shares of common stock in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder and subject to the following limitation: unless approved by the board of directors, we will not make, during any consecutive twelve-month period, redemptions in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder that exceed five percent of the number of Class E shares of common stock outstanding at the beginning of such twelve-month period. Prior to this time, redemptions were not limited to requests made in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder. With respect to Class E stockholders desiring liquidity other than in connection with an event of death or disability, our board of directors evaluates each quarter whether to make liquidity available through the Class E share redemption program or through a tender offer process. In order to make such liquidity available through the Class E share redemption program, our board of directors would need to amend the Class E share redemption program. Under the Class E share redemption program, we redeem Class E shares on a quarterly basis. If a redemption request with respect to Class E shares is made and accepted, the redemption price per share will be equal to the NAV per Class E share on the date of redemption.

 

With respect to Class E stockholders desiring liquidity other than in connection with an event of death or disability, our board of directors evaluates each quarter whether to make liquidity available through the Class E share redemption program or through a tender offer process. In order to provide additional liquidity to Class E stockholders, from time to time we may conduct self-tender offers for Class E shares. Although no assurances can be made, our board of directors currently intends to make liquidity available to Class E stockholders each quarter (other than liquidity made available in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder through the Class E share redemption program) in an amount that is the greater of (A) (i) funds received from the sale of Class E shares under our distribution reinvestment plan during such calendar quarter, plus (ii) 50% of the difference between (a) the proceeds (net of sales commissions) received by us from the sale of Class A, Class W and Class I shares in any public primary offering and under our distribution reinvestment plan during the most recently completed calendar quarter, and (b) the dollar amount used to redeem Class A, Class W and Class I shares during the most recently completed calendar quarter pursuant to the Class A, Class W and Class I share redemption program, less (iii) funds used for redemptions of Class E shares in the most recently completed quarter due to qualifying death or disability requests of a stockholder during such calendar quarter and (B) the amount that would result in repurchases or redemptions, during any consecutive twelve month period, at least equal to five percent of the number of Class E shares outstanding at the beginning of such twelve-month period (the “Class E Liquidity Amount”). Our board of directors may at any time decide to reduce or eliminate the Class E Liquidity Amount or cease making Class E liquidity available through self-tender offers.

 

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QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS ABOUT THIS OFFERING

 

Set forth below are some of the more frequently asked questions and answers relating to our structure, our management, our business and an offering of this type.

 

Questions and Answers Relating to our Structure, Management and Business

 

Q: WHAT IS A “REIT”?

 

A: In general, a REIT is a company that:

 

· Offers the benefits of a diversified real estate portfolio under professional management;

 

· Is required to make distributions to investors of at least 90% of its taxable income for each year;

 

· Prevents the federal “double taxation” treatment of income that generally results from investments in a corporation because a REIT is not generally subject to federal corporate income taxes on the portion of its net income that is distributed to the REIT’s stockholders; and

 

· Combines the capital of many investors to acquire or provide financing for real estate assets.

 

Q: WHAT IS YOUR RATIONALE FOR PURSUING A DIVERSIFIED REAL ESTATE PORTFOLIO?

 

A: We believe that the real estate market is cyclical, with different demand for property types at different times. Although we do not invest for the short term, we are active portfolio managers and we will seek to take advantage of opportunities to acquire or dispose of assets presented to us by real estate markets. One reason we focus on multiple property types and markets is to increase our ability to take advantage of these market cycles. We believe that the more opportunities we see in which to invest our capital, the more selective we can be in choosing strategic and accretive investments, which we believe may result in attractive total returns for our stockholders. Seeing more opportunities also may allow us to be consistent and meaningful investors throughout different cycles. When we believe one market is overvalued, we patiently wait and focus on another market that we believe is overlooked.

 

Q: WHAT IS THE EXPERIENCE OF THE ADVISOR’S MANAGEMENT TEAM?

 

A: The key members of the Advisor’s management team include, in alphabetical order, John A. Blumberg, Eileen Hallquist, Jeffrey L. Johnson, Andrea L. Karp, Richard D. Kincaid, J. Michael Lynch, Lainie P. Minnick, Gregory M. Moran, James R. Mulvihill, Taylor M. Paul, Gary M. Reiff, M. Kirk Scott, Jeffrey W. Taylor, Joshua J. Widoff and Evan H. Zucker. The Advisor’s management team collectively has substantial experience in various aspects of acquiring, owning, managing, financing and operating commercial real estate across diverse property types, as well as significant experience in the asset allocation and investment management of real estate, debt and other investments.

 

Certain affiliates of our Sponsor, the parent of the Advisor, directly or indirectly through affiliated entities, have sponsored five other public REITs: (i) Keystone Property Trust (New York Stock Exchange (“NYSE”): KTR) (formerly known as American Real Estate Investment Corp. and which we refer to herein as “KTR”), which was acquired by ProLogis Trust (NYSE: PLD) in August 2004, (ii) DCT Industrial Trust Inc. (formerly known as Dividend Capital Trust Inc. and which we refer to herein as “DCT Industrial”) (NYSE: DCT), (iii) Industrial Income Trust Inc., or “IIT”, (iv) LPT and (v) IPT. Owners of our Sponsor, directly or indirectly through affiliated entities, have also sponsored numerous private entities. Collectively, as of December 31, 2015, the public and private programs sponsored by certain members of the Advisor’s management team had purchased interests in real estate-related assets having combined acquisition and development costs of approximately $15.4 billion.

 

In addition, Mr. Kincaid, our Chairman of the Board of Directors, was a Trustee and the President of Equity Office Properties Trust from November 2002, and the Chief Executive Officer from April 2003, until Equity Office Properties Trust was acquired by the Blackstone Group in February 2007. Equity Office Properties Trust was a publicly traded REIT and at that time was the largest publicly traded owner and manager of office properties in the United States.

 

Mr. Johnson, our Chief Executive Officer, served as Chief Investment Officer, Executive Vice President and Chairman of the Investment Committee of Equity Office Properties Trust from 2003 until Equity Office Properties Trust was acquired by the Blackstone Group in February 2007.

 

Mr. Lynch, our President, served as Senior Vice President of Investments for Equity Office Properties Trust from May 2004 to March 2007.

 

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Q: WHAT IS THE LIQUIDITY EVENT HISTORY OF OTHER PUBLIC PROGRAMS SPONSORED BY YOUR ADVISOR?

 

A: Certain affiliates of our Sponsor, the parent of the Advisor, and principals of our Advisor directly or indirectly through affiliated entities, collectively or in various combinations, previously sponsored KTR, DCT Industrial and IIT and currently sponsor LPT and IPT. KTR’s common shares were listed on the American Stock Exchange at the time of its initial public offering. The following summary sets forth additional details with respect to the liquidity event history of the other four REITs.

 

DCT Industrial initially sold shares of its common stock to investors from February 2003 through January 2006 at share prices that ranged from $10.00 to $10.50 per share in various public offerings. DCT Industrial intended to effect a liquidity event within ten years of its first sale of common stock, which occurred in February 2003. DCT Industrial’s liquidity event occurred in December 2006, when DCT Industrial completed a listing on the NYSE at an offering price of $12.25 per share.

IIT sold shares of its common stock to investors from December 2009 through April 2012 at a share price of $10.00 per share in its initial public offering. IIT sold shares of its common stock pursuant to a follow-on offering from April 2012 through July 2013 at a share price of $10.40 per share. IIT announced an estimated NAV per share of its common stock of $11.04 as of December 31, 2014. On November 4, 2015, IIT completed its merger with and into Western Logistics II LLC, or “WL II”, an affiliate of Global Logistics Properties Limited, or “GLP”, in an all cash transaction valued at approximately $4.55 billion, subject to certain transaction costs. In connection with the closing, stockholders of IIT were paid a cash distribution of $10.56 per share as well as a distribution of units of beneficial interest in the liquidating trust described below. Academy Partners Ltd. Liability Company, or “Academy Partners”, is the former owner of the name “Industrial Income Trust Inc.”, “Industrial Income Trust” and “IIT”, which we refer to collectively as the “Trademarks” and GLP (or its affiliate), which is unrelated to Academy Partners and its Dividend Capital Group LLC affiliates, is the present owner and source of services provided under the Trademarks. Concurrently with the closing of the merger, IIT transferred 11 properties that are under development or in the lease-up stage to a liquidating trust, the beneficial interests in which were distributed to then-current IIT stockholders, with one unit being distributed for each share held. The liquidating trust units are illiquid. The liquidating trust intends to sell such excluded properties with the goal of maximizing the distributions to IIT’s former stockholders. IIT estimated at the closing of the merger that an additional approximately $0.56 net per liquidating trust unit would be paid in cash upon consummation of the sales of all of the excluded properties (net of certain estimated expenses), based on estimates at closing by IIT’s management of the value of each such property upon stabilization, the costs to complete the development and leasing of the excluded properties, and liquidation expenses. The actual amounts ultimately distributed by the liquidating trust will likely differ, perhaps materially, from this estimate based on, among other things, market conditions for sales of the properties, the amount of time it takes to complete the liquidation and the potential costs associated with the liquidation. As of the date of this prospectus, the liquidating trust currently anticipates completing its liquidation within the next 12 to 24 months following November 4, 2015. There can be no assurance regarding the amount of cash that ultimately will be distributed to IIT’s former stockholders in connection with the liquidating trust or the timing of the liquidation of the liquidating trust.

 

LPT commenced its initial public offering of shares of its common stock in February 2016 at a share price of $10.00 per Class A share and $9.42 per Class T share. LPT’s offering documents indicate an intention to consider alternatives to effect a liquidity event for its stockholders beginning seven to 10 years following the investment of substantially all of the net proceeds from LPT’s offerings. LPT has not invested substantially all of the net proceeds from all of its public offerings, as it is presently engaged in a public offering.

 

IPT commenced its initial public offering of shares of its common stock in July 2013 at a share price of $10.00 per share and the offering is ongoing. On August 14, 2015, IPT announced an estimated NAV of $9.24 per share as of June 30, 2015. Also on August 14, 2015, IPT announced the reclassification of its common stock into Class A shares and Class T shares, to be offered at a price of $10.4407 per Class A share and $9.8298 per Class T share. IPT’s offering documents indicate an intention to consider alternatives to effect a liquidity event for its stockholders beginning seven to 10 years following the investment of substantially all of the net proceeds from IPT’s public offerings. IPT has not invested substantially all of the net proceeds from all of its public offerings, as it is presently engaged in a public offering.

 

Q: WHO CHOOSES WHICH INVESTMENTS TO MAKE?

 

A: The Advisor selects real properties, debt-related investments and other investments based on specific investment objectives and criteria, and is subject to the direction, oversight and investment approval of our board of directors.

 

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Q: WHAT IS A PERPETUAL-LIFE REIT?

 

A: We use the term “perpetual-life REIT” to describe an investment vehicle of indefinite duration focused on real estate properties and other real estate-related assets, the shares of common stock of which are generally intended to be sold and redeemed by the issuer on a continuous basis. Public and private pension plan sponsors, endowments, foundations and other institutional investors have historically availed themselves of similarly structured perpetual-life vehicles as one option for allocating a portion of their portfolio to direct investments in real estate.

 

Q: HOW IS AN INVESTMENT IN SHARES OF OUR COMMON STOCK DIFFERENT FROM PUBLICLY TRADED REITs?

 

A: While investing in REITs whose shares are listed on a national securities exchange is one alternative for investing in real estate, shares of listed REITs generally fluctuate in value with both the real estate market and with the stock market as a whole. We do not intend to list our shares for trading on a national securities exchange and, as such, an investment in shares of our common stock generally differs from listed REITs in the following ways:

 

· The daily NAV per share for each class of our common stock is based directly on the value of our assets and liabilities, while shares of listed REITs are priced by the public trading market, which generally causes a listed REIT’s stock price to fluctuate based on factors such as supply (number of sellers) and demand (number of buyers) of shares, based on shifting preferences among various sectors of the economy as well as other market forces, and such stock price may deviate from the net asset value of such listed REIT.

 

· Most listed REITs focus on selected property types or geographic markets, whereas we have the flexibility to, and intend to, diversify across multiple properties types and geographic markets. We are active portfolio managers and we will seek to take advantage of opportunities to acquire or dispose of assets presented to us by real estate markets. We are not tied to specific allocation targets and we may not always have significant holdings, or any holdings at all, in any particular category.

 

· Industry benchmarks that track the value of direct investments in real estate properties as an asset class have demonstrated a low correlation with the benchmarks for traditional asset classes, such as publicly traded stocks and bonds, whereas in recent periods, listed REITs have demonstrated a high correlation with other publicly traded stocks.

 

Questions and Answers Relating to this Offering

 

Q: HOW DOES A “BEST EFFORTS” OFFERING WORK?

 

A: When shares of common stock are offered to the public on a “best efforts” basis, the broker-dealers participating in this offering are only required to use their best efforts to sell the shares of our common stock. Broker-dealers do not have a firm commitment or obligation to purchase any of the shares of our common stock.

 

Q: WHO CAN BUY SHARES OF COMMON STOCK IN THIS OFFERING?

 

A: In general, you may buy shares of our common stock pursuant to this prospectus provided that you have either (1) a net worth of at least $70,000 and an annual gross income of at least $70,000 or (2) a net worth of at least $250,000. For this purpose, net worth does not include your home, home furnishings and personal automobiles. Generally, you must initially invest at least $2,000. After you have satisfied the applicable minimum purchase requirement, additional purchases must be in increments of $100, except for purchases made pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan. These minimum net worth and investment levels may be higher in certain states, so you should carefully read the more detailed description under “Suitability Standards” above.

 

Q: WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE CLASS A, CLASS W AND CLASS I SHARES OF COMMON STOCK BEING OFFERED?

 

A: We are offering to the public three classes of shares of our common stock, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares. One difference between the share classes is that no selling commissions or distribution fees are paid with respect to Class W and Class I shares. The classes differ with respect to other ongoing fees and expenses as well, and they also have liquidation rights that are pro rata based on their specific NAVs. See “Description of Capital Stock” and “Plan of Distribution” for a discussion of the differences between our Class A, Class W and Class I shares.

 

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Our Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares are available for different categories of investors. Class A shares are available to the general public. Class W shares are available for purchase in this offering only (1) through fee-based programs, also known as wrap accounts, (2) through participating broker-dealers that have alternative fee arrangements with their clients, (3) through investment advisers registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or applicable state law or (4) through bank trust departments or any other organization or person authorized to act as a fiduciary for its clients or customers. Class I shares are available for purchase in this offering only (1) by institutional accounts as defined by FINRA Rule 4512(c), (2) through bank-sponsored collective trusts and bank-sponsored common trusts, (3) by retirement plans (including a trustee or custodian under any deferred compensation or pension or profit sharing plan or payroll deduction IRA established for the benefit of the employees of any company), foundations or endowments, (4) through certain financial intermediaries that are not otherwise registered with or as a broker-dealer and that direct clients to trade with a broker-dealer that offers Class I shares, (5) by our executive officers and directors and their immediate family members, as well as officers and employees of the Advisor and the Advisor’s product specialists or other affiliates of the Advisor and their immediate family members, our product specialists and their affiliates and, if approved by our board of directors, joint venture partners, consultants and other service providers, (6) by investors purchasing shares in a transaction that entitles our Dealer Manager to a “primary dealer fee” as described below under “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Primary Dealer Fee,” (7) through bank trust departments or any other organization or person authorized to act as a fiduciary for its clients or customers and (8) by any other categories of purchasers that we name in an amendment or supplement to this prospectus. If you are eligible to purchase any of the classes of shares, you should consider, among other things, the amount of your investment, the length of time you intend to hold the shares, the selling commission and fees attributable to each class of shares and whether you qualify for any selling commission discounts if you elect to purchase Class A shares. Before making your investment decision, please consult with your financial advisor regarding your account type and the classes of common stock you may be eligible to purchase.

 

Q: WHAT IS THE PURCHASE PRICE FOR EACH SHARE?

 

A: The per share purchase price for shares of our common stock will be the NAV per share for the applicable class, plus, for Class A shares sold in the primary offering only, applicable selling commissions. Each class of shares may have a different NAV per share because certain fees differ with respect to each class.

 

Q: ARE THERE ANY RISKS INVOLVED IN AN INVESTMENT IN YOUR SHARES?

 

A: Investing in our Class A, Class W and Class I shares involves a high degree of risk. You should carefully review the “Risk Factors” section of this prospectus beginning on page 25, which contains a detailed discussion of the material risks that you should consider before you invest in our common stock. Some of the more significant risks relating to an investment in our shares include:

 

· There is no public trading market for shares of our common stock, and we do not anticipate that there will be a public trading market for our shares, so redemption of shares by us will likely be the only way to dispose of your shares.

 

· Our Class A, Class W and Class I share redemption program generally imposes a quarterly cap on aggregate net redemptions of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes equal to the amount of shares of such classes with a value of up to 5% of the aggregate NAV of the outstanding shares of such classes as of the last day of the previous quarter. We may also amend, suspend or terminate our share redemption program at any time. As a result, our shares have only limited liquidity and may become illiquid.

 

· A portion of the proceeds received in this offering is intended to be used to redeem or repurchase Class E shares, which will reduce the net proceeds available to retire debt or acquire additional properties, which may result in reduced liquidity and profitability.

 

· The purchase and redemption price for shares of our common stock will be based on the NAV of each class of common stock and will not be based on any public trading market. Our NAV does not currently represent our enterprise value and may not accurately reflect the actual prices at which our assets could be liquidated on any given day, the value a third party would pay for all or substantially all of our shares, or the price that our shares would trade at on a national stock exchange. Furthermore, our board of directors may amend our NAV procedures from time to time.

 

· Some of our executive officers, directors and other key personnel are also officers, directors, managers, key personnel and/or holders of an ownership interest in the Advisor, our Dealer Manager, our property manager and/or other entities related to our Sponsor. As a result, they face conflicts of interest, including but not limited to conflicts arising from time constraints, allocation of investment and leasing opportunities and the fact that the fees the Advisor will receive for services rendered to us are based on our NAV, the procedures for which the Advisor assists our board of directors in developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating.

 

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· If we fail to maintain our status as a REIT, it would adversely affect our results of operations and our ability to make distributions to our stockholders.

 

· The amount of distributions we may pay is uncertain. We may pay distributions from sources other than cash flow from operations, including, without limitation, the sale of assets, borrowings or offering proceeds. The use of these sources for distributions would decrease the amount of cash we have available for new investments, share redemptions and other corporate purposes, and could reduce your overall return.

 

Q: HOW DO YOU COMMUNICATE THE DAILY NAV PER SHARE?

 

A: As promptly as practicable following the close of business on each business day, we (i) post our NAV per share for such day for each share class on our website, www.dividendcapitaldiversified.com , and (ii) make our NAV per share for each share class available on our toll-free, automated telephone line, (888) 310-9352. In addition, on at least a monthly basis, we disclose in a prospectus or prospectus supplement filed with the Commission our NAV per share for each share class for each business day during the prior month. On at least a quarterly basis, we disclose in a prospectus or prospectus supplement filed with the Commission the principal valuation components of our NAV.

 

Q: WILL I BE CHARGED SELLING COMMISSIONS?

 

A: If you purchase Class A shares in the primary offering, yes, subject to exceptions for certain categories of purchasers. Class A shares sold in the primary offering will generally be subject to selling commissions as part of the price per share. Selling commissions equal up to 3.0% of the public offering price per Class A share. The actual selling commission expressed as a percentage of the public offering price per share may be higher or lower than 3.0% due to rounding. Discounts are also available for certain volume purchases in the primary offering. See “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Selling Commissions—Class A Shares.”

 

Investors currently do not pay selling commissions on Class W shares or Class I shares sold in our primary offering, when purchasing shares of any class pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan, or when purchasing Class A shares sold through fee-based programs, also known as wrap accounts, or through investment advisers registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or applicable state law.

 

Q: WHAT IS THE TERM OR EXPECTED LIFE OF THIS OFFERING?

 

A: Pursuant to this prospectus, we are offering to the public all of the shares that we have registered. We intend to conduct a continuous offering that will not have a predetermined duration, subject to continued compliance with the rules and regulations of the Commission and applicable state laws. From time to time, we intend to file new registration statements on Form S-11 with the Commission to register additional Class A, Class W and Class I shares of common stock so that we may continuously offer shares of common stock pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act. In certain states, the registration of our offering may continue for only one year following the initial clearance by applicable state authorities, after which we intend to renew the offering period for additional one-year periods (or longer, if permitted by the laws of each particular state). We reserve the right to terminate this offering at any time.

 

Q: HOW DO I SUBSCRIBE FOR SHARES OF COMMON STOCK?

 

A: If you choose to purchase shares of our common stock in this offering, you are required to complete a subscription agreement in the applicable form attached to this prospectus as Appendix A for a specific number of shares of our common stock. You must pay for shares of our common stock at the time you subscribe. Certain participating broker-dealers may require supplementary disclosure materials or additional forms or documentation. You should consult with your financial advisor when purchasing shares. See “Plan of Distribution—Purchase of Shares.”

 

Q: HOW DOES THE PAYMENT OF FEES AND EXPENSES BY THE COMPANY AFFECT MY INVESTED CAPITAL?

 

A: We pay to the Dealer Manager a dealer manager fee in connection with this offering, a portion of which the Dealer Manager may reallow to participating broker-dealers that meet certain thresholds of our shares under management and certain other metrics. We also pay distribution fees to the Dealer Manager with respect to the Class A shares, which the Dealer Manager may reallow to participating broker-dealers. In addition, we incur, or reimburse the Advisor and the Dealer Manager for, our cumulative organization and offering expenses (other than selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee, primary dealer fees, and certain other amounts described in “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Other Compensation”). The payment of fees and expenses reduces the funds available to us for payment of distributions and investment in real properties, debt-related investments and other investments, and therefore may reduce our distributions or our NAV. However, because we are not required to pay distribution fees with respect to the Class W or Class I shares, the distributions and NAVs with respect to Class W shares and Class I shares are not reduced by these distribution fees, unlike that with respect to our Class A shares.

 

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Because the dealer manager fee and distribution fee are allocated on a class-specific basis and are borne by all holders of the applicable class, you will be allocated a share of class-specific expenses of our other offerings. Even if the FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation are reached with respect to this offering, you will be allocated a share of class-specific expenses of our other offerings. Accordingly, with respect to the shares that you own, you should expect to be allocated the maximum dealer manager fee and distribution fee described in this prospectus, for as long as you own your shares.

 

Q: WILL THE DISTRIBUTIONS I RECEIVE BE TAXABLE?

 

A: Distributions that you receive, including distributions that are reinvested pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan, will generally be taxed as ordinary dividend income to the extent they are paid out of our current or accumulated earnings and profits. However, if we recognize a long-term capital gain upon the sale of one of our assets, a portion of our distributions may be designated and treated in your hands as a long-term capital gain. In addition, we expect that some portion of your distributions may not be subject to tax in the year received due to the fact that depreciation expense reduces earnings and profits but does not reduce cash available for distribution. Amounts distributed to you in excess of our earnings and profits will reduce the tax basis of your investment and will not be taxable to the extent thereof on a current basis, and distributions in excess of tax basis will be taxable as an amount realized from the sale of your shares of common stock. This, in effect, would defer a portion of your tax until your investment is sold or we are liquidated, at which time you may be taxed at capital gains rates. However, because each investor’s tax considerations are different, we suggest that you consult with your tax advisor.

 

Q: WILL I BE ABLE TO LIQUIDATE MY INVESTMENT IMMEDIATELY AT THE TIME OF MY CHOOSING?

 

A: Maybe. While stockholders may request that we redeem all or any portion of their shares pursuant to our share redemption program, our ability to fulfill redemption requests on a daily basis is subject to a number of limitations. As a result, share redemptions may not be available at all times. In addition, because the volume limitations of our share redemption program are based, in part, on the aggregate NAV of the outstanding shares of the Class A, Class W and Class I share classes as of the last day of the quarter preceding the redemption request, the availability of redemptions in any quarter is dependent upon, among other things, the success of this offering. Generally, our share redemption program imposes a quarterly cap on the aggregate net redemptions of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes equal to the amount of shares of such classes with a value (based on the redemption price per share on the day the redemption is effected) of up to 5% of the aggregate NAV of the outstanding shares of such classes as of the last day of the previous calendar quarter.

 

In order to maintain a reasonable level of liquidity, we intend to generally maintain under normal circumstances the following aggregate allocation to liquid assets: (1) 10% of the aggregate NAV of our outstanding Class A, Class W and Class I shares up to $1 billion of collective Class A, Class W and Class I share NAV and (2) 5% of the aggregate NAV of our outstanding Class A, Class W and Class I shares in excess of $1 billion of collective Class A, Class W and Class I share NAV. However, no assurance can be given that we will maintain this allocation to liquid assets. In addition, we may also fund redemptions from any available source of funds, including operating cash flows, borrowings, proceeds from this offering and/or the sale of our assets. Despite these sources of liquidity, we may not always have sufficient liquid resources to satisfy redemption requests and you may not be able to redeem your shares. The vast majority of our assets consist of properties which cannot generally be readily liquidated on short notice without impacting our ability to realize full value upon their disposition. Therefore, we may not have sufficient liquid resources to satisfy redemption requests. Our board of directors may modify, suspend or terminate our share redemption program if it deems such action to be in the best interest of our stockholders. See “Description of Capital Stock—Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program” for more information.

 

Q: WHAT IS THE REDEMPTION PRICE?

 

A: The redemption price per share on any business day will be equal to our NAV per share of the class of shares being redeemed. Subject to limited exceptions, shares redeemed within 365 days of the date of purchase will be subject to a short-term trading discount equal to 2% of the gross proceeds otherwise payable with respect to the redemption, which will inure indirectly to the benefit of our remaining stockholders. See “Description of Capital Stock—Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program.”

 

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Q: WHEN WILL I GET MY DETAILED TAX INFORMATION?

 

A: Stockholder tax information is reported on Form 1099. We intend to mail your Form 1099 tax information, if required, by January 31 of each year.

 

Q: WHERE CAN I FIND UPDATED INFORMATION REGARDING THE COMPANY?

 

A: You may find updated information on our Internet website, www.dividendcapitaldiversified.com . Information contained in our website does not constitute part of this prospectus. In addition, we are subject to the informational reporting requirements of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended, which we refer to as the “Exchange Act,” which requires us to file reports, proxy statements and other information with the Commission. See “Additional Information” for a description of how you may read and copy the registration statement, the related exhibits and the reports, proxy statements and other information we file with the Commission.

 

Q: WHO CAN HELP ANSWER MY QUESTIONS?

 

A: If you have more questions about this offering or if you would like additional copies of this prospectus, you should contact your registered representative or the Dealer Manager:

 

Dividend Capital Securities LLC
518 Seventeenth Street, 17th Floor
Denver, Colorado 80202
Telephone: (303) 228-2200
Fax: (303) 228-2201
Attn: Charles Murray, President

 

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RISK FACTORS

 

Your purchase of shares of our common stock involves a number of risks. In addition to other risks discussed in this prospectus, you should specifically consider the following risks before you decide to buy shares of our common stock.

 

Risks Related to Investing in Shares of Our Common Stock

 

There is no public trading market for the shares of our common stock and we do not anticipate that there will be a public trading market for our shares; therefore, your ability to dispose of your shares will likely be limited to redemption by us. If you do sell your shares to us, you may receive less than the price you paid.

 

There is no public market for the shares of our common stock and we currently have no obligation or plans to apply for listing on any public securities market. Therefore, redemption of Class A, Class W and Class I shares by us will likely be the only way for you to dispose of your shares. We will redeem shares at a price equal to the NAV per share of the class of shares being redeemed on the date of redemption, and not based on the price at which you initially purchased your shares. We may redeem your shares if you fail to maintain a minimum balance of $2,000 in shares, even if your failure to meet the minimum balance is caused solely by a decline in our NAV. Subject to limited exceptions, Class A, Class W or Class I shares redeemed within 365 days of the date of purchase will be subject to a short-term trading discount equal to 2% of the gross proceeds otherwise payable with respect to the redemption, which will inure indirectly to the benefit of our remaining stockholders. As a result of this and the fact that our NAV will fluctuate, you may receive less than the price you paid for your shares upon redemption by us pursuant to our share redemption program. See “Description of Capital Stock—Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program.”

 

Our ability to redeem your shares may be limited, and our board of directors may modify, suspend or terminate our share redemption program at any time.

 

Generally, our share redemption program imposes a quarterly cap on aggregate net redemptions of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes equal to the amount of shares of such classes with a value (based on the redemption price per share on the day the redemption is effected) of up to 5% of the aggregate NAV of the outstanding shares of such classes as of the last day of the previous calendar quarter.

 

The vast majority of our assets will consist of properties which cannot generally be readily liquidated on short notice without impacting our ability to realize full value upon their disposition. Therefore, we may not always have a sufficient amount of cash to immediately satisfy redemption requests. Our board of directors may modify, suspend or terminate our share redemption program. As a result, your ability to have your shares redeemed by us may be limited, and our shares should be considered as having only limited liquidity and at times may be illiquid. See “Description of Capital Stock—Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program” for more information.

 

Our capacity to redeem shares may be further limited if we experience a concentration of investors.

 

The current limitations of our share redemption program are based, in part, on the number of outstanding shares. Thus, the ability of a single investor, or of a group of investors acting similarly, to redeem all of their shares may be limited if they own a large percentage of our shares. Similarly, if a single investor, or a group of investors acting in concert or independently, owns a large percentage of our shares, a significant redemption request by such investor or investors could significantly further limit our ability to satisfy redemption requests of other investors of such classes. Such concentrations could arise in a variety of circumstances, especially while we have relatively few outstanding Class A, Class W and Class I shares. For example, we could sell a large number of our shares to one or more institutional investors, either in a public offering or in a private placement. In addition, we may issue a significant number of our shares in connection with an acquisition of another company or a portfolio of properties to a single investor or a group of investors that may request redemption at similar times following the acquisition. As of December 31, 2015, based on the NAV per share of $7.47 on that date, we had outstanding approximately $1.0 billion in Class E shares, $12.7 million in Class A shares, $13.5 million in Class W shares, and $170.9 million in Class I shares. 

 

A portion of the proceeds raised in this offering is expected to be used to redeem Class E shares, which are not being sold in this offering, and such portion of the proceeds may be substantial.

 

We currently expect to use a portion of the proceeds from this Class A, Class W and Class I offering to enhance liquidity for our Class E stockholders through self-tender offers and our Class E share redemption program. On an ongoing basis, our current Class E share redemption program is only available for redemptions in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder. Unless approved by our board of directors, we will not make, during any consecutive twelve-month period, redemptions in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder that exceed five percent of the number of Class E shares of common stock outstanding at the beginning of such twelve-month period. However, with respect to all other Class E stockholders, our board of directors evaluates each quarter whether to make liquidity available through the Class E share redemption program or through a tender offer process. Although no assurances can be made, our board of directors currently intends to make liquidity available to Class E stockholders each quarter in the Class E Liquidity Amount, regardless of whether such liquidity will be made available through the Class E share redemption program or a tender offer, and excluding liquidity made available in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder through the Class E share redemption program. Our board of directors may at any time decide to reduce or eliminate the Class E Liquidity Amount or cease making Class E liquidity available through self-tender offers.

 

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There is significant pent up demand from Class E holders to have their shares purchased pursuant to a tender offer or to have their shares redeemed under our Class E share redemption program, and we plan to use a portion of the proceeds from this offering to purchase or redeem Class E shares. As a result, we may have fewer offering proceeds available to retire debt or acquire additional properties, which may result in reduced liquidity and profitability or restrict our ability to grow our NAV.

 

For example, on July 7, 2015, we commenced a modified “Dutch Auction” tender offer to purchase for cash up to $115.0 million of Class E shares. In accordance with rules promulgated by the Commission, we had the option to increase the number of shares accepted for payment by up to 2% of the outstanding Class E shares without amending the tender offer. We ultimately accepted for purchase approximately 17.2 million Class E shares of common stock, at a purchase price of $7.25 per share for an aggregate cost of approximately $124.4 million. The tender offer terminated on August 5, 2015. On November 12, 2015, we commenced another self-tender offer to purchase for cash up to $20 million of Class E shares. We ultimately purchased approximately 13.0% of Class E shares requested to be purchased for an aggregate cost of approximately $20.0 million of Class E shares at $7.39 per share pursuant to the tender offer, which terminated on December 23, 2015. On February 5, 2016, we commenced another self-tender offer to purchase for cash up to $30 million of Class E shares. Pursuant to the self-tender offer which expired on March 14, 2016, we purchased approximately 29.7% of the Class E shares requested to be purchased, at a price of $7.39 per share for an aggregate cost of approximately $30 million, excluding fees and expenses related to the tender offer.

 

With respect to liquidity for our Class E stockholders, our long-term goal is to raise sufficient proceeds in this offering so as to be able to accommodate those holders of Class E shares who would like to have their shares purchased pursuant to a tender offer or to have their shares redeemed under our Class E share redemption program. However, if we are not successful over time in generating liquidity to holders of our Class E shares through our self-tender offers and the Class E share redemption program, we may explore additional liquidity strategies for our Class E stockholders. There can be no assurances that we will be successful in achieving liquidity strategies for our Class E stockholders within any certain time frame or at all. In any event, our board of directors will seek to act in the best interest of the Company as a whole, taking into consideration all classes of stockholders.

 

You will not have the opportunity to evaluate future investments we will make with the proceeds raised in this offering prior to purchasing shares of our common stock.

 

We have not identified future investments that we will make with the proceeds of this offering. As a result, you will not be able to evaluate the economic merits, transaction terms or other financial or operational data concerning our future investments prior to purchasing shares of our common stock. You must rely on the Advisor and our board of directors to implement our investment policies, to evaluate our investment opportunities and to structure the terms of our investments. Because you cannot evaluate all of the investments we will make in advance of purchasing shares of our common stock, this additional risk may hinder your ability to achieve your own personal investment objectives related to portfolio diversification, risk-adjusted investment returns and other objectives.

 

We may raise significantly less than the maximum offering amount in this public offering. 

 

In this offering, we are offering on a continuous basis up to $1,000,000,000 of shares of our common stock. However, we may raise significantly less than this amount. The less capital we raise, the less capital we will have available to make investments in accordance with our investment strategy and policies, to provide liquidity to our stockholders and for general corporate purposes (which may include repayment of our debt or any other corporate purposes we deem appropriate). 

 

Furthermore, the figures presented in the section of this prospectus entitled “Estimated Use of Proceeds” are estimates derived at the beginning of this offering and are not updated throughout the offering. The actual percentage of net proceeds available to use will depend on a number of factors, including the amount of capital we raise, the actual offering costs and the portion of capital raised with respect to which we pay a primary dealer fee. For example, if we raise less than the maximum offering amount, we would expect the percentage of net offering proceeds available to us to be less (and may be substantially less) than that set forth in the section of this prospectus entitled “Estimated Use of Proceeds” because many offering costs are fixed and do not depend on the amount of capital raised in the offering. In our prior offering of Class A, W and I shares that terminated on September 15, 2015, before class-specific expenses, we raised total gross proceeds of approximately $183.0 million, of which approximately 89% in net proceeds was available to us for investment, redemptions, tender offers and other corporate purposes.

 

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Even if we are able to raise substantial funds in this offering, investors in our common stock are subject to the risk that our offering, business and operating plans may change.

 

Although we intend to operate as a perpetual-life REIT with an ongoing offering and share redemption programs (or self-tender offers), this is not a requirement of our charter. Even if we are able to raise substantial funds in this offering, if circumstances change such that our board of directors believes it is in the best interest of our stockholders to terminate this offering or to terminate our share redemption programs (or stop conducting self-tender offers), we may do so without stockholder approval. Our board of directors may also change our investment objectives, borrowing policies or other corporate policies without stockholder approval. In addition, we may change the way our fees and expenses are incurred and allocated to different classes of stockholders if the tax rules applicable to REITs change such that we could do so without adverse tax consequences. Our board of directors may decide that certain significant transactions that require stockholder approval such as dissolution, merger into another entity, consolidation or the sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of our assets, are in the best interests of our stockholders. Holders of all classes of our common stock have equal voting rights with respect to such matters and will vote as a single group rather than on a class-by-class basis. Accordingly, investors in our common stock are subject to the risk that our offering, business and operating plans may change.

 

Valuations and appraisals of our properties, real estate-related assets and real estate-related liabilities are estimates of value and may not necessarily correspond to realizable value.

 

The valuation methodologies used to value our properties and certain real estate-related assets involve subjective judgments regarding such factors as comparable sales, rental revenue and operating expense data, the capitalization or discount rate, and projections of future rent and expenses based on appropriate analysis. In addition, we generally do not undertake to mark to market our debt investments or real estate-related liabilities, but rather these assets and liabilities are usually included in our determination of NAV at an amount determined in accordance with GAAP. As a result, valuations and appraisals of our properties, real estate-related assets and real estate-related liabilities are only estimates of current market value. Ultimate realization of the value of an asset or liability depends to a great extent on economic and other conditions beyond our control and the control of the Independent Valuation Firm and other parties involved in the valuation of our assets and liabilities. Further, these valuations may not necessarily represent the price at which an asset or liability would sell, because market prices of assets and liabilities can only be determined by negotiation between a willing buyer and seller. Valuations used for determining our NAV also are generally made without consideration of the expenses that would be incurred in connection with disposing of assets and liabilities. Therefore, the valuations of our properties, our investments in real estate-related assets and our liabilities may not correspond to the timely realizable value upon a sale of those assets and liabilities. Our NAV does not currently represent enterprise value and may not accurately reflect the actual prices at which our assets could be liquidated on any given day, the value a third party would pay for all or substantially all of our shares, or the price that our shares would trade at on a national stock exchange. There will be no retroactive adjustment in the valuation of such assets or liabilities, the price of our shares of common stock, the price we paid to redeem shares of our common stock or NAV-based fees we paid to the Advisor and the Dealer Manager to the extent such valuations prove to not accurately reflect the true estimate of value and are not a precise measure of realizable value. Because the price you will pay for Class A, Class W or Class I shares of our common stock in this offering, and the price at which your shares may be redeemed by us pursuant to our share redemption program, are based on our estimated NAV per share, you may pay more than realizable value or receive less than realizable value for your investment.

 

In order to disclose a daily NAV, we are reliant on the parties that we engage for that purpose, in particular the Independent Valuation Firm and the appraisers that we hire to value and appraise our real estate portfolio.

 

In order to disclose a daily NAV, our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, has adopted valuation procedures and caused us to engage independent third parties such as the Independent Valuation Firm, to value our real estate portfolio on a daily basis, and independent appraisal firms, to provide periodic appraisals with respect to our properties. We have also engaged a firm to act as the NAV Accountant and may engage other independent third parties or our Advisor to value other assets or liabilities. Although our board of directors, with the assistance of the Advisor, oversees all of these parties and the reasonableness of their work product, we will not independently verify our NAV or the components thereof, such as the appraised values of our properties. Our management’s assessment of the market values of our properties may also differ from the appraised values of our properties as determined by the Independent Valuation Firm. If the parties engaged by us to determine our daily NAV are unable or unwilling to perform their obligations to us, our NAV could be inaccurate or unavailable, and we could decide to suspend this offering and our share redemption program.

 

Our NAV is not subject to GAAP, will not be independently audited and will involve subjective judgments by the Independent Valuation Firm and other parties involved in valuing our assets and liabilities.

 

Our valuation procedures and our NAV are not subject to GAAP and will not be subject to independent audit. Our NAV may differ from equity (net assets) reflected on our audited financial statements, even if we are required to adopt a fair value basis of accounting for GAAP financial statement purposes. Additionally, we are dependent on our Advisor to be reasonably aware of material events specific to our properties (such as tenant disputes, damage, litigation and environmental issues) that may cause the value of a property to change materially and to promptly notify the Independent Valuation Firm so that the information may be reflected in our real estate portfolio valuation. In addition, the implementation and coordination of our valuation procedures include certain subjective judgments of our Advisor, such as whether the Independent Valuation Firm should be notified of events specific to our properties that could affect their valuations, as well as of the Independent Valuation Firm and other parties we engage, as to whether adjustments to asset and liability valuations are appropriate. Accordingly, you must rely entirely on our board of directors to adopt appropriate valuation procedures and on the Independent Valuation Firm and other parties we engage in order to arrive at our NAV, which may not correspond to realizable value upon a sale of our assets.

 

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No rule or regulation requires that we calculate our NAV in a certain way, and our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, may adopt changes to the valuation procedures.

 

There are no existing rules or regulatory bodies that specifically govern the manner in which we calculate our NAV. As a result, it is important that you pay particular attention to the specific methodologies and assumptions we use to calculate our NAV. Other public REITs may use different methodologies or assumptions to determine their NAV. In addition, each year our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, will review the appropriateness of our valuation procedures and may, at any time, adopt changes to the valuation procedures. For example, we generally do not undertake to mark to market our debt investments or real estate-related liabilities, but rather these assets and liabilities are usually included in our determination of NAV at an amount determined in accordance with GAAP. As a result, the realizable value of specific debt investments and real property assets encumbered by debt that are used in the calculation of our NAV may be higher or lower than the value that would be derived if such debt investments or property-related liabilities were marked to market. In some cases such difference may be significant. We also do not currently include any enterprise value or real estate acquisition costs in our assets calculated for purposes of our NAV. If we acquire real property assets as a portfolio, we may pay a premium over the amount that we would pay for the assets individually. Our board of directors may change these or other aspects of our valuation procedures, which changes may have an adverse effect on our NAV and the price at which you may sell shares to us under our share redemption program. See “Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures” for more details regarding our valuation methodologies, assumptions and procedures.

 

Our NAV per share may suddenly change if the valuations of our properties materially change from prior valuations or the actual operating results materially differ from what we originally budgeted.

 

It is possible that the annual appraisals of our properties may not be spread evenly throughout the year and may differ from the most recent daily valuation. As such, when these appraisals are reflected in our Independent Valuation Firm’s valuation of our real estate portfolio, there may be a sudden change in our NAV per share for each class of our common stock. Property valuation changes can occur for a variety reasons, such as local real estate market conditions, the financial condition of our tenants, or lease expirations. For example, we regularly face lease expirations across our portfolio, and as we move further away from lease commencement toward the end of a lease term, the valuation of the underlying property will be expected to drop depending on the likelihood of a renewal or a new lease on similar terms. Such a valuation drop can be particularly significant when closer to a lease expiration, especially for single tenant buildings or where an individual tenant occupies a large portion of a building. We are at the greatest risk of these valuation changes during periods in which we have a large number of lease expirations as well as when the lease of a significant tenant is closer to expiration. Similarly, if a tenant will have an option in the future to purchase one of our properties from us at a price that is less than the current valuation of the property, then if the value of the property exceeds the option price, the valuation will be expected to decline and begin to approach the purchase price as the date of the option approaches. In addition, actual operating results may differ from what we originally budgeted, which may cause a sudden increase or decrease in the NAV per share amounts. We accrue estimated income and expenses on a daily basis based on annual budgets as adjusted from time to time to reflect changes in the business throughout the year. On a periodic basis, we adjust the income and expense accruals we estimated to reflect the income and expenses actually earned and incurred. We will not retroactively adjust the NAV per share of each class for any adjustments. Therefore, because actual results from operations may be better or worse than what we previously budgeted, the adjustment to reflect actual operating results may cause the NAV per share for each class of our common stock to increase or decrease.

 

New acquisitions may be valued for purposes of our NAV at less than what we pay for them, which would dilute our NAV.

 

Pursuant to our valuation procedures, the acquisition price of newly acquired properties will serve as our appraised value for the year of acquisition, and thereafter will be part of the rotating appraisal cycle such that they are appraised at least every calendar year. This is true whether the acquisition is funded with cash, equity or a combination thereof. However, the Independent Valuation Firm always has the ability to adjust property valuations for purposes of our NAV from the most recent appraised value. Similarly, if the Independent Valuation Firm believes that the purchase price for a recent acquisition does not reflect the current value of the property, the Independent Valuation Firm has the ability to adjust the valuation for purposes of our NAV downwards immediately after acquisition. Even if the Independent Valuation Firm does not adjust the valuation downwards immediately following the acquisition, when we obtain an appraisal on the property, it may not appraise at a value equal to the purchase price. Accordingly, the value of a new acquisition as established under our NAV procedures could be less than what we pay for it, which could negatively affect our NAV. Large portfolio acquisitions, in particular, may require a “portfolio premium” to be paid by us in order to be a competitive bidder, and this “portfolio premium” may not be taken into consideration in calculating our NAV. In addition, acquisition expenses we incur in connection with new acquisitions will negatively impact our NAV. We may make acquisitions (with cash or equity) of any size without stockholder approval, and such acquisitions may be dilutive to our NAV.

 

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The NAV per share that we publish may not necessarily reflect changes in our NAV that are not immediately quantifiable.

 

From time to time, we may experience events with respect to our investments that may have a material impact on our NAV. For example, and not by way of limitation, changes in governmental rules, regulations and fiscal policies, environmental legislation, acts of God, terrorism, social unrest, civil disturbances and major disturbances in financial markets may cause the value of a property to change materially. The NAV per share of each class of our common stock as published on any given day may not reflect such extraordinary events to the extent that their financial impact is not immediately quantifiable. As a result, the NAV per share that we publish may not necessarily reflect changes in our NAV that are not immediately quantifiable, and the NAV per share of each class published after the announcement of a material event may differ significantly from our actual NAV per share for such class until such time as the financial impact is quantified and our NAV is appropriately adjusted in accordance with our valuation procedures. The resulting potential disparity in our NAV may inure to the benefit of redeeming stockholders or non-redeeming stockholders and new purchasers of our common stock, depending on whether our published NAV per share for such class is overstated or understated.

 

The realizable value of specific properties may change before the value is adjusted by the Independent Valuation Firm and reflected in the calculation of our NAV.

 

Our valuation procedures generally provide that the Independent Valuation Firm will adjust a real property’s valuation, as necessary, based on known events that have a material impact on the most recent value (adjustments for non-material events may also be made). We are dependent on our Advisor to be reasonably aware of material events specific to our properties (such as tenant disputes, damage, litigation and environmental issues, as well as positive events such as new lease agreements) that may cause the value of a property to change materially and to promptly notify the Independent Valuation Firm so that the information may be reflected in our real estate portfolio valuation. Events may transpire that, for a period of time, are unknown to us or the Independent Valuation Firm that may affect the value of a property, and until such information becomes known and is processed, the value of such asset may differ from the value used to determine our NAV. In addition, although we may have information that suggests a change in value of a property may have occurred, there may be a delay in the resulting change in value being reflected in our NAV until such information is appropriately reviewed, verified and processed. For example, we may receive an unsolicited offer, from an unrelated third party, to sell one of our assets at a price that is materially different than the price included in our NAV. Or, we may be aware of a new lease, lease expiry, or entering into a contract for capital expenditure. Where possible, adjustments generally are made based on events evidenced by proper final documentation. It is possible that an adjustment to the valuation of a property may occur prior to final documentation if the Independent Valuation Firm determines that events warrant adjustments to certain assumptions that materially affect value. However, to the extent that an event has not yet become final based on proper documentation, its impact on the value of the applicable property may not be reflected (or may be only partially reflected) in the calculation of our NAV.

 

Because we generally do not mark our debt investments or real estate-related liabilities to market, the realizable value of specific debt investments and real property assets that are encumbered by debt may be higher or lower than the value used in the calculation of our NAV.

 

We generally do not undertake to mark to market our debt investments or real estate-related liabilities, but rather these assets and liabilities are usually included in our determination of NAV at an amount determined in accordance with GAAP. As a result, the realizable value of specific debt investments and real property assets that are encumbered by debt used in the calculation of our NAV may be higher or lower than the value that would be derived if such debt investments or liabilities were marked to market. In some cases such difference may be significant. For example, in our financial statements for the year ended December 31, 2015, we disclosed that the estimated fair value of our debt liabilities, net of the fair value of our debt investments, was $3.6 million lower than the GAAP carrying balance, meaning that if we used the fair value of our debt rather than the carrying balance, our NAV would have been higher by approximately $3.6 million as of December 31, 2015. We record all derivative instruments at fair value, which we do not expect to be significantly different from the realizable value of our derivative instruments used in the calculation of our NAV.

 

Due to daily fluctuations in our NAV, the price at which your purchase is executed could be higher than our NAV per share at the time you submit your purchase order, and the price at which your redemption is executed could be lower than our NAV per share at the time you submit your redemption request.

 

The purchase and redemption price for shares of our common stock will be determined at the end of each business day based on our NAV and will not be based on any established trading price. See “Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures.” Each accepted purchase order will be executed at a price equal to our NAV per share for the class of shares being purchased next determined after the purchase order is received in good order, plus, for Class A shares sold in the primary offering only, any applicable selling commissions. For example, if a purchase order is received in good order on a business day and before the close of business (4:00 p.m. Eastern time) on that day, the purchase order will be executed at a purchase price equal to our NAV per share for the class of shares being purchased determined after the close of business on that day, plus, for Class A shares sold in the primary offering only, any applicable selling commissions. If a purchase order is received in good order on a business day, but after the close of business on that day, the purchase order will be executed at a purchase price equal to our NAV per share for the class of shares being purchased determined after the close of business on the next business day, plus, for Class A shares sold in the primary offering only, any applicable selling commissions. See “Plan of Distribution—Purchase of Shares.” Similarly, redemption requests received in good order will be effected at a redemption price equal to the next-determined NAV per share for the class of shares being redeemed (subject to a 2% short-term trading discount in certain circumstances). See “Description of Capital Stock—Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program.” In addition, there may be a delay between your purchase or redemption decision and the execution date caused by time necessary for you and your participating broker-dealer to put a purchase order or redemption request in “good order,” which means, for these purposes, that all required information has been completed, all proper signatures have been provided, and, for purchase orders, funds for payment have been provided. As a result of this process, you will not know the purchase or redemption price at the time you submit your purchase order or redemption request. The purchase price per share at which your purchase order is executed could be higher than the NAV per share on the date you submitted your purchase order, and the redemption price per share at which your redemption request is executed could be lower than the NAV per share on the date you submitted your redemption request.

 

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Our NAV and the NAV of your shares may be diluted in connection with this and future securities offerings.

 

In connection with this offering, we incur fees and expenses. Excluding selling commissions (which are effectively paid by purchasers of Class A shares in the primary offering at the time of purchase, because the purchase price of such shares is equal to the NAV per Class A share plus the selling commission, and therefore have no effect on our NAV), we expect to incur up to $5 million in primary dealer fees and approximately $12.8 million in organization and offering expenses, which will decrease the amount of cash we have available for operations and new investments. In addition, because the prices of shares sold in this offering are based on our NAV, this offering may be dilutive if our NAV procedures do not fully capture the value of our shares and/or we do not utilize the proceeds accretively.

 

In the future we may conduct other offerings of common stock (whether existing or new classes), preferred stock, debt securities or of interests in our Operating Partnership. We may also amend the terms of this offering. We may structure or amend such offerings to attract institutional investors or other sources of capital in connection with efforts to provide additional Class E liquidity or otherwise. The terms of this offering will reduce the NAV of your shares over time in accordance with our valuation procedures and the terms of this offering and future offerings (such as the offering price and the distribution fees and expenses) may negatively impact our ability to pay distributions and your overall return.

 

You do not have the benefit of an independent due diligence review in connection with this offering which increases the risk of your investment.

 

Because the Advisor and the Dealer Manager are related, investors do not have the benefit of an independent due diligence review and investigation of the type normally performed by an unrelated, independent underwriter in connection with a securities offering. In addition, DLA Piper LLP (US) has acted as counsel to us, the Advisor and the Dealer Manager in connection with this offering and, therefore, investors do not have the benefit of a due diligence review that might otherwise be performed by independent counsel. Under applicable legal ethics rules, DLA Piper LLP (US) may be precluded from representing us due to a conflict of interest between us and the Dealer Manager. If any situation arises in which our interests are in conflict with those of the Dealer Manager or its related parties, we would be required to retain additional counsel and may incur additional fees and expenses. The lack of an independent due diligence review and investigation increases the risk of your investment.

 

Our investors may be at a greater risk of loss than the Advisor and members of our management team.

 

We have taken certain actions to increase the stock ownership in our Company by our management team, the Advisor and our directors over the past couple of years, including the implementation of certain stock-based awards. As of April 4, 2016, the Advisor and members of our management team own approximately $8.4 million of stock or in stock-based awards (including unvested shares). While we have improved and expect to continue to grow stock ownership by management, the Advisor and our directors, the current level of ownership may be less than the management teams of other public real estate companies and, as a result, our investors may be at a greater risk of loss than the Advisor and other members of our management, especially as compared to these other companies in which stock ownership by management and directors may be significantly greater.

 

The availability and timing of cash distributions to you is uncertain.

 

We currently make and expect to continue to make quarterly distributions to our stockholders. However, the payment of class-specific expenses results in different amounts of distributions being paid with respect to each class of shares. In addition, we bear all expenses incurred in our operations, which reduce the amount of cash available for distribution to our stockholders. Distributions may also be negatively impacted by the failure to deploy our net proceeds on an expeditious basis, the inability to find suitable investments that are not dilutive to our distributions, the poor performance of our investments, an increase in expenses for any reason (including expending funds for redemptions) and due to numerous other factors. Any request by the holders of our OP Units to redeem some or all of their OP Units for cash may also impact the amount of cash available for distribution to our stockholders. In addition, our board of directors, in its discretion, may retain any portion of such funds for working capital. We cannot assure you that sufficient cash will be available to make distributions to our stockholders or that the amount of distributions will not either decrease or fail to increase over time. From time to time, we may adjust our distribution level and we may make such an adjustment at any time.

 

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We may have difficulty funding our distributions with funds provided by our operations.

 

Although our distributions during 2015, 2014 and 2013 were fully funded from our operations, in the future we may fund distributions from other sources. Our long-term strategy is to fund the payment of quarterly distributions to our stockholders entirely from our operations. However, if we are unsuccessful in investing the capital we raise in this offering or which is generated from the sale of existing assets on an effective and efficient basis that is accretive to our distribution level, we may be required to fund our quarterly distributions to our stockholders from a combination of our operations and financing activities, which include net proceeds of this offering and borrowings (including borrowings secured by our assets), or to reduce the level of our quarterly distributions. Using certain of these sources may result in a liability to us, which would require a future repayment. The use of these sources for distributions and the ultimate repayment of any liabilities incurred could adversely impact our ability to pay distributions in future periods, decrease the amount of cash we have available for new investments, repayment of debt, share redemptions or repurchases and other corporate purposes, and potentially reduce your overall return and adversely impact and dilute the value of your investment in shares of our common stock. We may pay distributions from sources other than cash flow from operations, including, without limitation, the sale of assets, borrowings or offering proceeds. Our ability to pay distributions at the current level also likely will be impacted by the expiration of certain large leases in our portfolio, and, as a result, we may be required to reduce the level of our quarterly distributions. To the extent that we sell higher yielding assets in exchange for assets that may initially produce less income in exchange for the potential ability for longer term appreciation, this may also put pressure on our ability to sustain our current distribution level. If our quarterly distributions exceed cash flow generated from our operations, it may cause a decrease in our NAV if not offset by other effects.

 

If we raise substantial offering proceeds in a short period of time, we may not be able to invest all of the net offering proceeds promptly, which may cause our distributions and the long-term returns to our investors to be lower than they otherwise would.

 

We could suffer from delays in locating suitable investments. The more money we raise in this offering, the more difficult it will be to invest the net offering proceeds promptly. Therefore, the large size of this offering increases the risk of delays in investing our net offering proceeds. Our reliance on the Advisor to locate suitable investments for us at times when the management of the Advisor is simultaneously seeking to locate suitable investments for other entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of the Sponsor could also delay the investment of the proceeds of this offering. Delays we encounter in the selection, acquisition and development of income-producing properties would likely negatively affect our NAV, limit our ability to pay distributions to you and reduce your overall returns.

 

We are required to pay substantial compensation to the Advisor and its affiliates, which may be increased or decreased during this offering or future offerings by a majority of our board of directors, including a majority of the independent directors.

 

Pursuant to our agreements with the Advisor and its affiliates, we are obligated to pay substantial compensation to the Advisor and its affiliates. Subject to limitations in our charter, the fees, compensation, income, expense reimbursements, interests and other payments that we are required to pay to the Advisor and its affiliates may increase or decrease during this offering or future offerings if such change is approved by a majority of our board of directors, including a majority of the independent directors. These payments to the Advisor and its affiliates will decrease the amount of cash we have available for operations and new investments and could negatively impact our NAV, our ability to pay distributions and your overall return.

 

The performance component of the advisory fee is calculated on the basis of the overall non-compounded investment return provided to holders of Fund Interests over a calendar year, so it may not be consistent with the return on your shares.

 

The performance component of the advisory fee is calculated on the basis of the overall non-compounded investment return provided to holders of Fund Interests (i.e., our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with the OP Units held by third parties) over a calendar year such that the Advisor will receive 25% of the overall return in excess of 6%; provided that in no event will the performance component exceed 10% of the overall return for such year. The overall non-compounded investment return provided to holders of Fund Interests over any applicable period is a dollar amount defined as the product of (i) the amount, if any, by which (A) the sum of (1) the weighted-average distributions per Fund Interest over the applicable period and (2) the ending weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest, exceeds (B) the beginning weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest and (ii) the weighted-average number of Fund Interests outstanding during the applicable period. The weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest calculated on the last trading day of a calendar year shall be the amount against which changes in weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest are measured during the subsequent calendar year. However, the performance component will not be earned on any increase in the weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest except to the extent that it exceeds the historically highest year-end weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest since the commencement of our daily NAV calculations ($7.47 as of December 31, 2015). The foregoing NAV thresholds are subject to adjustment by our board of directors. Therefore, payment of the performance component of the advisory fee (1) is contingent upon the overall return to the holders of Fund Interests exceeding the 6% return, (2) will vary in amount based on our actual performance, (3) cannot cause the overall return to the holders of Fund Interests for the year to be reduced below 6%, and (4) is payable to the Advisor if the overall return to the holders of Fund Interests exceeds the 6% return in a particular calendar year, even if the overall return to the holders of Fund Interests on a cumulative basis over any longer or shorter period has been less than 6% per annum. Additionally, the Advisor will provide us with a waiver of a portion of its fees generally equal to the amount of the performance component that would have been payable with respect to the Class E shares and the Class E OP Units held by third parties until the NAV of such shares or units exceeds $10.00 per share or unit, the benefit of which will be shared among all holders of Fund Interests.

 

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As a result, the performance component is not directly tied to the performance of the shares you purchase, the class of shares you purchase or the time period during which you own your shares. The performance component may be payable to the Advisor even if the NAV of your shares at the end of the calendar year is below your purchase price, and the thresholds at which increases in NAV count towards the overall return to the holders of Fund Interests are not based on your purchase price. Because of the class-specific expenses consisting of the dealer manager fee and the distribution fee, which differ among classes, we do not expect the overall return of each class of Fund Interests to ever be the same. However, if and when the performance fee is payable, the expense will be allocated among all holders of Fund Interests ratably according to the NAV of their units or shares, regardless of the different returns achieved by different classes of Fund Interests during the year. Further, stockholders who redeem their shares during a given year may redeem their shares at a lower NAV per share as a result of an accrual for the estimated performance component of the advisory fee, even if no performance component is ultimately payable to the Advisor at the end of such calendar year. In addition, if the weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest remains above certain threshold levels, the Advisor’s ability to earn the performance fee in any year will not be affected by poor performance in prior years, and the Advisor will not be obligated to return any portion of advisory fees paid based on our subsequent performance. See “The Advisor and the Advisory Agreement—The Advisory Agreement.”

 

Payment of fees and expenses to the Advisor, the Property Manager and the Dealer Manager reduces the cash available for distribution and increases the risk that you will not be able to recover the amount of your investment in our shares.

 

The Advisor, the Property Manager and the Dealer Manager perform services for us, including, among other things, the selection and acquisition of our investments, the management of our assets, the disposition of our assets, the financing of our assets and certain administrative services. We pay the Advisor, the Property Manager and the Dealer Manager fees and expense reimbursements for these services, which will reduce the amount of cash available for further investments or distribution to our stockholders.

 

We are dependent upon the Advisor and its affiliates to conduct our operations and this offering; thus, adverse changes in their financial health or our relationship with them could cause our operations to suffer.

 

We are dependent upon the Advisor and its affiliates to conduct our operations and this offering. Thus, adverse changes to our relationship with, or the financial health of, the Advisor and its affiliates, including changes arising from litigation, could hinder their ability to successfully manage our operations and our portfolio of investments.

 

If we internalize our management functions, the percentage of our outstanding common stock owned by our other stockholders could be reduced, we could incur other significant costs associated with being self-managed, and any internalization could have other adverse effects on our business and financial condition.

 

At some point in the future, we may consider internalizing the functions performed for us by the Advisor, although we do not currently intend to do so. The method by which we could internalize these functions could take many forms. We may hire our own group of executives and other employees or we may acquire the Advisor or its respective assets, including its existing workforce. Any internalization transaction could result in significant payments to the owners of the Advisor, including in the form of our stock which could reduce the percentage ownership of our then existing stockholders and concentrate ownership in the owner of our Advisor. In addition, there is no assurance that internalizing our management functions will be beneficial to us and our stockholders. For example, we may not realize the perceived benefits because of the costs of being self-managed or we may not be able to properly integrate a new staff of managers and employees or we may not be able to effectively replicate the services provided previously by the Advisor or its affiliates. Internalization transactions have also, in some cases, been the subject of litigation. Even if these claims are without merit, we could be forced to spend significant amounts of money defending claims which would reduce our NAV and the amount of funds available for us to invest in real estate assets or to pay distributions.

 

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If we were to internalize our management or if another investment program, whether sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor or otherwise, hires the employees of the Advisor or its affiliates in connection with its own internalization transaction or otherwise, our ability to conduct our business may be adversely affected.

 

We rely on persons employed by the Advisor or its affiliates to manage our day-to-day operating and acquisition activities. If we were to effectuate an internalization of the Advisor, we may not be able to retain all of the employees of the Advisor or its affiliates or to maintain relationships with other entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor. In addition, some of the employees of the Advisor or its affiliates may provide services to one or more other investment programs. These programs or third parties may decide to retain some or all of the key employees in the future. If this occurs, these programs could hire certain of the persons currently employed by the Advisor or its affiliates who are most familiar with our business and operations, thereby potentially adversely impacting our business.

 

We have broad authority to incur debt, and high debt levels could hinder our ability to make distributions and could decrease the value of your investment in shares of our common stock.

 

Under our charter, we have a limitation on borrowing which precludes us from borrowing in excess of 300% of the value of our net assets, provided that we may exceed this limit if a higher level of borrowing is approved by a majority of our independent directors. High debt levels would cause us to incur higher interest charges, would result in higher debt service payments, could be accompanied by restrictive covenants and would generally make us subject to the risks associated with leverage. These factors could limit the amount of cash we have available to distribute and could result in a decline in our NAV and in the value of your investment in shares of our common stock.

 

Your investment will be impacted by class-specific expenses of other offerings.

 

The dealer manager fee and distribution fee are allocated on a class-specific basis, which means that the expenses are borne by all holders of the applicable class. For example, an investor who acquired Class A shares in a private offering will be allocated a proportional share of the dealer manager fee and distribution fee we pay with respect to Class A shares sold in this public offering. Such Class A expenses are allocated among all Class A shares ratably, regardless of how each Class A stockholder acquired his or her shares. As a result, purchasers of Class A, Class W or Class I shares in this offering will be impacted by class-specific expenses that we pay with respect to any of our outstanding Class A, Class W and Class I shares, respectively, regardless of how or when those shares were issued. Specifically, we intend to operate as a perpetual-life REIT, which means that we intend to offer Class A, Class W and Class I shares continuously. In order to do so, from time to time we will be required to file a new registration statement to register additional Class A, Class W and Class I shares of common stock with the Commission. The dealer manager fee and distribution fee that are payable to our Dealer Manager on an ongoing basis with respect to any offering (i.e., pursuant to the registration statement for such offering) will cease when total underwriting compensation in such offering equals the FINRA limitation of 10% of the gross proceeds from the primary portion of such offering. However, the dealer manager fee and distribution fee will be payable with respect to other public offerings, and investors in this offering will be allocated a proportional share of such class-specific expenses. Accordingly, with respect to the shares that you own, you should expect to be allocated the maximum dealer manager fee and distribution fee described in this prospectus, for as long as you own your shares.

 

We are exposed to risks arising from a small number of tenants comprising a significant portion of our income.

 

As of December 31, 2015, a significant portion of our annualized base rent comes from three tenants. As a result, we are particularly exposed to their ability and willingness to perform according to the contractual terms of their existing leases and to renew when the leases expire. When the leases expire, we may be forced to lower the rental rates or offer other concessions in order to retain the tenants. Any reduction in the rental rates or other lease terms may have a meaningful impact to our operating results. Further, if our significant tenants choose not to renew at all, we will likely suffer from periods of receiving no rent while we seek replacement tenants, and incur costs related to finding replacement tenants. Our two most significant leases, together comprising approximately 23.1% of our annualized base rent as of December 31, 2015, will expire between January 2017 and September 2017. One of these leases includes ten subleases comprising approximately 4.2% of our annualized base rent as of December 31, 2015, which are scheduled to expire between January 2020 and December 2023. Based on market information as of December 31, 2015, we have obtained third-party estimates that current market rental rates, on a weighted-average basis utilizing annualized base rent as of December 31, 2015, are approximately 14% lower than the in-place rents. Accordingly, if market rents do not increase significantly, replicating the cash flows from these leases would be very difficult. Our third most significant lease, comprising approximately 8.7% of our annualized base rent as of December 31, 2015, was subject to a purchase option. The tenant of this lease exercised the purchase option during January 2016 to acquire the office property on February 18, 2016. As a result, we no longer have this lease subsequent to February 18, 2016. These factors could adversely affect our results of operations, financial condition, NAV and ability to pay distributions to our stockholders.

 

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We are active portfolio managers and will incur transaction and transition costs each time that we acquire or dispose of an asset.

 

We believe that the real estate market is cyclical, with different demand for property types at different times. Although we do not invest for the short term, we are active portfolio managers and we will seek to take advantage of opportunities to acquire or dispose of assets presented to us by the real estate markets. Each time that we acquire or dispose of an asset, we incur associated transaction costs which may include, but are not limited to, broker fees, attorney fees, regulatory filings, taxes and disposition fees paid to the Advisor. In addition, each time that we sell an income-generating asset, our operating results will be negatively impacted unless and until we are able to reinvest the proceeds in an investment with an equal or greater yield, which we may be unable to do. Accordingly, in order for us to provide positive returns to our stockholders from active portfolio management, the benefits of active management must outweigh the associated transaction and transition costs. We may be unable to achieve this. These factors could adversely affect our results of operations, financial condition, NAV and ability to pay distributions to our stockholders.

 

The U.S. Department of Labor (“DOL”) has proposed to amend the definition of “fiduciary” under ERISA and the Code, which could affect the marketing of investments in our shares.

 

The DOL has proposed to amend the definition of “fiduciary” under ERISA and the Code. The proposed amendment would broaden the definition of “fiduciary” and make a number of changes to the prohibited transaction exemptions relating to investments by employee benefit plans subject to Title I of ERISA or retirement plans or accounts subject to Section 4975 of the Code (including IRAs). The DOL has said that the proposed changes will become effective eight months after the regulation is finalized and will be prospective only. If and when the proposed changes are finalized, they could have a significantly negative effect on the marketing of investments in our shares to such plans or accounts.

 

Risks Related to Conflicts of Interest

 

Our Advisor faces a conflict of interest because the fees it receives for services performed are based on our NAV, the procedures for which the Advisor will assist our board of directors in developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating.

 

The Advisor assists our board of directors in developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating our NAV procedures. It assists our Independent Valuation Firm in valuing our real property portfolio by providing the firm with property-level information, including (i) historical and projected operating revenues and expenses of the property; (ii) lease agreements on the property; and (iii) the revenues and expenses of the property. Our Independent Valuation Firm assumes and relies upon the accuracy and completeness of all such information, does not undertake any duty or responsibility to verify independently any of such information and relies upon us and our Advisor to advise if any material information previously provided becomes inaccurate or was required to be updated during the period of its review. In addition, the Advisor may have some discretion with respect to valuations of certain assets and liabilities, which could affect our NAV. Because the Advisor is paid fees for its services based on our NAV, the Advisor could be motivated to influence our NAV and NAV procedures such that they result in an NAV exceeding realizable value, due to the impact of higher valuations on the compensation to be received by the Advisor. Our Advisor may also benefit by us retaining ownership of our assets at times when our stockholders may be better served by the sale or disposition of our assets in order to avoid a possible reduction in our NAV that could result from a distribution of the proceeds. If our NAV is calculated in a way that is not reflective of our actual NAV, then the purchase price of shares of our common stock on a given date may not accurately reflect the value of our portfolio, and your shares may be worth less than the purchase price. See “Net Asset Valuation Calculation and Valuation Procedures.”

 

Our Advisor’s product specialists may recommend that we enter into transactions with entities that have a relationship or affiliation with them, and our stockholders will not be able to assess our Advisor’s product specialists’ qualifications when deciding whether to make an investment in shares of our common stock.

 

Our Advisor utilizes third-party and affiliated product specialists to assist in fulfilling its responsibilities to us. The partnerships between our Advisor and the product specialists provide, in accordance with industry standards, that the product specialists must adhere to a standard of care of commercial reasonableness when performing services on our behalf. Our Advisor’s product specialists generally do not owe fiduciary duties to us and may have time constraints and other conflicts of interest due to relationships or affiliations they have with other entities. As a result, these product specialists may recommend that we enter into transactions with such entities, in which case we will not have the benefit of arm’s-length negotiations of the type normally conducted between unrelated parties. Our stockholders will not be able to assess the qualifications of our Advisor’s product specialists when deciding whether to make an investment in shares of our common stock. Therefore, our stockholders may not be able to determine whether our Advisor’s product specialists are sufficiently qualified or otherwise desirable to work with.

 

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Our Advisor’s management personnel and product specialists face conflicts of interest relating to time management and there can be no assurance that our Advisor’s management personnel and product specialists will devote adequate time to our business activities or that our Advisor will be able to hire adequate additional employees.

 

All of our Advisor’s management personnel, other employees, affiliates and related parties may also provide services to other entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, including, but not limited to, LPT and IPT. We are not able to estimate the amount of time that such management personnel and product specialists will devote to our business. As a result, certain of our Advisor’s management personnel and product specialists may have conflicts of interest in allocating their time between our business and their other activities which may include advising and managing various other real estate programs and ventures, which may be numerous and may change as programs are closed or new programs are formed. During times of significant activity in other programs and ventures, the time they devote to our business may decline and be less than we would require. There can be no assurance that our Advisor’s affiliates will devote adequate time to our business activities or that our Advisor will be able to hire adequate additional employees to perform the tasks currently being performed by our Advisor’s affiliates should the amount of time devoted to our business activities by such affiliates prove to be insufficient.

 

Our Advisor and its affiliates, including our officers and two of our directors, face conflicts of interest caused by compensation arrangements with us and other entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, which could result in actions that are not in our stockholders’ best interests.

 

Some of our executive officers, two of our directors and other key personnel are also officers, directors, managers, key personnel and/or holders of an ownership interest in the Advisor, our Dealer Manager, our Property Manager and/or other entities related to our Sponsor. Our Advisor and its affiliates receive substantial fees from us in return for their services and these fees could influence their advice to us. Among other matters, the compensation arrangements could affect their judgment with respect to:

 

· the continuation, renewal or enforcement of our agreements with our Advisor and its affiliates, including the Advisory Agreement, the agreement with the Property Manager and the agreement with the Dealer Manager;

 

· recommendations to our board of directors with respect to developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating our NAV procedures, or the decision to adjust the value of certain of our assets or liabilities if the Advisor is responsible for valuing them;

 

· public offerings of equity by us, which may result in increased advisory fees for the Advisor;

 

· competition for tenants from entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor that own properties in the same geographic area as us;

 

· asset sales, which may allow the Advisor to earn disposition fees and commissions; and

 

· investments in assets subject to product specialist agreements with affiliates of the Advisor.

 

Further, certain advisory fees paid to our Advisor and management and leasing fees paid to the Property Manager are paid irrespective of the quality of the underlying real estate or property management services during the term of the related agreement. Our Advisor may also be entitled to a disposition fee and a commission upon a property sale, each equal to a percentage of the sales price. These fees and commissions may incentivize our Advisor to recommend the sale of an asset or assets that may not be in our best interests at the time. The premature sale of an asset may add concentration risk to the portfolio or may be at a price lower than if we held the asset. Moreover, our Advisor has considerable discretion with respect to the terms and timing of disposition and leasing transactions. In evaluating investments and other management strategies, the opportunity to earn these fees may lead our Advisor to place undue emphasis on criteria relating to its compensation at the expense of other criteria, such as preservation of capital, in order to achieve higher short-term compensation. Considerations relating to compensation to our Advisor and its affiliates from us and other entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor could result in decisions that are not in our stockholders’ best interests, which could hurt our ability to pay our stockholders distributions or result in a decline in the value of our stockholders’ investment. Conflicts of interest such as those described above have contributed to stockholder litigation against certain other externally managed REITs that are not affiliated with us or our Sponsor.

 

When considering whether to recommend investments through a joint venture or other co-ownership arrangement, the fee arrangements between our Advisor and the proposed joint venture partner may incentivize our Advisor to recommend investing a greater proportion of our resources in joint venture investments than may be in our stockholders’ best interests.

 

When we invest in assets through joint ventures or other co-ownership arrangements, our Advisor may, directly or indirectly (including, without limitation, through us or our subsidiaries), receive fees from our joint venture partners and co-owners of our properties for the services our Advisor provides to them with respect to their proportionate interests. Fees received from joint venture entities or partners and paid, directly or indirectly (including without limitation, through us or our subsidiaries), to the Advisor may be more or less than similar fees that we pay to the Advisor pursuant to the Advisory Agreement. Because the Advisor may receive fees from our joint venture partners and co-owners in connection with our joint venture or other co-ownership arrangements, the Advisor may be incentivized to recommend a higher level of investment through joint ventures than may otherwise be in the best interests of our stockholders.

 

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The time and resources that entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor devote to us may be diverted and we may face additional competition due to the fact that these entities are not prohibited from raising money for another entity that makes the same types of investments that we target.

 

Entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor are not prohibited from raising money for another investment entity that makes the same types of investments as those we target. As a result, the time and resources they could devote to us may be diverted. For example, our Dealer Manager is currently involved in other public offerings for other entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, including LPT and IPT. In addition, we may compete with any such investment entity for the same investors and investment opportunities. We may also co-invest with any such investment entity. Even though all such co-investments will be subject to approval by our independent directors, they could be on terms not as favorable to us as those we could achieve co-investing with an unrelated third party.

 

Our Advisor may have conflicting fiduciary obligations if we acquire properties with an entity sponsored or advised by one of its affiliates or other related entities; as a result, in any such transaction we may not have the benefit of arm’s-length negotiations of the type normally conducted between unrelated parties.

 

Our Advisor may cause us to acquire an interest in a property from, or through a joint venture with, an entity sponsored or advised by one of its affiliates or to dispose of an interest in a property to such an entity. In these circumstances, our Advisor will have a conflict of interest when fulfilling its fiduciary obligation to us. In any such transaction we may not have the benefit of arm’s-length negotiations of the type normally conducted between unrelated parties.

 

The fees we pay to entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor in connection with our offerings of securities and in connection with the management of our investments were not determined on an arm’s-length basis, and therefore, we do not have the benefit of arm’s-length negotiations of the type normally conducted between unrelated parties.

 

Our Advisor, our Dealer Manager and other of our Advisor’s affiliates have earned and will continue to earn fees, commissions and expense reimbursements from us. The fees, commissions and expense reimbursements paid and to be paid to our Advisor, our Dealer Manager and other of our Advisor’s affiliates for services they provided us in connection with past offerings and in connection with this offering were not determined on an arm’s-length basis. As a result, the fees have been determined without the benefit of arm’s-length negotiations of the type normally conducted between unrelated parties. See “Conflicts of Interest.”

 

We may compete with other entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, including LPT and IPT, for opportunities to acquire or sell investments, which may have an adverse impact on our operations.

 

We may compete with other entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, whether existing or created in the future, including LPT and IPT, for opportunities to acquire, finance or sell certain types of real properties. We may also buy, finance or sell real properties at the same time that other entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, including LPT and IPT, are buying, financing or selling properties. In this regard, there is a risk that our Advisor will advise us to purchase a real property that provides lower returns to us than a real property purchased by an entity or program sponsored or advised by an affiliate of our Sponsor, including LPT and IPT. Certain programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor own and/or manage real properties in geographic areas in which we expect to own real properties. Therefore, our real properties may compete for tenants with other real properties owned and/or managed by other programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, including LPT and IPT. Our Advisor may face conflicts of interest when evaluating tenant leasing opportunities for our real properties and other real properties owned and/or managed by programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, including LPT and IPT, and these conflicts of interest may have an adverse impact on our ability to attract and retain tenants.

 

Programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor may be given priority over us with respect to the acquisition of certain types of investments. As a result of our potential competition with these programs, certain investment opportunities that would otherwise be available to us may not in fact be available. For example, in recognition of the fact that we also desire to acquire industrial properties and have a separate day-to-day acquisition team, the Sponsor and the Advisor have agreed, subject to changes approved or required by the Conflicts Resolution Committee, that (1) if an industrial property opportunity is a widely-marketed, brokered transaction, we, on the one hand, and LPT and/or IPT, on the other hand, may simultaneously and independently pursue such transaction, and (2) if an industrial property is not a widely-marketed, brokered transaction, then, as between us, on the one hand, and LPT and/or IPT, on the other hand, the management team and employees of each company generally are free to pursue any industrial opportunity at any time, subject to certain allocations if non-widely-marketed transactions are first sourced by certain shared employees, managers or directors. One of our independent directors, Mr. Charles Duke, is also an independent director for LPT and IPT. If there are any transactions or policies affecting us and LPT or IPT, Mr. Duke will recuse himself from making any such decisions for as long as he holds both positions.

 

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We may also compete with other entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor for opportunities to acquire, finance or sell certain types of debt-related investments.

 

As a result of our potential competition with other entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, certain investment opportunities that would otherwise be available to us may not in fact be available. This competition may also result in conflicts of interest that are not resolved in our favor. See “Conflicts of Interest.”

 

We have purchased and may in the future purchase real estate assets from third parties who have existing or previous business relationships with affiliates or other related entities of our Sponsor; as a result, in any such transaction, we may not have the benefit of arm’s-length negotiations of the type normally conducted between unrelated parties.

 

We have purchased and may in the future purchase assets from third parties that have existing or previous business relationships with affiliates of our Sponsor. Affiliates of our Sponsor who also perform or have performed services for such third parties may have had or have a conflict in representing our interests in these transactions on the one hand and in preserving or furthering their respective relationships with such third parties on the other hand. In any such transaction, we will not have the benefit of arm’s-length negotiations of the type normally conducted between unrelated parties.

 

A conflict of interest may arise between our Class E investors and our Class A, Class W and Class I investors.

 

We do not intend to pursue a “Liquidity Event” with respect to our Class A, Class W and Class I shares within any period of time. A “Liquidity Event” includes, but is not limited to, (a) a listing of our common stock on a national securities exchange (or the receipt by our stockholders of securities that are listed on a national securities exchange in exchange for our common stock); (b) our sale, merger or other transaction in which our stockholders either receive, or have the option to receive, cash, securities redeemable for cash, and/or securities of a publicly traded company; or (c) the sale of all or substantially all of our assets where our stockholders either receive, or have the option to receive, cash or other consideration. Although we will not be precluded from pursuing a Liquidity Event (or series thereof) if our board of directors determines that is in the best interest of our stockholders, we intend to operate as a perpetual-life REIT.

 

With respect to our Class E stockholders, our long-term goal is to raise sufficient proceeds in this offering so as to be able to accommodate those holders of Class E shares who would like us to purchase or redeem their shares. Although there can be no assurance, our board of directors currently intends to make liquidity available to Class E stockholders each quarter in the Class E Liquidity Amount, regardless of whether such liquidity will be made available through the Class E share redemption program or a tender offer, and excluding liquidity made available in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder through the Class E share redemption program. Our board of directors may at any time decide to reduce or eliminate the Class E Liquidity Amount or cease making Class E liquidity available through self-tender offers. Our current Class E share redemption program is only available in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder and requests for redemption under the Class E share redemption program may only be made during a limited window each quarter. The board of directors will evaluate each quarter whether to make liquidity available to Class E stockholders through the Class E share redemption program or through a tender offer process. However, if we are not successful over time in generating liquidity to holders of our Class E shares through our self-tender offers and the Class E share redemption program, we may explore additional liquidity strategies for our Class E stockholders. There can be no assurances that we will seek or be successful in achieving liquidity strategies for our Class E stockholders within any certain time frame or at all. In any event, our board of directors will seek to act in the best interest of the Company as a whole, taking into consideration all classes of stockholders.

 

 Our different intentions with respect to liquidity strategies for our Class A, Class W and Class I stockholders and our Class E stockholders may, in certain situations, lead to conflicts of interests between the groups of stockholders. In such situations, this may not result in the best course of action for any particular stockholder.

 

Risks Related to Adverse Changes in General Economic Conditions

 

Changes in global economic and capital market conditions, including periods of generally deteriorating real estate industry fundamentals, may significantly affect our results of operations and returns to our stockholders.

 

We are subject to risks generally incident to the ownership of real property, including changes in global, national, regional or local economic, demographic, political, real estate, or capital market conditions and other factors particular to the locations of our respective real property investments. We are unable to predict future changes in these market conditions. For example, an economic downturn or rise in interest rates could make it more difficult for us to lease properties or dispose of them. In addition, rising interest rates could make alternative interest bearing and other investments more attractive and, therefore, potentially lower the relative value of our existing real estate investments.

 

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In addition, we believe the risks associated with our business are more severe during periods of economic slowdown or recession if these periods are accompanied by deteriorating fundamentals and declining values in the real estate industry. Because all of our debt-related investments outstanding as of December 31, 2015 and debt-related investments we may make in the future might consist of mortgages secured by real property, these same conditions could also adversely affect the underlying borrowers and collateral of assets that we own. Declining real estate values and deteriorating real estate fundamentals would also likely reduce the level of new mortgage loan originations, since borrowers often use increases in the value of their existing properties to support the purchase of, or investment in, additional properties. Furthermore, borrowers may not be able to pay principal and interest on such loans. Declining real estate values would also significantly increase the likelihood that we would incur losses on our debt investments in the event of a default because the value of our collateral may be insufficient to cover some or all of our basis in the investment.

 

We have recorded impairments of four real properties, significant other-than-temporary impairment charges related to our real estate-related securities holdings, and provisions for losses on our debt-related investments, as a result of such conditions that occurred recently. To the extent that there is a general economic slowdown or real estate fundamentals deteriorate, it may have a significant and adverse impact on our revenues, results from operations, financial condition, liquidity, overall business prospects and ultimately our ability to make distributions to our stockholders.

 

Uncertainty and volatility in the credit markets could affect our ability to obtain debt financing on reasonable terms, or at all, which could reduce the number of properties we may be able to acquire and the amount of cash distributions we can make to our stockholders.

 

The U.S. and global credit markets recently experienced severe dislocations and liquidity disruptions, which caused volatility in the credit spreads on prospective debt financings and constrained the availability of debt financing due to the reluctance of lenders to offer financing at high leverage ratios. Similar conditions in the future could adversely impact our ability to access additional debt financing on reasonable terms or at all, which may adversely affect investment returns on future acquisitions or our ability to make acquisitions.

 

If mortgage debt is unavailable on reasonable terms as a result of increased interest rates, increased credit spreads, decreased liquidity or other factors, we may not be able to finance the initial purchase of properties. In addition, when we incur mortgage debt on properties, we run the risk of being unable to refinance such debt upon maturity, or of being unable to refinance on favorable terms.

 

If interest rates are higher or other financing terms, such as principal amortization, the need for a corporate guaranty, or other terms are not as favorable when we refinance debt or issue new debt, our income could be reduced. To the extent we are unable to refinance debt on reasonable terms, at appropriate times or at all, we may be required to sell properties on terms that are not advantageous to us, or could result in the foreclosure of such properties. If any of these events occur, our cash flow would be reduced. This, in turn, would reduce cash available for distribution to our stockholders and may hinder our ability to raise more capital by issuing securities or borrowing more money.

 

Economic events that may cause our stockholders to request that we redeem their shares may materially adversely affect our cash flow and our ability to achieve our investment objectives.

 

Future economic events affecting the U.S. economy generally, or the real estate sector specifically, could cause our stockholders to seek to sell their shares to us pursuant to our share redemption programs or self-tender offers. Generally, our Class A, Class W and Class I share redemption program imposes a quarterly cap on the aggregate net redemptions of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes equal to the amount of shares of such classes with a value (based on the redemption price per share on the day the redemption is effected) of up to 5% of the aggregate NAV of the outstanding shares of such classes as of the last day of the previous calendar quarter. Our current Class E share redemption program is even more limited. On an ongoing basis, it is only available for redemptions in connection with the death or disability of a stockholder. With respect to all other Class E stockholders, although no assurances can be made, our board of directors currently intends to make liquidity available to Class E stockholders each quarter (other than liquidity made available in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder through the Class E share redemption program) in the Class E Liquidity Amount. Even if we are able to satisfy all resulting redemption or repurchase requests, our cash flow could be materially adversely affected. In addition, if we determine to sell valuable assets to satisfy redemption or repurchase requests, our ability to achieve our investment objectives, including, without limitation, diversification of our portfolio by property type and location, moderate financial leverage, conservative operating risk and an attractive level of current income, could be materially adversely affected. See “Description of Capital Stock—Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program” and “Description of Capital Stock—Class E Share Redemption Program” for more information.

 

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Inflation or deflation may adversely affect our financial condition and results of operations.

 

Although neither inflation nor deflation has materially impacted our operations in the recent past, increased inflation could have an adverse impact on our floating rate mortgages, interest rates and general and administrative expenses, as these costs could increase at a rate higher than our rental and other revenue. Inflation could also have an adverse effect on consumer spending which could impact our tenants’ sales and, in turn, our percentage rents, where applicable. Conversely, deflation could lead to downward pressure on rents and other sources of income.

 

The failure of any banking institution in which we deposit our funds could have an adverse effect on our results of operations, financial condition and ability to pay distributions to our stockholders.

 

Currently, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, or FDIC, generally, only insures amounts up to $250,000 per depositor per insured bank. A small proportion of our cash and cash equivalents, primarily those used to fund property-level working capital needs, are currently held in FDIC-insured bank accounts. The significant majority of our idle cash is currently invested in a combination of AAA-rated money market mutual funds, which in turn are primarily invested in short-term, high credit quality commercial paper, U.S. government funds and Treasury funds. To the extent that we have deposited funds with banking institutions, then if any of such institutions ultimately fail, we would lose the amount of our deposits over the then current FDIC insurance limit. The loss of our deposits could reduce the amount of cash we have available to distribute or invest and would likely result in a decline in the value of your investment.

 

We intend to disclose funds from operations (“FFO”) and Company-defined funds from operations (“Company-Defined FFO”), each a non-GAAP financial measure, in future communications with investors, including documents filed with the Commission. However, FFO and Company-Defined FFO are not equivalent to our net income or loss as determined under GAAP, and are not complete measures of our financial position and results of operations.

 

We use, and we disclose to investors, FFO and Company-Defined FFO, which are considered non-GAAP financial measures. See “Selected Information Regarding Our Operations – How We Measure Our Operating Performance.” FFO and Company-Defined FFO are not equivalent to our net income or loss as determined in accordance with GAAP. FFO and Company-Defined FFO and GAAP net income differ because FFO and Company-Defined FFO exclude gains or losses from sales of property and impairment of depreciable real estate, and add back real estate-related depreciation and amortization. Company-Defined FFO is also adjusted for gains and losses on real estate securities, gains and losses associated with provisions for loss on debt-related investments, acquisition-related expenses, gains and losses on derivatives and gains and losses associated with extinguishment of debt and financing commitments.

 

No single measure can provide investors with sufficient information and investors should consider all of our disclosures as a whole in order to adequately understand our financial position, liquidity and results of operations. Because of the differences between FFO and Company-Defined FFO and GAAP net income or loss, FFO and Company-Defined FFO may not be accurate indicators of our operating performance, especially during periods in which we are acquiring properties. In addition, FFO and Company-Defined FFO are not necessarily indicative of cash flow available to fund cash needs and investors should not consider FFO and Company-Defined FFO as alternatives to cash flows from operations or an indication of our liquidity, or indicative of funds available to fund our cash needs, including our ability to make distributions to our stockholders. Neither the Commission nor any other regulatory body has passed judgment on the acceptability of the adjustments that we use to calculate FFO and Company-Defined FFO. Also, because not all companies calculate these types of measures the same way, comparisons with other companies may not be meaningful.

 

Risks Related to Our General Business Operations and Our Corporate Structure

 

We depend on our Advisor and its key personnel; if any of such key personnel were to cease employment with our Advisor, our business could suffer.

 

Our ability to make distributions and achieve our investment objectives is dependent upon the performance of our Advisor in the acquisition, disposition and management of real properties and debt-related investments, the selection of tenants for our real properties, the determination of any financing arrangements and other factors. In addition, our success depends to a significant degree upon the continued contributions of certain of our Advisor’s key personnel, including John A. Blumberg, Eileen Hallquist, Jeffrey L. Johnson, Andrea L. Karp, Richard D. Kincaid, J. Michael Lynch, Lainie P. Minnick, Gregory M. Moran, James R. Mulvihill, Taylor M. Paul, Gary M. Reiff, M. Kirk Scott, Jeffrey W. Taylor, Joshua J. Widoff and Evan H. Zucker, each of whom would be difficult to replace. We currently do not have, nor do we expect to obtain key man life insurance on any of our Advisor’s key personnel. If our Advisor were to lose the benefit of the experience, efforts and abilities of one or more of these individuals, our operating results and NAV could suffer.

 

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Our board of directors determines our major policies and operations, which increases the uncertainties faced by our stockholders.

 

Our board of directors determines our major policies, including our policies regarding acquisitions, dispositions, financing, growth, debt capitalization, REIT qualification, redemptions and distributions. Our board of directors may amend or revise these and other policies without a vote of the stockholders. Under the Maryland General Corporation Law and our charter, our stockholders have a right to vote only on limited matters. Our board of directors’ broad discretion in setting policies and our stockholders’ inability to exert control over those policies increases the uncertainty and risks our stockholders face, especially if our board of directors and our stockholders disagree as to what course of action is in our stockholders’ best interests.

 

Our UPREIT structure may result in potential conflicts of interest with limited partners in the Operating Partnership whose interests may not be aligned with those of our stockholders.

 

Limited partners in the Operating Partnership have the right to vote on certain amendments to the agreement that governs the Operating Partnership (the “Operating Partnership Agreement”), as well as on certain other matters. Persons holding such voting rights may exercise them in a manner that conflicts with our stockholders’ interests. As general partner of the Operating Partnership, we are obligated to act in a manner that is in the best interests of all partners of the Operating Partnership. Circumstances may arise in the future when the interests of limited partners in the Operating Partnership may conflict with the interests of our stockholders. These conflicts may be resolved in a manner stockholders believe is not in their best interests.

 

We may assume unknown liabilities in connection with acquisitions which could result in unexpected liabilities and expenses.

 

In connection with an acquisition, we may receive certain assets or interests in certain assets subject to existing liabilities, some of which may be unknown to us at the time of the acquisition. Unknown liabilities might include liabilities for cleanup or remediation of undisclosed environmental conditions, claims of tenants, vendors or other persons dealing with the entities prior to this offering (including those that had not been asserted or threatened prior to this offering), tax liabilities, and accrued but unpaid liabilities incurred in the ordinary course of business. If we acquire an entity, that entity may be subject to liabilities that become our responsibility upon acquisition of the entity. Our recourse with respect to such liabilities may be limited. Depending upon the amount or nature of such liabilities, our business, financial condition and results of operations, our ability to make distributions to our stockholders and the NAV of our shares may be adversely affected.

 

Tax protection agreements could limit our ability to sell or otherwise dispose of property contributed to the Operating Partnership.

 

In connection with contributions of property to the Operating Partnership, our Operating Partnership may enter into a tax protection agreement with the contributor of such property that provides that if we dispose of any interest in the contributed property in a taxable transaction within a certain time period, subject to certain exceptions, we may be required to indemnify the contributor for its tax liabilities attributable to the built-in gain that exists with respect to such property interests, and the tax liabilities incurred as a result of such tax protection payment. Therefore, although it may be in our stockholders’ best interests that we sell the contributed property, it may be economically prohibitive for us to do so because of these obligations.

 

Tax protection agreements may require our Operating Partnership to maintain certain debt levels that otherwise would not be required to operate our business.

 

Under a tax protection agreement, our Operating Partnership may provide the contributor of property the opportunity to guarantee debt or enter into a deficit restoration obligation. If we fail to make such opportunities available, we may be required to deliver to such contributor a cash payment intended to approximate the contributor’s tax liability resulting from our failure to make such opportunities available to that contributor and the tax liabilities incurred as a result of such tax protection payment. These obligations may require the Operating Partnership to maintain more or different indebtedness than we would otherwise require for our business.

 

Certain provisions in the partnership agreement of our Operating Partnership may delay or defer an unsolicited acquisition of us or a change of our control.

 

Provisions in the partnership agreement of our Operating Partnership may delay or defer an unsolicited acquisition of us or changes of our control. These provisions include, among others, redemption rights of qualifying parties and the rights of the limited partners to consent to transfers of the general partnership interest and mergers under specified circumstances. These provisions could discourage third parties from making proposals involving an unsolicited acquisition of us or a change of our control, although some stockholders might consider such proposals, if made, desirable.

 

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The Operating Partnership’s private placements of beneficial interests in specific Delaware statutory trusts under its DST Program could subject us to liabilities from litigation or otherwise.

 

On March 2, 2016, we, through the Operating Partnership, initiated a program to raise capital in private placements exempt from registration under the Securities Act through the sale of beneficial interests (“Interests”) in specific Delaware statutory trusts holding real properties, including properties currently indirectly owned by the Operating Partnership (the “DST Program”). These Interests may serve as replacement properties for investors seeking to complete like-kind exchange transactions under Section 1031 of the Code. All of the Interests sold to investors pursuant to such private placements will be leased-back by the Operating Partnership or a wholly owned subsidiary thereof, as applicable, and fully guaranteed by our Operating Partnership. Additionally, the Operating Partnership will be given a fair market value purchase option (“FMV Option”) giving it the right, but not the obligation, to acquire the Interests from the investors at a later time in exchange for OP Units. Investors who acquired Interests pursuant to such private placements may have done so seeking certain tax benefits that depend on the interpretation of, and compliance with, federal and state income tax laws and regulations. As the general partner of the Operating Partnership, we may become subject to liability, from litigation or otherwise, as a result of such transactions, including in the event an investor fails to qualify for any desired tax benefits.

 

The Operating Partnership’s private placements of beneficial interests in specific Delaware statutory trusts under its DST Program will not shield us from risks related to the performance of the real properties held through such structures.

 

Pursuant to the DST Program, the Operating Partnership intends to place certain of its existing real properties and/or acquire new properties to place into Delaware statutory trusts and then sell interests, via its taxable REIT subsidiary (TRS), in such trusts to third-party investors. We will hold long-term leasehold interests in the property pursuant to master leases that are fully guaranteed by our Operating Partnership, while the third-party investors indirectly hold, in most cases, all of the interests in the real estate. Although we will hold a fair market value purchase option (the FMV Option) to reacquire the real estate, the purchase price will be based on the then-current fair market value of the third-party investor’s interest in the real estate, which will be greatly impacted by the rental terms fixed by the long-term master lease. The lease effectively fixes our costs to sublease the property to occupying tenants until the earlier of the expiration of the master lease or our exercise of the FMV Option, while we bear the risk that the underlying cash flow from the property may be less than the master lease payments. Therefore, even though we will no longer own the underlying real estate, because of the fixed terms of the long-term master lease guaranteed by our Operating Partnership, negative performance by the underlying properties could affect cash available for distributions to our stockholders and will likely have an adverse effect on our results of operations and NAV.

 

We may own beneficial interests in trusts owning real property that will be subject to the agreements under our DST Program, which may have an adverse effect on our results of operations, relative to if the DST Program agreements did not exist.

 

In connection with the launch of our DST Program, we may own beneficial interests in trusts owning real property that are subject to the terms of the agreements provided by our DST Program. The DST Program agreements may limit our ability to encumber, lease or dispose of our beneficial interests. Such agreements could affect our ability to turn our beneficial interests into cash and could affect cash available for distributions to our stockholders. The DST Program agreements, and in some cases the financing documents, used in connection with the DST Program could also impair our ability to take actions that would otherwise be in the best interests of our stockholders and, therefore, may have an adverse effect on our results of operations and NAV, relative to if the DST Program agreements did not exist.

 

Cash redemptions to holders of OP Units will reduce cash available for distribution to our stockholders or to honor their redemption or repurchase requests under our share redemption programs or self-tender offers.

 

The holders of OP Units (other than us) generally have the right to cause the Operating Partnership to redeem all or a portion of their OP Units for, at our sole discretion, shares of our common stock, cash, or a combination of both. Our election to redeem OP Units for cash may reduce funds available for distribution to our stockholders or to honor our stockholders’ redemption or repurchase requests under our share redemption programs or self-tender offers.

 

Maryland law and our organizational documents limit our stockholders’ right to bring claims against our officers and directors.

 

Maryland law provides that a director will not have any liability as a director so long as he or she performs his or her duties in good faith, in a manner he or she reasonably believes to be in our best interests and with the care that an ordinarily prudent person in a like position would use under similar circumstances. In addition, our charter provides that, subject to the applicable limitations set forth therein or under Maryland law, no director or officer will be liable to us or our stockholders for monetary damages. Our charter also provides that we will generally indemnify our directors, our officers, our Advisor and its affiliates for losses they may incur by reason of their service in those capacities unless their act or omission was material to the matter giving rise to the proceeding and was committed in bad faith or was the result of active and deliberate dishonesty, they actually received an improper personal benefit in money, property or services or, in the case of any criminal proceeding, they had reasonable cause to believe the act or omission was unlawful. Moreover, we have entered into separate indemnification agreements with each of our independent directors and executive officers. As a result, we and our stockholders have more limited rights against these persons than might otherwise exist under common law. In addition, we are obligated to fund the defense costs incurred by these persons in some cases. However, our charter does provide that we may not indemnify our directors, our Advisor and its affiliates for any liability or loss suffered by them unless they have determined that the course of conduct that caused the loss or liability was in our best interests, they were acting on our behalf or performing services for us, the liability or loss was not the result of negligence or misconduct by our non-independent directors, our Advisor and its affiliates or gross negligence or willful misconduct by our independent directors, and the indemnification is recoverable only out of our net assets and not from the stockholders.

 

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Your interest will be diluted if we or the Operating Partnership issue additional securities.

 

Class E stockholders and new investors purchasing shares of common stock in this offering do not have preemptive rights to any shares issued by us in the future. Under our charter, we have authority to issue a total of 1,200,000,000 shares of capital stock. Of the total number of shares of capital stock authorized (a) 1,000,000,000 shares are designated as common stock, 400,000,000 of which are unclassified (however, we refer to them herein as Class E shares to more easily distinguish them from the shares offered hereby), 200,000,000 of which are classified as Class A shares, 200,000,000 of which are classified as Class W shares, and 200,000,000 of which are classified as Class I shares and (b) 200,000,000 shares are designated as preferred stock. Our board of directors may amend our charter to increase the aggregate number of authorized shares of capital stock or the number of authorized shares of capital stock of any class or series without stockholder approval. We intend to operate as a perpetual-life REIT, and investors purchasing shares in this offering will likely experience dilution of their equity investment in us as a result of this ongoing offering, including the distribution reinvestment plan, our ongoing Class E distribution reinvestment plan and future public offerings. Investors will also experience dilution if we issue securities in one or more private offerings, issue equity compensation pursuant to our equity incentive plans, issue shares to the Advisor in lieu of cash payments or reimbursements under the Advisory Agreement, or redeem OP Units for shares of common stock. In addition, we may in the future cause the Operating Partnership to issue a substantial number of additional OP Units in order to raise capital, acquire properties or consummate a merger, business combination or another significant transaction. OP Units may generally be converted into shares of our common stock, thereby diluting the percentage ownership interest of other stockholders. Ultimately, any additional issuance by us of equity securities or by the Operating Partnership of OP Units will dilute your indirect interest in the Operating Partnership, through which we own all of our interests in our investments.

 

We may issue preferred stock or new classes of OP Units, which issuance could adversely affect those stockholders who purchased shares of our common stock in our public offerings.

 

If we ever created and issued preferred stock or one or more new classes of OP Units with a distribution preference over common stock, payment of any distribution preferences on outstanding preferred stock or OP Units would reduce the amount of funds available for the payment of distributions on our common stock. Further, holders of preferred stock are normally entitled and holders of new classes of OP Units could be entitled to receive a preference payment in the event we liquidate, dissolve or wind up before any payment is made to our common stockholders, likely reducing the amount common stockholders would otherwise receive upon such an occurrence. Holders of preferred stock or new classes of OP Units could be given other preferential rights, such as preferential redemption rights or preferential tax protection agreements, that could reduce the amount of funds available for the payment of distributions on our common stock or otherwise negatively affect our common stockholders. In addition, under certain circumstances, the issuance of preferred stock, a new class of OP Units, or a separate class or series of common stock may render more difficult or tend to discourage:

 

· a merger, offer or proxy contest;

 

· the assumption of control by a holder of a large block of our securities;

 

· the removal of incumbent management; and/or

 

· liquidity options that otherwise may be available.

 

We are not limited to making acquisitions with cash or borrowings.

 

We are not limited to making acquisitions with cash or borrowings. We may also make investments through either public or private offerings of equity securities from us or the Operating Partnership, and we intend to do so when attractive acquisition opportunities are available. We are not limited in the number or size of investments we may make with equity issuances, and we may effect a merger, business combination or another significant transaction through equity issuances. Such issuances may be comprised of existing classes of shares of our common stock or OP Units in the Operating Partnership, new classes of shares of our common stock or OP Units in the Operating Partnership with preferential terms compared to those of our existing investors (such as preferred stock, preferred OP Units, or contractual obligations to provide protection from adverse tax consequences), or tenancy-in-common interests. We and our Operating Partnership may, with the approval of a majority of our independent directors, agree to pay additional fees to our Advisor, the Dealer Manager and their affiliates in connection with any such transactions, which may negatively affect the NAV of your shares, our ability to pay distributions and your overall return.

 

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The limit on the percentage of shares of our common stock that any person may own may discourage a takeover or business combination that may have benefited our stockholders.

 

Our charter restricts the direct or indirect ownership by one person or entity to no more than 9.8% of the value of our then outstanding capital stock (which includes common stock and any preferred stock we may issue) and no more than 9.8% of the value or number of shares, whichever is more restrictive, of our then outstanding common stock. This restriction may discourage a change of control of us and may deter individuals or entities from making tender offers for shares of our common stock on terms that might be financially attractive to stockholders or which may cause a change in our management. This ownership restriction may also prohibit business combinations that would have otherwise been approved by our board of directors and our stockholders. In addition to deterring potential transactions that may be favorable to our stockholders, these provisions may also decrease our stockholders’ ability to sell their shares of our common stock.

 

Although we are not currently afforded the full protection of the Maryland General Corporation Law relating to deterring or defending hostile takeovers, our board of directors could opt into these provisions of Maryland law in the future, which may discourage others from trying to acquire control of us and may prevent our stockholders from receiving a premium price for their stock in connection with a business combination.

 

Under Maryland law, “business combinations” between a Maryland corporation and certain interested stockholders or affiliates of interested stockholders are prohibited for five years after the most recent date on which the interested stockholder becomes an interested stockholder. These business combinations include a merger, consolidation, share exchange, or, in circumstances specified in the statute, an asset transfer or issuance or reclassification of equity securities. Also under Maryland law, control shares of a Maryland corporation acquired in a control share acquisition have no voting rights except to the extent approved by a vote of two-thirds of the votes entitled to be cast on the matter. Shares owned by the acquirer, an officer of the corporation or an employee of the corporation who is also a director of the corporation are excluded from the vote on whether to accord voting rights to the control shares. Should our board of directors opt into these provisions of Maryland law, it may discourage others from trying to acquire control of us and increase the difficulty of consummating any offer. Similarly, provisions of Title 3, Subtitle 8 of the Maryland General Corporation Law could provide similar anti-takeover protection. For more information about the business combination, control share acquisition and Subtitle 8 provisions of Maryland law, see “Description of Capital Stock—Business Combinations,” “Description of Capital Stock—Control Share Acquisitions” and “Description of Capital Stock— Subtitle 8.”

 

Our charter includes a provision regarding tender offers that may discourage a stockholder from launching a tender offer for our shares.

 

Our charter provides that any person making a tender offer that is not otherwise subject to Regulation 14D of the Exchange Act, including any “mini-tender” offer, must comply with most of the provisions of Regulation 14D of the Exchange Act, including the notice and disclosure requirements. In addition, the offeror must provide us notice of such tender offer at least 10 business days before initiating the tender offer. If the offeror does not comply with the provisions set forth above, we will have the right to redeem that offeror’s shares, if any, and any shares acquired in such tender offer. In addition, the non-complying offeror will be responsible for all of our expenses in connection with that offeror’s noncompliance. This provision of our charter may discourage a stockholder from initiating a tender offer for our shares.

 

We depend on our relationships with lenders, joint venture partners, and property managers to conduct our business. If we fail to honor any of our contractual obligations, there could be a material and adverse impact on our ability to raise capital or manage our portfolio.

 

If we are viewed as developing underperforming properties, suffer sustained losses on our investments, default on a significant level of loans or experience significant foreclosure of our properties, our reputation could be damaged. Damage to our reputation could make it more difficult to successfully develop or acquire properties in the future and to continue to grow and expand our relationships with our lenders, joint venture partners, tenants and third-party management clients, which could adversely affect our business, financial condition, NAV, results of operations and ability to make distributions.

 

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Our business could suffer in the event our Advisor, the Dealer Manager, our transfer agent or any other party that provides us with services essential to our operations experiences system failures or other cyber incidents or a deficiency in cybersecurity.

 

Our Advisor, the Dealer Manager, our transfer agent and other parties that provide us with services essential to our operations are vulnerable to service interruptions or damages from any number of sources, including computer viruses, malware, unauthorized access, energy blackouts, natural disasters, terrorism, war and telecommunication failures. Any system failure or accident that causes interruptions in our operations could result in a material disruption to our business. A cyber incident is considered to be any adverse event that threatens the confidentiality, integrity or availability of information resources. More specifically, a cyber incident is an intentional attack or an unintentional event that may include, but is not limited to, gaining unauthorized access to systems to disrupt operations, corrupt data, steal assets or misappropriate Company funds and/or confidential information, including, for example, confidential information regarding our stockholders. As reliance on technology in our industry has increased, so have the risks posed to our systems, both internal and those we have outsourced. In addition, the risk of cyber incidents has generally increased as the number, intensity and sophistication of attempted attacks and intrusions from around the world have increased. Cyber incidents may be carried out by third parties or insiders, including by computer hackers, foreign governments and cyber terrorists, using techniques that range from highly sophisticated efforts to more traditional intelligence gathering and social engineering aimed at obtaining information. The remediation costs and lost revenues experienced by a victim of a cyber incident may be significant and significant resources may be required to repair system damage, protect against the threat of future security breaches or to alleviate problems, including reputational harm, loss of revenues and litigation, caused by any breaches. There also may be liability for any stolen assets or misappropriated Company funds or confidential information. Any material adverse effect experienced by our Advisor, the Dealer Manager, our transfer agent and other parties that provide us with services essential to our operations could, in turn, have an adverse impact on us.

 

Risks Related to Investments in Real Property

 

Real properties are illiquid investments, and we may be unable to adjust our portfolio in response to changes in economic or other conditions or sell a property if or when we decide to do so.

 

Real properties are illiquid investments and we may be unable to adjust our portfolio in response to changes in economic or other conditions. In addition, the real estate market is affected by many factors, such as general economic conditions, availability of financing, interest rates and other factors, including supply and demand, that are beyond our control. We cannot predict whether we will be able to sell any real property for the price or on the terms set by us, or whether any price or other terms offered by a prospective purchaser would be acceptable to us. We cannot predict the length of time needed to find a willing purchaser and to close the sale of a real property. In addition, we may acquire real properties that are subject to contractual “lock-out” provisions that could restrict our ability to dispose of the real property for a period of time.

 

We may also be required to expend funds to correct defects or to make improvements before a property can be sold. We cannot assure you that we will have funds available to correct such defects or to make such improvements.

 

In acquiring a real property, we may agree to restrictions that prohibit the sale of that real property for a period of time or impose other restrictions, such as a limitation on the amount of debt that can be placed or repaid on that real property. Our real properties may also be subject to resale restrictions. All of these provisions would restrict our ability to sell a property.

 

We are dependent on tenants for revenue, and our inability to lease our real properties or to collect rent from our tenants may adversely affect our results of operations, NAV and returns to our stockholders.

 

Our revenues from our real property investments are dependent on our ability to lease our real properties and the creditworthiness of our tenants and would be adversely affected by the loss of or default by one or more significant lessees. Furthermore, certain of our assets may utilize leases with payments directly related to tenant sales, where the amount of rent that we charge a tenant is calculated as a percentage of such tenant’s revenues over a fixed period of time, and a reduction in sales can reduce the amount of the lease payments required to be made to us by tenants leasing space in such assets. The success of those real properties depends on the financial stability of the respective tenants. The financial results of our tenants can depend on several factors, including but not limited to the general business environment, interest rates, inflation, the availability of credit, taxation and overall consumer confidence. The recent economic downturn has, and may continue to, impact all of these factors, some to a greater degree than others.

 

In addition, our ability to increase our revenues and operating income partially depends on steady growth of demand for the products and services offered by the tenants located in the assets that we own and manage. A drop in demand, as a result of a slowdown in the U.S. and global economy or otherwise, could result in a reduction in tenant performance and consequently, adversely affect our results of operations, NAV and returns to our stockholders. Inflation could also have an adverse effect on consumer spending which could impact our tenants’ sales and, in turn, our percentage rents, where applicable. Conversely, deflation could lead to downward pressure on rents and other sources of income.

 

If indicators of impairment exist in any of our real properties, for example, we experience negative operating trends such as prolonged vacancies or operating losses, we may not recover some or all of our investment.

 

Lease payment defaults by tenants could cause us to reduce the amount of distributions to our stockholders and could force us to find an alternative source of funds to make mortgage payments on any mortgage loans. In the event of a tenant default, we may also experience delays in enforcing our rights as landlord and may incur substantial costs in protecting our investment and re-leasing our real property. If a lease is terminated, we may be unable to lease the real property for the rent previously received or sell the real property without incurring a loss.

 

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If the market for commercial real estate experiences increased vacancy rates, particularly in certain large metropolitan areas, it could result in lower revenues for us.

 

In the past decade, there have been global economic downturns that negatively impacted the commercial real estate market in the U.S., particularly in certain large metropolitan areas, and resulted in, among other things, increased tenant defaults under leases, generally lower demand for rentable space, and an oversupply of rentable space, all of which could lead to increased concessions, tenant improvement expenditures or reduced rental rates to maintain occupancies. We believe that the risks associated with our business could be more severe if the economy deteriorates again or if commercial real estate values decline. Our revenues will decline and our NAV and ability to pay distributions will be negatively impacted if our commercial properties experience higher vacancy rates or decline in value.

 

A real property that incurs a vacancy could be difficult to sell or re-lease.

 

A real property may incur a vacancy either by the continued default of a tenant under its lease or the expiration of the lease. In addition, certain of the real properties we acquire may have some vacancies at the time of closing. Certain other real properties may be specifically suited to the particular needs of a tenant and such real property may become vacant. Certain of our leases with retail tenants contain provisions giving the particular tenant the exclusive right to sell particular types of merchandise or provide specific types of services within the particular retail center. These provisions may limit the number and types of prospective tenants interested in leasing space in a particular retail property. Therefore, we may have difficulty obtaining a new tenant for any vacant space we have in our real properties. If the vacancy continues for a long period of time, we would suffer reduced revenues, which could materially and adversely affect our liquidity and NAV, and result in lower cash distributions to our stockholders. In addition, the resale value of the real property could be diminished because the market value may depend principally upon the value of the leases of such real property.

 

Adverse economic and other conditions in the regions where our assets are located may have a significant adverse impact on our financial results.

 

A deterioration of general economic or other relevant conditions, changes in governmental laws and regulations, acts of nature, demographics or other factors in any of the states or the geographic region in which our assets are located could result in the loss of a tenant, a decrease in the demand for our properties and a decrease in our revenues from those markets, which in turn may have a disproportionate and material adverse effect on our results of operations and financial condition. In addition, some of our investments are located in areas that are more susceptible to natural disasters, and therefore, our tenants and properties are particularly susceptible to revenue loss, cost increase or damage caused by earthquakes or other severe weather conditions or natural disasters. Any significant loss due to a natural disaster may not be covered by insurance and may lead to an increase in the cost of insurance and expenses for our tenants, or could limit the future availability of such insurance, which could limit our tenants’ ability to satisfy their obligations to us.

 

In addition, our results of operations depend substantially on our ability to lease the areas available in the assets that we own as well as the price at which we lease such space. Adverse conditions in the regions and specific markets where we operate may reduce our ability to lease our properties, reduce occupancy levels, restrict our ability to increase lease prices and force us to lower lease prices and/or offer tenant incentives. Should our assets fail to generate sufficient revenues for us to meet our obligations, our financial condition and results of operations, as well as our NAV and ability to make distributions, could be adversely affected.

 

Properties that have significant vacancies, especially value-add or other types of discounted real estate assets, may experience delays in leasing up or could be difficult to sell, which could diminish our return on these properties and the return on your investment.

 

Our investments in value-add properties or other types of discounted properties may have significant vacancies at the time of acquisition. If vacancies continue for a prolonged period of time beyond the expected lease-up stage that we anticipate will follow any redevelopment or repositioning efforts, we may suffer reduced revenues, resulting in less cash available for distributions to our stockholders. In addition, the resale value of the property could be diminished because the market value of a particular property depends principally upon the value of the cash flow generated by the leases associated with that property. Such a reduction on the resale value of a property could also reduce our NAV and the overall return on your investment.

 

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Changes in supply of or demand for similar real properties in a particular area may increase the price of real property assets we seek to purchase or adversely affect the value of the real property assets that we own.

 

The real estate industry is subject to market forces and we are unable to predict certain market changes including changes in supply of or demand for similar real properties in a particular area. For example, if demand for the types of real property assets in which we seek to invest were to sharply increase or supply of those assets were to sharply decrease, the prices of those assets could rise significantly. Any potential purchase of an overpriced asset could decrease our rate of return on these investments and result in lower operating results and overall returns to our stockholders. Likewise, a sharp increase in supply could adversely affect leasing rates and occupancy, which could lower operating results, our NAV and overall returns to our stockholders.

 

Actions of our joint venture partners could adversely impact our performance.

 

We have entered into and may continue to enter into joint ventures with third parties, including entities that are affiliated with our Advisor or entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor. We have purchased and developed and may also continue to purchase and develop properties in joint ventures or in partnerships, co-tenancies or other co-ownership arrangements with the sellers of the properties, affiliates of the sellers, developers or other persons. Such investments may involve risks not otherwise present with a direct investment in real estate, including, for example:

 

· the possibility that our venture partner, co-tenant or partner in an investment might become bankrupt or otherwise be unable to meet its capital contribution obligations;

 

· that such venture partner, co-tenant or partner may at any time have economic or business interests or goals which are or which become inconsistent with our business interests or goals;

 

· that such venture partner, co-tenant or partner may be in a position to take action contrary to our instructions or requests or contrary to our policies or objectives;

 

· that actions by such venture partner, co-tenant or partner could adversely affect our reputation, negatively impacting our ability to conduct business; or

 

· that such venture partner, co-tenant or partner has legal or other effective control over the asset.

 

Actions by a joint venture partner or co-tenant might have the result of subjecting the property to liabilities in excess of those contemplated and may have the effect of reducing our stockholders’ returns.

 

Under certain joint venture arrangements, neither venture partner may have the power to control the venture, and an impasse could be reached, which might have a negative influence on the joint venture and decrease potential returns to our stockholders. In the event that a venture partner has a right of first refusal to buy out the other partner, it may be unable to finance such a buy-out at that time. It may also be difficult for us to sell our interest in any such joint venture or partnership or as a co-tenant in a particular property. In addition, to the extent that our venture partner or co-tenant is an affiliate of our Advisor or an entity sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, certain conflicts of interest will exist. See “Conflicts of Interest—Joint Ventures with Affiliates of the Advisor or other Entities Advised by the Affiliates of the Sponsor.”

 

We compete with numerous other parties or entities for real property investments and tenants, and we may not compete successfully.

 

We compete with numerous other persons or entities seeking to buy real property assets or to attract tenants to real properties we already own, which may have a negative impact on our ability to acquire real property assets or attract tenants on favorable terms, if at all, and the returns on our real property assets. These persons or entities may have greater experience and financial strength than us. For example, our competitors may be willing to offer space at rental rates below our rates, causing us to lose existing or potential tenants and pressuring us to reduce our rental rates to retain existing tenants or convince new tenants to lease space at our properties. Similarly, the opening of new competing assets near the assets that we own may hinder our ability to renew our existing leases or to lease to new tenants, because the proximity of new competitors may divert existing or new tenants to such competitors. In addition, if market rental rates decline during the term of an existing lease, we may be unable to renew or find a new tenant without lowering the rental rate. Each of these factors could adversely affect our results of operations, financial condition, NAV and ability to pay distributions to our stockholders.

 

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Delays in the acquisition, development and construction of real properties or debt investments may have adverse effects on portfolio diversification, results of operations and returns to our stockholders.

 

Delays we encounter in selecting, acquiring and developing additional real properties or debt investments could adversely affect our stockholders’ returns. The uncertain state of the real estate markets in recent years and the resulting incentives of lenders and sellers to retain their investments had previously led to generally lower transaction volume in the broader real estate market and for us, in part due to pricing and valuation uncertainties. It is possible that such disruptions and uncertainties may reoccur. Alternatively, increased competition for high quality investments may also limit our ability to make incremental accretive investments in real properties and debt investments. These factors may continue to have a negative effect on our stockholders’ returns, and may also hinder our ability to reach our portfolio diversification objectives.

 

In addition, where properties are acquired prior to the start of construction or during the early stages of construction, it will typically take several months to complete construction and rent available space. Therefore, we may not receive any income from these properties for a significant period of time following acquisition, and distributions to our stockholders could suffer. Delays in the completion of construction could give tenants the right to terminate preconstruction leases for space at a newly developed project. We may incur additional risks when we make periodic progress payments or other advances to builders prior to completion of construction. Each of those factors could result in increased costs of a project or loss of our investment. In addition, we will be subject to normal lease-up risks relating to newly constructed projects. Furthermore, the price we agree to for a real property will be based on our projections of rental income and expenses and estimates of the fair market value of the real property upon completion of construction. If our projections are inaccurate, we may pay too much for a property.

 

We may be unable to achieve our diversification goals or to realize benefits from diversification.

 

Our objective is to continue to build a high-quality, diversified real estate portfolio. Although there can be no assurance that we will achieve this objective, we intend to diversify our portfolio by key portfolio attributes including, but not limited to, (1) property type, (2) target market, with consideration given to geographic concentrations, (3) average lease terms and portfolio occupancy expectations, (4) tenant concentrations, including credit and exposure to particular businesses or industries and (5) debt profile with the goal of maximizing flexibility while seeking to minimize cost and mitigate the risks associated with changes in interest rates and debt maturities. However, we may not successfully implement our diversification strategy. For example, although we may target investments in four primary property categories of office, industrial, retail and multifamily, we currently do not own any multifamily investments and have recently sold a large portion of our industrial holdings. Even if we do fully achieve our diversification goals, it is possible our diversified portfolio will not perform as well as a portfolio that is concentrated in a particular type of real estate.

 

We may alter our exposure to various property categories and we may not always own properties in each category.

 

We may target investments in four primary property categories of office, industrial, retail and multifamily. Although we aim to diversify our real estate portfolio by owning properties in each of these categories, we may not always have significant holdings, or any holdings at all, in each category. For example, we currently have no multifamily investments and have recently sold a large portion of our industrial holdings. We may elect to increase or decrease our holdings in each category at any time and we may change our target property categories at any time. If we decrease or eliminate our holdings in any property category or cease to target any of the four property categories our real estate portfolio will be less diversified and we may not realize the benefits of diversification.

 

We are subject to the risk that, with respect to assets that we have acquired and may acquire based on growth potential, such growth potential is not realized.

 

In 2015, we disposed of approximately $496.2 million of assets and we acquired approximately $341.3 million of assets. The assets that we sold were generally higher-yielding than the new assets we acquired, although we believe the acquired assets exhibit greater potential for revenue growth going forward. We believe that market conditions may cause us to continue to explore in certain markets the disposition of higher-yielding assets and in certain target markets the acquisition of assets that may generate lower yields but with greater growth potential. Although there can be no assurance that we will pursue this strategy or be successful in its execution, this may mean that, for some period of time, higher-yielding assets are sold from our portfolio in exchange for assets that initially may produce lower current income but which we believe will generate increased income over time through increased tenant demand and rental rate growth in order to generate long term growth in NAV. With respect to such assets, we are subject to the risk that the expected growth potential is not realized. This may result from a variety of factors, including but not limited to unanticipated changes in local market conditions or increased competition for similar properties in the same market. Acquiring properties that do not realize their expected growth potential, or properties that take longer than expected to realize their growth potential, would likely negatively affect our NAV, limit our ability to pay distributions to you and reduce your overall returns.

 

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Our real properties are subject to property and other taxes that may increase in the future, which could adversely affect our cash flow.

 

Our real properties are subject to real and personal property and other taxes that may increase as tax rates change and as the properties are assessed or reassessed by taxing authorities. Certain of our leases provide that the property taxes, or increases therein, are charged to the lessees as an expense related to the real properties that they occupy while other leases will generally provide that we are responsible for such taxes. In any case, as the owner of the properties, we are ultimately responsible for payment of the taxes to the applicable governmental authorities. If property taxes increase, our tenants may be unable to make the required tax payments, ultimately requiring us to pay the taxes even if otherwise stated under the terms of the lease. If we fail to pay any such taxes, the applicable taxing authorities may place a lien on the property and the property may be subject to a tax sale. In addition, we will generally be responsible for property taxes related to any vacant space.

 

We are subject to litigation that could adversely affect our results of operations.

 

We are a defendant from time to time in lawsuits and/or regulatory proceedings relating to our business. Unfavorable outcomes resulting from such lawsuits and/or regulatory proceedings could adversely impact our business, financial condition, NAV or results of operations.

 

Uninsured losses or premiums for insurance coverage relating to real property may adversely affect our returns.

 

There are types of losses, generally catastrophic in nature, such as losses due to wars, acts of terrorism, earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, pollution or environmental matters that are uninsurable or not economically insurable, or may be insured subject to limitations, such as large deductibles or co-payments. Risks associated with potential acts of terrorism could sharply increase the premiums we pay for coverage against property and casualty claims. Additionally, mortgage lenders sometimes require commercial property owners to purchase specific coverage against terrorism as a condition for providing mortgage loans. These policies may not be available at a reasonable cost, if at all, which could inhibit our ability to finance or refinance our real properties. In such instances, we may be required to provide other financial support, either through financial assurances or self-insurance, to cover potential losses. Changes in the cost or availability of insurance could expose us to uninsured casualty losses. In the event that any of our real properties incurs a casualty loss that is not fully covered by insurance, the value of our assets will be reduced by any such uninsured loss. In addition, we could be held liable for indemnifying possible victims of an accident. We cannot assure our stockholders that funding will be available to us for the repair or reconstruction of damaged real property in the future or for liability payments to accident victims.

 

The real estate industry is subject to extensive regulation, which may result in higher expenses or other negative consequences that could adversely affect us.

 

Our activities are subject to federal, state and municipal laws, and to regulations, authorizations and license requirements with respect to, among other things, zoning, environmental protection and historical heritage, all of which may affect our business. We may be required to obtain licenses and permits with different governmental authorities in order to acquire and manage our assets.

 

In addition, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the “Dodd-Frank Act”), which generally took effect in 2011, contains a sweeping overhaul of the regulation of financial institutions and the financial markets. Key provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act require extensive rulemaking by the Commission and the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, some of which remains ongoing. Thus, the full impact of the Dodd-Frank Act on our business cannot be fully assessed until all final implementing rules and regulations are promulgated.

 

Various aspects of the Dodd-Frank Act may have a significant impact on our business, including, without limitation, provisions of the legislation that increase regulation of and disclosure requirements related to investment advisors, swap transactions and hedging policies, corporate governance and executive compensation, investor protection and enforcement provisions, and asset-backed securities.

 

For example, but not by way of limitation, the Dodd-Frank Act and the rulemaking thereunder provides for significantly increased regulation of the derivatives markets and transactions that affect our interest rate hedging activities, including: (i) regulatory reporting, (ii) subject to limited exemptions, mandated clearing through central counterparties and execution on regulated exchanges or execution facilities, and (iii) margin and collateral requirements. While the full impact of the Dodd-Frank Act on our interest rate hedging activities cannot be fully assessed until all final implementing rules and regulations are promulgated, the foregoing requirements may affect our ability to enter into hedging or other risk management transactions, may increase our costs in entering into such transactions, and/or may result in us entering into such transactions on less favorable terms than prior to effectiveness of the Dodd-Frank Act. For example, subject to an exception for “end-users” of swaps upon which we may seek to rely, we may be required to clear certain interest rate hedging transactions by submitting them to a derivatives clearing organization. In addition, to the extent we are required to clear any such transactions, we will be required to, among other things, post margin in connection with such transactions. The occurrence of any of the foregoing events may have an adverse effect on our business and our stockholders’ return.

 

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In addition, public authorities may enact new and more stringent standards, or interpret existing laws and regulations in a more restrictive manner, which may force companies in the real estate industry, including us, to spend funds to comply with these new rules. Any such action on the part of public authorities may adversely affect our results from operations.

 

In the event of noncompliance with such laws, regulations, licenses and authorizations, we may face the payment of fines, project shutdowns, cancellation of licenses and revocation of authorizations, in addition to other civil and criminal penalties.

 

Costs of complying with governmental laws and regulations related to environmental protection and human health and safety may be high.

 

All real property and the operations conducted on the real property are subject to federal, state and local laws and regulations relating to environmental protection and human health and safety. Some of these laws and regulations may impose joint and several liability on tenants, owners or operators for the costs to investigate or remediate contaminated properties, regardless of fault or whether the acts causing the contamination were legal.

 

Under various federal, state and local environmental laws, a current or previous owner or operator of real property may be liable for the cost of removing or remediating hazardous or toxic substances on such real property. Such laws often impose liability whether or not the owner or operator knew of, or was responsible for, the presence of such hazardous or toxic substances. Third parties may also sue the owner or operator of a site for damages based on personal injury, natural resources or property damage or other costs, including investigation and clean-up costs resulting from the environmental contamination. In addition, the presence of hazardous substances, or the failure to properly remediate these substances, may adversely affect our ability to sell, rent or pledge such real property as collateral for future borrowings. Environmental laws also may impose restrictions on the manner in which real property may be used or businesses may be operated. A property owner who violates environmental laws may be subject to sanctions, which may be enforced by government agencies or, in certain circumstances, private parties. Some of these laws and regulations have been amended so as to require compliance with new or more stringent standards as of future dates. Compliance with new or more stringent laws or regulations or stricter interpretation of existing laws may require us to incur material expenditures. Future laws, ordinances or regulations may impose material environmental liability. Our tenants’ operations, the existing condition of land when we buy it, operations in the vicinity of our real properties, such as the presence of underground storage tanks, or activities of unrelated third parties may affect our real properties. In addition, there are various local, state and federal fire, health, life-safety and similar regulations with which we may be required to comply, and which may subject us to liability in the form of fines or damages for noncompliance. In connection with the acquisition and ownership of our real properties, we may be exposed to such costs in connection with such regulations. The cost of defending against environmental claims, of any damages or fines we must pay, of compliance with environmental regulatory requirements or of remediating any contaminated real property could materially and adversely affect our business, lower the value of our assets or results of operations and, consequently, lower our NAV and the amounts available for distribution to our stockholders.

 

Environmental laws in the U.S. also require that owners or operators of buildings containing asbestos properly manage and maintain the asbestos, adequately inform or train those who may come into contact with asbestos and undertake special precautions, including removal or other abatement, in the event that asbestos is disturbed during building renovation or demolition. These laws may impose fines and penalties on building owners or operators who fail to comply with these requirements and may allow third parties to seek recovery from owners or operators for personal injury associated with exposure to asbestos. Some of our properties may contain asbestos-containing building materials.

 

From time to time, we may acquire properties, or interests in properties, with known adverse environmental conditions where we believe that the environmental liabilities associated with these conditions are quantifiable and that the acquisition will yield a superior risk-adjusted return. In such an instance, we will underwrite the costs of environmental investigation, clean-up and monitoring into the cost. Further, in connection with property dispositions, we may agree to remain responsible for, and to bear the cost of, remediating or monitoring certain environmental conditions on the properties.

 

Generally, our properties are subject to a Phase I or similar environmental assessment by independent environmental consultants prior to or in connection with our acquisition of such properties. Phase I assessments are intended to discover and evaluate information regarding the environmental condition of the surveyed property and surrounding properties. Phase I assessments generally include a historical review, a public records review, an investigation of the surveyed site and surrounding properties and preparation and issuance of a written report, but do not include soil sampling or subsurface investigations and typically do not include an asbestos survey. We cannot give any assurance that an environmental liability that we believe would have a material adverse effect on our business, financial condition or results of operations taken as a whole, will not currently exist at the time of acquisition or may not arise in the future, with respect to any of our properties. Material environmental conditions, liabilities or compliance concerns may arise after an environmental assessment has been completed. Moreover, there can be no assurance that future laws, ordinances or regulations will not impose any material environmental liability, or that the then current environmental condition of our properties will not be affected by tenants, by the condition of land or operations in the vicinity of such properties (such as releases from underground storage tanks), or by third parties unrelated to us.

 

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The costs associated with complying with the Americans with Disabilities Act may reduce the amount of cash available for distribution to our stockholders.

 

Investment in real properties may also be subject to the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990, as amended. Under this act, all places of public accommodation are required to comply with federal requirements related to access and use by disabled persons. The act has separate compliance requirements for “public accommodations” and “commercial facilities” that generally require that buildings and services be made accessible and available to people with disabilities. The act’s requirements could require us to remove access barriers and our failure to comply with the act’s requirements could result in the imposition of injunctive relief, monetary penalties or, in some cases, an award of damages. We will attempt to acquire properties that comply with the act or place the burden on the seller or other third party, such as a tenant, to ensure compliance with the act. We cannot assure our stockholders that we will be able to acquire properties or allocate responsibilities in this manner. Any monies we use to comply with the act will reduce our NAV and the amount of cash available for distribution to our stockholders.

 

We may not have funding for future tenant improvements, which may adversely affect the value of our assets, our results of operations and returns to our stockholders.

 

When a tenant at one of our real properties does not renew its lease or otherwise vacates its space in one of our buildings, it is likely that, in order to attract one or more new tenants, we will be required to expend substantial funds to construct new tenant improvements in the vacated space. We expect to invest the net proceeds from this offering in real estate-related investments, and we do not anticipate that we will maintain permanent working capital reserves. We do not currently have an identified funding source to provide funds that may be required in the future for tenant improvements and tenant refurbishments in order to attract new tenants. If we do not establish sufficient reserves for working capital or obtain adequate financing to supply necessary funds for capital improvements or similar expenses, we may be required to defer necessary or desirable improvements to our real properties. If we defer such improvements, the applicable real properties may decline in value, and it may be more difficult for us to attract or retain tenants to such real properties or the amount of rent we can charge at such real properties may decrease. We cannot assure our stockholders that we will have any sources of funding available to us for the repair or reconstruction of damaged real property in the future.

 

Lease agreements may have specific provisions that create risks to our business and may adversely affect us.

 

Our lease agreements are regulated by local, municipal, state and federal laws, which may grant certain rights to tenants, such as the compulsory renewal of their lease by filing lease renewal actions when certain legal conditions are met. A lease renewal action may represent two principal risks for us: (i) if we plan to vacate a given unit in order to change or adapt an asset’s mix of tenants, the tenant could remain in that unit by filing a lease renewal action and interfere with our strategy; and (ii) if we desire to increase the lease price for a specific unit, this increase may need to be approved in the course of a lease renewal action, and the final value could be decided at the discretion of a judge. We would then be subject to the court’s interpretation and decision, and could be forced to accept an even lower price for the lease of the unit. The compulsory renewal of our lease agreements and/or the judicial review of our lease prices may adversely affect our cash flow and our operating results.

 

Certain of our lease agreements may not be “triple net leases,” under which the lessee undertakes to pay all the expenses of maintaining the leased property, including insurance, taxes, utilities and repairs. We will be exposed to higher maintenance, tax and property management expenses with respect to all of our leases that are not “triple net.”

 

Operating expenses, such as expenses for fuel, utilities, labor, building materials and insurance are not fixed and may increase in the future. There is no guarantee that we will be able to pass such increases on to our tenants. To the extent such increases cannot be passed on to our tenants, any such increases would cause our cash flow, NAV and operating results to decrease.

 

We depend on the availability of public utilities and services, especially for water and electric power. Any reduction, interruption or cancellation of these services may adversely affect us.

 

Public utilities, especially those that provide water and electric power, are fundamental for the sound operation of our assets. The delayed delivery or any material reduction or prolonged interruption of these services could allow certain tenants to terminate their leases or result in an increase in our costs, as we may be forced to use backup generators, which also could be insufficient to fully operate our facilities and could result in our inability to provide services. Accordingly, any interruption or limitation in the provision of these essential services may adversely affect us.

 

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Risks Related to Investments in Real Estate-Related Debt and Securities

 

The mortgage loans in which we invest will be subject to the risk of delinquency, foreclosure and loss, which could result in losses to us.

 

Commercial mortgage loans are secured by commercial property and are subject to risks of delinquency and foreclosure and risks of loss. The ability of a borrower to repay a loan secured by a property typically is dependent primarily upon the successful operation of such property rather than upon the existence of independent income or assets of the borrower. If the net operating income of the property is reduced, the borrower’s ability to repay the loan may be impaired. Net operating income of an income-producing property can be affected by, among other things: tenant mix, success of tenant businesses, property management decisions, property location and condition, competition from comparable types of properties, changes in laws that increase operating expenses or limit rents that may be charged, any need to address environmental contamination at the property, the occurrence of any uninsured casualty at the property, changes in national, regional or local economic conditions and/or specific industry segments, current and potential future capital markets uncertainty, declines in regional or local real estate values, declines in regional or local rental or occupancy rates, increases in interest rates, real estate tax rates and other operating expenses, changes in governmental rules, regulations and fiscal policies, including environmental legislation, acts of God, terrorism, social unrest and civil disturbances.

 

In the event of any default under a mortgage loan held directly by us, we will bear a risk of loss of principal to the extent of any deficiency between the value of the collateral and the principal and accrued interest of the mortgage loan, which could have a material adverse effect on our cash flow from operations, and results from operations and limit amounts available for distribution to our stockholders. In the event of the bankruptcy of a mortgage loan borrower, the mortgage loan to such borrower will be deemed to be secured only to the extent of the value of the underlying collateral at the time of bankruptcy (as determined by the bankruptcy court), and the lien securing the mortgage loan will be subject to the avoidance powers of the bankruptcy trustee or debtor-in-possession to the extent the lien is unenforceable under state law. Foreclosure of a mortgage loan can be an expensive and lengthy process, which could have a substantial adverse effect on our anticipated return on the foreclosed mortgage loan. In addition, if we foreclose on a particular property, we could become, as owner of the property, subject to liabilities associated with such property, including liabilities related to taxes and environmental matters.

 

The mezzanine loans and B-notes in which we invest involve greater risks of loss than senior loans secured by income-producing real properties.

 

We invest in mezzanine loans and B-notes that substantially take the form of subordinated loans secured by second mortgages on the underlying real property or loans secured by a pledge of the ownership interests of either the entity owning the real property or the entity that owns the interest in the entity owning the real property. These types of investments involve a higher degree of risk than long-term senior mortgage loans secured by income-producing real property because the investment may become unsecured as a result of foreclosure by the senior lender. In the event of a bankruptcy of the entity providing the pledge of its ownership interests as security, we may not have full recourse to the assets of such entity, or the assets of the entity may not be sufficient to satisfy our mezzanine loan in whole or in part. In addition, there may be significant delays and costs associated with the process of foreclosing on collateral securing or supporting these investments. If a borrower defaults on our mezzanine loan or debt senior to our loan, or in the event of a borrower bankruptcy, our mezzanine loan will be satisfied only after the senior debt. As a result, we may not recover some or all of our investment. In addition, mezzanine loans may have higher loan-to-value ratios than conventional mortgage loans, resulting in less equity in the real property and increasing the risk of loss of principal. Further, even if we are successful in foreclosing on the equity interests serving as collateral for our mezzanine loans, such foreclosure will result in us inheriting all of the liabilities of the underlying mortgage borrower, including the senior mortgage on the applicable property. This may result in both increased costs to us and a negative impact on our overall debt covenants and occupancy levels. In many cases a significant restructuring of the senior mortgage may be required in order for us to be willing to retain longer term ownership of the property. If we are unsuccessful in restructuring the underlying mortgage debt in these scenarios, the mortgage lender ultimately may foreclose on the property causing us to lose any remaining investment.

 

A portion of our debt-related investments may be considered illiquid, and we may not be able to adjust our portfolio in response to changes in economic and other conditions.

 

Certain of the debt-related investments that we have purchased or may purchase in the future in connection with privately negotiated transactions are not or may not be registered under the relevant securities laws, resulting in a prohibition against their transfer, sale, pledge or other disposition except in a transaction that is exempt from the registration requirements of, or is otherwise effected in accordance with, those laws. As a result, our ability to vary our portfolio in response to changes in economic and other conditions may be limited. In addition, due to current credit market conditions, certain of our registered securities may not be as liquid as when originally purchased.

 

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Bridge loans may involve a greater risk of loss than conventional mortgage loans.

 

We may provide bridge loans secured by first lien mortgages on properties to borrowers who are typically seeking short-term capital to be used in an acquisition, development or refinancing of real estate. The borrower may have identified an undervalued asset that has been undermanaged or is located in a recovering market. If the market in which the asset is located fails to recover according to the borrower’s projections, or if the borrower fails to improve the quality of the asset’s management or the value of the asset, the borrower may not receive a sufficient return on the asset to satisfy the bridge loan, and we may not recover some or all of our investment.

 

In addition, owners usually borrow funds under a conventional mortgage loan to repay a bridge loan. We may, therefore, be dependent on a borrower’s ability to obtain permanent financing to repay our bridge loan, which could depend on market conditions and other factors. Bridge loans, like other loans secured directly or indirectly by property, are subject to risks of borrower defaults, bankruptcies, fraud, losses and special hazard losses that are not covered by standard hazard insurance. In the event of any default under bridge loans held by us, we bear the risk of loss of principal and nonpayment of interest and fees to the extent of any deficiency between the value of the mortgage collateral and the principal amount of the bridge loan. Any such losses with respect to our investments in bridge loans could have an adverse effect on our NAV, results of operations and financial condition.

 

Interest rate and related risks may cause the value of our real estate-related securities investments to be reduced.

 

Interest rate risk is the risk that fixed-income securities such as preferred and debt securities, and to a lesser extent dividend paying common stocks, will decline in value because of changes in market interest rates. Generally, when market interest rates rise, the market value of such securities will decline, and vice versa. In addition, during periods of rising interest rates, the average life of certain types of securities may be extended because of slower than expected principal payments. This may lock in a below-market interest rate, increase the security’s duration and reduce the value of the security. This is known as extension risk. During periods of declining interest rates, an issuer may be able to exercise an option to prepay principal earlier than scheduled, which is generally known as call or prepayment risk. If this occurs, we may be forced to reinvest in lower yielding securities. This is known as reinvestment risk. Preferred and debt securities frequently have call features that allow the issuer to repurchase the security prior to its stated maturity. An issuer may redeem an obligation if the issuer can refinance the debt at a lower cost due to declining interest rates or an improvement in the credit standing of the issuer. To the extent we invest in real estate-related securities going forward, these risks may reduce the value of such investments.

 

Investments in real estate-related securities are subject to specific risks relating to the particular issuer of the securities and may be subject to the general risks of investing in subordinated real estate-related securities.

 

We may invest in real estate-related common equity, preferred equity and debt securities of both publicly traded and private real estate companies. Investments in real estate-related securities will involve special risks relating to the particular issuer of the securities, including the financial condition and business outlook of the issuer. Issuers of real estate-related securities generally invest in real estate or real estate-related assets and are subject to the inherent risks associated with real estate-related debt investments discussed in this prospectus.

 

Real estate-related securities may be unsecured and subordinated to other obligations of the issuer. As a result, investments in real estate-related securities are subject to risks of (i) limited liquidity in the secondary trading market, (ii) substantial market price volatility, (iii) subordination to the prior claims of banks and other senior lenders to the issuer and preferred equity holders, (iv) the operation of mandatory sinking fund or call/redemption provisions during periods of declining interest rates that could cause the issuer to reinvest redemption proceeds in lower yielding assets, (v) the possibility that earnings of the issuer may be insufficient to meet its debt service and distribution obligations and (vi) the declining creditworthiness and potential for insolvency of the issuer during periods of rising interest rates and economic downturn. These risks may adversely affect the value of outstanding real estate-related securities and the ability of the issuers thereof to pay dividends.

 

We may make investments in non-U.S. dollar denominated securities, which will be subject to currency rate exposure and risks associated with the uncertainty of foreign laws and markets.

 

Some of our real estate-related securities investments may be denominated in foreign currencies, and therefore, we expect to have currency risk exposure to any such foreign currencies. A change in foreign currency exchange rates may have an adverse impact on returns on our non-U.S. dollar denominated investments. Although we may hedge our foreign currency risk subject to the REIT income qualification tests, we may not be able to do so successfully and may incur losses on these investments as a result of exchange rate fluctuations. To the extent that we invest in non-U.S. dollar denominated securities, in addition to risks inherent in the investment in securities generally discussed in this prospectus, we will also be subject to risks associated with the uncertainty of foreign laws and markets including, but not limited to, unexpected changes in regulatory requirements, political and economic instability in certain geographic locations, difficulties in managing international operations, currency exchange controls, potentially adverse tax consequences, additional accounting and control expenses and the administrative burden of complying with a wide variety of foreign laws.

 

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Risks Associated with Debt Financing

 

We incur mortgage indebtedness and other borrowings, which may increase our business risks, and could hinder our ability to make distributions to our stockholders.

 

We have financed and may continue to finance a portion of the purchase price of certain of our investments by borrowing funds. As of December 31, 2015, our leverage ratio is approximately 45.3% of the fair value of our real property and debt-related investments (determined in accordance with our valuation procedures) inclusive of property and entity-level debt. Our current leverage target is between 40-60%. Although we will generally work to maintain the targeted leverage ratio over the near term, we may change our targeted leverage ratio from time to time. In addition, we may vary from our target leverage ratio from time to time, and there are no assurances that we will maintain the targeted range disclosed above or achieve any other leverage ratio that we may target in the future. Our board of directors may from time to time modify our borrowing policy in light of then-current economic conditions, the relative costs of debt and equity capital, the fair values of our properties, general conditions in the market for debt and equity securities, growth and acquisition opportunities or other factors.

 

Under our charter, we have a limitation on borrowing that precludes us from borrowing in excess of 300% of the value of our net assets unless approved by a majority of the independent directors and disclosed to stockholders in our next quarterly report along with justification for the excess. Net assets for purposes of this calculation are defined to be our total assets (other than intangibles), valued at cost prior to deducting depreciation or other non-cash reserves, less total liabilities. Generally speaking, the preceding calculation is expected to approximate 75% of the aggregate cost of our real property assets and debt-related investments before non-cash reserves and depreciation. In addition, we have incurred and may continue to incur mortgage debt secured by some or all of our real properties to obtain funds to acquire additional real properties or for working capital. We may also borrow funds to satisfy the REIT tax qualification requirement that we distribute at least 90% of our annual REIT taxable income to our stockholders. Furthermore, we may borrow funds if we otherwise deem it necessary or advisable to ensure that we maintain our qualification as a REIT for federal income tax purposes.

 

High debt levels would generally cause us to incur higher interest charges, and could result in higher debt service payments and could be accompanied by restrictive covenants. If there is a shortfall between the cash flow from a property and the cash flow needed to service mortgage debt on that property, then the amount available for distributions to our stockholders may be reduced. In addition, incurring mortgage debt increases the risk of loss of a property since defaults on indebtedness secured by a property may result in lenders initiating foreclosure action. In that case, we could lose the property securing the loan that is in default or be forced to sell the property at an inopportune time, thus reducing the value of our investments. For tax purposes, a foreclosure on any of our properties will be treated as a sale of the property for a purchase price equal to the outstanding balance of the debt secured by the mortgage. If the outstanding balance of the debt secured by the mortgage exceeds our tax basis in the property, we will recognize taxable income on foreclosure, but we would not receive any cash proceeds. We and our Operating Partnership have historically given certain full, partial or limited guarantees, and may continue to give full, partial or limited guarantees in the future, to lenders of mortgage debt on behalf of the entities that own our properties. When we give a guarantee on behalf of an entity that owns one of our properties, we are responsible to the lender for satisfaction of the debt if it is not paid by such entity. If any mortgage contains cross-collateralization or cross-default provisions, a default on a single property could affect multiple properties. If any of our properties are foreclosed upon due to a default, our NAV, liquidity and ability to pay cash distributions to our stockholders will be adversely affected.

 

Increases in interest rates could increase the amount of our debt payments and therefore adversely impact our operating results.

 

We currently utilize a significant amount of variable rate debt financing. To the extent we do not have derivative instruments to hedge exposure to changes in interest rates, increases in interest rates would increase our interest costs, which would reduce our cash flows and our ability to make distributions to our stockholders. If we need to repay existing debt during periods of rising interest rates, we could be required to liquidate one or more of our real property or debt-related investments at times, which may not permit realization of the maximum return on such investments.

 

Our derivative instruments used to hedge against interest rate fluctuations may not be successful in mitigating our risks associated with interest rates and could reduce the overall returns on our investments.

 

We utilize derivative instruments to hedge exposure to changes in interest rates on certain of our loans secured by our real properties, but no hedging strategy can protect us completely. We may use derivative instruments, such as forward starting swaps, to hedge interest rate risks associated with debt incurrences that we anticipate may occur. However, if we fail to accurately forecast such debt incurrences we will be subject to interest rate risk without successfully hedging the underlying transaction. Furthermore, the use of derivative instruments may cause us to forgo the benefits of otherwise favorable fluctuations in interest rates, since derivative instruments may prevent us from realizing the full benefits of lower borrowing cost in an environment of declining interest rates.

 

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In addition, derivative instruments may not mitigate all of the risk associated with fluctuations in borrowing costs. Derivative instruments are generally used to hedge fluctuations in benchmark interest rates, such as London Interbank Offered Rate (“LIBOR”) and U.S. treasury security-based interest rates. However, there are other components of borrowing costs that may comprise the “spread” that lenders apply to the benchmark interest rates. The “spread” that lenders apply to benchmark interest rates when making loans may fluctuate from time to time. Fluctuations in the “spread” may be attributable to volatility in the credit markets or borrower-specific credit risk. When we enter into derivative instruments in anticipation of certain debt incurrences, such derivative instruments do not mitigate the risks of fluctuations in “spread” which could exacerbate the risks described above.

 

We cannot assure our stockholders that our hedging strategy and the derivatives that we use will adequately offset all of our risk related to interest rate volatility or that our hedging of these risks will not result in losses. These derivative instruments may also generate income that may not be treated as qualifying REIT income for purposes of the 75% or 95% REIT income tests.

 

We assume the credit risk of our counterparties with respect to derivative transactions.

 

We may enter into derivative contracts for risk management purposes to hedge our exposure to cash flow variability caused by changing interest rates on our future variable rate real estate loans receivable and variable rate notes payable. These derivative contracts generally are entered into with bank counterparties and are not traded on an organized exchange or guaranteed by a central clearing organization. We would therefore assume the credit risk that our counterparties will fail to make periodic payments when due under these contracts or become insolvent. If a counterparty fails to make a required payment, becomes the subject of a bankruptcy case, or otherwise defaults under the applicable contract, we would have the right to terminate all outstanding derivative transactions with that counterparty and settle them based on their net market value or replacement cost. In such an event, we may be required to make a termination payment to the counterparty, or we may have the right to collect a termination payment from such counterparty. We assume the credit risk that the counterparty will not be able to make any termination payment owing to us. We may not receive any collateral from a counterparty, or we may receive collateral that is insufficient to satisfy the counterparty’s obligation to make a termination payment. Default by a counterparty may result in the loss of unrealized profits and may force us to enter into a replacement transaction at the then current market price.

 

We assume the risk that our derivative counterparty may terminate transactions early.

 

If we fail to make a required payment or otherwise default under the terms of a derivative contract, the counterparty would have the right to terminate all outstanding derivative transactions between us and that counterparty and settle them based on their net market value or replacement cost. In certain circumstances, the counterparty may have the right to terminate derivative transactions early even if we are not defaulting. If our derivative transactions are terminated early, it may not be possible for us to replace those transactions with another counterparty, on as favorable terms or at all.

 

We may be required to collateralize our derivative transactions.

 

We may be required to secure our obligations to our counterparties under our derivative contracts by pledging collateral to our counterparties. That collateral may be in the form of cash, securities or other assets. If we default under a derivative contract with a counterparty, or if a counterparty otherwise terminates one or more derivative contracts early, that counterparty may apply such collateral toward our obligation to make a termination payment to the counterparty. If we have pledged securities or other assets, the counterparty may liquidate those assets in order to satisfy our obligations. If we are required to post cash or securities as collateral, such cash or securities will not be available for use in our business. Cash or securities pledged to counterparties may be repledged by counterparties and may not be held in segregated accounts. Therefore, in the event of a counterparty insolvency, we may not be entitled to recover some or all collateral pledged to that counterparty, which could result in losses and have an adverse effect on our operations.

 

We have entered into loan agreements that contain restrictive covenants relating to our operations, which could limit our ability to make distributions to our stockholders.

 

When providing financing, a lender typically imposes restrictions on us that may affect our distribution and operating policies and our ability to incur additional debt. Our loan agreements include restrictions, covenants, customary market carve-outs and/or guarantees by us. Certain financial covenants include tests of our general liquidity and debt servicing capability as well as certain collateral specific performance and valuation ratios. In addition, our loan agreements may contain covenants that limit our ability to further mortgage the property, discontinue insurance coverage or replace the Advisor as our advisor. Further, our loan agreements may limit our ability to replace the Property Manager as our property manager or terminate certain operating or lease agreements related to the property. These or other limitations may adversely affect our flexibility and our ability to achieve our investment objectives and make distributions to our stockholders. There can be no assurance that we will be able to comply with these covenants in the future, or that if we violate a covenant the lender would be willing to provide a waiver of such covenant. Violation of these covenants could result in the acceleration of maturities under the default provisions of our loan agreements. As of December 31, 2015, we were in compliance with all financial covenants.

 

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We have entered into, and may continue to enter into, financing arrangements involving balloon payment obligations, which may adversely affect our ability to refinance or sell properties on favorable terms, and to make distributions to our stockholders.

 

Most of our current mortgage financing arrangements require us to make a lump-sum or “balloon” payment at maturity. Our ability to make a balloon payment at maturity will be uncertain and may depend upon our ability to obtain additional financing or our ability to sell the particular property. At the time the balloon payment is due, we may or may not be able to refinance the balloon payment on terms as favorable as the original loan or to sell the particular property at a price sufficient to make the balloon payment. The effect of a refinancing or sale could affect the rate of return to our stockholders and the projected time of disposition of our assets. In an environment of increasing mortgage rates, if we place mortgage debt on properties, we run the risk of being unable to refinance such debt if mortgage rates are higher at the time a balloon payment is due. In addition, payments of principal and interest made to service our debts, including balloon payments, may leave us with insufficient cash to pay the distributions that we are required to pay to maintain our qualification as a REIT.

 

Risks Related to Our Taxation as a REIT

 

Failure to qualify as a REIT could adversely affect our operations and our ability to make distributions.

 

We are organized and operate in a manner intended to qualify as a REIT for U.S. federal income tax purposes. We first elected REIT status for our taxable year ended December 31, 2006. Although we have not requested a ruling from the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”) as to our overall REIT status, we have received the opinion of our special U.S. federal income tax counsel, DLA Piper LLP (US), with respect to our qualification as a REIT. Investors should be aware, however, that opinions of counsel are not binding on the IRS or on any court. The opinion of DLA Piper LLP (US) represents only the view of our counsel based on our counsel’s review and analysis of existing law and on certain representations as to factual matters and covenants made by us, including representations relating to the values of our assets and the sources of our income. DLA Piper LLP (US) has no obligation to advise us or the holders of our common stock of any subsequent change in the matters stated, represented or assumed in its opinions or of any subsequent change in applicable law. Furthermore, both the validity of the opinion of DLA Piper LLP (US) and our qualification as a REIT depend on our satisfaction of numerous requirements (some on an annual and quarterly basis) established under highly technical and complex provisions of the Code, for which there are only limited judicial or administrative interpretations, and involve the determination of various factual matters and circumstances not entirely within our control. The complexity of these provisions and of the applicable income tax regulations that have been promulgated under the Code is greater in the case of a REIT that holds its assets through a partnership, as we do. Moreover, no assurance can be given that legislation, new regulations, administrative interpretations or court decisions will not change the tax laws with respect to qualification as a REIT or the U.S. federal income tax consequences of that qualification.

 

If we were to fail to qualify as a REIT for any taxable year, we would be subject to U.S. federal income tax on our taxable income at corporate rates. In addition, we would generally be disqualified from treatment as a REIT for the four taxable years following the year in which we lose our REIT status. Losing our REIT status would reduce our net earnings available for investment or distribution to stockholders because of the additional tax liability. In addition, distributions to stockholders would no longer be deductible in computing our taxable income and we would no longer be required to make distributions. To the extent that distributions had been made in anticipation of our qualifying as a REIT, we might be required to borrow funds or liquidate some investments in order to pay the applicable corporate income tax. In addition, although we intend to operate in a manner as to qualify as a REIT, it is possible that future economic, market, legal, tax or other considerations may cause our board of directors to recommend that we revoke our REIT election.

 

Failure of our Operating Partnership to be taxable as a partnership could cause us to fail to qualify as a REIT and we could suffer other adverse tax consequences.

 

We believe that the Operating Partnership will continue to be treated for federal income tax purposes as a partnership and not as an association or as a publicly traded partnership taxable as a corporation. If the Internal Revenue Service were successfully to determine that the Operating Partnership was properly treated as a corporation, the Operating Partnership would be required to pay U.S. federal income tax at corporate rates on its net income, its partners would be treated as stockholders of the Operating Partnership and distributions to partners would constitute distributions that would not be deductible in computing the Operating Partnership’s taxable income. In addition, we could fail to qualify as a REIT, with the resulting consequences described above.

 

To continue to qualify as a REIT, we must meet annual distribution requirements, which may result in us distributing amounts that may otherwise be used for our operations.

 

To maintain the favorable tax treatment accorded to REITs, we normally will be required each year to distribute to our stockholders at least 90% of our real estate investment trust taxable income, determined without regard to the deduction for distributions paid and by excluding net capital gains. We are subject to U.S. federal income tax on our undistributed taxable income and net capital gain and to a 4% nondeductible excise tax on any amount by which distributions we pay with respect to any calendar year are less than the sum of (i) 85% of our ordinary income, (ii) 95% of our capital gain net income and (iii) 100% of our undistributed income from prior years. These requirements could cause us to distribute amounts that otherwise would be spent on acquisitions of properties and it is possible that we might be required to borrow funds or sell assets to fund these distributions. Additionally, it is possible that we might not always be able to make distributions sufficient to meet the annual distribution requirements and to avoid corporate income taxation on the earnings that we distribute.

 

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From time to time, we may generate taxable income greater than our taxable income for financial reporting purposes, or differences in timing between the recognition of taxable income and the actual receipt of cash may occur. If we do not have other funds available in these situations, we could be required to borrow funds on unfavorable terms, sell investments at disadvantageous prices or distribute amounts that would otherwise be invested in future acquisitions to make distributions sufficient to enable us to pay out enough of our taxable income to satisfy the REIT distribution requirement and to avoid corporate income tax and the 4% excise tax in a particular year. These alternatives could increase our costs or reduce our equity. Thus, compliance with the REIT requirements may hinder our ability to grow, which could adversely affect the value of our common stock.

 

Recharacterization of sale-leaseback transactions may cause us to lose our REIT status.

 

We may purchase real properties and lease them back to the sellers of such properties. If we were to attempt to structure a sale-leaseback transaction such that the lease would be characterized as a “true lease” that would allow us to be treated as the owner of the property for federal income tax purposes, we cannot assure our stockholders that the IRS will not challenge such characterization. In the event that any such sale-leaseback transaction is challenged and recharacterized as a financing transaction or loan for U.S. federal income tax purposes, deductions for depreciation and cost recovery relating to such property would be disallowed. If a sale-leaseback transaction were so recharacterized, we might fail to satisfy the REIT qualification “asset tests” or the “income tests” and, consequently, lose our REIT status effective with the year of recharacterization. Alternatively, the amount of our REIT taxable income could be recalculated, which might also cause us to fail to meet the distribution requirement for a taxable year.

 

Our stockholders may have current tax liability on distributions if our stockholders elect to reinvest in shares of our common stock.

 

Even if our stockholders participate in our distribution reinvestment plan, our stockholders will be deemed to have received, and for U.S. federal income tax purposes will be taxed on, the amount reinvested in shares of our common stock to the extent the amount reinvested was not a tax-free return of capital. As a result, our stockholders that are not tax-exempt entities may have to use funds from other sources to pay their tax liability on the value of the common stock received.

 

Distributions payable by REITs do not qualify for the reduced tax rates that apply to other corporate distributions.

 

The current maximum U.S. federal income tax rate for distributions payable by corporations to domestic stockholders that are individuals, trusts or estates is 20%. Distributions payable by REITs, however, generally are taxed at the ordinary income tax rate applicable to the individual recipient, rather than the maximum 20% preferential rate. The more favorable rates applicable to regular corporate distributions could cause investors who are individuals to perceive investments in REITs to be relatively less attractive than investments in the stocks of non-REIT corporations that pay distributions, which could adversely affect the value of the stock of REITs, including our common stock.

 

If we were considered to have actually or constructively paid a “preferential dividend” to certain of our stockholders, our status as a REIT could be adversely affected.

 

For taxable years ending on or before December 31, 2014, in order for distributions to have been counted as satisfying the annual distribution requirement for REITs, and to have provided us with a REIT-level tax deduction, the distributions must not have been “preferential dividends.” A dividend was not a preferential dividend if the distribution was (1) pro rata among all outstanding shares within a particular class, and (2) in accordance with the preferences among different classes of shares as set forth in our organizational documents. For the taxable year that began on January 1, 2015 and all future taxable years, so long as we continue to be a “publicly offered REIT” (i.e., a REIT which is required to file annual and periodic reports with the SEC under the Exchange Act), the preferential dividend rule will not apply to us.

 

In certain circumstances, we may be subject to federal and state income taxes as a REIT, which would reduce our cash available for distribution to our stockholders.

 

We may be subject to taxes on our income or property even if we qualify as a REIT for federal income tax purposes, including those described below:

 

· In order to qualify as a REIT, we are required to distribute annually at least 90% of our REIT taxable income (determined without regard to the dividends-paid deduction or net capital gain) to our stockholders. If we satisfy the distribution requirement but distribute less than 100% of our REIT taxable income, we will be subject to corporate income tax on the undistributed income.

 

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· We will be required to pay a 4% nondeductible excise tax on the amount, if any, by which the distributions we make to our stockholders in any calendar year are less than the sum of 85% of our ordinary income, 95% of our capital gain net income and 100% of our undistributed income from previous years.

 

· If we have net income from the sale of foreclosure property that we hold primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of business or other non-qualifying income from foreclosure property, we will be required to pay a tax on that income at the highest corporate income tax rate.

 

· Any gain we recognize on the sale of a property, other than foreclosure property, that we hold primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of business, would be subject to the 100% “prohibited transaction” tax unless the sale qualified for a statutory safe harbor that requires, among other things, a two year holding period.

 

Our board of directors is authorized to revoke our REIT election without stockholder approval, which may cause adverse consequences to our stockholders.

 

Our charter authorizes our board of directors to revoke or otherwise terminate our REIT election, without the approval of our stockholders, if it determines that it is not in our best interest to qualify as a REIT. In this event, we would become subject to U.S. federal income tax on our taxable income and we would no longer be required to distribute most of our net income to our stockholders, which may cause a reduction in the total return to our stockholders.

 

Distributions to tax-exempt investors may be classified as unrelated business taxable income.

 

Neither ordinary nor capital gain distributions with respect to our common stock nor gain from the sale of common stock should generally constitute unrelated business taxable income to a tax-exempt investor. However, there are certain exceptions to this rule. In particular:

 

· part of the income and gain recognized by certain qualified employee pension trusts with respect to our common stock may be treated as unrelated business taxable income if shares of our common stock are predominately held by qualified employee pension trusts, we are required to rely on a special look-through rule for purposes of meeting one of the REIT share ownership tests, and we are not operated in a manner to avoid treatment of such income or gain as unrelated business taxable income;

 

· part of the income and gain recognized by a tax-exempt investor with respect to our common stock would constitute unrelated business taxable income if the investor incurs debt in order to acquire the common stock; and

 

· part or all of the income or gain recognized with respect to our common stock by social clubs, voluntary employee benefit associations, supplemental unemployment benefit trusts and qualified group legal services plans that are exempt from federal income taxation under Sections 501(c)(7), (9), (17) or (20) of the Code may be treated as unrelated business taxable income.

 

The stock ownership limit imposed by the Code for REITs and our charter may restrict our business combination opportunities and you may be restricted from acquiring or transferring certain amounts of our capital stock.

 

To maintain our status as a REIT under the Code, not more than 50% in value of our outstanding stock may be owned, directly or indirectly, by five or fewer individuals (as defined in the Code to include certain entities) at any time during the last half of each taxable year after our first year in which we qualify as a REIT. Our charter, with certain exceptions, authorizes our board of directors to take the actions that are necessary and desirable to preserve our qualification as a REIT. Unless an exemption is granted by our board of directors, no person (as defined to include entities) may own more than 9.8% in value of our capital stock or more than 9.8% in value or in number of shares, whichever is more restrictive, of our common stock following the completion of our public offerings. In addition, our charter will generally prohibit beneficial or constructive ownership of shares of our capital stock by any person who owns, actually or constructively, an interest in any of our tenants that would cause us to own, actually or constructively, more than a 9.9% interest in any of our tenants. Our board of directors may grant an exemption in its sole discretion, subject to such conditions, representations and undertakings as it may determine. These ownership limitations in our charter are common in REIT charters and are intended, among other purposes, to assist us in complying with the tax law requirements and to minimize administrative burdens. However, these ownership limits might also delay or prevent a transaction or a change in our control that might involve a premium price for our common stock or otherwise be in the best interests of our stockholders.

 

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The tax on prohibited transactions will limit our ability to engage in transactions, including certain methods of syndicating and securitizing mortgage loans, that would be treated as sales for federal income tax purposes.

 

A REIT’s net income from prohibited transactions is subject to a 100% tax. In general, prohibited transactions are sales or other dispositions of property, other than foreclosure property, but including mortgage loans that are held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of business. We might be subject to this tax if we were to syndicate, dispose of or securitize loans in a manner that was treated as a sale of the loans for U.S. federal income tax purposes. Therefore, to avoid the prohibited transactions tax, we may choose not to engage in certain sales of loans at the REIT level and may limit the structures we utilize for our securitization transactions, even though the sales or structures otherwise might be beneficial to us.

 

In addition, the Code provides a safe harbor that, if met, allows us to avoid being treated as engaged in a prohibited transaction. In order to meet the safe harbor, (i) we must have held the property for at least 2 years (and, in the case of property which consists of land or improvements not acquired through foreclosure, we must have held the property for 2 years for the production of rental income), (ii) we must not have made aggregate expenditures includible in the basis of the property during the 2-year period preceding the date of sale that exceed 30% of the net selling price of the property, and (iii) during the taxable year the property is disposed of, we must not have made more than 7 property sales or, alternatively, the aggregate adjusted basis or fair market value of all the properties sold by us during the taxable year must not exceed 10% of the aggregate adjusted basis or 10% of the fair market value, respectively, of all our assets as of the beginning of the taxable year (with the 10% thresholds increased to 20% in certain circumstances). If the 7-sale limitation in (iii) above is not satisfied, substantially all of the marketing and development expenditures with respect to the property must be made through an independent contractor from whom we do not derive or receive any income (or, in certain circumstances, by a taxable REIT subsidiary). We will endeavor to avoid engaging in prohibited transactions or we will attempt to comply with the safe harbor provisions. There is no assurance, however, that we will not engage in prohibited transactions.

 

Legislative or regulatory action could adversely affect investors.

 

In recent years, numerous legislative, judicial and administrative changes have been made to the U.S. federal income tax laws applicable to investments in REITs and similar entities. Additional changes to tax laws are likely to continue to occur in the future, and we cannot assure our stockholders that any such changes will not adversely affect the taxation of a stockholder. Any such changes could have an adverse effect on an investment in shares of our common stock. We urge our stockholders to consult with their own tax advisor with respect to the status of legislative, regulatory or administrative developments and proposals and their potential effect on an investment in shares of our common stock.

 

Recharacterization of transactions under the Operating Partnership’s private placements could result in a 100% tax on income from prohibited transactions, which would diminish our cash distributions to our stockholders.

 

The Internal Revenue Service could recharacterize transactions under the Operating Partnership’s private placements such that the Operating Partnership could be treated as the bona fide owner, for tax purposes, of properties acquired and resold by the entity established to facilitate the transaction. Such recharacterization could result in the income realized on these transactions by the Operating Partnership being treated as gain on the sale of property that is held as inventory or otherwise held primarily for the sale to customers in the ordinary course of business. In such event, such gain could constitute income from a prohibited transaction and might be subject to a 100% tax. If this occurs, our ability to pay cash distributions to our stockholders will be adversely affected.

 

Qualifying as a REIT involves highly technical and complex provisions of the Code.

 

Qualification as a REIT involves the application of highly technical and complex Code provisions for which only limited judicial and administrative authorities exist. Even a technical or inadvertent violation could jeopardize our REIT qualification. Our continued qualification as a REIT will depend on our satisfaction of certain asset, income, organizational, distribution, stockholder ownership and other requirements on a continuing basis. In addition, our ability to satisfy the requirements to qualify as a REIT depends in part on the actions of third parties over which we have no control or only limited influence, including in cases where we own an equity interest in an entity that is classified as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes.

 

Foreign investors may be subject to FIRPTA on the sale of common shares if we are unable to qualify as a “domestically controlled qualified investment entity.”

 

A foreign person (subject to certain exceptions) disposing of a U.S. real property interest, including shares of a U.S. corporation whose assets consist principally of U.S. real property interests, is generally subject to a tax, known as FIRPTA, on the gain recognized on the disposition. FIRPTA does not apply, however, to the disposition of stock in a REIT if the REIT is a “domestically controlled qualified investment entity” (as defined in section 897(h)(4)(B) of the Code). A domestically controlled qualified investment entity includes a REIT in which, at all times during a specified testing period, less than 50% in value of its shares is held directly or indirectly by non-U.S. holders. We cannot assure our stockholders that we will qualify as a domestically controlled qualified investment entity. If we were to fail to so qualify, gain realized by a foreign investor on a sale of our common stock would be subject to FIRPTA unless our common stock was traded on an established securities market and the foreign investor did not at any time during a specified testing period directly or indirectly own more than 10% of the value of our outstanding common stock. Regardless of our status as a domestically controlled qualified investment entity, capital gain distributions attributable to a disposition of a U.S. real property interest will generally be subject to tax under FIRPTA in the hands of non-U.S. investors. See “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Special Tax Considerations for Non-U.S. Stockholders—Capital Gain Distributions.”

 

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Investment Company Risks

 

Avoiding registration as an investment company imposes limits on our operations, and failure to avoid registration reduces the value of your investment.

 

We conduct our operations so as not to become regulated as an investment company under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, which we refer to as the “Investment Company Act.” To do so, we will have to continue to monitor the value of our securities in comparison with the value of our other assets and make sure that the value of our securities does not exceed 40% of the value of all of our assets on an unconsolidated basis. As a result, we may be unable to sell assets we would otherwise want to sell and may be unable to purchase securities we would otherwise want to purchase.

 

If we were obligated to register as an investment company, we would have to comply with a variety of substantive requirements under the Investment Company Act that impose, among other things:

 

· limitations on capital structure;

 

· restrictions on specified investments;

 

· prohibitions on transactions with affiliates; and

 

· compliance with reporting, record keeping, voting proxy disclosure and other rules and regulations that would significantly increase our operating expenses.

 

Registration with the Commission as an investment company would be costly, would subject our company to a host of complex regulations and would divert the attention of management from the conduct of our business.

 

Further, if it were established that we were an unregistered investment company, there would be a risk that we would be subject to monetary penalties and injunctive relief in an action brought by the Commission, that we would be unable to enforce contracts with third parties and that third parties could seek to obtain rescission of transactions undertaken during the period it was established that we were an unregistered investment company. Any such results would be likely to have a material adverse effect on us.

 

Retirement Plan Risks

 

If you fail to meet the fiduciary and other standards under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974, as amended, or “ERISA,” or the Code as a result of an investment in our stock, you could be subject to criminal and civil penalties.

 

There are special considerations that apply to employee benefit plans subject to ERISA (such as profit-sharing, section 401(k) or pension plans) and other retirement plans or accounts subject to Section 4975 of the Code (such as an IRA) that are investing in our shares. If you are investing the assets of such a plan or account in our common stock, you should satisfy yourself that:

 

· your investment is consistent with your fiduciary and other obligations under ERISA and the Code;

 

· your investment is made in accordance with the documents and instruments governing the plan or IRA, including the plan’s or account’s investment policy;

 

· your investment satisfies the prudence and diversification requirements of Sections 404(a)(1)(B) and 404(a)(1)(C) of ERISA and other applicable provisions of ERISA and the Code;

 

· your investment in our shares, for which no trading market may exist, is consistent with the liquidity needs of the plan or IRA;

 

· your investment will not produce an unacceptable amount of “unrelated business taxable income” for the plan or IRA;

 

· you will be able to comply with the requirements under ERISA and the Code to value the assets of the plan or IRA annually; and

 

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· your investment will not constitute a prohibited transaction under Section 406 of ERISA or Section 4975 of the Code.

 

With respect to the annual valuation requirements described above, we expect to provide an estimated value of our net assets per share annually to those fiduciaries (including IRA trustees and custodians) who request it. Although this estimate will be based upon determinations of the NAV of our shares in accordance with our valuation procedures, no assurance can be given that such estimated value will satisfy the applicable annual valuation requirements under ERISA and the Code. The Department of Labor or the Internal Revenue Service may determine that a plan fiduciary or an IRA custodian is required to take further steps to determine the value of our common shares. In the absence of an appropriate determination of value, a plan fiduciary or an IRA custodian may be subject to damages, penalties or other sanctions.

 

Failure to satisfy the fiduciary standards of conduct and other applicable requirements of ERISA and the Code may result in the imposition of civil and criminal penalties, and can subject the fiduciary to claims for damages or for equitable remedies, including liability for investment losses. In addition, if an investment in our shares constitutes a prohibited transaction under ERISA or the Code, the fiduciary or IRA owner who authorized or directed the investment may be subject to the imposition of excise taxes with respect to the amount invested. Additionally, the investment transaction may have to be undone. In the case of a prohibited transaction involving an IRA owner, the IRA may be disqualified as a tax-exempt account and all of the assets of the IRA may be deemed distributed and subjected to tax. ERISA plan fiduciaries and IRA owners should consult with counsel before making an investment in our shares.

 

If our assets are deemed to be plan assets, the Advisor and we may be exposed to liabilities under Title I of ERISA and the Code.

 

In some circumstances where an ERISA plan holds an interest in an entity, the assets of the entity are deemed to be ERISA plan assets unless an exception applies. This is known as the “look-through rule.” Under those circumstances, the obligations and other responsibilities of plan sponsors, plan fiduciaries and plan administrators, and of parties in interest and disqualified persons, under Title I of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Code, as applicable, may be applicable, and there may be liability under these and other provisions of ERISA and the Code. We believe that our assets should not be treated as plan assets because the shares should qualify as “publicly-offered securities” that are exempt from the look-through rules under applicable Treasury Regulations. We note, however, that because certain limitations are imposed upon the transferability of shares so that we may qualify as a REIT, and perhaps for other reasons, it is possible that this exemption may not apply. If that is the case, and if the Advisor or we are exposed to liability under ERISA or the Code, our performance and results of operations could be adversely affected. Prior to making an investment in us, you should consult with your legal and other advisors concerning the impact of ERISA and the Code on your investment and our performance.

 

See “ERISA Considerations” for a more complete discussion of the foregoing issues and other risks associated with an investment in shares of our common stock by retirement plans.

 

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ESTIMATED USE OF PROCEEDS

 

The following table presents information about how we intend to use the proceeds raised in this offering assuming that we sell the maximum primary offering amount of $750,000,000 and the maximum distribution reinvestment plan offering amount of $250,000,000. The table assumes that 1/3 of primary offering gross proceeds come from sales of Class A shares, 1/3 of primary offering gross proceeds come from sales of Class W shares and 1/3 of primary offering gross proceeds come from sales of Class I shares, and that we pay the maximum 5.0% primary dealer fee on $100,000,000 in gross proceeds from sales of Class I shares in the primary offering. Because no sales commissions are paid on shares sold in the distribution reinvestment plan, it is not necessary to make any assumptions regarding the number of Class A, Class W or Class I shares sold in the distribution reinvestment plan. We are offering up to $750,000,000 in shares of our common stock in our primary offering, and up to $250,000,000 in shares of our common stock in our distribution reinvestment plan, in any combination of Class A, Class W and Class I shares. We may reallocate the shares of our common stock we are offering between the primary offering and our distribution reinvestment plan.

 

The actual amount of selling commissions and the primary dealer fee will vary from the estimated amounts shown because (1) the number of Class A shares that we will sell is uncertain, (2) our Class A shares will be sold at a price that varies day by day based on our daily NAV per share for that class of shares and actual selling commissions per Class A share will be a percentage of the total price per Class A share in our primary offering, (3) the selling commission may be reduced or eliminated in connection with certain categories of sales of Class A shares, such as sales for which a volume discount applies, and (4) the amount of Class I shares that we sell in transactions entitling the Dealer Manager to a primary dealer fee is uncertain. Any reduction in selling commissions will be accompanied by a corresponding reduction in the Class A per share purchase price, but will not affect the net proceeds available to us. Because amounts in this table are estimates, they may not accurately reflect the actual receipt or use of the offering proceeds.

 

We intend to use the net proceeds from this offering, which are not used to pay the fees and other expenses attributable to our operations: (1) to make investments in accordance with our investment strategy and policies; (2) to provide liquidity to our stockholders and (3) for other general corporate purposes (which may include repayment of our debt or any other corporate purposes we deem appropriate). We may use the proceeds of this offering to fund stockholder distributions, although we do not currently intend to do so. The specific amounts of the net proceeds that are used for such purposes, and the priority of such uses, will depend on the amount of proceeds raised in this offering, the timing of our receipt of such proceeds and the best uses of the proceeds at such time. The figures presented below are estimates derived at the beginning of this offering and are not updated throughout the offering. The actual percentage of net proceeds available to use will depend on a number of factors, including the amount of capital we raise, the actual offering costs and the portion of capital raised with respect to which we pay a primary dealer fee. For example, if we raise less than the maximum offering amount, we would expect the percentage of net offering proceeds available to us to be less (and may be substantially less) than that set forth below because many offering costs are fixed and do not depend on the amount of capital raised in the offering.

             
    Maximum Offering of $1,000,000,000  
      Amounts       Percent  
Gross Offering Proceeds   $ 1,000,000,000       100.00 %
Less:                
Selling Commissions and Primary Dealer Fee (1)   $ 12,500,000       1.25 %
Additional Underwriting Compensation (2)   $ 3,270,000       0.32 %
Issuer Organization and Offering Expenses (3)   $ 9,566,300       0.96 %
Net Offering Proceeds (4)   $ 974,663,700       97.47 %

 

 

(1) The table assumes that 1/3 of primary offering gross proceeds come from sales of Class A shares, 1/3 of primary offering gross proceeds come from sales of Class W shares and 1/3 of primary offering gross proceeds come from sales of Class I shares, and that we pay the maximum 5.0% primary dealer fee on $100,000,000 in gross proceeds from sales of Class I shares in the primary offering. Because no sales commissions are paid on shares sold in the distribution reinvestment plan, it is not necessary to make any assumptions regarding the number of Class A, Class W or Class I shares sold in the distribution reinvestment plan. The actual selling commissions that will be paid on Class A shares may be higher or lower due to rounding. For each purchase, the total per share purchase price will be calculated by adding the applicable selling commission to the NAV per share and rounding to four decimal places; the actual selling commission per share that we pay will be the total per share purchase price less the NAV per share. Selling commissions presented in the table reflect that no selling commissions are paid with respect to Class W shares, Class I shares or on distribution reinvestment plan shares. This table excludes the dealer manager fee and distribution fee, which will be paid over time and will not be paid from offering proceeds. Subject to FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation, we pay our dealer manager (1) a dealer manager fee equal to 1/365th of 0.60% of our NAV per share for Class A shares and Class W shares for each day, (2) a dealer manager fee equal to 1/365th of 0.10% of our NAV per share for Class I shares for each day, and (3) for Class A shares only, a distribution fee equal to 1/365th of 0.50% of our NAV per share for Class A shares for each day. We will continue paying such dealer manager fee and distribution fee until the earlier to occur of the following: (i) a listing of the class of such shares on a national securities exchange or (ii) such shares no longer being outstanding. See “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation.”

 

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(2) We pay directly, or reimburse the Advisor and the Dealer Manager if they pay on our behalf, certain additional items of underwriting compensation described in “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation,” including legal fees of the Dealer Manager, reimbursements for customary travel, lodging, meals and reasonable entertainment expenses of registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager, the cost of educational conferences held by us, including costs reimbursement for registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager and registered representatives of participating broker-dealers to attend educational conferences sponsored by us, attendance fees and costs reimbursement for registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager to attend seminars conducted by participating broker-dealers, and promotional items. In addition to these items of additional underwriting compensation, the Advisor may also pay the Dealer Manager additional amounts to fund certain of the Dealer Manager’s costs and expenses related to the distribution of this offering, which will not be reimbursed by us. Also, the Dealer Manager may pay supplemental fees or commissions to participating broker-dealers and servicing broker-dealers with respect to Class I shares sold in the primary offering, which will not be reimbursed by us. See “Plan of Distribution – Underwriting Compensation.”
(3) We pay directly, or reimburse the Advisor and the Dealer Manager if they pay on our behalf, any organization and offering expenses (other than selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee, primary dealer fees, supplemental fees and commissions and certain other amounts described in “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Other Compensation”) as and when incurred. After the termination of the primary offering and again after termination of the offering under our distribution reinvestment plan, the Advisor has agreed to reimburse us to the extent that total cumulative organization and offering expenses (including selling commissions, the dealer manager fee and the distribution fee) that we incur exceed 15% of our gross proceeds from the applicable offering. The issuer organization and offering expense estimates shown in the table above represent our estimates of expenses incurred by us in connection with this offering (other than selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee, primary dealer fees and additional underwriting compensation set forth in the table above).
(4) Generally, the net offering proceeds will be available (1) to make investments in accordance with our investment strategy and policies; (2) to fund redemptions under our share redemption programs; and (3) for other general corporate purposes (which may include repayment of our debt). Selling commissions are effectively paid by purchasers of Class A shares in the primary offering at the time of purchase, because the purchase price of such shares is equal to the NAV per Class A share plus the selling commission, and such selling commissions therefore have no effect on our NAV. Accordingly, if we fund additional underwriting compensation and issuer organization and offering expenses entirely out of cash flow from operations (which would not reduce the net offering proceeds), and assuming that we pay the maximum 5.0% primary dealer fee on $100,000,000 in gross proceeds from sales of Class I shares in the primary offering, then as a percentage of the NAV of the shares sold (measured as of the date of sale), approximately 99.49% of the proceeds will be available to us.

  

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INVESTMENT STRATEGY, OBJECTIVES AND POLICIES

 

Investment Objectives

 

Our primary investment objectives are:

 

· providing current income to our stockholders in the form of quarterly cash distributions;

 

· preserving and protecting our stockholders’ capital investments;

 

· realizing capital appreciation in our share price from active investment management and asset management; and

 

· providing portfolio diversification in the form of multi-asset class investing in direct real estate.

 

We cannot assure you that we will attain our investment objectives. Our charter places numerous limitations on us with respect to the manner in which we may invest our funds. In most cases these limitations cannot be changed unless our charter is amended, which may require the approval of our stockholders.

 

Investment Strategy

 

Our investment strategy is designed to focus on generating income to support the quarterly dividend, protecting capital and growing net asset value over time. We seek to leverage our extensive knowledge of targeted real estate markets and property types to capitalize on opportunities where there is a disconnect between our assessment of an investment’s intrinsic value relative to its market value. In addition, we seek to optimize the value of our portfolio through strategic financing, diligent asset management and selective asset disposition.

 

We believe that the real estate market is cyclical, with different demand for property types at different times. Although we do not invest for the short term, we are active portfolio managers and we will seek to take advantage of opportunities to acquire or dispose of assets presented to us by real estate markets. One reason we focus on multiple property types and markets is to increase our ability to take advantage of these market cycles. We believe that the more opportunities we see in which to invest our capital, the more selective we can be in choosing strategic and accretive investments, which we believe may result in attractive total returns for our stockholders. Seeing more opportunities also may allow us to be consistent and meaningful investors throughout different cycles. When we believe one market is overvalued, we patiently wait and focus on another market that we believe is overlooked.

 

We also believe that value generally is based on the investment’s ability to produce cash flow and not what the next buyer will pay at any point in time. We generally focus on select, targeted markets that exhibit characteristics of being supply-constrained with strong demand from tenants seeking quality space.

 

We may target investments in four primary property categories of office, industrial, retail and multifamily. Although we may own properties in each of these categories, we are not tied to specific allocation targets and we may not always have significant holdings, or any holdings at all, in each category. For example, we do not currently own multifamily investments, although we intend to consider multifamily investment opportunities in the future. Also, through the disposition of assets, our ownership of industrial assets has declined to less than 5% of our portfolio as of December 31, 2015. Our recent investment strategy has primarily been focused on multi-tenant office and necessity-oriented retail investments located in what we believe are strong markets poised for long-term growth. We currently intend that our near term investment strategy will continue to focus on these multi-tenant office and necessity-oriented retail investments. We may also look for opportunities to increase our holdings of industrial assets over the next year. However, there can be no assurance that we will be successful in this investment strategy, including with respect to any particular asset class. To a lesser extent we may invest in other types of real estate including, but not limited to, hospitality, medical offices, student housing and unimproved land. We anticipate that the majority of our real property investments will be made in the United States, although we may also invest in Canada and Mexico, and potentially elsewhere on a limited basis, to the extent that opportunities exist that may help us meet our investment objectives.

 

To provide diversification to our portfolio, we have invested and may continue to invest in real estate-related debt, which will generally include mortgage loans secured by real estate, mezzanine debt and other related investments. Any investments in real estate-related securities generally will focus on equity issued by public and private real estate companies and certain other securities, with the primary goal of such investments being the preservation of liquidity in support of our share redemption programs.

 

In 2015, we disposed of approximately $496.2 million of assets and we acquired approximately $341.3 million of assets. The assets that we sold were generally higher-yielding than the new assets we acquired, although we believe the acquired assets exhibit greater potential for future revenue growth. We believe that market conditions may cause us to continue to explore in certain markets the disposition of higher-yielding assets and in certain target markets the acquisition of assets that may generate lower yields but with greater growth potential. Although there can be no assurance that we will continue to pursue this strategy or be successful in its execution, for some period of time this may mean that higher-yielding assets are sold from our portfolio in exchange for assets that initially may produce lower current income but which we believe will generate increased income over time through increased tenant demand and rental rate growth in order to generate long term growth in net asset value.

 

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Portfolio Diversification

 

Our objective is to continue to build a high-quality, diversified real estate portfolio. Although there can be no assurance that we will achieve this objective, we intend to diversify our portfolio by key portfolio attributes including, but not limited to, (1) property type, (2) target market, with consideration given to geographic concentrations, (3) average lease terms and portfolio occupancy expectations, (4) tenant concentrations, including credit and exposure to particular businesses or industries and (5) debt profile with the goal of maximizing flexibility while seeking to minimize cost and mitigate the risks associated with changes in interest rates and debt maturities.

 

As of December 31, 2015, we had total gross investments with an estimated fair value of approximately $2.4 billion (calculated in accordance with our valuation procedures), comprised of :

 

(1) 60 operating properties located in 21 geographic markets in the United States, aggregating approximately 10.1 million net rentable square feet, which were approximately 90.1% leased. Our operating real property portfolio consists of:

 

· 20 office properties located in 14 geographic markets, aggregating approximately 4.5 million net rentable square feet, with an aggregate fair value of approximately $1.4 billion;

 

· 34 retail properties located in nine geographic markets, aggregating approximately 3.8 million net rentable square feet, with an aggregate fair value of approximately $950.9 million; and

 

· 6 industrial properties located in three geographic markets, aggregating approximately 1.9 million net rentable square feet, with an aggregate fair value of approximately $90.3 million.

 

(2) Approximately $15.7 million in net debt-related investments, all of which are structured as mortgage notes.

 

Real Estate Portfolio

 

We generally utilize a long-term hold strategy for strategic investments within our portfolio of real estate assets. The majority of our current portfolio consists of primarily “core” or “core-plus” properties that have significant operating histories and existing leases whereby a significant portion of the total investment return is expected to be derived from current income. In addition, we have invested in a relatively smaller proportion of “value added” opportunities that have arisen in circumstances where we have determined that a real property may be situationally undervalued or where product re-positioning, capital expenditures and/or improved property management may increase cash flows, and where the total investment return is generally expected to have a relatively larger component derived from capital appreciation. As described above, although we do not invest for the short term, we are active portfolio managers and we will seek to take advantage of opportunities to acquire or dispose of assets presented to us by the real estate market.

 

The Advisor has substantial discretion with respect to identifying and evaluating prospective real property investments. In determining the specific types of real property investments to potentially recommend to our board of directors, the Advisor will utilize the following criteria:

 

· positioning the overall portfolio to achieve a desired mix of real property and other real estate-related investments;

 

· diversification benefits relative to the rest of the real property and other assets within our portfolio;

 

· broad assessment of macro and microeconomic, employment and demographic data and trends;

 

· regional, market and property specific supply/demand dynamics;

 

· credit quality of in-place tenants and the potential for future rent increases;

 

· physical condition and location of the asset;

 

· market rents and opportunity for revenue and net operating income growth;

 

· opportunities for capital appreciation based on product repositioning, operating expense reductions and other factors;

 

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· liquidity and income tax considerations; and

 

· additional factors considered important to meeting our investment objectives.

 

The board of directors has delegated to the Investment Committee the authority to review and approve any real property acquisition and development (including real property portfolio acquisitions and developments), for a purchase price or total project cost of up to $25,000,000. The board of directors, including a majority of the independent directors, must approve all real property acquisitions and developments, including real property portfolio acquisitions and developments, for a purchase price or total project cost greater than $25,000,000, including the financing of such acquisitions and developments.

 

We are not specifically limited in the number or size of real properties we may acquire, or on the percentage of the net proceeds from this offering that we may invest in a single real property or real property type. However, we may not invest in excess of 10% of the aggregate cost of the real property assets within our portfolio in unimproved land or real properties that are not expected to produce income within two years of their acquisition. The specific number and mix of real properties we acquire will depend upon real estate market conditions, other circumstances existing at the time we are acquiring our real properties and the amount of proceeds we raise in this offering.

 

Real Estate-Related Debt and Securities Portfolio

 

To the extent that we invest in real estate-related debt, our primary targeted real estate-related debt investments include, but are not limited to, originations of and participations in commercial mortgage loans secured by real estate, mezzanine loans, other types of preferred equity and certain other types of debt-related investments that may help us reach our diversification, liquidity and other investment objectives. With respect to investments in real estate-related securities, our primary goal in making such investments is to preserve liquidity in support of our share redemption program, although in the future we may change our objectives with respect to investments in real estate-related securities. Targeted securities investments may include, but are not limited to, the following: (1) equity securities such as preferred stocks, common stocks and convertible preferred securities of public or private real estate companies (including other REITs, real estate operating companies, homebuilders and other real estate companies), (2) debt securities issued by other real estate companies, (3) U.S. government and agency securities and (4) certain other types of securities and debt-related investments that may help us reach our diversification, liquidity and other investment objectives. We do not intend to make any further investment in commercial mortgage-backed securities or commercial real estate collateralized debt obligations.

 

Our charter provides that we may not invest in securities unless a majority of our directors (including a majority of the independent directors) not otherwise interested in the transaction approves such investment as being fair, competitive and commercially reasonable and that, generally, we may not make mortgage loan investments (other than an investment in mortgage programs or residential mortgage backed securities) unless an appraisal is obtained concerning the underlying property and the aggregate amount of all mortgage loans outstanding on the property do not exceed an amount equal to 85% of the appraised value of the property unless substantial justification exists because of the presence of other underwriting criteria. See “Investment Limitations” below. Consistent with such requirements, in determining the types of real estate-related debt and securities investments to make, we evaluate specific criteria for each prospective real estate-related debt and securities investment including:

 

· positioning the overall portfolio to achieve a desired liquidity mix of real property and other real estate-related investments;

 

· diversification benefits relative to the rest of the real estate-related debt and securities within our portfolio;

 

· fundamental securities analysis;

 

· quality and sustainability of underlying property cash flows;

 

· broad assessment of macro-economic data and regional property level supply and demand dynamics;

 

· potential for delivering current income and attractive risk-adjusted total returns; and

 

· additional factors considered important to meeting our investment objectives.

 

We are not specifically limited in the number or size of our real estate-related debt or securities investments, or on the percentage of the net proceeds from this offering that we may invest in a single real estate-related debt or security investment or pool of investments. The specific number and mix of real estate-related debt and securities in which we invest will depend upon real estate market conditions, other circumstances existing at the time we are making investments and the amount of proceeds we raise in this offering. We will not invest in securities of other issuers for the purpose of exercising control and the first or second mortgages in which we intend to invest will likely not be insured by the Federal Housing Administration or guaranteed by the Veterans Administration or otherwise guaranteed or insured.

 

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Development and Construction of Properties

 

We may invest a portion of the proceeds available for investment in unimproved land upon which improvements are to be constructed or completed. However, we may not make investments in unimproved real property or indebtedness secured by a deed of trust or mortgage loans on unimproved real property in excess of 10% of our total assets. Development of real properties is subject to risks relating to a builder’s ability to control construction costs or to build in conformity with plans, specifications and timetables. To help ensure performance by the builders of real properties that are under construction, we intend to require a guarantee of completion at the price contracted either by an adequate completion bond or performance bond. The Advisor may rely upon the net worth of the contractor or developer or a personal guarantee accompanied by financial statements showing a substantial net worth provided by an affiliate of the person entering into the construction or development contract as an alternative to a completion bond or performance bond. The Advisor may elect to employ one or more project managers (who under some circumstances may be affiliated with the Advisor or the Property Manager) to plan, supervise and implement the development and construction of any unimproved real properties which we may acquire. Such persons would be compensated by us.

 

Acquisition of Properties from the Advisor, its Affiliates and Other Related Entities

 

We are not precluded from acquiring real properties, directly or through joint ventures, from the Advisor, its affiliates or entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of the Sponsor. Any such acquisitions are subject to approval by our board of directors consistent with the conflict of interest procedures described in this prospectus. See “Conflicts of Interest—Conflict Resolution Procedures.”

 

Joint Ventures

 

A component of our investment strategy may include entering into joint venture agreements with partners in connection with certain property acquisitions and debt-related investments or investments in funds managed by an affiliate of our Sponsor. With respect to these agreements, we may make varying levels of contributions in such ventures, including, without limitation, contributions of existing assets, and may take varying levels of management, control and decision rights. We may sell or transfer assets into funds or joint ventures in which we do not retain full control. These agreements may allow us or our joint venture partners to be entitled to profit participation upon the sale of a property. With respect to any joint venture, we may enter into an advisory or sub-advisory agreement with an affiliate of the Advisor. We may also enter into arrangements with the Advisor in which the Advisor receives fees (directly or indirectly, including through a subsidiary of ours) from the joint venture entity or from the joint venture partner. Fees received from joint venture entities or partners and paid, directly or indirectly (including without limitation, through us or our subsidiaries), to the Advisor may be more or less than similar fees that we pay to the Advisor pursuant to the Advisory Agreement.

 

In certain circumstances, where we have entered and may enter into a joint venture with a partner who may also be a product specialist of our Advisor, as described below, a joint venture partner or an affiliate thereof may also be responsible for certain acquisition, asset management or other services, for which our Advisor may reallow a portion of the fees that it receives from us. Where we have entered and may enter into a joint venture, partnership or similar arrangement with the Advisor’s product specialists for the purpose of acquiring portfolio assets, the product specialists may or may not make an equity capital contribution to any such arrangement and may or may not participate in any potential profits of the relevant portfolio assets. Such profit participations are separate from and have no impact on fees paid by us to the Advisor.

 

We may enter into joint ventures, general partnerships, co-tenancies and other participation arrangements, with one or more institutions or individuals, including real estate developers, operators, owners, investors and others, some of whom may be affiliates of the Sponsor, entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of the Sponsor, and/or the Advisor’s product specialists, for the purpose of acquiring, developing, owning and managing one or more real properties. We may enter into arrangements pursuant to which we serve as general partner or manager and receive promotional interests and/or fees in return for managing investments held by the joint venture. In determining whether to recommend a particular joint venture, the Advisor evaluates the real property that such joint venture owns or is being formed to own under the same criteria used for the selection of our real property investments.

 

In certain circumstances, we may enter into a joint venture with a partner who is a product specialist. Typically, such product partners are affiliated or third-party product specialists that have specialized expertise and dedicated resources in specific areas of real property or real estate-related debt or securities and assist the Advisor in connection with identifying, evaluating and recommending potential investments, performing due diligence, negotiating purchases and managing our assets on a day-to-day basis. These partnerships are intended to allow the Advisor to leverage the organizational infrastructure of experienced real estate developers, operators and investment managers, and to potentially give us access to a greater number of high-quality real property and other investment opportunities.

 

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In selecting product specialists to assist with the selection, acquisition and/or operation of our real property and real estate-related debt and securities, the Advisor uses various criteria, including, but not limited to, a combination of the following:

 

· a disciplined approach to real estate investing;

 

· access to a steady flow of potential acquisitions that meet our investment criteria;

 

· significant investment research capabilities;

 

· depth of relationships across the commercial real estate industry;

 

· financial resources and stability;

 

· a significant investment and/or operating history regarding the specific securities type(s), real estate property type(s) and/or geographic market(s) being considered;

 

· a track record of success in preserving capital and growing property level net operating income and/or securities investment yields; and

 

· other potential factors deemed important to the selection, acquisition and/or operation of real property and real estate-related debt and securities.

 

The use of product specialists or other service providers does not eliminate or reduce the Advisor’s fiduciary duty to us. The Advisor retains ultimate responsibility for the performance of all of the matters entrusted to it under the Advisory Agreement. Pursuant to the Advisory Agreement with the Advisor, we pay the Advisor certain fees. Agreement(s) between the Advisor and its product specialists are structured in a manner designed to align the product specialists’ incentives with our stockholders’ interests and our investment objectives. To the extent that agreements are entered into with affiliates of the Advisor, such agreements are subject to approval by our independent directors and include provisions to avoid duplication of fees paid by investors.

 

Our board of directors or the appropriate committee of our board normally approves a joint venture prior to the signing of a legally binding purchase agreement for the acquisition of a specific real property or leases with one or more major tenants for occupancy at a particular real property and prior to the satisfaction of all major contingencies contained in such purchase agreement. However, the board’s approval of a joint venture may occur before or after any such time, depending upon the particular circumstances surrounding each potential joint venture agreement. You should not rely upon our initial disclosure of any proposed joint venture agreement as an assurance that we will ultimately consummate the proposed transaction or that the information we provide in any supplement to this prospectus concerning any proposed transaction will not change after the date of the supplement. We may enter into joint ventures with affiliates of the Sponsor or entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of the Sponsor for the acquisition of real properties, but only provided that:

 

· a majority of our directors, including a majority of the independent directors, approve the transaction as being fair and reasonable to us; and

 

· the investment by us and such affiliate are on terms and conditions that are no less favorable than those that would be available to unaffiliated parties.

 

In certain cases, we may be able to obtain a right of first refusal to buy a real property if a particular joint venture partner elects to sell its interest in the real property held by the joint venture. In the event that the joint venture partner were to elect to sell real property held in any such joint venture, however, we may not have sufficient funds to exercise our right of first refusal to buy the joint venture partner’s interest in the real property held by the joint venture. In the event that any joint venture with an entity affiliated with our Advisor or sponsored or advised by an affiliate of our Sponsor holds interests in more than one real property, the interest in each such real property will be generally allocated based upon the respective proportion of funds invested by each co-venturer in each such property.

 

As of December 31, 2015, all of our joint venture partners also serve as product specialists with regard to the properties held in their respective joint venture. We had joint venture agreements with the following joint venture partners and/or their affiliates as of December 31, 2015:

                 
Joint Venture Partner   Investment Type   Number of
Investments
    % of Fair Value  
Amerimar Enterprises LLC   Office property     1       1.3 %
DCT Industrial Trust   Industrial properties     4       1.2 %
Alliance Commercial Properties LLC   Office properties     2       1.2 %
          7       3.7 %

 

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Real Property Ownership

 

Our investments in real properties generally take the form of holding fee title or a long-term leasehold estate. We generally acquire such interests either (a) directly through DCTRT Real Estate Holdco LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of the Operating Partnership, or wholly owned subsidiaries thereof or (b) indirectly through limited liability interests or through investments in joint ventures, general partnerships, co-tenancies or other co-ownership arrangements with the developers of the real properties, entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of the Sponsor or other persons. In addition, we may purchase real properties and lease them back to the sellers of such real properties. While we will use commercially reasonable efforts to structure any such sale-leaseback transaction such that the lease will be characterized as a “true lease” so that we will be treated as the owner of the property for federal income tax purposes, we cannot assure you that the IRS will not challenge such characterization. In the event that any such recharacterization were successful, deductions for depreciation and cost recovery relating to such real property would be disallowed and it is possible that under some circumstances we could fail to qualify as a REIT as a result. See “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Sale-Leaseback Transactions.”

 

In determining whether to purchase a particular real property, we may, in accordance with customary practices, obtain a purchase option on such real property. The amount paid for a purchase option, if any, is normally surrendered if the real property is not purchased and is normally credited against the purchase price if the real property is purchased.

 

Due Diligence

 

Our obligation to close a transaction involving the purchase of a real property asset is generally conditioned upon the delivery and verification of certain documents from the seller or developer, including, where appropriate:

 

· plans and specifications;

 

· environmental reports;

 

· surveys;

 

· evidence of marketable title subject to such liens and encumbrances; and

 

· title and liability insurance policies.

 

Our policy generally is to not close a transaction involving the purchase of a real property asset unless and until we obtain an environmental assessment (generally a minimum of a Phase I review) for each real property purchased.

 

Terms of Leases and Tenant Creditworthiness

 

The terms and conditions of any lease we enter into with our tenants may vary substantially from those we describe in this prospectus. The Advisor reviews the creditworthiness of potential major tenants of our real properties depending on the type of real property. Although we are authorized to enter into leases with any type of tenant, we anticipate that major corporations, smaller corporations and other organizations will be our tenants under many of our office, retail and industrial property leases. These types of tenants, as well as individuals who may be tenants under multifamily property leases, will generally be subjected to a credit review prior to entering into new leases with us or upon renewal of existing leases. Such credit reviews do not require that each tenant be credit rated or free of any credit issues.

 

We anticipate that tenant improvements required to be funded by us as the landlord under leases in connection with newly acquired real properties will be funded from proceeds from this offering or, to the extent available, through our cash from operations or financing. However, at such time as a tenant at one of our real properties does not renew its lease or otherwise vacates its space in one of our industrial, retail or office buildings, it is likely that, in order to attract new tenants, we will be required to expend substantial funds for tenant improvements and tenant refurbishments to the vacated space. Since we do not anticipate maintaining permanent working capital reserves, we may not have access to funds required in the future for tenant improvements and tenant refurbishments in order to attract new tenants to lease vacated space.

 

In this regard, we anticipate that most of our leases for office, industrial and retail properties will be for fixed rentals with periodic increases based on the consumer price index or similar adjustments and that most of the rentals under our leases for industrial, office or multifamily properties will not be based on the income or profits of any person. Rentals due under leases for retail properties may be based in part on the income of the retail tenant. In such cases where the tenant is required to pay rent based on a percentage of the tenant’s income from its operations at the real property, the actual rental income we receive under such a lease may be inadequate to cover the operating expenses associated with the real property if a tenant’s income is substantially lower than projected. In such case, we may not have access to funds required in the future to pay the operating expenses associated with the real property.

 

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Disposition Policies—Real Estate Portfolio

 

We generally acquire real property assets with an expectation of holding each asset for an extended period. However, circumstances might arise which could result in a shortened holding period for certain assets. As described above, we are active portfolio managers and we will seek to take advantage of opportunities to acquire or dispose of assets presented to us by the real estate markets. A real property asset may be sold before the end of the expected holding period if:

 

· current market values exceed our internal intrinsic value assessment;

 

· we believe full current value has been reached and the value of the asset might decline;

 

· there is a change in the local economy or regulatory environment;

 

· there are diversification benefits associated with disposing of the asset and rebalancing our investment portfolio;

 

· an opportunity has arisen to pursue a more attractive real property or real estate-related debt or securities investment;

 

· a major tenant has involuntarily liquidated or is in default under its lease;

 

· the asset was acquired as part of a portfolio acquisition and does not meet our strategic plan;

 

· there exists an opportunity to enhance overall investment returns by raising capital through the sale of the asset; or

 

· the sale of the real property is in our best interests.

 

The selling price of a real property which is net leased will be determined in large part by the amount of rent payable under the lease(s) for such real property. If a tenant has a repurchase option at a formula price, we may be limited in realizing any appreciation. In connection with our sales of real properties we may lend the purchaser all or a portion of the purchase price. In these instances, our taxable income may exceed the cash received in the sale. See “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Requirements for Qualification as a REIT—Operational Requirements—Annual Distribution Requirement.” The terms of payment will be affected by custom in the area in which the real property being sold is located and by the then-prevailing economic conditions.

 

The determination of whether a particular real property should be sold or otherwise disposed of will be made with a view toward achieving our investment objectives for our stockholders. We cannot assure you that these objectives will be realized.

 

The board of directors has delegated to the Management Committee the authority to approve all real property dispositions, including real property portfolio dispositions, proposed by the Advisor for a sales price of up to $25,000,000, provided that the total dispositions approved by the Management Committee in any quarter may not exceed $50,000,000. The board, including a majority of the independent directors, must approve all real property dispositions, including real property portfolio dispositions, proposed by the Advisor (i) for a sales price greater than $25,000,000, and (ii) once the total dispositions approved by the Management Committee in any quarter equals $50,000,000, for any sales price through the end of such quarter.

 

Disposition Policies—Real Estate-Related Debt and Securities

 

In general, the holding period for real estate-related debt and securities is expected to be shorter than the holding period for real property assets. The determination of whether a particular real estate-related debt or security investment should be sold or otherwise disposed of will be made after consideration of relevant factors with a view toward achieving maximum total investment return for the asset. Relevant factors that are considered when disposing of a security or debt-related investment include:

 

· the prevailing economic, real estate and securities market conditions;

 

· the extent to which an asset has realized its expected total return;

 

· portfolio rebalancing and optimization;

 

· diversification benefits;

 

· opportunities to pursue a more attractive real property or real estate-related debt or securities investment;

 

· liquidity benefits with respect to sufficient funds for the share redemption program; and

 

· other factors that determine that the sale of the security or debt-related asset is in our best interests.

 

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Borrowing Policies

 

We use and intend to continue to use secured and unsecured debt as a means of providing additional funds for the acquisition of real property and real estate-related debt and securities. Our ability to enhance our investment returns and to increase our diversification by acquiring assets using additional funds provided through borrowing could be adversely impacted if banks and other lending institutions reduce the amount of funds available for the types of loans we seek. See “Risk Factors—Risks Related to Adverse Changes in General Economic Conditions.” When debt financing is unattractive due to high interest rates or other reasons, or when financing is otherwise unavailable on a timely basis, we may purchase certain assets for cash with the intention of seeking debt financing at a later time.

 

We use financial leverage to provide additional funds to support our investment activities. We calculate our leverage for reporting purposes as our total borrowings, calculated on the basis of GAAP, divided by the fair value of our real property and debt-related investments. Based on this methodology, as of December 31, 2015, our leverage was 45.3%. There are other methods of calculating our overall leverage ratio that may differ from this methodology, such as the methodology used in determining our compliance with corporate borrowing covenants. Our current leverage target is between 40-60%. Although we will generally work to maintain the targeted leverage ratio over the near term, we may change our targeted leverage ratio from time to time. In addition, we may vary from our target leverage ratio from time to time, and there are no assurances that we will maintain the targeted range disclosed above or achieve any other leverage ratio that we may target in the future. Our board of directors may from time to time modify our borrowing policy in light of then-current economic conditions, the relative costs of debt and equity capital, the fair values of our properties, general conditions in the market for debt and equity securities, growth and acquisition opportunities or other factors.

 

There is no limitation on the amount we may invest in any single improved real property, security or debt-related investment. However, under our charter, we have a limitation on borrowing which precludes us from borrowing in excess of 300% of the value of our net assets. Net assets for purposes of this calculation are defined to be our total assets (other than intangibles), valued at cost prior to deducting depreciation, reserves for bad debts and other non-cash reserves, less total liabilities. The preceding calculation is generally expected to approximate 75% of the sum of (a) the aggregate cost of our real property assets before non-cash reserves and depreciation and (b) the aggregate cost of our real estate-related debt and securities. However, we may temporarily borrow in excess of these amounts if such excess is approved by a majority of the independent directors and disclosed to stockholders in our next quarterly report, along with an explanation for such excess. In such event, we will review our debt levels at that time and take action to reduce any such excess as soon as practicable.

 

Our board of directors has delegated (i) to our Chief Financial Officer the authority to review and approve any proposed new borrowing or refinancing (secured or unsecured) of the Company, the Operating Partnership or any direct or indirect subsidiary of ours or the Operating Partnership, provided that the amount of any single proposed borrowing or refinancing does not exceed $25,000,000, (ii) to the Management Committee the authority to review and approve any proposed new borrowing (secured or unsecured) of the Company, the Operating Partnership or any direct or indirect subsidiary of ours or the Operating Partnership, provided that the amount of any single proposed borrowing does not exceed $50,000,000 and the amount of total new borrowings approved by the Management Committee in any quarter does not exceed $100,000,000, and (iii) to the Management Committee the authority to review and approve any proposed refinancing (secured or unsecured) of the Company, the Operating Partnership or any direct or indirect subsidiary of ours or the Operating Partnership, provided that the amount of any single proposed refinancing does not exceed $100,000,000 and the amount of total new refinancings approved by the Management Committee in any quarter does not exceed $100,000,000. Such debt may be fixed or floating rate.

 

By operating on a leveraged basis, we expect that we will have more funds available for investments. This will generally allow us to make more investments than would otherwise be possible, potentially resulting in enhanced investment returns and a more diversified portfolio. However, our use of leverage increases the risk of default on loan payments and the resulting foreclosure on a particular asset. In addition, lenders may have recourse to assets other than those specifically securing the repayment of the indebtedness.

 

The Advisor will seek to obtain financing on the most favorable terms available to us and will seek to refinance assets during the term of a loan only in limited circumstances, such as when a decline in interest rates makes it beneficial to prepay an existing loan, when an existing loan matures or if an attractive investment becomes available and the proceeds from the refinancing can be used to purchase such investment. The benefits of any such refinancing may include an increased cash flow resulting from reduced debt service requirements, an increase in distributions from proceeds of the refinancing and an increase in diversification and assets owned if all or a portion of the refinancing proceeds are reinvested.

 

Our charter restricts us from obtaining loans from any of our directors, the Advisor and any of their affiliates unless such loan is approved by a majority of the directors (including a majority of the independent directors) not otherwise interested in the transaction as fair, competitive and commercially reasonable and no less favorable to us than comparable loans between unaffiliated parties. Our aggregate borrowings, secured and unsecured, will be reviewed by the board of directors at least quarterly.

 

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Acquisitions Through Equity Issuances

 

We are not limited to making acquisitions with cash or borrowings. We may also make investments through either public or private offerings of equity securities from us or the Operating Partnership, and we intend to do so when attractive acquisition opportunities are available. We are not limited in the number or size of investments we may make with equity issuances, and we may effect a merger, business combination or another significant transaction through equity issuances. Such issuances may be comprised of existing classes of shares of our common stock or OP Units in the Operating Partnership, new classes of shares of our common stock or OP Units in the Operating Partnership with preferential terms compared to those of our existing investors (such as preferred stock, preferred OP Units, securities with preferential redemption rights or contractual obligations to provide protection from adverse tax consequences), or tenancy-in-common interests. We and our Operating Partnership may, with the approval of a majority of our independent directors, agree to pay additional fees to our Advisor, the Dealer Manager and their affiliates in connection with any such transactions.

 

DST Program

 

In March 2016, we, through the Operating Partnership, initiated a program to raise capital in private placements exempt from registration under the Securities Act through the sale of beneficial interests in specific Delaware statutory trusts holding real properties, including properties currently indirectly owned by the Operating Partnership (the “DST Program”). From 2006 through 2009, we, through our subsidiaries conducted similar private placement offerings of fractional interests in which we raised a total of $183.1 million in gross proceeds. These fractional interests were all subsequently acquired by the Operating Partnership in exchange for an aggregate of 17.7 million OP Units.

 

Under the DST Program, each private placement will offer interests in one or more real properties placed into one or more Delaware statutory trust(s) by the Operating Partnership or its affiliates (“DST Properties”). We anticipate that these interests may serve as replacement properties for investors seeking to complete like-kind exchange transactions under Section 1031 of the Code. Additionally, any interests sold to investors pursuant to such private placements will be leased-back by an indirect wholly owned subsidiary of the Operating Partnership on a long term basis of up to 29 years. The lease agreements are expected to be fully guaranteed by the Operating Partnership. Additionally, the Operating Partnership will retain a fair market value purchase option giving it the right, but not the obligation, to acquire the Interests from the investors at a later time in exchange for OP Units.

 

In connection with the DST Program, in March 2016, Dividend Capital Exchange LLC (“DCX”), a wholly owned subsidiary of our taxable REIT subsidiary that is wholly owned by the Operating Partnership, entered into a dealer manager agreement with our Dealer Manager, pursuant to which the Dealer Manager agreed to conduct the private placements for interests reflecting an indirect ownership of up to $500 million of interests. DCX will pay certain up-front fees and reimburse certain related expenses to the Dealer Manager with respect to capital raised through any such private placements. DCX is obligated to pay the Dealer Manager a dealer manager fee of up to 1.5% of gross equity proceeds raised and a commission of up to 5% of gross equity proceeds raised through the private placements. The Dealer Manager may re-allow such commissions and a portion of such dealer manager fee to participating broker dealers.

 

In addition, we, or our subsidiaries, are obligated to pay directly or reimburse the Advisor and the Dealer Manager if they pay on our behalf, any organization and offering expenses (other than selling commissions and the dealer manager fee) as and when incurred. These expenses may include reimbursements for the bona fide due diligence expenses of participating broker-dealers, supported by detailed and itemized invoices, and similar diligence expenses of investment advisers, legal fees of the Dealer Manager, reimbursements for customary travel, lodging, meals and reasonable entertainment expenses of registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager, the cost of educational conferences held by us, including costs reimbursement for registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager and registered representatives of participating broker-dealers to attend educational conferences sponsored by us, and attendance fees and costs reimbursement for registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager to attend seminars conducted by participating broker-dealers and promotional items.

 

We intend to recoup the costs of the selling commissions and dealer manager fees described above through a purchase price “mark-up” of the initial estimated fair value of the DST Properties to be sold to investors, thereby placing the economic burden of these up-front fees on the investors purchasing such interests. In addition, to offset some or all of our organization and offering expenses associated with the private placements, we will add a purchase price mark-up of the estimated fair value of the DST Properties to be sold to investors in the amount of 1.5% of the gross equity proceeds. Collectively, these purchase price mark-ups total up to 8% of the gross equity proceeds raised in the private placements. Additionally, we will be paid, by investors purchasing interests, a non-accountable reimbursement equal to 1.0% of gross equity proceeds for real estate transaction costs that we expect to incur in selling or buying these Interests. Also, investors purchasing interests will be required to pay their own respective closing costs upon the initial sale of the interests.

 

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DCX Manager LLC (the “DST Manager”), an affiliate of the Advisor, will be engaged to act as the manager of each Delaware statutory trust holding a DST Property. While the intention is to sell 100% of the interests to third parties, DCX may hold an interest for a period of time and therefore could be subject to the following description of fees and reimbursements paid to the DST Manager. The trust manager will have primary responsibility for performing administrative actions in connection with the trust and any DST Property and has the sole power to determine when it is appropriate for a trust to sell a DST Property. The trust manager will be entitled to the following payments from the trust: (i) a management fee equal to a stated percentage (e.g., 1.0%) of the gross rents payable to the trust, with such amount to be set on a deal-by-deal basis, (ii) a disposition fee of 1.0% of the gross sales price of any DST Property sold to a third party, and (iii) reimbursement of certain expenses associated with the establishment, maintenance and operation of the trust and DST Properties.

 

Additionally, the DST Manager or its affiliate may earn a 1.0% loan fee for any financing arrangement sourced, negotiated and executed in connection with the DST Program. This loan fee only is payable to the DST Manager by new investors that purchase interests and therefore is not paid by us or our affiliates.

 

Investment Limitations

 

Our charter places the following limitations on us with respect to the manner in which we may invest our funds prior to a listing of our common stock:

 

· We will not invest in commodities or commodity futures contracts, except for futures contracts when used solely for the purpose of hedging in connection with our ordinary business of investing in real property, real estate-related debt and securities.

 

· We will not invest in real estate contracts of sale, otherwise known as land sale contracts, unless the contract is in recordable form and is appropriately recorded in the chain of title.

 

· We will not make or invest in individual mortgage loans (excluding any investments in mortgage pools, commercial mortgage-backed securities (“CMBS”) or residential mortgage-backed securities (“MBS”)) unless an appraisal is obtained concerning the underlying property except for those mortgage loans insured or guaranteed by a government or government agency. In cases where a majority of our independent directors so determines, and in all cases in which the transaction is with any of our directors, the Sponsor, the Advisor or any of their affiliates, such appraisal shall be obtained from an independent appraiser. We will maintain such appraisal in our records for at least five years and it will be available for your inspection and duplication. We will also obtain a mortgagee’s or owner’s title insurance policy as to the priority of the mortgage.

 

· We will not make or invest in mortgage loans that are subordinate to any lien or other indebtedness of any of our directors, the Advisor or its affiliates.

 

· We will not invest in securities unless a majority of the directors (including a majority of the independent directors) not otherwise interested in the transaction approve such investment as being fair, competitive and commercially reasonable. See “Investment Strategy, Objectives and Policies—Real Estate-Related Debt and Securities Portfolio.”

 

· We will not issue (i) equity securities redeemable solely at the option of the holder (except that stockholders may offer their shares of common stock to us pursuant to our share redemption programs), (ii) debt securities unless the historical debt service coverage (in the most recently completed fiscal year) as adjusted for known changes is anticipated to be sufficient to properly service that higher level of debt, or (iii) options or warrants to the directors, the Advisor or any of their affiliates except on the same terms as such options or warrants are sold to the general public; options or warrants may be issued to persons other than the directors, the Advisor or any of their affiliates, but not at exercise prices less than the fair market value of the underlying securities on the date of grant and not for consideration (which may include services) that in the judgment of the independent directors has a market value less than the value of such option or warrant on the date of grant.

 

· We will not make any investment that is inconsistent with our objectives of qualifying and remaining qualified as a REIT unless and until the board of directors determines, in its sole discretion, that REIT qualification is not in our best interests.

 

· We will not make or invest in mortgage loans, including construction loans but excluding any investment in CMBS, or residential MBS, on any one real property if the aggregate amount of all mortgage loans on such real property would exceed an amount equal to 85% of the appraised value of such real property as determined by appraisal unless substantial justification exists because of the presence of other underwriting criteria.

 

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· We will not borrow in excess of 300% of the value of our net assets (net assets for purposes of this calculation is defined to be our total assets (other than intangibles), valued at cost prior to deducting depreciation, reserves for bad debts and other non-cash reserves, less total liabilities).

 

· We will not make investments in unimproved real property or indebtedness secured by a deed of trust or mortgage loans on unimproved real property in excess of 10% of our total assets.

 

· We will not issue equity securities on a deferred payment basis or other similar arrangement.

 

Investment Company Act Considerations

 

We intend to continue to conduct our operations so that neither we nor any of our subsidiaries will be required to register as an investment company under the Investment Company Act. Under the relevant provisions of Section 3(a)(1) of the Investment Company Act, an entity may be an “investment company”:

 

· If it is engaged primarily, or holds itself out as being engaged primarily or proposing to engage primarily, in the business of investing, reinvesting or trading in securities; or

 

· If it is engaged or proposes to engage in the business of investing, reinvesting, owning, holding or trading in securities and owns or proposes to acquire “investment securities” having a value exceeding 40% of the value of its total assets (other than government securities or cash items) on an unconsolidated basis. “Investment securities” excludes U.S. government securities and securities of majority-owned subsidiaries that are not themselves investment companies and are not relying on the exception from the definition of investment company under Section 3(c)(1) or Section 3(c)(7) of the Investment Company Act (relating to private investment companies).

 

To continue to avoid registration under the Investment Company Act, we may have to retain assets we would otherwise want to sell and may have to sell assets we would otherwise wish to retain. In addition, we may have to acquire assets that we might not otherwise have acquired and may have to forego opportunities to acquire assets that we would otherwise want to acquire. See “Risk Factors—Investment Company Risks.”

 

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INVESTMENTS IN REAL PROPERTIES AND REAL ESTATE-RELATED DEBT AND SECURITIES

 

Our long-term investment strategy includes diversification across multiple dimensions, including investment type (i.e. real properties and real estate-related debt and securities), property type (e.g. office, industrial, retail, etc.) and geography. We believe that a diversified investment portfolio may potentially offer investors significant benefits for a given level of risk relative to a more concentrated invested portfolio. However, we cannot assure you that we will attain our long-term investment objectives. Over time, we expect our portfolio allocations may become more consistent with our long-term diversification strategy. The following series of charts illustrates our investment portfolio allocations as of December 31, 2015.

 

Our investment portfolio was comprised of approximately 99% real property investments and approximately 1% debt-related investments, based on fair value, as of December 31, 2015. The chart below describes the diversification of our investment portfolio (including debt-related investments) across real property type. Percentages in the chart correspond to the fair value as of December 31, 2015.

 

(PIE CHART)  

 

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Through our investments in real property and debt-related investments, we also seek diversification across multiple geographic regions primarily located in the United States. The chart below shows the current allocations of our real property investments across geographic regions within the continental United States. Percentages in the chart correspond to our fair value as of December 31, 2015. Any market for which we do not show a corresponding percentage of our total fair value comprises 1% or less of the total fair value of our real property portfolio. As of December 31, 2015, our real property investments were geographically diversified across 21 markets. Our debt-related investments are located in three additional markets resulting in a combined portfolio allocation across 24 markets.

 

(MAP)  

 

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Real Properties

 

The following table describes our operating properties as of December 31, 2015, by market (dollar amounts and square footage amounts in thousands).

                                           
Market   Number of Properties     Gross
Investment Amount
    % of Gross Investment Amount     Net Rentable Square Feet     % of Total
Net Rentable Square Feet
    % Leased (1)     Secured
Indebtedness (2)
 
Office Properties:                                                        
Washington, DC     3     $ 282,939       11.9 %     878       8.7 %     78.4 %   $ 45,041  
Northern New Jersey     1       224,545       9.4 %     594       5.9 %     100.0 %     107,248  
Austin, TX     3       153,419       6.4 %     585       5.8 %     99.3 %      
East Bay, CA     1       145,339       6.1 %     405       4.0 %     100.0 %      
San Francisco, CA     1       120,238       5.1 %     264       2.6 %     91.6 %     56,134  
South Florida     2       82,130       3.5 %     363       3.6 %     92.2 %      
Denver, CO     1       82,106       3.5 %     257       2.5 %     89.6 %      
Princeton, NJ     1       51,233       2.2 %     167       1.6 %     100.0 %      
Chicago, IL     2       43,745       1.8 %     307       3.0 %     76.1 %     29,190  
Philadelphia, PA     1       43,482       1.8 %     173       1.7 %     81.7 %     24,000  
Silicon Valley, CA     1       41,912       1.8 %     143       1.4 %     91.8 %     23,500  
Dallas, TX     1       35,875       1.5 %     155       1.5 %     91.1 %      
Minneapolis/St Paul, MN     1       29,515       1.2 %     107       1.1 %     100.0 %      
Fayetteville, AR     1       11,695       0.5 %     63       0.6 %     100.0 %      
Total/Weighted Average     20       1,348,173       56.7 %     4,461       44.0 %     91.0 %     285,113  
Total Office: 20 properties, 14 markets with average annual rent of $29.37 per sq. ft.                                                        
Industrial Properties:                                                        
Dallas, TX     1       35,746       1.6 %     446       4.4 %     35.1 %     22,700  
Central Kentucky     1       28,296       1.2 %     727       7.2 %     100.0 %      
Louisville, KY     4       27,273       1.1 %     736       7.3 %     88.5 %      
Total/Weighted Average     6       91,315       3.9 %     1,909       18.9 %     80.4 %     22,700  
Total Industrial: six properties, three markets with average annual rent of $3.48 per sq. ft.                                                        
Retail Properties:                                                        
Greater Boston     26       545,382       22.9 %     2,280       22.5 %     94.0 %     84,702  
Philadelphia, PA     1       105,126       4.4 %     426       4.2 %     99.1 %     67,800  
Washington, DC     1       62,533       2.6 %     233       2.3 %     99.3 %     70,000  
Northern New Jersey     1       58,484       2.5 %     223       2.2 %     94.6 %      
Raleigh, NC     1       45,553       1.9 %     142       1.4 %     99.2 %     26,200  
South Florida     1       37,898       1.6 %     124       1.2 %     100.0 %     10,834  
Tulsa, OK     1       34,147       1.4 %     101       1.0 %     100.0 %      
San Antonio, TX     1       32,069       1.3 %     161       1.6 %     89.6 %     21,500  
Jacksonville, FL     1       19,494       0.8 %     73       0.7 %     20.3 %      
Total/Weighted Average     34       940,686       39.4 %     3,763       37.1 %     93.9 %     281,036  
Total Retail: 34 properties, nine markets with average annual rent of $16.95 per sq. ft.                                                        
Grand Total/Weighted Average     60     $ 2,380,174       100.0 %     10,133       100.0 %     90.1 %   $ 588,849  

 

 

(1) Based on executed leases as of December 31, 2015.

(2) Secured indebtedness represents the principal balance outstanding and does not include our mark-to-market adjustment on debt or GAAP principal amortization on our troubled debt restructuring.

 

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Net Operating Income

 

The following table illustrates the historic net operating income derived from our investments in real properties for the year ended December 31, 2015 (amounts in thousands).

                                 
    For the Year Ended December 31, 2015  
    Office     Industrial     Retail     Total  
Rental Revenue (1)   $ 137,204     $ 8,672     $ 72,402     $ 218,278  
Rental Expenses     (39,763 )     (1,917 )     (17,910 )     (59,590 )
Net Operating Income   $ 97,441     $ 6,755     $ 54,492     $ 158,688  

 

 

(1) Rental revenues include adjustments as defined by GAAP such as straight-line rent adjustments and above and below market rent amortization. In addition, rental revenues include percentage rents, operating expense reimbursements and other miscellaneous items.

 

We consider net operating income, or NOI, to be an appropriate supplemental financial performance measure because NOI reflects the specific operating performance of our real properties and debt-related investments and excludes certain items that are not considered to be controllable in connection with the management of each property, such as gains on the disposition of securities, other-than-temporary impairment, losses related to provisions for losses on debt-related investments, gains or losses on derivatives, acquisition related expenses, losses on extinguishment of debt and financing commitments, interest income, depreciation and amortization, general and administrative expenses, asset management fees, interest expense and noncontrolling interests. However, NOI should not be viewed as an alternative measure of our financial performance as a whole, since it does exclude such items that could materially impact our results of operations. Further, our NOI may not be comparable to that of other real estate companies, as they may use different methodologies for calculating NOI. Therefore, we believe net income, as defined by GAAP, to be the most appropriate measure to evaluate our overall financial performance.

 

The following table is a reconciliation of our NOI to our reported net income attributable to common stockholders for the year ended December 31, 2015 (amounts in thousands).

       
    For the Year Ended
December 31, 2015
 
Net operating income   $ 158,688  
Debt related investment income     6,922  
Real estate depreciation and amortization expense     (83,114 )
General and administrative expenses     (10,720 )
Advisory fees, related party     (17,083 )
Acquisition-related expenses     (2,644 )
Impairment of real estate property     (8,124 )
Interest and other income     2,192  
Interest expense     (47,508 )
Loss on extinguishment of debt and financing commitments     (1,168 )
Gain on sale of real property     134,218  
Discontinued operations      
Net income attributable to noncontrolling interests     (7,404 )
Net income attributable to common stockholders   $ 124,255  

 

Our primary source of funding for our property-level operating expenses and debt service payments is rent collected pursuant to our tenant leases. Our properties are generally leased to tenants for the long term. As of December 31, 2015, the weighted average remaining term of our leases was approximately 4.5 years, based on annualized base rent, and 7.0 years, based on leased square footage. The following is a schedule of expiring leases for our consolidated operating properties by annualized base rent and square footage as of December 31, 2015 and assuming no exercise of lease renewal options (dollar amounts and square footage in thousands).

 

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      Lease Expirations  
Year (1)     Number of Leases Expiring     Annualized Base Rent (2)     %     Square Feet     %  
2016 (3) (4)       104     $ 21,925       12.0 %     917       10.1 %
2017       95       43,730       23.7 %     1,398       15.3 %
2018       126       13,443       7.3 %     680       7.5 %
2019       107       24,945       13.5 %     1,237       13.6 %
2020       111       24,229       13.1 %     1,259       13.8 %
2021       49       15,704       8.5 %     1,577       17.2 %
2022       32       9,105       4.9 %     516       5.7 %
2023       29       15,364       8.3 %     626       6.9 %
2024       24       4,977       2.7 %     333       3.7 %
2025       15       3,726       2.0 %     199       2.1 %
Thereafter       22       7,304       4.0 %     378       4.1 %
Total       714     $ 184,452       100.0 %     9,120       100.0 %

 

 

(1) The lease expiration year does not include the consideration of any renewal or extension options. Also, the lease expiration year is based on noncancellable lease terms and does not extend beyond any early termination rights that the tenant may have under the lease.

(2) Annualized base rent represents the annualized monthly base rent of leases executed as of December 31, 2015.

(3) Includes 17 leases with annualized base rent of approximately $423,000 that are on a month-to-month basis.

(4) Includes our lease with Northrop Grumman, which leased 100% of an office property comprising approximately 575,000 square feet, located in the Washington, DC market (“Colshire”). Northrop Grumman exercised a purchase option during January 2016 to acquire Colshire on February 18, 2016. As a result, Northrop Grumman is no longer our tenant. Excluding the Northrop Grumman lease, we would have 103 leases expiring during 2016, with total annualized base rent of approximately $6.0 million or approximately 3.3% of total portfolio annualized base rent, comprising approximately 342,000 square feet or approximately 3.8% of total portfolio square feet.

 

The following table describes our top ten tenants based on annualized base rent and their industry sectors as of December 31, 2015 (dollar and square footage amounts in thousands).

                                                 
    Tenant   Locations     Industry Sector  

Annualized

Base

Rent (1)

    % of Total Annualized Base Rent    

Square

Feet

    % of Occupied Square Feet  
1   Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.     2     Securities, Commodities, Fin. Inv./Rel. Activities   $ 23,408       12.8 %     602       6.6 %
2   Sybase     1     Publishing Information (except Internet)     18,692       10.3 %     405       4.5 %
3   Northrop Grumman (2)     1     Professional, Scientific and Technical Services     15,901       8.7 %     575       6.3 %
4   Stop & Shop     16     Food and Beverage Stores     14,983       8.2 %     911       10.1 %
5   Novo Nordisk     1     Chemical Manufacturing     4,535       2.5 %     167       1.8 %
6   Seton Health Care     1     Hospitals     4,339       2.4 %     156       1.7 %
7   Shaw’s Supermarket     4     Food and Beverage Stores     3,944       2.2 %     240       2.7 %
8   I.A.M. National Pension Fund     1     Funds, Trusts and Other Financial Vehicles     3,023       1.7 %     63       0.7 %
9   TJX Companies     7     Clothing and Clothing Accessories Stores     2,969       1.6 %     299       3.3 %
10   Home Depot     1     Building Material and Garden Equipment and Supplies Dealers     2,470       1.4 %     102       1.1 %
    Total     35         $ 94,264       51.8 %     3,520       38.8 %

 

 

(1) Annualized base rent represents the annualized monthly base rent of executed leases as of December 31, 2015.

(2) Northrop Grumman exercised a purchase option to acquire Colshire on February 18, 2016. As a result, Northrop Grumman is no longer our tenant. Prior to acquiring Colshire from us, Northrop Grumman’s lease would have expired in 2016. Subsequent to the disposition of Colshire, Alliant Techsystems Inc., a tenant in the computer and electronic product manufacturing industry, became our 10th largest tenant with an annualized base rent of approximately $2.4 million as of December 31, 2015, comprising approximately 107,000 square feet in one of our office properties.

 

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The following table describes our top ten tenant industry sectors based on annualized base rent as of December 31, 2015 (dollar and square footage amounts in thousands).

                                         
Industry Sector   Number of
Leases
    Annualized Base
Rent (1)
    % of Annualized
Base Rent
    Occupied Square
Feet
    % of Occupied
Square Feet
 
Professional, Scientific and Technical Services     112     $ 29,096       15.8 %     1,199       13.1 %
Securities, Commodity Contracts, and Other Financial Investments and Related Activities     30       25,835       14.0 %     687       7.5 %
Food and Beverage Stores     41       24,407       13.2 %     1,649       18.1 %
Publishing Information (except Internet)     3       19,033       10.3 %     413       4.5 %
Computer and Electronic Product Manufacturing     8       6,820       3.7 %     435       4.8 %
Clothing and Clothing Accessories Stores     32       6,591       3.6 %     425       4.7 %
Food Services and Drinking Places     78       6,175       3.3 %     222       2.4 %
Credit Intermediation and Related Activities     36       5,613       3.0 %     190       2.1 %
Chemical Manufacturing     3       5,403       2.9 %     461       5.1 %
Ambulatory Health Care Services     53       4,928       2.7 %     208       2.3 %
Other (2)     318       50,551       27.5 %     3,231       35.4 %
Total     714     $ 184,452       100.0 %     9,120       100.0 %

 

 

(1)  Annualized base rent represents the annualized monthly base rent of executed leases as of December 31, 2015.

(2)  Other industry sectors include 47 additional sectors.

 

Debt-Related Investments

 

As of December 31, 2015, we had invested in three debt-related investments structured as mortgage notes. As of December 31, 2015, the carrying value of our debt-related investments was approximately $15.7 million, which includes (i) unpaid principal balances and (ii) unamortized discounts, premiums and deferred charges. The weighted average yield of our debt-related investments as of December 31, 2015 was 6.1%, which is calculated on an unlevered basis using the amount invested, current interest rates and accretion of premiums or discounts realized upon the initial investment. The weighted average remaining contractual loan term of our debt-related investments as of December 31, 2015 was 3.3 years.

 

Borrowings

 

The following table describes our borrowings as of December 31, 2015 (dollar amounts in thousands).

                         
    Weighted Average Stated
Interest Rate
    Outstanding Balance (1)     Gross Investment Amount
Securing Borrowings (2)
 
Fixed-rate mortgages     5.6 %   $ 579,196     $ 1,016,560  
Floating-rate mortgages (3)     3.4 %     7,890       16,618  
Total secured borrowings     5.5 %     587,086       1,033,178  
Line of credit (4)     1.9 %     167,000       N/A  
Term loans (5)     2.6 %     350,000       N/A  
Total unsecured borrowings     2.4 %     517,000       N/A  
Total borrowings     4.1 %   $ 1,104,086       N/A  

 

 
(1) Amounts presented are net of (i) unamortized premiums to the face value of our outstanding fixed-rate mortgages of $1.3 million as of December 31, 2015, and (ii) GAAP principal amortization related to troubled debt restructurings of $3.1 million as of December 31, 2015.

(2) “Gross Investment Amount” as used here and throughout this document represents the allocated gross basis of real property and debt-related investments, after certain adjustments. Gross Investment Amount for real property (i) includes the effect of intangible lease liabilities, (ii) excludes accumulated depreciation and amortization, and (iii) includes the impact of impairments. Amounts reported for debt-related investments represent our net accounting basis of the debt investments, which includes (i) unpaid principal balances, (ii) unamortized discounts, premiums, and deferred charges, and (iii) allowances for loan loss.

(3) As of December 31, 2015, our one floating-rate mortgage note was subject to an interest rate spread of 3.00% over one-month LIBOR.

(4) As of December 31, 2015, borrowings under our line of credit were subject to interest at a floating rate of 1.40% over one-month LIBOR. However, as of December 31, 2015, we had effectively fixed the interest rate of approximately $25.4 million of the total of $167.0 million in borrowings using interest rate swaps, resulting in a weighted average interest rate on the total line of credit of 1.88%.

(5) As of December 31, 2015, borrowings under our term loans were subject to interest at weighted average floating rates of 1.52% over one-month LIBOR, which we had effectively fixed using interest rate swaps at 2.59% as of December 31, 2015.

 

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The following table reflects our contractual debt maturities as of December 31, 2015, specifically our obligations under our mortgage notes and unsecured borrowings (dollar amounts in thousands).

                                           
      As of December 31, 2015  
      Mortgage Notes     Unsecured Borrowings   Total  
Year Ending December 31,     Number of
Borrowings
Maturing
    Outstanding
 Principal
Balance (1)
    Number of
Borrowings
Maturing
    Outstanding
 Principal
Balance (2)
    Outstanding
 Principal
 Balance
 
2016       7     $ 286,679           $     $ 286,679  
2017       6       206,660                   206,660  
2018             1,762       1       150,000       151,762  
2019             1,869       1       167,000       168,869  
2020             1,982                   1,982  
2021       1       10,825                   10,825  
2022       1       1,663       1       200,000       201,663  
2023             978                   978  
2024             1,034                   1,034  
2025       1       71,094                   71,094  
Thereafter       2       4,303                   4,303  
Total       18     $ 588,849       3     $ 517,000     $ 1,105,849  

 

 
(1) Outstanding principal balance represents expected cash outflows for contractual amortization and scheduled balloon payment maturities and does not include principal amortization of our restructured mortgage note of approximately $3.1 million that does not reduce the contractual amount due of the related mortgage note as of December 31, 2015, partially offset by the mark-to-market adjustment on assumed debt of $1.3 million as of December 31, 2015.

(2) Unsecured borrowings presented include (i) borrowings of $150.0 million under our $150 million term loan, which are scheduled to mature in 2018, subject to two one-year extension options, (ii) borrowings under our revolving credit facility of $167.0 million, which are scheduled to mature in 2019, subject to a one-year extension option, and (iii) borrowings of $200.0 million under our $200 million term loan, which are scheduled to mature in 2022 with no extension options.

 

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MANAGEMENT

Board of Directors

We operate under the direction of our board of directors, the members of which are accountable to us and our stockholders as fiduciaries. The board of directors is responsible for the management and control of our affairs. The board of directors has retained the Advisor to manage our day-to-day affairs and to implement our investment strategy, subject to the board’s direction, oversight and approval.

We currently have a total of five members on our board of directors, three of whom are independent of us, the Advisor, our Sponsor and our respective affiliates. An “independent director” is a person who is not associated, and has not been associated within the last two years, directly or indirectly, with us, our Sponsor or our Advisor. We refer to our two directors who are not independent of us as our “interested directors.”

Our charter sets forth the material business or professional relationships that cause a person to be associated with us and therefore not eligible to serve as an independent director. A business or professional relationship is per se material if the prospective independent director received more than 5% of his annual gross income in the last two years from the Sponsor, the Advisor or any affiliate of the Sponsor or Advisor, or if more than 5% of his net worth, on a fair market value basis, has come from the Sponsor, the Advisor or any affiliate of the Sponsor or Advisor. The existence of other relationships or circumstances may also create a material business or professional relationship, thereby disqualifying a person as an independent director, even if he has not received more than 5% of his annual gross income in the last two years from the Sponsor, the Advisor or any affiliate of the Sponsor or Advisor, and has not acquired more than 5% of his net worth, on a fair market value basis, from the Sponsor, the Advisor or any affiliate of the Sponsor or Advisor.

Our charter and bylaws provide that the number of our directors may be established by a majority of the board but may not be fewer than three nor more than 15. The foregoing is the exclusive means of fixing the number of directors. Our charter also provides that a majority of the directors must be independent directors. Our charter provides that at least one of the independent directors must have at least three years of relevant real estate experience. The independent directors will nominate replacements for vacancies among the independent directors.

Each director will be elected by the stockholders and will serve for a term of one year. Each director may be elected to an unlimited number of successive terms. Although the number of directors may be increased or decreased, a decrease shall not have the effect of shortening the term of any incumbent director.

Any director may resign at any time and may be removed with or without cause by the stockholders upon the affirmative vote of at least a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast at a meeting called for the purpose of the proposed removal. The notice of the meeting shall indicate that the purpose, or one of the purposes, of the meeting is to determine if the director shall be removed.

A vacancy following the removal of a director or a vacancy created by an increase in the number of directors or the death, resignation, adjudicated incompetence or other incapacity of a director shall be filled by a vote of a majority of the remaining directors and, in the case of an independent director, the director must also be nominated by the remaining independent directors.

If there are no remaining independent directors, then a majority vote of the remaining directors shall be sufficient to fill a vacancy among the independent directors’ positions. If at any time there are no independent or interested directors in office, successor directors shall be elected by the stockholders. Each director will be bound by our charter.

Duties of Directors

In general, when the board of directors acts on matters relating to any of the following, the approval of a majority of the independent directors is required: minimum capital, duties of directors, the Advisory Agreement, liability and indemnification of directors, fees to our Advisor or its affiliates, compensation and expenses, investment policies, leverage and borrowing policies, meetings of stockholders, stockholders’ election of directors and our distribution reinvestment plan. At the first meeting of our board of directors consisting of a majority of independent directors, held January 9, 2006, our charter and each of the above matters were reviewed and ratified by a unanimous vote of the directors and of the independent directors.

The responsibilities of the board of directors are as follows:

· It reviews and adopts valuation procedures to be used in connection with the calculation of our NAV, oversees the implementation of the valuation procedures and approves the parties engaged in connection with determining our NAV.

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· It approves and oversees our overall investment strategy, which consists of elements such as (i) allocation percentages of capital to be invested in real properties and real estate-related debt and securities, (ii) diversification strategies, (iii) investment selection criteria for real property and real estate-related debt and securities, and (iv) asset disposition strategies.
· It approves all investments, dispositions and real property developments, except that the board of directors has delegated (i) to the Investment Committee the authority to review and approve any real property acquisition and development (including real property portfolio acquisitions and developments), for a purchase price or total project cost of up to $25,000,000, and (ii) to the Management Committee the authority to review and approve any real property disposition (including real property portfolio dispositions) for a sales price of up to $25,000,000, provided that the total dispositions approved by the Management Committee in any quarter may not exceed $50,000,000.
· It approves and oversees our debt financing strategies, except that the board of directors has delegated (i) to the Chief Financial Officer the authority to review and approve any proposed new borrowing or refinancing (secured or unsecured) for an amount of up to $25,000,000, (ii) to the Management Committee the authority to review and approve any proposed new borrowing (secured or unsecured) for an amount of up to $50,000,000, provided that the total new borrowings approved by the Management Committee in any quarter may not exceed $100,000,000, and (iii) to the Management Committee the authority to review and approve any proposed new refinancing (secured or unsecured) for an amount of up to $100,000,000, provided that the total new refinancings approved by the Management Committee in any quarter may not exceed $100,000,000.
· It approves and monitors the relationship between us, the Operating Partnership and the Advisor.
· It approves joint ventures, limited partnerships and other such relationships with third parties.
· It determines our distribution policy and declares distributions from time to time.
· It oversees our share redemption programs.

The directors are not required to devote all of their time to our business and are only required to devote such time to our affairs as their duties require. The directors will meet quarterly or more frequently as necessary.

The directors have established written policies on investments and borrowings consistent with our investment objectives and will monitor our administrative procedures, investment operations and performance and those of the Advisor to assure that such policies are carried out. The independent directors will review these policies at least annually to determine that the policies are in the best interests of our stockholders. Each such determination and the basis thereof will be included in the minutes of the board of directors. Any change in our investment objectives, as stated in our charter, must be approved by the stockholders.

The independent directors are also responsible for reviewing our fees and expenses on at least an annual basis and with sufficient frequency to determine that the expenses incurred are in the best interest of the stockholders.

In order to reduce or eliminate certain potential conflicts of interest, our charter requires that a majority of our board of directors (including a majority of the independent directors) not otherwise interested in the transaction approve all transactions with any of our directors, the Sponsor, the Advisor or any of their affiliates. The independent directors are also responsible for reviewing the performance of the Advisor and determining that the compensation to be paid to the Advisor is reasonable in relation to the nature and quality of services performed and that the provisions of the Advisory Agreement are being carried out. Each such determination shall be based on factors set forth below and all other factors the independent directors deem relevant and the findings of the independent directors will be recorded in the minutes of the board of directors. As part of their review of the Advisor’s compensation, the independent directors will consider factors such as:

· the amount of fees paid to the Advisor in relation to the size, composition and performance of our investments;
· the success of the Advisor in generating investment opportunities that meet our investment objectives;
· rates charged to other externally advised REITs and other similar investors by advisors performing similar services;
· additional revenues realized by the Advisor and its affiliates through their relationship with us, whether we pay them or they are paid by others with whom we do business;
· the quality and extent of the services and advice furnished by the Advisor;

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· the performance of our investments, including income, conservation or appreciation of capital, frequency of problem investments and competence in dealing with distress situations; and

· the quality of our investment portfolio in relation to the investments generated by the Advisor for its own account.

Committees of the Board

Our board of directors may establish committees it deems appropriate to address specific areas in more depth than may be possible at a full board meeting, provided that the majority of the members of each committee are independent directors. We currently have five directors on our board of directors, three of whom are independent. Our board of directors has established an Investment Committee, an Audit Committee and a Conflicts Resolution Committee. Our board of directors may also establish a Compensation Committee and/or a Nominating Committee.

Our board of directors also adopted a delegation of authority policy and, pursuant to such policy, has established a Management Committee and delegated the authority for certain actions to the Management Committee. The Management Committee, described further below, is not a committee of our board of directors.

Investment Committee

Our board of directors has delegated to the Investment Committee (a) certain responsibilities with respect to specific real property investments proposed by the Advisor and (b) the authority to review our investment policies and procedures on an ongoing basis and recommend any changes to our board of directors. The Investment Committee is currently comprised of all five of our directors, but we may subsequently reduce its size.

With respect to real property investments, the board of directors has delegated to the Investment Committee the authority to approve all real property acquisitions and developments, including real property portfolio acquisitions and developments, for a purchase price or total project cost of up to $25,000,000, including the financing of such acquisitions and developments. The board of directors, including a majority of the independent directors, must approve all real property acquisitions and developments, including real property portfolio acquisitions and developments, for a purchase price or total project cost greater than $25,000,000, including the financing of such acquisitions and developments.

Audit Committee

The Audit Committee meets on a regular basis, at least quarterly and more frequently as necessary. The Audit Committee’s primary function is to assist our board of directors in fulfilling its oversight responsibilities by reviewing the financial information to be provided to stockholders and others, reviewing our system of internal controls, which management has established, overseeing the audit and financial reporting process, including the preapproval of services performed by our independent registered public accounting firm, and overseeing certain areas of risk management. The Audit Committee is currently comprised of three directors, two of whom are independent directors. The members of the Audit Committee are Charles B. Duke, Richard D. Kincaid and Daniel J. Sullivan.

Conflicts Resolution Committee

Our board of directors has delegated the responsibility to consider and resolve all conflicts that may arise between us and either LPT or IPT to the Conflicts Resolution Committee. Such conflicts may arise as a result of the investment allocation methodology that our Advisor utilizes for allocating investment opportunities that are suitable for both us and LPT and/or IPT. The members of the Conflicts Resolution Committee are Daniel J. Sullivan and John P. Woodberry, each of whom is an independent director.

In recognition of the fact that we also desire to acquire industrial properties and have a separate day-to-day acquisition team, the Sponsor and the Advisor have agreed, subject to changes approved or required by the Conflicts Resolution Committee, that (1) if an industrial property opportunity is a widely-marketed, brokered transaction, we, on the one hand, and LPT and/or IPT, on the other hand, may simultaneously and independently pursue such transaction, and (2) if an industrial property is not a widely-marketed, brokered transaction, then, as between us, on the one hand, and LPT and/or IPT, on the other hand, the management team and employees of each company generally are free to pursue any industrial opportunity at any time, subject to certain allocations if non-widely-marketed transactions are first sourced by certain shared employees, managers or directors.

Compensation Committee

Our board of directors may establish a Compensation Committee to administer our equity incentive plans. The primary function of the Compensation Committee would be to administer the granting of awards to the independent directors and selected employees of the Advisor or its affiliates, based upon recommendations from the Advisor, and to set the terms and conditions of such awards in accordance with the equity incentive plans. The Compensation Committee, if formed, will be comprised entirely of independent directors.

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Nominating Committee

Our board of directors may establish a Nominating Committee. The primary function of the Nominating Committee would be to:

· assist our board of directors in identifying individuals qualified to become members of our board of directors;
· recommend candidates to our board of directors to fill vacancies on the board;
· recommend committee assignments for directors to the full board; and
· periodically assess the performance of our board of directors.

Management Committee

Our board of directors has delegated to the Management Committee certain responsibilities with respect to certain disposition, leasing, capital expenditure, borrowing and refinancing decisions. The Management Committee does not have authority over any transactions between us and the Advisor, a member of the board of directors, or any of their affiliates. The Management Committee is not a board committee and is currently comprised of our Chief Executive Officer, Chief Financial Officer, Chairman of the Board of Directors, General Counsel, General Counsel of our Advisor, President, the managers of the Advisor, and, if deciding upon a disposition, our Senior Vice President of Real Estate.

With respect to real property investments, the board of directors has delegated to the Management Committee the authority to approve all real property dispositions, including real property portfolio dispositions, for a sales price of up to $25,000,000, provided that the total dispositions approved by the Management Committee in any quarter may not exceed $50,000,000. The board of directors, including a majority of the independent directors, must approve all real property dispositions, including real property portfolio dispositions, (i) for a sales price greater than $25,000,000, and (ii) once the total dispositions approved by the Management Committee in any quarter equals $50,000,000, for any sales price through the end of such quarter.

With respect to the lease of real property, the board of directors has delegated (i) to the Chief Executive Officer, President or Executive Vice President—Retail of the Company the authority to approve any lease of real property, on such terms as the Chief Executive Officer, President or Executive Vice President—Retail deems necessary, advisable, or appropriate, for total base rent of $10,000,000 over the base term of the lease, and (ii) to the Management Committee the authority to approve the lease of real property, on such terms as the Management Committee deems necessary, advisable, or appropriate, for total base rent of $50,000,000 over the base term of the lease.

With respect to capital expenditures (excluding capital expenditures approved by the board of directors in the ordinary course of budget approvals), (i) the President of the Company is authorized to approve any capital expenditure of up to $1,000,000 over the line item approved by the board of directors in the budget for the specified property, and (ii) the Management Committee is authorized to approve any capital expenditure of up to $5,000,000 over the line item approved by the board of directors in the budget for the specified property.

With respect to borrowing and refinancing decisions, the board of directors has authorized (i) the Chief Financial Officer to review and approve any proposed new borrowing or refinancing (secured or unsecured) for an amount of up to $25,000,000, (ii) the Management Committee to review and approve any proposed new borrowing (secured or unsecured) for an amount of up to $50,000,000, provided that the total new borrowings approved by the Management Committee in any quarter may not exceed $100,000,000, and (iii) the Management Committee to review and approve any proposed new refinancing (secured or unsecured) for an amount of up to $100,000,000, provided that the total new refinancings approved by the Management Committee in any quarter may not exceed $100,000,000.

Compensation of Directors

We pay each of our independent directors $8,750 per quarter plus $2,000 for each regular board of directors meeting attended in person, $1,000 for each regular board of directors meeting attended by telephone, and $2,000 for each committee meeting and each special board of directors meeting attended in person or by telephone. We also pay the chairman of the Audit Committee an annual retainer of $7,500 (prorated for a partial term). All directors receive reimbursement of reasonable out-of-pocket expenses incurred in connection with attending board meetings. If a director is also one of our officers, we will not pay additional compensation for services rendered as a director. 

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RSU Awards

In addition, at each annual meeting of stockholders the independent directors will automatically, upon election, receive an award (“Annual Award”), pursuant to either the Equity Incentive Plan (as defined below) or the Secondary Plan (as defined below), of $10,000 in restricted stock units (“RSUs”) with respect to Class I shares of our common stock, with the number of RSUs based on the NAV per Class I share as of the end of the day of the annual meeting. Independent directors appointed after an annual meeting will, upon appointment, receive a pro rata Annual Award, with the number of RSUs based on the Class I NAV as of the end of the day of appointment and reflecting the number of days remaining until the one-year anniversary of the prior annual meeting of stockholders (or, if earlier and if scheduled as of the day of appointment, the date of the next scheduled annual meeting of stockholders).

RSUs will vest if and when the director completes the term for which he or she was elected/appointed. Unvested awards will also vest in the event of death or disability of the director or upon a change of control of our company. Unvested awards will be forfeited if the director’s term in office terminates prematurely for any other reason. The directors may elect to defer settlement of vested awards in shares pursuant to Section 409A of the Code.

The independent directors will accrue dividend equivalents on unsettled RSUs, in amounts and with accrual dates that mirror the dividend amounts and payment dates on the underlying Class I shares. Any such dividend equivalents will be paid in the form of additional RSUs, will be subject to the same terms and vesting as the underlying RSUs with respect to which the dividend equivalents are paid, and will be settled in shares at the same time as the underlying RSUs with respect to which the dividend equivalents are paid.

Stock Option Awards

In connection with our 2007, 2008, 2009, and 2010 Annual Meetings of Stockholders, on August 27, 2007, August 21, 2008, June 29, 2009, and June 29, 2010, respectively, each of our three independent directors was granted an option to purchase 5,000 Class E shares of our common stock under the Prior Plan (as defined below) with an exercise price equal to $11.00 per share. These options have all vested and remain outstanding.

Equity Incentive Plans

Second Amended and Restated Equity Incentive Plan

On March 12, 2015, our board of directors adopted the Second Amended and Restated Equity Incentive Plan (the “Equity Incentive Plan”). The Equity Incentive Plan was approved by our stockholders on June 23, 2015. The Equity Incentive Plan provides for the granting of cash-based awards and stock-based awards, including stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock, and stock units to our employees (if we have any in the future), our independent directors, employees of the Advisor or its affiliates, other advisors and consultants of ours and of the Advisor selected by the plan administrator for participation in the Equity Incentive Plan, and any prospective director, officer, employee, consultant, or advisor of the Company and the Advisor. Any such stock-based awards, including stock options, stock appreciation rights, restricted stock, and stock units will provide for exercise prices, where applicable, that are not less than the fair market value of shares of our common stock on the date of the grant.

Our board of directors administers the Equity Incentive Plan as the plan administrator, with sole authority to select participants, determine the types of awards to be granted and determine all the terms and conditions of the awards, including whether the grant, vesting or settlement of awards may be subject to the attainment of one or more performance goals. No awards will be granted under the Equity Incentive Plan if the grant, vesting and/or exercise of the awards would jeopardize our status as a REIT for tax purposes or otherwise violate the ownership and transfer restrictions imposed under our charter. Unless determined by the plan administrator, no award granted under the Equity Incentive Plan will be transferable except through the laws of descent and distribution.

An aggregate maximum of 5.0 million shares of our common stock may be issued upon grant, vesting or exercise of awards under the Equity Incentive Plan, although the board of directors, to date, has only authorized and reserved for issuance a total of 2.0 million shares of our common stock under the Equity Incentive Plan. In addition, to any individual in any single calendar year no more than 200,000 shares may be made subject to stock options or stock appreciation rights under the Equity Incentive Plan and no more than 200,000 shares may be made subject to other stock-based awards under the Equity Incentive Plan. Further, no more than $1.0 million may be paid under a cash-based award to any individual in a single calendar year.

If any shares subject to an award are forfeited or cancelled, or if an award is settled in cash, terminates unearned or expires, in each case, without a distribution of shares, the shares with respect to such award shall, to the extent of any such forfeiture, cancellation, cash settlement, termination or expiration, again be available for awards under the Equity Incentive Plan. By contrast, if shares are surrendered or withheld as payment of the exercise price of an award or withholding taxes in respect of an award, the shares with respect to such award shall, to the extent of any such surrender or withholding, no longer be available for awards under the Equity Incentive Plan. In the event of certain corporate transactions affecting our common stock, such as, for example, a reorganization, recapitalization, merger, spin-off, split-off, stock dividend or extraordinary dividend, our board of directors will have the sole authority to determine whether and in what manner to equitably adjust the number and type of shares and the exercise prices applicable to outstanding awards under the plan, the number and type of shares reserved for future issuance under the plan, and, if applicable, performance goals applicable to outstanding awards under the plan. Fractional shares that result from any adjustment will be disregarded.

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Under the Equity Incentive Plan, the plan administrator will determine the treatment of awards in the event of a change in our control. The Equity Incentive Plan will automatically expire on March 12, 2025, unless earlier terminated by our board of directors. Our board of directors may terminate the Equity Incentive Plan at any time. The expiration or other termination of the Equity Incentive Plan will have no adverse impact on any award that is outstanding at the time the Equity Incentive Plan expires or is terminated without the consent of the holder of the outstanding award. Our board of directors may amend the Equity Incentive Plan at any time, but no amendment will adversely affect any award on a retroactive basis without the consent of the holder of the outstanding award, and no amendment to Equity Incentive Plan will be effective without the approval of our stockholders if such approval is required by any law, regulation or rule applicable to the Equity Incentive Plan. The same is true for any amendment to remove the prohibition on repricing. No amendment will be made that could jeopardize the status of the Company as a REIT under the Code.

Secondary Equity Incentive Plan

On March 12, 2015, the board of directors also adopted the Amended and Restated Secondary Equity Incentive Plan (the “Secondary Plan”). The Secondary Plan was approved by our stockholders on June 23, 2015. The Secondary Plan is substantially similar to the Equity Incentive Plan, except that under the Secondary Plan, an eligible participant is any person, trust, association or entity to which the plan administrator desires to grant an award. An aggregate maximum of 5.0 million shares may be issued upon grant, vesting or exercise of awards under the Secondary Plan, although the board of directors, to date, has only authorized and reserved for issuance a total of 2.0 million shares of our common stock under the Secondary Plan.

Efforts to Align Independent Director and Management Interests with Stockholders

We currently have three separate initiatives intended to promote an alignment of the interests of independent directors and our management with our stockholders. First, as described above under “—Compensation of Directors—RSU Awards” we provide a portion of our independent director compensation in the form of equity awards. Second, as described below under “The Advisor and the Advisory Agreement—Restricted Stock Unit Agreements,” we have entered into Restricted Stock Unit Agreements with our Advisor, pursuant to which the Advisor receives Class I shares in return for offsets of future advisory fees and expenses, and the Advisor has entered into agreements to redistribute substantially all of such shares to senior level employees of the Advisor and its affiliates that provide services to us. Finally, pursuant to our equity incentive plans, each year we grant shares of restricted Class I stock to non-executive employees of our Advisor and its affiliates. Most recently, on February 4, 2016, we granted 124,451 shares of restricted Class I stock to non-executive employees of our Advisor and its affiliates.

Compensation Committee Interlocks and Insider Participation

Because our Advisory Agreement provides that our Advisor will assume principal responsibility for managing our affairs, our officers, in their capacities as such, do not receive compensation directly from us.

Limited Liability and Indemnification of Directors, Officers and Others

Our charter, subject to certain limitations, limits the personal liability of our directors and officers for monetary damages. The Maryland General Corporation Law permits a corporation to include in its charter a provision limiting the liability of its directors and officers to the corporation and its stockholders for money damages, except for liability resulting from (a) actual receipt of an improper benefit or profit in money, property or services or (b) active and deliberate dishonesty established by a final judgment and which is material to the cause of action. In addition, our charter and, with respect to our directors only, indemnification agreements with each director, provide that, subject to certain limitations, we will generally indemnify our directors, our officers, the Advisor and its affiliates, and may indemnify our employees (if we have any in the future) and agents for losses they may incur by reason of their service in those capacities. We also have obtained directors and officers liability insurance. The Maryland General Corporation Law allows directors and officers to be indemnified against judgments, penalties, fines, settlements and expenses actually incurred in a proceeding unless the following can be established:

· an act or omission of the director or officer was material to the cause of action adjudicated in the proceeding, and was committed in bad faith or was the result of active and deliberate dishonesty;
· the director or officer actually received an improper personal benefit in money, property or services; or
· with respect to any criminal proceeding, the director or officer had reasonable cause to believe his act or omission was unlawful.

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In spite of the above provisions of the Maryland General Corporation Law, our charter and, with respect to our directors only, indemnification agreements with each director, provide that our directors, the Advisor and its affiliates will be indemnified by us for losses or liabilities suffered by them or held harmless for losses or liabilities suffered by us only if all of the following conditions are met:

· our directors, the Advisor or its affiliates have determined, in good faith, that the course of conduct that caused the loss or liability was in our best interests;
· our directors, the Advisor or its affiliates were acting on our behalf or performing services for us;
· in the case of interested directors, the Advisor or its affiliates, the liability or loss was not the result of negligence or misconduct by the party seeking indemnification;
· in the case of our independent directors, the liability or loss was not the result of gross negligence or willful misconduct by the party seeking indemnification; and
· the indemnification or agreement to hold harmless is recoverable only out of our net assets and not from our stockholders.

We have agreed to indemnify and hold harmless the Advisor and its affiliates performing services for us from specific claims and liabilities arising out of the performance of their obligations under the Advisory Agreement to the maximum extent permitted by law. As a result, we and our stockholders may be entitled to a more limited right of action than we would otherwise have if these indemnification rights were not included in the Advisory Agreement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, any provision of the Maryland General Corporation Law or our organizational documents, we may not indemnify or hold harmless the Advisor, its affiliates or any of their respective officers, directors, partners or employees in any manner that would be inconsistent with the Statement of Policy Regarding Real Estate Investment Trusts adopted by the North American Securities Administrators Association (the “Statement of Policy”).

The general effect to investors of any arrangement under which any of our controlling persons, directors or officers are insured or indemnified against liability is a potential reduction in distributions resulting from our payment of premiums associated with insurance or any indemnification for which we do not have adequate insurance.

The Commission takes the position that indemnification against liabilities arising under the Securities Act is against public policy and unenforceable. Indemnification of the directors, our officers, the Advisor or its affiliates will not be allowed for liabilities arising from or out of a violation of state or federal securities laws, unless one or more of the following conditions are met:

· there has been a successful adjudication on the merits of each count involving alleged securities law violations;
· such claims have been dismissed with prejudice on the merits by a court of competent jurisdiction; or
· a court of competent jurisdiction approves a settlement of the claims against the indemnitee and finds that indemnification of the settlement and the related costs should be made, and the court considering the request for indemnification has been advised of the position of the Commission and of the published position of any state securities regulatory authority in which the securities were offered as to indemnification for violations of securities laws.

Indemnification will be allowed for settlements and related expenses of lawsuits alleging securities laws violations and for expenses incurred in successfully defending any lawsuits, provided that a court either:

· approves the settlement and finds that indemnification of the settlement and related costs should be made; or
· dismisses with prejudice, or there is a successful adjudication on the merits of, each count involving alleged securities law violations as to the particular indemnitee and a court approves the indemnification.

We may advance funds to directors, officers, the Advisor and its affiliates for legal expenses and other costs incurred as a result of our legal action for which indemnification is being sought only if all of the following conditions are met:

· the legal action relates to acts or omissions with respect to the performance of duties or services on behalf of the REIT;
· the party seeking such advancement has provided us with written affirmation of his good faith belief that he has met the standard of conduct necessary for indemnification;

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· the legal action is initiated by a third party who is not a stockholder or the legal action is initiated by a stockholder acting in his capacity as such and a court of competent jurisdiction specifically approves such advancement; and
· the party seeking indemnification undertakes to repay the advanced funds to us, together with the applicable legal rate of interest thereon, in cases in which he is found not to be entitled to indemnification.

Indemnification may reduce the legal remedies available to us and our stockholders against the indemnified individuals.

The aforementioned charter provisions do not reduce the exposure of directors and officers to liability under federal or state securities laws, nor do they limit a stockholder’s ability to obtain injunctive relief or other equitable remedies for a violation of a director’s or an officer’s duties to us or our stockholders, although the equitable remedies may not be an effective remedy in some circumstances.

Directors and Executive Officers

As of the date of this prospectus, our directors and executive officers, their ages and their positions and offices are as follows:

         

Name

 

Age

 

Position

Richard D. Kincaid   54   Chairman of the Board of Directors
John A. Blumberg   56   Director
Charles B. Duke   58   Director*
Daniel J. Sullivan   51   Director*
John P. Woodberry   53   Director*
Jeffrey L. Johnson   56   Chief Executive Officer
J. Michael Lynch   63   President
M. Kirk Scott   37   Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer
Joshua J. Widoff   45   Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary
Gregory M. Moran   43   Executive Vice President

 

 

* Denotes an independent director.

Richard D. Kincaid has served as our Chairman of the Board of Directors since September 2012. Prior to joining our board of directors, Mr. Kincaid was a Trustee and the President of Equity Office Properties Trust from November 2002, and the Chief Executive Officer from April 2003, until Equity Office Properties Trust was acquired by the Blackstone Group in February 2007. From March 1997 until November 2002, Mr. Kincaid was Executive Vice President of Equity Office Properties Trust and was Chief Operating Officer from September 2001 until November 2002. He also was Chief Financial Officer of Equity Office Properties Trust from March 1997 until August 2002, and Senior Vice President from October 1996 until March 1997.

Prior to joining Equity Office Properties Trust in 1995, Mr. Kincaid was Senior Vice President of Finance for Equity Group Investments, Inc., where he oversaw debt financing activities for the public and private owners of real estate controlled by Mr. Samuel Zell. During his tenure at Equity Group Investments and Equity Office Properties Trust, Mr. Kincaid supervised more than $11 billion in financing transactions, including property level loans encumbering office buildings, apartments, and retail properties, as well as unsecured debt, convertible debt securities, and preferred stock. Prior to joining Equity Group Investments in 1990, Mr. Kincaid held positions with Barclays Bank PLC and The First National Bank of Chicago. Richard Kincaid is currently the President and Founder of the BeCause Foundation. The BeCause Foundation is a nonprofit corporation that heightens awareness about a number of complex social problems and promotes change through the power of film. Mr. Kincaid is also an active private investor in early stage companies. Mr. Kincaid is on the board of directors of Rayonier Inc. (NYSE: RYN), an international REIT that specializes in timber and specialty fibers. He also serves on the board of directors of Strategic Hotels and Resorts (NYSE: BEE), an owner of upscale and luxury hotels in North America and Europe. He also serves on the board of directors of the Street Medicine Institute. Mr. Kincaid received his Master’s Degree in Business Administration from the University of Texas, and his Bachelor’s Degree from Wichita State University.

We believe that Mr. Kincaid’s qualifications to serve on our board of directors include his significant leadership experience as a Trustee, the President and the Chief Executive Officer of Equity Office Properties Trust and his director positions with other public companies. He also has demonstrated strategic insight with respect to large, growing real estate companies, as he developed the financial, technology and integration strategies for Equity Office Properties Trust during its tremendous growth, which included nearly $17 billion in acquisitions. We believe that his leadership and experience are valuable additions to our board in connection with our new offering and our transition to a perpetual-life REIT.

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John A. Blumberg has served as a director of our board of directors since January 2006 and also as our Chairman of the Board of Directors from January 2006 to September 2012. Mr. Blumberg has also been a manager of our Advisor since April 2005. From October 2009 to March 2010, Mr. Blumberg served as the Chairman of the Board of Directors of IIT, a Denver, Colorado-based REIT focusing on industrial real estate which was sold in November 2015. He is also a manager of Industrial Income Advisors LLC, the former advisor to IIT. Mr. Blumberg is also a manager of Industrial Property Advisors LLC, the advisor to IPT, a Denver, Colorado-based REIT, and of Logistics Property Advisors LLC, the advisor to LPT, a Denver, Colorado-based REIT.

Mr. Blumberg is a principal of both Dividend Capital Group LLC and Black Creek Group LLC, a Denver-based real estate investment firm which he co-founded in 1993. In 2014, Mr. Blumberg joined the Board of Directors for Rayonier Inc. Since 2006, Mr. Blumberg has also been chairman of Mexico Retail Properties, a fully integrated retail real estate company that acquires, develops and manages retail properties throughout Mexico. Mr. Blumberg has been active in real estate acquisition, development and redevelopment activities since 1993 and, as of December 31, 2015, with affiliates, has overseen directly, or indirectly through affiliated entities, the acquisition, development, redevelopment, financing and sale of real properties having combined value of approximately $15.4 billion. Prior to co-founding Black Creek Group LLC, Mr. Blumberg was President of JJM Investments, which owned over 100 shopping center properties in Texas. During the 12 years prior to joining JJM Investments, Mr. Blumberg served in various positions with Manufacturer’s Hanover Real Estate, Inc., Chemical Bank and Chemical Real Estate, Inc., most recently as President of Chemical Real Estate, Inc. Mr. Blumberg holds a Bachelor’s Degree from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

We believe that Mr. Blumberg’s qualifications to serve on our board of directors are demonstrated by his extensive experience in real estate investments, including his over 20 years of experience with Black Creek Group LLC as a co-founder of the company, his position as a principal of Dividend Capital Group LLC, his leadership experience as an executive officer of, and an advisor to, non-traded REITs and other real estate investment companies, and his experience in real estate investment banking.

Charles B. Duke has served as an independent director of our board of directors since January 2006. Mr. Duke also served as an independent director on the board of directors of IIT from December 2009 to November 2015 and an independent director on the board of directors of LPT since February 2016. Mr. Duke has also served as an Independent Director on the board of IPT since March 2013. Mr. Duke is currently founder and Chief Executive Officer of To-Table Inc. (“To-Table”), a retailer of specialty gourmet foods. Prior to founding To-Table in November 2014, Mr. Duke was involved in the management of two ink jet cartridge remanufacturers and aftermarket suppliers: Mr. Duke served as Executive Vice President of IJR, Inc. in Phoenix, Arizona, from October 2012 to July 2014, and as the founder, President and Chief Executive Officer of Legacy Imaging, Inc. from 1996 through 2012. Mr. Duke has been active in entrepreneurial and general business activities since 1980 and has held several executive and management roles throughout his career, including founder, president, and owner of Careyes Corporation, a private bank, registered investment advisor and a member of FINRA based in Denver, Colorado, Chief Financial Officer at Particle Measuring Systems, a global technology leader in the environmental monitoring industry based in Boulder, Colorado, and Vice President of Commercial Loans at Colorado National Bank. Mr. Duke also spent four years with Kirkpatrick Pettis, the investment-banking subsidiary of Mutual of Omaha, as Vice President of Corporate Finance, involved in primarily mergers and acquisitions, financing, and valuation activities. Mr. Duke graduated from Hamilton College in 1980 with a Bachelor’s Degree in Economics and English .

We believe that Mr. Duke’s qualifications to serve on our board of directors include his considerable experience in financial matters, including specifically his experience as founder and president of a private bank and as Chief Financial Officer of a significant organization, and we believe his business management experience is valuable in terms of providing director leadership.

Daniel J. Sullivan has served as an independent director of our board of directors since January 2006. Since 2003, Mr. Sullivan has been a private consultant and an author. From 2003 to 2013, Mr. Sullivan was also the assistant editor of Humanitas, an academic journal published by the National Humanities Institute. Prior to that, from 1998 to 2002, he was Director of Business Development at Jordan Industries Inc. Mr. Sullivan has eighteen years of international business, consulting, and private equity investment experience, including over four years, from 1987 through 1991, in the real estate industry as an appraiser, property analyst, and investment banker with Manufacturers Hanover Real Estate Investment Banking Group in New York. During that time, Mr. Sullivan participated in the structuring and private placement of over $1 billion in long term, fixed-rate, and multi-property mortgage financings for the bank’s corporate clients. Mr. Sullivan holds a Master of Arts Degree in Political Theory from The Catholic University of America in Washington, DC and a Bachelor of Arts Degree in History from Boston College in Chestnut Hill, Massachusetts.

We believe that Mr. Sullivan’s diverse background in education, journalism, international business, consulting, and private equity investment adds a unique perspective to our board of directors in fulfilling its duties. His qualifications to serve on our board are also demonstrated by his experience in international business, finance, and real estate investments.

John P. Woodberry has served as an independent director of our board of directors since January 2006. Mr. Woodberry has been active in finance and investing activities since 1991. From 2007 to 2012, Mr. Woodberry served as the Portfolio Manager for the India and Capital Markets Group of Passport Capital, LLC, a San Francisco-based hedge fund. From 2004 to 2007, Mr. Woodberry was the President and Portfolio Manager of Independence Capital Asset Partners, LLC. Previously, from 2001 to 2004, Mr. Woodberry was a Senior Research Analyst at Cobalt Capital, LLC, a New York City-based hedge fund. From 1998 to 2001, Mr. Woodberry worked for Minute Man Capital Management, LLC and Trident Investment Management, LLC, each a New York City-based hedge fund. From 1995 to 1998, Mr. Woodberry worked at Templeton Investment Council Ltd. Mr. Woodberry has a Master’s Degree in Business Administration from Harvard Business School and a Bachelor of Arts Degree from Stanford University.

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We believe that Mr. Woodberry’s qualifications to serve on our board of directors include his depth of experience in finance, capital markets, and investment management. His managerial roles at various hedge funds, including his experience as President and Portfolio Manager of Independence Capital Asset Partners, LLC, provide him with leadership experience that we believe is valuable to our board of directors in fulfilling its duties.

Jeffrey L. Johnson has served as our Chief Executive Officer since January 2013. Mr. Johnson served as Managing Principal of Lakeshore Holdings, LLC, a private equity real estate firm that he founded, from 2007 through December 2012. Mr. Johnson has also served as the Chief Executive Officer of our Advisor since January 2013. From December 2009 to June 2011, he also served as founder and Managing Principal of Reunion Office Holdings, LLC, a private equity real estate firm, and from January 2009 to November 2009, he served as Chief Investment Officer and Managing Director of Transwestern Investment Company, a private equity real estate firm now known as Pearlmark Real Estate Partners. From 2003 until Equity Office Properties Trust was acquired by the Blackstone Group in February 2007, Mr. Johnson served as Chief Investment Officer, Executive Vice President and Chairman of the Investment Committee of Equity Office Properties Trust. Equity Office Properties Trust was a publicly traded REIT and at that time was the largest publicly traded owner and manager of office properties in the United States. While at Equity Office Properties Trust, Mr. Johnson restructured the investment group and implemented an investment strategy that resulted in over $12.5 billion in transaction volume, providing capital for a $2.6 billion stock repurchase. From 1990 to 1999, Mr. Johnson was a senior executive at Equity Office Properties Trust and its predecessor entities, most recently serving as Chief Investment Officer. Mr. Johnson was instrumental in completing Equity Office Property Trust’s initial public offering in July 1997, setting investment strategies and completing over $9 billion of real estate operating company transactions and property acquisitions. From 1990 to 1996, he was a senior acquisitions officer where he was responsible for acquiring over $1.2 billion of office properties. From 2000 through 2003, Mr. Johnson served as a Managing Director, founding Partner and Co-Head of U.S. Investments for Lehman Brothers Holdings, Inc.’s real estate private equity group, where he was one of six founding members that raised a $1.6 billion first-time fund, built an international investment group and executed a process that resulted in $580 million of equity investments, in over $6.9 billion of real estate, during the fund’s first 30 months.

During his career, Mr. Johnson has overseen acquisition and disposition activity in various real estate and real estate-related investments, including core office properties, development projects, joint ventures, international investments, mezzanine loans and multi-asset class portfolio transactions. He has also been instrumental in numerous significant public and private capital markets and mergers and acquisitions transactions. Mr. Johnson serves on the Northwestern University Kellogg Real Estate Advisory Board. Mr. Johnson is also a member of each of the Urban Land Institute and the Chicago Commonwealth Club. Mr. Johnson received his Master’s Degree in Business Administration from Northwestern University’s Kellogg Graduate School of Management and his Bachelor’s Degree from Denison University.

J. Michael Lynch has served as our President since July 2013. Mr. Lynch has over 30 years of real estate development and investment experience. Prior to joining us, Mr. Lynch served as Chief Investment Officer of Arden Realty, Inc., a GE Capital Real Estate Company, from May 2007 to June 2013. While with Arden Realty, Mr. Lynch oversaw capital market activities for a $4.5 billion office and industrial portfolio and led a team responsible for approximately $2 billion in acquisition and disposition activity. From May 2004 to March 2007, he served as Senior Vice President of Investments for Equity Office Properties Trust. While at Equity Office Properties Trust, Mr. Lynch managed office investment activity in major cities in the Western U.S. and development activity throughout the U.S. and completed transactions valued at over $1.5 billion of core and core-plus properties.

Mr. Lynch serves as an Advisory Board member for American Homes 4 Rent. Mr. Lynch received his Bachelor of Science Degree in Economics, cum laude, from Mount Saint Mary’s College and his Master’s Degree in Architecture from Virginia Polytechnic Institute.

M. Kirk Scott has served as our Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer since April 2009 and served as our Vice President and Controller from April 2008 to September 2011. Since joining us in April 2008, Mr. Scott has overseen and developed investor and lender relations, finance, financial reporting, accounting, budgeting, forecasting, internal audit, securities and tax compliance, lender relations and other related areas of responsibilities. Prior to joining us in 2008, Mr. Scott was Controller of Denver-based NexCore Group, a fully-integrated real estate development and operating company primarily focused within the medical office sector that, at the time, had developed or acquired over 4.7 million square feet of facilities. Within his capacity as Controller, Mr. Scott directed and oversaw the accounting, financial reporting and compliance, budgeting, forecasting and investor relation functions for the NexCore Group. From 2002 until 2006, Mr. Scott was Assistant Controller at Dividend Capital Group LLC and DCT Industrial Trust Inc. (NYSE: DCT) during that company’s growth from inception to more than $2 billion in assets under management where he was responsible for establishing the organization’s accounting and financial reporting function including compliance with the rules and regulations of the Commission, FINRA, the Internal Revenue Service and various state blue sky laws. Prior thereto, Mr. Scott was an auditor with KPMG focused on various real estate assignments. Mr. Scott holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Accounting, cum laude, from the University of Wyoming.

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Joshua J. Widoff has served as Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary since October 2010, and served as Senior Vice President, Secretary and General Counsel from September 2007 to October 2010. He also served as the Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary of Industrial Income Trust from November 2013 until November 2015, and as its Senior Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary from May 2009 to December 2013. Mr. Widoff has served as the Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary of IPT since September 2012 and as the Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary of LPT since November 2014. Mr. Widoff has also been the Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary of DC Industrial Liquidating Trust, a Maryland trust, since October 2015. He has also served as a Managing Director of Black Creek Group LLC, a Denver-based private equity real estate firm, since September 2007, and as Executive Vice President of Dividend Capital Group LLC since October 2010. Prior to joining us in September 2007, Mr. Widoff was a partner from October 2002 to July 2007 at the law firm of Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, P.C., where he was active in the management of the firm, serving as chairman of both the firm’s Associate and Recruiting Committees and overseeing an integrated team of attorneys and paralegals servicing clients primarily in the commercial real estate business. During more than a dozen years of private practice, he managed transactions involving the acquisition, development, leasing, financing and disposition of various real estate assets, including vacant land, apartment and office buildings, hotels, casinos, industrial/warehouse facilities and shopping centers. He also participated in asset and stock acquisition transactions, convertible debt financings, private offerings and complex joint venture negotiations. Mr. Widoff served as general business counsel on a variety of contract and operational issues to a wide range of clients in diverse businesses. Mr. Widoff currently serves as a Vice-Chair and Commissioner for the Denver Urban Renewal Authority. Mr. Widoff received his Bachelor’s Degree from Trinity University in Texas and his Juris Doctor Degree from the University of Colorado School of Law.

Gregory M. Moran has served as Executive Vice President since July 2013. Mr. Moran also has served as a Vice President of Investments of Dividend Capital Group LLC and Dividend Capital Total Advisors Group LLC since August 2005. Mr. Moran has been an active participant in the institutional real estate community since 1998. From December 2001 through July 2005, Mr. Moran was a Portfolio Manager in the Real Estate Investment Group for the Public Employees’ Retirement Association of Colorado where he was directly involved in the ongoing management of a global real estate investment portfolio with over $2 billion of invested equity. Mr. Moran was responsible for sourcing and underwriting new investment opportunities, ongoing asset management of existing portfolio investments and relationship management for over a dozen joint venture partners and advisors of the fund. From September 1998 through December 2001, Mr. Moran worked in the Capital Markets Group at Sonnenblick Goldman Company, most recently as a Vice President. During this time, Mr. Moran was responsible for raising and structuring debt and equity investments in commercial real estate projects on behalf of public and private real estate investment companies. Mr. Moran received his Bachelor’s Degree in Business Administration and Master’s Degree in Professional Accounting from the University of Texas at Austin — McCombs School of Business. He is also a CFA Charterholder, and a member of the CFA Institute, Urban Land Institute and Pension Real Estate Association.

 

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THE ADVISOR AND THE ADVISORY AGREEMENT

 

General

 

We rely on the Advisor to manage our day-to-day activities and to implement our investment strategy. We, the Operating Partnership and the Advisor are currently party to the Ninth Amended and Restated Advisory Agreement, effective as of March 2, 2016 and currently renewed through June 30, 2016.

 

The Advisor

 

The Advisor performs its duties and responsibilities under the Advisory Agreement as a fiduciary of the Company and our stockholders. Under the terms of the Advisory Agreement, subject to the oversight, review and approval of the board of directors, the Advisor undertakes to perform the following:

 

· participate in formulating an investment strategy and asset allocation framework consistent with achieving our investment objectives;

 

· assist our board of directors in developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating our daily NAV procedures;

 

· provide information about our properties and other assets and liabilities to the Independent Valuation Firm and other parties involved in determining our daily NAV;

 

· research, identify, review and recommend to our board of directors for approval real property and real estate-related related acquisitions and dispositions consistent with our investment policies and objectives;

 

· structure the terms and conditions of transactions pursuant to which acquisitions and dispositions of real properties and real estate-related investments will be made;

 

· actively oversee and manage our real property and real estate-related investment portfolios for purposes of meeting our investment objectives;

 

· manage our day-to-day affairs, including financial accounting and reporting, investor relations, marketing, informational systems and other administrative services on our behalf;

 

· select joint venture partners and product specialists, structure corresponding agreements and oversee and monitor these relationships; and

 

· arrange for financing and refinancing of our assets.

 

The above summary is provided to illustrate the material functions that the Advisor will perform for us as our advisor and it is not intended to include all of the services that may be provided to us by the Advisor or third parties, including the Advisor’s product specialists. Any investment advisory services provided with respect to securities will be provided by a registered investment adviser.

 

The Advisor expects to engage in other business activities. As a result, its resources will not be dedicated exclusively to our business. However, pursuant to the Advisory Agreement, the key personnel of the Advisor must devote sufficient resources to our business operations to permit the Advisor to discharge its obligations. The Advisor may not make any investments, dispositions or real property developments including real property portfolio acquisitions, developments and dispositions without the prior approval of the majority of our Investment Committee, our Management Committee, or our board of directors, as the case may be. See “Management—Duties of Directors.” The actual terms and conditions of transactions involving investments in real properties and real estate-related debt and securities shall be determined in the sole discretion of the Advisor and its product specialists, subject, as applicable, to board and Investment Committee approval.

 

The Advisor is currently managed by the following individuals:  

 

John A. Blumberg

Eileen Hallquist

Jeffrey L. Johnson

Andrea L. Karp

Richard D. Kincaid

J. Michael Lynch

Gregory M. Moran

Lainie P. Minnick

 

James R. Mulvihill 

Taylor M. Paul 

Gary M. Reiff 

M. Kirk Scott

Jeffrey W. Taylor

Joshua J. Widoff

Evan H. Zucker

 
     

  

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For biographical information regarding Messrs. Blumberg, Johnson, Kincaid, Lynch, Scott and Widoff, see “Management—Directors and Executive Officers.”

 

Eileen Hallquist , age 55, has served as Senior Vice President Asset Management Office & Industrial since May 2015. Ms. Hallquist has over 27 years of real estate asset management and development experience. Prior to joining Dividend Capital, Ms. Hallquist served as Vice President – Asset Management / Director of Sustainability for the JBG Companies from April 2011 to April 2015. While with the JBG Companies, Ms. Hallquist oversaw asset management activities for a $730 million portfolio of commercial and mixed-use assets in the Washington metropolitan area. She was also responsible for leading the sustainability and energy initiatives for the firm’s portfolio of 10 million square feet of office properties. From 2009 to 2011, she was President of Fiberight, LLC, an early stage biofuels company. From 2001 to 2009, she served as Senior Vice President of Development for Lowe Enterprises. While at Lowe Enterprises, Ms. Hallquist was responsible for building a platform of mixed-use urban infill projects, with success in security public/private partnerships and GSA tenancies, to create a $600 million pipeline of development projects. She also served in an asset management capacity for eight years for Potomac Capital Investment Corporation overseeing a portfolio of 30 former utility parent properties for value-creation from 1990 to 1998.

 

Ms. Hallquist serves on the University of Virginia’s School of Architecture Board of Trustees. She has a LEED AP certification and was previously a registered architect in the District of Columbia. She is a member of the Urban Land Institute and past national board member of the National Network of Commercial Real Estate Women (NNCREW.) Ms. Hallquist received her Bachelor of Science Degree in Architecture from the University of Virginia and her Master’s Degree in Business from the Darden School, at the University of Virginia.

 

Andrea L. Karp , age 44, has responsibilities for due diligence and acquisitions at the Advisor. Ms. Karp has served as our Senior Vice President of Real Estate since May 2007. Ms. Karp has also served as the Senior Vice President of Real Estate of IIT since August 2010 and as the Senior Vice President of Real Estate of IPT since March 2013. From 2006 to 2007, Ms. Karp was Vice President of Fremont Investment & Loan, a California-based bank where she was responsible for originating commercial loans. From 1997 through 2006, Ms. Karp served as First Vice President of ProLogis. In this capacity, Ms. Karp was responsible for overseeing the Asset Services team, which handled all due diligence and underwriting activities of corporate mergers, joint ventures, financings, acquisitions and dispositions with activity levels in excess of $6 billion per year. Ms. Karp holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Economics from the University of Colorado.

 

Lainie P. Minnick , age 43, has responsibilities for financings at the Advisor. As our Senior Vice President of Finance since 2007, Ms. Minnick is primarily responsible for executing financing initiatives and managing lending relationships. Ms. Minnick has also served as the Senior Vice President of Finance of IIT since August 2010 and as the Senior Vice President of Finance of IPT since March 2013. Since joining Dividend Capital in February 2007, Ms. Minnick has executed approximately $5.9 billion of financings for DPF, IIT and IPT, collectively. Prior to joining the Advisor in 2007, Ms. Minnick was a Project Executive for Urban Villages, Inc., a Denver-based real estate development firm. In 1996 Ms. Minnick joined the Archon Group, a subsidiary of Goldman Sachs, where she was responsible for portfolio management and loan asset management efforts. She subsequently worked directly for Goldman Sachs from 1998 through 2004 as a Vice President working exclusively with the Whitehall Funds, a series of global real estate opportunity funds. Based in both New York and London, Ms. Minnick was responsible for executing over $3 billion of real estate-related portfolio financings for Whitehall throughout the U.S. and Europe. Ms. Minnick holds a Bachelor’s of Business Administration degree from Southern Methodist University and a Masters in Business Administration from the Wharton School at the University of Pennsylvania.

 

James R. Mulvihill , age 51, is a manager of both the Advisor and the Property Manager. Mr. Mulvihill is also a manager of Industrial Income Advisors LLC, the advisor to IIT, and a manager of Industrial Property Advisors LLC, the advisor to IPT. Mr. Mulvihill is a co-founder and managing partner of both Dividend Capital Group LLC and Black Creek Group LLC. Mr. Mulvihill co-founded the first Black Creek affiliated entities in 1991 with John Blumberg and Evan Zucker, and co-founded Dividend Capital Group in 2002 with Mr. Blumberg and Mr. Zucker. As of December 31, 2014, with Mr. Blumberg and Mr. Zucker and other affiliates, Mr. Mulvihill has overseen directly, or indirectly through affiliated entities, the acquisition, development, redevelopment, financing and sale of real estate-related assets with an aggregate value in excess of approximately $13.6 billion. Mr. Mulvihill was a co-founder and formerly served as a director of DCT Industrial Trust, formerly known as Dividend Capital Trust, a NYSE-listed industrial REIT (NYSE: DCT). He is also a co-founder and former Chairman of the Board of CPA, one of the largest owners and developers of industrial properties in Mexico. In 1993, Mr. Mulvihill co-founded American Real Estate Investment Corp. (formerly known as Keystone Property Trust, NYSE: KTR) which was an industrial, office and logistics REIT and was acquired by ProLogis Trust (NYSE: PLD) in August 2004. Mr. Mulvihill served as its Chairman and as a director from 1993 through 1997 and as a director of Keystone Property Trust from 1997 through 2001. Prior to 1991, Mr. Mulvihill served as Vice President of the Real Estate Banking and Investment Banking Groups of Manufacturer’s Hanover and subsequently Chemical Bank, where his responsibilities included real estate syndication efforts, structured debt underwritings and leveraged buyout real estate financings. Mr. Mulvihill holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science from Stanford University.

 

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Taylor M. Paul , age 36, serves as our Senior Vice President and Controller and has held various positions of growing responsibilities with us and our Advisor since our inception in 2006 including as our Vice President and Controller since 2011. Mr. Paul’s responsibilities have included financial reporting, corporate and property accounting, financial planning and analysis and treasury management. In his current role, Mr. Paul oversees all aspects of our accounting, financial reporting, budgeting and certain treasury management and compliance functions. Prior to joining us, Mr. Paul was with KPMG LLP from 2003 to 2006 where he primarily worked in the firm’s real estate practice for various clients which most notably included an S&P 500 international real estate investment trust. Mr. Paul holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Accounting and Spanish from Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas and holds an inactive CPA license in the state of Colorado.

 

Gary M. Reiff , age 56, is Executive Vice President and General Counsel of the Advisor. Mr. Reiff has also served, since March 2008, as the Chief Operating Officer and Chief Legal Officer of Dividend Capital Group LLC and Black Creek Group LLC, both Denver-based real estate investment firms which he joined in February 2007. In addition, Mr. Reiff has held various positions with affiliates of Black Creek Group LLC and Dividend Capital Group LLC, acting as General Counsel, Chief Legal Officer, Executive Vice President and Chief Operating Officer of various of those affiliates, including as Executive Vice President and General Counsel of Industrial Income Advisors LLC (the advisor to Industrial Income Trust Inc.) since October 2012 and of Industrial Property Advisors (the advisor to Industrial Property Trust Inc.) since September 2013. From 1985 until 1986, and from 1989 until 2007, Mr. Reiff was an attorney with Brownstein Hyatt Farber Schreck, P.C., being a shareholder from 1991 until 2007. Mr. Reiff also served as a member of that firm’s Executive Committee and co-chair of the firm’s Corporate and Securities Department. During Mr. Reiff’s more than 20 years of private legal practice, he has represented a wide variety of businesses and corporations, both public and private, in their acquisitions, dispositions, ventures, financings and general corporate counseling. Mr. Reiff currently serves as the Vice-Chair of the Colorado Transportation Commission (and is a past-Chair of the Commission) and on the High Enterprise Transportation Enterprise and has been an Adjunct Professor at the University of Colorado Law School. Mr. Reiff received his B.A., with distinction, and his M.A. from Stanford University, and his law degree, magna cum laude, from Harvard Law School.

 

Jeffrey W. Taylor, CFA , age 43, has responsibilities for shareholder operations, product management and development, coordination of risk management programs and certain business operations at the Advisor and its affiliates. Mr. Taylor has served as our Senior Vice President of Shareholder Operations since September 2012. Mr. Taylor has also served as Senior Vice President of Operations of Black Creek Group LLC since 2009 and has served as President of BCG Advisors LLC since March 2012. BCG Advisors LLC is a registered investment advisor whose subsidiary, BCG TRT Advisors LLC, we and the Advisor have engaged to provide non-discretionary advice and recommendations with respect to our investment in securities. Mr. Taylor’s background includes investment management, risk management, product management, operating company analysis and strategic planning within financial services companies. Prior to joining us and Black Creek Group LLC, Mr. Taylor served in various positions with INVESCO Funds Group, most notably in management roles within the investment division and the distribution company as well as positions within the transfer agency. Mr. Taylor holds a Bachelor’s degree from Pennsylvania State University and a Masters in Business Administration from the University of Colorado at Denver. In addition, Mr. Taylor is a CFA Charterholder.

 

Evan H. Zucker , age 50, is a manager of both the Advisor and the Property Manager. Mr. Zucker is also a manager of Industrial Income Advisors LLC, the advisor to IIT, and has served as the Chairman of the board of directors of IIT since March 2010. Additionally, Mr. Zucker is a manager of Industrial Property Advisors LLC, the advisor to IPT, and has served as the Chairman of the board of directors of IPT since January 2013. Mr. Zucker served as the President of IIT from October 2009 until his election to the IIT board of directors and as Chairman in March 2010. From its inception until October 2006, Mr. Zucker was the Chief Executive Officer, President, Secretary and a director of DCT Industrial. Mr. Zucker is a principal of both Dividend Capital Group LLC and Black Creek Capital LLC, a Denver-based real estate investment firm which he co-founded in 1993. Mr. Zucker has been active in real estate acquisition, development and redevelopment activities since 1989 and, as of December 31, 2014, with affiliates, has overseen directly, or indirectly through affiliated entities, the acquisition, development, redevelopment, financing and sale of real properties having combined value of approximately $13.6 billion. In 1993, Mr. Zucker co-founded American Real Estate Investment Corp., which subsequently became Keystone Property Trust (NYSE: KTR), an industrial, office and logistics REIT that was acquired by ProLogis Trust (NYSE: PLD) in August 2004. Mr. Zucker served as the President and as a director of American Real Estate Investment Corp. from 1993 to 1997 and as a director of Keystone Property Trust from 1997 to 1999. Mr. Zucker graduated from Stanford University with a Bachelor’s Degree in Economics.

 

The Advisory Agreement

 

Term and Termination Rights

 

The term of the Advisory Agreement is for one year and expires on June 30 of each calendar year, subject to renewals by our board of directors for an unlimited number of successive one-year periods. The independent directors will evaluate the performance of the Advisor before renewing the Advisory Agreement, and the criteria used in such evaluation will be included in the minutes of the board of directors. The Advisory Agreement may be terminated:

 

· immediately by us for “cause” or upon the bankruptcy of the Advisor;

 

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· without cause or penalty by a majority of our independent directors upon 60 days’ written notice; or

 

· with “good reason” by the Advisor upon 60 days’ written notice.

 

“Good reason” is defined in the Advisory Agreement to mean either any failure by us to obtain a satisfactory agreement from any successor to assume and agree to perform our obligations under the Advisory Agreement or any uncured material breach of the Advisory Agreement of any nature whatsoever by us. “Cause” is defined in the Advisory Agreement to mean fraud, criminal conduct, willful misconduct or willful or negligent breach of fiduciary duty by the Advisor, or an uncured material breach of the Advisory Agreement by the Advisor.

 

In the event of the termination of the Advisory Agreement, the Advisor will cooperate with us and take all reasonable steps requested to assist the board of directors in making an orderly transition of the advisory function. Before selecting a successor advisor, the board of directors must determine that any successor advisor possesses sufficient qualifications to perform the advisory function and to justify the compensation it would receive from us.

 

The Advisor and its affiliates are paid fees and reimbursed certain expenses in connection with services they provide to us. In the event the Advisory Agreement is terminated, the Advisor will be paid all accrued and unpaid fees and expense reimbursements earned prior to the date of termination. We will not reimburse the Advisor or its affiliates for services for which the Advisor or its affiliates are entitled to compensation in the form of a separate fee.

 

The Advisor may also, directly or indirectly (including, without limitation, through us or our subsidiaries), receive fees from our joint venture partners and co-owners of our properties for services provided to them with respect to their proportionate interests. Fees received from joint venture partners or co-owners of our properties and paid, directly or indirectly (including without limitation, through us or our subsidiaries), to the Advisor may be more or less than similar fees that we pay to the Advisor pursuant to the Advisory Agreement.

 

Advisory Fee and Expense Reimbursements

 

As compensation for asset management services the Advisor provides to us pursuant to the Advisory Agreement, we pay the Advisor an advisory fee comprised of two separate components:

 

(1) a fixed component, payable monthly in arrears, that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 1.15% of (a) the Aggregate Fund NAV (i.e., the aggregate NAV of our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with the OP Units held by third parties) for such day and (b) the consideration received by us or our affiliate for selling interests in DST Properties to third party investors, net of up-front fees and expense reimbursements payable out of gross sale proceeds from the sale of such interests; and

 

(2) a performance component based on the overall non-compounded investment return (as described below) provided to holders of Fund Interests (i.e., our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with the OP Units held by third parties) any calendar year, payable annually in arrears.

 

We accrue both components of the advisory fee on a daily basis. The performance component of the advisory fee is calculated on the basis of the overall non-compounded investment return provided to holders of Fund Interests over a calendar year such that the Advisor will receive 25% of the overall return in excess of 6%; provided that in no event will the performance component exceed 10% of the overall return for such year. The overall non-compounded investment return provided to holders of Fund Interests over any applicable period is a dollar amount defined as the product of (i) the amount, if any, by which (A) the sum of (1) the weighted-average distributions per Fund Interest over the applicable period and (2) the ending weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest, exceeds (B) the beginning weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest and (ii) the weighted-average number of Fund Interests outstanding during the applicable period. The weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest calculated on the last trading day of a calendar year shall be the amount against which changes in weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest are measured during the subsequent calendar year. However, the performance component will not be earned on any increase in the weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest except to the extent that it exceeds the historically highest year-end weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest since the commencement of our daily NAV calculations (currently $7.47). The foregoing NAV thresholds are subject to adjustment by our board of directors. Therefore, payment of the performance component of the advisory fee (1) is contingent upon the overall return to the holders of Fund Interests exceeding the 6% return, (2) will vary in amount based on our actual performance, (3) cannot cause the overall return to the holders of Fund Interests for the year to be reduced below 6% and (4) is payable to the Advisor if the overall return to the holders of Fund Interests exceeds the 6% return in a particular calendar year, even if the overall return to the holders of Fund Interests on a cumulative basis over any longer or shorter period has been less than 6% per annum. Additionally, the Advisor will provide us with a waiver of a portion of its fees generally equal to the amount of the performance component that would have been payable with respect to the Class E shares and the Class E OP Units held by third parties until the NAV of such shares or units exceeds $10.00 a share or unit, the benefit of which will be shared among all holders of Fund Interests.

 

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As a result, the performance component is not directly tied to the performance of the shares you purchase, the class of shares you purchase or the time period during which you own your shares. The performance component may be payable to the Advisor even if the NAV of your shares at the end of the calendar year is below your purchase price, and the thresholds at which increases in NAV count towards the overall return to the holders of Fund Interests are not based on your purchase price. Because of the class-specific expenses consisting of the dealer manager fee and the distribution fee, which differ among classes, we do not expect the overall return of each class of Fund Interests to ever be the same. However, if and when the performance fee is payable, the expense will be allocated among all holders of Fund Interests ratably according to the NAV of their units or shares, regardless of the different returns achieved by different classes of Fund Interests during the year. Further, stockholders who redeem their shares during a given year may redeem their shares at a lower NAV per share as a result of an accrual for the estimated performance component of the advisory fee, even if no performance component is ultimately payable to the Advisor at the end of such calendar year. In addition, if the weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest remains above certain threshold levels, the Advisor’s ability to earn the performance fee in any year will not be affected by poor performance in prior years, and the Advisor will not be obligated to return any portion of advisory fees paid based on our subsequent performance.

 

The fixed and performance components of the advisory fee described above are based on the Aggregate Fund NAV and the returns to holders of all Fund Interests because the Advisor manages all of the assets owned by the Operating Partnership, but the Company’s NAV only represents the part of the ownership interests in the Operating Partnership. The other interests in our Operating Partnership are owned by third-party holders of OP Units. This fee structure does not benefit the third-party holders of OP Units at the expense of our stockholders or vice versa, because these fees will be allocated among all third-party holders of OP Units and all of our stockholders ratably according to the NAV of their units or shares.

 

We will also pay our Advisor a development management fee equal to 4.0% of the cost to develop, construct or improve any real property assets, including DST Properties.

 

In addition, we will pay the Advisor a fee of 1.0% of the total consideration we receive upon the sale of real property assets (excluding DST Properties). For these purposes, a “sale” means any transaction or series of transactions whereby we or the Operating Partnership directly or indirectly (including through the sale of any interest in a joint venture or through a sale by a joint venture in which we hold an interest) sells, grants, transfers, conveys, or relinquishes its ownership of any real property or portion thereof, including the lease of any real property consisting of a building only, and including any event with respect to any real property which gives rise to a significant amount of insurance proceeds or condemnation awards. Further, for providing a substantial amount of services in connection with the sale of a property (excluding DST Properties), as determined by a majority of our independent directors, we will pay the Advisor up to 50.0% of the reasonable, customary and competitive commission paid for the sale of a comparable real property, provided that such amount shall not exceed 1.0% of the contract price of the property sold and, when added to all other real estate commissions paid to unaffiliated parties in connection with the sale, may not exceed the lesser of a competitive real estate commission or 6.0% of the sales price of the property.

 

Subject to certain limitations, we reimburse the Advisor for all of the costs it incurs in connection with the services it provides to us, including, but not limited to:

 

· organization and offering expenses (whether public or private offerings), which include legal, accounting and printing fees and expenses attributable to preparation of the registration statement, registration and qualification of our common stock for sale with the Commission and in the various states and filing fees (and not including selling commissions, the dealer manager fee and the distribution fee), in the event that the Advisor incurs any such expenses on our behalf;

 

· expenses incurred by the Advisor in connection with the selection and acquisition of properties, real estate-related assets and other investments of ours, whether or not such investments are acquired;

 

· expenses incurred by the Advisor in connection with financing transactions, including the financing or refinancing of our properties;

 

· expenses incurred by the Advisor in connection with providing other services to us, such as compliance with reporting requirements under securities laws; and

 

· our allocable share of the Advisor’s overhead, which includes but is not limited to the Advisor’s rent, utilities and personnel costs, as well as the compensation payable to our principal executive officer and our principal financial officer; provided, that we will not reimburse the Advisor or its affiliates for services for which the Advisor or its affiliates are entitled to compensation in the form of a separate fee.

 

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The Advisor must reimburse us at least quarterly for reimbursements paid to the Advisor in any four consecutive fiscal quarters to the extent that such reimbursements to the Advisor cause our total operating expenses over such period to exceed the greater of (1) 2% of our average invested assets, which generally consists of the average of the aggregate book value of our assets invested, directly or indirectly, in equity interests in, and loans secured by, real estate, before reserves for depreciation, bad debts and other non-cash reserves, or (2) 25% of our net income, which is defined as our total revenues less total operating expenses for any given period excluding additions to reserves for depreciation, bad debts and other non-cash reserves. Such operating expenses will be calculated in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles and will include, but will not be limited to, items such as legal, accounting and auditing expenses, the advisory fee, transfer agent costs, D&O insurance, board of directors fees and related expenses, and expenses related to compliance with the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002. Such operating expenses will not include (a) the expenses of raising capital such as organization and offering expenses, legal, audit, accounting, underwriting, brokerage, listing, registration and other fees, printing and other such expenses, and tax incurred in connection with the issuance, distribution, transfer and registration of our shares; (b) interest payments; (c) taxes; (d) non-cash expenditures such as depreciation, amortization and bad debt reserves; (e) incentive fees paid in compliance with the Statement of Policy; and (f) acquisition fees, acquisition expenses, real estate commissions on the sale of property and other fees and expenses connected with the acquisition, disposition, management and ownership of real estate interests, mortgage loans or other property (including the costs of foreclosure, insurance premiums, legal services, maintenance, repair and improvement of property). To the extent that operating expenses payable or reimbursable by us exceed this limit and the independent directors determine that the excess expenses were justified based on unusual and nonrecurring factors which they deem sufficient, the Advisor may be reimbursed in future quarters for the full amount of the excess expenses, or any portion thereof, but only to the extent the reimbursement would not cause our operating expenses to exceed the limitation in any four consecutive fiscal quarters. Within 60 days after the end of any of our fiscal quarters for which total operating expenses for the 12 months then ended exceed the limitation, there shall be sent to the stockholders a written disclosure, together with an explanation of the factors the independent directors considered in arriving at the conclusion that the excess expenses were justified.

 

Assignment

 

With the permission of our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, our Advisor may at any time assign the Advisory Agreement to an affiliate of the Advisor. The assignment would not be expected to materially affect the identity of the persons on whom we rely for advisory services, and hence we would expect that such assignment would be approved by our board if requested.

 

Restricted Stock Unit Agreements

 

We have entered into Restricted Stock Unit Agreements (the “Advisor RSU Agreements”) with our Advisor. Pursuant to the terms of the Advisor RSU Agreements, we have granted 565,789 Company RSUs to the Advisor that remain unvested and unsettled as of April 4, 2016. Each Company RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of our Class I common stock. The Company RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offsets of advisory fees and expenses otherwise payable from the Company to the Advisor based on a value of the NAV per Class I share on the grant date of the applicable Company RSU (the weighted average grant-date NAV per Class I share with respect to the unsettled Company RSUs is $7.14 as of April 4, 2016). As of April 4, 2016, all of the Class I shares that were issued upon settlement of Company RSUs have been used for fee offset.

 

The purposes of the Advisor RSU Agreements are to promote an alignment of interests among our stockholders, the Advisor and the personnel of our Advisor and its affiliates, and to promote retention of the personnel of our Advisor and its affiliates. The Advisor has entered into agreements to redistribute substantially all of the Class I shares acquired through Company RSUs to senior level employees of the Advisor and its affiliates that provide services to us, although the terms of such redistributions (including the timing, amount and recipients) remain solely in the discretion of the Advisor. The Advisor has granted 544,572 Advisor RSUs to certain employees of the Advisor and its affiliates that remain unsettled as of April 4, 2016. Each Advisor RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of our Class I common stock. The Advisor RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offsets of compensation otherwise payable from the Advisor or its affiliates to the applicable employee based on a value of the NAV per Class I share on the grant date of the applicable Advisor RSU (the weighted average grant-date NAV per Class I share with respect to the unsettled Advisor RSUs is $7.15 as of April 4, 2016). As of April 4, 2016, no Advisor RSUs have vested but have not been settled. Both Company RSUs and Advisor RSUs are entitled to dividend equivalents that mirror the dividends paid by us with respect to Class I shares.

 

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Vesting and Payment Offset

 

The chart below shows the grant dates, vesting dates and Class I NAV on the grant dates of the unvested Company RSUs as of April 4, 2016.

 

                       
Award   Grant Date     Vesting Dates   Number of
Unvested Shares
    Grant Date NAV per 
Class I Share
 
Company RSU     4/7/14   4/15/14, 4/15/15, 4/15/16, 4/15/17     246,788     $ 6.9634  
Company RSU     2/25/15   4/15/15, 4/15/16, 4/15/17     59,192       7.1800  
Company RSU     2/25/15   4/15/18     135,359       7.1800  
Company RSU     2/4/16   4/15/19     124,451       7.4100  
Total/ weighted average                 565,789     $ 7.1361  

 

On each vesting date, an offset amount will be calculated and deducted on a pro rata basis over the next 12 months from the cash payments otherwise due and payable to the Advisor under our then-current Advisory Agreement for any fees or expense reimbursements. Each offset amount will equal the number of Company RSUs vesting on such date multiplied by the grant-date NAV per Class I share. For each Company RSU, the offset amount will always be calculated based on the grant-date NAV per Class I share, even beyond the initial grant and vesting dates. At the end of each 12-month period following each vesting date, if the offset amount has not been fully realized by offsets from the cash payments otherwise due and payable to the Advisor under the Advisory Agreement, the Advisor will promptly pay any shortfall to us.

 

Termination

 

The Advisor RSU Agreements will automatically terminate upon termination or non-renewal of the Advisory Agreement, by any party for any reason. In addition, upon a change in control of us, then either the Advisor or we may immediately terminate the Advisor RSU Agreements. Further, the Advisor may immediately terminate the Advisor RSU Agreements if we exercise certain rights under the Advisor RSU Agreements to replace the Company RSUs with another form of compensation.

 

Upon termination of the Advisor RSU Agreements, the Advisor will promptly pay any unused offset amounts to us or, at the Advisor’s election, return Class I shares in equal value based on the Class I NAV as of the date of termination of the Advisor RSU Agreements. In addition, upon termination of the Advisor RSU Agreements, all unvested Company RSUs will be forfeited except that, unless the Advisor RSU Agreements were terminated at the election of the Advisor following a change in control of us or as a result of a premature termination of the Advisory Agreement at our election for cause (as defined in the Advisory Agreement) or upon the bankruptcy of the Advisor, then following such forfeiture of Company RSUs, the Advisor will have the right to acquire from us the number of Class I shares equal to the number of Company RSUs forfeited, in return for a purchase price equal to such number of Class I shares multiplied by the grant-date NAV per Class I share. The Advisor must notify us of its election to exercise the foregoing acquisition right within 30 days following the termination of the Advisor RSU Agreements, and the parties will close the transaction within 60 days following the termination of the Advisor RSU Agreements.

 

Dividend Equivalent Payments

 

If our board of directors declares and we pay a cash dividend on Class I shares for any period in which the Company RSUs are outstanding (regardless of whether such Company RSUs are then vested), the Advisor will be entitled to dividend equivalents with respect to that cash dividend equal to the cash dividends that would have been payable on the same number of Class I shares as the number of Company RSUs subject to the Advisor RSU Agreements had such Class I shares been outstanding during the same portion of such period as the Company RSUs were outstanding. Any such dividend equivalents may be paid in cash or Class I shares, at the Advisor’s election.

 

Holdings of Shares of Common Stock, OP Units and Special Units

 

We are the sole general partner of our Operating Partnership. We initially contributed $2,000 into the Operating Partnership in exchange for 200 OP Units, representing the sole general partner interest in the Operating Partnership. Subsequently, we contributed 100% of the proceeds received from our public offerings of common stock to our Operating Partnership in exchange for OP Units representing our interest as a limited partner of the Operating Partnership. As of December 31, 2015, we held a 92.8% limited partnership interest in the Operating Partnership. As of December 31, 2015, the Operating Partnership had issued OP Units to third-party investors, representing approximately a 7.2% limited partnership interest, pursuant to the Operating Partnership’s option to acquire certain fractional interests in real estate that were previously sold to such investors pursuant to the Operating Partnership’s private placements.

 

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Companies Affiliated with the Advisor

 

Property Manager

 

Certain of our real properties may be managed and leased by the Property Manager. The Property Manager is an affiliate of the Advisor and was organized in April 2002 to lease and manage real properties acquired by entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor or other third parties.

 

We will pay the Property Manager a property management fee equal to a market-based percentage of the annual gross revenues of each of our real properties managed by the Property Manager. The actual percentage will be variable and is dependent upon geographic location and product type (such as office, industrial, retail, multifamily, hospitality and other property types). In addition, we may pay the Property Manager a separate fee for the one-time initial lease-up of newly constructed real properties it manages for us in an amount not to exceed the fee customarily charged in arm’s-length transactions by others rendering similar services in the same geographic area for similar real properties as determined by a survey of brokers and agents in such area. Historically, we have primarily relied on third-party property managers, and we have not paid any significant amount of a property management fee to the Property Manager.

 

The Property Manager will hire, direct and establish policies for employees who will have direct responsibility for the operations of each real property it manages, which may include but is not limited to on-site managers and building and maintenance personnel. Certain employees of the Property Manager may be employed on a part-time basis and may also be employed by the Advisor, the Dealer Manager or certain companies affiliated with them. The Property Manager will also direct the purchase of equipment and supplies and will supervise all maintenance activity. The management fees to be paid to the Property Manager will include, without additional expense to us, all of the Property Manager’s general overhead costs.

 

Dealer Manager

 

The Dealer Manager is a member firm of FINRA. The Dealer Manager was organized in December 2001 for the purpose of participating in and facilitating the distribution of securities of entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor. The Dealer Manager provides certain sales, promotional and marketing services to us in connection with the distribution of the shares of common stock offered pursuant to this prospectus. See “Plan of Distribution.”

 

We pay the Dealer Manager selling commissions on Class A shares sold in the primary offering of up to 3.0% of the public offering price per share, which may be higher or lower due to rounding. Selling commissions may be reduced or eliminated to or for the account of certain categories of purchasers. We do not pay selling commissions on Class W shares, Class I shares, on shares sold under our distribution reinvestment plan, or on Class A shares sold through fee-based programs, also known as wrap accounts, or through investment advisers registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or applicable state law. Subject to FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation, we pay the Dealer Manager (1) a dealer manager fee equal to 1/365th of 0.60% of our NAV per share for Class A shares and Class W shares for each day, (2) a dealer manager fee equal to 1/365th of 0.10% of our NAV per share for Class I shares for each day and (3) for Class A shares only, a distribution fee equal to 1/365th of 0.50% of our NAV per share for Class A shares for each day. See “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation.”

 

We may pay to the Dealer Manager a primary dealer fee in the amount of up to 5.0% of the gross proceeds raised from the sale of Class I shares in the primary offering, provided that (i) the total gross proceeds raised with respect to which the primary dealer fee will apply may not exceed $100,000,000, subject to further increase by our board of directors, in its discretion; (ii) the primary dealer fee will only be paid with respect to sales made by participating broker-dealers specifically approved by us as being eligible; and (iii) the primary dealer fee will only be paid with respect to sales made at times approved by us. The Dealer Manager may reallow a portion of the primary dealer fee to the participating broker-dealers involved in selling such Class I shares based on the portion of the gross proceeds raised from their customers. The Dealer Manager will consider the primary dealer fee to be underwriting compensation subject to the limits described below. The primary dealer fee will be paid by us and will not be considered to be a class-specific expense. Accordingly, the expense will be allocated among all holders of Fund Interests ratably according to the NAV of their units or shares. Currently, the maximum primary dealer fee we will pay our Dealer Manager is $5 million, although in the future we may provide for additional primary dealer fee payments. See “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Primary Dealer Fees.”

 

We have also engaged the Dealer Manager to conduct the private placements of our DST Program. For more information, see “Investment Strategy, Objectives and Policies—DST Program.”

 

The DST Manager

 

The DST Manager, an affiliate of the Advisor, will be engaged to act as the manager of each Delaware statutory trust holding a DST Property. For more information, see “Investment Strategy, Objectives and Policies—DST Program.”

 

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Management Decisions of the Advisor

 

Messrs. Blumberg, Johnson, Kincaid, Lynch, Moran, Mulvihill, Paul, Reiff, Scott, Taylor, Widoff, Zucker and Mmes. Hallquist, Karp and Minnick have primary responsibility for management decisions of the Advisor, including the selection of real property and real estate-related investments to be recommended to our board of directors, the negotiations in connection with these investments and the property management and leasing of real properties.

 

Management Compensation

 

Because our Advisory Agreement provides that our Advisor assumes principal responsibility for managing our affairs, our officers, in their capacities as such, do not receive compensation directly from us. Our Advisor, through an affiliate, compensates our officers who also serve as officers of the Advisor and of other affiliates. However, in their capacities as officers or employees of our Advisor or its affiliates, they devote such portion of their time to our affairs as is required for the performance of the duties of our Advisor under the Advisory Agreement.

 

The Advisor, the Sponsor, the Dealer Manager, the Property Manager and the DST Manager are presently each directly or indirectly majority owned by one or more of the following and/or their affiliates: John A. Blumberg, James R. Mulvihill, Charles Murray and Evan H. Zucker. The independent directors will determine, from time to time but at least annually, that (1) the total fees and expenses paid to the Advisor, the Property Manager, the Dealer Manager and the DST Manager, as applicable, are reasonable in light of our investment performance, net assets, net income and the fees and expenses of other comparable unaffiliated REITs and (2) the compensation paid to the Advisor is reasonable in relation to the nature and quality of services performed and that such compensation is within the limits prescribed by this prospectus. Each such determination will be reflected in the minutes of the board of directors. The independent directors will also supervise the performance of the Advisor and review the compensation we pay the Advisor to determine that the provisions of the Advisory Agreement are carried out.

 

The following table summarizes and discloses all of the compensation and fees, including reimbursement of expenses, to be paid by us to the Advisor, the Property Manager and the Dealer Manager in connection with this offering or the operation of the Company. The maximum amount that we may pay with respect to such compensation, fees and reimbursement of expenses is also set forth below, assuming the maximum gross proceeds from the primary offering and distribution reinvestment plan.

 

The selling commissions listed below are effectively paid by purchasers of Class A shares in the primary offering at the time of purchase, because the purchase price of such shares is equal to the NAV per Class A share plus the selling commission, and such selling commissions therefore have no effect on our NAV. The dealer manager fee and the distribution fee listed below are allocated on a class-specific basis and differ for each class, even when the NAV of each class is the same. Such class-specific fees are generally expected to affect distributions of the applicable classes rather than the NAV per share of such classes. The other fees and expenses below, including the primary dealer fee, are not class-specific. Accordingly, they are allocated among all holders of Fund Interests ratably according to the NAV of their units or shares.

 

Because the dealer manager fee and distribution fee are allocated on a class-specific basis and are borne by all holders of the applicable class, you will be allocated a share of class-specific expenses of our other offerings. Even if the FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation are reached with respect to this offering, you will be allocated a share of class-specific expenses of our other offerings. Accordingly, with respect to the shares that you own, you should expect to be allocated the maximum dealer manager fee and distribution fee described below, for as long as you own your shares.

 

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Summary of Fees, Commissions and Reimbursements

 

Type of Compensation
and Recipient

 

Description and Method of Computation

 

Maximum Amount

         
Selling Commission—the Dealer Manager (1)  

We pay the Dealer Manager selling commissions of up to 3.0% of the public offering price per Class A share. The actual selling commission expressed as a percentage of the public offering price per Class A share may be higher or lower than 3.0% due to rounding. Selling commissions may be waived at the direction of the Dealer Manager and may be reduced for volume purchases. Substantially all of the sales commissions are expected to be reallowed to third-party broker-dealers participating in this offering.

 

We do not pay selling commissions with respect to purchases of Class W shares, Class I shares, shares of any class sold pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan, or Class A shares sold through fee-based programs, also known as wrap accounts, or through investment advisers registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or applicable state law.

 

  The actual amount will depend on the number of Class A shares sold, the NAV per share and the type of accounts that purchase shares. Aggregate selling commissions will equal $22,500,000 if we sell the maximum offering, assuming that all shares sold are Class A shares, the maximum selling commission is paid for each primary offering share and there is no reallocation of shares between our primary offering and our distribution reinvestment plan.
Dealer Manager Fee—the Dealer Manager  

Subject to FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation, we pay the Dealer Manager a dealer manager fee that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.60% of our NAV per share for each of our Class A and Class W shares and an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.10% of our NAV per share for our Class I shares for such day on a continuous basis from year to year. We will cease paying the dealer manager fee on the earlier to occur of the following: (i) a listing of the class of such shares on a national securities exchange or (ii) such shares no longer being outstanding.

 

The Dealer Manager may reallow a portion of the dealer manager fee to participating broker-dealers that meet certain thresholds of our shares under management and certain other metrics and to servicing broker-dealers. The dealer manager fee is payable monthly in arrears. The dealer manager fee is payable with respect to all Class A, Class W and Class I shares, including Class A, Class W and Class I shares issued under our distribution reinvestment plan. We do not pay a dealer manager fee with respect to Class E shares.

  Actual amounts depend upon the number of shares of each class outstanding, our daily NAV and when shares are outstanding, and, therefore, cannot be determined at this time. The additional dealer manager fee with respect to shares sold in this offering will equal $6,000,000 per annum if we sell the maximum offering, assuming that all shares sold are Class W shares and that the NAV per Class W share remains the same throughout this offering.  

 

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Distribution Fee—the Dealer Manager  

Subject to FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation, we pay the Dealer Manager a distribution fee with respect to our Class A shares only that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365 th of 0.50% of the amount of our NAV per share for the Class A shares for such day on a continuous basis from year to year. We will cease paying the distribution fee on the earlier to occur of the following: (i) a listing of the class of such shares on a national securities exchange or (ii) such shares no longer being outstanding.

 

The Dealer Manager may reallow the distribution fee to participating broker-dealers and servicing broker-dealers. The distribution fee is payable monthly in arrears. The distribution fee is payable with respect to all Class A shares, including Class A shares issued under our distribution reinvestment plan.

 

We do not pay a distribution fee with respect to Class E shares, Class W shares or Class I shares.

 

  Actual amounts depend upon our daily NAV, the number of Class A shares outstanding and when shares are outstanding, and, therefore, cannot be determined at this time. The additional distribution fee with respect to shares sold in this offering will equal $4,887,500 per annum if we sell the maximum offering, assuming that all shares sold are Class A shares, that the NAV per Class A share remains the same throughout this offering and that there is no reallocation of shares between our primary offering and our distribution reinvestment plan.
Primary Dealer Fee—the Dealer Manager   We may pay to the Dealer Manager a primary dealer fee in the amount of up to 5.0% of the gross proceeds raised from the sale of Class I shares in the primary offering, provided that (i) the total gross proceeds raised with respect to which the primary dealer fee will apply may not exceed $100,000,000, subject to further increase by our board of directors, in its discretion; (ii) the primary dealer fee will only be paid with respect to sales made by participating broker-dealers specifically approved by us as being eligible; and (iii) the primary dealer fee will only be paid with respect to sales made at times approved by us. The Dealer Manager may reallow a portion of the primary dealer fee to the participating broker-dealers involved in selling such Class I shares based on the portion of the gross proceeds raised from their customers. The Dealer Manager will consider the primary dealer fee to be underwriting compensation. The primary dealer fee will be paid by us and will not be considered to be a class-specific expense. Accordingly, the expense will be allocated among all holders of Fund Interests ratably according to the NAV of their units or shares. Currently, the maximum primary dealer fee we will pay our Dealer Manager is $5 million, although in the future we may provide for additional primary dealer fee payments.   Actual amounts depend upon the proceeds raised from the sale of Class I shares in transactions that entitle our Dealer Manager to a primary dealer fee. The primary dealer fee will equal $5,000,000 if we pay the maximum 5.0% primary dealer fee on $100,000,000 in gross proceeds from sales of Class I shares in the primary offering.
Additional Underwriting Compensation – the Dealer Manager or the Advisor (2)   We pay directly, or reimburse the Advisor and the Dealer Manager if they pay on our behalf, certain additional items of underwriting compensation described in “Plan of Distribution – Underwriting Compensation,” including legal fees of the Dealer Manager, reimbursements for customary travel, lodging, meals and reasonable entertainment expenses of registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager, the cost of educational conferences held by us, including costs reimbursement for registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager and registered representatives of participating broker-dealers to attend educational conferences sponsored by us, attendance fees and costs reimbursement for registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager to attend seminars conducted by participating broker-dealers, and promotional items.   We estimate our additional underwriting compensation expenses to be approximately $3,270,000 if we sell the maximum offering amount.

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Issuer Organization and Offering Expense Reimbursement—the Advisor or its affiliates, including the Dealer Manager (3)   We pay directly, or reimburse the Advisor and the Dealer Manager if they pay on our behalf, any organization and offering expenses (other than selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee, primary dealer fee, supplemental fees and commissions and certain other amounts described in “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Other Compensation”) as and when incurred. After the termination of the primary offering and again after termination of the offering under our distribution reinvestment plan, the Advisor has agreed to reimburse us to the extent that total cumulative organization and offering expenses (including selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee and any additional underwriting compensation) that we incur exceed 15% of our gross proceeds from the applicable offering.   We estimate our issuer organization and offering expenses (which excludes underwriting compensation expenses, including selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee, the primary dealer fee, supplemental fees and commissions, the additional underwriting compensation described above and certain other amounts described in “Plan of Distribution – Underwriting Compensation – Other Compensation”) to be approximately $9,566,300 if we sell the maximum offering amount.
Advisory Fees—the Advisor (4)  

In consideration for the asset management services it provides on our behalf, we pay the Advisor an advisory fee equal to (1) a fixed component, payable monthly in arrears, that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 1.15% of (a) the Aggregate Fund NAV (i.e., the aggregate NAV of our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with the OP Units held by third parties) for such day and (b) the consideration received by us or our affiliate for selling interests in DST Properties to third party investors, net of up-front fees and expense reimbursements payable out of gross sale proceeds from the sale of such interests, and (2) a performance component calculated on the basis of the overall non-compounded investment return provided to holders of Fund Interests (i.e., our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with the OP Units held by third parties) in any calendar year such that the Advisor will receive 25% of the overall return in excess of 6%; provided that in no event will the performance component exceed 10% of the overall return for such year. However, the performance component will not be earned on any increase in the weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest except to the extent that it exceeds the historically highest year-end weighted-average NAV per Fund Interest since the commencement of our daily NAV calculations (currently $7.47). The foregoing NAV thresholds are subject to adjustment by our board of directors. Additionally, the Advisor will provide us with a waiver of a portion of its fees generally equal to the amount of the performance component that would have been payable with respect to the Class E shares and the Class E OP Units held by third parties until the NAV of such shares or units exceeds $10.00 a share or unit, the benefit of which will be shared among all holders of Fund Interests. For a more comprehensive description of the performance fee and related calculations, see “The Advisor and the Advisory Agreement—Summary of Fees, Commissions and Reimbursements.”

 

We will also pay our Advisor a development management fee equal to 4.0% of the cost to develop, construct or improve any real property assets, including DST Properties. 

  Actual amounts depend upon our Aggregate Fund NAV, the distributions we pay, the changes in NAV and future development and sales of assets and, therefore, cannot be calculated at this time.

 

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    In addition, we will pay the Advisor a fee of 1.0% of the total consideration we receive upon the sale of real property assets (excluding DST Properties). For these purposes, a “sale” means any transaction or series of transactions whereby we or the Operating Partnership directly or indirectly (including through the sale of any interest in a joint venture or through a sale by a joint venture in which we hold an interest) sells, grants, transfers, conveys, or relinquishes its ownership of any real property or portion thereof, including the lease of any real property consisting of a building only, and including any event with respect to any real property which gives rise to a significant amount of insurance proceeds or condemnation awards.    
    Further, for providing a substantial amount of services in connection with the sale of a property (excluding DST Properties), as determined by a majority of our independent directors, we will pay the Advisor up to 50.0% of the reasonable, customary and competitive commission paid for the sale of a comparable real property, provided that such amount shall not exceed 1.0% of the contract price of the property sold and, when added to all other real estate commissions paid to unaffiliated parties in connection with the sale, may not exceed the lesser of a competitive real estate commission or 6.0% of the sales price of the property.    
Expense Reimbursement—the Advisor (5)   Subject to certain limitations, we reimburse the Advisor for all of the costs it incurs in connection with the services it provides to us, including, without limitation, our allocable share of the Advisor’s overhead, which includes but is not limited to the Advisor’s rent, utilities and personnel costs, as well as a portion of the compensation payable to our principal executive officer and our principal financial officer; provided, that we will not reimburse the Advisor or its affiliates for services for which the Advisor or its affiliates are entitled to compensation in the form of a separate fee, which services and fees are described in this table.   Actual amounts are dependent upon actual expenses incurred and, therefore, cannot be determined at this time.
Property Management and Leasing Fees—the Property Manager  

We may pay the Property Manager or other affiliates an amount equal to a market-based percentage of the annual gross revenues of each real property owned by us and managed by the Property Manager. Such fee is expected to range from 2% to 5% of annual gross revenues.

 

In addition, we may pay the Property Manager or other affiliates a separate fee for the one-time initial lease-up of newly constructed real properties. Such fee is generally expected to range from 2% to 8% of the projected first years’ annual gross revenues of the property.

  Actual amounts are dependent upon actual gross revenues of each real property owned by us and managed by the Property Manager and, therefore, cannot be determined at this time.

 

 
(1) Selling commissions for sales of Class A shares may be reduced or waived in connection with volume or other discounts, other fee arrangements or for sales to certain categories of purchasers. See “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Selling Commissions—Class A Shares.”
(2) In addition to these additional items of underwriting compensation, the Advisor may also pay the Dealer Manager additional amounts to fund certain of the Dealer Manager’s costs and expenses related to the distribution of this offering, which will not be reimbursed by us. Also, the Dealer Manager may pay supplemental fees or commissions to participating broker-dealers and servicing broker-dealers with respect to Class I shares sold in the primary offering, which will not be reimbursed by us. ”See “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation” for a discussion of underwriting compensation to be paid in connection with this offering.
(3) Expenses incurred in connection with this offering may include legal, accounting, printing, mailing and filing fees and expenses, costs in connection with preparing sales materials, and diligence expenses of investment advisers, any of which may be incurred by the Advisor on our behalf. Additional expenses incurred in connection with this offering, which may be incurred by or on behalf of the Dealer Manager, may include reimbursements for the bona fide due diligence expenses of participating broker-dealers, supported by detailed and itemized invoices. Although we expect to pay such expenses directly, we will reimburse the Advisor or the Dealer Manager, as applicable, for any organization and offering expenses that it incurs on our behalf (other than selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee, primary dealer fees, supplemental fees and commissions and certain other amounts described in “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Other Compensation”). As required by FINRA rules and the Statement of Policy, under no circumstances may our total cumulative organization and offering expenses (including selling commissions, the dealer manager and the distribution fee, bona fide due diligence expenses and underwriting compensation) exceed 15% of the gross proceeds from the primary offering.

 

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(4) The fixed and performance components of the advisory fee, as well as the fee of 1.0% of the total consideration we receive upon the sale of real property assets, that are payable under the Advisory Agreement will count against the limit on total operating expenses described in note 4 below. The fee equal to 4.0% of the cost to develop, construct or improve any real property asset that is payable under the Advisory Agreement will be included in the calculation of acquisition fees and expenses for purposes of our charter limitation that, without the approval of a majority of our board of directors, including a majority of the independent directors, the total of all acquisition fees and expenses relating to a real property acquisition may not exceed 6.0% of the contract purchase price.

(5) The Advisor must reimburse us at least quarterly for reimbursements paid to the Advisor in any four consecutive fiscal quarters to the extent that such reimbursements to the Advisor cause our total operating expenses over such period to exceed the greater of (1) 2% of our average invested assets, which generally consists of the average of the aggregate book value of our assets invested, directly or indirectly, in equity interests in, and loans secured by, real estate, before reserves for depreciation, bad debts and other non-cash reserves, or (2) 25% of our net income, which is defined as our total revenues less total operating expenses for any given period excluding additions to reserves for depreciation, bad debts and other non-cash reserves, unless the independent directors have determined that such excess expenses were justified based on unusual and non-recurring factors. See “The Advisor and the Advisory Agreement—The Advisory Agreement.”

 

In lieu of cash, the Advisor may elect to receive the payment of its fees and the reimbursement of its expenses in Class E, Class A, Class W or Class I shares of our common stock. Any such shares will be valued at the NAV per share applicable to such shares on the issue date and will not be eligible for redemption by the Advisor for six months from the issue date.

 

We have granted 565,789 Company RSUs to the Advisor that remain unvested and unsettled as of April 4, 2016. Each Company RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of our Class I common stock. The Company RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offsets of advisory fees and expenses otherwise payable from the Company to the Advisor based on a value of the NAV per Class I share on the grant date of the applicable Company RSU (the weighted average grant-date NAV per Class I share with respect to the unsettled Company RSUs is $7.14 as of April 4, 2016). As of April 4, 2016, all of the Class I shares that were issued upon settlement of Company RSUs have been used for fee offset.

 

The Advisor has granted 544,572 Advisor RSUs to certain employees of the Advisor and its affiliates that remain unsettled as of April 4, 2016. Each Advisor RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of our Class I common stock. The Advisor RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offsets of compensation otherwise payable from the Advisor or its affiliates to the applicable employee based on a value of the NAV per Class I share on the grant date of the applicable Advisor RSU (the weighted average grant-date NAV per Class I share with respect to the unsettled Advisor RSUs is $7.15 as of April 4, 2016). As of April 4, 2016, no Advisor RSUs have vested but have not been settled. Both Company RSUs and Advisor RSUs are entitled to dividend equivalents that mirror the dividends paid by us with respect to Class I shares. For more information, see “The Advisor and the Advisory Agreement—Restricted Stock Unit Agreements.”

 

The table below provides information regarding fees and expenses paid or payable to our Advisor, our Dealer Manager, and their affiliates in connection with their services provided to us. The table includes amounts incurred and payable for the year ended December 31, 2015 (amounts in thousands). 

             
    Incurred For the Year Ended
December 31, 2015
    Payable as of
December 31, 2015
 
Advisory fees (1)   $ 17,083     $ 2,476  
Other reimbursements paid to our Advisor (2)     9,008       200  
Other reimbursements paid to our Dealer Manager     441        
Advisory fees related to the disposition of real properties     4,962        
Development management fee     88       37  
Primary dealer fee (3)     2,540        
Selling commissions, dealer manager,  and distribution fees     422       35  
Total   $ 34,544     $ 2,748  

 

 
(1) Include approximately $1.1 million that we were not obligated to pay in consideration of the issuance of Company RSUs to our Advisor.
(2) Includes $319,500 to reimburse a portion of the salary and benefits for our principal executive officer, Jeffrey L. Johnson, and $555,000 to reimburse a portion of the salary and benefits for our principal financial officer, M. Kirk Scott, for services provided to us, for which we do not pay our Advisor a fee. Our principal executive officer and principal financial officer receive significant additional compensation from our Advisor or its affiliates that we do not reimburse.
(3) Include primary dealer fees we paid to our Dealer Manager based on the gross proceeds raised by participating broker-dealers pursuant to certain selected dealer agreements. Of the primary dealer fee earned during the years ended December 31, 2015, our Dealer Manager reallowed approximately $2.3 million to participating third-party broker-dealers and retained approximately $254,000.

 

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Product Specialists

 

In certain circumstances, we have entered and may enter into a joint venture with a partner who is a product specialist. Typically, such product partners are affiliated with the Advisor or third-party product specialists that have specialized expertise and dedicated resources in specific areas of real property or real estate-related debt or securities and assist the Advisor in connection with identifying, evaluating and recommending potential investments, performing due diligence, negotiating purchases and managing our assets on a day-to-day basis. These partnerships are intended to allow the Advisor to leverage the organizational infrastructure of experienced real estate developers, operators and investment managers, and to potentially give us access to a greater number of high-quality real property and other investment opportunities. The use of product specialists or other service providers does not eliminate or reduce the Advisor’s fiduciary duty to us. The Advisor retains ultimate responsibility for the performance of all of the matters entrusted to it under the Advisory Agreement. Pursuant to the Advisory Agreement with the Advisor, we pay the Advisor certain fees. Where we have entered and may enter into a joint venture with a partner who is a product specialist of our Advisor, a portion of the Advisor’s fees are generally reallowed to the product specialist in exchange for services provided. The product specialists may or may not make an equity capital contribution to any such arrangement and may or may not participate in any potential profits of the relevant portfolio assets. Such profit participations are separate from and have no impact on fees paid by us to the Advisor.

 

During the year ended December 31, 2012, our Advisor entered into a product specialist arrangement with BCG TRT Advisors, LLC (“BCG TRT Advisors”) as discussed below in more detail. Our Advisor had previously entered into joint venture and/or product specialist arrangements with three additional affiliates (Dividend Capital Investments LLC, Hudson River Partners Real Estate Investment Management L.P., and FundCore LLC). The agreements with these three affiliates were terminated prior to December 31, 2012.

 

BCG TRT Advisors

 

During the year ended December 31, 2012, we and our Advisor entered into a product specialist agreement with BCG TRT Advisors in connection with non-discretionary advisory services related to our investments in real estate-related securities assets. Pursuant to this agreement, a portion of the asset management fee that our Advisor receives from us related to real estate securities investments is reallowed to BCG TRT Advisors in exchange for services provided. Our Advisor incurred approximately $24,000, $35,000, and $58,000 related to services provided by BCG TRT Advisors during the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013, respectively.

 

Related Party Transactions

 

For more information regarding our related party transactions during the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014 and 2013, see Note 11 to our historical financial statements included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015, which is incorporated herein by reference.

 

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THE OPERATING PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT

 

General

 

The Operating Partnership was formed in April 2005 to own real property and real estate-related debt and securities that have been and will continue to be acquired and actively managed by the Advisor on our behalf. We utilize an UPREIT structure generally to enable us to acquire real property in exchange for OP Units from owners who desire to defer taxable gain that would otherwise be recognized by them upon the disposition of their real property or the transfer of their real property to us in exchange for shares of our common stock or cash. In such a transaction, the property owner’s goals are accomplished because the owner may contribute property to the Operating Partnership in exchange for OP Units on a tax-deferred basis. These owners may also desire to achieve diversity in their investment and other benefits afforded to owners of shares of our common stock in a REIT.

 

We intend to continue to hold substantially all of our assets in the Operating Partnership or in subsidiary entities in which the Operating Partnership owns an interest, and we intend to continue to make future acquisitions of real properties using the UPREIT structure. Further, the Operating Partnership is structured to make distributions with respect to OP Units that are equivalent to the distributions made to our stockholders. Finally, a third-party holder of OP Units may later exchange his OP Units for shares of our common stock in a taxable transaction. For purposes of satisfying the asset and income tests for qualification as a REIT for federal income tax purposes, the REIT’s proportionate share of the assets and income of the Operating Partnership will be deemed to be assets and income of the REIT.

 

We are the sole general partner of our Operating Partnership. As the sole general partner of the Operating Partnership, we have the exclusive power to manage and conduct the business of the Operating Partnership. In addition, we have contributed 100% of the proceeds received from our public offerings of common stock to our Operating Partnership in exchange for OP Units representing our interest as a limited partner of the Operating Partnership. As of December 31, 2016, we held a 92.8% limited partnership interest in the Operating Partnership. As of December 31, 2015, the Operating Partnership had issued OP Units to third-party investors, representing approximately a 7.2% limited partnership interest, pursuant to the Operating Partnership’s option to acquire certain fractional interests in real estate that were previously sold to such investors pursuant to the Operating Partnership’s private placements.

 

The following is a summary of certain provisions of the Operating Partnership Agreement.

 

Classes of OP Units

 

Our Operating Partnership has classes of OP Units that correspond to our four classes of common stock: Class E OP Units (which are further separated into Series 1 and Series 2), Class A OP Units, Class W OP Units and Class I OP Units. We may issue new classes of OP Units with unique terms, preferences, conversion or other rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends or other distributions, qualifications and terms or conditions of redemption. Thus, our board of directors could authorize the issuance of new classes of OP Units with terms and conditions which could have the effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a transaction or change in control that might involve a premium price for holders of our common stock or otherwise be in their best interest.

 

Capital Contributions

 

As we accept subscriptions for shares of our common stock, we will transfer substantially all of the net offering proceeds to the Operating Partnership in exchange for OP Units of the same class as the applicable shares with respect to which offering proceeds have been received. Such OP Units will have economic terms that vary based upon the class of shares issued. However, we will be deemed to have made capital contributions in the amount of the gross offering proceeds received from investors, and the Operating Partnership will be deemed to have simultaneously paid the fees, commissions and other costs associated with this offering. Currently all of the third-party partners own Class E OP Units, but we may in the future cause the Operating Partnership to issue Class A, Class W or Class I OP Units to third parties other than us.

 

If the Operating Partnership requires additional funds at any time in excess of capital contributions, we may borrow funds from a financial institution or other lender and lend such funds to the Operating Partnership. In addition, we are authorized to cause the Operating Partnership to issue OP Units for less than fair market value if we conclude in good faith that such issuance is in the best interest of the Operating Partnership and us.

 

Operations

 

The Operating Partnership Agreement requires that the Operating Partnership be operated in a manner that will enable us to (1) satisfy the requirements for being classified as a REIT for federal income tax purposes, unless we otherwise cease to qualify as a REIT, (2) avoid any federal income or excise tax liability and (3) ensure that the Operating Partnership will not be classified as a “Publicly Traded Partnership” for purposes of Section 7704 of the Code, which classification could result in the Operating Partnership being taxed as a corporation, rather than as a partnership. See “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Federal Income Tax Aspects of the Operating Partnership—Classification as a Partnership.”

 

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The Operating Partnership Agreement generally provides that the Operating Partnership will distribute cash flow from operations and net sales proceeds from disposition of assets to the partners of the Operating Partnership in accordance with their relative percentage interests, but that we may (and we intend to) cause the distributions to vary by class of OP Units in a manner that matches the way distributions to our stockholders may vary by class of common stock, in order to account for different NAVs per share and class-specific expenses and allocations.

 

Upon the liquidation of the Operating Partnership, after payment of debts and obligations, any remaining assets of the Operating Partnership will be distributed to the partners based on the NAVs per share of our shares that correspond to the class of OP Units held by each partner.

 

Subject to compliance with Sections 704(b) and 704(c) of the Code and related Treasury Regulations, profits and losses are allocated among the partners so as to cause each partner’s capital account balance to equal the amount the partner would receive if the Operating Partnership were then liquidated.

 

In addition to the administrative and operating costs and expenses incurred by the Operating Partnership in acquiring and operating real properties and in acquiring and managing real estate-related debt and securities, the Operating Partnership will pay all our administrative costs and expenses and such expenses will be treated as expenses of the Operating Partnership. Such expenses will include:

 

· all expenses relating to the formation and continuity of our existence;

 

· all expenses relating to our offering and registration of securities;

 

· all expenses associated with the preparation and filing of any periodic reports by us under federal, state or local laws or regulations;

 

· all expenses associated with compliance by us with applicable laws, rules and regulations; and

 

· all our other operating or administrative costs incurred in the ordinary course of our business on behalf of the Operating Partnership.

 

Redemption Rights

 

The holders of Series 1 Class E OP Units (other than us) generally have the right to cause the Operating Partnership to redeem all or a portion of their Class E OP Units for, at our sole discretion, Class E shares of our common stock, cash or a combination of both. The holders of Series 2 Class E OP Units (none of which are owned by us) generally have the right to cause the Operating Partnership to redeem all or a portion of their Class E OP Units for, at our sole discretion, Class I shares of our common stock, cash or a combination of both. The right of the holders of Class E OP Units to cause us to redeem their Class E OP Units is not subject to an annual percentage limitation on the number or dollar value of Class E OP Units redeemed for cash or shares of our common stock. If we elect to redeem Series 1 Class E OP Units for Class E shares of our common stock, we will generally deliver one share of our Class E common stock for each such Series 1 Class E OP Unit redeemed (subject to any redemption fees withheld), and such Class E shares may, subsequently, only be redeemed for cash in accordance with the terms of our Class E share redemption program. If we elect to redeem Series 2 Class E OP Units for Class I shares of our common stock, we will generally deliver one share of our Class I common stock for each such Series 2 Class E OP Unit redeemed (subject to adjustment in the event that the NAV per Class E share and NAV per Class I share differs, and subject to any redemption fees withheld), and such Class I shares may, subsequently, only be redeemed for cash in accordance with the terms of our Class A, Class W and Class I share redemption program. If we elect to redeem Class E OP Units for cash, the cash delivered will equal the then-current NAV per unit of our Class E OP Units (subject to any redemption fees withheld), which will equal the then-current NAV per share of our Class E shares. In connection with the exercise of these redemption rights, a limited partner must make certain representations, including that the delivery of shares of our common stock upon redemption would not result in such limited partner owning shares in excess of the ownership limits in our charter.

 

Subject to the foregoing, holders of Class E OP Units (other than us) may exercise their redemption rights at any time after one year; provided, however, that a holder of Class E OP Units may not deliver more than two redemption notices in a single calendar year and may not exercise a redemption right for less than 1,000 Class E OP Units, unless such holder holds less than 1,000 Class E OP Units, in which case, it must exercise its redemption right for all of its Class E OP Units.

 

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Transferability of Operating Partnership Interests

 

We may not (1) voluntarily withdraw as the general partner of the Operating Partnership, (2) engage in any merger, consolidation or other business combination or (3) transfer our general partnership interest in the Operating Partnership (except to a wholly owned subsidiary), unless the transaction in which such withdrawal, business combination or transfer occurs results in the holders of OP Units receiving or having the right to receive an amount of cash, securities or other property equal in value to the amount they would have received if they had exercised their exchange rights immediately prior to such transaction or unless, in the case of a merger or other business combination, the successor entity contributes substantially all of its assets to the Operating Partnership in return for an interest in the Operating Partnership and agrees to assume all obligations of the general partner of the Operating Partnership. We may also enter into a business combination or we may transfer our general partnership interest upon the receipt of the consent of a majority-in-interest of the holders of OP Units. With certain exceptions, the holders of OP Units may not transfer their interests in the Operating Partnership, in whole or in part, without our written consent, as general partner.

 

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CONFLICTS OF INTEREST

 

We are subject to various conflicts of interest arising out of our relationship with the Advisor and its affiliates, including (i) conflicts related to the compensation arrangements between the Advisor, certain of its affiliates and us, (ii) conflicts with respect to the allocation of the time of the Advisor and its key personnel and (iii) conflicts with respect to the allocation of investment opportunities. The independent directors have an obligation to function on our behalf in all situations in which a conflict of interest may arise and will have a fiduciary obligation to act on behalf of the stockholders. The material conflicts of interest are discussed below.

 

Interests in Other Real Estate Programs

 

Other than performing services as our advisor, the Advisor presently has no interests in other real estate programs. However, certain members of the Advisor’s management are presently, and plan in the future to continue to be, involved with a number of other real estate programs and activities. The Advisor and its affiliates are not prohibited from engaging, directly or indirectly, in any other business or from possessing interests in any other business venture or ventures, including businesses and ventures involved in the acquisition, ownership, development, management, leasing or sale of real property or the acquisition, ownership, management and disposition of real estate debt and securities. Entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor are not prohibited from raising money for another entity that makes the same types of investments that we target and we may co-invest with any such entity. All such potential co-investments will be subject to approval by our independent directors.

 

Allocation of Advisor’s Time

 

We rely on the Advisor and its affiliates to manage our day-to-day activities and to implement our investment strategy. The Advisor and certain of its affiliates, including its principals and some of its potential product specialists, are presently, and plan in the future to continue to be, involved with real estate programs and activities which are unrelated to us. As a result of these activities, the Advisor, its employees, its product specialists and certain of its affiliates will have conflicts of interest in allocating their time between us and other activities in which they are or may become involved. The Advisor, its employees and its product specialists will devote only as much of their time to our business as the Advisor and the product specialists, in their judgment, determine is reasonably required, which may be substantially less than their full time. Therefore, the Advisor, its employees and its product specialists may experience conflicts of interest in allocating management time, services and functions among us and other programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, including but not limited to LPT and IPT, and any other business ventures in which they or any of their key personnel, as applicable, are or may become involved.

 

This could result in actions that are more favorable to other entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor than to us. However, the Advisor believes that it and its affiliates have sufficient personnel to discharge fully their responsibilities to us and all of the other entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor with which they are involved.

 

Competition

 

We may compete with entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, including but not limited to LPT and IPT, for opportunities to acquire, finance or sell investments. As a result of this competition, certain investment opportunities may not be available to us. For example, in recognition of the fact that we also desire to acquire industrial properties and have a separate day-to-day acquisition team, the Sponsor and the Advisor have agreed, subject to changes approved or required by the Conflicts Resolution Committee, that (1) if an industrial property opportunity is a widely-marketed, brokered transaction, we, on the one hand, and LPT and/or IPT, on the other hand, may simultaneously and independently pursue such transaction, and (2) if an industrial property is not a widely-marketed, brokered transaction, then, as between us, on the one hand, and LPT and/or IPT, on the other hand, the management team and employees of each company generally are free to pursue any industrial opportunity at any time, subject to certain allocations if non-widely-marketed transactions are first sourced by certain shared employees, managers or directors. One of our independent directors, Mr. Charles Duke, is also an independent director for LPT and IPT. If there are any transactions or policies affecting us and LPT or IPT, Mr. Duke will recuse himself from making any such decisions for as long as he holds both positions.

 

We and our Advisor have developed procedures to resolve potential conflicts of interest in the allocation of investment opportunities between us entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor. The Advisor will be required to provide information to our board of directors to enable the board, including the independent directors, to determine whether such procedures are being fairly applied. See “—Conflict Resolution Procedures” for a further description of how potential investment opportunities will be allocated between us and entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor.

 

Affiliates of our executive officers and certain of our directors and entities owned or managed by such affiliates also may acquire or develop real estate and real estate-related investments for their own accounts, and have done so in the past. Furthermore, affiliates of our executive officers and certain of our directors and entities owned or managed by such affiliates intend to form additional real estate investment entities in the future, whether public or private, which can be expected to have the same or similar investment objectives and targeted assets as we have, and such persons may be engaged in sponsoring one or more of such entities at approximately the same time as the offering of our shares of common stock. Our Advisor, its managers, directors, officers and other employees and certain of its affiliates and related parties will experience conflicts of interest as they simultaneously perform services for us and other real estate programs that they sponsor or have involvement with.

 

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Certain of the Advisor’s affiliates or other related entities currently own and/or manage properties in geographic areas in which we expect to acquire real properties. Conflicts of interest will exist to the extent that we own and/or manage real properties in the same geographic areas where real properties owned or managed by other entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, including but not limited to LPT and IPT, or other related entities are located. In such a case, a conflict could arise in the leasing of real properties in the event that we and another entity or program sponsored or advised by an affiliate of our Sponsor, including but not limited to LPT and IPT, or another related entity were to compete for the same tenants in negotiating leases, or a conflict could arise in connection with the resale of real properties in the event that we and another entity or program sponsored or advised by an affiliate of our Sponsor, including but not limited to LPT and IPT, or another related entity were to attempt to sell similar real properties at the same time. Conflicts of interest may also exist at such time as we or our Advisor’s affiliates or other related entities managing real property on our behalf seek to employ developers, contractors or building managers.

 

Dealer Manager

 

Our Advisor is related to the Dealer Manager and this relationship may create conflicts of interest in connection with the performance of due diligence by the Dealer Manager. Although the Dealer Manager has examined the information in the prospectus for accuracy and completeness, the Dealer Manager has not made an independent due diligence review and investigation of our company or this offering of the type normally performed by an unrelated, independent underwriter in connection with the offering of securities. The Dealer Manager is currently involved in offerings for other programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor, including but not limited to IPT. Accordingly, you do not have the benefit of such independent review and investigation.

 

Certain of the participating broker-dealers have made, or are expected to make, their own independent due diligence investigations. The Dealer Manager is not prohibited from acting in any capacity in connection with the offer and sale of securities offered by entities or programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor that may have some or all investment objectives similar to ours.

 

Property Manager

 

We anticipate that the Property Manager may perform certain property management services for us and the Operating Partnership. The Property Manager also serves as the property manager for LPT and IPT. The Property Manager is affiliated with the Advisor and in the future there is potential for a number of the members of the Advisor’s management team and the Property Manager to overlap. As a result, we might not always have the benefit of independent property management to the same extent as if the Advisor and the Property Manager were unaffiliated and did not share any employees or managers. In addition, given that the Property Manager is affiliated with the Advisor, any agreements with the Property Manager will not be at arm’s length. As a result, with respect to any such agreement we will not have the benefit of arm’s-length negotiations of the type normally conducted between unrelated parties.

 

The term of our agreement with the Property Manager is for one year and expires in January of each calendar year, subject to automatic renewals for an unlimited number of successive one-year periods unless we or the Property Manager gives 60 days’ written notice. In addition, our agreement with the Property Manager may be terminated by us or the Property Manager upon 60 days’ written notice without cause or penalty. Our Property Manager may be deemed to be a fiduciary of the Company.

 

DST Program

 

Our Advisor is related to our Dealer Manager and affiliated with the DST Manager. These relationships may create conflicts of interest with respect to decisions regarding whether to place properties into the DST Program. The Dealer Manager and the DST Manager will receive fees in connection with their roles in the DST Program (which fees are expected to be substantially paid by the private investors in that program). In addition, the Advisor will continue to receive the advisory fee from us with respect to the consideration received by us or our affiliate for selling interests in DST Properties to third party investors, net of up-front fees and expense reimbursements payable out of gross sale proceeds from the sale of such interests.

 

Joint Ventures with Affiliates of the Sponsor or Other Entities Advised by the Affiliates of the Sponsor

 

Subject to approval by our board of directors and the separate approval of our independent directors, we may enter into joint ventures or other arrangements with affiliates of the Sponsor or entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of the Sponsor to acquire, develop and/or manage real properties. In conjunction with such prospective agreements, the Advisor and its affiliates may have conflicts of interest in determining which of such entities should enter into any particular joint venture agreement. Joint venture partners affiliated with our Advisor or sponsored or advised by affiliates of the Sponsor may have economic or business interests or goals which are or that may become inconsistent with our business interests or goals. In addition, should any such joint venture be consummated, the Advisor and its affiliates may face a conflict in structuring the terms of the relationship between our interests and the interest of the joint venture partner and in managing the joint venture. Since the Advisor will make investment decisions on our behalf, agreements and transactions between us and the Advisor’s affiliates or entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of the Sponsor as joint venture partners with respect to any such joint venture will not have the benefit of arm’s-length negotiations of the type normally conducted between unrelated parties. We may enter into joint ventures with affiliates of the Sponsor or entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of the Sponsor for the acquisition of properties, but only if (i) a majority of our directors, including a majority of the independent directors, approve the transaction as being fair and reasonable to us and (ii) the investment by us and such affiliate are on terms and conditions that are no less favorable than those that would be available to unaffiliated parties.

 

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The Advisor may, with respect to any investment in which we are a participant, also render advice and service to others in that investment, and earn fees for rendering such advice and service. Specifically, it is contemplated that we may enter into joint ventures or other similar co-investment arrangements with certain individuals, corporations, partnerships, trusts, joint ventures, limited liability companies or other entities, and pursuant to the agreements governing such joint ventures or arrangements, our Advisor may be engaged to provide advice and service to such individuals, corporations, partnerships, trusts, joint ventures, limited liability companies or other entities, in which case the Advisor will earn fees for rendering such advice and service.

 

Fees and Other Compensation to the Advisor and its Affiliates

 

None of the agreements that provide for fees and other compensation to the Advisor and its affiliates will be the result of arm’s-length negotiations. All such agreements, including our Advisory Agreement, require approval by a majority of the independent directors.

 

The timing and nature of fees and compensation to the Advisor or its affiliates could create a conflict between the interests of the Advisor or its affiliates and those of our stockholders. Specifically, the Advisor is responsible for assisting our board of directors in developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating our NAV procedures, and the advisory fee we pay the Advisor and the fees we pay the Dealer Manager are based on our NAV. Among other matters, the compensation arrangements could affect the judgment of our Advisor’s personnel with respect to:

 

· the continuation, renewal or enforcement of our agreements with our Advisor and its affiliates, including the Advisory Agreement, the agreement with the Property Manager and the agreement with the Dealer Manager;

 

· recommendations to our board of directors with respect to developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating our NAV procedures, the provision of forward-looking property-level information to the Independent Valuation Firm, or the decision to adjust the value of certain of our assets or liabilities if the Advisor is responsible for valuing them;

 

· public offerings of equity by us, which may result in increased advisory fees for the Advisor;

 

· competition for tenants from entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of the Sponsor that own properties in the same geographic area as us;

 

· asset sales, which may allow the Advisor to earn disposition fees and commissions;

 

· investments in assets subject to product specialist agreements with the Advisor’s affiliates; and

 

· investments through a joint venture or other co-ownership arrangements, which may result in increased fees for the Advisor.

 

We will pay certain advisory fees to our Advisor regardless of the quality of the services it provides during the term of the Advisory Agreement.

 

Each transaction we enter into with the Advisor or its affiliates is subject to an inherent conflict of interest. The board of directors may encounter conflicts of interest in enforcing our rights against any affiliate of the Advisor in the event of a default by or disagreement with an affiliate of the Advisor or in invoking powers, rights or options pursuant to any agreement between us and any affiliate of the Advisor. The independent directors must approve each transaction between us and the Advisor or any of its affiliates.

 

Valuation Conflicts

 

The Advisor assists our board of directors in developing, overseeing, implementing and coordinating our NAV procedures. It assists our Independent Valuation Firm in valuing our real property portfolio by providing the firm with property-level information, including (i) historical and projected operating revenues and expenses of the property; (ii) lease agreements on the property; and (iii) information regarding recent or planned capital expenditures. Our Independent Valuation Firm assumes and relies upon the accuracy and completeness of all such information, does not undertake any duty or responsibility to verify independently any of such information and relies upon us and our Advisor to advise if any material information previously provided becomes inaccurate or was required to be updated during the period of its review. In addition, the Advisor may have some discretion with respect to valuations of certain assets and liabilities, which could affect our NAV. Because the Advisor is paid fees for its services based on our NAV, the Advisor could be motivated to influence our NAV and NAV procedures such that they result in an NAV exceeding realizable value, due to the impact of higher valuations on the compensation to be received by the Advisor. Our Advisor may also benefit by us retaining ownership of our assets at times when our stockholders may be better served by the sale or disposition of our assets in order to avoid a possible reduction in our NAV that could result from a distribution of the proceeds.

 

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We also compensate our Independent Valuation Firm, independent appraisers and other parties involved in the determination of our daily NAV, as described in “Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures.” The compensation we pay to these parties has been approved by a majority of our independent directors and is based on standard market terms, which are not based on the valuations of our assets and liabilities.

 

Conflict Resolution Procedures

 

We are subject to potential conflicts of interest arising out of our relationship with the Advisor and its affiliates. These conflicts may relate to compensation arrangements, the allocation of investment opportunities, the terms and conditions on which various transactions might be entered into by us and the Advisor or its affiliates and other situations in which our interests may differ from those of the Advisor or its affiliates. The procedures set forth below have been adopted by us to address these potential conflicts of interest.

 

Independent Directors

 

Our independent directors, acting as a group, will resolve potential conflicts of interest whenever they determine that the exercise of independent judgment by the board of directors or the Advisor or its affiliates could reasonably be compromised. However, the independent directors may not take any action which, under Maryland law, must be taken by the entire board or which is otherwise not within their authority. The independent directors, as a group, are authorized to retain their own legal and financial advisors. Among the matters we expect the independent directors to review and act upon are:

 

· the continuation, renewal or enforcement of our agreements with the Advisor and its affiliates, including the Advisory Agreement and the agreement with the dealer manager;

 

· transactions with affiliates, including our directors and officers; and

 

· awards under the equity incentive plans.

 

Those conflict of interest matters that cannot be delegated to the independent directors, as a group, under Maryland law must be acted upon by both the board of directors and the independent directors.

 

Compensation Involving the Advisor and its Affiliates

 

The independent directors evaluate at least annually whether the compensation that we contract to pay to the Advisor and its affiliates is reasonable in relation to the nature and quality of services performed and that such compensation is within the limits prescribed by our charter. The independent directors supervise the performance of the Advisor and its affiliates and the compensation we pay to them to determine that the provisions of our compensation arrangements are being carried out. This evaluation is based on the factors set forth below as well as any other factors deemed relevant by the independent directors:

 

· the amount of fees paid to the Advisor in relation to the size, composition and performance of our investments;

 

· the success of the Advisor in generating investments that meet our investment objectives;

 

· rates charged to other externally advised REITs and other similar investors by advisors performing similar services;

 

· additional revenues realized by the Advisor and its affiliates through their relationship with us, whether we pay them or they are paid by others with whom we do business;

 

· the quality and extent of the services and advice furnished by the Advisor;

 

· the performance of our investments, including income, conservation or appreciation of capital, frequency of problem investments and competence in dealing with distress situations; and

 

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· the quality of our investment portfolio in relation to the investments generated by the Advisor for its own accounts.

 

Acquisitions

 

We will not purchase or lease real properties in which the Sponsor, the Advisor, any of our directors or any of their respective affiliates has an interest without a determination by a majority of the directors not otherwise interested in the transaction (including a majority of the independent directors not otherwise interested in the transaction) that such transaction is fair and reasonable to us and at a price to us no greater than the cost of the property to the Sponsor, the Advisor, such director or such affiliate unless there is substantial justification for any amount that exceeds such cost and such excess amount is determined to be reasonable. In no event will we acquire any such property at an amount in excess of its appraised value. We will not sell or lease real properties to the Sponsor, the Advisor, any of our directors or any of their respective affiliates unless a majority of the directors not otherwise interested in the transaction (including a majority of the independent directors not otherwise interested in the transaction) determine that the transaction is fair and reasonable to us.

 

Our charter provides that the consideration we pay for real property will ordinarily be based on the fair market value of the property as determined by a majority our directors, or the approval of a majority of a committee of the board of directors. In cases in which a majority of our independent directors so determine, and in all cases in which real property is acquired from the Sponsor, the Advisor, any of our directors or any of their respective affiliates, the fair market value shall be determined by an independent appraiser selected by our independent directors.

 

Mortgage Loans

 

Our charter prohibits us from investing in or making mortgage loans in which the transaction is with the Sponsor, the Advisor, our directors or any of their respective affiliates unless an independent expert appraises the underlying property. We must keep the appraisal for at least five years and make it available for inspection and duplication by any of our stockholders. In addition, we must obtain a mortgagee’s or owner’s title insurance policy or commitment as to the priority of the mortgage or the condition of the title. Our charter prohibits us from making or investing in any mortgage loans that are subordinate to any lien or other indebtedness of the Sponsor, the Advisor, our directors, our officers or any of their affiliates.

 

Issuance of Options and Warrants

 

Our charter prohibits the issuance of options or warrants to purchase our common stock to the Sponsor, the Advisor, our directors or any of their respective affiliates (i) except on the same terms as such options or warrants are sold to the general public and (ii) in excess of an amount equal to 10% of our outstanding common stock on the date of grant.

 

Repurchase of Shares of Common Stock

 

Our charter prohibits us from paying a fee to the Sponsor, the Advisor, our directors or any of their respective affiliates in connection with our repurchase or redemption of our common stock.

 

Loans and Expense Reimbursements

 

Except with respect to certain mortgage loans as described above or loans to wholly owned subsidiaries, we will not make any loans to the Sponsor, the Advisor or to our directors or any of their respective affiliates. In addition, we will not borrow from these parties unless a majority of the directors not otherwise interested in the transaction (including a majority of the independent directors not otherwise interested in the transaction) approve the transaction as being fair, competitive and commercially reasonable, and no less favorable to us than comparable loans between unaffiliated parties. These restrictions on loans will only apply to advances of cash that are commonly viewed as loans, as determined by the board of directors. By way of example only, the prohibition on loans would not restrict advances of cash for legal expenses or other costs incurred as a result of any legal action for which indemnification is being sought, nor would the prohibition limit our ability to advance reimbursable expenses incurred by directors or the Advisor or its affiliates.

 

In addition, our directors and officers, the Sponsor, the Advisor and its affiliates shall be entitled to reimbursement, at cost, for actual expenses incurred by them on behalf of us or joint ventures in which we are a joint venture partner, subject to the limitation on reimbursement of operating expenses to the extent that they exceed the greater of 2% of our average invested assets or 25% of our net income, as described in this prospectus under the caption “The Advisor and the Advisory Agreement—The Advisory Agreement.”

 

Voting of Shares of Common Stock

 

Under our charter, the Advisor, each director and any of their affiliates may not vote their shares of common stock regarding (i) the removal of any of the Advisor, our directors or any of their affiliates or (ii) any transaction between them and us.

 

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Allocation of Investment Opportunities

 

Certain direct or indirect owners, managers, employees and officers of the Advisor are presently, and may in the future be, involved with other programs and business ventures and may have conflicts of interest in allocating their time, services, functions and investment opportunities among us and other real estate programs or business ventures that such direct or indirect owners, managers, employees and officers organize or serve. Our Advisor has informed us that it will employ sufficient staff to be fully capable of discharging its responsibilities to us in light of the other real estate programs that from time to time will be advised or managed by its direct or indirect owners, managers, employees and officers.

 

In the event that an investment opportunity becomes available which, in the discretion of the Advisor, may be suitable for us, the Advisor will examine various factors and will consider whether under such factors the opportunity is equally suitable for us and another program sponsored or advised by an affiliate of our Sponsor. In determining whether or not an investment opportunity is suitable for us or another such program, the Advisor shall examine, among others, the following factors as they relate to us and each other program:

 

· the investment objectives and criteria of each program;

 

· the general real property sector or real estate-related sector investment allocation targets of each program and any targeted geographic concentrations;

 

· the cash requirements of each program;

 

· the effect of the acquisition both on diversification of each program’s investments by type of commercial property and geographic area, and on diversification of the customers of its properties;

 

· the policy of each program relating to leverage of properties;

 

· the anticipated cash flow of each program;

 

· the tax effects of the purchase on each program;

 

· the size of the investment; and

 

· the amount of funds available to each program and the length of time such funds have been available for investment.

 

In the event that our investment objectives overlap with those of another such program and the opportunity is equally suitable for us and the other program, then the Advisor will utilize a reasonable allocation method to determine which investments are presented to our board of directors as opposed to the board of directors of such other program. Our board of directors, including the independent directors, has a duty to ensure that the method used by the Advisor for the allocation of investments by two or more programs sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor seeking to acquire similar types of investments shall be reasonable. Our Advisor is required to obtain and provide to our board of directors the necessary information to make this determination.

 

If a subsequent development, such as a delay in the closing of a property or a delay in the construction of a property, causes any such investment, in the opinion of the Advisor, to be more appropriate for a program other than the program that committed to make the investment, the Advisor may determine that another program sponsored or advised by an affiliate of our Sponsor may make the investment.

 

In recognition of the fact that we also desire to acquire industrial properties and have a separate day-to-day acquisition team, the Sponsor and the Advisor have agreed, subject to changes approved or required by the Conflicts Resolution Committee, that (1) if an industrial property opportunity is a widely-marketed, brokered transaction, we, on the one hand, and LPT and/or IPT, on the other hand, may simultaneously and independently pursue such transaction, and (2) if an industrial property is not a widely-marketed, brokered transaction, then, as between us, on the one hand, and LPT and/or IPT, on the other hand, the management team and employees of each company generally are free to pursue any industrial opportunity at any time, subject to certain allocations if non-widely-marketed transactions are first sourced by certain shared employees, managers or directors. One of our independent directors, Mr. Charles Duke, is also an independent director for LPT and IPT. If there are any transactions or policies affecting us and LPT or IPT, Mr. Duke will recuse himself from making any such decisions for as long as he holds both positions.

 

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While this is the current allocation process for allocating our Sponsor’s investment opportunities as between us, LPT and/or IPT, our Sponsor may revise this allocation procedure. In addition, entities sponsored or advised by affiliates of our Sponsor may sponsor or advise additional real estate funds or other ventures now and in the future. The result of the creation of such additional funds may be to increase the number of parties who have the right to participate in, or have priority with respect to, investment opportunities sourced by our Sponsor or its affiliates, thereby reducing the number of investment opportunities available to us. Additionally, this may result in certain asset classes being unavailable for investment by us, or being available only after one or more other real estate funds have first had the opportunity to invest in such assets. For example, if an affiliate of our Sponsor sponsors an additional real estate fund that is exclusively or primarily focused on the acquisition of a particular asset class, we may agree, with the approval of a majority of the board of directors, including a majority of the independent directors, that such fund will have priority with respect to the acquisition of such asset class.

 

To the extent that a product specialist affiliated with our Advisor or another of Advisor’s affiliates or related entities becomes aware of an investment opportunity that is suitable for us, it is possible that we may, pursuant to the terms of any agreement with such entity, co-invest equity capital in the form of a joint venture. Any such joint venture will require the approval of a majority of the board of directors, including a majority of the independent directors.

 

The Advisor has entered into and may continue to enter into product specialist agreements or other arrangements with its affiliates and other related entities that have specialized expertise in specific areas of real property or real estate-related debt and securities to assist the Advisor in connection with identifying, evaluating and recommending potential investments, performing due diligence, negotiating purchases and managing our assets on a day-to-day basis.

 

Any affiliate of the Advisor that serves as a product specialist in connection with securities investment management services will be required to have adopted trade aggregation and allocation policies designed to promote fairness and equity amongst all of its clients and to minimize risk that any of its clients would be or could be systematically advantaged or disadvantaged through aggregation of trade orders.

 

Any of our Advisor’s product specialist and joint venture agreements with its affiliate(s) may also require that such affiliate(s) provide the Advisor, on a quarterly basis and/or upon reasonable request, such reasonable information required by our board of directors, including our independent directors, to determine whether our conflicts resolution procedures are being fairly applied.

 

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SECURITY OWNERSHIP OF CERTAIN BENEFICIAL OWNERS AND MANAGEMENT

 

The following table shows, as of April 4, 2016, the amount of each class of our common stock beneficially owned (unless otherwise indicated) by (i) any person who is known by us to be the beneficial owner of more than 5 percent of the outstanding shares of such class, (ii) our directors, (iii) our executive officers and (iv) all of our directors and executive officers as a group.

 

Unless otherwise indicated below, each person or entity has an address in care of our principal executive offices at 518 Seventeenth Street, 17th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202.

                       
Name and Address of Beneficial Owner (1)   Amount and Nature of Beneficial
Ownership
    Percent of Common Stock
of Applicable Class
Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC (2)     20,000     Class E shares       *  
      11,687     Class I shares       *  
John A. Blumberg (Director) (2)     36,822     Class I shares       *  
Charles B. Duke (Independent Director)     2,200     Class I shares       *  
Richard D. Kincaid (Chairman and Director)     45,589     Class I shares       *  
Daniel J. Sullivan (Independent Director)     2,280     Class I shares       *  
John P. Woodberry (Independent Director)     7,200     Class I shares       *  
Jeffrey L. Johnson (Chief Executive Officer)     156,084     Class I shares       *  
J. Michael Lynch (President and Chief Operating Officer)     54,062     Class I shares       *  
M. Kirk Scott (Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer)     22,994     Class I shares       *  
Joshua J. Widoff (Executive Vice President, General Counsel and Secretary)     12,656     Class I shares       *  
Gregory M. Moran (Executive Vice President)     3,707     Class I shares       *  
Beneficial ownership of Common Stock by all directors and executive officers as a group (10 persons) (2)     20,000     Class E shares       *  
      355,281     Class I shares       1.5 %

 

 
 * Less than 1%.

(1) Except as otherwise indicated below, each beneficial owner has the sole power to vote and dispose of all common stock held by that beneficial owner. Beneficial ownership is determined in accordance with Rule 13d-3 under the Exchange Act. Common stock issuable pursuant to options, to the extent such options are exercisable within 60 days, is treated as beneficially owned and outstanding for the purpose of computing the percentage ownership of the person holding the option, but is not treated as outstanding for the purpose of computing the percentage ownership of any other person.

(2) The Advisor and the parent of the Advisor are presently each directly or indirectly controlled by one or more of the following and/or their affiliates: John A. Blumberg, James R. Mulvihill, and Evan H. Zucker.

 

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NET ASSET VALUE CALCULATION AND VALUATION PROCEDURES

 

Valuation Procedures

 

Our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, has adopted valuation procedures, as amended from time to time, that contain a comprehensive set of methodologies to be used in connection with the calculation of our NAV. As a public company, we are required to issue financial statements generally based on historical cost in accordance with GAAP as applicable to our financial statements. To calculate our NAV for the purpose of establishing a purchase and redemption price for our shares, we have adopted a model, as explained below, which adjusts the value of certain of our assets from historical cost to fair value. As a result, our NAV may differ from the amount reported as stockholder’s equity on the face of our financial statements prepared in accordance with GAAP. When the fair value of our assets is calculated for the purposes of determining our NAV per share, the calculation is done using the fair value methodologies detailed within the Financial Accounting Standards Board (“FASB”) Accounting Standards Codification under Topic 820, Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures. However, our valuation procedures and our NAV are not subject to GAAP and will not be subject to independent audit. Our NAV may differ from equity reflected on our audited financial statements, even if we are required to adopt a fair value basis of accounting for GAAP financial statement purposes in the future. Furthermore, no rule or regulation requires that we calculate NAV in a certain way. Although we believe our NAV calculation methodologies are consistent with standard industry principles, there is no established practice among public REITs, whether listed or not, for calculating NAV in order to establish a purchase and redemption price. As a result, other public REITs may use different methodologies or assumptions to determine NAV.

 

Independent Valuation Firm

 

With the approval of our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, we have engaged Altus Group U.S., Inc., an independent valuation firm (the “Independent Valuation Firm”), to serve as our independent valuation firm with respect to the daily valuation of our real property portfolio. Altus Group is a multidisciplinary provider of independent, commercial real estate consulting and advisory services in multiple offices around the world, including Canada, the U.K., Australia, the United States and Asia Pacific. Altus Group is engaged in the business of valuing commercial real estate properties and is not affiliated with us or the Advisor. The compensation we pay to the Independent Valuation Firm will not be based on the estimated values of our real property portfolio. Our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, may replace the Independent Valuation Firm. We will promptly disclose any changes to the identity or role of the Independent Valuation Firm in this prospectus and in reports we publicly file with the Commission.

 

The Independent Valuation Firm discharges its responsibilities in accordance with our real property valuation procedures described below and under the oversight of our board of directors. Our board of directors is not involved in the day-to-day valuation of the real property portfolio, but periodically receives and reviews such information about the valuation of the real property portfolio as it deems necessary to exercise its oversight responsibility. While our Independent Valuation Firm is responsible for providing our real property valuations, our Independent Valuation Firm is not responsible for and does not prepare our daily NAV.

 

At this time, the Independent Valuation Firm is engaged solely to provide our daily real property portfolio valuation and to help us manage the property appraisal process, but it may be engaged to provide additional services, including providing an independent valuation or appraisal of any of our other assets or liabilities (contingent or otherwise), in the future. Our Independent Valuation Firm and its affiliates may from time to time in the future perform other commercial real estate and financial advisory services for our Advisor and its related parties, or in transactions related to the properties that are the subjects of the valuations being performed for us, or otherwise, so long as such other services do not adversely affect the independence of the applicable appraiser as certified in the applicable appraisal report.

 

Real Property Portfolio Valuation

 

Daily Valuation Process

 

The real property portfolio valuation, which is the largest component of our NAV calculation, is provided to us by the Independent Valuation Firm on each business day. The foundation for this valuation is periodic appraisals, as discussed further below. However, on each business day, the Independent Valuation Firm adjusts a real property’s valuation, as necessary, based on known events that have a material impact on the most recent value (adjustments for non-material events may also be made). For example, an unexpected termination or renewal of a material lease, a material change in vacancies, an unanticipated structural or environmental event at a property or material capital market events, among others, may cause the value of a property to change materially. Furthermore, the value of our properties is determined on an unencumbered basis. The effect of property-level debt on our NAV is discussed further below.

 

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Using information derived from a variety of sources including, but not limited to, the property’s most recent appraisal, information from management and other information derived through the Independent Valuation Firm’s database, industry data and other sources, the Independent Valuation Firm determines the appropriate adjustment to be made to the estimated value of the property based on material events, which may include a change to underlying property fundamentals or cash flows or a change in overall market conditions. The Independent Valuation Firm collects all reasonably available material information that it deems relevant in valuing our real estate portfolio. The Independent Valuation Firm relies in part on property-level information provided by the Advisor, including (i) historical and projected operating revenues and expenses of the property; (ii) lease agreements on the property; and (iii) information regarding recent or planned capital expenditures. Upon becoming aware of the occurrence of a material event impacting property-level information, the Advisor promptly notifies the Independent Valuation Firm. Any adjustment to the valuation of a property is performed as soon as practicable after a determination that a material change with respect to such property has occurred and the financial effects of such change are quantifiable by the Independent Valuation Firm. However, rapidly changing market conditions or material events may not be immediately reflected in our daily NAV. The resulting potential disparity in our NAV may inure to the benefit of redeeming stockholders or non-redeeming stockholders and new purchasers of our common stock, depending on whether our published NAV per share for such class is higher or lower than the adjusted value of our NAV after material events have been considered. Any such adjustments are estimates of the market impact of material events to the appraised value of the property, based on assumptions and judgments that may or may not prove to be correct, and may also be based on limited information readily available at that time. As part of the oversight by our board of directors, on a periodic basis the Independent Valuation Firm provides our board of directors with reports on its valuation activity.

 

The primary methodology used to value properties is the income approach, whereby value is derived by determining the present value of an asset’s stream of future cash flows (for example, discounted cash flow analysis). Consistent with industry practices, the income approach incorporates subjective judgments regarding comparable rental and operating expense data, the capitalization or discount rate, and projections of future rent and expenses based on appropriate evidence. Other methodologies that may also be used to value properties include sales comparisons and replacement cost approaches. Because the property valuations involve significant professional judgment in the application of both observable and unobservable attributes, the calculated value of our real property assets may differ from their actual realizable value or future appraised value. Our real estate portfolio valuation may not reflect the liquidation value or net realizable value of our properties because the valuations performed by the Independent Valuation Firm involve subjective judgments and do not reflect transaction costs associated with property dispositions. However, as discussed below, in some circumstances such as when an asset is anticipated to be acquired or disposed, we may apply a probability-weighted analysis to factor in a portion of potential transaction costs in our NAV calculation.

 

Each individual appraisal report for our assets (discussed further below) is addressed solely to the Company to assist the Independent Valuation Firm in providing our real property portfolio valuation. Our Independent Valuation Firm’s valuation reports are not addressed to the public and may not be relied upon by any other person to establish an estimated value of our common stock and will not constitute a recommendation to any person to purchase or sell any shares of our common stock. In preparing its valuation reports, our Independent Valuation Firm does not solicit third-party indications of interest for our common stock in connection with possible purchases thereof or the acquisition of all or any part of our company.

 

In conducting its investigation and analyses, our Independent Valuation Firm takes into account customary and accepted financial and commercial procedures and considerations as it deems relevant, which may include, without limitation, the review of documents, materials and information relevant to valuing the property that are provided by us or our Advisor. Although our Independent Valuation Firm may review information supplied or otherwise made available by us or our Advisor for reasonableness, it assumes and relies upon the accuracy and completeness of all such information and of all information supplied or otherwise made available to it by any other party and does not undertake any duty or responsibility to verify independently any of such information. With respect to operating or financial forecasts and other information and data to be provided to or otherwise to be reviewed by or discussed with our Independent Valuation Firm, our Independent Valuation Firm assumes that such forecasts and other information and data were reasonably prepared in good faith on bases reflecting the best currently available estimates and judgments of our management, board of directors and Advisor, and relies upon us to advise our Independent Valuation Firm promptly if any material information previously provided becomes inaccurate or was required to be updated during the period of its review.

 

In performing its analyses, our Independent Valuation Firm makes numerous other assumptions with respect to industry performance, general business, economic and regulatory conditions and other matters, many of which are beyond its control and our control, as well as certain factual matters. For example, unless specifically informed to the contrary, our Independent Valuation Firm assumes that we have clear and marketable title to each real estate property valued, that no title defects exist, that improvements were made in accordance with law, that no hazardous materials are present or were present previously, that no deed restrictions exist, and that no changes to zoning ordinances or regulations governing use, density or shape are pending or being considered. Furthermore, our Independent Valuation Firm’s analysis, opinions and conclusions are necessarily based upon market, economic, financial and other circumstances and conditions existing at or prior to the valuation, and any material change in such circumstances and conditions may affect our Independent Valuation Firm’s analysis, opinions and conclusions. Our Independent Valuation Firm’s appraisal reports may contain other assumptions, qualifications and limitations set forth in the respective appraisal reports that qualify the analysis, opinions and conclusions set forth therein.

 

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The analyses performed by our Independent Valuation Firm do not address the market value of our common stock. Furthermore, the prices at which our real estate properties may actually be sold could differ from our Independent Valuation Firm’s analyses.

 

Property Appraisals

 

Periodic real property appraisals serve as the foundation of the Independent Valuation Firm’s daily real property portfolio valuation. The overarching principle of these appraisals is to produce valuations that represent fair and accurate estimates of the unencumbered values of our real estate or the prices that would be received for our real properties in arm’s-length transactions between market participants before considering underlying debt. The valuation of our real properties determined by the Independent Valuation Firm may not always reflect the value at which we would agree to buy or sell such assets and the value at which we would buy or sell such assets could materially differ from the Independent Valuation Firm’s estimate of fair value. Further, we do not undertake to disclose the value at which we would be willing to buy or sell our real properties to any prospective or existing investor.

 

We obtain ongoing appraisals pursuant to schedules prepared by the Independent Valuation Firm and our Advisor that are designed to conduct appraisals on each of our properties throughout any given calendar year. In order to provide a smooth and orderly appraisal process, we seek to have approximately 1/12th of the portfolio appraised each month, although we may have more or less appraised in a month. In no event will a calendar year pass without having each and every property valued by appraisal unless such asset is bought or sold in such calendar year. The acquisition price of newly acquired properties will serve as our appraised value for the year of acquisition, and thereafter will be part of the appraisal cycle described above such that they are appraised at least every calendar year.

 

Appraisals are performed in accordance with the Code of Ethics and the Uniform Standards of Professional Appraisal Practices, or USPAP, the real estate appraisal industry standards created by The Appraisal Foundation. Each appraisal must be reviewed, approved and signed by an individual with the professional designation of MAI (Member of the Appraisal Institute). The Independent Valuation Firm is involved with the appraisal process, but we have engaged other independent valuation firms (“Appraisal Firms”) to provide appraisals for our properties. The Appraisal Firms were chosen from a list of firms pre-approved by our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, based on their qualifications. The Independent Valuation Firm confirms the reasonableness of the appraisal before reflecting any valuation change in its valuation of our real property portfolio. Real estate appraisals are reported on a free-and-clear basis (for example, no mortgage), irrespective of any property-level financing that may be in place. Such property-level financings ultimately are factored in and do reduce our NAV in a manner described in more detail below.

 

Portfolio Assets, Joint Ventures and Developments

 

Properties purchased or operated as a portfolio or held in a joint venture that acquires properties over time may be valued as a single asset, which may result in a different value than if they were valued as individual assets. Investments in joint ventures that hold properties are valued by the Independent Valuation Firm in a manner that is consistent with the procedures described above and approved by our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, with the agreed approach taking into account the size of our investment in the joint venture, the assets owned by the joint venture, the terms of the joint venture including any promotional interests, minority discount and control, if applicable, and other relevant factors. Development assets, if any, will be valued at cost plus capital expenditures and will join the appraisal cycle upon the earlier of stabilization or 24 months from substantial completion.

 

Valuation of Real Estate-Related Assets

 

Real estate-related assets that we own or may acquire include, among other things, debt and equity interests backed principally by real estate, such as mortgage loans, participations in mortgage loans (i.e., A-Notes and B-Notes), mezzanine loans and publicly traded common and preferred stock of real estate companies. In general, the value of real estate-related assets is determined in accordance with GAAP and adjusted upon the occurrence of a material event, or in the case of liquid securities, each business day, as applicable, thereafter, according to the procedures specified below. Pursuant to our valuation procedures, our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, approves the pricing sources of our real estate-related assets. In general, these sources are third parties other than our Advisor. However, we may utilize the Advisor as a pricing source if the asset is immaterial or there are no other pricing sources reasonably available, and provided that our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, must approve the initial valuation performed by our Advisor and any subsequent material adjustments made by our Advisor. The third-party pricing source may, under certain circumstances, be our Independent Valuation Firm, subject to its acceptance of the additional engagement.

 

Mortgage Loans, Participations in Mortgage Loans and Mezzanine Loans

 

Individual investments in mortgages, mortgage participations and mezzanine loans are generally included in our determination of NAV at an amount determined in accordance with GAAP and adjusted as necessary to reflect impairments.

 

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Private Real Estate-Related Assets

 

Investments in privately placed debt instruments and securities of real estate-related operating businesses (other than joint ventures), such as real estate development or management companies, are valued at cost and thereafter are revalued as determined in good faith by the pricing source. In evaluating the value of our interests in certain commingled investment vehicles (such as private real estate funds), values periodically assigned to such interests by the respective issuers or broker-dealers may be relied upon.

 

Publicly Traded Real Estate-Related Assets

 

Publicly traded debt and equity real estate-related securities (such as REIT bonds) that are not restricted as to salability or transferability are valued daily on the basis of publicly available information. Generally, to the extent the information is available, such securities are valued at the last trade of such securities that was executed at or prior to closing on the valuation day or, in the absence of such trade, the last “bid” price. The value of publicly traded debt and equity real estate-related securities that are restricted as to salability or transferability may be adjusted by the pricing source for a liquidity discount. In determining the amount of such discount, consideration will be given to the nature and length of such restriction and the relative volatility of the market price of the security.

 

Valuation of Liquid Non-Real Estate-Related Assets

 

Liquid non-real estate-related assets include credit rated government and corporate debt securities, publicly traded equity securities and cash and cash equivalents. Liquid non-real estate-related assets are valued daily on the basis of publicly available information.

 

Valuation of Real Estate-Related Liabilities

 

Our real estate-related liabilities consist of financing for our portfolio of assets. These liabilities are usually included in our determination of NAV in accordance with GAAP. Costs and expenses incurred to secure the financing are amortized over the life of the applicable loan. Unless costs can be specifically identified, we allocate the financing costs and expenses incurred with obtaining multiple loans that are not directly related to any single loan among the applicable loans, generally pro rata based on the amount of proceeds from each loan.

 

There are some circumstances where liabilities may be included in our determination of NAV using an alternative methodology to GAAP. For example, if a loan amount exceeds the value of the underlying real property and the loan is otherwise a non-recourse loan, we will assume an equity value of zero for purposes of the combined real property and the loan in the determination of our NAV. Another example would be if a loan restructure or modification has caused the legal liability of the loan to significantly deviate from the carrying value according to GAAP, we would recognize the legal liability rather than the GAAP determination of the liability.

 

NAV and NAV per Share Calculation

 

We are offering to the public three classes of shares of our common stock, Class A shares, Class I shares and Class W shares. Our NAV is calculated for each of these classes and our Class E shares after the end of each business day that the New York Stock Exchange is open for unrestricted trading by ALPS Fund Services Inc. (“ALPS” or the “NAV Accountant”), a third-party firm approved by our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors. Our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, may replace ALPS with another party, including our Advisor, if it is deemed appropriate to do so.

 

At the end of each such trading day, before taking into consideration accrued dividends or class-specific expense accruals, any change in the Aggregate Fund NAV (whether an increase or decrease) is allocated among each class of Fund Interest (i.e., our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with any classes of OP Units held by third parties) based on each class’s relative percentage of the previous Aggregate Fund NAV. Changes in the Aggregate Fund NAV reflect factors including, but not limited to, unrealized/realized gains (losses) on the value of our real property portfolio, real estate-related assets and liabilities, and daily accruals for income and expenses (including accruals for performance based fees, if any, asset management, the dealer manager fee and the distribution fee) and distributions to investors.

 

Our most significant source of net income is property income. We accrue estimated income and expenses on a daily basis based on annual budgets as adjusted from time to time to reflect changes in the business throughout the year. For the first month following a property acquisition, we calculate and accrue portfolio income with respect to such property based on the performance of the property before the acquisition and the contractual arrangements in place at the time of the acquisition, as identified and reviewed through our due diligence and underwriting process in connection with the acquisition. For the purpose of calculating our NAV, all organization and offering costs reduce NAV as part of our estimated income and expense accrual. On a periodic basis, our income and expense accruals are adjusted based on information derived from actual operating results.

 

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Our liabilities are included as part of our NAV calculation generally based on GAAP. Our liabilities include, without limitation, property-level mortgages, accrued distributions, the fees payable to the Advisor and the Dealer Manager, accounts payable, accrued company-level operating expenses, any company or portfolio-level financing arrangements and other liabilities.

 

Following the calculation and allocation of changes in the Aggregate Fund NAV as described above, NAV for each class is adjusted for accrued dividends, the distribution fee and the dealer manager fee, to determine the current day’s NAV. Selling commissions, which are effectively paid by purchasers of Class A shares in the primary offering at the time of purchase, because the purchase price of such shares is equal to the NAV per Class A share plus the selling commission, have no effect on the NAV of any class.

 

NAV per share for each class is calculated by dividing such class’s NAV at the end of each trading day by the number of shares outstanding for that class on such day.

 

Probability-Weighted Adjustments

 

In certain circumstances, such as in an acquisition or disposition process, we may be aware of a contingency or contingencies that could impact the value of our assets, liabilities, income or expenses for purposes of our NAV calculation. For example, we may be party to an agreement to sell a property at a value different from that used in our current NAV calculation. The same agreement may require the buyer to assume a related mortgage loan with a fair value that is different from that used in our current NAV calculation. The transaction may also involve costs for brokers, transfer taxes, and other items upon a successful closing. To the extent such contingencies may affect the value of a property, the Independent Valuation Firm may take such contingencies into account when determining the value of such property for purposes of our NAV calculation. Similarly, we may adjust the other components of our NAV (such as the carrying value of our liabilities or expense accruals) for purposes of our NAV calculation. These adjustments may be made either in whole or in part over a period of time, and both the Independent Valuation Firm and we may take into account (a) the estimated probability of the contingencies occurring and (b) the estimated impact to NAV if the contingencies were to occur when determining the timing and magnitude of any adjustments to NAV.

 

NAV of our Operating Partnership and OP Units

 

Because certain fees to the Advisor are based on our Aggregate Fund NAV (i.e., the aggregate NAV of our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares, along with the OP Units held by third parties), our valuation procedures include the following methodology to determine the daily NAV of our Operating Partnership and the OP Units. Our Operating Partnership has four classes of OP Units (Class E, Class A, Class W and Class I) that are each economically equivalent to our corresponding classes of shares (Class E, Class A, Class W and Class I). Accordingly, on each business day, the NAV per Class E OP Unit equals the NAV per Class E share, the NAV per Class A OP Unit equals the NAV per Class A share, the NAV per Class W OP Unit equals the NAV per Class W share and the NAV per Class I OP Unit equals the NAV per Class I share. The NAV of our Operating Partnership on each business day equals the sum of the NAVs of each outstanding OP Unit on such business day.

 

Oversight by our Board of Directors

 

All parties engaged by us in the calculation of our NAV, including the Advisor, are subject to the oversight of our board of directors. As part of this process, our Advisor reviews the estimates of the values of our real property portfolio and real estate-related assets for consistency with our valuation guidelines and the overall reasonableness of the valuation conclusions, and informs our board of directors of its conclusions. Although our Independent Valuation Firm or other pricing sources may consider any comments received from us or our Advisor in making their individual valuations, the final estimated values of our real property portfolio and real estate-related assets are determined by the Independent Valuation Firm or other pricing sources.

 

Our Independent Valuation Firm is available to meet with our board of directors to review valuation information, as well as our valuation guidelines and the operation and results of the valuation process generally. Our board of directors has the right to engage additional valuation firms and pricing sources to review the valuation process or valuations, if deemed appropriate.

 

Review of and Changes to Our Valuation Procedures

 

At least once each calendar year our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, reviews the appropriateness of our valuation procedures. With respect to the valuation of our properties, the Independent Valuation Firm provides the board of directors with periodic valuation reports. From time to time our board of directors, including a majority of our independent directors, may adopt changes to the valuation procedures if it (1) determines that such changes are likely to result in a more accurate reflection of NAV or a more efficient or less costly procedure for the determination of NAV without having a material adverse effect on the accuracy of such determination or (2) otherwise reasonably believes a change is appropriate for the determination of NAV. We will publicly announce material changes to our valuation procedures or the identity or role of the Independent Valuation Firm.

 

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Limitations on the Calculation of NAV

 

The largest component of our NAV consists of real property investments and, as with any real estate valuation protocol, each property valuation is based on a number of judgments, assumptions or opinions about future events that may or may not prove to be correct. The use of different judgments, assumptions or opinions would likely result in a different estimate of the value of our real property investments. Although the methodologies contained in the valuation procedures are designed to operate reliably within a wide variety of circumstances, it is possible that in certain unanticipated situations or after the occurrence of certain extraordinary events (such as a terrorist attack or an act of nature), our ability to implement and coordinate our NAV procedures may be impaired or delayed, including in circumstances where there is a delay in accessing or receiving information from vendors or other reporting agents. Further, the NAV per share should not be viewed as being determinative of the value of our common stock that may be received in a sale to a third party or the value at which our stock would trade on a national stock exchange. Our board of directors may suspend this offering and the share redemption program if it determines that the calculation of NAV may be materially incorrect or there is a condition that restricts the valuation of a material portion of our assets.

 

Our Current and Historical NAV Calculations

 

The following table sets forth the components of NAV for the Company as of December 31, 2015 and September 30, 2015 (amounts in thousands except per share information). As used below, “Fund Interests” means our Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares, and Class I shares, along with the OP Units held by third parties, and “Aggregate Fund NAV” means the NAV of all of the Fund Interests.

 

   

As of  
December 31,

2015 

   

As of
September 30,
2015  

 
Office properties   $ 1,378,635     $ 1,356,600  
Industrial properties     90,250       88,050  
Retail properties     950,925       872,300  
Real properties   $ 2,419,810     $ 2,316,950  
Debt related investments     15,722       27,775  
Total Investments   $ 2,435,532     $ 2,344,725  
Cash and other assets, net of other liabilities     (14,069 )     (26,734 )
Debt obligations     (1,098,853 )     (997,517 )
Outside investors’ interests     (4,771 )     (4,498 )
Aggregate Fund NAV   $ 1,317,839     $ 1,315,976  
Total Fund Interests outstanding     176,490       177,468  
NAV per Fund Interest   $ 7.47     $ 7.42  

  

When the fair value of our real estate assets is calculated for the purposes of determining our NAV per share, the calculation is done using the fair value methodologies detailed within the FASB Accounting Standards Codification under Topic 820 , Fair Value Measurements and Disclosures (“ASC Topic 820”). However, our valuation procedures and our NAV are not subject to GAAP and will not be subject to independent audit. In the determination of our NAV, the value of certain of our assets and liabilities are generally determined based on their carrying amounts under GAAP; however, those principles are generally based upon historic cost and therefore may not be determined in accordance with ASC Topic 820. Readers should refer to our audited financial statements for our net book value determined in accordance with GAAP from which one can derive our net book value per share by dividing our stockholders’ equity by shares of our common stock outstanding as of the date of measurement.

 

Our valuation procedures, which address specifically each category of our assets and liabilities and are applied separately from the preparation of our financial statements in accordance with GAAP, involve adjustments from historical cost. There are certain factors which cause NAV to be different from net book value on a GAAP basis. Most significantly, the valuation of our real estate assets, which is the largest component of our NAV calculation, will be provided to us by the Independent Valuation Firm on a daily basis. For GAAP purposes, these assets are generally recorded at depreciated or amortized cost. We generally do not undertake to mark to market our debt investments or real estate-related liabilities, but rather these assets and liabilities are usually included in our determination of NAV at amounts determined in accordance with GAAP, which amounts have been and could in the future be materially different from the amount of these assets and liabilities if we were to undertake to mark to market our debt. Also for NAV purposes, we mark-to-market our hedging instruments on a frequency that management determines to be practicable under the circumstances and currently we seek to mark-to-market our hedging instruments on a weekly basis. However, our NAV policies and procedures allow for that frequency to change to be more or less frequent. Other examples that will cause our NAV to differ from our GAAP net book value include the straight-lining of rent, which results in a receivable for GAAP purposes that is not included in the determination of our NAV, and, for purposes of determining our NAV, the assumption of a value of zero in certain instances where the balance of a loan exceeds the value of the underlying real estate properties, where GAAP net book value would reflect a negative equity value for such real estate properties, even if such loans are non-recourse. Third party appraisers may value our individual real estate assets using appraisal standards that deviate from fair value standards under GAAP. The use of such appraisal standards may cause our NAV to deviate from GAAP fair value principles. We did not develop our valuation procedures with the intention of complying with fair value concepts under GAAP and, therefore, there could be differences between our fair values and the fair values derived from the principal market or most advantageous market concepts of establishing fair value under GAAP.

 

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We include no discounts to our NAV for the illiquid nature of our shares, including the limitations on your ability to redeem shares under our share redemption programs and our ability to suspend or terminate our share redemption programs at any time. Our NAV generally does not consider exit costs (e.g. selling costs and commissions related to the sale of a property) that would likely be incurred if our assets and liabilities were liquidated or sold. While we may use market pricing concepts to value individual components of our NAV, our per share NAV is not derived from the market pricing information of open-end real estate funds listed on stock exchanges.

 

Please note that our NAV is not a representation, warranty or guarantee that: (1) we would fully realize our NAV upon a sale of our assets; (2) shares of our common stock would trade at our per share NAV on a national securities exchange; and (3) a stockholder would be able to realize the per share NAV if such stockholder attempted to sell his or her shares to a third party.

 

The December 31, 2015 valuation for our real properties was provided by the Independent Valuation Firm in accordance with our valuation procedures and determined starting with the appraised value. The aggregate real property valuation of $2.42 billion compares to a GAAP basis of real properties (before accumulated amortization and depreciation and the impact of intangible lease liabilities) of $2.29 billion, representing an increase of approximately $133.2 million or 5.8%. Certain key assumptions that were used by our Independent Valuation Firm in the discounted cash flow analysis are set forth in the following table based on weighted averages by property type.  

 

    Office     Industrial     Retail     Weighted
Average Basis
 
Exit capitalization rate     6.77 %     7.35 %     6.48 %     6.68 %
Discount rate / internal rate of return (“IRR”)     7.47 %     7.93 %     7.00 %     7.30 %
Annual market rent growth rate     2.82 %     2.98 %     2.93 %     2.87 %
Average holding period (years)     10.7       10.7       10.3       10.5  

 

A change in the rates used would impact the calculation of the value of our real properties. For example, assuming all other factors remain constant, an increase in the weighted-average annual discount rate/IRR and the exit capitalization rate of 0.25% would reduce the value of our real properties by approximately 1.95% and 2.15%, respectively.

 

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The following table sets forth the quarterly changes to the components of NAV for the Company and the reconciliation of NAV changes for each class of shares (amounts in thousands, except per share information):

                                                 
    Total     Class E
Common
Stock
    Class A
Common
Stock
    Class W
Common
Stock
    Class I
Common
Stock
    Class E
OP Units
 
NAV as of September 30, 2015   $ 1,315,976     $ 1,034,058     $ 10,735     $ 10,513     $ 165,291     $ 95,379  
Fund level changes to NAV                                                
Realized/unrealized gains on net assets     4,239       3,311       37       38       550       303  
Income accrual     25,131       19,666       220       218       3,222       1,805  
Dividend accrual     (15,997 )     (12,589 )     (108 )     (122 )     (2,021 )     (1,157 )
Advisory fee     (3,851 )     (3,014 )     (34 )     (33 )     (493 )     (277 )
Performance based fee     (187 )     (146 )     (2 )     (2 )     (24 )     (13 )
Class specific changes to NAV                                                
Dealer Manager fee     (77 )           (17 )     (17 )     (43 )      
Distribution fee     (15 )           (15 )                  
NAV as of December 31, 2015                                                
before share/unit sale/redemption activity   $ 1,325,219     $ 1,041,286     $ 10,816     $ 10,595     $ 166,482     $ 96,040  
Share/unit sale/redemption activity                                                
Shares/units sold     17,244       4,034       1,915       2,927       8,368        
Shares/units redeemed     (24,624 )     (20,205 )     (16 )           (3,974 )     (429 )
NAV as of December 31, 2015   $ 1,317,839     $ 1,025,115     $ 12,715     $ 13,522     $ 170,876     $ 95,611  
Shares/units outstanding as of September 30, 2015 (1)     177,468       139,437       1,448       1,418       22,299       12,866  
Shares/units sold     2,323       545       257       393       1,128        
Shares/units redeemed     (3,301 )     (2,707 )     (2 )           (534 )     (58 )
Shares/units outstanding as of December 31, 2015 (1)     176,490       137,275       1,703       1,811       22,893       12,808  
NAV per share/unit as of September 30, 2015           $ 7.42     $ 7.42     $ 7.42     $ 7.42     $ 7.42  
Change in NAV per share             0.05       0.05       0.05       0.05       0.05  
NAV per share/unit as of December 31, 2015           $ 7.47     $ 7.47     $ 7.47     $ 7.47     $ 7.47  

 

 
(1) Amounts reported do not include approximately 441,000 restricted stock units granted to our Advisor that remain unvested as of both September 30, 2015 and December 31, 2015.

 

The following table shows our NAV per share at the end of each quarter since we commenced calculating our daily NAV on July 12, 2012.

                                   
Date     Class E     Class A     Class W     Class I  
September 30, 2012     $ 6.64     $ 6.64     $ 6.64     $ 6.64  
December 31, 2012     $ 6.70     $ 6.70     $ 6.70     $ 6.70  
March 31, 2013     $ 6.79     $ 6.79     $ 6.79     $ 6.79  
June 30, 2013     $ 6.83     $ 6.83     $ 6.83     $ 6.83  
September 30, 2013     $ 6.87     $ 6.87     $ 6.87     $ 6.87  
December 31, 2013     $ 6.93     $ 6.93     $ 6.93     $ 6.93  
March 31, 2014     $ 6.96     $ 6.96     $ 6.96     $ 6.96  
June 30, 2014     $ 7.00     $ 7.00     $ 7.00     $ 7.00  
September 30, 2014     $ 7.09     $ 7.09     $ 7.09     $ 7.09  
December 31, 2014     $ 7.16     $ 7.16     $ 7.16     $ 7.16  
March 31, 2015     $ 7.31     $ 7.31     $ 7.31     $ 7.31  
June 30, 2015     $ 7.38     $ 7.38     $ 7.38     $ 7.38  
September 30, 2015     $ 7.42     $ 7.42     $ 7.42     $ 7.42  
December 31, 2015     $ 7.47     $ 7.47     $ 7.47     $ 7.47  

 

On any day, our share sales and redemptions are made based on the day’s applicable per share NAV carried out to four decimal places. On each business day, our NAV per share for each class is (1) posted on our website, www.dividendcapitaldiversified.com , and (2) made available on our toll-free, automated telephone line, (888) 310-9352. In addition, on at least a monthly basis, we disclose in a prospectus or prospectus supplement filed with the Commission our NAV per share for each share class for each business day during the prior month. On at least a quarterly basis, we disclose in a prospectus or prospectus supplement filed with the Commission the principal valuation components of our NAV.

 

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SELECTED INFORMATION REGARDING OUR OPERATIONS

 

Selected Financial Data

 

The following table presents selected historical consolidated financial information for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, and 2011; and balance sheet information as of December 31, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, and 2011. The selected historical consolidated financial information presented below has been derived from our consolidated financial statements. Because the information presented below is only a summary and does not provide all of the information contained in our historical consolidated financial statements, including the related notes thereto, you should read it in conjunction with our historical financial statements and “Management’s Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of Operations” for the year ended December 31, 2015, which are included in our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 and incorporated herein by reference. The amounts in the table are in thousands except per share data.

                               
    As of or For the Year Ended December 31,  
    2015     2014     2013     2012     2011  
Statement of Operations Data:                              
Total revenue   $ 225,200     $ 231,597     $ 217,777     $ 216,325     $ 218,857  
Total operating expenses, excluding acquisition-related expenses and gains and losses on real property, debt-related investments, and real estate securities     (170,507 )     (167,018 )     (155,740 )     (156,550 )     (162,885 )
Acquisition-related expenses net of other gains     (2,644 )     (1,205 )     (536 )     (325 )     (610 )
Impairments and provisions for loss on real property, real estate-related debt investments and real estate securities (1)     (8,124 )     (9,500 )     (2,600 )           (26,406 )
Gain on sale of real property (2)     134,218       10,914                    
Interest expense     (47,508 )     (61,903 )     (65,325 )     (69,844 )     (74,406 )
Income (loss) from continuing operations (3)     131,659       3,990       (9,084 )     (14,961 )     (43,056 )
Discontinued operations (4)           30,004       65,554       (7,410 )     (21,510 )
Net income (loss)     131,659       33,994       56,470       (22,371 )     (64,566 )
Net (income) loss attributable to noncontrolling interests     (7,404 )     (4,802 )     (4,002 )     110       6,886  
Net income (loss) attributable to common stockholders   $ 124,255     $ 29,192     $ 52,468     $ (22,261 )   $ (57,680 )
Comprehensive Income (Loss) Data:                                        
Net income (loss)   $ 131,659     $ 33,994     $ 56,470     $ (22,371 )   $ (64,566 )
Net unrealized change from available-for-sale securities           (211 )           (1,426 )     1,260  
Net unrealized change from cash flow hedging derivatives     (977 )     721       4,975       3,963       2,837  
Total other comprehensive (loss) income     (977 )     510       4,975       2,537       4,097  
Comprehensive income (loss)   $ 130,682     $ 34,504     $ 61,445     $ (19,834 )   $ (60,469 )
Per Share Data:                                        
Net income (loss) per basic and diluted common share:                                        
Continuing operations   $ 0.70     $ 0.02     $ (0.05 )   $ (0.08 )   $ (0.22 )
Discontinued operations   $     $ 0.14     $ 0.34     $ (0.04 )   $ (0.09 )
Common Stock Distributions                                        
Common stock distributions declared   $ 63,145     $ 62,236     $ 62,330     $ 84,259     $ 105,704  
Weighted average common stock distributions declared per share   $ 0.3582     $ 0.3492     $ 0.3499     $ 0.4625     $ 0.5750  
Other Information:                                        
Weighted average number of common shares outstanding:                                        
Basic     175,938       178,273       178,196       181,982       183,813  
Diluted     188,789       190,991       191,932       197,244       197,377  
Number of common shares outstanding at end of period     164,124       178,400       176,007       178,128       182,331  
Number of diluted shares outstanding at end of period     176,932       190,547       189,278       192,303       198,529  
Balance Sheet Data:                                        
Real estate, before accumulated depreciation (5)   $ 2,380,174     $ 2,472,926     $ 2,570,480     $ 2,819,550     $ 2,724,684  
Total assets   $ 1,967,208     $ 2,148,133     $ 2,305,409     $ 2,659,254     $ 2,670,419  
Total debt obligations (6)   $ 1,104,086     $ 1,198,267     $ 1,323,472     $ 1,619,452     $ 1,481,503  
Total liabilities   $ 1,241,257     $ 1,384,153     $ 1,500,398     $ 1,817,727     $ 1,671,150  
Cash Flow Data:                                        
Net cash provided by operating activities   $ 105,530     $ 87,229     $ 86,589     $ 94,487     $ 94,342  
Net cash (used in) provided by investing activities   $ 74,421     $ (15,102 )   $ 72,847     $ (39,465 )   $ 89,457  
Net cash used in financing activities   $ (178,643 )   $ (82,444 )   $ (171,530 )   $ (146,597 )   $ (138,911 )
Supplemental Information                                        
FFO attributable to common stockholders (3)(7)   $ 82,170     $ 85,246     $ 85,216     $ 82,851     $ 65,237  
Company-defined FFO attributable to common stockholders (7)   $ 85,719     $ 86,430     $ 88,044     $ 88,402     $ 90,680  

 

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(1) Impairments and provisions for loss on real property, real estate-related debt investments and real estate securities include (i) real property impairment of $8.1 million, $9.5 million, and $2.6 million during 2015, 2014, and 2013, respectively, (ii) provisions for loan loss, net of reversals, of $23.0 million during 2011, and (iii) other than temporary impairment on securities of $3.4 million during 2011. Real property impairment losses of $5.7 million and $23.5 million recorded during the years ended December 31, 2012 and 2011, respectively, relate to properties that we have disposed of and are included within discontinued operations.

(2) Beginning with the year ended December 31, 2014, as the result of adopting new accounting guidance, we present the aggregate net gains related to disposals of properties that are not classified as discontinued operations within continuing operations.

(3) Income (loss) from continuing operations and FFO attributable to common stockholders includes losses on extinguishment of debt of $1.2 million, $2.5 million, and $5.7 million in 2015, 2013, and 2012, respectively.

(4) After December 31, 2013, a discontinued operation is a component (or group of components) of the entity, the disposal of which would represent a strategic shift that has (or will have) a major effect on the entity’s operations and financial results, when such component (or group of components) have been disposed of or classified as held for sale. Through December 31, 2013, discontinued operations represent properties that we have either disposed of or have classified as held for sale if both the operations and cash flows of the property have been or will be eliminated from our ongoing operations as a result of the disposal transaction and if we will not have any significant continuing involvement in the operations of the property after the disposal transaction. Discontinued operations includes the results of (i) 12 properties classified as held for sale as of December 31, 2013, (ii) 13 properties disposed of during 2013, (iii) three properties disposed of during 2012, and (iv) five properties disposed of during 2011.

(5) Real estate, before accumulated depreciation includes approximately $30.4 million and $193.6 million that we classified within assets held for sale as of December 31, 2014 and 2013, respectively.

(6) Total debt obligations includes approximately $80.4 million that we classified within liabilities related to assets held for sale as of December 31, 2013.

(7) FFO and Company-Defined FFO are defined, reconciled to GAAP net income, and discussed below in “Selected Information Regarding Our Operations—How We Measure Our Operating Performance—Funds From Operations.”

 

Share Redemptions and Repurchases

 

Below is a summary of Class E common stock repurchases pursuant to our self-tender offers and redemptions pursuant to the Class E share redemption program for each quarter during 2015 (number of shares in thousands).

                         
For the Quarter Ended:   Number of Class E
 Shares Requested
for Redemption or Purchase
    Number of Class E
 Shares Redeemed or Purchased
    Percentage of Class E
Shares Requested for
Redemption Redeemed
or for Purchase
Purchased
    Price Paid 
per Share
 
March 31, 2015                                
Class E SRP – Ordinary Redemptions     18,570       1,104       5.9 %   $ 7.30  
Class E SRP – Death or Disability Redemptions     426       426       100.0 %     7.30  
Total / Average     18,996       1,530       8.1 %     7.30  
June 30, 2015                                
Class E SRP – Ordinary Redemptions     20,031       4,379       21.9 %     7.38  
Class E SRP – Death or Disability Redemptions     626       626       100.0 %     7.38  
Total / Average     20,657       5,005       24.2 %     7.38  
September 30, 2015                                
Class E SRP – Ordinary Redemptions     12,456       1,393       11.2 %     7.42  
Class E SRP – Death or Disability Redemptions     452       452       100.0 %     7.42  
Self-Tender Offer Purchases (1)     17,153       17,153       100.0 %     7.25  
Total / Average     30,061       18,998       63.2 %     7.27  
December 31, 2015                                
Self-Tender Offer Purchases (2)     20,758       2,707       13.0 %     7.39  
Total / Average     20,758       2,707       13.0 %     7.39  
Average 2015     22,618       7,060       31.2 %   $ 7.30  

 

 
(1) Amounts represent Class E shares properly tendered and not properly withdrawn at or below the final purchase price of $7.25 per share of a modified “Dutch auction” tender offer, which we completed on August 12, 2015. An additional 6,863 Class E shares were submitted for redemption at prices higher than the final purchase price, and were therefore not properly tendered.

(2) Amounts represent Class E shares purchased pursuant to a self-tender offer, which we completed on December 23, 2015.

 

Additionally, during 2015, we satisfied 100% of redemption requests received pursuant to our Class A, Class W and Class I share redemption program. Below is a summary of common stock redemptions pursuant to the Class A, Class W and Class I share redemption program for each quarter during 2015 (amounts in thousands except per share and percentage data).

                         
For the Quarter Ended:   Aggregate Number of
A, W, and I Shares
Requested for Redemption
    Aggregate Number
of A, W, and I
Shares Redeemed
    Percentage of
A, W, and I Shares
 Requested for
Redemption Redeemed
    Average Price
Paid per Share
 
March 31, 2015     142       142       100.0 %   $ 7.20  
June 30, 2015     121       121       100.0 %     7.27  
September 30, 2015     118       118       100.0 %     7.34  
December 31, 2015     536       536       100.0 %     7.44  
Average 2015     229       229       100.0 %   $ 7.37  

 

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Share redemptions during 2015 for both our Class E share redemption program and our Class A, Class W and Class I share redemption program were funded through a combination of offering proceeds from our ongoing primary offering of Class A, Class W and Class I shares, sales of Class E, Class A, Class W and Class I shares pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan, and asset sales.

 

Distribution Information

 

On March 17, 2016, the Company’s board of directors authorized a quarterly distribution of $0.09 per share of common stock, subject to adjustment for class-specific fees, for the second quarter of 2016. The Company’s board of directors reserves the right to revisit this distribution level during the quarter with respect to record dates that have not yet passed. The distribution will be payable to stockholders of record as of the close of business on each day during the period, from April 1, 2016 through and including June 30, 2016, prorated for the period of ownership. Distributions on our shares accrue daily.

 

Our board of directors authorized quarterly distributions for our stockholders equal to $0.09 per share for all four quarters of 2015 and the first quarter of 2016, subject to adjustment for class-specific fees. We paid the 2015 distributions on April 16, 2015, July 2, 2015, October 16, 2015, and January 19, 2016, and expect to pay the distributions for the first quarter of 2016 on April 18, 2016.

 

The following table sets forth relationships between the amounts of total distributions, including distributions to noncontrolling interests, declared for such period, the amount reported as cash flow from operations in accordance with GAAP, and the amount reported as NAREIT-defined FFO for each quarter during 2015. All authorized distributions reduce our NAV, including those funded with borrowings.

                                             
Three Months Ended:     Paid
in Cash
    % Paid in Cash     Reinvested in Shares     % Reinvested
in Shares
    Total     Cash Flow from Operations (1)     % Funded with Cash Flows from Operations (1)  
March 31, 2015       11,937       69 %     5,325       31 %     17,262       25,551       100 %
June 30, 2015       12,163       69 %     5,502       31 %     17,665       22,317       100 %
September 30, 2015       11,803       69 %     5,257       31 %     17,060       30,033       100 %
December 31, 2015       11,061       68 %     5,093       32 %     16,154       27,629       100 %
Total 2015     $ 46,964       69 %   $ 21,177       31 %   $ 68,141     $ 105,530       100 %

 

 
(1) Commencing on January 1, 2009, expenses associated with the acquisition of real property are recorded to earnings and as a deduction to our cash from operations. See “Selected Information Regarding Our Operations—How We Measure Our Operating Performance” for a discussion of acquisition-related expenses, net of other gains, and its impact on our cash flow from operations.

 

For the year ended December 31, 2015, our NAREIT-defined FFO was $88.2 million, or 130% of our total distributions. NAREIT-defined FFO is an operating metric and should not be used as a liquidity measure. However, management believes the relationship between NAREIT-defined FFO and distributions may be meaningful for investors to better understand the sustainability of our operating performance compared to distributions made. The definition of NAREIT-defined FFO, a reconciliation to GAAP net income, and a discussion of NAREIT-defined FFO’s inherent limitations are provided below in “Selected Information Regarding Our Operations—How We Measure Our Operating Performance.”

 

How We Measure Our Operating Performance

 

Funds From Operations

 

FFO Definition (“FFO”)

 

We believe that FFO, as defined by the National Association of Real Estate Investment Trusts (“NAREIT”), is a meaningful supplemental measure of our operating performance because historical cost accounting for real estate assets in accordance with GAAP implicitly assumes that the value of real estate assets diminishes predictably over time, as reflected through depreciation and amortization expense. However, since real estate values have historically risen or fallen with market and other conditions, many industry investors and analysts have considered presentation of operating results for real estate companies that use historical cost accounting to be insufficient. Thus, NAREIT created FFO as a supplemental measure of operating performance for real estate investment trusts that consists of net income (loss), calculated in accordance with GAAP, plus real estate-related depreciation and amortization and impairment of depreciable real estate, less gains (or losses) from dispositions of real estate held for investment purposes.

 

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The following table presents a reconciliation of FFO to net income (loss) for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, and 2011 (amounts in thousands, except per share information).

                               
    For the Year Ended December 31,  
    2015     2014     2013     2012     2011  
Reconciliation of net earnings to FFO:                              
Net income (loss) attributable to common stockholders   $ 124,255     $ 29,192     $ 52,468     $ (22,261 )   $ (57,680 )
Add (deduct) NAREIT-defined adjustments:                                        
Depreciation and amortization expense     83,114       88,994       108,191       129,116       126,890  
Gain on disposition of real property (1)     (134,218 )     (40,592 )     (74,306 )     (21,108 )     (13,588 )
Impairment of real estate property     8,124       9,500       2,600       5,700       23,500  
Noncontrolling interests’ share of net income (loss)     7,404       4,802       4,002       (110 )     (6,886 )
Noncontrolling interests’ share of FFO     (6,509 )     (6,650 )     (7,739 )     (8,486 )     (6,999 )
FFO attributable to common shares-basic     82,170       85,246       85,216       82,851       65,237  
FFO attributable to dilutive OP Units     6,001       6,077       6,575       6,947       4,810  
FFO attributable to common shares-diluted   $ 88,171     $ 91,323     $ 91,791     $ 89,798     $ 70,047  
FFO per share-basic and diluted   $ 0.47     $ 0.48     $ 0.48     $ 0.46     $ 0.35  
Weighted average number of shares outstanding                                        
Basic     175,938       178,273       178,196       181,982       183,813  
Diluted     188,789       190,991       191,932       197,244       197,377  

 

 
(1) Include amounts attributable to discontinued operations for periods presented of 2014 and 2013.

 

Company-Defined FFO

 

As part of its guidance concerning FFO, NAREIT has stated that the “management of each of its member companies has the responsibility and authority to publish financial information that it regards as useful to the financial community.” As a result, modifications to FFO are common among REITs as companies seek to provide financial measures that meaningfully reflect the specific characteristics of their businesses. In addition to the NAREIT definition of FFO and other GAAP measures, we provide a Company-Defined FFO measure that we believe is helpful in assisting management and investors assess the sustainability of our operating performance. As described further below, our Company-Defined FFO presents a performance metric that adjusts for items that we do not believe to be related to our ongoing operations. In addition, these adjustments are made in connection with calculating certain of the Company’s financial covenants including its interest coverage ratio and fixed charge coverage ratio and therefore we believe this metric will help our investors better understand how certain of our lenders view and measure the financial performance of the Company and ultimately its compliance with these financial covenants. However, no single measure can provide users of financial information with sufficient information and only our disclosures read as a whole can be relied upon to adequately portray our financial position, liquidity and results of operations.

 

Our Company-Defined FFO is derived by adjusting FFO for the following items: acquisition-related expenses, gains and losses associated with extinguishment of debt and financing commitments, and gains and losses on derivatives. Management’s evaluation of our future operating performance excludes these items based on the following economic considerations:

 

Acquisition-related expenses —For GAAP purposes, expenses associated with efforts to acquire real properties, including efforts related to acquisition opportunities that are not ultimately completed, are recorded to earnings. We believe by excluding acquisition-related expenses, Company-Defined FFO provides useful supplemental information for management and investors when evaluating the sustainability of our operating performance, because these types of expenses are directly correlated to our investment activity rather than our ongoing operating activity.

 

Losses on extinguishment of debt and financing commitments —Losses on extinguishment of debt and financing commitments represent losses incurred as a result of the early retirement of debt obligations and breakage costs and fees incurred related to rate lock agreements with prospective lenders. Such losses may be due to dispositions of assets, the repayment of debt prior to its contractual maturity or the nonoccurrence of forecasted financings. Our management believes that any such losses are not related to our ongoing operations. Accordingly, we believe by excluding losses on extinguishment of debt and financing commitments, Company-Defined FFO provides useful supplemental information for management and investors when evaluating the sustainability of our operating performance.

 

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Gains and losses on derivatives —Gains and losses on derivatives represent the gains or losses on the fair value of derivative instruments due to hedge ineffectiveness. As these gains or losses relate to underlying long-term assets and liabilities, where we are not speculating or trading assets, our management believes that any such gains or losses are not reflective of our ongoing operations. Accordingly, we believe by excluding unrealized gains or losses on derivatives, Company-Defined FFO provides useful supplemental information for management and investors when evaluating the sustainability of our operating performance.

 

We also believe that Company-Defined FFO allows investors and analysts to compare the performance of our portfolio with other REITs that are not currently affected by the adjusted items. In addition, as many other REITs adjust FFO to exclude the items described above, we believe that our calculation and reporting of Company-Defined FFO may assist investors and analysts in comparing our performance with that of other REITs. However, because Company-Defined FFO excludes items that are an important component in an analysis of our historical performance, such supplemental measure should not be construed as a complete historical performance measure and may exclude items that have a material effect on the value of our common stock.

 

The following table presents a reconciliation of Company-Defined FFO to FFO for the years ended December 31, 2015, 2014, 2013, 2012, and 2011 (amounts in thousands, except per share information).

                               
    For the Year Ended December 31,  
    2015     2014     2013     2012     2011  
Reconciliation of FFO to Company-Defined FFO:                              
FFO attributable to common shares-basic   $ 82,170     $ 85,246     $ 85,216     $ 82,851     $ 65,237  
Add (deduct) our adjustments:                                        
Acquisition-related expenses     2,644       1,205       536       325       610  
(Gain) loss on derivatives     (3 )                 19       85  
Loss on extinguishment of debt and financing commitments     1,168       63       2,507       5,675       95  
Other-than-temporary impairment and related amortization on securities                             3,495  
Provision for loss on debt related investments                             23,037  
Noncontrolling interests’ share of NAREIT-defined FFO     6,509       6,650       7,739       8,486       6,999  
Noncontrolling interests’ share of Company-Defined FFO     (6,769 )     (6,734 )     (7,954 )     (8,954 )     (8,878 )
Company-Defined FFO attributable to common shares-basic     85,719       86,430       88,044       88,402       90,680  
Company-Defined FFO attributable to dilutive OP Units     6,261       6,161       6,790       7,414       6,689  
Company-Defined FFO attributable to common shares-diluted   $ 91,980     $ 92,591     $ 94,834     $ 95,816     $ 97,369  
Company-Defined FFO per share-basic and diluted   $ 0.49     $ 0.48     $ 0.49     $ 0.49     $ 0.49  
Weighted average number of shares outstanding                                        
Basic     175,938       178,273       178,196       181,982       183,813  
Diluted     188,789       190,991       191,932       197,244       197,377  

 

Limitations of FFO and Company-Defined FFO

 

FFO (both NAREIT-defined and Company-Defined) is presented herein as a supplemental financial measure and has inherent limitations. We do not use FFO or Company-Defined FFO as, nor should they be considered to be, an alternative to net income (loss) computed under GAAP as an indicator of our operating performance, or as an alternative to cash from operating activities computed under GAAP, or as an indicator of liquidity or our ability to fund our short or long-term cash requirements, including distributions to stockholders. Management uses FFO and Company-Defined FFO as indications of our future operating performance and as a guide to making decisions about future investments. Our FFO and Company-Defined FFO calculations do not present, nor do we intend them to present, a complete picture of our financial condition and operating performance. In addition, other REITs may define FFO and an adjusted FFO metric differently and choose to treat acquisition-related expenses and potentially other accounting line items in a manner different from us due to specific differences in investment strategy or for other reasons; therefore, comparisons with other REITs may not be meaningful.

 

130
 

 

Our Company-Defined FFO calculation is limited by its exclusion of certain items previously discussed, but we continuously evaluate our investment portfolio and the usefulness of our Company-Defined FFO measure in relation thereto. We believe that net income (loss) computed under GAAP remains the primary measure of performance and that FFO or Company-Defined FFO are only meaningful when they are used in conjunction with net income (loss) computed under GAAP. Further, we believe that our consolidated financial statements, prepared in accordance with GAAP, provide the most meaningful picture of our financial condition and operating performance.

 

Specifically with respect to fees and expenses associated with the acquisition of real property, which are excluded from Company-Defined FFO, such fees and expenses are characterized as operational expenses under GAAP and included in the determination of net income (loss) and income (loss) from operations, both of which are performance measures under GAAP. The purchase of operating properties is a key strategic objective of our business plan focused on generating operating income and cash flow in order to fund our obligations and to make distributions to investors. However, as the corresponding acquisition-related costs are paid in cash, these acquisition-related costs negatively impact our GAAP operating performance and our GAAP cash flows from operating activities during the period in which efforts are undertaken to acquire properties. In addition, if we acquire a property after all offering proceeds from our public offerings have been invested, there will not be any offering proceeds to pay the corresponding acquisition-related costs. Accordingly, such costs will then be paid from other sources of cash such as additional debt proceeds, operational earnings or cash flow, net proceeds from the sale of properties, or other ancillary cash flows. Among other reasons as previously discussed, the treatment of acquisition-related costs is a reason why Company-Defined FFO is not a complete indicator of our overall financial performance, especially during periods in which efforts are undertaken to acquire properties. Note that, pursuant to our valuation procedures, acquisition-related expenses result in an immediate decrease to our NAV.

 

FFO and Company-Defined FFO may not be useful performance measures as a result of the various adjustments made to net income for the charges described above to derive such performance measures. Specifically, we intend to operate as a perpetual-life vehicle and, as such, it is likely for our operating results to be negatively affected by certain of these charges in the future, specifically acquisition-related expenses, as it is currently contemplated as part of our business plan to acquire additional investment properties which would result in additional-acquisition related expenses. Any change in our operational structure would cause the non-GAAP measure to be re-evaluated as to the relevance of any adjustments included in the non-GAAP measure. As a result, we caution investors against using FFO or Company-Defined FFO to determine a price to earnings ratio or yield relative to our NAV.

 

Further, FFO or Company-Defined FFO is not comparable to the performance measure established by the Investment Program Association (the “IPA”), referred to as “modified funds from operations,” or “MFFO,” as MFFO makes further adjustments including certain mark-to-market items and adjustments for the effects of straight-line rent. As such, FFO and Company-Defined FFO may not be comparable to the MFFO of non-listed REITs that disclose MFFO in accordance with the IPA standard. More specifically, Company-Defined FFO has limited comparability to the MFFO and other adjusted FFO metrics of those REITs that do not intend to operate as perpetual-life vehicles as such REITs have a defined acquisition stage. Because we do not have a defined acquisition stage, we may continue to acquire real estate and real estate-related investments for an indefinite period of time. Therefore, Company-Defined FFO may not reflect our future operating performance in the same manner that the MFFO or other adjusted FFO metrics of a REIT with a defined acquisition stage may reflect its operating performance after the REIT had completed its acquisition stage.

 

 Neither the Commission nor any other regulatory body, nor NAREIT, has adopted a set of standardized adjustments that includes the adjustments that we use to calculate Company-Defined FFO. In the future, the Commission or another regulatory body, or NAREIT, may decide to standardize the allowable adjustments across the non-listed REIT industry at which point we may adjust our calculation and characterization of Company-Defined FFO. 

 

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DESCRIPTION OF CAPITAL STOCK

 

The following is a summary of the material terms of shares of our capital stock as set forth in our charter and is qualified in its entirety by reference to our charter. Under our charter, we have authority to issue a total of 1,200,000,000 shares of capital stock. Of the total number of shares of capital stock authorized (a) 1,000,000,000 shares are designated as common stock with a par value of $0.01 per share, 400,000,000 of which are unclassified (however, we refer to them herein as Class E shares to more easily distinguish them from the shares offered hereby), 200,000,000 of which are classified as Class A shares, 200,000,000 of which are classified as Class W shares and 200,000,000 of which are classified as Class I shares, and (b) 200,000,000 shares are designated as preferred stock with a par value of $0.01 per share. Our board of directors, with the approval of a majority of the full board and without any action by our stockholders, may amend our charter from time to time to increase or decrease the aggregate number of shares of capital stock or the number of shares of capital stock of any class or series that we have authority to issue. As of April 1, 2016, 133,269,090 Class E shares of our common stock, 1,928,810 Class A shares of our common stock, 2,279,171 Class W shares of our common stock and 23,345,096 Class I shares of our common stock were issued and outstanding.

 

Common Stock

 

The holders of shares of our common stock are entitled to one vote per share on all matters voted on by stockholders, including election of our directors. Our charter does not provide for cumulative voting in the election of directors. Therefore, the holders of a majority of the outstanding shares of our common stock can elect our full board of directors. Subject to any preferential rights of any outstanding series of preferred stock and the provisions of our charter regarding restriction on ownership and transfer of our common stock, the holders of shares of our common stock are entitled to such distributions as may be authorized from time to time by our board of directors out of legally available funds and declared by us and, upon liquidation, are entitled to receive all assets available for distribution to stockholders. All shares of our common stock issued in this offering are fully paid and non-assessable shares of common stock. Holders of shares of our common stock do not have preemptive rights, which means that you do not have an option to purchase any new shares of common stock that we issue, and generally do not have appraisal rights unless our board of directors determines that appraisal rights apply, with respect to all or any classes or series of shares, to one or more transactions occurring after the date of such determination in connection with which holders of such shares would otherwise be entitled to exercise appraisal rights. Stockholders are not liable for the acts or obligations of the Company.

 

We do not issue certificates for shares of our common stock. Shares of our common stock are held in “uncertificated” form which eliminates the physical handling and safekeeping responsibilities inherent in owning transferable share certificates and eliminates the need to return a duly executed share certificate to effect a transfer. DST Systems, Inc. acts as our registrar and as the transfer agent for shares of our common stock. Transfers can be effected simply by mailing a transfer and assignment form, which we will provide to you at no charge, to:

 

For regular mail: For overnight deliveries:
DST Systems, Inc. DST Systems, Inc.
PO Box 219079 430 West 7th Street, Suite 219079
Kansas City, Missouri 64121-9079 Kansas City, Missouri 64105

 

Class E Shares

 

Substantially all of our outstanding Class E shares were sold by us in prior public primary offerings or to Class E stockholders pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan. No Class E shares will be issued in this offering.

 

Class A Shares

 

Each Class A share issued in the primary offering is subject to a selling commission of up to 3.0% of the public offering price for such Class A share. In addition, subject to certain FINRA limitations, we pay the Dealer Manager (i) a distribution fee that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365 th of 0.50% of the amount of our NAV per share for the Class A shares for such day and (ii) a dealer manager fee that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365 th of 0.60% of our NAV per share for the Class A shares for such day, in each case, on a continuous basis from year to year, subject to certain limitations.

 

Class W Shares

 

No selling commissions are paid for sales of any Class W shares, and we do not pay the Dealer Manager distribution fees with respect to the Class W shares. Subject to certain FINRA limitations, we pay the Dealer Manager a dealer manager fee that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365 th of 0.60% of our NAV per share for the Class W shares for such day on a continuous basis from year to year, subject to certain limitations. Class W shares are available for purchase in this offering only (1) through fee-based programs, also known as wrap accounts, (2) through participating broker-dealers that have alternative fee arrangements with their clients, (3) through investment advisers registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or applicable state law or (4) through bank trust departments or any other organization or person authorized to act as a fiduciary for its clients or customers.

 

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Class I Shares

 

No selling commissions are currently paid for sales of any Class I shares, and we do not pay the Dealer Manager distribution fees with respect to the Class I shares. Subject to certain FINRA limitations, we pay the Dealer Manager a dealer manager fee that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365 th of 0.10% of our NAV per share for the Class I shares for such day on a continuous basis from year to year, subject to certain limitations. Class I shares are available for purchase in this offering only (1) by institutional accounts as defined by FINRA Rule 4512(c), (2) through bank-sponsored collective trusts and bank-sponsored common trusts, (3) by retirement plans (including a trustee or custodian under any deferred compensation or pension or profit sharing plan or payroll deduction IRA established for the benefit of the employees of any company), foundations or endowments, (4) through certain financial intermediaries that are not otherwise registered with or as a broker-dealer and that direct clients to trade with a broker-dealer that offers Class I shares, (5) by our executive officers and directors and their immediate family members, as well as officers and employees of the Advisor and the Advisor’s product specialists or other affiliates of the Advisor and their immediate family members, our product specialists and their affiliates and, if approved by our board of directors, joint venture partners, consultants and other service providers, (6) by investors purchasing shares in a transaction that entitles our Dealer Manager to a “primary dealer fee” as described below under “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Primary Dealer Fee,” (7) through bank trust departments or any other organization or person authorized to act as a fiduciary for its clients or customers and (8) by any other categories of purchasers that we name in an amendment or supplement to this prospectus. 

 

We may pay to the Dealer Manager a primary dealer fee in the amount of up to 5.0% of the gross proceeds raised from the sale of Class I shares in the primary offering, provided that (i) the total gross proceeds raised with respect to which the primary dealer fee will apply may not exceed $100,000,000, subject to further increase by our board of directors, in its discretion; (ii) the primary dealer fee will only be paid with respect to sales made by participating broker-dealers specifically approved by us as being eligible; and (iii) the primary dealer fee will only be paid with respect to sales made at times approved by us. The Dealer Manager may reallow a portion of the primary dealer fee to the participating broker-dealers involved in selling such Class I shares based on the portion of the gross proceeds raised from their customers. The Dealer Manager will consider the primary dealer fee to be underwriting compensation. The primary dealer fee will be paid by us and will not be considered to be a class-specific expense. Accordingly, the expense will be allocated among all holders of Fund Interests ratably according to the NAV of their units or shares. Currently, the maximum primary dealer fee we will pay our Dealer Manager is $5 million, although in the future we may provide for additional primary dealer fee payments. See “Plan of Distribution—Underwriting Compensation—Primary Dealer Fee.”

 

Rights Upon Liquidation

 

In the event of any voluntary or involuntary liquidation, dissolution or winding up of the Company, or any liquidating distribution of our assets, then such assets, or the proceeds thereof, will be distributed among the holders of Class E shares, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares ratably in proportion to the respective NAV for each class until the NAV for each class has been paid. Each holder of shares of a particular class of common stock will be entitled to receive, ratably with each other holder of shares of such class, that portion of such aggregate assets available for distribution as the number of outstanding shares of such class held by such holder bears to the total number of shares of such class then outstanding. If there are remaining assets available for distribution to our common stockholders after each class has received its NAV (which is not likely because NAV would be adjusted upward prior to the liquidating distribution), then holders of our Class E, Class A, Class W and Class I shares will be treated the same, with each such holder receiving the same per share distribution of any such excess.

 

Preferred Stock

 

Our charter authorizes our board of directors to classify and reclassify any unissued shares of our common stock and preferred stock into other classes or series of stock. A majority of our independent directors who do not have an interest in the transaction must approve any offering of preferred stock and have access to counsel at the Company’s expense. Prior to issuance of shares of each class or series, the board of directors is required by the Maryland General Corporation Law and by our charter to set, subject to our charter restrictions on transfer of our stock, the terms, preferences, conversion or other rights, voting powers, restrictions, limitations as to dividends or other distributions, qualifications and terms or conditions of redemption for each class or series. Thus, the board of directors could authorize the issuance of shares of common stock or preferred stock with terms and conditions which could have the effect of delaying, deferring or preventing a transaction or change in control that might involve a premium price for holders of our common stock or otherwise be in their best interest. Our board of directors has no present plans to issue preferred stock, but may do so at any time in the future without stockholder approval. We will not offer preferred stock to our advisor, our dealer manager, our officers and directors, or any of their affiliates except on the same terms as preferred stock is offered to all other investors.

 

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Meetings, Special Voting Requirements and Access to Records

 

An annual meeting of the stockholders is held each year on a date specified by our board of directors that is not less than 30 days after delivery of our annual report. Special meetings of stockholders may be called only upon the request of a majority of the directors, a majority of the independent directors, the chief executive officer or upon the written request of stockholders holding at least 10% of the outstanding shares of our common stock. Upon receiving a written request, either by person or by mail, our secretary will provide all stockholders with written notice, either by person or by mail, of such meeting and the purpose of such meeting. The special meeting must be held not less than 15 nor more than 60 days after the distribution of the notice, at a time and place specified in the stockholder request, or if none is specified, at a time and place convenient to the stockholders. The presence of 50% of the outstanding shares of our common stock either in person or by proxy shall constitute a quorum. Generally, the affirmative vote of a majority of the votes cast on a matter is necessary to take stockholder action, except that a majority of the votes represented in person or by proxy at a meeting at which a quorum is present is required to elect a director and except for the matters described in the next paragraph, which must be approved by the affirmative vote of stockholders entitled to cast a majority of all the votes entitled to be cast on the matter.

 

Under the Maryland General Corporation Law and our charter, stockholders are generally entitled to vote at a duly held meeting at which a quorum is present on (1) the amendment of our charter, (2) our dissolution, (3) our merger into another entity, our consolidation or the sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of our assets and (4) the election or removal of our directors.

 

The Advisory Agreement, including the selection of the Advisor, is approved annually by our directors including a majority of the independent directors. While the stockholders do not have the ability to vote to replace the Advisor or to select a new advisor, stockholders do have the ability, by the affirmative vote of a majority of the shares of our common stock entitled to vote on such matter, to remove a director from our board of directors. Any stockholder shall be permitted access to all our records at all reasonable times, and may inspect and copy any of them for a reasonable copying charge. An alphabetical list of the names, addresses and telephone numbers of our stockholders, along with the number of shares of our common stock held by each of them, shall be maintained as part of our books and records and shall be available for inspection by any stockholder or the stockholder’s designated agent at our office. The stockholder list will be updated at least quarterly to reflect changes in the information contained therein. A copy of the list shall be mailed to any stockholder who requests the list within 10 days of the request. A stockholder may request a copy of the stockholder list in connection with matters relating to voting rights and the exercise of stockholder rights under federal proxy laws. A stockholder requesting a list will be required to pay reasonable costs of postage and duplication. We have the right to request that a requesting stockholder represent to us that the list will not be used to pursue commercial interests. In addition to the foregoing, stockholders have rights under Rule 14a-7 under the Exchange Act, which provides that, upon the request of investors and the payment of the expenses of the distribution, we are required to distribute specific materials to stockholders in the context of the solicitation of proxies for voting on matters presented to stockholders or, at our option, provide requesting stockholders with a copy of the list of stockholders so that the requesting stockholders may make the distribution of proxies themselves. If a proper request for the stockholder list is not honored, then the requesting stockholder shall be entitled to recover certain costs incurred in compelling the production of the list as well as actual damages suffered by reason of the refusal or failure to produce the list. However, a stockholder shall not have the right to, and we may require a requesting stockholder to represent that it will not, secure the stockholder list or other information for the purpose of selling or using the list for a commercial purpose (such as to acquire our shares in a tender offer for investment purposes) not related to the requesting stockholder’s interest in the affairs of the Company.

 

Tender Offers

 

Our charter provides that any person making a tender offer that is not otherwise subject to Regulation 14D of the Exchange Act, including any “mini-tender” offer, must comply with most of the provisions of Regulation 14D of the Exchange Act, including the notice and disclosure requirements. In addition, the offeror must provide us notice of such tender offer at least 10 business days before initiating the tender offer. If the offeror does not comply with the provisions set forth above, we will have the right to redeem that offeror’s shares, if any, and any shares acquired in such tender offer. In addition, the non-complying offeror will be responsible for all of our expenses in connection with that offeror’s noncompliance.

 

Restriction On Ownership of Shares of Capital Stock

 

In order for us to qualify as a REIT, no more than 50% in value of the outstanding shares of our common stock may be owned, directly or indirectly, through the application of certain attribution rules under the Code, by any five or fewer individuals, as defined in the Code to include specified entities, during the last half of any taxable year. In addition, the outstanding shares of our common stock must be owned by 100 or more persons independent of us and each other during at least 335 days of a 12-month taxable year or during a proportionate part of a shorter taxable year, excluding our first taxable year ending December 31, 2006. In addition, we must meet requirements regarding the nature of our gross income in order to qualify as a REIT. One of these requirements is that at least 75% of our gross income for each calendar year must consist of rents from real property and income from other real property investments. The rents received by the Operating Partnership from any tenant will not qualify as rents from real property, which could result in our loss of REIT status, if we own, actually or constructively within the meaning of certain provisions of the Code, 10% or more of the ownership interests in that tenant. In order to assist us in preserving our status as a REIT, among other purposes, our charter contains limitations on the ownership and transfer of shares of common stock which prohibit any person or entity from owning or acquiring, directly or indirectly, more than 9.8% of the value of our then outstanding capital stock or more than 9.8% of the value or number of shares, whichever is more restrictive, of our then outstanding common stock, prohibit the beneficial ownership of the outstanding shares of our capital stock by fewer than 100 persons and prohibit any transfer of or other event or transaction with respect to shares of capital stock that would result in the beneficial ownership of our outstanding shares of capital stock by fewer than 100 persons. In addition, our charter prohibits any transfer of or other event with respect to shares of our capital stock that would result in us being “closely held” within the meaning of Section 856(h) of the Code, that would cause us to own, actually or constructively, more than 9.9% of the ownership interests in a tenant of our real property or the real property of the Operating Partnership or any direct or indirect subsidiary of the Operating Partnership or that would otherwise cause us to fail to qualify as a REIT.

 

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Our charter provides that the shares of our capital stock that, if transferred, would result in a violation of the 9.8% ownership limit, would result in us being “closely held” within the meaning of Section 856(h) of the Code, would cause us to own more than 9.9% of the ownership interests in a tenant of our real property or the real property of the Operating Partnership or any direct or indirect subsidiary of the Operating Partnership or would otherwise cause us to fail to qualify as a REIT will be transferred automatically to a trust effective on the day before the purported transfer of such shares of our capital stock. We will designate a trustee of the share trust that will not be affiliated with us or the purported transferee or record holder. We will also name a charitable organization as beneficiary of the share trust. The trustee will receive all distributions on the shares of our capital stock in the same trust and will hold such distributions or distributions in trust for the benefit of the beneficiary. The trustee also will vote the shares of capital stock in the same trust. The intended transferee will acquire no rights in such shares of capital stock, unless, in the case of a transfer that would cause a violation of the 9.8% ownership limit, the transfer is exempted by the board of directors from the ownership limit based upon receipt of information (including certain representations and undertakings from the intended transferee) that such transfer would not violate the provisions of the Code for our qualification as a REIT. In addition, our charter provides that any transfer of shares of our capital stock that would result in shares of our capital stock being owned by fewer than 100 persons will be null and void and the intended transferee will acquire no rights in such shares of our capital stock.

 

The trustee will transfer the shares of our capital stock to a person whose ownership of shares of our capital stock will not violate the ownership limits. The transfer shall be made no earlier than 20 days after the later of our receipt of notice that shares of our capital stock have been transferred to the trust or the date we determine that a purported transfer of shares of stock has occurred. During this 20-day period, we will have the option of redeeming such shares of our capital stock. Upon any such transfer or redemption, the purported transferee or holder shall receive a per share price equal to the lesser of (a) the price per share in the transaction that resulted in the transfer of such shares to the trust (or, in the case of a gift or devise, the price per share on the date of redemption at the time of the gift or devise) or (b) the price per share on the date of the redemption, in the case of a purchase by us, or the price received by the trustee net of any sales commission and expenses, in the case of a sale by the trustee. The charitable beneficiary will receive any excess amounts. In the case of a liquidation, holders of such shares will receive a ratable amount of our remaining assets available for distribution to shares of the applicable class or series taking into account all shares of such class or series. The trustee will distribute to the purported transferee or holder an amount equal to the lesser of the amounts received with respect to such shares or the price per share in the transaction that resulted in the transfer of such shares to the trust (or, in the case of a gift or devise, the price at the time of the gift or devise) and shall distribute any remaining amounts to the charitable beneficiary.

 

Any person who (1) acquires or attempts to acquire shares of our capital stock in violation of the foregoing restrictions or who owns shares of our capital stock that were transferred to any such trust is required to give immediate written notice to us of such event or (2) purports to transfer or receive shares of our capital stock subject to such limitations is required to give us 15 days written notice prior to such purported transaction. In both cases, such persons shall provide to us such other information as we may request in order to determine the effect, if any, of such event on our status as a REIT. The foregoing restrictions will continue to apply until the board of directors determines it is no longer in our best interest to continue to qualify as a REIT.

 

The ownership limits do not apply to a person or persons which the directors exempt from the ownership limit upon appropriate assurances that our qualification as a REIT is not jeopardized. Any person who owns 5% or more (or such lower percentage applicable under Treasury regulations) of the outstanding shares of our capital stock during any taxable year will be asked to deliver a statement or affidavit setting forth the number of shares of our capital stock beneficially owned.

 

Distributions

 

We intend to continue to accrue distributions daily and make distributions on a quarterly basis following the end of each calendar quarter and we began making such distributions following the first calendar quarter after the quarter in which the minimum offering requirements were met for our initial public offering. However, we reserve the right to adjust the periods during which distributions accrue and are paid. Although our distributions during 2015, 2014 and 2013 were fully funded from our operations, in the future we may fund distributions from other sources. Our long-term strategy is to fund the payment of quarterly distributions to our stockholders entirely from our operations. However, if we are unsuccessful in investing the capital we raise in this offering or which is generated from the sale of existing assets on an effective and efficient basis that is accretive to our distribution level, we may be required to fund our quarterly distributions to our stockholders from a combination of our operations and financing activities, which include net proceeds of this offering and borrowings (including borrowings secured by our assets), or to reduce the level of our quarterly distributions. We have not established a cap on the amount of our distributions that may be paid from any of these sources.

 

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Our ability to pay distributions at the current level also likely will be impacted by the expiration of certain large leases in our portfolio, and, as a result, we may be required to reduce the level of our quarterly distributions. To the extent that we sell higher yielding assets in exchange for assets that may initially produce less income in exchange for the potential ability for longer term appreciation, this may also put pressure on our ability to sustain our current distribution level. If our quarterly distributions exceed cash flow generated from our operations, it may cause a decrease in our NAV if not offset by other effects.

 

Our board of directors determines the level of our distributions each quarter. In determining the appropriate level of a distribution, our board of directors considers a number of factors, including the current and anticipated market conditions, current and anticipated future performance and make-up of our investments, our overall financial projections and expected future cash needs. We can give no assurance that the board of directors will continue to set distributions at current levels and our distribution levels may change from time to time. Depending on the distribution level relative to cash flow generated from our portfolio, if our quarterly distributions exceed cash flow generated from our operations, it may cause a decrease in our NAV if not offset by other effects.

 

In connection with a distribution to our stockholders, our board has historically authorized, and intends to continue to authorize, a quarterly distribution of a certain dollar amount per share of our common stock before or on the first day of each quarter. We then calculate each stockholder’s specific distribution amount for the quarter using daily record and declaration dates and your distributions will begin to accrue on the date and time that you become a record owner of our common stock, subject to our board of directors declaring a distribution for record owners as of such date and time. We accrue the amount of declared distributions as our liability on a daily basis, and such liability is accounted for in determining the NAV.

 

Distributions are made on all classes of our common stock at the same time. The per share amount of distributions on Class E, Class A, Class W and Class I shares differs because of different allocations of class-specific expenses. We use the record share method of determining the per share amount of distributions on each class of shares, although our board of directors may choose other methods. The record share method is one of several distribution calculation methods for multiple-class funds recommended, but not required, by the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (AICPA). Under this method, the amount to be distributed on shares of our common stock is increased by the sum of all class-specific expenses accrued for such period. Such amount is divided by the number of shares of our common stock outstanding on the record date. Such per share amount is reduced for each class of common stock by the per share amount of any class-specific expenses allocable to such class.

 

We are required to make distributions sufficient to satisfy the requirements for qualification as a REIT for federal income tax purposes. Generally, income distributed will not be taxable to us under the Code if we distribute at least 90% of our taxable income each year (computed without regard to the distributions paid deduction and our net capital gain). In addition, if we fail to distribute during each calendar year at least the sum of (a) 85% of our ordinary income for such year, (b) 95% of our capital gain net income for such year, and (c) any undistributed taxable income from prior periods, we will be subject to a 4% excise tax on the excess of the required distribution over the sum of (i) the amounts actually distributed by us, plus (ii) retained amounts on which we pay income tax at the corporate level. See “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Requirements for Qualification as a REIT—Operational Requirements—Annual Distribution Requirement.” Distributions are authorized at the discretion of the board of directors, in accordance with our earnings, cash flow and general financial condition. The board’s discretion is directed, in substantial part, by its obligation to cause us to comply with the REIT requirements. Because we may receive income from interest or rents at various times during our fiscal year, distributions may not reflect our income earned in that particular distribution period and may be made in advance of actual receipt of funds in an attempt to make distributions relatively uniform. We are authorized to borrow money, issue new securities or sell assets in order to make distributions. There are no restrictions on the ability of our Operating Partnership to transfer funds to us. For information regarding our historical distributions, see “Selected Information Regarding Our Operations—Distribution Information.”

 

We are prohibited from making distributions in kind, except for distributions of readily marketable securities, distributions of beneficial interests in a liquidating trust established for the dissolution of the Company and the liquidation of assets in accordance with the terms of our charter, or distributions in which (i) the board of directors advises each stockholder of the risks associated with direct ownership of the property, (ii) the board of directors offers each stockholder the election of receiving such in-kind distributions and (iii) in-kind distributions are made only to those stockholders that accept such offer. We are not prohibited from distributing our own securities in lieu of making cash distributions to stockholders, provided that the securities so distributed to stockholders are readily marketable. Stockholders who receive marketable securities in lieu of cash distributions may incur transaction expenses in liquidating the securities.

 

Distribution Reinvestment Plan

 

Our distribution reinvestment plan allows you to elect to have your cash distributions attributable to the class of shares owned automatically reinvested in additional shares of the same class. A copy of our distribution reinvestment plan is included as Appendix B to this prospectus. You may elect to participate in the distribution reinvestment plan by completing the subscription agreement, the enrollment form or by other written notice to the plan administrator. Participation in the plan will begin with the next distribution made after acceptance of your written notice.

 

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The per share purchase price for shares purchased pursuant to the distribution reinvestment plan will be equal to our NAV per share applicable to the class of shares purchased, calculated as of the distribution date. Stockholders do not pay selling commissions when purchasing shares pursuant to the distribution reinvestment plan. Because the dealer manager fee is calculated based on our NAV, it reduces the NAV and/or distributions with respect to Class A, Class W and Class I shares, including shares issued under the distribution reinvestment plan with respect to such share classes. Similarly, the distribution fee reduces the Class A NAV and/or distributions because it is calculated based on Class A NAV. The distribution fee is not payable with respect to Class W or Class I shares. Shares acquired under the distribution reinvestment plan entitle the participant to the same rights and be treated in the same manner as shares of that class purchased in this offering.

 

We reserve the right to amend any aspect of our distribution reinvestment plan without the consent of our stockholders, provided that notice of any material amendment is sent to participants at least 10 days prior to the effective date of that amendment. Our board of directors may amend, suspend or terminate the distribution reinvestment plan for any reason at any time upon 10 days’ prior notice to participants. We may provide notice by including such information (a) in a Current Report on Form 8-K or in our annual or quarterly reports, all publicly filed with the Commission or (b) in a separate mailing to the participants. Participation in the plan may also be terminated with respect to any person to the extent that a reinvestment of distributions in shares of our common stock would cause the share ownership limitations contained in our charter to be violated. Following any termination of the distribution reinvestment plan, all subsequent distributions to stockholders would be made in cash.

 

If a stockholder elects to participate in the distribution reinvestment plan, the stockholder will be treated as receiving, in lieu of the reinvested cash distribution, a distribution of additional shares of the same class of common stock on which the distribution is made. If the stockholder is subject to federal income taxation, the stockholder will be treated for federal income tax purposes as if he or she has received a dividend, to the extent of our current and accumulated earnings and profits, in an amount equal to the fair value on the relevant distribution date of the shares of the class of common stock purchased with the reinvested distributions, and will be taxed on the amount of such distribution as ordinary income to the extent such distribution is from current or accumulated earnings and profits, unless we have designated all or a portion of the distribution as a capital gain dividend in which event the appropriate portion of the distribution will be treated as long-term capital gain to the extent the distribution does not exceed our current and accumulated earnings and profits. See “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Taxation of Taxable U.S. Stockholders” and “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Special Tax Considerations for Non-U.S. Stockholders.” However, the tax consequences of participating in our distribution reinvestment plan will vary depending upon each participant’s particular circumstances and you are urged to consult your own tax advisor regarding the specific tax consequences to you of participation in the distribution reinvestment plan.

 

All material information regarding the distributions to stockholders and the effect of reinvesting the distributions, including tax information with respect to income earned on shares under the plan for the calendar year, will be provided to the stockholders at least annually. Each stockholder participating in the distribution reinvestment plan will have an opportunity to withdraw from the plan at any time after receiving this information.

 

Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program

 

We expect that there will be no regular secondary trading market for shares of our common stock. While you should view your investment as long term with limited liquidity, we have adopted a Class A, Class W and Class I share redemption program, whereby stockholders may request that we redeem all or any portion of their Class A, Class W or Class I shares in accordance with the procedures and subject to certain conditions and limitations described below. We also have a separate share redemption program for holders of our Class E shares, described below. Unless the context otherwise requires, when we describe our share redemption program in this prospectus, we are referring to our share redemption program for holders of Class A, Class W and Class I shares. Because the volume limitations described below are based, in part, on the NAV of each class as of the last day of the quarter preceding the redemption request, the availability of redemptions in any quarter will be dependent upon, among other things, the success of this offering.

 

Only those stockholders who received their shares directly from us (including through our distribution reinvestment plan, except as set forth below) or received their shares through one or more transactions that were not for cash or other consideration are eligible to participate in our share redemption program. Once our shares are transferred, directly or indirectly, for value by a stockholder (other than transfers which occur in connection with a non-taxable transaction, such as a gift or contribution to a family trust), the transferee and all subsequent holders of the shares are not eligible, unless otherwise approved by our management in its sole discretion, to participate in the share redemption program with respect to such shares that were transferred for value and any additional shares acquired by such transferee through our distribution reinvestment program.

 

Due to the illiquid nature of investments in real property, we may not have sufficient liquid resources to fund redemption requests. In addition, we have established limitations on the amount of funds we may use for redemptions during any calendar quarter. See “—Redemption Limitations” below. Further, our board of directors has the right to modify, suspend or terminate the share redemption program if it deems such action to be in the best interest of our stockholders.

 

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A stockholder’s request for redemption in accordance with any of the special treatment described below in the event of the death or qualifying disability of a stockholder must be submitted within 18 months of the death of the stockholder or the initial determination of the stockholder’s disability (which we define as such term is defined in Section 72(m)(7) of the Code), as further described below.

 

You may request that we redeem shares of our common stock through your financial advisor or directly with our transfer agent. We will generally adhere to the following procedures relating to the redeeming of shares of our common stock:

 

· Under our share redemption program, on each day the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading (a business day), stockholders may request that we redeem all or any portion of their shares. Redemption requests received in good order by our transfer agent or a fund intermediary on a business day and before the close of business (4:00 p.m. Eastern time) on that day will be effected at a redemption price equal to our NAV per share for the class of shares being redeemed calculated after the close of business on that day.

 

· Redemption requests received in good order by our transfer agent or a fund intermediary on a business day, but after the close of business on that day, will be effected at our NAV per share for the class of shares being redeemed calculated after the close of business on the next business day.

 

· The redemption price per share on any business day will be our NAV per share for the class of shares being redeemed, less any applicable short-term trading discounts. In addition, there may be a delay between your redemption decision and the execution date caused by time necessary for you to put a redemption request in “good order,” which means, for these purposes, that all required information has been completed and all proper signatures have been provided. As a result of this process, you will not know the redemption price at the time you submit your redemption request. The price at which your redemption is executed could be higher or lower than our NAV per share at the time you submit your redemption request. Although a stockholder will not know at the time he or she requests the redemption of shares the exact price at which such redemption request will be processed, the stockholder may cancel the redemption request before it has been processed by notifying a customer service representative available on our toll-free, automated telephone line, (888) 310-9352. The line is open on each business day between the hours of 9:00 a.m. and 6:00 p.m. (Eastern time). Redemption requests received in good order before 4:00 p.m. (Eastern time) on a business day must be cancelled before 4:00 p.m. (Eastern time) on the same day. Redemption requests received in good order after 4:00 p.m. (Eastern time) on a business day, or at any time on a day that is not a business day, must be cancelled before 4:00 p.m. (Eastern time) on the next business day. If the redemption request is not cancelled before the applicable time described above, the stockholder will be contractually bound to redemption of the shares and will not be permitted to cancel the request prior to the payment of redemption proceeds.

 

· Redemption requests may generally be made by phone at (888) 310-9352 or in writing by submitting a completed redemption form, which we will provide to you at no charge, to:

 

For regular mail: For overnight deliveries:
DST Systems, Inc. DST Systems, Inc.
PO Box 219079 430 West 7th Street, Suite 219079
Kansas City, Missouri 64121-9079 Kansas City, Missouri 64105

 

Corporate investors and other non-individual entities must have an appropriate certification on file authorizing redemptions. A signature guarantee may be required.

 

With respect to retirement accounts or other investment accounts registered through custodians, trustees or fiduciaries, redemption requests can only be made by the authorized custodian, trustee or fiduciary, as applicable. Redemption requests with respect to such accounts or in connection with the death or qualifying disability of a stockholder must be made in writing.

 

· For processed redemptions, stockholders may request that redemption proceeds are paid by mailed check provided that the amount is less than $100,000 and the check is mailed to an address on file with the transfer agent for at least 30 days.

 

· Processed redemptions of more than $100,000 will be paid only via ACH or wire transfer. For this reason, stockholders who own more than $100,000 of our common stock must provide bank instructions for their brokerage account or designated U.S. bank account. Stockholders who own less than $100,000 of our common stock may also receive redemption proceeds via ACH or wire transfer, provided the payment amount is at least $5,000. For all redemptions paid via wire transfer, the funds will be wired to the account on file with the transfer agent or, upon instructions made with a medallion signature guarantee, to another financial institution provided that the stockholder has made the necessary funds transfer arrangements. The customer service representative can provide detailed instructions on establishing funding arrangements and designating your bank or brokerage account on file. Funds will be sent only to U.S. financial institutions (ACH network members).

 

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· A medallion signature guarantee will be required in certain circumstances. The medallion signature process protects stockholders by verifying the authenticity of a signature and limiting unauthorized fraudulent transactions. A medallion signature guarantee may be obtained from a domestic bank or trust company, broker-dealer, clearing agency, savings association or other financial institution which participates in a medallion program recognized by the Securities Transfer Association. The three recognized medallion programs are the Securities Transfer Agents Medallion Program (STAMP), the Stock Exchanges Medallion Program (SEMP) and the New York Stock Exchange, Inc. Medallion Signature Program (NYSE MSP). Signature guarantees from financial institutions which are not participating in any of these medallion programs will not be accepted. A notary public cannot provide signature guarantees. We reserve the right to amend, waive or discontinue this policy at any time and establish other criteria for verifying the authenticity of any redemption or transaction request. We may require a medallion signature guarantee if, among other reasons: (1) the amount of the redemption request is over $100,000; (2) you wish to have redemption proceeds transferred to an account other than the designated bank or brokerage account on file for at least 30 days or sent to an address other than your address of record for the past 30 days; or (3) our transfer agent cannot confirm your identity or suspects fraudulent activity.

 

Because we intend to accrue distributions with daily record dates, we expect that your redemption price will reflect an impact or adjustment in NAV from the distribution accrued since the most recent quarter-end, to which you will be entitled. However, we reserve the right to adjust the periods during which distributions accrue and are paid.

 

Minimum Account Redemptions

 

In the event that any stockholder fails to maintain the minimum balance of $2,000 of shares of our common stock, we may redeem all of the shares held by that stockholder at the redemption price in effect on the date we determine that the stockholder has failed to meet the minimum balance, less any applicable short-term trading discounts unless waived. Minimum account redemptions will apply even in the event that the failure to meet the minimum balance is caused solely by a decline in our NAV. Minimum account redemptions are subject to the short-term trading discount discussed below to the extent the redeemed shares were purchased within 365 days of redemption.

 

Available Liquidity

 

We may, in the Advisor’s discretion, after taking the interests of our company as a whole and the interests of our remaining stockholders into consideration, use proceeds from any available sources at our disposal to satisfy redemption requests, subject to the limitation on the amount of funds we may use described below under “—Redemption Limitations.” Potential sources of funding redemptions include, but are not limited to, cash on hand, cash available from borrowings, cash from the sale of shares of our common stock and cash from liquidations of investments, to the extent that such funds are not otherwise dedicated to a particular use, such as working capital, cash distributions to stockholders, purchases of real property, debt-related or other investments or redemption of Class E shares or OP Units. Our board of directors has no obligation to use other sources to redeem shares of our common stock in any circumstances. In order to maintain a reasonable level of liquidity, we intend to generally maintain under normal circumstances the following aggregate allocation to liquid assets: (1) 10% of the aggregate NAV of our outstanding Class A, Class W and Class I shares up to $1 billion of collective Class A, Class W and Class I share NAV and (2) 5% of the aggregate NAV of our outstanding Class A, Class W and Class I shares in excess of $1 billion of collective Class A, Class W and Class I share NAV. However, no assurance can be given that we will maintain this allocation to liquid assets.

 

Payment of Redemption Proceeds

 

Under normal market conditions, we will pay redemption proceeds, less any applicable short-term trading discounts and any applicable tax or other withholding required by law, by the third business day following receipt by our transfer agent or a fund intermediary of a redemption request in good order. Because our NAV per share for each class of common stock will be calculated at the close of each business day, the redemption price may fluctuate between the date we receive the redemption request and the date on which redemption proceeds are paid. As a result, the redemption price that a stockholder will receive may be different from the redemption price on the day the redemption proceeds are paid.

 

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Redemption Limitations

 

Our share redemption program imposes a quarterly cap on the aggregate “net redemptions” of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes equal to the amount of shares of such classes with a value (based on the redemption price per share on the day the redemption is effected) of up to 5% of the aggregate NAV of the outstanding shares of such classes as of the last day of the previous calendar quarter. Here, we use the term “net redemptions” to mean, for any quarter, the excess of our share redemptions (capital outflows) of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes over the share purchases net of sales commissions (capital inflows) of such classes in this offering (including purchases made pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan). Measuring redemptions on a net basis will allow us to provide our stockholders with more liquidity during quarters when we are experiencing inflows of capital. On any business day during a calendar quarter, the maximum amount available for redemptions will be equal to (1) 5% of the NAV of our outstanding Class A, Class W and Class I shares, calculated as of the last day of the previous calendar quarter, plus (2) proceeds from sales of new Class A, Class W and Class I shares in this offering (including reinvestment of distributions but net of sales commissions) since the beginning of the current calendar quarter, less (3) proceeds paid to redeem shares of such classes since the beginning of the current calendar quarter through the prior business day. The quarterly cap will be monitored each business day by us based on reports from our transfer agent, which will provide daily updated information on the proceeds from sales of new shares and the redemption proceeds paid by us. If the quarterly cap is reached during a given day, redemptions will be satisfied pro rata on that day and we will no longer redeem shares for the remainder of the quarter, regardless of additional share purchases by investors for the remainder of such quarter.

 

For each future quarter, our board of directors reserves the right to choose whether the quarterly cap will be applied to “gross redemptions,” meaning, for any class and any quarter, amounts paid to redeem shares of such class since the beginning of such calendar quarter, or “net redemptions.” In order for the board of directors to change the application of the quarterly cap from net redemptions to gross redemptions or vice versa, we will notify stockholders through a prospectus supplement and/or a special or periodic report filed with the Commission, as well as in a press release or on our website, at least 10 days before the first business day of the quarter for which the new test will apply.

 

In addition, for each future quarter, our board of directors reserves the right to choose whether the quarterly cap and the “net redemptions” test will be applied to our Class A, Class W and Class I shares on a class-specific basis rather than on the aggregate basis described above. If our board of directors chooses to have the quarterly cap and the “net redemptions” test apply on a class-specific basis, then “net redemptions” of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes will mean, for any class and any quarter, the excess of our share redemptions (capital outflows) of such class over the share purchases net of sales commissions (capital inflows) of such class in this offering (which includes purchases through our distribution reinvestment plan). Further, the quarterly cap will mean a quarterly cap on the “net redemptions” of each of our Class A, Class W and Class I share classes equal to the amount of shares of such class with an aggregate value (based on the redemption price per share on the day the redemption is effected) of up to 5% of the NAV of the outstanding shares of such class as of the last day of the previous calendar quarter. In order for the board of directors to change the application of the quarterly cap and the “net redemptions” test from being applied to our Class A, Class W and Class I shares on an aggregate basis among Class A, Class W and Class I shares, taken together, to a class-specific basis, or vice versa, we will notify stockholders through a prospectus supplement and/or a special or periodic report filed with the Commission, as well as in a press release or on our website, at least 10 days before the first business day of the quarter for which the new test will apply.

 

On the first business day during any quarter in which we have reached that quarter’s quarterly cap, we will promptly publicly disclose such fact through a filing with the Commission and a posting to our website in order to notify stockholders of such class that the quarterly cap has been reached and when redemptions will resume. Unless our board of directors determines to modify, suspend or terminate our share redemption program, our share redemption program with respect to such class of shares will automatically and without stockholder notification resume normal operation on the first day of the calendar quarter following the quarter in which the quarterly cap was reached. After the quarterly cap has been reached in a quarter, any unsatisfied portion of a redemption request must be resubmitted at the start of the next quarter or upon recommencement of the share redemption program, as applicable.

 

Even when redemption requests do not exceed the quarterly cap, we may not have a sufficient amount of liquid assets to satisfy redemption requests because our assets will consist primarily of properties and types of real estate-related assets that cannot be readily liquidated on short notice.

 

Our board of directors may modify, suspend or terminate our share redemption program if it deems such action to be in the best interest of our stockholders. Events that may cause our board of directors to decide to modify, suspend or terminate the share redemption program include, but are not limited to, unavailability of sufficient liquidity to fund redemption requests, adverse developments in financial markets, regulatory changes, changes in law or if our board of directors becomes aware of undisclosed material information that it believes should be publicly disclosed before shares are redeemed. Accordingly, stockholders cannot be assured that all of the shares in their redemption requests will be redeemed. Any suspension or termination of, or material modification to, the share redemption program will be disclosed to stockholders. If the share redemption program is suspended by our board of directors other than as a result of reaching the quarterly cap, our board of directors must affirmatively authorize the recommencement of the program before stockholder requests will be considered again. The start of a new calendar quarter will not automatically trigger the recommencement of the share redemption program. We will provide notice to stockholders of any recommencement of the share redemption program following such a suspension due to action of our board of directors. Any modification, suspension or termination of the share redemption program will not affect any determinations that may be made by the board of directors regarding requests by holders of Class E shares for redemption of their Class E shares pursuant to the Class E share redemption program or holders of OP Units for redemption of their OP Units pursuant to the Operating Partnership Agreement.

 

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If the full amount of shares of any class of our common stock requested to be redeemed as of any given date cannot be redeemed due to the quarterly cap or lack of readily available funds, available funds will be allocated pro rata taking into consideration the total number of shares requested to be redeemed and the NAV of our classes of common stock on that date, subject to the quarterly cap. With respect to any pro rata treatment, redemption requests following the death or qualifying disability of a stockholder will be considered first, as a group, with any remaining available funds allocated pro rata among all other redemption requests. Such determinations regarding our share redemption program will not affect any determinations that may be made by the board of directors regarding requests by holders of Class E shares for redemption of their Class E shares pursuant to the Class E share redemption program or holders of OP Units for redemption of their OP Units pursuant to the Operating Partnership Agreement.

 

All unsatisfied redemption requests (including the unsatisfied portion of any request not satisfied in full) due to any of the limitations described above must be resubmitted at the start of the next quarter or upon recommencement of the share redemption program, as applicable. At the start of the next quarter, or when normal operation of the program otherwise recommences, available funds will be allocated pro rata based on the total number of shares subject to pending redemption requests, subject to the quarterly cap (with priority given to redemption requests following the death or qualifying disability of a stockholder, as described above).

 

To avoid certain issues related to our ability to comply with the REIT distribution requirements and utilize the deficiency dividend procedure (see “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Requirements for Qualification as a REIT—Operational Requirements—Annual Distribution Requirement”), we have implemented procedures designed to track our stockholders’ percentage interests in our common stock in order to identify any dividend equivalent redemptions and will decline to effect a redemption to the extent that we believe that it would constitute a dividend equivalent redemption. See “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Taxation of Taxable U.S. Stockholders—Redemptions of Our Common Stock.”

 

Short-Term Trading Discounts

 

There is no minimum holding period for shares of our common stock and stockholders can request that we redeem their shares at any time. However, subject to limited exceptions, shares redeemed within 365 days of the date of purchase will be redeemed at NAV per share for the class of shares being redeemed less a short-term trading discount equal to 2% of the gross proceeds otherwise payable with respect to the redemption. This short-term trading discount will also generally apply to minimum account redemptions that occur during the 365 day period following the purchase of the shares. The short-term trading discount will inure indirectly to the benefit of our remaining stockholders and is intended to offset the trading costs, market impact and other costs associated with short-term trading in our common stock. We may, from time to time, waive the short-term trading discount in the following circumstances:

 

· redemptions resulting from death or qualifying disability;

 

· in the event that a stockholder’s shares are redeemed because the stockholder has failed to maintain the $2,000 minimum account balance; or

 

· with respect to shares purchased through our distribution reinvestment plan.

 

In addition, the short-term trading discount may not apply to transactions initiated by the trustee or adviser to a donor-advised charitable gift fund, collective trust fund, common trust fund, fund of fund(s) or other institutional accounts, strategy funds or programs if we determine, in our sole discretion, such account, fund or program has an investment strategy or policy that is reasonably likely to control short-term trading. Further, shares of our common stock may be sold to certain employer sponsored plans, bank or trust company accounts and accounts of certain financial institutions or intermediaries for which we may not apply the redemption discount to underlying stockholders, often because of administrative or systems limitations.

 

Other

 

When you make a request to have shares redeemed, you should note the following:

 

· any short-term trading discount will be applied on a first in-first out basis unless otherwise specified by the stockholder or the stockholder’s representative; for this purpose, shares held for the longest period of time will be treated as being redeemed first and shares held for the shortest period of time as being redeemed last;

 

· if you are requesting that some but not all of your shares be redeemed, keep your balance above $2,000 to avoid minimum account redemption, if applicable;

 

· you will not receive interest on amounts represented by uncashed redemption checks; and

 

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· under applicable anti-money laundering regulations and other federal regulations, redemption requests may be suspended, restricted or canceled and the proceeds may be withheld.

 

Internal Revenue Service regulations require us to determine and disclose on Form 1099-B the adjusted cost basis for shares of our stock sold or redeemed. Although there are several available methods for determining the adjusted cost basis, unless you elect otherwise, which you may do by calling our customer service number at (888) 310-9352, we will utilize the first-in-first-out method. The tax treatment of stockholders whose shares of our common stock are redeemed by us under the share redemption program will depend on the specific circumstances of the stockholder, and each stockholder should consult his or her own tax adviser regarding the tax consequences of redemptions.

 

As previously described, our share redemption program, including redemption upon the death or qualifying disability of a stockholder, is not intended to provide liquidity to any stockholder (and any subsequent transferee of such stockholder) who acquired, directly or indirectly, his or her shares by purchase or other taxable transaction from another stockholder, unless shares acquired in such transactions are approved for redemption by our management in its sole discretion. In connection with a request for redemption, the requesting stockholder or his or her estate, heir or beneficiary will be required to certify to us that the stockholder either (1) acquired the shares to be repurchased directly from us and no direct or indirect transfer of the shares has occurred since the stockholder acquired the shares from us, or (2) acquired the shares from the original stockholder, directly or indirectly, by way of one or more transactions that were not for cash (or other consideration) in connection with a non-taxable transaction, including transactions for the benefit of a member of the original stockholder’s immediate or extended family (including the original stockholder’s spouse, parents, siblings, children or grandchildren and including relatives by marriage) through a transfer to a custodian, trustee or other fiduciary for the account of the original stockholder or members of the original stockholder’s immediate or extended family in connection with an estate planning transaction, including by bequest or inheritance upon death or operation of law.

 

Moreover, all shares of our common stock requested to be repurchased must be beneficially owned by the stockholder of record making the request or his or her estate, heir or beneficiary, or the party requesting the repurchase must be authorized to do so by the stockholder of record of the shares or his or her estate, heir or beneficiary, and such shares of common stock must be fully transferable and not subject to any liens or encumbrances. In certain cases, we may ask the requesting party to provide evidence satisfactory to us that the shares requested for repurchase are not subject to any liens or encumbrances. If we determine that a lien exists against the shares, we will not be obligated to redeem any shares subject to the lien.

 

As set forth above, we will redeem shares upon the death of a stockholder who is a natural person, subject to the conditions and limitations described above, including shares held by such stockholder through a revocable grantor trust or an IRA or other retirement or profit-sharing plan, after receiving written notice from the estate of the stockholder, the recipient of the shares through bequest or inheritance, or, in the case of a revocable grantor trust, the trustee of such trust, who shall have the sole ability to request redemption on behalf of the trust. We must receive the written redemption request within 18 months after the death of the stockholder in order for the requesting party to rely on any of the special treatment described above that may be afforded in the event of the death of a stockholder. Such a written request must be accompanied by a certified copy of the official death certificate of the stockholder. If spouses are joint registered holders of shares, the request to redeem the shares may be made if either of the registered holders dies. If the stockholder is not a natural person, such as certain trusts or a partnership, corporation or other similar entity, the right of redemption upon death does not apply.

 

Furthermore, as set forth above, we will redeem shares held by a stockholder who is a natural person who is deemed to have a qualifying disability (which we define as such term is defined in Section 72(m)(7) of the Code), subject to the conditions and limitations described above, including shares held by such stockholder through a revocable grantor trust, or an IRA or other retirement or profit-sharing plan, after receiving written notice from such stockholder, provided that the condition causing the qualifying disability was not pre-existing on the date that the stockholder became a stockholder. We must receive the written redemption request within 18 months of the initial determination of the stockholder’s disability in order for the stockholder to rely on any of the waivers described above that may be granted in the event of the disability of a stockholder. If spouses are joint registered holders of shares, the request to redeem the shares may be made if either of the registered holders acquires a qualifying disability. If the stockholder is not a natural person, such as certain trusts or a partnership, corporation or other similar entity, the right of redemption upon disability does not apply.

 

Class E Share Redemption Program and Tender Offers

 

We also have a separate Class E share redemption program for holders of our Class E shares under which, pursuant to an amendment effective on December 12, 2015, redemptions are only available with respect to Class E shares of common stock in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder and subject to the following limitation: unless approved by the board of directors, we will not make, during any consecutive twelve-month period, redemptions in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder that exceed five percent of the number of Class E shares of common stock outstanding at the beginning of such twelve-month period. Prior to this time, redemptions were not limited to requests made in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder. With respect to Class E stockholders desiring liquidity other than in connection with an event of death or disability, our board of directors evaluates each quarter whether to make liquidity available through the Class E share redemption program or through a tender offer process. In order to make such liquidity available through the Class E share redemption program, our board of directors would need to amend the Class E share redemption program. Under the Class E share redemption program, we redeem Class E shares on a quarterly basis. If a redemption request with respect to Class E shares is made and accepted, the redemption price per share will be equal to the NAV per Class E share on the date of redemption.

 

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Liquidity Events

 

The purchase of Class A, Class W and Class I shares is intended to be a long-term investment and we do not anticipate that a secondary trading market will develop. Therefore, it will be very difficult for you to sell your shares promptly or at all, and any such sales may be made at a loss. On a limited basis, you may be able to have your shares redeemed through our share redemption program. In addition, we do not intend to pursue a “Liquidity Event” with respect to our Class A, Class W and Class I shares within any period of time. A “Liquidity Event” includes, but is not limited to, (a) a listing of our common stock on a national securities exchange (or the receipt by our stockholders of securities that are listed on a national securities exchange in exchange for our common stock); (b) our sale, merger or other transaction in which our stockholders either receive, or have the option to receive, cash, securities redeemable for cash, and/or securities of a publicly traded company; or (c) the sale of all or substantially all of our assets where our stockholders either receive, or have the option to receive, cash or other consideration. Although we will not be precluded from pursuing a Liquidity Event (or series thereof) if our board of directors determines that is in the best interest of our stockholders, we intend to operate as a perpetual-life REIT.

 

With respect to our Class E stockholders, our long-term goal is to raise sufficient proceeds in this offering so as to be able to accommodate those holders of Class E shares who would like us to purchase or redeem their shares. Although no assurances can be made, our board of directors currently intends to make liquidity available to Class E stockholders each quarter in the Class E Liquidity Amount, regardless of whether such liquidity will be made available through the Class E share redemption program or a tender offer, and excluding liquidity made available in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder through the Class E share redemption program. Our board of directors may at any time decide to reduce or eliminate the Class E Liquidity Amount or cease making Class E liquidity available through self-tender offers. Our current Class E share redemption program is only available in the event of the death or disability of a stockholder and requests for redemption under the Class E share redemption program may only be made during a limited window each quarter. The board of directors will evaluate each quarter whether to make liquidity available to Class E stockholders through the Class E share redemption program or through a tender offer process. However, if we are not successful over time in generating liquidity to holders of our Class E shares through our self-tender offers and the Class E share redemption program, we may explore additional liquidity strategies for our Class E stockholders. There can be no assurances that we will seek or be successful in achieving liquidity strategies for our Class E stockholders within any certain time frame or at all. In any event, our board of directors will seek to act in the best interest of the Company as a whole, taking into consideration all classes of stockholders.

 

Subsequent Offerings

 

Apart from this offering, our ongoing distribution reinvestment plan offering of Class E shares and our DST Program, we may in the future conduct offerings of common stock (whether existing or new classes), preferred stock, debt securities or interests in our Operating Partnership or other subsidiaries. We may structure such offerings to attract institutional investors or other sources of capital in connection with efforts to provide additional Class E liquidity or otherwise.

 

Business Combinations

 

Under the Maryland General Corporation Law, business combinations between a Maryland corporation and an interested stockholder or the interested stockholder’s affiliate are prohibited for five years after the most recent date on which the stockholder becomes an interested stockholder. For this purpose, the term “business combinations” includes mergers, consolidations, share exchanges, asset transfers and issuances or reclassifications of equity securities. An “interested stockholder” is defined for this purpose as: (1) any person who beneficially owns 10 percent or more of the voting power of the corporation’s shares or (2) an affiliate or associate of the corporation who, at any time within the two-year period prior to the date in question, was the beneficial owner of 10 percent or more of the voting power of the then outstanding voting shares of the corporation. A person is not an interested stockholder under the Maryland General Corporation Law if the board of directors approved in advance the transaction by which he otherwise would become an interested stockholder. However, in approving the transaction, the board of directors may provide that its approval is subject to compliance, at or after the time of approval, with any terms and conditions determined by the board.

 

After the five-year prohibition, any business combination between the corporation and an interested stockholder generally must be recommended by the board of directors of the corporation and approved by the affirmative vote of at least: (1) 80% of the votes entitled to be cast by holders of outstanding shares of voting stock of the corporation and (2) two-thirds of the votes entitled to be cast by holders of voting stock of the corporation other than shares of stock held by the interested stockholder or its affiliate with whom the business combination is to be effected, or held by an affiliate or associate of the interested stockholder, voting together as a single voting group.

 

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These super majority vote requirements do not apply if the corporation’s common stockholders receive a minimum price, as defined under the Maryland General Corporation Law, for their shares of common stock in the form of cash or other consideration in the same form as previously paid by the interested stockholder for its shares of common stock.

 

None of these provisions of the Maryland General Corporation Law will apply, however, to business combinations that are approved or exempted by the board of directors of the corporation prior to the time that the interested stockholder becomes an interested stockholder. Pursuant to the business combination statute, our board of directors has exempted any business combination involving us and any person. Consequently, the five-year prohibition and the super majority vote requirements will not apply to business combinations between us and any person. As a result, any person may be able to enter into business combinations with us that may not be in the best interest of our stockholders, without compliance with the super majority vote requirements and other provisions of the statute.

 

Should our board of directors opt in to the business combination statute, it may discourage others from trying to acquire control of us and increase the difficulty of consummating any offer.

 

Business Combination with the Advisor

 

Many REITs that are listed on a national securities exchange or included for quotation on an over-the-counter market are considered self-administered, which means that they employ persons or agents to perform all significant management functions. The costs to perform these management functions are “internalized,” rather than external, and no third-party fees, such as advisory fees, are paid by the REIT. We may consider becoming a self-administered REIT if we determine that internalizing some or all of the management functions performed by the Advisor is in our best interests and in the best interests of our stockholders.

 

Control Share Acquisitions

 

The Maryland General Corporation Law provides that Control Shares of a Maryland corporation acquired in a Control Share acquisition have no voting rights except to the extent approved by a vote of two-thirds of the votes entitled to be cast on the matter. Shares of common stock owned by the acquirer, by officers or by employees who are directors of the corporation are not entitled to vote on the matter. “Control Shares” are voting shares of stock which, if aggregated with all other shares of stock owned by the acquirer or with respect to which the acquirer has the right to vote or to direct the voting of, other than solely by virtue of revocable proxy, would entitle the acquirer to exercise voting power in electing directors within one of the following ranges of voting powers:

 

· one-tenth or more but less than one-third;

 

· one-third or more but less than a majority; or

 

· a majority or more of all voting power.

 

Control Shares do not include shares of stock the acquiring person is then entitled to vote as a result of having previously obtained stockholder approval. Except as otherwise specified in the statute, a “Control Share acquisition” means the acquisition of Control Shares. Once a person who has made or proposes to make a Control Share acquisition has undertaken to pay expenses and has satisfied other required conditions, the person may compel the board of directors to call a special meeting of stockholders to be held within 50 days of demand to consider the voting rights of the shares of stock. If no request for a meeting is made, the corporation may itself present the question at any stockholders meeting. If voting rights are not approved for the Control Shares at the meeting or if the acquiring person does not deliver an “Acquiring Person Statement” for the Control Shares as required by the statute, the corporation may redeem any or all of the Control Shares for their fair value, except for Control Shares for which voting rights have previously been approved. Fair value is to be determined for this purpose without regard to the absence of voting rights for the Control Shares, and is to be determined as of the date of the last Control Share acquisition or of any meeting of stockholders at which the voting rights for Control Shares are considered and not approved.

 

If voting rights for Control Shares are approved at a stockholders’ meeting and the acquirer becomes entitled to vote a majority of the shares of stock entitled to vote, all other stockholders may exercise appraisal rights. The fair value of the shares of stock as determined for purposes of these appraisal rights may not be less than the highest price per share paid in the Control Share acquisition. Some of the limitations and restrictions otherwise applicable to the exercise of dissenters’ rights do not apply in the context of a Control Share acquisition.

 

The Control Share acquisition statute does not apply to shares of stock acquired in a merger, consolidation or share exchange if the corporation is a party to the transaction or to acquisitions approved or exempted by the charter or bylaws of the corporation. As permitted by the Maryland General Corporation Law, we have provided in our bylaws that the Control Share provisions of the Maryland General Corporation Law will not apply to any acquisition by any person of shares of our stock, but the board of directors retains the discretion to change this provision in the future.

 

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Subtitle 8

 

Subtitle 8 of Title 3 of the Maryland General Corporation Law, which we refer to as “Subtitle 8,” permits a Maryland corporation with a class of equity securities registered under the Exchange Act and at least three independent directors to elect to be subject, by a provision in its charter or bylaws or a resolution of its board of directors and notwithstanding any contrary provision in our charter, to any or all of the following five provisions:

 

· a classified board;

 

· a two-thirds vote requirement for removing a director;

 

· a requirement that the number of directors be fixed only by vote of the directors;

 

· a requirement that a vacancy on the board be filled only by the remaining directors and for the remainder of the full term of the class of directors in which the vacancy occurred; and

 

· a majority requirement for the calling of a special meeting of stockholders.

 

Pursuant to Subtitle 8, we have elected to provide that vacancies on our board of directors be filled only by the remaining directors and for the remainder of the full term of the directorship in which the vacancy occurred. Through provisions in our charter and bylaws unrelated to Subtitle 8, we vest in the board of directors the exclusive power to fix the number of directorships. We have not elected to be subject to the other provisions of Subtitle 8.

 

Restrictions on Roll-Up Transactions

 

In connection with a proposed “roll-up transaction,” which, in general terms, is any transaction involving the acquisition, merger, conversion or consolidation, directly or indirectly, of our company and the issuance of securities of an entity that would be created or would survive after the successful completion of the roll-up transaction, we will obtain an appraisal of all of our assets from an independent expert. In order to qualify as an independent expert for this purpose, the person or entity must have no material current or prior business or personal relationship with our Advisor or directors and must be engaged to a substantial extent in the business of rendering opinions regarding the value of real property and/or other assets of the type held by us. If the appraisal will be included in a prospectus used to offer the securities of the entity that would be created or would survive after the successful completion of the roll-up transaction, the appraisal will be filed with the Commission and the states in which the securities are being registered as an exhibit to the registration statement for the offering. Our assets will be appraised on a consistent basis, and the appraisal will be based on the evaluation of all relevant information and will indicate the value of our assets as of a date immediately prior to the announcement of the proposed roll-up transaction. The appraisal will assume an orderly liquidation of assets over a 12-month period. The terms of the engagement of such independent expert will clearly state that the engagement is for our benefit and the benefit of our stockholders. We will include a summary of the independent appraisal, indicating all material assumptions underlying the appraisal, in a report to the stockholders in connection with a proposed roll-up transaction.

 

In connection with a proposed roll-up transaction, the person sponsoring the roll-up transaction must offer to common stockholders who vote against the proposal a choice of:

 

· accepting the securities of the entity that would be created or would survive after the successful completion of the roll-up transaction offered in the proposed roll-up transaction; or

 

· one of the following:

 

· remaining stockholders and preserving their interests in us on the same terms and conditions as existed previously; or

 

· receiving cash in an amount equal to their pro rata share of the appraised value of our net assets.

 

We are prohibited from participating in any proposed roll-up transaction:

 

· that would result in common stockholders having voting rights in the entity that would be created or would survive after the successful completion of the roll-up transaction that are less than those provided in our charter, including rights with respect to the election and removal of directors, annual and special meetings, amendment of the charter and our dissolution;

 

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· that includes provisions that would operate as a material impediment to, or frustration of, the accumulation of shares by any purchaser of the securities of the entity that would be created or would survive after the successful completion of the roll-up transaction, except to the minimum extent necessary to preserve the tax status of such entity, or which would limit the ability of an investor to exercise the voting rights of its securities of the entity that would be created or would survive after the successful completion of the roll-up transaction on the basis of the number of shares held by that investor;

 

· in which our common stockholders’ rights to access records of the entity that would be created or would survive after the successful completion of the roll-up transaction will be less than those provided in our charter and described in “—Meetings, Special Voting Requirements and Access To Records” above; or

 

· in which we would bear any of the costs of the roll-up transaction if our common stockholders reject the roll-up transaction.

 

Forum for Certain Litigation

 

Our bylaws provide that the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, Maryland, shall be the sole and exclusive forum for (i) any derivative action or proceeding brought on our behalf, (ii) any action asserting a claim of breach of any duty owed by any director or officer or employee of the Company to us or to our stockholders, (iii) any action asserting a claim arising pursuant to any provision of the Maryland General Corporation Law or our charter or bylaws, or (iv) any action asserting a claim that is governed by the internal affairs doctrine, and any record or beneficial stockholder of the Company who commences such an action shall cooperate in a request that the action be assigned to the court’s Business and Technology Case Management Program.

 

Reports to Stockholders

 

Our charter requires that we prepare an annual report and deliver it to our stockholders within 120 days after the end of each fiscal year. Among the matters that must be included in the annual report are:

 

· financial statements which are prepared in accordance with GAAP and are audited by our independent registered public accounting firm;

 

· the ratio of the costs of raising capital during the year to the capital raised;

 

· the aggregate amount of advisory fees and the aggregate amount of other fees paid to the Advisor and any affiliate of the Advisor by us or third parties doing business with us during the year;

 

· our total operating expenses for the year, stated as a percentage of our average invested assets and as a percentage of our net income;

 

· a report from the independent directors that our policies are in the best interests of our stockholders and the basis for such determination; and

 

· separately stated, full disclosure of all material terms, factors and circumstances surrounding any and all transactions involving us and the Advisor, our Sponsor, a director or any affiliate thereof during the year; and the independent directors are specifically charged with a duty to examine and comment in the report on the fairness of the transactions.

 

Restrictions on Transfer

 

Subsequent purchasers, i.e., potential purchasers of your shares, must meet the net worth or income standards of our charter, and unless you are transferring all of your shares, you may not transfer your shares in a manner that causes you or your transferee to own less than $2,000 in our shares. Apart from the foregoing potential transfer restrictions and the potential restrictions described above in “—Restriction On Ownership of Shares of Capital Stock,” the shares purchased in this offering are freely transferable.

 

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FEDERAL INCOME TAX CONSIDERATIONS

 

General

 

The following is a summary of United States material federal income tax considerations associated with an investment in our common stock that may be relevant to you. The statements made in this section of the prospectus are based upon current provisions of the Code and Treasury Regulations promulgated thereunder, as currently applicable, currently published administrative positions of the Internal Revenue Service and judicial decisions, all of which are subject to change, either prospectively or retroactively. We cannot assure you that any changes will not modify the conclusions expressed in counsel’s opinions described herein. This summary does not address all possible tax considerations that may be material to an investor and does not constitute legal or tax advice. Moreover, this summary does not deal with all tax aspects that might be relevant to you, as a prospective stockholder, in light of your personal circumstances, nor does it deal with particular types of stockholders that are subject to special treatment under the federal income tax laws, such as insurance companies, holders whose shares are acquired through the exercise of share options or otherwise as compensation, holders whose shares are acquired through the distribution reinvestment plan or who intend to sell their shares under the share redemption program, tax-exempt organizations except as provided below, financial institutions or broker-dealers, or foreign corporations or persons who are not citizens or residents of the United States except as provided below. The Code provisions governing the federal income tax treatment of REITs and their stockholders are highly technical and complex, and this summary is qualified in its entirety by the express language of applicable Code provisions, Treasury Regulations promulgated thereunder and administrative and judicial interpretations thereof.

 

DLA Piper LLP (US) has acted as our special U.S. federal income tax counsel, has reviewed this summary and is of the opinion that it fairly summarizes the United States federal income tax considerations that are likely to be material to U.S. stockholders (as defined herein) of our common stock. This opinion of DLA Piper LLP (US) has been filed as an exhibit to the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part. The opinion of DLA Piper LLP (US) is based on various assumptions, is subject to limitations and will not be binding on the Internal Revenue Service or any court.

 

We urge you, as a prospective stockholder, to consult your tax advisor regarding the specific tax consequences to you of a purchase of shares of common stock, ownership and sale of the shares of common stock and of our election to be taxed as a REIT, including the federal, state, local, foreign and other tax consequence of such purchase, ownership, sale and election and of potential changes in applicable tax laws.

 

REIT Qualification

 

We are organized and operate in a manner intended to qualify as a REIT for U.S. federal income tax purposes. We first elected REIT status for our taxable year ended December 31, 2006. This section of the prospectus discusses the laws governing the tax treatment of a REIT and its stockholders. These laws are highly technical and complex.

 

In connection with this offering, DLA Piper LLP (US) has delivered an opinion to us that, commencing with our taxable year ended on December 31, 2006, we were organized in conformity with the requirements for qualification as a REIT under the Code, and our proposed method of operation will enable us to meet the requirements for qualification and taxation as a REIT.

 

It must be emphasized that the opinion of DLA Piper LLP (US) is based on various assumptions relating to our organization and operation, and is conditioned upon representations and covenants made by us regarding our organization, assets and the past, present and future conduct of our business operations. While we intend to operate so that we will qualify as a REIT, given the highly complex nature of the rules governing REITs, the ongoing importance of factual determinations, and the possibility of future changes in our circumstances, no assurance can be given by DLA Piper LLP (US) or by us that we will so qualify for any particular year. DLA Piper LLP (US) has no obligation to advise us or the holders of our common stock of any subsequent change in the matters stated, represented or assumed in the opinion, or of any subsequent change in the applicable law. You should be aware that opinions of counsel are not binding on the Internal Revenue Service or any court, and no assurance can be given that the Internal Revenue Service will not challenge the conclusions set forth in such opinions. Other than as specifically described herein, we have not sought and will not seek an advance ruling from the IRS regarding any matter discussed in this prospectus.

 

Qualification and taxation as a REIT depends on our ability to meet on a continuing basis, through actual operating results, distribution levels, and diversity of share ownership, various qualification requirements imposed upon REITs by the Code, the compliance with which will not be reviewed by DLA Piper LLP (US). Our ability to qualify as a REIT also requires that we satisfy certain asset tests, some of which depend upon the fair market values of assets directly or indirectly owned by us. Such values may not be susceptible to a precise determination. While we intend to continue to operate in a manner that will allow us to qualify as a REIT, no assurance can be given that the actual results of our operations for any taxable year satisfy such requirements for qualification and taxation as a REIT.

 

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Taxation of Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.

 

If we qualify for taxation as a REIT, we generally will not be subject to federal corporate income taxes on that portion of our ordinary income or capital gain that we distribute currently to our stockholders, because the REIT provisions of the Code generally allow a REIT to deduct distributions paid to its stockholders. This substantially eliminates the federal “double taxation” on earnings (taxation at both the corporate level and stockholder level) that usually results from an investment in a corporation. For tax years beginning after December 31, 2012, most domestic stockholders that are individuals, trusts or estates are taxed on corporate dividends at a maximum rate of 20% (the same as long-term capital gains). With limited exceptions, however, dividends from us or from other entities that are taxed as REITs are generally not eligible for this rate and will continue to be taxed at rates applicable to ordinary income, which will be as high as 39.6%. See “—Taxation of Taxable U.S. Stockholders” below.

 

Any net operating losses, foreign tax credits and other tax attributes generally do not pass through to our stockholders, subject to special rules for certain items such as the capital gains that we recognize. See “—Taxation of Taxable U.S. Stockholders” below.

 

Even if we qualify for taxation as a REIT, however, we will be subject to federal income taxation as follows:

 

· We will be taxed at regular corporate rates on our undistributed REIT taxable income, including undistributed net capital gains.

 

· Under some circumstances, we may be subject to “alternative minimum tax”.

 

· If we have net income from prohibited transactions (which are, in general, sales or other dispositions of property, other than foreclosure property, held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of business), the income will be subject to a 100% tax. The Internal Revenue Service could recharacterize transactions under the Operating Partnership’s intended private placements such that the Operating Partnership could be treated as the bona fide owner, for tax purposes, of properties acquired and resold by the entity established to facilitate the transaction. Such recharacterization could result in the income realized on these transactions by the Operating Partnership being treated as gain on the sale of property that is held as inventory or otherwise held primarily for the sale to customers in the ordinary course of business. In such event, such gain would constitute income from a prohibited transaction and would be subject to a 100% tax.

 

· If we elect to treat property that we acquire in connection with a foreclosure of a mortgage loan or certain leasehold terminations as “foreclosure property,” we may avoid the 100% tax on gain from a resale of that property (if the sale would otherwise constitute a prohibited transaction), but the income from the sale or operation of the property may be subject to corporate income tax at the highest applicable rate (currently 35%).

 

· If we derive “excess inclusion income” from an interest in certain mortgage loan securitization structures (i.e., a “taxable mortgage pool” or a residual interest in a real estate mortgage investment conduit, or “REMIC”), we could be subject to corporate level federal income tax at a 35% rate to the extent that such income is allocable to specified types of tax-exempt stockholders known as “disqualified organizations” that are not subject to unrelated business income tax.

 

· If we should fail to satisfy the asset tests other than certain de minimis violations or other requirements applicable to REITs, as described below, yet nonetheless maintain our qualification as a REIT because there is reasonable cause for the failure and other applicable requirements are met, we may be subject to an excise tax. In that case, the amount of the tax will be at least $50,000 per failure, and, in the case of certain asset test failures, will be determined as the amount of net income generated by the assets in question multiplied by the highest corporate tax rate (currently 35%) if that amount exceeds $50,000 per failure.

 

· If we fail to satisfy either of the 75% or 95% gross income tests (discussed below) but have nonetheless maintained our qualification as a REIT because certain conditions have been met, we will be subject to a 100% tax on an amount based on the magnitude of the failure, as adjusted to reflect the profit margin associated with our gross income.

 

· If we fail to distribute during each year at least the sum of (i) 85% of our REIT ordinary income for the year, (ii) 95% of our REIT capital gain net income for such year and (iii) any undistributed taxable income from prior periods, we will be subject to a 4% excise tax on the excess of the required distribution over the sum of (A) the amounts actually distributed, plus (B) retained amounts on which corporate level tax is paid by us.

 

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· We may elect to retain and pay tax on our net long-term capital gain. In that case, a United States stockholder would be taxed on its proportionate share of our undistributed long-term capital gain and would receive a credit or refund for its proportionate share of the tax we paid.

 

· If we fail certain of the REIT asset tests and do not qualify for “de minimis” relief, we may be required to pay a corporate level tax on the income generated by the assets that caused us to violate the asset test. See “Requirements for Qualification as a REIT—Operational Requirements—Asset Tests.”

 

· If we acquire appreciated assets from a C corporation that is not a REIT (i.e., a corporation generally subject to corporate level tax) in a transaction in which the C corporation would not normally be required to recognize any gain or loss on disposition of the asset and we subsequently recognize gain on the disposition of the asset during the 5 year period beginning on the date on which we acquired the asset, then a portion of the gain may be subject to tax at the highest regular corporate rate, unless the C corporation made an election to treat the asset as if it were sold for its fair market value at the time of our acquisition.

 

· We may be required to pay monetary penalties to the IRS in certain circumstances, including if we fail to meet record keeping requirements intended to monitor our compliance with rules relating to the composition of a REIT’s stockholders, as described below in “—Operational Requirements—Recordkeeping” and “—Failure to Qualify as a REIT.”

 

· A 100% tax may be imposed on transactions between us and a TRS (as described below) that do not reflect arms-length terms.

 

· The earnings of our subsidiaries, including any Taxable REIT Subsidiary (“TRS”), are subject to federal corporate income tax to the extent that such subsidiaries are subchapter C corporations.

 

In addition, we and our subsidiaries may be subject to a variety of taxes, including payroll taxes and state, local, and foreign income, property and other taxes on our assets and operations. We could also be subject to tax in situations and on transactions not presently contemplated.

 

Requirements for Qualification as a REIT

 

In order for us to qualify as a REIT, we must meet and continue to meet the requirements discussed below relating to our organization, sources of income, nature of assets and distributions of income to our stockholders.

 

Organizational Requirements

 

In order to qualify for taxation as a REIT under the Code, we must meet tests regarding our income and assets described below and:

 

1. be a corporation, trust or association that would be taxable as a domestic corporation but for the REIT provisions of the Code and that makes an election to be a REIT for the current taxable year or has made such an election for a previous taxable year that has not been terminated or revoked;

 

2. be managed by one or more trustees or directors;

 

3. have our beneficial ownership evidenced by transferable shares;

 

4. not be a financial institution or an insurance company subject to special provisions of the federal income tax laws;

 

5. use a calendar year for federal income tax purposes;

 

6. have at least 100 stockholders for at least 335 days of each taxable year of 12 months or during a proportionate part of a taxable year of less than 12 months; and

 

7. not be closely held as defined for purposes of the REIT provisions of the Code.

 

We would be treated as closely held if, during the last half of any taxable year, more than 50% in value of our outstanding capital shares is owned, directly or indirectly through the application of certain attribution rules, by five or fewer individuals, as defined in the Code to include certain entities. Items 6 and 7 above do not apply until after the first taxable year for which we elect to be taxed as a REIT. If we comply with Treasury regulations that provide procedures for ascertaining the actual ownership of our common stock for each taxable year and we did not know, and with the exercise of reasonable diligence could not have known, that we failed to meet item 7 above for a taxable year, we will be treated as having met Item 7 for that year.

 

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We elected to be taxed as a REIT commencing with our taxable year ended December 31, 2006, and we intend to satisfy the other requirements described in Items 1-5 above at all times during each of our taxable years. In addition, our charter contains restrictions regarding ownership and transfer of shares of our common stock that are intended to assist us in continuing to satisfy the share ownership requirements in Items 6 and 7 above. See “Description of Capital Stock—Restriction on Ownership of Shares of Capital Stock.” For purposes of the requirements described herein, any corporation that is a qualified REIT subsidiary of ours will not be treated as a corporation separate from us and all assets, liabilities, and items of income, deduction and credit of our qualified REIT subsidiaries will be treated as our assets, liabilities and items of income, deduction and credit. A qualified REIT subsidiary is a corporation, other than a taxable REIT subsidiary (as described below under “—Operational Requirements—Asset Tests”), all of the capital shares of which is owned by a REIT.

 

In the case of a REIT that is a partner in an entity treated as a partnership for federal tax purposes, the REIT is treated as owning its proportionate share of the assets of the partnership and as earning its allocable share of the gross income of the partnership for purposes of the requirements described herein. In addition, the character of the assets and gross income of the partnership will retain the same character in the hands of the REIT for purposes of the REIT requirements, including the asset and income tests described below. As a result, our proportionate share of the assets, liabilities and items of income of the Operating Partnership and of any other partnership, joint venture, limited liability company or other entity treated as a partnership for federal tax purposes in which we or the Operating Partnership have an interest will be treated as our assets, liabilities and items of income.

 

The Code provides relief from violations of the REIT gross income requirements, as described below under “—Operational Requirements—Gross Income Tests,” in cases where a violation is due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect, and other requirements are met, including the payment of a penalty tax that is based upon the magnitude of the violation. In addition, the Code includes provisions that extend similar relief in the case of certain violations of the REIT asset requirements (see “—Operational Requirements—Asset Tests” below) and other REIT requirements, again provided that the violation is due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect, and other conditions are met, including the payment of a penalty tax. If we fail to satisfy any of the various REIT requirements, there can be no assurance that these relief provisions would be available to enable us to maintain our qualification as a REIT, and, if available, the amount of any resultant penalty tax could be substantial.

 

Operational Requirements—Gross Income Tests

 

To maintain our qualification as a REIT, we must satisfy annually two gross income requirements:

 

· At least 75% of our gross income, excluding gross income from prohibited transactions and certain hedging transactions, for each taxable year must be derived directly or indirectly from investments relating to real property or mortgages on real property and from other specified sources, including qualified temporary investment income, as described below. Gross income includes “rents from real property” and, in some circumstances, interest, but excludes gross income from dispositions of property held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business. These dispositions are referred to as “prohibited transactions.” This is the 75% Income Test.

 

· At least 95% of our gross income, excluding gross income from prohibited transactions and certain hedging transactions, for each taxable year must be derived from the real property investments described above and generally from dividends and interest and gains from the sale or disposition of shares of our common stock or securities or from any combination of the foregoing. This is the 95% Income Test.

 

· For purposes of the 75% and 95% gross income tests, certain foreign currency income is disregarded for purposes of determining gross income.

 

The rents we will receive or be deemed to receive will qualify as “rents from real property” for purposes of satisfying the gross income requirements for a REIT only if the following conditions are met:

 

· The amount of rent received from a customer must not be based in whole or in part on the income or profits of any person; however, an amount received or accrued generally will not be excluded from the term “rents from real property” solely by reason of being based on a fixed percentage or percentages of gross receipts or sales.

 

· In general, neither we nor an owner of 10% or more shares of our common stock may directly or constructively own 10% or more of a customer, which we refer to as a “Related Party Customer,” or a subtenant of the customer (in which case only rent attributable to the subtenant is disqualified).

 

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· Rent attributable to personal property leased in connection with a lease of real property cannot be greater than 15% of the total rent received under the lease, as determined based on the average of the fair market values as of the beginning and end of the taxable year.

 

· We normally must not operate or manage the property or furnish or render services to customers, other than through an “independent contractor” who is adequately compensated and from whom we do not derive any income or through a “taxable REIT subsidiary.” However, a REIT may provide services with respect to its properties, and the income derived therefrom will qualify as “rents from real property,” if the services are “usually or customarily rendered” in connection with the rental of space only and are not otherwise considered “rendered to the occupant.” Even if the services provided by us with respect to a property are impermissible customer services, the income derived therefrom will qualify as “rents from real property” if such income does not exceed one percent of all amounts received or accrued with respect to that property.

 

Unless we determine that the resulting nonqualifying income under any of the following situations, taken together with all other nonqualifying income earned by us in the taxable year, will not jeopardize our status as a REIT, we do not intend to:

 

· charge rent for any property that is based in whole or in part on the income or profits of any person, except by reason of being based on a fixed percentage or percentages of receipts or sales, as described above;

 

· rent any property to a related party lessee, including a taxable REIT subsidiary, unless the rent from the lease to the taxable REIT subsidiary would qualify for the special exception from the related party lessee rule applicable to certain leases with a taxable REIT subsidiary;

 

· derive rental income attributable to personal property other than personal property leased in connection with the lease of real property, the amount of which is less than 15% of the total rent received under the lease; or

 

· perform services considered to be noncustomary or rendered to the occupant of the property unless the amount we receive or accrue (directly or indirectly) for performing such services for any taxable year will not exceed 1% of all amounts we receive or accrue during such year with respect to the property.

 

We may, from time to time, enter into transactions to hedge against interest rate risks or value fluctuations on one or more of our assets or liabilities. Our hedging activities may include entering into interest rate swaps, caps, and floors, options to purchase these items, futures and forward contracts and other financial instruments. To the extent that we or a pass-through subsidiary enter into a hedging transaction (i) in the normal course of our business primarily to manage the risk of interest rate changes, price changes or currency fluctuations with respect to indebtedness incurred or to be incurred by us to acquire or carry real estate assets, (ii) primarily to manage risk of currency fluctuation with respect to items of income or gain qualifying under the 75% or 95% income tests, or (iii) manage risk with respect to certain prior transactions described in (i) and/or (ii) above, income and certain gain from the hedging transaction will be excluded from gross income solely for purposes of 75% and 95% income tests, provided, in each case, that we clearly and timely identify such hedging transaction in the manner required under the Code and the Treasury Regulations promulgated thereunder. A different set of rules applies to hedge transactions occurring on or before July 30, 2008. In all cases, we intend that any hedging transactions were or will be structured in a manner that does not jeopardize our status as a REIT. We may conduct some or all of our hedging activities (including hedging activities relating to currency risk) through a TRS or other corporate entity, the income from which may be subject to federal income tax, rather than by participating in the arrangements directly or through pass-through subsidiaries. No assurance can be given, however, that our hedging activities will not give rise to income that does not qualify for purposes of either or both of the REIT income tests, or that our hedging activities will not adversely affect our ability to satisfy the REIT qualification requirements.

 

Prior to the making of investments in real properties, we may invest the net offering proceeds in liquid assets such as government securities or certificates of deposit. For purposes of the 75% Income Test, income attributable to a stock or debt instrument purchased with the proceeds received by a REIT in exchange for stock in the REIT (other than amounts received pursuant to a distribution reinvestment plan) constitutes qualified temporary investment income if such income is received or accrued during the one-year period beginning on the date the REIT receives such new capital. To the extent that we hold any proceeds of the offering for longer than one year, we may invest those amounts in less liquid investments such as mortgage backed securities, maturing mortgage loans purchased from mortgage lenders, money market funds or shares of common stock in other REITs in order to satisfy the 75% Income and the 95% Income Tests and the Asset Tests described below. We expect the bulk of the remainder of our income to qualify under the 75% Income and 95% Income Tests as gains from the sale of real property interests, interest on mortgages on real property, and rents from real property in accordance with the requirements described above. With regard to rental income, we anticipate that most of our leases will be for fixed rentals with annual “consumer price index” or similar adjustments and that most of the rentals under our leases will not be based on the income or profits of any person. Rental leases may provide for payments based on gross receipts, which are generally permissible under the REIT income tests. In addition, none of our customers are expected to be Related Party Customers and the portion of the rent attributable to personal property is not expected to exceed 15% of the total rent to be received under any lease. We anticipate that all or most of the services to be performed with respect to our real properties will be performed by our property manager and such services are expected to be those usually or customarily rendered in connection with the rental of real property and not rendered to the occupant of such real property. Finally, we anticipate that any non-customary services will be provided by a taxable REIT subsidiary or, alternatively, by an independent contractor that is adequately compensated and from whom we derive no income. However, we can give no assurance that the actual sources of our gross income will allow us to satisfy the 75% Income and the 95% Income Tests described above.

 

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Further, we and our subsidiaries may hold investments in and pay taxes to foreign countries. Taxes that we pay in foreign jurisdictions may not be passed through to, or used by our stockholders as a foreign tax credit or otherwise. Our foreign investments might also generate foreign currency gains and losses. After July 30, 2008, for purposes of either one or both of the 75% and 95% gross income tests, two categories of foreign currency gain may be excluded from gross income: “real estate foreign exchange gain” and “passive foreign exchange gain.” Real estate foreign exchange gain is not treated as gross income for purposes of both the 75% and 95% gross income tests. Real estate foreign exchange gain includes gain derived from certain qualified business units of the REIT and foreign currency gain attributable to (i) qualifying income under the 75% gross income test, (ii) the acquisition or ownership of obligations secured by mortgages on real property or interests in real property, or (iii) being an obligor on an obligation secured by mortgages on real property or on interests in real property. In addition, passive foreign exchange gain is not treated as gross income for purposes of the 95% gross income test only. Passive foreign exchange gain includes real estate foreign exchange gain and foreign currency gain attributable to (i) qualifying income under the 95% gross income test, (ii) the acquisition or ownership of obligations, or (iii) being the obligor on obligations and that, in the case of (ii) and (iii), does not fall within the scope of the real estate foreign exchange definition. A different set of rules applies to foreign currency transactions occurring on or before July 30, 2008. In all cases, we intend that any foreign currency transactions were or will be structured in a manner that does not jeopardize our status as a REIT. No assurance can be given that any foreign currency gains that we recognize directly or through pass-through subsidiaries will not adversely affect our ability to satisfy the REIT qualification requirements.

 

Notwithstanding our failure to satisfy one or both of the 75% Income and the 95% Income Tests for any taxable year, we may still qualify as a REIT for that year if we are eligible for relief under specific provisions of the Code. These relief provisions generally will be available if:

 

· our failure to meet these tests was due to reasonable cause and not due to willful neglect;

 

· we attach a schedule of our income sources to our federal income tax return; and

 

· any incorrect information on the schedule is not due to fraud with intent to evade tax.

 

It is not possible, however, to state whether, in all circumstances, we would be entitled to the benefit of these relief provisions. In addition, as discussed above in “—REIT Qualification—Taxation of Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.,” even if these relief provisions apply, a tax would be imposed with respect to the excess net income.

 

Operational Requirements—Asset Tests

 

At the close of each quarter of our taxable year, starting with the taxable year ending December 31, 2006, we also must satisfy four tests, which we refer to as “Asset Tests,” relating to the nature and diversification of our assets.

 

· First, at least 75% of the value of our total assets must be represented by real estate assets, cash, cash items and government securities. The term “real estate assets” includes real property, mortgages on real property or in interests in real property, debt instruments issued by publicly offered REITs (subject to certain limits), shares of common stock in other qualified REITs, property attributable to the temporary investment of new capital as described above and a proportionate share of any real estate assets owned by a partnership in which we are a partner or of any qualified REIT subsidiary of ours.

 

· Second, no more than 25% of our total assets may be represented by securities other than those in the 75% asset class.

 

· Third, of the investments included in the 25% asset class, the value of any one issuer’s securities that we own may not exceed 5% of the value of our total assets. Additionally, we may not own more than 10% of the voting power or value of any one issuer’s outstanding securities, which we refer to as the “10% Asset Test.” The 10% Asset Test does not apply to securities of a taxable REIT subsidiary, nor does it apply to certain “straight debt” instruments possessing certain characteristics. The term “securities” also does not include the equity or debt securities of a qualified REIT subsidiary of ours or an equity interest in any entity treated as a partnership for federal tax purposes.

 

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· Fourth, no more than 25% (20% prior to July 30, 2008 and for taxable years after 2017) of the value of our total assets may consist of the securities of one or more taxable REIT subsidiaries. Subject to certain exceptions, a taxable REIT subsidiary is any corporation, other than a REIT, in which we directly or indirectly own stock and with respect to which a joint election has been made by us and the corporation to treat the corporation as a taxable REIT subsidiary of ours and also includes any corporation, other than a REIT, in which a taxable REIT subsidiary of ours owns, directly or indirectly, more than 35 percent of the voting power or value.

 

Any interests that we hold in a REMIC will generally qualify as real estate assets and income derived from REMIC interests will generally be treated as qualifying income for purposes of the REIT income tests described above. If less than 95% of the assets of a REMIC are real estate assets, however, then only a proportionate part of our interest in the REMIC and income derived from the interest will qualify for purposes of the REIT asset and income tests. If we hold a “residual interest” in a REMIC from which we derive “excess inclusion income,” we will be required either to distribute the excess inclusion income or to pay tax on it (or a combination of the two), even though we may not receive the income in cash. To the extent that distributed excess inclusion income is allocable to a particular stockholder, the income (1) would not be allowed to be offset by any net operating losses otherwise available to the stockholder, (2) would be subject to tax as unrelated business taxable income in the hands of most types of stockholders that are otherwise generally exempt from federal income tax, and (3) would result in the application of U.S. federal income tax withholding at the maximum rate (30%), without reduction pursuant to any otherwise applicable income tax treaty, to the extent allocable to most types of foreign stockholders. Moreover, any excess inclusion income that we receive that is allocable to specified categories of tax-exempt investors which are not subject to unrelated business income tax, such as government entities, may be subject to corporate-level income tax in our hands, whether or not it is distributed.

 

To the extent that we hold mortgage participations or CMBS that do not represent REMIC interests, such assets may not qualify as real estate assets, and the income generated from them may not qualify for purposes of either or both of the REIT income tests, depending upon the circumstances and the specific structure of the investment.

 

We may enter into sale and repurchase agreements under which we would nominally sell certain of our loan assets to a counterparty and simultaneously enter into an agreement to repurchase the sold assets. We believe that we would be treated for U.S. federal income tax purposes as the owner of the loan assets that are the subject of any such agreement notwithstanding that such agreements may transfer record ownership of the assets to the counterparty during the term of the agreement. It is possible, however, that the IRS could assert that we did not own the loan assets during the term of the sale and repurchase agreement, in which case we could fail to qualify as a REIT.

 

Certain of our mezzanine loans may qualify for the safe harbor in Revenue Procedure 2003-65 pursuant to which certain loans secured by a first priority security interest in ownership interests in a partnership or limited liability company will be treated as qualifying assets for purposes of the 75% real estate asset test and the 10% vote or value test. See “—Operational Requirements—Gross Income Tests.” We may make some mezzanine loans that do not qualify for that safe harbor and that do not qualify as “straight debt” securities or for one of the other exclusions from the definition of “securities” for purposes of the 10% value test. We intend to make such investments in such a manner as not to fail the asset tests described above.

 

No independent appraisals have been obtained to support our conclusions as to the value of our total assets or the value of any particular security or securities. Moreover, values of some assets, including instruments issued in securitization transactions, may not be susceptible to a precise determination, and values are subject to change in the future. Furthermore, the proper classification of an instrument as debt or equity for federal income tax purposes may be uncertain in some circumstances, which could affect the application of the REIT asset requirements. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that the IRS will not contend that our interests in our subsidiaries or in the securities of other issuers will not cause a violation of the REIT asset tests.

 

The Asset Tests must generally be met for any quarter in which we acquire securities or other property. Upon full investment of the net offering proceeds we expect that most of our assets will consist of “real estate assets” and we therefore expect to satisfy the Asset Tests.

 

If we meet the Asset Tests at the close of any quarter, we will not lose our REIT status for a failure to satisfy the Asset Tests at the end of a later quarter in which we have not acquired any securities or other property if such failure occurs solely because of changes in asset values. For tax years beginning after July 30, 2008, if we meet the Asset Tests at the close of any quarter, we will not lose our REIT status for a failure to satisfy the Assets Tests at the end of a later quarter in which we have not acquired any securities or other property if such failure occurs solely because of changes in asset values (including changes resulting solely by the change in the foreign currency exchange rate used to value a foreign asset). For all periods, if our failure to satisfy the Asset Tests results from an acquisition of securities or other property during a quarter, we can cure the failure by disposing of a sufficient amount of non-qualifying assets within 30 days after the close of that quarter. We intend to maintain adequate records of the value of our assets to ensure compliance with the Asset Tests and to take other action within 30 days after the close of any quarter as may be required to cure any noncompliance. If that does not occur, we may nonetheless qualify for one of the relief provisions described below.

 

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The Code contains a number of provisions applicable to REITs, including relief provisions that make it easier for REITs to satisfy the asset requirements, or to maintain REIT qualification notwithstanding certain violations of the asset and other requirements.

 

One such provision allows a REIT which fails one or more of the asset requirements to nevertheless maintain its REIT qualification if (i) it provides the IRS with a description of each asset causing the failure, (ii) the failure is due to reasonable cause and not willful neglect, (iii) the REIT pays a tax equal to the greater of (a) $50,000 per failure and (b) the product of the net income generated by the assets that caused the failure multiplied by the highest applicable corporate tax rate (currently 35%), and (iv) the REIT either disposes of the assets causing the failure within six months after the last day of the quarter in which it identifies the failure, or otherwise satisfies the relevant asset tests within that time frame.

 

A second relief provision applies to de minimis violations of the 10% and 5% asset tests. A REIT may maintain its qualification despite a violation of such requirements if (i) the value of the assets causing the violation do not exceed the lesser of 1.0% of the REIT’s total assets, and $10,000,000, and (ii) the REIT either disposes of the assets causing the failure within six months after the last day of the quarter in which it identifies the failure, or the relevant tests are otherwise satisfied within that time frame.

 

The Code also provides that certain securities will not cause a violation of the 10% value test described above. Such securities include instruments that constitute “straight debt,” which includes securities having certain contingency features. A security cannot qualify as “straight debt” where a REIT (or a controlled taxable REIT subsidiary of the REIT) owns other securities of the issuer of that security which do not qualify as straight debt, unless the value of those other securities constitute, in the aggregate, 1.0% or less of the total value of that issuer’s outstanding securities. In addition to straight debt, the Code provides that certain other securities will not violate the 10% value test. Such securities include (i) any loan made to an individual or an estate, (ii) certain rental agreements in which one or more payments are to be made in subsequent years (other than agreements between a REIT and certain persons related to the REIT), (iii) any obligation to pay rents from real property, (iv) securities issued by governmental entities that are not dependent in whole or in part on the profits of (or payments made by) a non-governmental entity, (v) any security issued by another REIT, and (vi) any debt instrument issued by a partnership if the partnership’s income is of a nature that it would satisfy the 75% gross income test described above under “—Operational Requirements—Gross Income Tests.” In addition, when applying the 10% value test, a debt security issued by a partnership is not taken into account to the extent, if any, of the REIT’s proportionate equity interest in that partnership.

 

Operational Requirements—Annual Distribution Requirement

 

In order to be taxed as a REIT, we are required to make distributions, other than capital gain distributions, to our stockholders each year in the amount of at least 90% of our REIT taxable income (computed without regard to the dividends paid deduction and our net capital gain and subject to certain other potential adjustments) for all tax years. While we must generally make distributions in the taxable year to which they relate, we may also make distributions in the following taxable year if (1) they are declared before we timely file our federal income tax return for the taxable year in question and (2) they are paid on or before the first regular distribution payment date after the declaration.

 

Even if we satisfy the foregoing distribution requirement and, accordingly, continue to qualify as a REIT for tax purposes, we will still be subject to federal income tax on the excess of our net capital gain and our REIT taxable income, as adjusted, over the amount of distributions to stockholders.

 

In addition, if we fail to distribute during each calendar year at least the sum of:

 

· 85% of our ordinary income for that year;

 

· 95% of our capital gain net income other than the capital gain net income which we elect to retain and pay tax on for that year; and

 

· any undistributed taxable income from prior periods;

 

we will be subject to a 4% nondeductible excise tax on the excess of the amount of the required distributions over the sum of (A) the amounts actually distributed plus (B) retained amounts on which corporate level tax is paid by us.

 

For taxable years ending on or before December 31, 2014, in order for dividends to have been counted towards our distribution requirement and to have provided a tax deduction to us, they must not have been “preferential dividends.” A dividend paid for such taxable years was not a preferential dividend if it was pro rata among all outstanding shares within a particular class and was in accordance with the preferences among our different classes of shares as set forth in our organizational documents. A distribution of a preferential dividend may cause other distributions to be treated as preferential dividends, which may possibly have prevented us from satisfying the distribution requirement for REIT qualification. We received a private letter ruling from the IRS that differences in the dividends distributed to holders of Class E shares, holders of Class A shares and holders of Class W shares will not cause such dividends to be preferential dividends. The preferential dividend rules ceased to apply to us as of our 2015 taxable year, and will not apply so long as we remain a publicly-offered REIT.

 

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We intend to make timely distributions sufficient to satisfy this requirement; however, it is possible that we may experience timing differences between (1) the actual receipt of income and payment of deductible expenses, and (2) the inclusion of that income and deduction of those expenses for purposes of computing our taxable income. It is also possible that we may be allocated a share of net capital gain attributable to the sale of depreciated property by the Operating Partnership that exceeds our allocable share of cash attributable to that sale. In those circumstances, we may have less cash than is necessary to meet our annual distribution requirement or to avoid income or excise taxation on undistributed income. We may find it necessary in those circumstances to arrange for financing or raise funds through the issuance of additional shares of common stock in order to meet our distribution requirements. If we fail to satisfy the distribution requirement for any taxable year by reason of a later adjustment to our taxable income made by the Internal Revenue Service, we may be able to pay “deficiency dividends” in a later year and include such distributions in our deductions for dividends paid for the earlier year. In that event, we may be able to avoid losing our REIT status or being taxed on amounts distributed as deficiency dividends, but we would be required to pay interest and a penalty to the Internal Revenue Service based upon the amount of any deduction taken for deficiency dividends for the earlier year.

 

We may also elect to retain, rather than distribute, our net long-term capital gains. Provided we comply with certain requirements, the effect of such an election would be as follows:

 

· we would be required to pay the federal income tax on these gains;

 

· taxable U.S. stockholders, while required to include their proportionate share of the undistributed long-term capital gains in income, would receive a credit or refund for their share of the tax paid by the REIT; and

 

· the basis of the stockholder’s shares of common stock would be increased by the difference between the designated amount included in the stockholder’s long-term capital gains and the tax deemed paid with respect to such shares of common stock.

 

We are required to file an annual U.S. federal income tax return, which, like other corporate returns, is subject to examination by the Internal Revenue Service. Because the tax law requires us to make many judgments regarding the proper treatment of a transaction or an item of income or deduction, it is possible that the Internal Revenue Service will challenge positions we take in computing our REIT taxable income and our distributions.

 

Issues could arise, for example, with respect to the allocation of the purchase price of real properties between depreciable or amortizable assets and non-depreciable or non-amortizable assets such as land and the current deductibility of fees paid to the Advisor or its affiliates. Were the Internal Revenue Service to successfully challenge our characterization of a transaction or determination of our REIT taxable income, we could be found to have failed to satisfy a requirement for qualification as a REIT. If, as a result of a challenge, we are determined to have failed to satisfy the distribution requirements for a taxable year, we would be disqualified as a REIT, unless we were permitted to pay a deficiency dividend to our stockholders and pay interest thereon to the Internal Revenue Service, as provided by the Code.

 

Taxable Income for Which Cash Has Not Been Received Created by Investments in Debt Obligations

 

Due to the nature of the assets in which we will invest, we may be required to recognize taxable income from those assets in advance of our receipt of cash flow on or proceeds from disposition of such assets, and may be required to report taxable income in early periods that exceeds the economic income ultimately realized on such assets.

 

We may acquire debt instruments in the secondary market for less than their face amount. The amount of such discount generally will be treated as “market discount” for U.S. federal income tax purposes. We expect to accrue market discount on the basis of a constant yield to maturity of a debt instrument. Accrued market discount is reported as income when, and to the extent that, any payment of principal of the debt instrument is made, unless we elect to include accrued market discount in income as it accrues. Principal payments on certain loans are made monthly, and consequently accrued market discount may have to be included in income each month as if the debt instrument were assured of ultimately being collected in full. If we collect less on the debt instrument than our purchase price plus the market discount we had previously reported as income, we may not be able to benefit from any offsetting loss deductions in a subsequent taxable year.

 

Some of the debt instruments that we acquire may have been issued with original issue discount. In general, we will be required to accrue original issue discount based on the constant yield to maturity of the debt instrument, and to treat it as taxable income in accordance with applicable U.S. federal income tax rules even though smaller or no cash payments are received on such debt instrument. As in the case of the market discount discussed in the preceding paragraph, the constant yield in question will be determined and we will be taxed based on the assumption that all future payments due on debt instrument in question will be made, with consequences similar to those described in the previous paragraph if all payments on the debt instruments are not made.

 

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We may acquire distressed debt investments that are subsequently modified by agreement with the borrower. If the amendments to the outstanding debt are “significant modifications” under the applicable Treasury regulations, the modified debt may be considered to have been reissued to us in a debt-for-debt exchange with the borrower. In that event, we may be required to recognize taxable income to the extent the principal amount of the modified debt exceeds our adjusted tax basis in the unmodified debt, and would hold the modified loan with a cost basis equal to its principal amount for U.S. federal tax purposes.

 

In addition, in the event that any debt instruments acquired by us are delinquent as to mandatory principal and interest payments, or in the event payments with respect to a particular debt instrument are not made when due, we may nonetheless be required to continue to recognize the unpaid interest as taxable income. Similarly, we may be required to accrue interest income with respect to subordinate mortgage-backed securities at the stated rate regardless of whether corresponding cash payments are received.

 

Due to each of these potential timing differences between income recognition or expense deduction and the related cash receipts or disbursements, there is a significant risk that we may have substantial taxable income in excess of cash available for distribution. In that event, we may need to borrow funds or take other action to satisfy the REIT distribution requirements for the taxable year in which this “taxable income for which cash has not been received” is recognized.

 

Operational Requirements—Recordkeeping

 

We must maintain certain records as set forth in Treasury Regulations in order to avoid the payment of monetary penalties to the Internal Revenue Service. Such Treasury Regulations require that we request, on an annual basis, certain information designed to disclose the ownership of shares of our outstanding common stock. We intend to comply with these requirements.

 

Failure to Qualify as a REIT

 

If we fail to qualify as a REIT for any reason in a taxable year and applicable relief provisions do not apply, we will be subject to tax (including any applicable alternative minimum tax) on our taxable income at regular corporate rates. We will not be able to deduct dividends paid to our stockholders in any year in which we fail to qualify as a REIT. In this situation, to the extent of current and accumulated earnings and profits, all dividends to our domestic stockholders that are individuals, trusts or estates will generally be taxable at capital gains rates and, subject to limitations of the Code, corporate distributees may be eligible for the dividends received deduction. We also will be disqualified for the four taxable years following the year during which qualification was lost unless we are entitled to relief under specific statutory provisions. It is not possible to state whether, in all circumstances, we would be entitled to this statutory relief.

 

Sale-Leaseback Transactions

 

Some of our investments may be in the form of sale-leaseback transactions. We normally intend to treat these transactions as true leases for federal income tax purposes. However, depending on the terms of any specific transaction, the Internal Revenue Service might take the position that the transaction is not a true lease but is more properly treated in some other manner. If such recharacterization were successful, we would not be entitled to claim the depreciation deductions available to an owner of the property. In addition, the recharacterization of one or more of these transactions might cause us to fail to satisfy the Asset Tests or the Income Tests described above based upon the asset we would be treated as holding or the income we would be treated as having earned and such failure could result in our failing to qualify as a REIT. Alternatively, the amount or timing of income inclusion or the loss of depreciation deductions resulting from the recharacterization might cause us to fail to meet the distribution requirement described above for one or more taxable years absent the availability of the deficiency dividend procedure or might result in a larger portion of our dividends being treated as ordinary income to our stockholders.

 

Taxation of Taxable U.S. Stockholders

 

Definition

 

In this section, the phrase “U.S. Stockholder” means a holder of our common stock that for federal income tax purposes is:

 

· a citizen or resident of the United States;

 

· a corporation, partnership or other entity treated as a corporation or partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes created or organized in or under the laws of the United States or of any political subdivision thereof;

 

· an estate, the income of which is subject to U.S. federal income taxation regardless of its source; or

 

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· a trust, if a U.S. court is able to exercise primary supervision over the administration of the trust and one or more U.S. persons have the authority to control all substantial decisions of the trust.

 

If a partnership, including for this purpose any entity that is treated as a partnership for U.S. federal income tax purposes, holds our common stock, the tax treatment of a partner in the partnership will generally depend upon the status of the partner and the activities of the partnership. An investor that is a partnership and the partners in such partnership should consult their tax advisors about the U.S. federal income tax consequences of the acquisition, ownership and disposition of our common stock.

 

For any taxable year for which we qualify for taxation as a REIT, amounts distributed to, and gains realized by, taxable U.S. stockholders with respect to our common stock generally will be taxed as described below. For a summary of the U.S. federal income tax treatment of distributions reinvested in additional shares of common stock pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan, see “Description of Capital Stock—Distribution Reinvestment Plan.” For a summary of the U.S. federal income tax treatment of shares of common stock redeemed by us under our share redemption program, see “Description of Capital Stock—Class A, Class W and Class I Share Redemption Program.”

 

Certain U.S. individuals, estates, and trusts are subject to an additional 3.8% tax on net investment income. For these purposes, net investment income includes dividends and gains from sales of stock. In the case of an individual, the tax will be 3.8% of the lesser of the individual’s net investment income or the excess of the individual’s modified adjusted gross income over an amount equal to (1) $250,000 in the case of a married individual filing a joint return or a surviving spouse, (2) $125,000 in the case of a married individual filing a separate return, or (3) $200,000 in the case of a single individual.

 

For individuals (and entities taxed at individual rates), the maximum ordinary income tax rate is 39.6% and the maximum tax rate for long-term capital gains and qualified dividends is 20%. REIT dividends generally are not treated as such qualified dividends.

 

Distributions Generally

 

Distributions to U.S. stockholders, other than capital gain distributions discussed below, will constitute distributions up to the amount of our current or accumulated earnings and profits and will be taxable to the stockholders as ordinary income. These distributions are not eligible for the dividends received deduction generally available to corporations. In addition, with limited exceptions, these distributions are not eligible for taxation at the preferential income tax rates for qualified dividends received by domestic stockholders that are individuals, trusts and estates from taxable C corporations. Stockholders that are individuals, however, are taxed at the preferential rates on dividends designated by and received from us to the extent that the dividends are attributable to (i) income retained by us in the prior taxable year on which we were subject to corporate level income tax (less the amount of tax), (ii) dividends received by us from taxable C corporations, or (iii) income in the prior taxable year from the sales of “built-in gain” property acquired by us from C corporations in carryover basis transactions (less the amount of corporate tax on such income).

 

To the extent that we make a distribution in excess of our current and accumulated earnings and profits, the distribution will be treated first as a tax-free return of capital, reducing the tax basis in the U.S. stockholder’s shares of common stock, and the amount of each distribution in excess of a U.S. stockholder’s tax basis in its shares of common stock will be taxable as gain realized from the sale of its shares of common stock. Dividends that we declare in October, November or December of any year payable to a stockholder of record on a specified date in any of these months will be treated as both paid by us and received by the stockholder on December 31 of the year, provided that we actually pay the dividends during January of the following calendar year.

 

To the extent that we have available net operating losses and capital losses carried forward from prior tax years, such losses may reduce the amount of distributions that we must make in order to comply with the REIT distribution requirements. See “—Operational Requirements—Annual Distribution Requirement.” Such losses, however, are not passed through to stockholders and do not offset income of stockholders from other sources, nor would such losses affect the character of any distributions that we make, which are generally subject to tax in the hands of stockholders to the extent that we have current or accumulated earnings and profits.

 

If excess inclusion income from a taxable mortgage pool or REMIC residual interest is allocated to any stockholder, that income will be taxable in the hands of the stockholder and would not be offset by any net operating losses of the stockholder that would otherwise be available. As required by IRS guidance, we intend to notify our stockholders if a portion of a dividend paid by us is attributable to excess inclusion income.

 

We will be treated as having sufficient earnings and profits to treat as a dividend any distribution by us up to the amount required to be distributed in order to avoid imposition of the 4% excise tax discussed above. Moreover, any “deficiency distribution” will be treated as an ordinary or capital gain distribution, as the case may be, regardless of our earnings and profits. As a result, stockholders may be required to treat as taxable some distributions that would otherwise result in a tax-free return of capital.

 

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Capital Gain Distributions

 

Distributions to U.S. stockholders that we properly designate as capital gain distributions normally will be treated as long-term capital gains to the extent they do not exceed our actual net capital gain for the taxable year without regard to the period for which the U.S. stockholder has held his shares of common stock. A corporate U.S. stockholder might be required to treat up to 20% of some capital gain distributions as ordinary income. Long-term capital gains are generally taxable at maximum federal rates of 20% in the case of stockholders who are individuals, trusts and estates, and 35% in the case of stockholders that are corporations. Capital gains attributable to the sale of depreciable real property held for more than 12 months are subject to a 25% maximum federal income tax rate for taxpayers who are individuals, to the extent of previously claimed depreciation deductions. See “—Operational Requirements—Annual Distribution Requirement” for the treatment by U.S. stockholders of net long-term capital gains that we elect to retain and pay tax on.

 

To the extent that we have available net operating losses and capital losses carried forward from prior tax years, such losses may reduce the amount of distributions that must be made in order to comply with the REIT distribution requirements. Such losses, however, are not passed through to U.S. stockholders and do not offset income of U.S. stockholders from other sources, nor do they affect the character of any distributions that are actually made by us, which are generally subject to tax in the hands of U.S. stockholders to the extent that we have current or accumulated earnings and profits.

 

Certain Dispositions of Our Common Stock

 

In general, capital gains recognized by individuals upon the sale or disposition of shares of common stock will be subject to a maximum federal income tax rate of 20% if such shares of common stock are held for more than 12 months, and will be taxed at ordinary income rates (of up to 39.6%) if such shares of common stock are held for 12 months or less. Gains recognized by stockholders that are corporations are subject to federal income tax at a maximum rate of 35%, whether or not classified as long-term capital gains. The IRS has the authority to prescribe, but has not yet prescribed, regulations that would apply a higher capital gain tax rate of 25% to a portion of capital gain realized by a non-corporate holder on the sale of REIT shares that would correspond to the REIT’s “unrecaptured Section 1250 gain.” Capital losses recognized by a stockholder upon the disposition of a share of our common stock held for more than one year at the time of disposition will be considered long-term capital losses, and are generally available only to offset capital gain income of the stockholder but not ordinary income (except in the case of individuals, who may offset up to $3,000 of ordinary income each year). In addition, any loss upon a sale or exchange of shares of common stock by a stockholder who has held such shares of common stock for six months or less, after applying holding period rules, will be treated as a long-term capital loss to the extent of distributions received from us that are required to be treated by the stockholder as long-term capital gain.

 

If an investor recognizes a loss upon a subsequent disposition of our stock or other securities in an amount that exceeds a prescribed threshold, it is possible that the provisions of Treasury regulations involving “reportable transactions” could apply, with a resulting requirement to separately disclose the loss-generating transaction to the IRS. These regulations, though directed towards “tax shelters,” are broadly written and apply to transactions that would not typically be considered tax shelters. The Code imposes significant penalties for failure to comply with these requirements. You should consult your tax advisor concerning any possible disclosure obligation with respect to the receipt or disposition of our stock or securities or transactions that we might undertake directly or indirectly. Moreover, you should be aware that we and other participants in the transactions in which we are involved (including their advisors) might be subject to disclosure or other requirements pursuant to these regulations.

 

Distributions that we make and gain arising from the sale or exchange by a domestic stockholder of our stock will not be treated as passive activity income. As a result, stockholders will not be able to apply any “passive losses” against income or gain relating to our stock. To the extent that distributions we make do not constitute a return of capital, they will be treated as investment income for purposes of computing the investment interest limitation.

 

Redemptions of Our Common Stock

 

A redemption of our common stock will be treated as a distribution in exchange for the redeemed shares and taxed in the same manner as other taxable share sales discussed above, provided that the redemption satisfies one of the tests enabling the redemption to be treated as a sale or exchange. A redemption will be treated as a sale or exchange if it (1) is “substantially disproportionate” with respect to a stockholder, (2) results in a “complete termination” of a stockholder’s interest in our shares or (3) is “not essentially equivalent to a dividend” with respect to a stockholder, all within the meaning of applicable provisions of the Code. In determining whether any of these tests have been met, shares considered to be owned by a stockholder by reason of certain constructive ownership rules, as well as shares actually owned, must generally be taken into account.

 

A redemption that does not qualify as an exchange under such tests will constitute a dividend equivalent redemption that is treated as a taxable distribution and taxed in the same manner as regular distributions (i.e., ordinary dividend income to the extent paid out of earnings and profits unless properly designated as a capital gain dividend). In addition, although guidance is sparse, the IRS could take the position that a stockholder who does not participate in any redemption treated as a dividend should be treated as receiving a constructive share distribution taxable as a dividend in the amount of their increased percentage ownership of our shares as a result of the redemption, even though the stockholder did not actually receive cash or other property as a result of the redemption.

 

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To avoid certain issues related to our ability to comply with the REIT distribution requirements and utilize the deficiency dividend procedure (see “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Operational Requirements—Annual Distribution Requirement”) we have implemented procedures designed to track our stockholders’ percentage interests in our common stock in order to identify any dividend equivalent redemptions and will decline to effect a redemption to the extent that we believe that it would constitute a dividend equivalent redemption. We cannot assure you, however, that we will be successful in preventing all dividend equivalent redemptions.

 

Passive Activity Losses and Investment Interest Limitations

 

Distributions made by us and gain arising from the sale, redemption or exchange by a U.S. stockholder of shares of our common stock will not be treated as passive activity income. As a result, U.S. stockholders will not be able to apply any “passive losses” against income or gain relating to shares of our common stock. Distributions made by us, to the extent they do not constitute a return of capital, generally will be treated as investment income for purposes of computing the investment interest limitation. A U.S. stockholder that elects to treat capital gain dividends, capital gains from the disposition of shares or qualified dividend income as investment income for purposes of the investment interest limitation will be taxed at ordinary income rates on such amounts.

 

Information Reporting Requirements and Backup Withholding for U.S. Stockholders

 

We will report to U.S. stockholders of our common stock and to the Internal Revenue Service the amount of distributions made or deemed made during each calendar year and the amount of tax withheld, if any. Under some circumstances, U.S. stockholders may be subject to backup withholding on payments made with respect to, or cash proceeds of a sale or exchange of, our common stock. Backup withholding will apply only if the stockholder:

 

· Fails to furnish its taxpayer identification number (which, for an individual, would be his Social Security number);

 

· Furnishes an incorrect taxpayer identification number;

 

· Is notified by the Internal Revenue Service that the stockholder has failed properly to report payments of interest or dividends and is subject to backup withholding; or

 

· Under some circumstances, fails to certify, under penalties of perjury, that it has furnished a correct taxpayer identification number and has not been notified by the Internal Revenue Service that the stockholder is subject to backup withholding for failure to report interest and dividend payments or has been notified by the Internal Revenue Service that the stockholder is no longer subject to backup withholding for failure to report those payments.

 

Backup withholding will not apply with respect to payments made to some stockholders, such as corporations in certain circumstances and tax-exempt organizations. Backup withholding is not an additional tax. Rather, the amount of any backup withholding with respect to a payment to a U.S. stockholder will be allowed as a credit against the U.S. stockholder’s United States federal income tax liability and may entitle the U.S. stockholder to a refund, provided that the required information is furnished to the Internal Revenue Service. U.S. stockholders should consult their tax advisors regarding their qualification for exemption from backup withholding and the procedure for obtaining an exemption.

 

With respect to dispositions of REIT shares acquired after 2010 (2011 in the case of shares acquired in connection with a distribution reinvestment plan), brokers that are required to report the gross proceeds from a sale of shares on Form 1099-B are also required to report the customer’s adjusted basis in the shares and whether any gain or loss with respect to the shares is long-term or short-term. In some cases, there may be alternative methods of determining the basis in shares that are disposed of, in which case your broker will apply a default method of its choosing if you do not indicate which method you choose to have applied. You should consult with your own tax advisor regarding these reporting requirements and your election options.

 

Treatment of Tax-Exempt Stockholders

 

Tax-exempt entities including employee pension benefit trusts and individual retirement accounts generally are exempt from United States federal income taxation. These entities are subject to taxation, however, on any “unrelated business taxable income,” which we refer to as “UBTI,” as defined in the Code. The Internal Revenue Service has issued a published ruling that distributions from a REIT to a tax-exempt pension trust did not constitute UBTI. Although rulings are merely interpretations of law by the Internal Revenue Service and may be revoked or modified, based on this analysis, indebtedness incurred by us or by the Operating Partnership in connection with the acquisition of a property should not cause any income derived from the property to be treated as UBTI upon the distribution of those amounts as dividends to a tax-exempt U.S. stockholder of our common stock. A tax-exempt entity that incurs indebtedness to finance its purchase of our common stock, however, will be subject to UBTI under the debt-financed income rules. However, social clubs, voluntary employee benefit associations, supplemental unemployment benefit trusts and qualified group legal services plans that are exempt from taxation under specified provisions of the Code are subject to different UBTI rules, which generally may require them to treat distributions from us as UBTI. These organizations are urged to consult their own tax advisor with respect to the treatment of our distributions to them.

 

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In certain circumstances, a pension trust that owns more than 10% of our stock could be required to treat a percentage of the dividends as UBTI if we are a “pension-held REIT.” We will not be a pension-held REIT unless (1) we are required to “look through” one or more of our pension trust stockholders in order to satisfy the REIT “closely-held” test, and (2) either (i) one pension trust owns more than 25% of the value of our stock, or (ii) one or more pension trusts, each individually holding more than 10% of the value of our stock, collectively owns more than 50% of the value of our stock. Certain restrictions on ownership and transfer of our stock generally should prevent a tax-exempt entity from owning more than 10% of the value of our stock and generally should prevent us from becoming a pension-held REIT. Tax-exempt stockholders are urged to consult their tax advisors regarding the federal, state, local and foreign income and other tax consequences of owning our common stock .

 

Special Tax Considerations for Non-U.S. Stockholders

 

The rules governing United States federal income taxation of non-resident alien individuals, foreign corporations, foreign partnerships and other foreign stockholders, which we refer to collectively as “Non-U.S. holders,” are complex. The following discussion is intended only as a summary of these rules. Non-U.S. holders should consult with their own tax advisors to determine the impact of United States federal, state and local income tax laws on an investment in our common stock, including any reporting requirements as well as the tax treatment of the investment under the tax laws of their home country.

 

Ordinary Dividends

 

The portion of distributions received by Non-U.S. holders payable out of our earnings and profits which are not attributable to our capital gains and which are not effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business of the Non-U.S. holder will be subject to U.S. withholding tax at the rate of 30%, unless reduced or eliminated by treaty. Reduced treaty rates and other exemptions are not available to the extent that income is attributable to excess inclusion income allocable to the foreign stockholder. Accordingly, we will withhold at a rate of 30% on any portion of a dividend that is paid to a non-U.S. holder and attributable to that holder’s share of our excess inclusion income. As required by IRS guidance, we intend to notify our stockholders if a portion of a dividend paid by us is attributable to excess inclusion income. In general, Non-U.S. holders will not be considered to be engaged in a U.S. trade or business solely as a result of their ownership of our common stock. In cases where the distribution income from a Non-U.S. holder’s investment in our common stock is, or is treated as, effectively connected with the Non-U.S. holder’s conduct of a U.S. trade or business, the Non-U.S. holder generally will be subject to U.S. tax at graduated rates, in the same manner as domestic stockholders are taxed with respect to such distributions, such income must generally be reported on a U.S. income tax return filed by or on behalf of the Non-U.S. holder, and the income may also be subject to the 30% branch profits tax in the case of a Non-U.S. holder that is a corporation.

 

Non-Dividend Distributions

 

Unless our common stock constitutes a U.S. real property interest, which we refer to as a “USRPI,” distributions by us which are not distributions out of our earnings and profits will not be subject to U.S. income tax. If it cannot be determined at the time at which a distribution is made whether or not the distribution will exceed current and accumulated earnings and profits, the distribution will be subject to withholding at the rate applicable to distributions. However, the Non-U.S. holder may seek a refund from the Internal Revenue Service of any amounts withheld if it is subsequently determined that the distribution was, in fact, in excess of our current and accumulated earnings and profits. If our common stock constitutes a USRPI, as described below, distributions by us in excess of the sum of our earnings and profits plus the stockholder’s basis in shares of our common stock will be taxed under the Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act of 1980, which we refer to as “FIRPTA,” unless a specific exemption under FIRPTA applies (i.e. for “qualified foreign pension funds” or “qualified shareholders”), at the rate of tax, including any applicable capital gains rates, that would apply to a domestic stockholder of the same type (e.g., an individual or a corporation, as the case may be), and the collection of the tax will be enforced by a refundable withholding at a rate of 15% of the amount by which the distribution exceeds the stockholder’s share of our earnings and profits.

 

Capital Gain Distributions

 

A capital gain distribution from a publicly traded REIT will generally not be treated as income that is effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business, and will instead be treated the same as an ordinary distribution from us (see “—Special Tax Considerations for Non-U.S. Stockholders—Ordinary Dividends”), provided that (1) the capital gain distribution is received with respect to a class of stock that is regularly traded on an established securities market located in the United States, and (2) the recipient Non-U.S. holder does not own more than 10% of that class of stock at any time during the taxable year in which the capital gain distribution is received. If such requirements are not satisfied, such distributions will be treated as income that is effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business of the Non-U.S. holder without regard to whether the distribution is designated as a capital gain distribution and, in addition, shall be subject to a 35% withholding tax. We do not anticipate our common stock will satisfy the “regularly traded” requirement, and therefore expect that our capital gain distributions that are attributable to the disposition of a U.S. real property interest will be taxable under FIRTPA. Distributions subject to FIRPTA may also be subject to a 30% branch profits tax in the hands of a Non-U.S. holder that is a corporation. A distribution is not a USRPI capital gain if we held the underlying asset solely as a creditor. Capital gain distributions received by a Non-U.S. holder from a REIT that are not USRPI capital gains are generally not subject to U.S. income tax, but may be subject to withholding tax.

 

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In addition, even if we are a domestically controlled qualified investment entity as described below, upon disposition of our stock (subject to the 10% exception applicable to “regularly traded” stock described above), a non-U.S. holder may be treated as having gain from the sale or exchange of a USRPI if the non-U.S. holder (1) disposes of our common stock within a 30-day period preceding the ex-dividend date of a distribution, any portion of which, but for the disposition, would have been treated as gain from the sale or exchange of a USRPI and (2) acquires, or enters into a contract or option to acquire, other shares of our common stock within 30 days after such ex-dividend date.

 

Estate Tax

 

If our stock is owned or treated as owned by an individual who is not a citizen or resident (as specially defined for U.S. federal estate tax purposes) of the United States at the time of such individual’s death, the stock will be includable in the individual’s gross estate for U.S. federal estate tax purposes, unless an applicable estate tax treaty provides otherwise, and may therefore be subject to U.S. federal estate tax.

 

Dispositions and Redemptions of Our Common Stock

 

Unless our common stock constitutes a USRPI, a sale of our common stock by a Non-U.S. holder generally will not be subject to U.S. taxation under FIRPTA. Our common stock will not be treated as a USRPI if less than 50% of our assets throughout a prescribed testing period consist of interests in real property located within the United States, excluding, for this purpose, interests in real property solely in a capacity as a creditor.

 

Even if the foregoing test is not met, our common stock nonetheless will not constitute a USRPI if we are a “domestically controlled qualified investment entity.” A domestically controlled qualified investment entity includes a REIT in which, at all times during a specified testing period, less than 50% in value of its shares of common stock is held directly or indirectly by Non-U.S. holders. We currently anticipate that we will be a domestically controlled qualified investment entity and, therefore, the sale of our common stock should not be subject to taxation under FIRPTA. However, we cannot assure you that we are or will continue to be a domestically controlled qualified investment entity.

 

In the event that we do not constitute a domestically controlled qualified investment entity, a non-U.S. stockholder’s sale of our common stock nonetheless will generally not be subject to tax under FIRPTA as a sale of a U.S. real property interest, provided that (1) shares of our common stock are “regularly traded,” as defined by applicable Treasury Regulations, on an established securities market and (2) the selling non-U.S. stockholder owned, actually or constructively, 10% or less of our outstanding common stock at all times during a specified testing period. As previously noted, however, we do not expect any of our shares to be regularly traded on an established securities market.

 

In addition, even if we are a domestically controlled qualified investment entity, upon disposition of our shares, a non-U.S. stockholder may be treated as having gain from the sale or exchange of a U.S. real property interest if the non-U.S. stockholder (1) disposes of an interest in our shares during the 30-day period preceding the ex-dividend date of a distribution, any portion of which, but for the disposition, would have been treated as gain from sale or exchange of a U.S. real property interest and (2) acquires, enters into a contract or option to acquire, or is deemed to acquire, other shares of our shares within 30 days after such ex-dividend date. The foregoing rules do not apply to a transaction if the 10% regularly traded test described above is satisfied with respect to the non-U.S. stockholder. As previously noted, however, we do not expect shares of our common stock to be regularly traded on an established securities market at any time and, therefore, we do not expect the exception for non-U.S. stockholders that satisfy the 10% regularly traded test to apply.

 

A redemption of shares generally will be taxable under FIRPTA to the extent the distribution in the redemption of the shares is attributable to gains from our dispositions of U.S. real property interests. To the extent the distribution is not attributable to gains from our dispositions of U.S. real property interests, the excess of the amount of money received in the redemption over the non-U.S. stockholder’s basis in the redeemed shares will be taxable if we are not a domestically controlled qualified investment entity. The IRS has stated that redemption payments may be attributable to gains from dispositions of U.S. real property interests (except when the 10% publicly traded exception would apply), but has not provided any guidance to determine when and what portion of a redemption payment is a distribution that is attributable to gains from our dispositions of U.S. real property interests. Due to the uncertainty, we may withhold at the 35% rate from all or a portion of redemption payments to non-U.S. stockholders. To the extent the amount of tax we withhold exceeds the amount of a non-U.S. stockholder’s U.S. federal income tax liability, the non-U.S. stockholder may file a U.S. federal income tax return and claim a refund.

 

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If the gain on the sale of shares of common stock were subject to taxation under FIRPTA (and no FIRPTA exemption existed), a Non-U.S. holder would be subject to the same treatment as a U.S. stockholder with respect to the gain, subject to any applicable alternative minimum tax and a special alternative minimum tax in the case of non-resident alien individuals. Gain from the sale of our common stock that would not otherwise be subject to FIRPTA will nonetheless be taxable in the United States to a Non-U.S. holder in two cases: (a) if the Non-U.S. holder’s investment in our common stock is effectively connected with a U.S. trade or business conducted by such Non-U.S. holder, the Non-U.S. holder will be subject to the same treatment as a U.S. stockholder with respect to such gain, or (b) if the Non-U.S. holder is a nonresident alien individual who was present in the United States for 183 days or more during the taxable year and has a “tax home” in the United States, the nonresident alien individual will be subject to a 30% tax on the individual’s capital gain.

 

Information Reporting Requirements and Backup Withholding for Non-U.S. Stockholders

 

Non-U.S. stockholders should consult their tax advisors with regard to U.S. information reporting and backup withholding requirements under the Code.

 

Foreign Accounts

 

Under the Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act, or FATCA, withholding taxes may apply to certain types of payments made to “foreign financial institutions” (as specially defined under those rules) and certain other non-U.S. entities. Specifically, a 30% withholding tax may be imposed on dividends on, or gross proceeds from the sale or other disposition of, our common stock paid to a foreign financial institution or to a non-financial foreign entity, unless (i) the foreign financial institution undertakes certain diligence and reporting, (ii) the non-financial foreign entity either certifies it does not have any substantial U.S. owners or furnishes identifying information regarding each substantial U.S. owner, or (iii) the foreign financial institution or non-financial foreign entity otherwise qualifies for an exemption from these rules. If the payee is a foreign financial institution and is subject to the diligence and reporting requirements in clause (i) above, it must enter into an agreement with the U.S. Treasury that requires, among other things, that it undertake to identify accounts held by certain U.S. persons or U.S.-owned foreign entities, annually report certain information about such accounts, and withhold 30% on payments to non-compliant foreign financial institutions and certain other account holders. Foreign financial institutions located in jurisdictions that have an intergovernmental agreement with the United States governing FATCA may be subject to different rules.

 

The withholding provisions described above currently apply to payments of dividends on our common stock and will apply to payments of gross proceeds from a sale or other disposition of such stock on or after January 1, 2019. Prospective investors should consult their tax advisors regarding FATCA.

 

Statement of Share Ownership

 

We are required to demand annual written statements from the record holders of designated percentages of our common stock disclosing the actual owners of the shares of common stock. Any record stockholder who, upon our request, does not provide us with required information concerning actual ownership of the shares of common stock is required to include specified information relating to his shares of common stock in his federal income tax return. We also must maintain, within the Internal Revenue District in which we are required to file our federal income tax return, permanent records showing the information we have received about the actual ownership of our common stock and a list of those persons failing or refusing to comply with our demand.

 

Federal Income Tax Aspects of the Operating Partnership

 

The following discussion summarizes certain federal income tax considerations applicable to our investment in the Operating Partnership. The discussion does not cover state or local tax laws or any federal tax laws other than income tax laws.

 

Classification as a Partnership

 

We will be entitled to include in our income a distributive share of the Operating Partnership’s income and to deduct our distributive share of the Operating Partnership’s losses only if the Operating Partnership is classified for federal income tax purposes as a partnership, rather than as a corporation or an association taxable as a corporation. Under applicable Treasury Regulations, which we refer to as the “Check-the-Box-Regulations,” an unincorporated domestic entity with at least two members may elect to be classified either as an association taxable as a corporation or as a partnership. If the entity fails to make an election, it generally will be treated as a partnership for federal income tax purposes. The Operating Partnership intends to be classified as a partnership for federal income tax purposes and will not elect to be treated as an association taxable as a corporation under the Check-the-Box-Regulations.

 

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Even though the Operating Partnership will not elect to be treated as an association for Federal income tax purposes, it may be taxed as a corporation if it is deemed to be a “publicly traded partnership.” A publicly traded partnership is a partnership whose interests are traded on an established securities market or are readily tradable on a secondary market or the substantial equivalent thereof. Under applicable Treasury regulations, which we refer to as the “PTP Regulations,” limited safe harbors from the definition of a publicly traded partnership are provided. Pursuant to one of those safe harbors, which we refer to as the “Private Placement Exclusion,” interests in a partnership will not be treated as readily tradable on a secondary market or the substantial equivalent thereof if (i) all interests in the partnership were issued in a transaction (or transactions) that were not required to be registered under the Securities Act and (ii) the partnership does not have more than 100 partners at any time during the partnership’s taxable year. In determining the number of partners in a partnership, a person owning an interest in a flow-through entity (including a partnership, grantor trust or S corporation) that owns an interest in the partnership is treated as a partner in such partnership only if (a) substantially all of the value of the owner’s interest in the flow-through entity is attributable to the flow-through entity’s direct or indirect interest in the partnership, and (b) a principal purpose of the use of the flow-through entity is to permit the partnership to satisfy the 100 partner limitation. We and the Operating Partnership believe and currently intend to take the position that the Operating Partnership should not be classified as a publicly traded partnership because (i) OP Units are not traded on an established securities market, and (ii) OP Units should not be considered readily tradable on a secondary market or the substantial equivalent thereof. In addition, the Operating Partnership presently qualifies for the Private Placement Exclusion.

 

Even if the Operating Partnership were considered a publicly traded partnership under the PTP Regulations, the Operating Partnership should not be treated as a corporation for Federal income tax purposes as long as 90% or more of its gross income consists of “qualifying income” under section 7704(d) of the Code. In general, qualifying income includes interest, dividends, real property rents (as defined by section 856 of the Code) and gain from the sale or disposition of real property. If the Operating Partnership were characterized as a publicly traded partnership even if it were not taxable as a corporation because of the qualifying income exception, however, holders of OP Units would be subject to special rules under section 469 of the Code. Under such rules, each holder of OP Units would be required to treat any loss derived from the Operating Partnership separately from any income or loss derived from any other publicly traded partnership, as well as from income or loss derived from other passive activities. In such case, any net losses or credits attributable to the Operating Partnership which are carried forward may only be offset against future income of the Operating Partnership. Moreover, unlike other passive activity losses, suspended losses attributable to the Operating Partnership would only be allowed upon the complete disposition of the OP Unit holder’s “entire interest” in the Operating Partnership.

 

We have not requested, and do not intend to request, a ruling from the Internal Revenue Service that the Operating Partnership will be classified as a partnership for federal income tax purposes.

 

If for any reason the Operating Partnership were taxable as a corporation, rather than a partnership, for federal income tax purposes, we would not be able to qualify as a REIT, unless we are eligible for relief from the violation pursuant to relief provisions described above. See “—Requirements for Qualification as a REIT—Organizational Requirements” and “—Requirements for Qualification as a REIT—Operational Requirements—Asset Tests,” above, for discussion of the effect of the failure to satisfy the REIT tests for a taxable year, and of the relief provisions. In addition, any change in the Operating Partnership’s status for tax purposes might be treated as a taxable event, in which case we might incur a tax liability without any related cash distribution. Further, items of income and deduction of the Operating Partnership would not pass through to its partners, and its partners would be treated as stockholders for tax purposes. The Operating Partnership would be required to pay income tax at corporate tax rates on its net income, and distributions to its partners would constitute distributions that would not be deductible in computing the Operating Partnership’s taxable income.

 

Income Taxation of the Operating Partnership and its Partners

 

Partners, Not Operating Partnership, Subject to Tax . A partnership is not a taxable entity for federal income tax purposes. As a partner in the Operating Partnership, we will be required to take into account our allocable share of the Operating Partnership’s income, gains, losses, deductions, and credits for any taxable year of the Operating Partnership ending within or with our taxable year, without regard to whether we have received or will receive any distributions from the Operating Partnership.

 

Operating Partnership Allocations . Although a partnership agreement generally determines the allocation of income and losses among partners, such allocations will be disregarded for tax purposes under section 704(b) of the Code if they do not comply with the provisions of section 704(b) of the Code and the Treasury regulations promulgated thereunder. If an allocation is not recognized for federal income tax purposes, the item subject to the allocation will be reallocated in accordance with the partner’s interests in the partnership, which will be determined by taking into account all of the facts and circumstances relating to the economic arrangement of the partners with respect to such item. The Operating Partnership’s allocations of taxable income and loss are intended to comply with the requirements of section 704(b) of the Code and the Treasury regulations promulgated thereunder.

 

Tax Allocations With Respect to Contributed Properties . Pursuant to section 704(c) of the Code, income, gain, loss, and deduction attributable to appreciated or depreciated property that is contributed to a partnership in exchange for an interest in the partnership must be allocated for federal income tax purposes in a manner such that the contributor is charged with, or benefits from, the unrealized gain or unrealized loss associated with the property at the time of the contribution. The amount of unrealized gain or unrealized loss is generally equal to the difference between the fair market value of the contributed property at the time of contribution and the adjusted tax basis of such property at the time of contribution. Under applicable Treasury Regulations, partnerships are required to use a “reasonable method” for allocating items subject to section 704(c) of the Code, and several reasonable allocation methods are described therein.

 

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Under the Operating Partnership Agreement, subject to exceptions applicable to the special limited partnership interests, depreciation or amortization deductions of the Operating Partnership generally will be allocated among the partners in accordance with their respective interests in the Operating Partnership, except to the extent that the Operating Partnership is required under section 704(c) to use a different method for allocating depreciation deductions attributable to its properties. In addition, gain or loss on the sale of a property that has been contributed to the Operating Partnership will be specially allocated to the contributing partner to the extent of any built-in gain or loss with respect to the property for federal income tax purposes. It is possible that we may (1) be allocated lower amounts of depreciation deductions for tax purposes with respect to contributed properties than would be allocated to us if each such property were to have a tax basis equal to its fair market value at the time of contribution, and (2) be allocated taxable gain in the event of a sale of such contributed properties in excess of the economic profit allocated to us as a result of such sale. These allocations may cause us to recognize taxable income in excess of cash proceeds received by us, which might adversely affect our ability to comply with the REIT distribution requirements, although we do not anticipate that this event will occur. The foregoing principles also will affect the calculation of our earnings and profits for purposes of determining the portion of our distributions that are taxable as a distribution. The allocations described in this paragraph may result in a higher portion of our distributions being taxed as a dividend than would have occurred had we purchased such properties for cash.

 

Basis in Operating Partnership Interest . The adjusted tax basis of our partnership interest in the Operating Partnership generally will be equal to (1) the amount of cash and the basis of any other property contributed to the Operating Partnership by us, (2) increased by (A) our allocable share of the Operating Partnership’s income and (B) our allocable share of indebtedness of the Operating Partnership, and (3) reduced, but not below zero, by (A) our allocable share of the Operating Partnership’s loss and (B) the amount of cash distributed to us, including constructive cash distributions resulting from a reduction in our share of indebtedness of the Operating Partnership. If the allocation of our distributive share of the Operating Partnership’s loss would reduce the adjusted tax basis of our partnership interest in the Operating Partnership below zero, the recognition of the loss will be deferred until such time as the recognition of the loss would not reduce our adjusted tax basis below zero. If a distribution from the Operating Partnership or a reduction in our share of the Operating Partnership’s liabilities would reduce our adjusted tax basis below zero, that distribution, including a constructive distribution, will constitute taxable income to us. The gain realized by us upon the receipt of any such distribution or constructive distribution would normally be characterized as capital gain, and if our partnership interest in the Operating Partnership has been held for longer than the long-term capital gain holding period (currently one year), the distribution would constitute long-term capital gain.

 

Depreciation Deductions Available to the Operating Partnership . The Operating Partnership will use a portion of contributions we make from net offering proceeds to acquire interests in properties and securities. To the extent that the Operating Partnership acquires properties or securities for cash, the Operating Partnership’s initial basis in such properties for federal income tax purposes generally will be equal to the purchase price paid by the Operating Partnership. The Operating Partnership plans to depreciate each depreciable property for federal income tax purposes under the alternative depreciation system of depreciation, which we refer to as “ADS.” Under ADS, the Operating Partnership generally will depreciate buildings and improvements over a 40-year recovery period using a straight-line method and a mid-month convention and will depreciate furnishings and equipment over a 10-year recovery period. To the extent that the Operating Partnership acquires properties in exchange for units of the Operating Partnership, the Operating Partnership’s initial basis in each such property for federal income tax purposes should be the same as the transferor’s basis in that property on the date of acquisition by the Operating Partnership. Although the law is not entirely clear, the Operating Partnership generally intends to depreciate such depreciable property for federal income tax purposes over the same remaining useful lives and under the same methods used by the transferors.

 

Sale of the Operating Partnership’s Property . Generally, any gain realized by the Operating Partnership on the sale of property held for more than one year will be long-term capital gain, except for any portion of such gain that is treated as depreciation or cost recovery.

 

Partnership Audit Rules . The recently enacted Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 changes the rules applicable to U.S. federal income tax audits of partnerships. Under the new rules (which are generally effective for taxable years beginning after December 31, 2017), among other changes and subject to certain exceptions, any audit adjustment to items of income, gain, loss, deduction, or credit of a partnership (and any partner’s distributive share thereof) is determined, and taxes, interest, or penalties attributable thereto are assessed and collected, at the partnership level. Although it is uncertain how these new rules will be implemented, it is possible that they could result in partnerships in which we directly or indirect invest, including the Operating Partnership, being required to pay additional taxes, interest and penalties as a result of an audit adjustment, and we, as a direct or indirect partner of these partnerships, could be required to bear the economic burden of those taxes, interest, and penalties even though we, as a REIT, may not otherwise have been required to pay additional corporate-level taxes as a result of the related audit adjustment. The changes created by these new rules are sweeping and in many respects dependent on the promulgation of future regulations or other guidance by the Treasury. Investors are urged to consult their tax advisors with respect to these changes and their potential impact on their investment in our stock.

 

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Prohibited Transaction Rules . A REIT will incur a 100% penalty tax on the net income derived from a sale or other disposition of property, other than foreclosure property, that the REIT holds primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of a trade or business, which we refer to as a “prohibited transaction.” Under a safe harbor provision in the Code, a REIT may sell certain real property without being subject to the prohibited transaction tax if, among other things, the REIT held the real property for the production of rental income for at least four years prior to the disposition. That four year period is shortened to two years for transactions occurring after July 30, 2008. We, however, do not presently intend to acquire or hold or allow the Operating Partnership to acquire or hold any property that represents inventory or other property held primarily for sale to customers in the ordinary course of our or the Operating Partnership’s trade or business.

 

Other Tax Considerations

 

Legislative or Other Actions Affecting REITs

 

The rules dealing with federal income taxation are constantly under review by persons involved in the legislative process and by the IRS and the U.S. Treasury Department. Changes to the federal tax laws and interpretations thereof could adversely affect an investment in our stock. Under proposed legislation, certain foreign currency gains would be qualifying income for purposes of the REIT income tests. This legislation is merely proposed and has not been enacted, and no assurances can be provided that it will be enacted as currently proposed or at all.

 

State, Local and Foreign Taxes

 

We and our subsidiaries and stockholders may be subject to state, local or foreign taxation in various jurisdictions including those in which we or they transact business, own property or reside. We may own properties located in numerous jurisdictions, and may be required to file tax returns in some or all of those jurisdictions. Our state, local or foreign tax treatment and that of our stockholders may not conform to the federal income tax treatment discussed above. We may pay foreign property taxes, and dispositions of foreign property or operations involving, or investments in, foreign property may give rise to foreign income or other tax liability in amounts that could be substantial. Any foreign taxes that we incur do not pass through to stockholders as a credit against their U.S. federal income tax liability. Prospective investors should consult their tax advisors regarding the application and effect of state, local and foreign income and other tax laws on an investment in our stock.

 

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ERISA CONSIDERATIONS

 

The following is a summary of some non-tax considerations associated with an investment in shares of our common stock by a qualified employee pension benefit plan or an IRA or by an entity that includes such assets. This summary is based on provisions of ERISA and the Code, as amended through the date of this prospectus, and relevant regulations and opinions issued by the Department of Labor and the Internal Revenue Service. We cannot assure you that adverse tax decisions or legislative, regulatory or administrative changes which would significantly modify the statements expressed herein will not occur. Any such changes may or may not apply to transactions entered into prior to the date of their enactment. Each fiduciary of an employee pension benefit plan subject to ERISA, such as a profit sharing, section 401(k) or pension plan, or of any other retirement plan or account subject to Section 4975 of the Code, such as an IRA, or any entity that includes such assets, which we refer to collectively as the “Benefit Plans,” seeking to invest plan assets in shares of our common stock must, taking into account the facts and circumstances of such Benefit Plan, consider, among other matters:

 

· whether the investment is consistent with the applicable provisions of ERISA and the Code;

 

· whether, under the facts and circumstances attendant to the Benefit Plan in question, the fiduciary’s responsibility to the plan has been satisfied;

 

· whether the investment will produce UBTI to the Benefit Plan (see “Federal Income Tax Considerations—Treatment of Tax-Exempt Stockholders”); and

 

· the need to value the assets of the Benefit Plan annually.

 

Under ERISA, a plan fiduciary’s responsibilities include the following duties:

 

· to act solely in the interest of plan participants and beneficiaries and for the exclusive purpose of providing benefits to them, as well as defraying reasonable expenses of plan administration;

 

· to invest plan assets prudently;

 

· to diversify the investments of the plan unless it is clearly prudent not to do so;

 

· to ensure sufficient liquidity for the plan; and

 

· to consider whether an investment would constitute or give rise to a prohibited transaction under ERISA or the Code.

 

ERISA also requires that the assets of an employee benefit plan be held in trust and that the trustee, or a duly authorized named fiduciary or investment manager, have exclusive authority and discretion to manage and control the assets of the plan. Section 406 of ERISA and Section 4975 of the Code prohibit specified transactions involving the assets of a Benefit Plan which are between the plan and any “party in interest” or “disqualified person” with respect to that Benefit Plan. These transactions are prohibited regardless of how beneficial they may be for the Benefit Plan. Prohibited transactions include the sale, exchange or leasing of property, the lending of money or the extension of credit between a Benefit Plan and a party in interest or disqualified person, and the transfer to, or use by, or for the benefit of, a party in interest, or disqualified person, of any assets of a Benefit Plan. A fiduciary of a Benefit Plan also is prohibited from engaging in self-dealing, acting for a person who has an interest adverse to the plan or receiving any consideration for its own account from a party dealing with the plan in a transaction involving plan assets.

 

Plan Asset Considerations

 

In order to determine whether an investment in shares of our common stock by Benefit Plans creates or gives rise to the potential for either prohibited transactions or the commingling of assets referred to above, a fiduciary must consider whether an investment in shares of our common stock will cause our assets to be treated as assets of the investing Benefit Plans. U.S. Department of Labor Regulations provide guidelines as to whether, and under what circumstances, the underlying assets of an entity will be deemed to constitute assets of a Benefit Plan when the plan invests in that entity, which we refer to as the “Plan Assets Regulation.” Under the Plan Assets Regulation, the assets of corporations, partnerships or other entities in which a Benefit Plan makes an equity investment will generally be deemed to be assets of the Benefit Plan unless the entity satisfies one of the exceptions to this general “look-through” rule.

 

In the event that our underlying assets were treated by the Department of Labor as the assets of investing Benefit Plans, our management would be treated as fiduciaries with respect to each Benefit Plan stockholder, and an investment in shares of our common stock might constitute an ineffective delegation of fiduciary responsibility to the Advisor, and expose the fiduciary of the Benefit Plan to co-fiduciary liability under ERISA for any breach by the Advisor of the fiduciary duties mandated under ERISA.

 

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If the Advisor or affiliates of the Advisor were treated as fiduciaries with respect to Benefit Plan stockholders, the prohibited transaction restrictions of ERISA and the Code would apply to any transaction involving our assets. These restrictions could, for example, require that we avoid transactions with entities that are affiliated with us or our affiliates or restructure our activities in order to obtain an administrative exemption from the prohibited transaction restrictions. Alternatively, we might have to provide Benefit Plan stockholders with the opportunity to sell their shares of common stock to us or we might dissolve or terminate. If a prohibited transaction were to occur, the Code imposes an excise tax equal to 15% of the amount involved and authorizes the IRS to impose an additional 100% excise tax if the prohibited transaction is not “corrected.” These taxes would be imposed on any disqualified person who participates in the prohibited transaction. In addition, the Advisor and possibly other fiduciaries of Benefit Plan stockholders subject to ERISA who permitted the prohibited transaction to occur or who otherwise breached their fiduciary responsibilities, or a non-fiduciary participating in a prohibited transaction, could be required to restore to the Benefit Plan any profits they realized as a result of the transaction or breach, and make good to the Benefit Plan any losses incurred by the Benefit Plan as a result of the transaction or breach. With respect to an IRA that invests in shares of our common stock, the occurrence of a prohibited transaction involving the individual who established the IRA, or his beneficiary, would cause the IRA to lose its tax-exempt status under Section 408(e)(2) of the Code.

 

The Plan Assets Regulation provides that the underlying assets of an entity, including a REIT, will not be treated as assets of a Benefit Plan investing therein if the interest the Benefit Plan acquires is a “publicly offered security.” The definition of publicly offered securities requires that such securities be “widely held,” “freely transferable” and satisfy registration requirements under federal securities laws.

 

Under the Plan Assets Regulation, a class of securities will meet the registration requirements under federal securities laws if they are (1) part of a class of securities registered under section 12(b) or 12(g) of the Exchange Act or (2) part of an offering of securities to the public pursuant to an effective registration statement under the Securities Act and the class of securities of which such security is a part is registered under the Exchange Act within 120 days (or such later time as may be allowed by the Commission) after the end of the fiscal year of the issuer during which the offering of such securities to the public occurred. Our securities meet these registration requirements under the Plan Assets Regulation. Also under the Plan Assets Regulation, a class of securities will be “widely held” if it is held by 100 or more persons independent of the issuer. We believe that this requirement will be met with respect to Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares of our common stock. Although all classes of our shares are intended to satisfy the registration requirements under this definition, and we expect that our securities will be “widely-held,” the “freely transferable” requirement must also be satisfied in order for us to qualify for the “publicly offered securities” exception.

 

Whether a security is “freely transferable” depends upon the particular facts and circumstances. Shares of our common stock are subject to certain restrictions on transferability, including restrictions intended to ensure that we continue to qualify for federal income tax treatment as a REIT and restrictions to comply with federal and state securities laws. The regulation provides, however, that where the minimum investment in a public offering of securities is $10,000 or less, the presence of a restriction on transferability intended to prohibit transfers which would result in (1) a termination or reclassification of the entity for state or federal tax purposes or (2) a violation of any state or federal statute or regulation, will not ordinarily affect a determination that such securities are freely transferable. The minimum investment in shares of our common stock is less than $10,000; thus, the restrictions imposed in order to maintain our status as a REIT and to comply with federal and state securities laws should not cause the shares of common stock to be deemed not freely transferable.

 

Taking into account all of the relevant facts and circumstances, including those referred to in the preceding paragraph, and assuming that the offering takes place as described in this prospectus, we believe that shares of our common stock should constitute “publicly offered securities” and, accordingly, our underlying assets should not be considered “plan assets” under the Plan Assets Regulation. No assurance can be given, however, that the publicly offered securities exception will apply. If our underlying assets are not deemed to be “plan assets,” the issues discussed in the second and third paragraphs of this “Plan Assets Considerations” section are not expected to arise.

 

Other Prohibited Transactions

 

Regardless of whether the shares of common stock qualify for the “publicly offered security” exception of the Plan Assets Regulation, a prohibited transaction could occur if we, the Advisor, any selected dealer or any of their affiliates is a fiduciary (within the meaning of Section 3(21) of ERISA) with respect to any Benefit Plan purchasing the shares of common stock. Accordingly, unless an administrative or statutory exemption applies, shares of common stock should not be purchased using assets of a Benefit Plan with respect to which any of the above persons is a fiduciary. A person is a fiduciary with respect to a Benefit Plan under Section 3(21) of ERISA if, among other things, the person has discretionary authority or control with respect to “plan assets” or provides investment advice for a fee with respect to “plan assets.” Under a regulation issued by the Department of Labor, a person shall be deemed to be providing investment advice if that person renders advice as to the advisability of investing in shares of our common stock and that person regularly provides investment advice to the Benefit Plan pursuant to a mutual agreement or understanding (written or otherwise) (1) that the advice will serve as the primary basis for investment decisions and (2) that the advice will be individualized for the Benefit Plan based on its particular needs.

 

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Annual Valuation

 

A fiduciary of an employee benefit plan subject to ERISA is required to determine annually the fair market value of each asset of the plan as of the end of the plan’s fiscal year and to file a report reflecting that value with the Department of Labor. When the fair market value of any particular asset is not available, the fiduciary is required to make a good faith determination of that asset’s “fair market value” assuming an orderly liquidation at the time the determination is made. In addition, a trustee or custodian of an IRA must provide an IRA participant with a statement of the value of the IRA each year.

 

In discharging its obligation to value assets of a plan, a fiduciary subject to ERISA must act consistently with the relevant provisions of the plan and the general fiduciary standards of ERISA. It is not currently intended that the shares of our common stock will be listed on a national securities exchange, nor is it expected that a public market for the shares of common stock will develop. To date, neither the Internal Revenue Service nor the Department of Labor has promulgated regulations specifying how a plan fiduciary should determine the “fair market value” of the shares of our common stock, namely when the fair market value of the shares of common stock is not determined in the marketplace. Therefore, to assist fiduciaries in fulfilling their valuation and annual reporting responsibilities with respect to ownership of shares of common stock, we intend to provide reports of our annual determinations of the current value of our net assets per outstanding share to those fiduciaries (including IRA trustees and custodians) who identify themselves to us and request the reports. However, because the redemption of our common stock may be limited as to timing and as to the amount of shares of common stock that can be redeemed, you may not be able to realize the current NAV per share for your common stock at any given time. Accordingly, there can be no assurance that such determinations of current net asset value per share will satisfy the applicable annual valuation requirements under ERISA or the Code.

 

The foregoing requirements of ERISA and the Code are complex and subject to change. Plan fiduciaries and the beneficial owners of IRAs are urged to consult with their own advisors regarding an investment in our shares.

  

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PLAN OF DISTRIBUTION

 

General

 

We are offering up to $1,000,000,000 in shares of our common stock in this offering through Dividend Capital Securities LLC, our Dealer Manager, a registered broker-dealer related to the Advisor, including $750,000,000 in shares of our common stock initially allocated to be offered in the primary share offering and $250,000,000 in shares of our common stock initially allocated to be offered pursuant to the distribution reinvestment plan. Prior to the conclusion of this offering, if any of the shares of our common stock initially allocated to the distribution reinvestment plan remain after meeting anticipated obligations under the distribution reinvestment plan, we may decide to sell some or all of such shares of common stock to the public in the primary share offering. Similarly, prior to the conclusion of this offering, if the shares of our common stock initially allocated to the distribution reinvestment plan have been purchased and we anticipate additional demand for shares of common stock under our distribution reinvestment plan, we may choose to reallocate some or all of the shares of our common stock allocated to be offered in the primary share offering to the distribution reinvestment plan.

 

We are offering to the public three classes of shares of our common stock, Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares. We are offering a maximum of $750,000,000 in any combination of purchases of Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares in our primary offering. All investors must meet the suitability standards discussed in the section of this prospectus entitled “Suitability Standards.” The share classes have different selling commissions and ongoing fees and expenses. When deciding which class of shares to buy, you should consider, among other things, whether you are eligible to purchase one or more classes of shares, the amount of your investment, the length of time you intend to hold the shares, the selling commission and fees attributable to each class of shares and whether you qualify for any selling commission discounts described below.

 

Our Class A shares, Class W shares and Class I shares are available for different categories of investors. Class A shares are available to the general public. Class W shares are available for purchase in this offering only (1) through fee-based programs, also known as wrap accounts, (2) through participating broker-dealers that have alternative fee arrangements with their clients, (3) through investment advisers registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or applicable state law or (4) through bank trust departments or any other organization or person authorized to act as a fiduciary for its clients or customers. Class I shares are available for purchase in this offering only (1) by institutional accounts as defined by FINRA Rule 4512(c), (2) through bank-sponsored collective trusts and bank-sponsored common trusts, (3) by retirement plans (including a trustee or custodian under any deferred compensation or pension or profit sharing plan or payroll deduction IRA established for the benefit of the employees of any company), foundations or endowments, (4) through certain financial intermediaries that are not otherwise registered with or as a broker-dealer and that direct clients to trade with a broker-dealer that offers Class I shares, (5) by our executive officers and directors and their immediate family members, as well as officers and employees of the Advisor and the Advisor’s product specialists or other affiliates of the Advisor and their immediate family members, our product specialists and their affiliates and, if approved by our board of directors, joint venture partners, consultants and other service providers, (6) by investors purchasing shares in a transaction that entitles our Dealer Manager to a “primary dealer fee” as described below under “—Underwriting Compensation—Primary Dealer Fee,” (7) through bank trust departments or any other organization or person authorized to act as a fiduciary for its clients or customers and (8) by any other categories of purchasers that we name in an amendment or supplement to this prospectus. In particular, we intend to sell Class I shares to a bank-sponsored collective trust named The Trust Advisors Portfolios Program, Series Seven, Reliance Trust Real Estate Portfolio – Dividend Capital Focus. The trust presently intends to raise capital by selling units of interest in the trust, and to invest a substantial amount of the proceeds in our Class I shares. The trust is under no obligation to purchase any Class I shares. Neither the Dealer Manager nor its affiliates will directly or indirectly compensate any person engaged as an investment advisor or a bank trust department by a potential investor as an inducement for such investment advisor or bank trust department to advise favorably for an investment in Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.

  

The shares of our common stock being offered to the public are being offered on a “best efforts” basis, which means generally that the Dealer Manager and the participating broker-dealers described below will be required to use only their best efforts to sell the shares of our common stock and they have no firm commitment or obligation to purchase any shares of our common stock. Our agreement with the Dealer Manager may be terminated by either party upon 60 days’ written notice. This offering commenced on September 16, 2015, the initial effective date of the registration statement of which this prospectus forms a part.

  

The broker-dealers participating in the offering of shares of our common stock are not obligated to obtain any subscriptions on our behalf, and we cannot assure you that any shares of common stock will be sold. Although we expect that most sales will be made through participating broker-dealers, in certain situations the Dealer Manager may make sales without a participating broker-dealer. In addition, we may make issuer direct sales with respect to Class I shares purchased in this offering by our executive officers and directors and their immediate family members, as well as officers and employees of the Advisor and its affiliates; this will not have any effect on the price they pay for their shares.

 

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Purchase of Shares

 

Shares are sold at NAV per share of the class of share being purchased, plus, for Class A shares sold in the primary offering only, applicable selling commissions. Each class of shares may have a different NAV per share because certain fees are charged differently with respect to each class. See “Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures—NAV and NAV Per Share Calculation” for more information about the calculation of NAV per share.

 

In order to purchase shares, you must (1) complete a subscription eligibility form to be provided to us by your financial advisor and direct your financial advisor to purchase shares in this offering and (2) pay for the shares at the time your purchase order is settled. Certain participating broker-dealers may require supplementary disclosure materials or additional forms or documentation. You should consult with your financial advisor when purchasing shares. Shares of our common stock purchased by a fiduciary or custodial account will be registered in the name of the fiduciary account and not in the name of the beneficiary. We generally adhere to the following procedures relating to purchases of shares of our common stock in this offering:

 

· As soon as practicable after the close of the New York Stock Exchange (generally, 4:00 p.m. Eastern time), which we refer to as the “close of business,” on each business day, the NAV Accountant, with oversight of our Advisor, determines our NAV per share for that day for each share class. As promptly as practicable following the close of business on each business day, we (i) post our NAV per share for such day for each share class on our website, www.dividendcapitaldiversified.com , and (ii) make our NAV per share for each share class available on our toll-free, automated telephone line, (888) 310-9352. In addition, on at least a monthly basis, we disclose in a prospectus or prospectus supplement filed with the Commission our NAV per share for each share class for each business day during the prior month. On at least a quarterly basis, we disclose in a prospectus or prospectus supplement filed with the Commission the principal valuation components of our NAV.

 

· On each business day, our transfer agent collects and processes purchase orders. In order to help ensure that you have had an opportunity to review the terms as well as the risks of investing in this offering, we may not accept an initial purchase order until at least five business days after you receive a final prospectus. Notwithstanding, we can reject purchase orders for any reason, even if a prospective investor meets the minimum suitability requirements outlined in our prospectus. Each accepted purchase order will be executed at a price equal to our NAV per share for the class of shares being purchased determined after the purchase order is received in good order by our transfer agent or a fund intermediary, plus, for Class A shares sold in the primary offering only, any applicable selling commissions. For example, if a purchase order is received in good order after the close of business (4:00 p.m. Eastern time) on a business day, the purchase will be executed at our NAV per share for the class of shares being purchased determined after the close of business on the next business day, plus, for Class A shares sold in the primary offering only, any applicable selling commissions. In addition, there may be a delay between your purchase decision and the execution date caused by time necessary for you and your participating broker-dealer to put a purchase order in “good order,” which means, for these purposes, that all required information has been completed, all proper signatures have been provided, and funds for payment have been provided. As a result of this process, the price per share at which your order is executed may be different than the price per share on the date you submitted your purchase order.

 

· You will receive a confirmation statement of each new transaction in your account promptly after your purchase order is processed. The confirmation statement will disclose the price at which the order was executed and will include information on how to obtain information we have filed with the Commission and made publicly available on our website at www.dividendcapitaldiversified.com and our toll-free, automated telephone line at (888) 310-9352, including our daily NAV per share.

 

You will not know at the time you place an order to purchase shares of our common stock precisely the price at which your order will be executed. The NAV per share at which your purchase price is based could be higher or lower than our NAV per share at the time you submit your purchase order. However, you will have available through our latest prospectus information regarding the methodology pursuant to which our NAV is determined, and, accordingly, the method upon which the price of shares of our common stock is determined on the business day that your purchase order is processed. In addition, on at least a monthly basis, we disclose in a prospectus or prospectus supplement filed with the Commission our NAV per share for each share class for each business day during the prior month. On at least a quarterly basis, we disclose in a prospectus or prospectus supplement filed with the Commission the principal valuation components of our NAV. You also have information available through our website and our toll-free telephone line about the NAV per share for each share class upon which the price for our common stock was based on the business day immediately preceding the day that you submit your purchase order. Although under normal circumstances we would not anticipate that our NAV will vary significantly from one day to the next, there can be no assurance that will be the case.

 

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In contrast to securities traded on an exchange or over-the-counter, where the price often fluctuates as a result of, among other things, the supply and demand of securities in the trading market, our NAV is calculated once daily using our valuation procedures, and the price at which we sell new shares and redeem outstanding shares that day does not change depending on the level of demand by investors or the volume of requests for redemption on that day. We generally sell as many shares as orders are received from investors, subject to acceptance as discussed below, each day at the same price (NAV per share of the applicable class of shares, without premium or discount, plus, for Class A shares sold in the primary offering only, applicable selling commissions) regardless of when orders are received during the day. If, however, we become aware of facts or circumstances that are likely to materially affect our NAV on any particular day, we may decline to accept orders from investors until we have disclosed publicly such information.

 

If you place an order to buy shares and your payment is not received and collected, your purchase may be canceled and you could be liable for any losses or fees we have incurred.

 

We may reject for any reason or for no reason, or cancel as permitted or required by law, any purchase orders. For example, we may reject any purchase orders from market timers or investors that, in our opinion, may be disruptive to our operations. We may stop offering shares completely or may offer shares only on a limited basis for a period of time or permanently. If your subscription is rejected, your purchase payment will be returned to you without interest.

 

Because we intend to accrue distributions with daily record dates, we expect that your purchase price will reflect a reduction in NAV from the distribution accrued since the most recent quarter-end, to which you will not be entitled. However, we reserve the right to adjust the periods during which distributions accrue and are paid.

 

If you participate in our distribution reinvestment plan, the cash distributions attributable to the class of shares that you purchase in our primary offering will be automatically invested in additional shares of the same class. Shares are offered pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan at NAV per share applicable to that class, calculated as of the distribution date.

 

Pursuant to this prospectus, we will offer to the public all of the shares that we have registered. We intend to conduct a continuous offering that will not have a predetermined duration, subject to continued compliance with the rules and regulations of the Commission and applicable state laws. From time to time, we intend to file new registration statements on Form S-11 with the Commission to register additional Class A, Class W and Class I shares of common stock so that we may continuously offer shares of common stock pursuant to Rule 415 under the Securities Act. In certain states, the registration of our offering may continue for only one year following the initial clearance by applicable state authorities, after which we intend to renew the offering period for additional one-year periods (or longer, if permitted by the laws of each particular state). We reserve the right to terminate this offering at any time.

 

Frequent Trading Policies

 

We may reject for any reason, or cancel as permitted or required by law, any subscriptions for shares of our common stock.

 

For example, we may reject any subscriptions from market timers or investors that, in our opinion, may be disruptive to our operations. Frequent purchases and sales of our shares can harm stockholders in various ways, including reducing the returns to long-term stockholders by increasing our costs, disrupting portfolio management strategies and diluting the value of the shares of long-term stockholders. Among other things, the following activities may be considered by us to be frequent trading:

 

· any stockholder who redeems their shares of our common stock within 30 calendar days of the purchase of such shares;

 

· transactions deemed harmful or excessive by us (including but not limited to patterns of purchases and redemptions), in our sole discretion; and

 

· transactions initiated by financial advisors, among multiple stockholder accounts, that in the aggregate are deemed harmful or excessive.

 

Underwriting Compensation

 

We have entered into a dealer manager agreement with our Dealer Manager which sets forth the compensation arrangements between us and the Dealer Manager in connection with this offering. We will not pay referral or similar fees to any accountant, attorneys or other persons in connection with the distribution of shares of our common stock.

 

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Summary

 

The following table shows the selling commissions payable at the time you subscribe for shares in the primary offering, which selling commissions are subject to the provisions for a reduction in certain circumstances as described below: 

 

     

Maximum up-front sales charge
as a % of the public
offering price for such class (1)

 
  Class A shares       3.0 %
  Class W shares       None  
  Class I shares       None  

 

 

(1) This presents the commission before rounding. For each purchase, the total per share purchase price will be calculated by adding the applicable selling commission to the NAV per share and rounding to four decimal places; the actual selling commission per share that we pay will be the total per share purchase price less the NAV per share.

 

The following table shows the fees we will pay the Dealer Manager with respect to each class of shares on an annualized basis as a percentage of our NAV per share for such class.

                   
   

Class A 

   

Class W 

   

Class I

 
Dealer Manager Fee (1)     0.60 %     0.60 %     0.10 %
Distribution Fee (2)     0.50 %     None       None  

 

 
(1) The dealer manager fee accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.60% of our NAV per share for each of our Class A and Class W shares and an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.10% of our NAV per share for our Class I shares for such day on a continuous basis from year to year, subject to certain limitations under applicable FINRA rules.

(2) The distribution fee accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.50% of our NAV per share for Class A shares only for such day on a continuous basis from year to year, subject to certain limitations under applicable FINRA rules.

 

In certain circumstances we will pay a primary dealer fee of up to 5.0% of the gross proceeds raised from the sale of Class I shares in the primary offering. See “—Primary Dealer Fee” below. In addition, in certain circumstances the Dealer Manager may pay certain supplemental fees or commissions in connection with the sale of Class I shares in this offering as described below under “—Supplemental Fees and Commissions.”

  

Selling Commissions—Class A Shares

 

Subject to the provisions for a reduction of the selling commission described below, we pay the Dealer Manager selling commissions on Class A shares sold in the primary offering of up to 3.0% of the public offering price per Class A share sold in the primary offering. The selling commission expressed as a percentage of the public offering price per share may be higher or lower than 3.0% due to rounding. Substantially all of the selling commissions are expected to be reallowed to participating broker-dealers. Further, selling commissions may be reduced or waived at the direction of the Dealer Manager, in connection with volume or other discounts, other fee arrangements or for sales to certain categories of purchasers. The Dealer Manager is not required to sell any specific number or dollar amount of shares of our common stock but will use its best efforts to sell the shares offered hereby in the primary offering.

 

We are offering volume discounts to purchasers who purchase $500,000 or more in Class A shares from the same broker-dealer, whether in a single purchase or as the result of multiple purchases. The Dealer Manager and any participating broker-dealers and their registered representatives will be responsible for the proper implementation of any applicable volume discounts. Any reduction in the amount of the selling commissions as a result of volume discounts received may be credited to the qualifying purchasers in the form of the issuance of additional shares. The net offering proceeds we receive will not be affected by any reduction of selling commissions.

 

The following table illustrates the various discount levels that may be offered to purchasers of Class A shares purchased in the primary offering:

 

       

Your Investment

 

Commission as a % of Public Offering
Price Per Class A Share (1)

 
Up to $499,999.99     3.00 %
$500,000 to $999,999.99     2.50 %
$1,000,000 to $1,499,999.99     2.00 %
$1,500,000 to $1,999,999.99     1.50 %
$2,000,000 to $2,499,999.99     1.00 %
$2,500,000 to $2,999,999.99     0.50 %
$3,000,000 and up     0.00 %

 

 
(1) This presents the commission before rounding. For each purchase, the total per share purchase price will be calculated by adding the applicable selling commission to the NAV per share and rounding to four decimal places; the actual selling commission per share that we pay will be the total per share purchase price less the NAV per share.

 

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For an example of how the volume discount is calculated, assuming Class A NAV per share of $7.3587 and no volume discount per share, if an investor purchases $950,000 of Class A shares, the investor would pay $7.5863 per share and purchase 125,226 shares. With the volume discount, the investor would pay $7.5474 per share and purchase 125,871 Class A shares.

 

If you qualify for a volume discount as the result of multiple purchases of our Class A shares, you will receive the benefit of the applicable volume discount for the individual purchase which qualified you for the volume discount, but you will not be entitled to the benefit for prior purchases. Additionally, once you qualify for a volume discount, you will receive the benefit for subsequent purchases through the same participating broker-dealer. For this purpose, if you purchase Class A shares issued and sold in this offering you will receive the benefit of such Class A share purchases in connection with qualifying for volume discounts in our subsequent offerings through the same participating broker-dealer.

 

Notwithstanding the above, the Dealer Manager may, at its sole discretion, enter into an agreement with a participating broker-dealer, whereby such broker-dealer may aggregate subscriptions, including future subscriptions for which a bona fide letter of intent is provided, as part of a combined order for the purposes of offering investors reduced sales commissions, provided that any such aggregate group of subscriptions must be received from such broker-dealer. Any reduction in sales commissions would be prorated among the separate subscribers.

 

In addition, we will not pay selling commissions with respect to sales of Class A shares through either of the following distribution channels: (1) through fee-based programs, also known as wrap accounts or (2) through investment advisers registered under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 or applicable state law.

 

Your ability to receive a discount or fee waiver based on combining orders or otherwise may depend on the financial advisor or broker-dealer through which you purchase your Class A shares. An investor qualifying for a discount will receive a higher percentage return on his or her investment than investors who do not qualify for such discount. Accordingly, you should consult with your financial advisor about the ability to receive such discounts or fee waivers before purchasing Class A shares.

 

Selling Commissions—Class W and Class I shares

 

We do not pay selling commissions on Class W and Class I shares. However, in certain circumstances we will pay a primary dealer fee of up to 5.0% of the gross proceeds raised from the sale of Class I shares in the primary offering. See “—Primary Dealer Fee” below. In addition, in certain circumstances the Dealer Manager may pay certain supplemental fees or commissions in connection with the sale of Class I shares in this offering as described below under “—Supplemental Fees and Commissions.”

 

Selling Commissions—Distribution Reinvestment Plan Shares

 

We do not pay selling commissions on shares sold pursuant to our distribution reinvestment plan.

 

Dealer Manager Fee—Class A, Class W and Class I Shares

 

We pay the Dealer Manager a dealer manager fee for coordinating our marketing and distribution efforts. Subject to FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation and certain other limitations, the dealer manager fee accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.60% of our NAV per share for each of our Class A and Class W shares and in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.10% of our NAV per share for our Class I shares for such day on a continuous basis from year to year. The Dealer Manager may reallow a portion of the dealer manager fee to participating broker-dealers that meet certain thresholds of our shares under management and certain other metrics and servicing broker-dealers. The dealer manager fee is payable monthly in arrears. The dealer manager fee is payable with respect to all Class A, Class W and Class I shares, including Class A, Class W and Class I shares issued under our distribution reinvestment plan.

 

Distribution Fee—Class A Shares Only

 

Subject to FINRA limitations on underwriting compensation and certain other limitations, we pay the Dealer Manager a distribution fee with respect to our Class A shares that accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.50% of the amount of our NAV per share for our Class A shares for such day on a continuous basis from year to year as additional compensation for selling shares in this offering and for ongoing stockholder services. The Dealer Manager may reallow the distribution fee to participating broker-dealers and servicing broker-dealers. The distribution fee is payable monthly in arrears. The distribution fee is payable with respect to all Class A shares, including Class A shares issued under our distribution reinvestment plan. We do not pay the distribution fee on Class W and Class I shares.

 

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Primary Dealer Fee

 

We may pay to the Dealer Manager a primary dealer fee in the amount of up to 5.0% of the gross proceeds raised from the sale of Class I shares in the primary offering, provided that (i) the total gross proceeds raised with respect to which the primary dealer fee will apply may not exceed $100,000,000, subject to further increase by our board of directors, in its discretion; (ii) the primary dealer fee will only be paid with respect to sales made by participating broker-dealers specifically approved by us as being eligible; and (iii) the primary dealer fee will only be paid with respect to sales made at times approved by us. The Dealer Manager may reallow a portion of the primary dealer fee to the participating broker-dealers involved in selling such Class I shares based on the portion of the gross proceeds raised from their customers. The Dealer Manager will consider the primary dealer fee to be underwriting compensation subject to the limits described below. The primary dealer fee will be paid by us and will not be considered to be a class-specific expense. Accordingly, the expense will be allocated among all holders of Fund Interests ratably according to the NAV of their units or shares. Currently, the maximum primary dealer fee we will pay our Dealer Manager is $5 million, although in the future we may provide for additional primary dealer fee payments.

 

Supplemental Fees and Commissions

 

In addition to the fees and commissions described above, the Dealer Manager may elect to pay supplemental fees or commissions to participating broker-dealers and servicing broker-dealers with respect to Class I shares sold in the primary offering. If such supplemental fees or commissions are paid with respect to an investment, the investor will be notified through disclosure on the subscription agreement. Such supplemental fees or commissions may be paid at the time of sale or over time. Any such supplemental fees and commissions will be considered underwriting compensation subject to the 10% underwriting compensation limit described below and will not be reimbursed by us, but may be reimbursed by the Advisor. Assuming that we sell the maximum primary offering in equal dollar amounts of each class offered, we do not expect such supplemental fees and commissions to exceed $2.5 million.

 

Other Compensation

 

We pay directly, or reimburse the Advisor and the Dealer Manager if they pay on our behalf, any organization and offering expenses (other than selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee, primary dealer fees, supplemental fees and commissions and certain amounts described in the paragraph below) as and when incurred. These expenses may include reimbursements for the bona fide due diligence expenses of participating broker-dealers, supported by detailed and itemized invoices, and similar diligence expenses of investment advisers, legal fees of the Dealer Manager, reimbursements for customary travel, lodging, meals and reasonable entertainment expenses of registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager, the cost of educational conferences held by us, including costs reimbursement for registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager and registered representatives of participating broker-dealers to attend educational conferences sponsored by us, and attendance fees and costs reimbursement for registered persons associated with the Dealer Manager to attend seminars conducted by participating broker-dealers and promotional items.

 

In addition, the Advisor may pay the Dealer Manager, without reimbursement by us, additional amounts in order to fund certain of the Dealer Manager’s costs and expenses related to the distribution of the offering, including compensation of certain registered employees of the Dealer Manager as well as supplemental fees and commissions paid by the Dealer Manager with respect to sales of Class I shares described above. Such payments will be considered underwriting compensation subject to the 10% underwriting compensation limit described below. Assuming that we sell the maximum primary offering in equal dollar amounts of each class offered, we do not expect such payments to exceed $5.5 million (including payments to reimburse the Dealer Manager for payments of any supplemental fees or commissions in connection with the sale of Class I shares that are not reimbursable by us, as described above in “—Supplemental Fees and Commissions”).

 

Limitations on Underwriting Compensation

 

The Dealer Manager monitors the aggregate amount of underwriting compensation that we and the Advisor pay in connection with this offering in order to ensure we comply with the underwriting compensation limits of applicable FINRA rules. Under applicable FINRA rules, total underwriting compensation in this offering, including selling commissions, the dealer manager fee, the distribution fee, primary dealer fees, supplemental fees and commissions, and expense reimbursements or payments to the Dealer Manager and participating broker-dealers described in the table and footnotes below, may not exceed 10% of the gross offering proceeds of our primary offering. Accordingly, the dealer manager fee and distribution fee that are payable to our Dealer Manager with respect to this offering (i.e., pursuant to the registration statement for this offering) will cease when, following the completion of this offering, total underwriting compensation in such offering equals 10% of the gross proceeds from the primary portion of this offering. We consider the portion of the dealer manager fee and the distribution fee accruing with respect to Class A, Class W and Class I shares issued during the term of this offering, and not issued pursuant to a prior public offering, as underwriting compensation with respect to this offering. In addition, we will cease paying the dealer manager fee and the distribution fee on the earlier to occur of the following: (i) a listing of the class of such shares on a national securities exchange or (ii) such shares no longer being outstanding, for example (without limitation) upon their redemption or other repurchase by us, upon our dissolution, or upon a merger or other extraordinary transaction in which we are a party and in which the shares are exchanged for cash or other securities. FINRA rules also limit our total cumulative organization and offering expenses (including selling commissions, bona fide due diligence expenses and underwriting compensation) to 15% of our gross offering proceeds. After the termination of the primary offering and again after termination of the offering under our distribution reinvestment plan, the Advisor has agreed to reimburse us to the extent that total cumulative organization and offering expenses that we incur exceed 15% of our gross proceeds from the applicable offering.

 

174
 

 

In order to show the maximum amount of compensation that may be paid in connection with this offering, the following table assumes that we sell all of the shares offered by this prospectus, that all shares sold are Class A shares, that no shares are reallocated between the primary offering and the distribution reinvestment plan and that all Class A shares are sold with the highest possible selling commissions.

 

Maximum Estimated Underwriting Fees, Expenses and Other Compensation
At Maximum Primary Offering of $750,000,000 (1)(2)

 

Selling commissions (3) $ 22,500,000     3.00 %
Dealer manager fee (4)   23,890,364     3.20 %
Distribution fee (5)   19,908,636     2.65 %
Wholesaling compensation allocations (6)   5,431,000     0.72 %
Reimbursements related to retail activities (7)   1,010,000     0.13 %
Reimbursements for wholesaling activities (8)   1,940,000     0.26 %
Legal fees allocable to dealer manager 170,000   0.02 %
Promotional items 150,000   0.02 %
    Total $ 75,000,000     10.00 %

 

 
(1) Because this table assumes that all shares sold are Class A shares, it does not reflect the payment of any primary dealer fees which are payable on certain Class I shares as described elsewhere in this prospectus. To the extent primary dealer fees are paid on Class I shares, such primary dealer fees will be considered underwriting compensation subject to the 10% underwriting compensation limit described above and thus will reduce the maximum amounts available for the other underwriting compensation expenses set forth in this table.

(2) This table does not reflect payments by the Dealer Manager of any supplemental fees or commissions in connection with the sale of Class I shares that are not reimbursable by us, as described above in “—Supplemental Fees and Commissions”, or payments by the Advisor to the Dealer Manager that are not reimbursable by us, as described above in “— Other Compensation”. To the extent any such payments are made, such payments will be subject to the 10% underwriting compensation limit described above and thus will reduce the maximum amounts available for the other underwriting compensation expenses set forth in this table, except with respect to reimbursements for expenses already included in the table. Assuming that we sell the maximum primary offering in equal dollar amounts of each class offered, we do not expect payments by the Dealer Manager of supplemental fees or commissions in connection with the sale of Class I shares that are not reimbursable by us, as described above in “—Supplemental Fees and Commissions”, to exceed $2.5 million. Assuming that we sell the maximum primary offering in equal dollar amounts of each class offered, we do not expect payments by the Advisor to the Dealer Manager that are not reimbursable by us, as described above in “— Other Compensation”, to exceed $5.5 million (including payments to reimburse the Dealer Manager for payments of any supplemental fees or commissions in connection with the sale of Class I shares that are not reimbursable by us, as described above in “—Supplemental Fees and Commissions”).

(3) Assumes the full selling commission of 3% of the public offering price per share is paid for each Class A share sold in this offering.

(4) Subject to certain limitations, the dealer manager fee accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.60% of our NAV per share for Class A and Class W shares and in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.10% of our NAV per share for Class I shares for such day. The numbers presented reflect that the dealer manager fee is paid over a number of years, and as a result, will cumulatively increase above 0.60% over time. The Dealer Manager may reallow a portion of the dealer manager fee to participating broker-dealers that meet certain thresholds of our shares under management and certain other metrics.

(5) Subject to certain limitations, the distribution fee accrues daily in an amount equal to 1/365th of 0.50% of the amount of our NAV per share for our Class A shares for each day. The numbers presented reflect that the distribution fee is paid over a number of years and, as a result, will cumulatively increase above 0.50% over time. The Dealer Manager may reallow the distribution fee to participating broker-dealers. The distribution fee is not payable on Class W or Class I shares.

(6) Represents the estimated amount of non-transaction based compensation of the Dealer Manager’s employees engaged in the distribution of this offering that will be allocated to this offering under applicable FINRA rules.

(7) Consists primarily of (a) fees paid to participating broker-dealers to attend retail seminars sponsored by such participating broker-dealers and (b) amounts used to reimburse participating broker-dealers for the actual costs incurred by registered representatives for travel, meals and lodging in connection with attending bona fide training and education meetings sponsored by us or the Dealer Manager.

(8) Consists primarily of expense reimbursements for actual costs incurred by employees of the Dealer Manager in the performance of wholesaling activities, including entertainment expenses, actual costs incurred by such employees for travel, meals and lodging in connection with attending retail seminars sponsored by participating broker-dealers and bona fide training and education meetings sponsored by us or the Dealer Manager. We will reimburse the Dealer Manager for these expenses to the extent permissible under applicable FINRA rules.

  

Indemnification

 

Subject to certain limitations in our agreements, we have agreed to indemnify the Dealer Manager and participating broker-dealers, and the Dealer Manager and participating broker-dealers have agreed to severally indemnify us, our officers and directors against certain liabilities in connection with this offering, including liabilities arising under the Securities Act. However, the Commission and some state securities commissions take the position that indemnification against liabilities arising under the Securities Act is against public policy and is unenforceable.

 

175
 

 

SUPPLEMENTAL SALES MATERIAL

 

In addition to this prospectus, we may utilize certain sales material in connection with the offering of shares of our common stock, although only when accompanied by or preceded by the delivery of this prospectus. In certain jurisdictions, some or all of such sales material may not be available. This material may include information relating to this offering, the past performance of the Advisor and its affiliates, property brochures and articles and publications concerning real estate. In addition, the sales material may contain certain quotes from various publications without obtaining the consent of the author or the publication for use of the quoted material in the sales material.

 

The offering of shares of our common stock is made only by means of this prospectus. Although the information contained in such sales material will not conflict with any of the information contained in this prospectus, such material does not purport to be complete, and should not be considered a part of this prospectus or the registration statement of which this prospectus is a part, or as incorporated by reference in this prospectus or said registration statement or as forming the basis of the offering of the shares of our common stock.

 

QUANTITATIVE AND QUALITATIVE DISCLOSURES ABOUT MARKET RISK

 

Market risk is the adverse effect on the value of assets and liabilities that results from a change in the applicable market resulting from a variety of factors such as perceived risk, interest rate changes, inflation and overall general economic changes. Accordingly, we manage our market risk by matching projected cash inflows from operating, investing and financing activities with projected cash outflows for debt service, acquisitions, capital expenditures, distributions to stockholders and unit holders, and other cash requirements. Our outstanding borrowings are directly impacted by changes in market conditions. This impact is largely mitigated by the fact that the majority of our outstanding borrowings have fixed interest rates, which minimize our exposure to the risk that fluctuating interest rates may pose to our operating results and liquidity.

 

As of December 31, 2015, the fair value of our fixed rate mortgage debt was $576.4 million and the carrying value of our fixed rate mortgage debt was $579.2 million. The fair value estimate of our fixed rate mortgage debt was estimated using a discounted cash flow analysis utilizing rates we would expect to pay for debt of a similar type and remaining maturity if the loans were originated as of December 31, 2015. As we expect to hold our fixed rate instruments to maturity and the amounts due under such instruments would be limited to the outstanding principal balance and any accrued and unpaid interest, we do not expect that fluctuations in interest rates, and the resulting change in fair value of our fixed rate instruments, would have a significant impact on our operations.

 

As of December 31, 2015, we had approximately $149.5 million of unhedged variable rate borrowings outstanding indexed to LIBOR rates. If the LIBOR rates relevant to our remaining variable rate borrowings were to increase 10%, we estimate that our annual interest expense would increase by approximately $64,000 based on our outstanding floating-rate debt as of December 31, 2015.

 

We may seek to limit the impact of interest rate changes on earnings and cash flows and to lower our overall borrowing costs by selectively utilizing derivative instruments to hedge exposures to changes in interest rates on loans secured by our assets. We maintain risk management control systems to monitor interest rate cash flow risk attributable to both our outstanding and forecasted debt obligations as well as our potential offsetting hedge positions. While this hedging strategy is designed to minimize the impact on our net income (loss) and funds from operations from changes in interest rates, the overall returns on our investments may be reduced. Our board of directors has established policies and procedures regarding our use of derivative instruments for hedging or other purposes.

  

LEGAL MATTERS

 

The legality of the shares of our common stock being offered hereby has been passed upon for us by DLA Piper LLP (US). The statements relating to certain federal income tax matters under the caption “Federal Income Tax Considerations” have been reviewed by and our qualification as a REIT for federal income tax purposes and the partnership status of the Operating Partnership for federal income tax purposes has been passed upon by DLA Piper LLP (US).

 

EXPERTS

 

The consolidated financial statements and related financial statement schedule of Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, and for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2015, have been incorporated by reference herein and in the registration statement, in reliance upon the reports of KPMG LLP, independent registered public accounting firm, incorporated by reference herein, and upon the authority of said firm as experts in accounting and auditing.

 

The statements of revenues and certain expenses for the year ended December 31, 2014 for two of our office properties, City View and Venture Corporate Center, have been audited by EKS&H LLLP, an independent registered public accounting firm, as set forth in their reports thereon, included therein, and incorporated herein by reference, and are incorporated herein by reference in reliance upon such reports given on the authority of such firm as experts in accounting and auditing.

 

176
 

 

The statements included in this prospectus under the caption “Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures” relating to the role of Altus Group U.S., Inc. as the Independent Valuation Firm, and the valuation of the real properties and related assumptions provided under the caption “Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures—Our Current and Historical NAV Calculations,” have been reviewed by Altus Group U.S., Inc., an independent valuation firm, and are included in this prospectus given the authority of such firm as experts in property valuations.

 

INCORPORATION OF CERTAIN INFORMATION BY REFERENCE

 

In this prospectus, we “incorporate by reference” certain information we filed with the Commission, which means that we may disclose important information to you by referring you to other documents that we have previously filed with the Commission. The information incorporated by reference is considered to be part of this prospectus. We incorporate by reference the documents listed below:

 

· our Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 filed on March 3, 2016;

 

· our Definitive Proxy Statement on Schedule 14A;

 

· our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on September 4, 2015;

 

· our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on January 5, 2016;

 

· our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on February 1, 2016;

 

· our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on February 5, 2016;

 

· our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on March 1, 2016;

 

· our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on March 3, 2016; and

 

· our Current Report on Form 8-K, filed on April 1, 2016.

 

The information relating to us contained in this prospectus should be read together with the information in the documents incorporated by reference.

 

You can obtain any of the documents incorporated by reference in this document from us, or from the Commission through the Commission’s website at the address www.sec.gov . Documents incorporated by reference are available from us without charge, excluding any exhibits to those documents, unless the exhibit is specifically incorporated by reference as an exhibit in this document. You can obtain documents incorporated by reference in this document, at no cost, by requesting them in writing or by telephone from us at the following address or telephone number or at our website at www.dividendcapitaldiversified.com :

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.
Investor Relations
518 17 th Street, Suite 1700
Denver, Colorado 80202
Telephone: (303) 228-2200

 

177
 

 

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

 

We have filed with the Commission a registration statement under the Securities Act on Form S-11 regarding this offering. This prospectus, which is part of the registration statement, does not contain all the information set forth in the registration statement and the exhibits related thereto filed with the Commission, reference to which is hereby made.

 

We are subject to the informational reporting requirements of the Exchange Act and, under that Act, we will file reports, proxy statements and other information with the Commission. You may read and copy any document that we have filed with the Commission at the public reference facilities of the Commission at 100 F Street, N.E., Washington, DC 20549. Please call the Commission at 1-800-SEC-0330 for further information on the operation of the public reference facilities. These documents also may be accessed through the Commission’s electronic data gathering analysis and retrieval system, or EDGAR, via electronic means, included on the Commission’s internet website, www.sec.gov .

 

You may also request a copy of these filings at no cost, by writing or telephoning us at:

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.
518 Seventeenth Street, 17th Floor
Denver, Colorado 80202
Tel.: (303) 228-2200
Attn: Investor Relations

 

Within 120 days after the end of each fiscal year we will provide to our stockholders of record an annual report. The annual report will contain audited financial statements and certain other financial and narrative information that we are required to provide to stockholders.

 

We also maintain an internet site at www.dividendcapitaldiversified.com , where there may be additional information about our business, but the contents of that site are not incorporated by reference in or otherwise a part of this prospectus.

 

178
 

 

 

Appendix A
FORMS OF SUBSCRIPTION AGREEMENT

 

 

 

A- 1
 

 

(GRAPHIC)  

 

 

A- 2
 

 

(GRAPHIC)  

 

A- 3
 

 

  (GRAPHIC)

 

A- 4
 

 

(GRAPHIC)  

 

A- 5
 

 

(GRAPHIC)  

 

A- 6
 

 

(GRAPHIC)  

 

A- 7
 

 

(GRAPHIC)  

 

A- 8
 

 

(GRAPHIC)  

 

A- 9
 

 

Appendix B
FOURTH AMENDED AND RESTATED DISTRIBUTION REINVESTMENT PLAN

 

This FOURTH AMENDED AND RESTATED DISTRIBUTION REINVESTMENT PLAN (the “ Plan ”) is adopted by Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation (the “ Company ”) pursuant to its charter (the “ Charter ”). In this Plan, unclassified shares of the Company’s common stock are considered one of the Company’s “classes” of common stock. Unless otherwise defined herein, capitalized terms shall have the same meaning as set forth in the Charter.

 

1.           Distribution Reinvestment. As agent for the stockholders (the “ Stockholders ”) of the Company who elect to participate in the Plan, the Company will apply all dividends and other distributions declared and paid in respect of the shares of the Company’s common stock (the “ Shares ”) held by each participating Stockholder (the “ Dividends ”), including Dividends paid with respect to any full or fractional Shares acquired under the Plan, to the purchase of additional Shares of the same class for such participating Stockholder to which such Dividends are attributable.

 

Additionally, as agent for the holders of partnership units (the “ OP Units ”) of Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP (the “ Partnership ”) who acquire such OP Units as a result of any transaction of the Partnership, and who elect to participate in the Plan (together with the participating Stockholders, the “ Participants ”), the Partnership will apply all distributions declared and paid in respect of the OP Units held by each Participant (the “ Distributions ”), including Distributions paid with respect to any full or fractional OP Units, to the purchase of Shares having the same class designation as the applicable class of OP Units for such Participant to which such Distributions are attributable.

 

2.           Effective Date. The effective date of this Plan is July 23, 2012.

 

3.           Procedure for Participation. Any Stockholder or holder of OP Units may elect to become a Participant by completing and executing the subscription agreement, an enrollment form or any other appropriate authorization form as may be available from the Company, the Partnership, the Dealer Manager or Soliciting Dealer. Participation in the Plan will begin with the next Dividend or Distribution payable after acceptance of a Participant’s subscription, enrollment or authorization. Shares will be purchased under the Plan on the date that Dividends or Distributions are paid by the Company or the Partnership, as the case may be. The Company may elect to deny participation in the Plan with respect to a Stockholder or holder of OP Units that resides in a jurisdiction or foreign country where, in the Company’s judgment, the burden or expense of compliance with applicable securities laws makes participation impracticable or inadvisable.

 

4.           Suitability. Each Participant agrees that if such Participant fails to meet the then current suitability requirements for making an investment in the Company or cannot make the other representations or warranties as set forth in the Company’s most recent applicable prospectus or subscription agreement, enrollment form or other authorization form, such Participant will promptly so notify the Company in writing.

 

5.           Purchase of Shares.

 

(a)               Participants will acquire Shares under this Plan (the “ Plan Shares ”) from the Company at a price equal to the net asset value per Share applicable to the class of Shares purchased by the Participant, calculated as of the distribution date in accordance with the Company’s valuation policies and procedures. No selling commissions will be payable with respect to Shares purchased pursuant to this Plan. Participants in the Plan may also purchase fractional Shares so that 100% of the Dividends or Distributions will be used to acquire Shares. However, a Participant will not be able to acquire Plan Shares to the extent that any such purchase would cause such Participant to exceed the Aggregate Share Ownership Limit or the Common Share Ownership Limit as set forth in the Charter or otherwise would cause a violation of the Share ownership restrictions set forth in the Charter.

 

(b)               Shares to be distributed by the Company in connection with the Plan will be supplied from: (a) Shares that are or will be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “ Commission ”) for use in the Plan, or (b) Shares purchased by the Company for the Plan in a secondary market (if available) or on a national stock exchange (if listed) (collectively, the “ Secondary Market ”).

 

(c)               Shares purchased in any Secondary Market will be purchased by the Company at the then-prevailing market price for Shares of the class purchased, which price will be utilized for purposes of issuing Shares in the Plan. Shares acquired by the Company in any Secondary Market or Shares that the Company registers for use in the Plan may be at prices lower or higher than the Share price that will be paid for the Plan Shares of that class pursuant to the Plan.

 

(d)               If the Company acquires Shares in any Secondary Market for use in the Plan, the Company shall use its reasonable efforts to acquire Shares at the lowest price then reasonably available for Shares of the class acquired. However, the Company does not in any respect guarantee or warrant that the Shares so acquired and purchased by the Participant in the Plan will be at the lowest possible price. Further, irrespective of the Company’s ability to acquire Shares in any Secondary Market or to register Shares to be used in the Plan in the future, the Company is in no way obligated to do either, but may do so in its sole discretion.

 

B- 1
 

 

6.           Taxes. IT IS UNDERSTOOD THAT REINVESTMENT OF DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS DOES NOT RELIEVE A PARTICIPANT OF ANY INCOME TAX LIABILITY WHICH MAY BE PAYABLE ON THE DIVIDENDS AND DISTRIBUTIONS. ADDITIONAL INFORMATION REGARDING POTENTIAL PARTICIPANT INCOME TAX LIABILITY MAY BE FOUND IN THE PUBLIC FILINGS MADE BY THE COMPANY WITH THE COMMISSION.

 

7.           Share Certificates. The ownership of the Shares purchased through the Plan will be in book-entry form unless and until the Company issues certificates for its outstanding common stock.

 

8.           Reports. Within 90 days after the end of the Company’s fiscal year, the Company shall provide or cause to be provided to each Stockholder with an individualized report on his or her investment, including the purchase date(s), purchase price and number of Shares owned, as well as the dates of Dividend and/or Distribution payments and amounts of Dividends and/or Distributions paid during the prior fiscal year. In addition, the Company shall provide or cause to be provided to each Participant an individualized quarterly report at the time of each Dividend and/or Distribution payment showing the number of Shares owned prior to the current Dividend and/or Distribution, the amount of the current Dividend and/or Distribution and the number of Shares owned after the current Dividend and/or Distribution.

 

9.           Termination by Participant. A Participant may terminate participation in the Plan at any time, without penalty, by delivering to the Company a written notice. Such notice must be received by the Company at least one business day prior to a distribution date in order for a Participant’s termination to be effective for such distribution date (i.e., a termination notice will be effective the day after it is received and will not affect participation in the Plan for any prior date). Any transfer of Shares by a Participant to a non-Participant will terminate participation in the Plan with respect to the transferred Shares. If the Company redeems a portion of a Participant’s Shares, the Participant’s participation in the Plan with respect to the Participant’s Shares that were not redeemed will not be terminated unless the Participant requests such termination pursuant to this Section 9. If the Company intends to list the Shares on a national stock exchange the Plan may be terminated and any balance in a terminating Participant’s account that does not reflect a whole number of Shares will be distributed to the terminating Participant in cash. From and after termination of Plan participation for any reason, Dividends and/or Distributions will be distributed to the Stockholder or holder of OP Units in cash.

 

10.           Amendment or Termination of Plan by the Company. The Board of Directors may by majority vote (including a majority of the Independent Directors) amend the Plan; provided that the Plan cannot be amended to eliminate a Participant’s right to terminate participation in the Plan and that notice of any material amendment must be provided to Participants at least 10 days prior to the effective date of that amendment. The Board of Directors may by majority vote (including a majority of the Independent Directors) suspend or terminate the Plan for any reason upon 10 days’ notice to the Participants. The Company may provide notice under this Section 10 by including such information (a) in a Current Report on Form 8-K or in its annual or quarterly reports, all publicly filed with the Commission or (b) in a separate mailing to the Participants.

 

11.           Liability of the Company. The Company shall not be liable for any act done in good faith, or for any good faith omission to act, including, without limitation, any claims or liability (a) arising out of failure to terminate a Participant’s account upon such Participant’s death prior to receipt of notice in writing of such death; or (b) with respect to the time and the prices at which Shares are purchased or sold for a Participant’s account. To the extent that indemnification may apply to liabilities arising under the Securities Act, or the securities laws of a particular state, the Company has been advised that, in the opinion of the Commission and certain state securities commissioners, such indemnification is contrary to public policy and, therefore, unenforceable.

 

12.             Governing Law . The terms and conditions of the Plan and its operation are governed by the laws of the State of Maryland.

 

B- 2
 

 

You should rely only on the information contained in this prospectus and incorporated herein by reference. No dealer, salesperson or other individual has been authorized to give any information or to make any representations that are not contained in this prospectus. If any such information or statements are given or made, you should not rely upon such information or representation. This prospectus does not constitute an offer to sell any securities other than those to which this prospectus relates, or an offer to sell, or a solicitation of an offer to buy, to any person in any jurisdiction where such an offer or solicitation would be unlawful. This prospectus speaks as of the date set forth above. You should not assume that the delivery of this prospectus will remain fully accurate and correct as of any time subsequent to the date of this prospectus. 

 

  (DIVIDEND CAPITAL LOGO)

 

Class A, Class W and Class I Common Stock

 

Maximum Offering of $1,000,000,000
Minimum Purchase of $2,000

 


 

PROSPECTUS

 


 

April 7, 2016

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

DIVIDEND CAPITAL DIVERSIFIED PROPERTY FUND INC.
SUPPLEMENT NO. 1 DATED APRIL 7, 2016
TO THE PROSPECTUS DATED APRIL 7, 2016

 

This prospectus supplement (this “Supplement”) is part of and should be read in conjunction with the prospectus of Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., dated April 7, 2016 (the “Prospectus”). Unless otherwise defined herein, capitalized terms used in this Supplement shall have the same meanings as in the Prospectus.

 

The purpose of this Supplement is to disclose:

 

· the status of the offering;

 

· information about our dispositions of real properties;

 

· information about our repayments of borrowings under mortgage notes; and

 

· updated certain historical NAV information.

 

Status of the Offering

 

As of April 1, 2016, we had raised gross proceeds of approximately $23.3 million from the sale of approximately 3.1 million shares in this offering, including proceeds from our distribution reinvestment plan of approximately $2.5 million. As of April 1, 2016, approximately $976.7 million in shares remained available for sale pursuant to this offering, including approximately $247.5 million in shares available for sale through our distribution reinvestment plan.

 

Dispositions of Real Properties

 

The following table describes our disposition of real properties subsequent to December 31, 2015 (square footage amounts and dollar amounts in thousands):

                                             
            As of December 31, 2015            
Real Property   Property
Type
  Market   Ownership       Net Rentable
Square Feet
  Percentage
Leased
    Net Basis   Disposition Date   Contract Sales
Price
 
Colshire Drive (1)   Office   Washington, DC   100 %     575   100 %   $ 118,558   2/18/16   $ 158,400  
40 Boulevard (2)   Office   Chicago, IL   80 %     107   66 %     9,505   3/1/16     9,850  
Washington Commons (2)   Office   Chicago, IL   80 %     200   81 %     16,978   3/1/16     1,800  
Total subsequent real property dispositions                   882   92 %   $ 145,041       $ 186,250  

 

 
(1) The property was subject to a purchase option held by the tenant with an exercise price of approximately $158.4 million (the “Colshire Purchase Option”). The tenant exercised the Colshire Purchase Option during January 2016.
(2) The office properties were consolidated in our consolidated financial statements. We held these properties through a joint venture in which we are not the managing partner.

 

Repayments of Mortgage Notes

 

Subsequent to December 31, 2015, we repaid three mortgage note borrowings in full using proceeds from our revolving credit facility. The following table describes our repayment of mortgage note borrowings subsequent to December 31, 2015 (dollar amounts in thousands): 

                                     
Debt Obligation   Repayment Date   Balance as of
December 31, 2015
    Interest Rate
Fixed or
Floating
  Stated Interest
Rate as of
December 31,
2015
    Contractual
Maturity Date
  Collateral Type   Collateral
Market
1300 Connecticut   1/12/16   $ 45,041     Fixed     6.81 %   4/10/16   Office Property   Washington, DC
Washington Commons   2/1/16     21,300     Fixed     5.94 %   2/1/16   Office Property   Chicago, IL
40 Boulevard (1)   3/1/2016     7,890     Floating     3.43 %   3/1/16   Office Property   Chicago, IL
Total/weighted average       $ 74,231           6.20 %            

 

 
(1) The mortgage note is subject to an interest rate of 3.0% over one-month LIBOR and we repaid this as part of the disposition of 40 Boulevard.

 

 

 

 

Certain Historical NAV Information

 

Below is the NAV per share, as determined in accordance with our valuation procedures, for each business day from January 1 through March 31, 2016:

                                   
Date     NAV per Share  
      Class E     Class A     Class W     Class I  
January 4, 2016     $ 7.47     $ 7.47     $ 7.47     $ 7.47  
January 5, 2016     $ 7.47     $ 7.47     $ 7.47     $ 7.47  
January 6, 2016     $ 7.46     $ 7.46     $ 7.46     $ 7.46  
January 7, 2016     $ 7.46     $ 7.46     $ 7.46     $ 7.46  
January 8, 2016     $ 7.46     $ 7.46     $ 7.46     $ 7.46  
January 11, 2016     $ 7.46     $ 7.46     $ 7.46     $ 7.46  
January 12, 2016     $ 7.46     $ 7.46     $ 7.46     $ 7.46  
January 13, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
January 14, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
January 15, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
January 19, 2016     $ 7.44     $ 7.44     $ 7.44     $ 7.44  
January 20, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
January 21, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
January 22, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
January 25, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
January 26, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
January 27, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
January 28, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
January 29, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
February 1, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
February 2, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
February 3, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
February 4, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
February 5, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
February 8, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
February 9, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
February 10, 2016     $ 7.39     $ 7.39     $ 7.39     $ 7.39  
February 11, 2016     $ 7.39     $ 7.39     $ 7.39     $ 7.39  
February 12, 2016     $ 7.39     $ 7.39     $ 7.39     $ 7.39  
February 16, 2016     $ 7.39     $ 7.39     $ 7.39     $ 7.39  
February 17, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
February 18, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
February 19, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
February 22, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
February 23, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
February 24, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
February 25, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
February 26, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
February 29, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
March 1, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
March 2, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
March 3, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
March 4, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
March 7, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
March 8, 2016     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40     $ 7.40  
March 9, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
March 10, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
March 11, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
March 14, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
March 15, 2016     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41     $ 7.41  
March 16, 2016     $ 7.42     $ 7.42     $ 7.42     $ 7.42  
March 17, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
March 18, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
March 21, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
March 22, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
March 23, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
March 24, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
March 28, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
March 29, 2016     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43     $ 7.43  
March 30, 2016     $ 7.42     $ 7.42     $ 7.42     $ 7.42  
March 31, 2016     $ 7.36     $ 7.36     $ 7.36     $ 7.36  

 

 

 

 

On any day, our share sales and redemptions are made based on the day’s applicable per share NAV carried out to four decimal places. On each business day, our NAV per share for each class is (1) posted on our website, www.dividendcapitaldiversified.com, and (2) made available on our toll-free, automated telephone line, (888) 310-9352.

 

 

 

 

PART II

Information Not Required in the Prospectus

 

Item 31. Other Expenses of Issuance and Distribution.

 

The following table itemizes the expenses, other than selling commissions, the primary dealer fee, the dealer manager fee, and distribution fees, to be incurred by Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. (the “Company”) in connection with the issuance and registration of the securities being registered hereunder. All amounts shown are estimates except the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”) registration fee and the FINRA filing fee.

         
Commission registration fee   $ 128,800  
FINRA filing fee     150,500  
Printing costs     341,000  
Legal fees and expenses     1,250,000  
Accounting fees and expenses     149,000  
Blue sky fees and expenses     185,000  
Advertising and sales literature     2,590,000  
Advisor personnel salaries and expenses     4,159,000  
Due diligence expenses     100,000  
Transfer agent fees and expenses     425,000  
Miscellaneous expenses     88,000  
Reimbursements related to retail activities – additional underwriting compensation     1,010,000  
Reimbursements for wholesaling activities– additional underwriting compensation     1,940,000  
Legal fees allocable to the dealer manager– additional underwriting compensation     170,000  
Promotional items– additional underwriting compensation     150,000  
         
Total   $ 12,836,300  

 

Item 32. Sales to Special Parties.

 

From time to time, pursuant to its equity incentive plans, the Company grants restricted Class I shares and restricted stock units with respect to Class I shares to directors, officers, employees of its external advisor, Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC (the “Advisor”) and employees of the Advisor’s affiliates, for no consideration other than past and future services.

 

In addition, on April 7, 2014, the Advisor acquired 493,575 restricted stock units (“Company RSUs”) from the Company. Each Company RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Company RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of advisory fees and expenses otherwise payable from the Company to the Advisor based on a value of $6.96 per share (the net asset value per Class I share on April 7, 2014). In connection with this transaction, on April 7, 2014, the Advisor granted, in the aggregate, 493,575 restricted stock units (“Advisor RSUs”) to certain employees of the Advisor and its affiliates. Each Advisor RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Advisor RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of compensation otherwise payable from the Advisor to the applicable employee based on a value of $6.96 per share.

 

In addition, on February 25, 2015, the Advisor acquired 224,147 Company RSUs from the Company. Each Company RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Company RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of advisory fees and expenses otherwise payable from the Company to the Advisor based on a value of $7.18 per share (the net asset value per Class I share on February 25, 2015). In connection with this transaction, on February 25, 2015, the Advisor granted, in the aggregate, 224,147 Advisor RSUs to certain employees of the Advisor and its affiliates. Each Advisor RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Advisor RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of compensation otherwise payable from the Advisor to the applicable employee based on a value of $7.18 per share.

 

II- 1
 

 

In addition, on February 4, 2016, the Advisor acquired 124,451 Company RSUs from the Company. Each Company RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Company RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of advisory fees and expenses otherwise payable from the Company to the Advisor based on a value of $7.41 per share (the net asset value per Class I share on February 4, 2016). In connection with this transaction, on February 4, 2016, the Advisor granted, in the aggregate, 124,451 Advisor RSUs to certain employees of the Advisor and its affiliates. Each Advisor RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Advisor RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of compensation otherwise payable from the Advisor to the applicable employee based on a value of $7.41 per share.

 

Item 33. Recent Sales of Unregistered Securities.

 

Pursuant to the Limited Partnership Agreement of Dividend Capital Total Realty Trust Operating Partnership LP, the Company’s Operating Partnership, holders of partnership units in the Operating Partnership (“OP Units”) may request the Operating Partnership to redeem their OP Units, and the Company, as the general partner of the Operating Partnership, may elect to redeem any OP Units for cash or for shares of its common stock. The number of shares issuable by the Company in redemption of OP Units is currently equal to the number of OP Units redeemed, less an amount of shares to cover a redemption fee.

 

Effective January 2, 2014, the Company granted a total of 2,086.89 restricted stock units to its independent directors for future services for the Company in a private transaction exempt from registration pursuant to Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act. Each restricted stock unit will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock.

 

Effective March 24, 2014, February 25, 2015, and February 4, 2016, the Company granted 4,836, 5,501, and 5,608 restricted stock units, respectively, to non-executive level employees of the Advisor and its affiliates for past and future services for the Company in a private transaction exempt from registration pursuant to Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act.

 

On April 7, 2014, the Advisor acquired 493,575 restricted stock units (“Company RSUs”) from the Company. Each Company RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Company RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of advisory fees and expenses otherwise payable from the Company to the Advisor based on a value of $6.96 per share (the net asset value per Class I share on April 7, 2014). In connection with this transaction, on April 7, 2014, the Advisor granted, in the aggregate, 493,575 restricted stock units (“Advisor RSUs”) to certain employees of the Advisor and its affiliates. Each Advisor RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Advisor RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of compensation otherwise payable from the Advisor to the applicable employee based on a value of $6.96 per share. The securities issued by the Company pursuant to this paragraph were issued in private transactions exempt from registration pursuant to Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act.

 

On February 25, 2015, the Advisor acquired 224,147 Company RSUs from the Company. Each Company RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Company RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of advisory fees and expenses otherwise payable from the Company to the Advisor based on a value of $7.18 per share (the net asset value per Class I share on February 25, 2015). In connection with this transaction, on February 25, 2015, the Advisor granted, in the aggregate, 224,147 Advisor RSUs to certain employees of the Advisor and its affiliates. Each Advisor RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Advisor RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of compensation otherwise payable from the Advisor to the applicable employee based on a value of $7.18 per share. The securities issued by the Company pursuant to this paragraph were issued in private transactions exempt from registration pursuant to Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act.

 

On February 4, 2016, the Advisor acquired 124,451 Company RSUs from the Company. Each Company RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Company RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of advisory fees and expenses otherwise payable from the Company to the Advisor based on a value of $7.41 per share (the net asset value per Class I share on February 4, 2016). In connection with this transaction, on February 4, 2016, the Advisor granted, in the aggregate, 124,451 Advisor RSUs to certain employees of the Advisor and its affiliates. Each Advisor RSU will, upon vesting, be settled in one share of the Company’s Class I common stock. These Advisor RSUs are subject to specified vesting and settlement provisions and, upon settlement in Class I shares of Company common stock, require offset of compensation otherwise payable from the Advisor to the applicable employee based on a value of $7.41 per share. The securities issued by the Company pursuant to this paragraph were issued in private transactions exempt from registration pursuant to Section 4(a)(2) of the Securities Act.

 

II- 2
 

 

Item 34. Indemnification of Directors, Officers and Others.

 

Pursuant to Maryland corporate law and the Company’s charter, the Company is required to indemnify and hold harmless a present or former director, officer, Advisor, or Advisor’s affiliate and may indemnify and hold harmless a present or former employee or agent of the Company (the “Indemnitees”) against any or all losses or liabilities reasonably incurred by the Indemnitee in connection with or by reason of any act or omission performed or omitted to be performed on behalf of the Company while a director, officer, Advisor, Advisor’s affiliate, employee or agent and in such capacity, provided that the Indemnitee, if a director, the Advisor or an Advisor’s affiliate, has determined, in good faith, that the act or omission which caused the loss or liability was in the best interests of the Company. In addition, the Company will not indemnify the Indemnitee for any loss or liability suffered by the Indemnitee or hold the Indemnitee harmless for any loss or liability suffered by the Company if: (i) the loss or liability was the result of negligence or misconduct if the Indemnitee is an interested director, the Advisor, or an Advisor’s affiliate, (ii) the loss or liability was the result of gross negligence or willful misconduct if the Indemnitee is an independent director, (iii) the act or omission was material to the loss or liability and was committed in bad faith or was the result of active and deliberate dishonesty, (iv) the Indemnitee actually received an improper personal benefit in money, property, or services, (v) in the case of any criminal proceeding, the Indemnitee had reasonable cause to believe that the act or omission was unlawful, or (vi) in a proceeding by or in the right of the Company, the Indemnitee shall have been adjudged to be liable to the Company. In addition, the Company will not provide indemnification to a director, the Advisor or an Advisor’s affiliate for any loss or liability arising from an alleged violation of federal or state securities laws unless one or more of the following conditions are met: (i) there has been a successful adjudication on the merits of each count involving the alleged securities law violation as to the particular Indemnitee; (ii) such claims have been dismissed with prejudice on the merits by a court of competent jurisdiction as to the particular Indemnitee or (iii) a court of competent jurisdiction approves a settlement of the claims against a particular Indemnitee and finds that indemnification of the settlement and the related costs should be made, and the court considering the request of indemnification has been advised of the position of the Commission and of the published position of any state securities regulatory authority in which securities of the Company were offered or sold as to indemnification for violation of securities laws. Pursuant to its charter, the Company is required to pay or reimburse reasonable expenses incurred by a present or former director, officer, Advisor or Advisor’s affiliate and may pay or reimburse reasonable expenses incurred by any other Indemnitee in advance of final disposition of a proceeding if the following are satisfied: (i) the Indemnitee was made a party to the proceeding by reason of his service as a director, officer, Advisor, Advisor’s affiliate, employee or agent of the Company, (ii) the Indemnitee provides the Company with written affirmation of his good faith belief that he has met the standard of conduct necessary for indemnification by the Company as authorized by the charter, (iii) the Indemnitee provides the Company with a written agreement to repay the amount paid or reimbursed by the Company, together with the applicable legal rate of interest thereon, if it is ultimately determined that the Indemnitee did not comply with the requisite standard of conduct, and (iv) the legal proceeding was initiated by a third party who is not a stockholder or, if by a stockholder of the Company acting in his capacity as such, a court of competent jurisdiction approves such advancement.

 

Any indemnification may be paid only out of Net Assets of the Company (as defined in its charter), and no portion may be recoverable from the stockholders.

 

The Company has entered into indemnification agreements with each of the Company’s independent directors and executive officers. The indemnification agreements require, among other things, that, subject to certain limitations, the Company indemnify its independent directors and executive officers and advance to the independent directors and executive officers all related expenses, subject to reimbursement if it is subsequently determined that indemnification is not permitted. In accordance with these agreements, the Company must indemnify and advance all expenses incurred by its independent directors and executive officers seeking to enforce their rights under the indemnification agreements. The Company also covers officers and directors under the Company’s directors’ and officers’ liability insurance.

 

Item 35. Treatment of Proceeds from Shares Being Registered.

 

Not applicable.

 

Item 36. Financial Statements and Exhibits.

 

(a)          Financial Statements.

 

The following financial statements are incorporated into the prospectus by reference:

 

The consolidated financial statements and financial statement schedule of the Company included in the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2015 filed with the Commission on March 3, 2016.

 

The statements of revenues and certain expenses and the notes thereto for the three months ended March 31, 2015 (unaudited) and the year ended December 31, 2014 for City View, one of the Company’s office properties, and the related pro forma financial statements included in the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Commission on September 4, 2015.

 

II- 3
 

 

The statements of revenues and certain expenses and the notes thereto for the six months ended June 30, 2015 (unaudited) and the year ended December 31, 2014 for Venture Corporate Center, one of the Company’s office properties, and the related pro forma financial statements included in the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K filed with the Commission on September 4, 2015.

 

Any financial statement schedules omitted have been so omitted because of the absence of the conditions under which they are required or because the information required by such omitted schedules is set forth in the financial statements or the notes thereto.

 

(b)          Exhibits.

 

See the Exhibit Index on the page immediately preceding the exhibits for a list of exhibits filed as part of this registration statement on Form S-11, which Exhibit Index is incorporated herein by reference.

 

Item 37. Undertakings.

 

1.           The undersigned registrant hereby undertakes:

 

(a) To file, during any period in which offers or sales are being made, a post-effective amendment to this registration statement:

 

(i) To include any prospectus required by section 10(a)(3) of the Securities Act.

 

(ii) To reflect in the prospectus any facts or events arising after the effective date of the registration statement (or the most recent post-effective amendment thereof) which, individually or in the aggregate, represent a fundamental change in the information set forth in the registration statement. Notwithstanding the foregoing, any increase or decrease in volume of securities offered (if the total dollar value of securities offered would not exceed that which was registered) and any deviation from the low or high end of the estimated maximum offering range may be reflected in the form of prospectus filed with the Commission pursuant to Rule 424(b) if, in the aggregate, the changes in volume and price represent no more than a 20% change in the maximum aggregate offering price set forth in the “Calculation of Registration Fee” table in the effective registration statement.

 

(iii) To include any material information with respect to the plan of distribution not previously disclosed in the registration statement or any material change to such information in the registration statement.

 

(b) That, for the purpose of determining any liability under the Securities Act, each such post-effective amendment shall be deemed to be a new registration statement relating to the securities offered therein, and the offering of such securities at that time shall be deemed to be the initial bona fide offering thereof.

 

(c) To remove from registration by means of a post-effective amendment any of the securities being registered which remain unsold at the termination of the offering.

 

(d) That, for the purpose of determining liability under the Securities Act to any purchaser, each prospectus filed pursuant to Rule 424(b) as part of the registration statement relating to the offering, other than a registration statement relying on Rule 430B or other than a prospectus filed in reliance on Rule 430A, shall be deemed to be part of and included in the registration statement as of the date it is first used after effectiveness. Provided, however , that no statement made in a registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement or made in a document incorporated or deemed incorporated by reference into the registration statement or prospectus that is part of the registration statement will, as to a purchaser with a time of contract of sale prior to such first use, supersede or modify any statement that was made in the registration statement or prospectus that was part of the registration statement or made in any such document immediately prior to such date of first use.

 

II- 4
 

 

(e) That, for the purpose of determining liability of the registrant under the Securities Act to any purchaser in the initial distribution of the securities, in a primary offering of securities pursuant to this registration statement, regardless of the underwriting method used to sell the securities to the purchaser, if the securities are offered or sold to such purchaser by means of any of the following communications, the undersigned registrant will be a seller to the purchaser and will be considered to offer or sell such securities to such purchaser:

 

(i) any preliminary prospectus or prospectus of the undersigned registrant relating to the offering required to be filed pursuant to Rule 424;

 

(ii) any free writing prospectus relating to the offering prepared by or on behalf of the undersigned registrant or used or referred to by the undersigned registrant;

 

(iii) the portion of any other free writing prospectus relating to the offering containing material information about the undersigned registrant or its securities provided by or on behalf of the undersigned registrant; and

 

(iv) any other communication that is an offer in the offering made by the undersigned registrant to the purchaser.

 

2.           Insofar as indemnification for liabilities arising under the Securities Act may be permitted to directors, officers and controlling persons of the registrant pursuant to the foregoing provisions and otherwise, the registrant has been advised that in the opinion of the Commission such indemnification is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and is, therefore, unenforceable. In the event that a claim for indemnification against such liabilities (other than the payment by the registrant of expenses incurred or paid by a director, officer or controlling person of the registrant in the successful defense of any action, suit or proceeding) is asserted by such director, officer or controlling person in connection with securities being registered, the registrant will, unless in the opinion of its counsel the matter has been settled by controlling precedent, submit to a court of appropriate jurisdiction the question whether such indemnification by it is against public policy as expressed in the Securities Act and will be governed by the final adjudication of such issue.

 

II- 5
 

 

SIGNATURES

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, the Registrant certifies that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all of the requirements for filing on Form S-11 and has duly caused this Post-Effective Amendment No. 3 to Form S-11 Registration Statement to be signed on its behalf by the undersigned, thereunto duly authorized, in the City of Denver, State of Colorado, on April 7, 2016. 

     
  DIVIDEND CAPITAL DIVERSIFIED PROPERTY FUND INC.
   
  By: /s/ Jeffrey L. Johnson
    Jeffrey L. Johnson, Chief Executive Officer

 

POWER OF ATTORNEY

 

Pursuant to the requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, this Form S-11 registration statement has been signed by the following persons in the following capacities on April 7, 2016.

 

Signature 

 

Title

     
*   Chairman of the Board and Director
Richard D. Kincaid    
*   Director
John A. Blumberg    
*   Director
Charles B. Duke    
*   Director
Daniel J. Sullivan    
*   Director
John P. Woodberry    
/s/ Jeffrey L. Johnson   Chief Executive Officer (principal executive officer)
Jeffrey L. Johnson    
/s/ M. Kirk Scott   Chief Financial Officer and Treasurer (principal financial officer and principal accounting officer)
M. Kirk Scott  
     
*By: /s/ M. Kirk Scott   Attorney-in-Fact
M. Kirk Scott    

 

 
 

 

Exhibit Index

 

Exhibit Number     Description  
1.1   Second Amended and Restated Dealer Manager Agreement, including Form of Selected Dealer Agreement, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 1.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed September 16, 2015
2.1   Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., the entities set forth therein and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated May 3, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.2   First Amendment to Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., the entities set forth therein and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated May 11, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1.1 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.3   Second Amendment to Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., the entities set forth therein and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated May 21, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1.2 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.4   Third Amendment to Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., the entities set forth therein and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated June 24, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1.3 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.5   Fourth Amendment to Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., the entities set forth therein and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated June 25, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.1.4 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.6   Member Interest Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., iStar Harborside LLC and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated May 3, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.2 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.7   First Amendment to Member Interest Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., iStar Harborside LLC and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated May 11, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.2.1 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.8   Second Amendment to Member Interest Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., iStar Harborside LLC and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated May 21, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.2.2 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.9   Third Amendment to Member Interest Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., iStar Harborside LLC and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated June 24, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.2.3 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.10   Fourth Amendment to Member Interest Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., iStar Harborside LLC and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated June 25, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.2.4 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.11   Partnership Interests Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., iStar NG Inc., iStar NG GenPar Inc. and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated June 25, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.3 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
2.12   Member Interest Purchase and Sale Agreement by and among iStar Financial Inc., iStar CTL Holdco LLC and TRT Acquisitions LLC, dated June 25, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 2.4 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
3.1   Articles of Restatement, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed March 21, 2012
3.2   Articles of Amendment, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed July 12, 2012
3.3   Articles Supplementary (Class A shares), incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.2 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed July 12, 2012
3.4   Articles Supplementary (Class W shares), incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.3 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed July 12, 2012
3.5   Articles Supplementary (Class I shares), incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.4 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed July 12, 2012
3.6   Certificate of Correction to Articles of Restatement, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed March 26, 2014
3.7   Sixth Amended and Restated Bylaws, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed December 8, 2014
4.1   Form of Subscription Agreement (included in the Prospectus as Appendix A and incorporated herein by reference)
4.2   Fourth Amended and Restated Distribution Reinvestment Plan (included in the Prospectus as Appendix B and incorporated herein by reference)

 

 
 

 

4.3   Second Amended and Restated Class E Share Redemption Program, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed December 16, 2015
4.4   Second Amended and Restated Class A, W and I Share Redemption Program, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed December 17, 2014
4.5   Statement regarding transfer restrictions, preferences, limitations and rights of holders of shares of common stock (to appear on stock certificate or to be sent upon request and without charge to stockholders issued shares without certificates), incorporated by reference to Exhibit 4.5 to Post-Effective Amendment No. 3 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-175989), filed April 15, 2013
5.1   Opinion of DLA Piper LLP (US) as to legality of securities, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 5.1 to Amendment No. 3 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767), filed September 4, 2015
8.1   Opinion of DLA Piper LLP (US) as to tax matters, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 8.1 to Amendment No. 3 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767), filed September 4, 2015
8.2   Private Letter Ruling, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 8.2 to Amendment No. 4 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-175989), filed June 22, 2012
10.1   Ninth Amended and Restated Advisory Agreement, dated as of March 2, 2016 *
10.2   Fifth Amended and Restated Limited Partnership Agreement of Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, dated as of March 2, 2016 *
10.3   Property Management Agreement between Dividend Capital Total Realty Trust Inc. and Dividend Capital Property Management LLC, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.3 to Amendment No. 5 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11, Commission File No. 333-125338, filed January 13, 2006
10.4   Form of Indemnification Agreement between Dividend Capital Total Realty Inc. and the officers and directors of Dividend Capital Total Realty Trust Inc., incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.4 to Amendment No. 5 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11, Commission File No. 333-125338, filed January 13, 2006
10.5   Second Amended and Restated Equity Incentive Plan, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.7 to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 2 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767), filed May 20, 2015
10.6   Amended and Restated Secondary Equity Incentive Plan, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.9 to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 2 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767), filed May 20, 2015
10.7   Form of Director Option Agreement, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed April 7, 2006
10.8   Form of Management Agreement between various affiliates of Dividend Capital Total Realty Trust Inc. and KeyPoint Partners LLC, as property manager (New England Retail Portfolio), incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.27 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 14, 2007
10.9   Dividend Capital Fixed Rate Office Portfolio Loan Agreement between TRT Lending Subsidiary I, LLC and Wells Fargo Bank, National Association, dated June 25, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.2 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
10.10   Side Letter Agreement Related to Mortgage, Assignment of Leases and Rents, Security Agreement and Fixture Filing by and among Dividend Capital Total Realty Trust and New York Life Insurance Company, dated June 25, 2010, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.5.1 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q, filed August 13, 2010
10.11   Amended and Restated Credit and Term Loan Agreement, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 1.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed January 13, 2015
10.12   Credit Agreement, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 1.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed March 2, 2015
10.13   Form of Independent Director Restricted Stock Unit Agreement, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.17 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed March 10, 2014
10.14   Restricted Stock Unit Agreement between the Company and Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC, dated April 7, 2014, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.14 to Post-Effective Amendment No. 8 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-175989), filed April 11, 2014

 

 

 

10.15   Purchase and Sale Contract by and between TRT NOIP Doolittle – Redondo Beach LP, TRT NOIP Sheila – Commerce LP, TRT NOIP Corporate Center Drive – Newbury Park LP, TRT NOIP Sylvan Way – Parsippany LLC, TRT NOIP Sw 80 – Plantation LLC, TRT NOIP Connection – Irving LP, TRT NOIP Maple – El Segundo LP, TRT NOIP Glenville – Richardson LP, TRT NOIP Columbia – Richfield LLC, TRT NOIP Corporate Drive – Dixon LLC, TRT NOIP Eagle LP, TRT NOIP East 28 – Aurora LLC, GPT Doolittle Drive Owner LP, GPT Sheila Street Owner LP, GPT Corporate Center-Thousand Oaks Owner LP, GPT Sylvan Way Owner LLC, GPT SW 80th Street Owner LLC, GPT Maple Avenue Owner LP, GPT Connection Drive Owner LLC, GPT Glenville Drive Owner LLC, GPT Columbia Road Owner LLC, GPT Corporate Drive-Dixon Owner LLC, GPT Vickery Drive Owner LLC, and GPT 28th Avenue Aurora Owner LLC, dated December 9, 2014, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.15 to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767), filed January 29, 2015
10.16   Amended and Restated Purchase and Sale Contract between TRT NOIP Sheila - Commerce LP, TRT NOIP Corporate Center Drive – Newbury Park LP, TRT NOIP Connection – Irving LP, TRT NOIP Glenville - Richardson LP, TRT NOIP Columbia - Richfield LLC, TRT NOIP Eagle LP, TRT NOIP East 28 – Aurora LLC, GPT Sheila Street Owner LP, GPT Corporate Center-Thousand Oaks Owner LP, GPT Connection Drive Owner LLC, GPT Columbia Road Owner LLC, GPT Vickery Drive Owner LLC, and GPT 28th Avenue Aurora Owner LLC, dated January 15, 2015, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.16 to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767), filed January 29, 2015
10.17   Amended and Restated Purchase and Sale Contract between TRT NOIP Doolittle – Redondo Beach LP, TRT NOIP Sw 80 – Plantation LLC, TRT NOIP Corporate Drive – Dixon LLC, GPT Doolittle Drive Owner LP, GPT SW 80th Street Owner LLC, and GPT Corporate Drive-Dixon Owner LLC, dated January 15, 2015, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.17 to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767), filed January 29, 2015
10.18   Amended and Restated Purchase and Sale Contract by and between TRT NOIP Sylvan Way – Parsippany LLC, TRT NOIP Maple – El Segundo LP, GPT Sylvan Way Owner LLC, and GPT Maple Avenue Owner LP, dated January 15, 2015, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.18 to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767), filed January 29, 2015
10.19   Restricted Stock Unit Agreement between the Company and Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC, dated February 25, 2015 (relating to 135,359 restricted stock units), incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.28 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed March 3, 2015
10.20   Restricted Stock Unit Agreement between the Company and Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC, dated February 25, 2015 (relating to 88,788 restricted stock units), incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.29 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed March 3, 2015
10.21   Restricted Stock Unit Agreement between the Company and Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC, dated February 4, 2016 (relating to 124,451 restricted stock units), incorporated by reference to Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s Current Report on Form 8-K, filed February 5, 2016
10.22   Form of Trust Agreement *
10.23   Form of Master Lease *
10.24   Form of Guaranty *
10.25   Dealer Manager Agreement between Dividend Capital Exchange LLC and Dividend Capital Securities LLC dated March 2, 2016, and Form of Selected Dealer Agreement *
21   Subsidiaries of the registrant *
23.1   Consent of KPMG LLP *
23.2   Consent of DLA Piper LLP (US) (included in Exhibit 5.1 and Exhibit 8.1)
23.3   Consent of EKS&H LLLP *
24.1   Power of Attorney, incorporated by reference to the signature page to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767), filed July 31, 2014
24.2   Power of Attorney, incorporated by reference to the signature page to Pre-Effective Amendment No. 1 to the Company’s Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767), filed January 29, 2015
99.1   Valuation Procedures, incorporated by reference to Exhibit 99.1 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K, filed March 3, 2015
99.2   Consent of Altus Group U.S., Inc. *

 

* Filed herewith.

 

 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. POS AM

Exhibit 10.1

 

NINTH AMENDED AND RESTATED ADVISORY AGREEMENT

 

among

 

DIVIDEND CAPITAL DIVERSIFIED PROPERTY FUND INC.,

 

DIVIDEND CAPITAL TOTAL REALTY OPERATING PARTNERSHIP LP

 

and

 

DIVIDEND CAPITAL TOTAL ADVISORS LLC

 

 
 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS 

       
1. DEFINITIONS   1
       
2. APPOINTMENT   10
       
3. DUTIES OF THE ADVISOR   10
       
4. AUTHORITY OF ADVISOR   15
       
5. BANK ACCOUNTS   16
       
6. RECORDS; ACCESS   16
       
7. LIMITATIONS ON ACTIVITIES   16
       
8. RELATIONSHIP WITH DIRECTORS   17
       
9. FEES   17
       
10. EXPENSES   21
       
11. OTHER SERVICES   23
       
12. REIMBURSEMENT TO THE ADVISOR   23
       
13. OTHER ACTIVITIES OF THE ADVISOR   24
       
14. TERM; TERMINATION OF AGREEMENT   25
       
15. TERMINATION BY THE PARTIES   25
       
16. ASSIGNMENT TO AN AFFILIATE   25
       
17. PAYMENTS TO AND DUTIES OF ADVISOR UPON TERMINATION   26
       
18. INDEMNIFICATION BY THE COMPANY AND THE OPERATING PARTNERSHIP   27
       
19. INDEMNIFICATION BY ADVISOR   28
       
20. NOTICES   28
       
21. MODIFICATION   29
       
22. SEVERABILITY   29
       

23. CONSTRUCTION   29

 

i
 

 

24. ENTIRE AGREEMENT   29
       
25. INDULGENCES, NOT WAIVERS   29
       
26. GENDER   29
       
27. TITLES NOT TO AFFECT INTERPRETATION   29
       
28. EXECUTION IN COUNTERPARTS   29
       
29. INITIAL INVESTMENT   30

 

ii
 

 

NINTH AMENDED AND RESTATED ADVISORY AGREEMENT

 

THIS NINTH AMENDED AND RESTATED ADVISORY AGREEMENT (this “ Agreement ”), dated as of March 2, 2016, is among Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation (f/k/a Dividend Capital Total Realty Trust Inc.) (the “Company”), Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership (the “ Operating Partnership ”), and Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC, a Delaware limited liability company.

 

W I T N E S S E T H

 

WHEREAS, the Company has qualified as a REIT (as defined below), and invests its funds in investments permitted by the terms of Sections 856 through 860 of the Code (as defined below);

 

WHEREAS, the Company is the general partner of the Operating Partnership and conducts all its business and makes all investments in Real Properties, Real Estate Related Securities, and Debt Investments through the Operating Partnership;

 

WHEREAS, the Company and the Operating Partnership desire to avail themselves of the experience, sources of information, advice, assistance and certain facilities of the Advisor and to have the Advisor undertake the duties and responsibilities hereinafter set forth, on behalf of, and subject to the supervision, of the Board of Directors of the Company all as provided herein;

 

WHEREAS, the Advisor is willing to undertake to render such services, subject to the supervision of the Board of Directors, on the terms and conditions hereinafter set forth; and

 

WHEREAS, the parties hereto are party to that certain Eighth Amended and Restated Advisory Agreement, dated as of July 12, 2012, which is amended and restated in its entirety hereby.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing and of the mutual covenants and agreements contained herein, the parties hereto agree as follows:

 

1. DEFINITIONS. As used in this Agreement, the following terms have the definitions hereinafter indicated:

 

Acquisition Expenses . Any and all expenses, exclusive of Acquisition Fees, incurred by the Company, the Operating Partnership, the Advisor, or any of their Affiliates in connection with the selection, acquisition or development of any Real Property, Real Estate Related Security or Debt Investment, whether or not acquired, including, without limitation, legal fees and expenses, travel and communications expenses, costs of appraisals, nonrefundable option payments on property not acquired, accounting fees and expenses, title insurance premiums, and the costs of performing due diligence.

 

1
 

 

Acquisition Fees . Any and all fees and commissions, exclusive of Acquisition Expenses, paid by any Person to any other Person (including any fees or commissions paid by or to any Affiliate of the Company, the Operating Partnership or the Advisor) in connection with making or investing in Debt Investments or the purchase, development or construction of a Real Property, including real estate commissions, selection fees, development fees, construction fees, nonrecurring management fees, loan fees, points or any other fees of a similar nature. Excluded shall be development fees and construction fees paid to any Person not affiliated with the Sponsor in connection with the actual development and construction of a project.

 

Additional Threshold . A VPU of $10.00. The Additional Threshold is subject to adjustment to account for (i) any stock dividend, stock split, recapitalization, or other similar change in the capital structure of the Operating Partnership, and (ii) any adjustment approved by the Board, as applicable.

 

Advisor . Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, any successor advisor to the Company, the Operating Partnership or any person or entity to which Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC or any successor advisor subcontracts substantially all of its functions. Notwithstanding the forgoing, a Person hired or retained by Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC to perform property and securities management and related services for the Company or the Operating Partnership that is not hired or retained to perform substantially all of the functions of Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC with respect to the Company or the Operating Partnership as a whole shall not be deemed to be an Advisor.

 

Advisory Fee . The fee payable to the Advisor pursuant to Section 9(b).

 

Affiliate or Affiliated . With respect to any Person, (i) any Person directly or indirectly owning, controlling or holding, with the power to vote, ten percent (10%) or more of the outstanding voting securities of such other Person; (ii) any Person ten percent (10%) or more of whose outstanding voting securities are directly or indirectly owned, controlled or held, with the power to vote, by such other Person; (iii) any Person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by or under common control with such other Person; (iv) any executive officer, director, trustee or general partner of such other Person; and (v) any legal entity for which such Person acts as an executive officer, director, trustee or general partner.

 

Annual Total Return Percentage . The overall non-compounded investment return provided to Unitholders, expressed as a percentage, for any calendar year (or such other applicable period), which shall be equal to the ratio of: (i) the amount, if any, by which (A) the sum of (1) the Weighted-Average Distributions per Unit over the applicable period, and (2) the Ending VPU, exceeds (B) the Beginning VPU, divided by (ii) the Beginning VPU.

 

Articles of Incorporation . The Articles of Incorporation of the Company, as amended from time to time.

 

Average Invested Assets . For a specified period, the average of the aggregate book value of the assets of the Company invested, directly or indirectly, in Real Estate Related Securities, Debt Investments and Real Properties, before deducting depreciation, bad debts or other non-cash reserves, computed by taking the average of such values at the end of each month during such period.

 

2
 

 

Beginning VPU . The VPU as of the end of the last Business Day prior to the commencement of the applicable period.

 

Board of Directors or Board . The persons holding such office, as of any particular time, under the Articles of Incorporation of the Company, whether they be the Directors named therein or additional or successor Directors.

 

Business Day . Any day on which the New York Stock Exchange is open for trading.

 

Bylaws . The bylaws of the Company, as the same are in effect from time to time.

 

Cause . With respect to the termination of this Agreement, fraud, criminal conduct, willful misconduct or willful or negligent breach of fiduciary duty by the Advisor, or an uncured material breach of this Agreement by the Advisor.

 

Class A Shares . Shares of the Company’s $0.01 par value common stock that have been designated as Class A.

 

Class A Stockholders . The registered holders of the Class A Shares.

 

Class A Unit . An OP Unit entitling the holder thereof to the rights of a holder of a Class A Unit as provided in the Operating Partnership Agreement.

 

Class E Shares . Shares of the Company’s $0.01 par value common stock that have not been designated as either Class A Shares, Class W Shares or Class I Shares or another specified class.

 

Class E Stockholders . The registered holders of the Class E Shares.

 

Class E Unit . An OP Unit entitling the holder thereof to the rights of a holder of a Class E Unit as provided in the Operating Partnership Agreement.

 

Class I Shares . Shares of the Company’s $0.01 par value common stock that have been designated as Class I.

 

Class I Stockholders . The registered holders of the Class I Shares.

 

Class I Unit . An OP Unit entitling the holder thereof to the rights of a holder of a Class I Unit as provided in the Operating Partnership Agreement.

 

Class W Shares . Shares of the Company’s $0.01 par value common stock that have been designated as Class W.

 

Class W Stockholders . The registered holders of the Class W Shares.

 

3
 

 

Class W Unit . An OP Unit entitling the holder thereof to the rights of a holder of a Class W Unit as provided in the Operating Partnership Agreement.

 

Code . Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from time to time, or any successor statute thereto. Reference to any provision of the Code shall mean such provision as in effect from time to time, as the same may be amended, and any successor provision thereto, as interpreted by any applicable regulations as in effect from time to time.

 

Company . Company shall have the meaning set forth in the preamble of this Agreement.

 

Company Property . Any and all property, real, personal or otherwise, tangible or intangible, which is transferred or conveyed to the Company (including all rents, income, profits and gains therefrom), and which is owned or held by, or for the account of, the Company.

 

Competitive Real Estate Commission . A real estate or brokerage commission for the purchase or sale of property which is reasonable, customary, and competitive in light of the size, type, and location of the property.

 

Contract Sales Price . The total consideration received by the Company for the sale of a Company Property.

 

Debt Investments . The debt related investments, or such investments the Board of Directors and the Advisor mutually designate as debt related investments, which are owned from time to time by the Company or the Operating Partnership; such debt related investments include, but are not limited to, mortgage loans, B-notes, mezzanine debt, participating debt (including with equity-like features), non-traded preferred equity, convertible debt, hybrid instruments, equity instruments and other related investments.

 

Director . A member of the Board of Directors of the Company.

 

Distributions . Any distributions of money or other property by the Company to owners of Shares, including distributions that may constitute a return of capital for federal income tax purposes.

 

DST Properties . Real properties that meet the following criteria: (i) tenancy-in-common or Delaware statutory trust beneficial interests in such properties have been sold by the Company or any Affiliate to third party investors and (ii) such properties are being leased by the Company or any Affiliate from the tenancy-in-common or Delaware statutory trust third party investors.

 

DST Property Consideration . The consideration received by the Company or any Affiliate for selling tenancy-in-common or Delaware statutory trust beneficial interests in DST Properties to third party investors, net of DST Up Front Fees.

 

DST Up Front Fees . Up front fees and expense reimbursements payable out of gross sale proceeds from the sale of tenancy-in-common or Delaware statutory trust beneficial interests in DST Properties, including but not limited to sales commissions, dealer manager fees and non-accountable expense allowances.

 

4
 

 

Ending VPU . The VPU as of the end of the last Business Day of the applicable period.

 

Equity Shares . Transferable shares of beneficial interest of the Company of any class or series, including common shares or preferred shares.

 

Excess Amount . Excess Amount has the meaning set forth in Section 12.

 

Expense Year . Expense Year has the meaning set forth in Section 12.

 

Fixed Component . The non-variable component of the Advisory Fee as described in Section 9.

 

GAAP . Generally accepted accounting principles as in effect in the United States of America from time to time.

 

Good Reason . With respect to the termination of this Agreement, (i) any failure to obtain a satisfactory agreement from any successor to the Company and/or the Operating Partnership to assume and agree to perform the Company’s and/or the Operating Partnership’s obligations under this Agreement; or (ii) any uncured material breach of this Agreement of any nature whatsoever by the Company and/or the Operating Partnership.

 

Gross Proceeds . The aggregate purchase price of all Shares sold for the account of the Company through all Offerings, without deduction for Organizational and Offering Expenses.

 

Independent Director . Independent Director shall have the meaning set forth in the Articles of Incorporation.

 

Independent Expert . A person or entity with no material current or prior business or personal relationship with the Advisor or the Directors and who is engaged to a substantial extent in the business of rendering opinions regarding the value of assets of the type held by the Company.

 

Independent Valuation Advisor . A firm that is (i) engaged to a substantial degree in the business of conducting valuations on commercial real estate properties, (ii) not affiliated with the Advisor and (iii) engaged by the Company with the approval of the Board to appraise the Real Properties or other assets or liabilities pursuant to the Valuation Procedures.

 

Joint Ventures . The joint venture or partnership arrangements (other than with Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP) in which the Company or any of its subsidiaries is a co-venturer or general partner which are established to acquire Real Properties.

 

Listing . The listing of the Shares on a national securities exchange or the receipt by the Company’s stockholders of securities that are listed on a national securities exchange in exchange for the Company’s common stock. Upon such Listing, the Shares shall be deemed Listed.

 

5
 

 

NASAA REIT Guidelines . The Statement of Policy Regarding Real Estate Investment Trusts published by the North American Securities Administrators Association on May 7, 2007, as may be amended from time to time.

 

NAV . Net asset value, calculated pursuant to the Valuation Procedures.

 

NAV Calculations . The calculations used to determine the NAV of the Company, the Shares, the Operating Partnership and the Units, all as provided in the Valuation Procedures.

 

Net Income . For any period, the Company’s total revenues applicable to such period, less the total expenses applicable to such period other than additions to reserves for depreciation, bad debts or other similar non-cash reserves and excluding any gain from the sale of the Company’s assets.

 

Offering . A public offering of Shares pursuant to a Prospectus.

 

Operating Partnership . Operating Partnership has the meaning set forth in the preamble of this Agreement.

 

Operating Partnership Agreement . The Operating Partnership’s limited partnership agreement among the Company, the Advisor, and Dividend Capital Total Advisors Group LLC.

 

Operating Partnership NAV . The NAV of the Operating Partnership.

 

OP Unit . A unit of limited partnership interest in the Operating Partnership.

 

Organizational and Offering Expenses . Any and all cumulative costs and expenses incurred by and to be paid from the assets of the Company, including amounts reimbursable to the Advisor and its Affiliates pursuant and subject to Section 10(a)(i) hereof, in connection with the formation, qualification and registration of all of the Company’s Offerings and the subsequent marketing and distribution of Shares, including, without limitation, the following: total underwriting and brokerage discounts and commissions (including fees of the underwriters’ attorneys), any expense allowance granted by the Company to the underwriter (which may include a dealer manager) or any reimbursement of expenses of the underwriter by the Company, expenses for printing, engraving, mailing and distributing costs, salaries of employees while engaged in sales activity, telephone and other telecommunications costs, all advertising and marketing expenses (including the costs related to investor and broker-dealer sales meetings), charges of transfer agents, registrars, trustees, escrow holders, depositories, experts, fees, expenses and taxes related to the filing, registration and qualification of the sale of the Shares under federal and state laws, including accountants’ and attorneys’ fees.

 

Performance Component . The variable component of the Advisory Fee as described in Section 9.

 

Person . An individual, corporation, partnership, trust, joint venture, limited liability company or other entity.

 

6
 

 

Priority Return Percentage . Priority Return Percentage has the meaning set forth in Section 9.

 

Private Organizational and Offering Expenses . Any and all cumulative costs and expenses incurred by and to be paid from the assets of the Company or any of its subsidiaries, including amounts reimbursable to the Advisor and its Affiliates pursuant and subject to Section 10(a)(ii) hereof, in connection with the formation and qualification of any private offerings of any securities conducted by the Company or any of its subsidiaries and the subsequent marketing and distribution of such securities, including, without limitation, the following: total underwriting and brokerage discounts and commissions (including fees of the underwriters’ attorneys), any expense allowance granted by the Company or its subsidiaries to the underwriter (which may include a dealer manager) or any reimbursement of expenses of the underwriter by the Company or its subsidiaries, expenses for printing, engraving, mailing and distributing costs, salaries of employees while engaged in sales activity, telephone and other telecommunications costs, all advertising and marketing expenses (including the costs related to investor and broker-dealer sales meetings), charges of transfer agents, registrars, trustees, escrow holders, depositories, experts, fees, expenses and taxes related to the qualification of the sale of the securities under federal and state laws, including accountants’ and attorneys’ fees.

 

Product Specialist . Persons that have specialized expertise and dedicated resources in specific areas of real property, real estate related securities or debt investments, that perform fee-related services that the Advisor has committed to provide pursuant to Section 3(a) of this Agreement or with whom the Company has entered into a product specialist agreement, and that assist the Advisor in connection with one or more of the following: identifying, evaluating and/or recommending potential investments, performing due diligence, negotiating purchases and/or managing the Company’s assets on a day-to-day basis, as described in the Company’s Prospectus.

 

Prospectus . “Prospectus” has the meaning set forth in Section 2(10) of the Securities Act, including a preliminary Prospectus, an offering circular as described in Rule 256 of the General Rules and Regulations under the Securities Act or, in the case of an intrastate offering, any document by whatever name known, utilized for the purpose of offering and selling securities to the public.

 

Real Estate Related Securities . The real estate related securities investments, or such investments the Board of Directors and the Advisor mutually designate as Real Estate Related Securities to the extent such investments could be classified as either Real Estate Related Securities or Real Property, which are owned from time to time by the Company or the Operating Partnership.

 

Real Property . (i) Land, including the buildings located thereon, or (ii) land only, or (iii) the buildings only, which are owned from time to time by the Company or the Operating Partnership, either directly or through subsidiaries, joint venture arrangements or other partnerships, or (iv) such investments the Board of Directors and the Advisor mutually designate as Real Property to the extent such investments could be classified as either Real Property, Real Estate Related Securities, or Debt Investments. DST Properties shall also be deemed Real Property for the purposes of this definition.

 

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REIT . A “real estate investment trust” under Sections 856 through 860 of the Code or as may be amended.

 

Sale or Sales . Any transaction or series of transactions whereby: (A) the Company or the Operating Partnership directly or indirectly (except as described in other subsections of this definition) sells, grants, transfers, conveys, or relinquishes its ownership of any Real Property or portion thereof, including the lease of any Real Property consisting of a building only, and including any event with respect to any Real Property which gives rise to a significant amount of insurance proceeds or condemnation awards; (B) the Company or the Operating Partnership directly or indirectly (except as described in other subsections of this definition) sells, grants, transfers, conveys, or relinquishes its ownership of all or substantially all of the interest of the Corporation or the Operating Partnership in any Joint Venture in which it is a co-venturer or partner; (C) any Joint Venture directly or indirectly (except as described in other subsections of this definition) in which the Company or the Operating Partnership as a co-venturer or partner sells, grants, transfers, conveys, or relinquishes its ownership of any Real Property or portion thereof, including any event with respect to any Real Property which gives rise to insurance claims or condemnation awards; or (D) the Company or the Operating Partnership directly or indirectly (except as described in other subsections of this definition) sells, grants, conveys or relinquishes its interest in any mortgage or portion thereof (including with respect to any mortgage, all payments thereunder or in satisfaction thereof other than regularly scheduled interest payments) of amounts owed pursuant to such mortgage and any event which gives rise to a significant amount of insurance proceeds or similar awards; or (E) the Company or the Operating Partnership directly or indirectly (except as described in other subsections of this definition) sells, grants, transfers, conveys, or relinquishes its ownership of any other asset not previously described in this definition or any portion thereof.

 

Securities . Any Equity Shares, any other stock, shares or other evidences of equity or beneficial or other interests, voting trust certificates, bonds, debentures, notes or other evidences of indebtedness, secured or unsecured, convertible, subordinated or otherwise, or in general any instruments commonly known as “securities” or any certificates of interest, shares or participations in, temporary or interim certificates for, receipts for, guarantees of, or warrants, options or rights to subscribe to, purchase or acquire, any of the foregoing.

 

Securities Act . The Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

 

Shares . The shares of all classes of the common stock of the Company.

 

Sponsor . Any Person which (i) is directly or indirectly instrumental in organizing, wholly or in part, the Company, (ii) will control, manage or participate in the management of the Company, and any Affiliate of any such Person, (iii) takes the initiative, directly or indirectly, in founding or organizing the Company, either alone or in conjunction with one or more other Persons, (iv) receives a material participation in the Company in connection with the founding or organizing of the business of the Company, in consideration of services or property, or both services and property, (v) has a substantial number of relationships and contacts with the Company, (vi) possesses significant rights to control Real Properties, (vii) receives fees for providing services to the Company which are paid on a basis that is not customary in the industry, or (viii) provides goods or services to the Company on a basis which was not negotiated at arm’s-length with the Company. “Sponsor” does not include wholly independent third parties such as attorneys, accountants and underwriters whose only compensation is for professional services.

 

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Standard Threshold . The higher of (a) the VPU as of the end of the Business Day on which the initial Offering of Class A, Class I and Class W Shares commenced or (b) the highest VPU on the last Business Day of any prior calendar year following the commencement of the initial Offering of Class A, Class I and Class W Shares. The Standard Threshold is subject to adjustment to account for (i) any stock dividend, stock split, recapitalization, or other similar change in the capital structure of the Operating Partnership, and (ii) any adjustment approved by the Board, as applicable.

 

Stockholders . The registered holders of the Company’s Shares.

 

Termination Date . The date of termination of this Agreement.

 

Termination Event . The termination or nonrenewal of this Agreement (i) in connection with a merger, sale of assets or transaction involving the Company pursuant to which a majority of the Directors then in office are replaced or removed, (ii) by the Advisor for Good Reason or (iii) by the Company and the Operating Partnership other than for Cause.

 

Total Operating Expenses . All costs and expenses paid or incurred by the Company, as determined under GAAP, that are in any way related to the operation of the Company or to corporate business, including the Advisory Fee, but excluding (i) the expenses of raising capital such as Organizational and Offering Expenses, legal, audit, accounting, underwriting, brokerage, listing, registration, and other fees, printing and other such expenses and tax incurred in connection with the issuance, distribution, transfer, registration and Listing, (ii) interest payments, (iii) taxes, (iv) non-cash expenditures such as depreciation, amortization and bad debt reserves, (v) incentive fees paid in compliance with the NASAA REIT Guidelines; (vi) Acquisition Fees and Acquisition Expenses, (vii) real estate commissions on the Sale of Real Property, and (viii) other fees and expenses connected with the acquisition, disposition, management and ownership of real estate interests, mortgage loans or other property (including the costs of foreclosure, insurance premiums, legal services, maintenance, repair, and improvement of property). The definition of “Total Operating Expenses” set forth above is intended to encompass only those expenses which are required to be treated as Total Operating Expenses under the NASAA REIT Guidelines. As a result, and notwithstanding the definition set forth above, any expense of the Company which is not part of Total Operating Expenses under the NASAA REIT Guidelines shall not be treated as part of Total Operating Expenses for purposes hereof.

 

2%/25% Guidelines . For any year in which the Company qualifies as a REIT, the requirement pursuant to the NASAA REIT Guidelines that, in any period of four consecutive fiscal quarters, Total Operating Expenses not exceed the greater of 2% of the Company’s Average Invested Assets during such 12-month period or 25% of the Company’s Net Income over the same 12-month period.

 

Unitholders . The holders of OP Units.

 

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Valuation Procedures . The valuation procedures adopted by the Board, as amended from time to time.

 

VPU . Average value per unit, which on any given date shall be equal to (i) the Operating Partnership NAV on such date, divided by (ii) the aggregate number of OP Units of all classes outstanding on such date.

 

Weighted-Average Distributions per Unit . For a particular period of time, an amount equal to the ratio of (i) the aggregate distributions accrued in respect of all Units during the applicable period after deducting all relevant class-specific expenses, divided by (ii) the weighted-average number of Units of all classes outstanding during the applicable period, calculated in accordance with GAAP applied on a consistent basis.

  

2. APPOINTMENT. The Company and the Operating Partnership hereby appoint the Advisor to serve as their advisor on the terms and conditions set forth in this Agreement, and the Advisor hereby accepts such appointment.

 

3. DUTIES OF THE ADVISOR. The Advisor undertakes to provide a continuing and suitable investment program consistent with the investment objectives and policies of the Company as determined and adopted from time to time by the Directors. In performance of this undertaking, subject to the supervision of the Directors and consistent with the provisions of the Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws and the Operating Partnership Agreement, and subject to the condition that any investment advisory services provided with respect to securities shall be provided by a registered investment adviser, the Advisor shall, either directly or by engaging an Affiliated or non-Affiliated Person:

 

(a) Fee-related Services .

 

(i) Asset Management Services . The following services shall be provided by the Advisor or one of its Affiliates in consideration of the fees described in Section 9(b) of this Agreement, subject to reimbursement for expenses as provided in Section 9(a), Section 10 and Section 12, or as otherwise provided under this Agreement:

 

(1) monitor the operating performance of the investments of the Company and/or the Operating Partnership;

 

(2) oversee the leasing activities of the Company’s portfolio including but not limited to negotiations with prospective and existing tenants and leasing arrangements with Affiliated and non-Affiliated leasing brokers;

 

(3) oversee Affiliated and non-Affiliated property managers who perform property management services for the Company or the Operating Partnership;

 

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(4) oversee and negotiate service contracts for the Company’s Real Properties;

 

(5) oversee and coordinate the making of dispositions of Real Properties within the discretionary limits and authority as granted by the Board, or if no such discretionary limits have been established, with the prior approval of the Board, any particular Directors specified by the Board or any committee of the Board, as the case may be; and

 

(6) negotiate with and engage selling brokers as necessary to dispose of Real Properties.

 

(ii) Development Management Services . If the Advisor or one of its Affiliates provides the services described in Section 9(c) of this Agreement, it shall be entitled to the compensation described therein; however, the Advisor and its Affiliates shall not be obligated to provide such services.

 

(iii) Real Estate Brokerage Services . If the Advisor or one of its Affiliates provides the services described in Section 9(d) of this Agreement, it shall be entitled to the compensation described therein; however, the Advisor and its Affiliates shall not be obligated to provide such services.

 

(b) Non Fee-Related Services . The following services shall be provided by the Advisor or one of its Affiliates without consideration in the form of a separate fee, subject to reimbursement for expenses as provided in Section 10 and Section 12, or as otherwise provided under this Agreement:

 

(i) Organizational and Offering Services .

 

(1) assist the Company in maintaining the registration of the Shares under federal and state securities laws and complying with all federal, state and local regulatory requirements applicable to the Company in respect of the Offering (including the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, as amended), including preparing or causing to be prepared all supplements to the Prospectus, post-effective amendments to the registration statement for any Offering and financial statements required under applicable regulations and contractual undertakings and all reports and documents, if any, required under the Securities Act and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended; provided , however , that in all filings made under federal and state securities laws, the statements therein shall be made by solely the Company and not by the Advisor or any of its other Affiliates; and

 

(2) assist the Company in complying with all federal, state and local regulatory requirements applicable to the Company and its subsidiaries in respect of any private placements of any securities, including but not limited to tenancy-in-common or Delaware statutory trust beneficial interests in DST Properties, including preparing or causing to be prepared private placement memoranda and all supplements thereto; provided , however , that in all private placement memoranda, supplements thereto and any other offering materials, the statements therein shall be made by solely the Company and not by the Advisor or any of its other Affiliates.

 

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(ii) Acquisition Services .

 

(1) present to the Company and the Operating Partnership potential investment opportunities;

 

(2) serve as the Company’s and the Operating Partnership’s investment and financial advisor and, as reasonably appropriate under the circumstances, provide research and economic and statistical data in connection with the Company’s assets and investment policies;

 

(3) subject to any required Board or Board committee approval, (i) locate, analyze and select potential investments, (ii) structure and negotiate the terms and conditions of transactions pursuant to which investments will be made; (iii) oversee and coordinate the making of investments by the Company and the Operating Partnership in compliance with the investment objectives and policies of the Company; and (iv) arrange, oversee and coordinate the financing and refinancing and the making of other changes in the asset or capital structure of investments;

 

(4) perform due diligence on prospective investments;

 

(5) upon request provide the Directors with periodic reports regarding prospective investments;

 

(6) obtain the prior approval of the Board, any particular Directors specified by the Board or any committee of the Board, as the case may be, for any and all investments in Real Properties; and

 

(7) oversee and coordinate the making of investments in Real Estate Related Securities or Debt Investments within the discretionary limits and authority as granted by the Board, or if no such discretionary limits have been established, with the prior approval of the Board, any particular Directors specified by the Board or any committee of the Board, as the case may be.

 

(iii) Financing Services .

 

(1) consult with the officers and Directors of the Company and assist the Directors in the formulation and implementation of the Company’s borrowing policies, and, as necessary, furnish the Directors with advice and recommendations with respect to any borrowings proposed to be undertaken by the Company and/or the Operating Partnership; and

 

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(2) negotiate on behalf of the Company and the Operating Partnership with banks or lenders for loans to be made to the Company and the Operating Partnership, and negotiate on behalf of the Company and the Operating Partnership with investment banking firms and broker-dealers or negotiate private sales of Shares and other Securities or obtain loans for the Company and the Operating Partnership, but in no event in such a way so that the Advisor shall be acting as broker-dealer or underwriter; and provided, further, that any fees and costs payable to third parties incurred by the Advisor in connection with the foregoing shall be the responsibility of the Company or the Operating Partnership.

 

(iv) Accounting and Administrative Services .

 

(1) provide the daily management for the Company and the Operating Partnership and perform and supervise the various administrative functions reasonably necessary for the management of the Company and the Operating Partnership, unless expressly provided for elsewhere in this Agreement;

 

(2) provide the Company and the Operating Partnership with, or arrange for the provision to the Company and the Operating Partnership of, all necessary cash management services;

 

(3) consult with the Company’s officers and the Board and assist the Board in evaluating and obtaining adequate insurance coverage based upon risk management determinations;

 

(4) implement and coordinate the processes with respect to the NAV Calculations, and in connection therewith, obtain appraisals performed by an Independent Valuation Advisor concerning the value of the Real Properties;

 

(5) supervise one or more Independent Valuation Advisors and, if and when necessary, recommend to the Board its replacement; and

 

(6) deliver to or maintain on behalf of the Company copies of all appraisals obtained in connection with the investments in Real Properties and all valuations of Real Estate Related Securities or Debt Investments as may be required to be obtained by the Board;

 

(7) in consultation with legal counsel, advise the Company regarding the maintenance of the Company’s exemption from the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, and monitor compliance with the requirements for maintaining an exemption from such act;

 

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(8) in consultation with legal counsel and other tax advisers, advise the Company regarding the maintenance of the Company’s status as a REIT and monitor compliance with the various REIT qualification tests and other rules set out in the Code and the regulations promulgated thereunder;

 

(9) in consultation with legal counsel and other tax advisers, take all necessary actions to enable the Company and the Operating Partnership to make required tax filings and reports, including soliciting Stockholders for required information to the extent provided by the REIT provisions of the Code; and

 

(10) oversee and resolve all claims, disputes or controversies (including all litigation, arbitration, settlement or other proceedings or negotiations) in which the Company and the Operating Partnership may be involved or to which the Company and the Operating Partnership may be subject, arising out of the Company’s or the Operating Partnership’s day-to-day operations, subject to such limitations or parameters as may be imposed from time to time by the Board.

 

(v) Stockholder Services .

 

(1) in consultation with legal counsel, communicate on the Company’s or the Operating Partnership’s behalf with the respective holders of any of the Company’s or the Operating Partnership’s securities as required to satisfy the reporting and other requirements of any regulatory bodies or agencies and to maintain effective relations with such holders; and

 

(2) oversee the performance of the transfer agent and registrar.

 

(vi) Other Services .

 

(1) oversee and coordinate the disposition of Real Estate Related Securities or Debt Investments within the discretionary limits and authority as granted by the Board, or if no such discretionary limits have been established, with the prior approval of the Board, any particular Directors specified by the Board or any committee of the Board, as the case may be;

 

(2) oversee and coordinate the making of any private placement of OP Units, tenancy-in-common or other interests in Real Properties as may be approved by the Board;

 

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(3) investigate, select, and, on behalf of the Company and the Operating Partnership, oversee and coordinate the engagement of and business with such Persons as the Advisor deems necessary to the proper performance of its obligations hereunder (whether for a fee or not), including but not limited to consultants, accountants, correspondents, lenders, technical advisors, attorneys, brokers, underwriters, corporate fiduciaries, escrow agents, depositaries, custodians, agents for collection, insurers, insurance agents, banks, builders, developers, property owners, real estate management companies, real estate operating companies, securities investment advisors, mortgagors, and any and all agents for any of the foregoing, including Affiliates of the Advisor, and Persons acting in any other capacity deemed by the Advisor necessary or desirable for the performance of any of the foregoing services, including but not limited to entering into contracts in the name of the Company and the Operating Partnership with any of the foregoing;

 

(4) from time to time, or at any time reasonably requested by the Directors, make reports to the Directors of its performance of services to the Company and the Operating Partnership under this Agreement, including reports with respect to potential conflicts of interest involving the Advisor or any of its affiliates; and

 

(5) do all other things reasonably necessary to assure its ability to render the services described in this Agreement.

 

Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Advisor may delegate any of the foregoing duties to any Person so long as the Advisor or any Affiliate remains responsible for the performance of the duties set forth in this Section 3.

 

4. AUTHORITY OF ADVISOR.

 

(a) Pursuant to the terms of this Agreement (including the restrictions included in this Section 4 and in Section 7), and subject to the continuing and exclusive authority of the Directors over the management of the Company, the Directors hereby delegate to the Advisor the authority to take, or cause to be taken, any and all actions and to execute and deliver any and all agreements, certificates, assignments, instruments or other documents and to do any and all things that, in the judgment of the Advisor, may be necessary or advisable in connection with the Advisor’s duties described in Section 3.

 

(b) Notwithstanding the foregoing, any investment in Real Properties, including any acquisition of Real Property by the Company or the Operating Partnership (including any financing of such acquisition), will require the prior approval of the Board, any particular Directors specified by the Board or any committee of the Board, as the case may be.

 

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(c) If a transaction requires approval by the Independent Directors, the Advisor will deliver to the Independent Directors all documents and other information required by them to properly evaluate the proposed transaction.

 

The prior approval of a majority of the Independent Directors not otherwise interested in the transaction and a majority of the Directors not otherwise interested in the transaction will be required for each transaction to which the Advisor or its Affiliates is a party. The Directors may, at any time upon the giving of written notice to the Advisor, modify or revoke the authority set forth in this Section 4. If and to the extent the Directors so modify or revoke the authority contained herein, the Advisor shall henceforth submit to the Directors for prior approval such proposed transactions involving investments in Real Property, Real Estate Related Securities, or Debt Investments as thereafter require prior approval, provided however, that such modification or revocation shall be effective upon receipt by the Advisor and shall not be applicable to investment transactions to which the Advisor has committed the Company prior to the date of receipt by the Advisor of such notification.

 

5. BANK ACCOUNTS. The Advisor may establish and maintain one or more bank accounts in the name of the Company and the Operating Partnership and may collect and deposit into any such account or accounts, and disburse from any such account or accounts, any money on behalf of the Company and/or the Operating Partnership, under such terms and conditions as the Directors may approve, provided that no funds shall be commingled with the funds of the Advisor; and the Advisor shall from time to time render appropriate accountings of such collections and payments to the Directors and to the auditors of the Company.

 

6. RECORDS; ACCESS. The Advisor shall maintain appropriate records of all its activities hereunder and make such records available for inspection by the Directors and by counsel, auditors and authorized agents of the Company, at any time or from time to time during normal business hours. The Advisor shall at all reasonable times have access to the books and records of the Company and the Operating Partnership.

 

7. LIMITATIONS ON ACTIVITIES. Anything else in this Agreement to the contrary notwithstanding, the Advisor shall refrain from taking any action which, in its sole judgment made in good faith, would (a) adversely affect the status of the Company as a REIT, (b) subject the Company to regulation under the Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended, or (c) violate any law, rule, regulation or statement of policy of any governmental body or agency having jurisdiction over the Company, its Shares or its Securities, or otherwise not be permitted by the Articles of Incorporation or Bylaws of the Company, except if such action shall be ordered by the Directors, in which case the Advisor shall notify promptly the Directors of the Advisor’s judgment of the potential impact of such action and shall refrain from taking such action until it receives further clarification or instructions from the Directors. In such event the Advisor shall have no liability for acting in accordance with the specific instructions of the Directors so given. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Company shall hold harmless the Advisor, its directors, officers, employees and stockholders, and stockholders, directors and officers of the Advisor’s Affiliates for any act or omission by the Advisor, its directors, officers or employees, or stockholders, directors or officers of the Advisor’s Affiliates taken or omitted to be taken in the performance of their duties under this Agreement to the extent permitted under the Company’s Articles of Incorporation and under Section 18 hereof.

 

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8. RELATIONSHIP WITH DIRECTORS. Subject to Section 7 of this Agreement and to restrictions advisable with respect to the qualification of the Company as a REIT, directors, officers and employees of the Advisor or an Affiliate of the Advisor or any corporate parents of an Affiliate, may serve as a Director and as officers of the Company, except that no director, officer or employee of the Advisor or its Affiliates who also is a Director or officer of the Company shall receive any compensation from the Company for serving as a Director or officer other than reasonable reimbursement for travel and related expenses incurred in attending meetings of the Directors and no such Director shall be deemed an Independent Director for purposes of satisfying the Director independence requirement set forth in the Articles of Incorporation. Notwithstanding the foregoing, directors, officers and employees of the Advisor and its Affiliates that are also Directors or officers of the Company may receive compensation from the Advisor or its Affiliates for which the Advisor or its Affiliates are reimbursed by the Company pursuant to Section 10 of this Agreement.

 

9. FEES.

 

(a) The fees described in Section 9(b)-(d) are compensation for the personnel and related employment costs incurred by the Advisor or its Affiliates in performing the applicable services, including but not limited to salaries and wages, benefits and overhead of all employees involved in the performance of such services, but not for the third-party costs incurred by the Advisor or its Affiliates in connection with the performance of such services, which third-party costs shall be separately reimbursed and are not included in the services provided by the Advisor and its Affiliates.

 

(b) Advisory Fee . The Advisor shall receive the Advisory Fee as compensation for asset management services rendered pursuant to Section 3(a)(i) hereof as follows.

 

(i) The Advisory Fee will be comprised of two separate components: (1) a fixed component in an amount equal to, for each day during the term of this Agreement, 1/365th of 1.15% of the sum of (a) Operating Partnership NAV and (b) aggregate DST Property Consideration for all DST Properties (the “ Fixed Component ”); and (2) a performance component (the “ Performance Component ”) that is calculated based on the Annual Total Return Percentage.

 

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(ii) The Performance Component will not be paid for any calendar year in which the Annual Total Return Percentage is less than or equal to 6.0% (the “ Priority Return Percentage ”). The dollar amount of the Performance Component will be 25.0% of the product of (A) the excess of the Annual Total Return Percentage over the Priority Return Percentage, (B) the Beginning VPU, and (C) the weighted-average number of OP Units outstanding during the applicable period, calculated in accordance with GAAP applied on a consistent basis. However in no event will the Performance Component in a single calendar year exceed 10.0% of the product of (A) the Annual Total Return Percentage, (B) the Beginning VPU, and (C) the weighted-average number of OP Units outstanding during the applicable period, calculated in accordance with GAAP applied on a consistent basis. In the event that the VPU decreases (subject to adjustment to account for (i) any stock dividend, stock split, recapitalization, or other similar change in the capital structure of the Operating Partnership, and (ii) any adjustment approved by the Board, as applicable), any subsequent increase in such VPU up to the Standard Threshold shall not be included in the calculation of the Performance Component. If the Performance Component is payable pursuant to this Section 9(b)(ii), the Advisor will be entitled to such payment even in the event that the total percentage return to Unitholders on a cumulative basis over any longer or shorter period, or the total percentage return to any particular Unitholder on a cumulative basis over the same, longer or shorter period, has been less than the Priority Return Percentage. The Advisor shall not be obligated to return any portion of any Advisory Fee paid based on the Company’s or the Operating Partnership’s subsequent performance.

  

(iii) The Advisor shall, on a daily basis, (i) accrue a liability reserve account equal to the amount due for both the Fixed Component and the Performance Component, such accrual to be reflected in the VPU calculations for such day; and (ii) calculate the Annual Total Return Percentage, prorated as of the end of such day and, based on such calculation, adjust the balance of liability reserve accrual to reflect the estimated amount due on account of the Performance Component.

 

(iv) The Advisory Fee will accrue daily. The Fixed Component is payable monthly in arrears (after the close of business and NAV Calculations for the last Business Day for such month). The Performance Component with respect to any calendar year is payable on January 1 of the following calendar year, provided that if this Agreement or its term expires without renewal prior to December 31 of any calendar year, then the Performance Component for such partial year shall be payable on the first business day after the Termination Date. The Performance Component shall be payable for each calendar year in which this Agreement is in effect, even if the Agreement is in effect for less than a full calendar year. In the event this Agreement is terminated or its term expires without renewal, the Advisory Fee will be calculated and due and payable after the NAV Calculations on the Termination Date. If the Advisory Fee is payable with respect to any partial calendar month or calendar year, the Fixed Component will be prorated based on the number of days elapsed during any partial calendar month and the Performance Component (including the Priority Return Percentage) will be prorated based on the number of days elapsed during, and the Annual Total Return Percentage achieved for, the period of such partial calendar year. For example, for the partial calendar year following the date of this Agreement, the Performance Component will be calculated based on the Annual Total Return Percentage achieved with respect to the VPU at the end of the date of this Agreement, and the Priority Return Percentage will be reduced pro rata by the number of days in the calendar year that precedes the date of this Agreement.

 

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(v) In the event the Operating Partnership commences a liquidation of its Investments during any calendar year, the Advisor will be paid its Advisory Fee from the proceeds of the liquidation and the Performance Component will be calculated at the end of the liquidation period prior to the distribution of the liquidation proceeds to the Unitholders. The calculation of the Performance Component for any partial year shall be calculated consistent with the applicable provisions of Section 9(b)(iv) above.

 

(vi) In addition, upon the Sale of one or more Real Properties (other than DST Properties), the Advisor or an Affiliate shall receive an amount equal to 1% of the Contract Sales Price of such Real Property or Real Properties.

 

(c) Development Management Fees . The Advisor shall receive as compensation for services provided by the Advisor, its Affiliates, or sub-contractors thereof in connection with overseeing the development, construction and improvement, including tenant improvements, of Real Properties (including DST Properties) by third parties on behalf of the Company a Development Management Fee payable by the Company. The Development Management Fee shall equal 4.0% of the cost to develop, construct or improve any Real Property on behalf of the Company. Development Management Fees shall be payable as such costs are incurred. However, Development Management Fees shall not be payable to the extent that such fees would cause the total of all Acquisition Fees (including Development Management Fees) and Acquisition Expenses payable with respect to any Real Property to exceed 6% of the amount actually paid or allocated to the purchase, development, construction or improvement of such Real Property, exclusive of Acquisition Fees and Acquisition Expenses, unless fees in excess of such amount are approved by a majority of the Directors not interested in such transaction and by a majority of the Independent Directors not interested in such transaction. The Advisor may hire third parties to assist the Advisor in performing these oversight services, in which case the Advisor will compensate the third party from its Development Management Fee. The Advisor and the Company may also agree for the Company to engage a third party to provided these services directly, in which case the Advisor shall not receive a Development Management Fee.

 

(d) Real Estate Sales Commissions . If the Advisor or an Affiliate provides a substantial amount of the services in connection with the Sale of one or more Real Properties (other than DST Properties), the Advisor or an Affiliate shall receive a real estate sales commission equal to the lesser of (i) one-half of a Competitive Real Estate Commission or (ii) 1% of the Contract Sales Price of such Real Property or Real Properties. The Real Estate Commission may be paid in addition to real estate commissions paid to non-Affiliates, provided that the total real estate commissions paid to all Persons by the Company with respect to the sale of such Real Property or Real Properties shall not exceed an amount equal to the lesser of (i) 6% of the Contract Sales Price of the Real Property or Real Properties or (ii) the Competitive Real Estate Commission.

 

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(e) Loans from Affiliates . The Advisor or any Affiliate thereof may not make any loan to the Company or the Operating Partnership unless a majority of the Directors (including a majority of the Independent Directors) not otherwise interested in such loan approve the loan as being fair, competitive, and commercially reasonable and no less favorable to the Company or the Operating Partnership than loans between unaffiliated parties under the same circumstances.

 

(f) Exclusion of Certain Transactions . In the event the Company or the Operating Partnership shall propose to enter into any transaction in which an officer or director of the Company, and the Operating Partnership, the Advisor, or any Affiliate of the Company, the Operating Partnership or the Advisor has a direct or indirect interest, then (i) such transaction shall be approved by a majority of the Board of Directors and also by a majority of the Independent Directors and (ii) any commissions or remuneration received by any such persons in connection with such transaction shall be deducted from the fees payable under this Agreement.

 

(g) Product Specialists . In the event the Advisor enters into strategic alliances with Product Specialists with respect to investments in Real Properties, Real Estate Related Securities or Debt Investments on behalf of the Company or the Operating Partnership as provided for in the Company’s prospectus, and the Product Specialists perform services that entitle them to fees, any such fees will be paid by the Advisor (and not by the Company or the Operating Partnership) out of the fees the Advisor receives from the Company or the Operating Partnership.

 

(h) Payment in Shares . The fees and commissions due under this Section 9 shall be paid in cash; provided, however, that in lieu of cash, the Advisor may elect to receive the payment of the fees and commissions due under this Section 9 in any class of Shares.  Any such Shares will be valued at the NAV per share applicable to such Shares on the issue date and will not be eligible for redemption by the Advisor until six months from the issue date.

 

(i) Fee Waiver . As described above in Section 9(b)(ii), in the event that the VPU decreases (subject to adjustment to account for (i) any stock dividend, stock split, recapitalization, or other similar change in the capital structure of the Operating Partnership, and (ii) any adjustment approved by the Board, as applicable) any subsequent increase in such VPU up to the Standard Threshold shall not be included in the calculation of the Performance Component. The Company and the Advisor believe that the Performance Component should also not be earned with respect to Class E Units on any increase in the value per Class E Unit up to $10.00. However, it is the Company’s understanding that in order to continue to qualify as a REIT under current law, the Company cannot direct this entire benefit to the holders of Class E Units.

 

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Instead, the Company, the Operating Partnership and the Advisor have structured the following fee waiver that will benefit all Unitholders. If as of the end of the last Business Day of the applicable period the NAV of a Class E Unit is less than $10.00 per unit, the Advisor will waive its fees earned under this Agreement in an amount equal to the product of (a) the Performance Component for the applicable period calculated after excluding any increases in VPU up to the Standard Threshold, and (b) the weighted-average Class E Units outstanding over the applicable period divided by the weighted-average OP Units outstanding over the same period. If as of the end of the last Business Day of the applicable period, the NAV of a Class E Unit is equal to or greater than $10.00 per unit, the Advisor will waive its fees earned under this Agreement in the amount, if any, by which (i) the product of (a) the Performance Component for the applicable period calculated after excluding any increases in VPU up to the Standard Threshold, and (b) the weighted-average Class E Units outstanding over the applicable period divided by the weighted-average OP Units outstanding over the same period, exceeds (ii) the product of (x) the Performance Component for the applicable period calculated after excluding any increases in VPU up to the Additional Threshold, and (y) the weighted-average Class E Units outstanding over the applicable period divided by the weighted-average OP Units outstanding over the same period. In this manner, the holders of each class of OP Units will benefit from this waiver pro rata in accordance with their particular class’s portion of Operating Partnership NAV.

 

However, if the tax laws are modified in the future such that the Company can direct this entire benefit to the holders of Class E Units, the Company, the Operating Partnership and the Advisor may agree to do so.

 

10. EXPENSES.

 

(a) In addition to the compensation paid to the Advisor pursuant to Section 9 hereof, the Company or the Operating Partnership shall pay directly or reimburse the Advisor for all of the expenses paid or incurred by the Advisor in connection with the services it provides to the Company and the Operating Partnership pursuant to this Agreement, including, but not limited to:

 

(i) Organizational and Offering Expenses paid or incurred by the Advisor or any of its Affiliates; provided that after an Offering terminates, the Advisor shall reimburse the Company to the extent the Organizational and Offering Expenses with respect to such Offering that are borne by the Company exceed 15.0% of the Gross Proceeds raised in the completed Offering; the Advisor shall be responsible for the payment of all the Company’s Organizational and Offering Expenses in excess of the maximum amount permitted;

 

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(ii) Private Organizational and Offering Expenses paid or incurred by the Advisor or any of its Affiliates, except to the extent the Advisor or its Affiliates have agreed to receive a fee in lieu of reimbursement of such expenses therewith;

 

(iii) Acquisition Expenses incurred in connection with the selection and acquisition of Real Properties;

 

(iv) the actual cost of goods and services used by the Company and obtained from Persons not affiliated with the Advisor, other than Acquisition Expenses, including brokerage fees paid in connection with the purchase and sale of Real Estate Related Securities or Debt Investments;

 

(v) interest and other costs for borrowed money, including discounts, points and other similar fees;

 

(vi) taxes and assessments on income of the Company or Real Properties;

 

(vii) costs associated with insurance required in connection with the business of the Company or by the Directors;

 

(viii) expenses of managing and operating Real Properties owned by the Company;

 

(ix) all expenses in connection with payments to the Directors and meetings of the Directors and Stockholders;

 

(x) personnel (and related employment) costs and overhead (including rent, insurance and other costs) incurred by the Advisor or its Affiliates in performing the services described in Section 3 hereof, including but not limited to salaries, wages or other compensation, benefits and other overhead of all employees involved in the performance of such services, provided that no reimbursement shall be made for such costs in connection with the services under Section 3(a) or services provided by an Affiliate of the Adviser for which the Company pays a separate fee pursuant to a separate agreement;

 

(xi) expenses associated with a Listing, if applicable, or with the issuance and distribution of Securities, such as selling commissions and fees, advertising expenses, taxes, legal and accounting fees, listing and registration fees;

 

(xii) expenses connected with payments of Distributions in cash or otherwise made or caused to be made by the Company to the Stockholders;

 

(xiii) expenses of organizing, redomesticating, merging, liquidating or dissolving the Company or of amending the Articles of Incorporation or the Bylaws;

 

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(xiv) expenses of maintaining communications with Stockholders, including the cost of preparation, printing, and mailing annual reports and other Stockholder reports, proxy statements and other reports required by governmental entities;

 

(xv) audit, accounting and legal fees and other fees for professional services relating to the operations of the Company and all such fees incurred at the request, or on behalf of, the Board, the Independent Directors or any committee of the Board;

 

(xvi) all other costs incurred by the Advisor in performing its duties hereunder.

 

(b) Expenses incurred by the Advisor on behalf of the Company and the Operating Partnership and payable pursuant to this Section 10 shall be reimbursed no less than monthly to the Advisor. The Advisor shall prepare a statement documenting the expenses of the Company and the Operating Partnership and the calculation of the fees and commissions due under this Agreement during each month, and shall deliver such statement to the Company and the Operating Partnership within 45 days after the end of each month.

 

(c) In lieu of cash, the Advisor may elect to receive the reimbursement of any of its expenses in any class of Shares.  Any such Shares will be valued at the NAV per share applicable to such Shares on the issue date and will not be eligible for redemption by the Advisor until six months from the issue date.

 

11. OTHER SERVICES. Should the Directors request that the Advisor or any director, officer or employee thereof render services for the Company and the Operating Partnership other than set forth in Section 3, such services shall be separately compensated at such rates and in such amounts as are agreed by the Advisor and the Independent Directors of the Company, subject to the limitations contained in the Articles of Incorporation, and shall not be deemed to be services pursuant to the terms of this Agreement.

 

12. REIMBURSEMENT TO THE ADVISOR. For any year in which the Company qualifies as a REIT, the Company shall not reimburse the Advisor at the end of any fiscal quarter Total Operating Expenses that, in the four consecutive fiscal quarters then ended (the “ Expense Year ”) exceed (the “ Excess Amount ”) the greater of 2% of Average Invested Assets or 25% of Net Income (the “ 2%/25% Guidelines ”) for such year. Any Excess Amount paid to the Advisor during a fiscal quarter shall be repaid to the Company or, at the option of the Company, subtracted from the Total Operating Expenses reimbursed during the subsequent fiscal quarter. If there is an Excess Amount in any Expense Year and the Independent Directors determine that such excess was justified based on unusual and nonrecurring factors which they deem sufficient, then (i) the Excess Amount may be carried over and included in Total Operating Expenses in subsequent Expense Years and reimbursed to the Advisor in one or more of such years, provided that Total Operating Expenses in any Expense Year, including any Excess Amount to be paid to the Advisor, shall not exceed the 2%/25% Guidelines or (ii) the Excess Amount may be paid in the Expense Year and within 60 days after the end of such Expense Year there shall be sent to the stockholders a written disclosure of such fact, together with an explanation of the factors the Independent Directors considered in determining that such excess expenses were justified. Such determination shall be reflected in the minutes of the meetings of the Board of Directors. The Company will not reimburse the Advisor or its Affiliates for its personnel (and related employment) costs and overhead (including rent, insurance and other costs) incurred in connection with the services under Section 3(a) or services provided by an Affiliate of the Adviser for which the Company pays a separate fee pursuant to a separate agreement. All figures used in the foregoing computation shall be determined in accordance with GAAP applied on a consistent basis.

 

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13. OTHER ACTIVITIES OF THE ADVISOR.

 

(a)            Nothing herein contained shall prevent the Advisor or any of its Affiliates from engaging in or earning fees from other activities, including, without limitation, the rendering of advice to other Persons (including other REITs) and the management of other programs advised, sponsored or organized by the Advisor or its Affiliates; nor shall this Agreement limit or restrict the right of any director, officer, employee, or stockholder of the Advisor or its Affiliates to engage in or earn fees from any other business or to render services of any kind to any other partnership, corporation, firm, individual, trust or association and earn fees for rendering such services. The Advisor may, with respect to any investment in which the Company is a participant, also render advice and service to each and every other participant therein, and earn fees for rendering such advice and service. Specifically, it is contemplated that the Company may enter into joint ventures or other similar co-investment arrangements with certain Persons, and pursuant to the agreements governing such joint ventures or arrangements, the Advisor may be engaged (directly or indirectly) to provide advice and service to such Persons, in which case the Advisor will earn fees for rendering such advice and service. 

 

(b) The Advisor shall report to the Directors the existence of any condition or circumstance, existing or anticipated, of which it has knowledge, which creates or could create a conflict of interest between the Advisor’s obligations to the Company and its obligations to or its interest in any other partnership, corporation, firm, individual, trust or association. The Advisor or its Affiliates shall promptly disclose to the Directors knowledge of such condition or circumstance. If the Advisor, Director or Affiliates thereof have sponsored other investment programs with similar investment objectives which have investment funds available at the same time as the Company, it shall be the duty of the Directors (including the Independent Directors) to ensure that the Advisor and its Affiliates adopt the method approved by the Independent Directors, by which investments are to be allocated to the competing investment entities and to use their best efforts to ensure that such method is applied fairly to the Company.

 

(c) The Advisor may make such an investment only after (i) such investment has been offered to the Company, the Operating Partnership and all public partnerships and other investment entities Affiliated with the Company with funds available for such investment and (ii) such investment is found to be unsuitable for investment by the Company, the Operating Partnership, such partnerships and investment entities. The Advisor’s Affiliates may make such an investment subject to the method approved by the Independent Directors, by which investments are to be allocated to the competing investment entities.

 

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(d) In the event that the Advisor is presented with a potential investment which might be made by the Company or the Operating Partnership and by another investment entity which the Advisor advises or manages, the Advisor shall consider, among others, the following factors: the investment objectives and criteria of each entity; the general real property sector or real estate-related sector investment allocation targets of each entity and any targeted geographic concentrations; the cash requirements of each entity; the effect of the acquisition both on diversification of each entity’s investments by type of commercial property and geographic area, and on diversification of the customers of its properties; the policy of each entity relating to leverage of properties; the anticipated cash flow of each entity; the tax effects of the purchase on each entity; the size of the investment; and the amount of funds available to each entity and the length of time such funds have been available for investment. In the event that an investment opportunity becomes available which the Advisor determines is suitable for the Company or the Operating Partnership based on the criteria set forth above, then the Advisor will utilize a reasonable allocation method to determine which investments are presented to the Board as opposed to the board of directors of such other program. Notwithstanding the foregoing, from time to time the Board or any committee of the Board, as the case may be, may approve, in cooperation with another investment entity which the Advisor (or its Affiliate) advises or manages, a specific allocation procedure with respect to such other investment entity, which shall be communicated to and followed by the Advisor. 

 

14. TERM; TERMINATION OF AGREEMENT. This Agreement shall continue in force through June 30, 2016, subject to an unlimited number of successive one-year renewals upon mutual consent of the parties. It is the duty of the Directors to evaluate the performance of the Advisor annually before renewing the Agreement, and each such renewal shall be for a term of no more than one year.

 

15. TERMINATION BY THE PARTIES. This Agreement may be terminated (i) immediately by the Company and/or the Operating Partnership for Cause or upon the bankruptcy of the Advisor, (ii) upon 60 days written notice without Cause and without penalty by a majority of the Independent Directors of the Company or (iii) upon 60 days written notice with Good Reason by the Advisor.

 

16. ASSIGNMENT TO AN AFFILIATE. This Agreement may be assigned by the Advisor to an Affiliate with the approval of a majority of the Directors (including a majority of the Independent Directors). The Advisor may assign any rights to receive fees or other payments under this Agreement to any Person without obtaining the approval of the Directors. This Agreement shall not be assigned by the Company or the Operating Partnership without the consent of the Advisor, except in the case of an assignment by the Company or the Operating Partnership to a corporation, limited partnership or other organization which is a successor to all of the assets, rights and obligations of the Company or the Operating Partnership, in which case such successor organization shall be bound hereunder and by the terms of said assignment in the same manner as the Company and the Operating Partnership are bound by this Agreement.

 

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17. PAYMENTS TO AND DUTIES OF ADVISOR UPON TERMINATION. Payments to the Advisor of unpaid expense reimbursements pursuant to this Section 17 shall be subject to the 2%/25% Guidelines to the extent applicable.

 

(a) After the Termination Date, the Advisor shall not be entitled to compensation for further services hereunder except it shall be entitled to receive from the Company or the Operating Partnership within 30 days after the effective date of such termination all unpaid reimbursements of expenses and all earned but unpaid fees payable to the Advisor prior to termination of this Agreement. In addition, in accordance with the provisions of Section 12, the Advisor shall be entitled to receive any Excess Amount (as defined in Section 12) for which the Independent Directors determined (before or after the Termination Date) that there was justification based on unusual and nonrecurring factors.

 

(b) The Advisor shall promptly upon termination:

 

(i) pay over to the Company and the Operating Partnership all money collected and held for the account of the Company and the Operating Partnership pursuant to this Agreement, after deducting any accrued compensation and reimbursement for its expenses to which it is then entitled;

 

(ii) deliver to the Directors a full accounting, including a statement showing all payments collected by it and a statement of all money held by it, covering the period following the date of the last accounting furnished to the Directors;

 

(iii) deliver to the Directors all assets, including Real Properties, Real Estate Related Securities and Debt Investments, and documents of the Company and the Operating Partnership then in the custody of the Advisor; and

 

(iv) cooperate with the Company and the Operating Partnership to provide an orderly management transition.

 

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18. INDEMNIFICATION BY THE COMPANY AND THE OPERATING PARTNERSHIP. The Company and the Operating Partnership shall indemnify and hold harmless the Advisor and its Affiliates, including their respective officers, directors, partners and employees, from all liability, claims, damages or losses arising in the performance of their duties hereunder, and related expenses, including reasonable attorneys’ fees, subject to any limitations imposed by the laws of the State of Maryland or the Articles of Incorporation of the Company. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Company and the Operating Partnership shall not provide for indemnification of the Advisor and its Affiliates, including their respective officers, directors, partners and employees, for any loss or liability suffered by the Advisor and its Affiliates, including their respective officers, directors, partners and employees, nor shall they provide that the Advisor and its Affiliates, including their respective officers, directors, partners and employees, be held harmless for any loss or liability suffered by the Company and the Operating Partnership, unless all of the following conditions are met:

 

(a) The Advisor has determined, in good faith, that the course of conduct which caused the loss or liability was in the best interest of the Company and the Operating Partnership;

 

(b) The Advisor was acting on behalf of or performing services for the Company and the Operating Partnership;

 

(c) Such liability or loss was not the result of negligence or misconduct by the Advisor; and

 

(d) Such indemnification or agreement to hold harmless is recoverable only out of the Company’s net assets and not from Stockholders.

 

Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Advisor and its Affiliates, including their respective officers, directors, partners and employees, shall not be indemnified by the Company and the Operating Partnership for any losses, liabilities or expenses arising from or out of an alleged violation of federal or state securities laws by the Advisor and its Affiliates, including their respective officers, directors, partners and employees, unless one or more of the following conditions are met:

 

(a) There has been a successful adjudication on the merits of each count involving alleged securities law violations as to the Advisor;

 

(b) Such claims have been dismissed with prejudice on the merits by a court of competent jurisdiction as to the Advisor; or

 

(c) A court of competent jurisdiction approves a settlement of the claims against the Advisor and finds that indemnification of the settlement and the related costs should be made, and the court considering the request for indemnification has been advised of the position of the Securities and Exchange Commission and of the published position of any state securities regulatory authority in which securities of the Company and the Operating Partnership were offered or sold as to indemnification for violation of securities laws.

 

27
 

 

In addition, the advancement of the Company’s or the Operating Partnership’s funds to the Advisor and its Affiliates, including their respective officers, directors, partners and employees, for legal expenses and other costs incurred as a result of any legal action for which indemnification is being sought is permissible only if all of the following conditions are satisfied:

 

(a) The legal action relates to acts or omissions with respect to the performance of duties or services on behalf of the Company or the Operating Partnership;

 

(b) The legal action is initiated by a third party who is not a shareholder or the legal action is initiated by a shareholder acting in his or her capacity as such and a court of competent jurisdiction specifically approves such advancement; and

 

(c) The Advisor undertakes to repay the advanced funds to the Company or the Operating Partnership, together with the applicable legal rate of interest thereon, in cases in which the Advisor is found not to be entitled to indemnification.

 

19. INDEMNIFICATION BY ADVISOR. The Advisor shall indemnify and hold harmless the Company and the Operating Partnership from contract or other liability, claims, damages, taxes or losses and related expenses including attorneys’ fees, to the extent that such liability, claims, damages, taxes or losses and related expenses are incurred by reason of the Advisor’s bad faith, fraud, willful misfeasance, gross misconduct, gross negligence or reckless disregard of its duties, but the Advisor shall not be held responsible for any action of the Board of Directors in following or declining to follow any advice or recommendation given by the Advisor.

 

20. NOTICES. Any notice, report or other communication required or permitted to be given hereunder shall be in writing unless some other method of giving such notice, report or other communication is required by the Articles of Incorporation, the Bylaws, or accepted by the party to whom it is given, and shall be given by being delivered by hand or by overnight mail or other overnight delivery service to the addresses set forth herein:

 

To the Directors and to the Company:

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.
518 17th Street
17th Floor
Denver, CO 80202

 

To the Operating Partnership:

 

Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP
518 17th Street
17th Floor
Denver, CO 80202

 

To the Advisor:

 

Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC
518 17th Street
17th Floor
Denver, CO 80202

 

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Any party may at any time give notice in writing to the other parties of a change in its address for the purposes of this Section 20.

 

21. MODIFICATION. This Agreement shall not be changed, modified, terminated, or discharged, in whole or in part, except by an instrument in writing signed by the parties hereto, or their respective successors or assignees.

 

22. SEVERABILITY. The provisions of this Agreement are independent of and severable from each other, and no provision shall be affected or rendered invalid or unenforceable by virtue of the fact that for any reason any other or others of them may be invalid or unenforceable in whole or in part.

 

23. CONSTRUCTION. The provisions of this Agreement shall be construed and interpreted in accordance with the laws of the State of Colorado.

 

24. ENTIRE AGREEMENT. This Agreement contains the entire agreement and understanding among the parties hereto with respect to the subject matter hereof, and supersedes all prior and contemporaneous agreements, understandings, inducements and conditions, express or implied, oral or written, of any nature whatsoever with respect to the subject matter hereof. The express terms hereof control and supersede any course of performance and/or usage of the trade inconsistent with any of the terms hereof. This Agreement may not be modified or amended other than by an agreement in writing.

 

25. INDULGENCES, NOT WAIVERS. Neither the failure nor any delay on the part of a party to exercise any right, remedy, power or privilege under this Agreement shall operate as a waiver thereof, nor shall any single or partial exercise of any right, remedy, power or privilege preclude any other or further exercise of the same or of any other right, remedy, power or privilege, nor shall any waiver of any right, remedy, power or privilege with respect to any occurrence be construed as a waiver of such right, remedy, power or privilege with respect to any other occurrence. No waiver shall be effective unless it is in writing and is signed by the party asserted to have granted such waiver.

 

26. GENDER. Words used herein regardless of the number and gender specifically used, shall be deemed and construed to include any other number, singular or plural, and any other gender, masculine, feminine or neuter, as the context requires.

 

27. TITLES NOT TO AFFECT INTERPRETATION. The titles of sections and subsections contained in this Agreement are for convenience only, and they neither form a part of this Agreement nor are they to be used in the construction or interpretation hereof.

 

28. EXECUTION IN COUNTERPARTS. This Agreement may be executed in any number of counterparts, each of which shall be deemed to be an original as against any party whose signature appears thereon, and all of which shall together constitute one and the same instrument. This Agreement shall become binding when one or more counterparts hereof, individually or taken together, shall bear the signatures of all of the parties reflected hereon as the signatories.

 

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29. INITIAL INVESTMENT. The Advisor has made a capital contribution of $200,000 to the Operating Partnership in exchange for OP Units, which were subsequently exchanged for 200,000 Class E Shares. The Advisor may not sell any of such Shares while the Advisor acts in such advisory capacity to the Company, provided, that such Shares may be transferred to Affiliates of the Advisor. The restrictions included above shall not apply to any other Securities acquired by the Advisor or its Affiliates. The Advisor shall not vote any Shares it now owns, or hereafter acquires, in any vote for the election of Directors or any vote regarding the approval or termination of any contract with the Advisor or any of its Affiliates.

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have executed this Ninth Amended and Restated Advisory Agreement as of the date and year first above written. 

     
  DIVIDEND CAPITAL DIVERSIFIED PROPERTY FUND INC., a Maryland corporation
     
  By: /s/ M. Kirk Scott
    Name: M. Kirk Scott
    Title:   Chief Financial Officer
     
  DIVIDEND CAPITAL TOTAL REALTY OPERATING PARTNERSHIP LP, a Delaware limited partnership
     
  By: Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., its General Partner
     
  By: /s/ M. Kirk Scott
    Name: M. Kirk Scott
    Title:   Chief Financial Officer
     
  DIVIDEND CAPITAL TOTAL ADVISORS LLC, a Delaware limited partnership
   
  By: Dividend Capital Total Advisors Group LLC, its Sole Member
     
  By: /s/ Evan H. Zucker
    Name: Evan H. Zucker
    Title:   Manager

 

 

 

 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. POS AM

 

Exhibit 10.2

 

FIFTH AMENDED AND RESTATED LIMITED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT

OF

DIVIDEND CAPITAL TOTAL REALTY OPERATING PARTNERSHIP LP

A DELAWARE LIMITED PARTNERSHIP

March 2, 2016

 

 
 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

         
Article       PAGE
         
1 DEFINED TERMS   1
  1.1 Definitions   1
  1.2 Interpretation   10
       
2 PARTNERSHIP FORMATION AND IDENTIFICATION   10
  2.1 Formation   10
  2.2 Name, Office and Registered Agent   10
  2.3 Partners   10
  2.4 Term and Dissolution   11
  2.5 Filing of Certificate and Perfection of Limited Partnership   11
  2.6 Certificates Describing Partnership Units   12
         
3 BUSINESS OF THE PARTNERSHIP   12
       
4 CAPITAL CONTRIBUTIONS AND ACCOUNTS   12
  4.1 Capital Contributions   12
  4.2 Classes of Partnership Units   13
  4.3 Additional Capital Contributions and Issuances of Additional Partnership Interests   13
  4.4 Additional Funding   15
  4.5 Capital Accounts   15
  4.6 Percentage Interests   16
  4.7 No Interest On Contributions   16
  4.8 Return Of Capital Contributions   16
  4.9 No Third Party Beneficiary   16
         
5 PROFITS AND LOSSES; DISTRIBUTIONS   17
  5.1 Allocation of Profit and Loss   17
  5.2 Distribution of Cash   19
  5.3 REIT Distribution Requirements   21
  5.4 No Right to Distributions in Kind   21
  5.5 Limitations on Return of Capital Contributions   21
  5.6 Distributions Upon Liquidation   21
  5.7 Substantial Economic Effect   22
       
6 RIGHTS, OBLIGATIONS AND POWERS OF THE GENERAL PARTNER   22
  6.1 Management of the Partnership   22
  6.2 Delegation of Authority   25
  6.3 Indemnification and Exculpation of Indemnitees   25
  6.4 Liability of the General Partner   26
  6.5 Reimbursement of General Partner   27
  6.6 Outside Activities   28
  6.7 Employment or Retention of Affiliates   28
  6.8 General Partner Participation   28
  6.9 Title to Partnership Assets   29
  6.10 Redemptions and Exchanges of REIT Shares   29

 

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

(continued) 

         
Article       PAGE
         
  6.11 No Duplication of Fees or Expenses   29
         
7 CHANGES IN GENERAL PARTNER   30
  7.1 Transfer of the General Partner’s Partnership Interest   30
  7.2 Admission of a Substitute or Additional General Partner   32
  7.3 Effect of Bankruptcy, Withdrawal, Death or Dissolution of the sole remaining General Partner   32
  7.4 Removal of a General Partner   33
       
8 RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF THE LIMITED PARTNERS   34
  8.1 Management of the Partnership   34
  8.2 Power of Attorney   34
  8.3 Limitation on Liability of Limited Partners   34
  8.4 Ownership by Limited Partner of Corporate General Partner or Affiliate   34
  8.5 Redemption Right   35
  8.6 Registration   38
  8.7 Distribution Reinvestment Plan   38
       
9 TRANSFERS OF LIMITED PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS   39
  9.1 Purchase for Investment   39
  9.2 Restrictions on Transfer of Limited Partnership Interests   39
  9.3 Admission of Substitute Limited Partner   40
  9.4 Rights of Assignees of Partnership Interests   41
  9.5 Effect of Bankruptcy, Death, Incompetence or Termination of a Limited Partner   42
  9.6 Joint Ownership of Interests   42
       
10 BOOKS AND RECORDS; ACCOUNTING; TAX MATTERS   42
  10.1 Books and Records   42
  10.2 Custody of Partnership Funds; Bank Accounts   43
  10.3 Fiscal and Taxable Year   43
  10.4 Annual Tax Information and Report   43
  10.5 Tax Matters Partner; Tax Elections; Special Basis Adjustments   43
  10.6 Reports to Limited Partners   44
       
11 AMENDMENT OF AGREEMENT; MERGER   44
       
12 GENERAL PROVISIONS   45
  12.1 Notices   45
  12.2 Survival of Rights   45
  12.3 Additional Documents   45
  12.4 Severability   45
  12.5 Entire Agreement   45
  12.6 Pronouns and Plurals   45
  12.7 Headings   45
  12.8 Counterparts   46

  

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

(continued)  

         
Article       PAGE
         
  12.9 Governing Law   46
         
EXHIBITS      
         
EXHIBIT A - Partners, Capital Contributions, Units and Percentage Interests    
         
EXHIBIT B - Notice of Exercise of Redemption Right    

 

iii
 

   

FIFTH Amended and Restated LIMITED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
OF
Dividend Capital Total rEALTY Operating PARTNERSHIP LP

 

This Fifth Amended and Restated Limited Partnership Agreement (this “Agreement”) is entered into as of March 2, 2016, between Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation (f/k/a Dividend Capital Total Realty Trust Inc.) (the “General Partner”) and the Limited Partners set forth on Exhibit A attached hereto.

 

RECITALS:

 

A.          Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP (the “Partnership”), was formed on April 12, 2005 as a limited partnership under the laws of the State of Delaware, pursuant to a Certificate of Limited Partnership filed with the Office of the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware on April 12, 2005.

 

B.          The Partnership is currently governed by the Fourth Amended and Restated Limited Partnership Agreement of the Partnership dated July 12, 2012, as amended by Amendment No. 1 dated November 9, 2012 (the “Prior Agreement”).

 

C.          The parties desire to amend and restate the Prior Agreement to, among other things, separate Class E Units into separate series, all as fully set forth below.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the foregoing, of mutual covenants between the parties hereto, and of other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, the parties hereto agree that the Prior Agreement shall be and hereby is amended and restated in its entirety as follows:

 

Article 1

DEFINED TERMS

 

1.1           Definitions . The following defined terms used in this Agreement shall have the meanings specified below:

 

“ACT” means the Delaware Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act, as it may be amended from time to time.

 

“ADDITIONAL FUNDS” has the meaning set forth in Section 4.4.

 

“ADDITIONAL SECURITIES” means any additional REIT Shares (other than REIT Shares issued in connection with a redemption pursuant to Section 8.5 or REIT Shares issued pursuant to a dividend reinvestment plan of the General Partner) or rights, options, warrants or convertible or exchangeable securities containing the right to subscribe for or purchase REIT Shares, as set forth in Section 4.3(a)(ii).

 

 
 

 

“ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSES” means (i) all administrative and operating costs and expenses incurred by the Partnership, (ii) those administrative costs and expenses of the General Partner, including any salaries or other payments to directors, officers or employees of the General Partner, and any accounting and legal expenses of the General Partner, which expenses, the Partners have agreed, are expenses of the Partnership and not the General Partner, and (iii) to the extent not included in clause (ii) above, REIT Expenses; provided , however , that Administrative Expenses shall not include any administrative costs and expenses incurred by the General Partner that are attributable to Properties or partnership interests in a Subsidiary Partnership that are owned by the General Partner directly.

 

“ADVISOR” or “ADVISORS” means the Person or Persons, if any, appointed, employed or contracted with by the General Partner and responsible for directing or performing the day-to-day business affairs of the General Partner, including any Person to whom the Advisor subcontracts substantially all of such functions.

 

“ADVISORY AGREEMENT” means the agreement between the General Partner and the Advisor pursuant to which the Advisor will direct or perform the day-to-day business affairs of the General Partner.

 

“AFFILIATE” means, with respect to any Person, (i) any Person directly or indirectly, owning, controlling or holding with the power to vote 10% of more of the outstanding voting securities of such other Person; (ii) any Person 10% or more of whose outstanding voting securities are directly or indirectly owned, controlled or held, with the power to vote, by such other Person; (iii) any Person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by or under common control with such other Person; (iv) any executive officer, director, trustee or general partner of such other Person; and (v) any legal entity for which such Person acts an executive officer, director, trustee or general partner.

 

“AFFIRMATION DATE” has the meaning provided in Section 8.5(a).

 

“AGGREGATE SHARE OWNERSHIP LIMIT” shall have the meaning set forth in the Articles of Incorporation.

 

“AGREED VALUE” means the fair market value of a Partner’s non-cash Capital Contribution as of the date of contribution as agreed to by such Partner and the General Partner. The names and addresses of the Partners, number and Class of Partnership Units issued to each Partner, and the Agreed Value of non-cash Capital Contributions as of the date of contribution are set forth on Exhibit A .

 

“AGREEMENT” means this Fourth Amended and Restated Limited Partnership Agreement, as amended, modified supplemented or restated from time to time, as the context requires.

 

“APPLICABLE PERCENTAGE” has the meaning provided in Section 8.5(b).

 

“ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION” means the Articles of Restatement of the General Partner filed with the Maryland State Department of Assessments and Taxation on March 20, 2012, as further amended or supplemented from time to time.

 

“CAPITAL ACCOUNT” has the meaning provided in Section 4.5.

 

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“CAPITAL CONTRIBUTION” means the total amount of cash, cash equivalents, and the Agreed Value of any Property or other asset (other than cash or cash equivalents) contributed or agreed to be contributed, as the context requires, to the Partnership by each Partner pursuant to the terms of this Agreement. Any reference to the Capital Contribution of a Partner shall include the Capital Contribution made by a predecessor holder of the Partnership Interest of such Partner.

 

“CARRYING VALUE” means, with respect to any asset of the Partnership, the asset’s adjusted net basis for federal income tax purposes or, in the case of any asset contributed to the Partnership, the fair market value of such asset at the time of contribution, reduced by any amounts attributable to the inclusion of liabilities in basis pursuant to Section 752 of the Code, except that the Carrying Values of all assets may, at the discretion of the General Partner, be adjusted to equal their respective fair market values (as determined by the General Partner), in accordance with the rules set forth in Regulations Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(f), as provided for in Section 4.5. In the case of any asset of the Partnership that has a Carrying Value that differs from its adjusted tax basis, the Carrying Value shall be adjusted by the amount of depreciation, depletion and amortization calculated for purposes of the definition of Profit and Loss rather than the amount of depreciation, depletion and amortization determined for federal income tax purposes.

 

“CASH AMOUNT” means an amount of cash per Partnership Unit equal to the applicable Redemption Price determined by the General Partner.

 

“CERTIFICATE” means any instrument or document that is required under the laws of the State of Delaware, or any other jurisdiction in which the Partnership conducts business, to be signed and sworn to by the Partners of the Partnership (either by themselves or pursuant to the power-of-attorney granted to the General Partner in Section 8.2) and filed for recording in the appropriate public offices within the State of Delaware or such other jurisdiction to perfect or maintain the Partnership as a limited partnership, to effect the admission, withdrawal, or substitution of any Partner of the Partnership, or to protect the limited liability of the Limited Partners as limited partners under the laws of the State of Delaware or such other jurisdiction.

 

“CLASS” means a class of REIT Shares (including unclassified shares of common stock of the General Partner, which are referred to herein as Class E REIT Shares) or Partnership Units, as the context may require.

 

“CLASS A REIT SHARES” means the REIT Shares referred to as “Class A” shares in the Prospectus.

 

“CLASS A UNIT” means a Partnership Unit entitling the holder thereof to the rights of a holder of a Class A Unit as provided in this Agreement.

 

“CLASS E REIT SHARES” means the REIT Shares referred to as “Class E” shares in the Prospectus.

 

“CLASS E UNIT” means a Partnership Unit entitling the holder thereof to the rights of a holder of a Class E Unit as provided in this Agreement, and shall be either Series 1 Class E Units or Series 2 Class E Units.

 

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“CLASS I REIT SHARES” means the REIT Shares referred to as “Class I” shares in the Prospectus.

 

“CLASS I UNIT” means a Partnership Unit entitling the holder thereof to the rights of a holder of a Class I Unit as provided in this Agreement.

 

“CLASS W REIT SHARES” means the REIT Shares referred to as “Class W” shares in the Prospectus.

 

“CLASS W UNIT” means a Partnership Unit entitling the holder thereof to the rights of a holder of a Class W Unit as provided in this Agreement.

 

“CODE” means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, and as hereafter amended from time to time. Reference to any particular provision of the Code shall mean that provision in the Code at the date hereof and any successor provision of the Code.

 

“COMMISSION” means the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission.

 

“COMMON SHARE OWNERSHIP LIMIT” shall have the meaning set forth in the Articles of Incorporation.

 

“CONVERSION FACTOR” means 1.0, provided that in the event that the General Partner (i) declares or pays a dividend on its outstanding REIT Shares in REIT Shares or makes a distribution to all holders of its outstanding REIT Shares in REIT Shares, (ii) subdivides its outstanding REIT Shares, or (iii) combines its outstanding REIT Shares into a smaller number of REIT Shares, the Conversion Factor shall be adjusted by multiplying the Conversion Factor by a fraction, the numerator of which shall be the number of REIT Shares issued and outstanding on the record date for such dividend, distribution, subdivision or combination (assuming for such purposes that such dividend, distribution, subdivision or combination has occurred as of such time), and the denominator of which shall be the actual number of REIT Shares (determined without the above assumption) issued and outstanding on such date and, provided further, that in the event that an entity other than an Affiliate of the General Partner shall become General Partner pursuant to any merger, consolidation or combination of the General Partner with or into another entity (the “Successor Entity”), the Conversion Factor shall be adjusted by multiplying the Conversion Factor by the number of shares of the Successor Entity into which one REIT Share is converted pursuant to such merger, consolidation or combination, determined as of the date of such merger, consolidation or combination. Any adjustment to the Conversion Factor shall become effective immediately after the effective date of such event retroactive to the record date, if any, for such event; provided, however, that if the General Partner receives a Notice of Redemption after the record date, but prior to the effective date of such dividend, distribution, subdivision or combination, the Conversion Factor shall be determined as if the General Partner had received the Notice of Redemption immediately prior to the record date for such dividend, distribution, subdivision or combination. A separate Conversion Factor shall be determined for each Class of Partnership Units by taking into account only the outstanding REIT Shares having the same Class designation as the applicable Class of Partnership Units.

 

“DIRECTOR” shall have the meaning set forth in the Articles of Incorporation.

 

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“EVENT OF BANKRUPTCY” as to any Person means the filing of a petition for relief as to such Person as debtor or bankrupt under the Bankruptcy Code of 1978 or similar provision of law of any jurisdiction (except if such petition is contested by such Person and has been dismissed within 90 days); insolvency or bankruptcy of such Person as finally determined by a court proceeding; filing by such Person of a petition or application to accomplish the same or for the appointment of a receiver or a trustee for such Person or a substantial part of his assets; commencement of any proceedings relating to such Person as a debtor under any other reorganization, arrangement, insolvency, adjustment of debt or liquidation law of any jurisdiction, whether now in existence or hereinafter in effect, either by such Person or by another, provided that if such proceeding is commenced by another, such Person indicates his approval of such proceeding, consents thereto or acquiesces therein, or such proceeding is contested by such Person and has not been finally dismissed within 90 days.

 

“EXCEPTED HOLDER LIMIT” shall have the meaning set forth in the Articles of Incorporation.

 

“GENERAL PARTNER” means Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation, and any Person who becomes a substitute or additional General Partner as provided herein, and any of their successors as General Partner, in such Person’s capacity as a General Partner of the Partnership.

 

“GENERAL PARTNERSHIP INTEREST” means a Partnership Interest held by the General Partner.

 

“INDEMNITEE” means (i) any Person made a party to a proceeding by reason of its status as the General Partner or a director, officer or employee of the General Partner or the Partnership, and (ii) such other Persons (including Affiliates of the General Partner or the Partnership) as the General Partner may designate from time to time, in its sole and absolute discretion.

 

“INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS” shall have the meaning set forth in the Articles of Incorporation.

 

“JOINT VENTURE” means any joint venture or general partnership arrangement in which the Partnership is a co-venturer or general partner which are established to acquire Real Property.

 

“LIMITED PARTNER” means any Person named as a Limited Partner on Exhibit A , and any Person who becomes a Substitute Limited Partner, in such Person’s capacity as a Limited Partner in the Partnership.

 

“LIMITED PARTNERSHIP INTEREST” means the ownership interest of a Limited Partner in the Partnership at any particular time, including the right of such Limited Partner to any and all benefits to which such Limited Partner may be entitled as provided in this Agreement and in the Act, together with the obligations of such Limited Partner to comply with all the provisions of this Agreement and of such Act.

 

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“LISTING” means the listing of the shares of the General Partner’s stock, previously issued by the General Partner pursuant to an effective registration statement and such shares currently registered with the Commission pursuant to an effective registration statement, on a national securities exchange or the receipt by holders of shares of the General Partner’s stock of securities that are listed on a national securities exchange in exchange for shares of the General Partner’s stock. Upon such Listing, the shares shall be deemed “LISTED”.

 

“LOSS” has the meaning provided in Section 5.1(g).

 

“MINIMUM LIMITED PARTNERSHIP INTEREST” means the lesser of (i) 1% or (ii) if the total Capital Contributions to the Partnership exceeds $50 million, 1% divided by the ratio of the total Capital Contributions to the Partnership to $50 million; provided, however, that the Minimum Limited Partnership Interest shall not be less than 0.2% at any time.

 

“NET ASSET VALUE PER UNIT” means, for each Class of Partnership Unit and on any business day, the net asset value per unit of such Class of Partnership Unit, determined at the end of such business day as described in the Prospectus.

 

“NET ASSET VALUE PER REIT SHARE” means, for each Class of REIT Shares and on any business day, the net asset value per share of such Class of REIT Shares, determined at the end of such business day as described in the Prospectus.

 

“MORTGAGES” means, in connection with any mortgage financing provided, invested in, participated in or purchased by the Partnership, all of the notes, deeds of trust, mortgages, security interests or other evidences of indebtedness or obligations, which are secured by or, collateralized by, or applicable to any Real Property owned by the borrowers under such notes, deeds of trust, mortgages, security interests or other evidences of indebtedness or obligations.

 

“NOTICE OF REDEMPTION” means the Notice of Exercise of Redemption Right substantially in the form attached as Exhibit B .

 

“OFFER” has the meaning set forth in Section 7.1(c).

 

“OFFERING” means the an offer and sale of REIT Shares to the public.

 

“PARTNER” means any General Partner or Limited Partner.

 

“PARTNER NONRECOURSE DEBT MINIMUM GAIN” has the meaning set forth in Regulations Section 1.704-2(i). A Partner’s share of Partner Nonrecourse Debt Minimum Gain shall be determined in accordance with Regulations Section 1.704-2(i)(5).

 

“PARTNERSHIP” means Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership.

 

“PARTNERSHIP INTEREST” means an ownership interest in the Partnership held by either a Limited Partner or the General Partner and includes any and all benefits to which the holder of such a Partnership Interest may be entitled as provided in this Agreement, together with all obligations of such Person to comply with the terms and provisions of this Agreement.

 

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“PARTNERSHIP MINIMUM GAIN” has the meaning set forth in Regulations Section 1.704-2(d). In accordance with Regulations Section 1.704-2(d), the amount of Partnership Minimum Gain is determined by first computing, for each Partnership nonrecourse liability, any gain the Partnership would realize if it disposed of the property subject to that liability for no consideration other than full satisfaction of the liability, and then aggregating the separately computed gains. A Partner’s share of Partnership Minimum Gain shall be determined in accordance with Regulations Section 1.704-2(g)(1).

 

“PARTNERSHIP RECORD DATE” means the record date established by the General Partner for the distribution of cash pursuant to Section 5.2, which record date shall be the same as the record date established by the General Partner for a distribution to its shareholders of some or all of its portion of such distribution.

 

“PARTNERSHIP UNIT” means a fractional, undivided share of the Partnership Interests of all Partners issued hereunder, including Class A Units, Class E Units, Class I Units and Class W Units. The allocation of Partnership Units of each Class among the Partners shall be as set forth on Exhibit A , as such Exhibit may be amended from time to time.

 

“PERCENTAGE INTEREST” means the percentage ownership interest in the Partnership of each Partner, as determined by dividing the Partnership Units owned by a Partner by the total number of Partnership Units then outstanding. The Percentage Interest of each Partner shall be as set forth on Exhibit A , as such Exhibit may be amended from time to time.

 

“PERSON” means any individual, partnership, limited liability company, corporation, joint venture, trust or other entity.

 

“PROFIT” has the meaning provided in Section 5.1(g) hereof.

 

“PROPERTY” means any Real Property, Real Estate Securities or other investment in which the Partnership holds an ownership interest.

 

“PROSPECTUS” means the most recent prospectus relating to an Offering of Class A REIT Shares, Class I REIT Shares and Class W REIT Shares, as such prospectus may be amended or supplemented from time to time.

 

“REAL ESTATE SECURITIES” means the real estate related securities, or such investments the General Partner and the Advisor mutually designate as Real Estate Securities to the extent such investments could be classified as either Real Estate Securities or Real Property, typically consisting of (i) securities of other real estate investment trusts or real estate companies, (ii) shares of open-end and/or closed-end real estate funds, and (iii) mortgages or interests in pools of mortgages secured by real estate, which are acquired by the Partnership, either directly or through joint venture arrangements or other partnerships.

 

“REAL PROPERTY” means (i) the real properties, including the buildings located thereon, or (ii) the real properties only, or (iii) the buildings only, which are acquired by the Partnership, either directly or through joint venture arrangements or other partnerships, or (iv) such investments the General Partner and the Advisor mutually designate as Real Property to the extent such investments could be classified as either Real Property or Real Estate Securities.

 

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“REDEMPTION PRICE” means the Value of the REIT Shares Amount as of the end of the Specified Redemption Date.

 

“REDEMPTION RIGHT” has the meaning provided in Section 8.5(a).

 

“REGULATIONS” means the Federal income tax regulations promulgated under the Code, as amended and as hereafter amended from time to time. Reference to any particular provision of the Regulations shall mean that provision of the Regulations on the date hereof and any successor provision of the Regulations.

 

“REGULATORY ALLOCATIONS” has the meaning set forth in Section 5.1(h).

 

“REIT” means a real estate investment trust under Sections 856 through 860 of the Code.

 

“REIT EXPENSES” means (i) costs and expenses relating to the formation and continuity of existence and operation of the General Partner and any Subsidiaries thereof (which Subsidiaries shall, for purposes hereof, be included within the definition of General Partner), including taxes, fees and assessments associated therewith, any and all costs, expenses or fees payable to any director, officer, or employee of the General Partner, (ii) costs and expenses relating to any public offering and registration of securities by the General Partner and all statements, reports, fees and expenses incidental thereto, including, without limitation, underwriting discounts and selling commissions applicable to any such offering of securities, and any costs and expenses associated with any claims made by any holders of such securities or any underwriters or placement agents thereof, (iii) costs and expenses associated with any repurchase of any securities by the General Partner, (iv) costs and expenses associated with the preparation and filing of any periodic or other reports and communications by the General Partner under federal, state or local laws or regulations, including filings with the Commission, (v) costs and expenses associated with compliance by the General Partner with laws, rules and regulations promulgated by any regulatory body, including the Commission and any securities exchange, (vi) costs and expenses associated with any 401(k) plan, incentive plan, bonus plan or other plan providing for compensation for the employees of the General Partner, (vii) costs and expenses incurred by the General Partner relating to any issuing or redemption of Partnership Interests, and (viii) all other operating or administrative costs of the General Partner incurred in the ordinary course of its business on behalf of or in connection with the Partnership.

 

“REIT SHARE” means a common share of beneficial interest in the General Partner (or successor entity, as the case may be), including Class A REIT Shares, Class E REIT Shares, Class I REIT Shares and Class W REIT Shares.

 

“REIT SHARES AMOUNT ” means a number of Class E REIT Shares equal to the product of the number of Class E Units offered for exchange by a Tendering Party, multiplied by the Conversion Factor for Class E Units as adjusted to and including the Specified Redemption Date; provided that in the event the General Partner issues to all holders of Class E REIT Shares rights, options, warrants or convertible or exchangeable securities entitling the shareholders to subscribe for or purchase REIT Shares, or any other securities or property (collectively, the “rights”), and the rights have not expired at the Specified Redemption Date, then the REIT Shares Amount shall also include the rights issuable to a holder of the REIT Shares Amount of Class E REIT Shares on the record date fixed for purposes of determining the holders of Class E REIT Shares entitled to rights.

 

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“RELATED PARTY” means, with respect to any Person, any other Person whose ownership of shares of the General Partner’s capital stock would be attributed to the first such Person under Code Section 544 (as modified by Code Section 856(h)(1)(B)).

 

“SECURITIES ACT” means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended and the rules and regulations promulgated thereunder.

 

“SERIES 1 CLASS E UNITS” means Class E Units with the Redemption Rights set forth for Series 1 Class E Units in Section 8.5 and related registration rights set forth in Section 8.6.

 

“SERIES 2 CLASS E UNITS” means Class E Units with the Redemption Rights set forth for Series 2 Class E Units in Section 8.5 and related registration rights set forth in Section 8.6.

 

“SERVICE” means the United States Internal Revenue Service.

 

“SPECIFIED REDEMPTION DATE” means, if the Affirmation Date is at least three business days before the end of a month, the last business day of such month, and otherwise the last business day of the month following the month in which the Affirmation Date occurred.

 

“SUBSIDIARY” means, with respect to any Person, any corporation or other entity of which a majority of (i) the voting power of the voting equity securities or (ii) the outstanding equity interests is owned, directly or indirectly, by such Person.

 

“SUBSIDIARY PARTNERSHIP” means any partnership of which the partnership interests therein are owned by the General Partner or a direct or indirect subsidiary of the General Partner.

 

“SUBSTITUTE LIMITED PARTNER” means any Person admitted to the Partnership as a Limited Partner pursuant to Section 9.3.

 

“SUCCESSOR ENTITY” has the meaning provided in the definition of “Conversion Factor” contained herein.

 

“SURVIVOR” has the meaning set forth in Section 7.1(d).

 

“TAX MATTERS PARTNER” has the meaning described in Section 10.5(a).

 

“TERMINATION EVENT” means the termination or nonrenewal of the Advisory Agreement (i) in connection with a merger, sale of assets or transaction involving the General Partner pursuant to which a majority of the directors of the General Partner then in office are replaced or removed, (ii) by the Advisor for “good reason” (as defined in the Advisory Agreement) or (iii) by the General Partner other than for “cause” (as defined in the Advisory Agreement).

 

“TENDERED UNITS” has the meaning provided in Section 8.5(a).

 

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“TENDERING PARTY” has the meaning provided in Section 8.5(a).

 

“TRANSACTION” has the meaning set forth in Section 7.1(c).

 

“TRANSFER” has the meaning set forth in Section 9.2(a).

 

“VALUE” means, for each Class of REIT Shares, the fair market value per share of that Class of REIT Shares which will equal: (i) if REIT Shares of that Class are Listed, the average closing price per share for the previous thirty business days, or (ii) if REIT Shares of that Class are not Listed, the Net Asset Value Per REIT Share for REIT Shares of that Class.

 

1.2           Interpretation . The definitions in Section 1.1 shall apply equally to both the singular and plural forms of the terms defined. Wherever the context may require, any pronoun used in this Agreement shall include the corresponding masculine, feminine and neuter forms. For all purposes of this Agreement, the term “control” and variations thereof shall mean possession of the authority to direct or cause the direction of the management and policies of the specified entity, through the direct or indirect ownership of equity interests therein, by contract or otherwise. As used in this Agreement, the words “include,” “includes” and “including” shall be deemed to be followed by the phrase “without limitation.” As used in this Agreement, the terms “herein,” “hereof” and “hereunder” shall refer to this Agreement in its entirety. Any references in this Agreement to “Sections” or “Articles” shall, unless otherwise specified, refer to Sections or Articles, respectively, in this Agreement. Any references in this Agreement to an “Exhibit” shall, unless otherwise specified, refer to an Exhibit attached to this Agreement. Each such Exhibit shall be deemed incorporated in this Agreement in full.

 

Article 2

PARTNERSHIP FORMATION AND IDENTIFICATION

 

2.1           Formation . The Partnership was formed as a limited partnership pursuant to the Act and all other pertinent laws of the State of Delaware, for the purposes and upon the terms and conditions set forth in this Agreement.

 

2.2           Name, Office and Registered Agent . The name of the Partnership is Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP. The specified office and place of business of the Partnership shall be 518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202. The General Partner may at any time change the location of such office, provided the General Partner gives notice to the Partners of any such change. The name and address of the Partnership’s registered agent is Corporation Service Company, 2711 Centerville Road, Suite 400, Wilmington, Delaware 19808. The sole duty of the registered agent as such is to forward to the Partnership any notice that is served on him as registered agent.

 

2.3           Partners .

 

(a)          The General Partner of the Partnership is Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation. Its principal place of business is the same as that of the Partnership.

 

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(b)          The Limited Partners are those Persons identified as Limited Partners on Exhibit A hereto, as amended from time to time.

 

2.4           Term and Dissolution .

 

(a)          The term of the Partnership shall be perpetual, except that the Partnership shall be dissolved upon the first to occur of any of the following events:

 

(i)          The occurrence of an Event of Bankruptcy as to a General Partner or the dissolution, death, removal or withdrawal of a General Partner unless the business of the Partnership is continued pursuant to Section 7.3(b); provided that if a General Partner is on the date of such occurrence a partnership, the dissolution of such General Partner as a result of the dissolution, death, withdrawal, removal or Event of Bankruptcy of a partner in such partnership shall not be an event of dissolution of the Partnership if the business of such General Partner is continued by the remaining partner or partners, either alone or with additional partners, and such General Partner and such partners comply with any other applicable requirements of this Agreement;

 

(ii)        The passage of ninety (90) days after the sale or other disposition of all or substantially all of the assets of the Partnership (provided that if the Partnership receives an installment obligation as consideration for such sale or other disposition, the Partnership shall continue, unless sooner dissolved under the provisions of this Agreement, until such time as such note or notes are paid in full);

 

(iii)       The exchange of all Limited Partnership Interests (other than any of such interests held by the General Partner or Affiliates of the General Partner) for REIT Shares or the securities of any other entity; or

 

(iv)        The election by the General Partner that the Partnership should be dissolved.

 

(b)          Upon dissolution of the Partnership (unless the business of the Partnership is continued pursuant to Section 7.3(b)), the General Partner (or its trustee, receiver, successor or legal representative) shall amend or cancel any Certificate(s) and liquidate the Partnership’s assets and apply and distribute the proceeds thereof in accordance with Section 5.6. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the liquidating General Partner may either (i) defer liquidation of, or withhold from distribution for a reasonable time, any assets of the Partnership (including those necessary to satisfy the Partnership’s debts and obligations), or (ii) distribute the assets to the Partners in kind.

 

2.5           Filing of Certificate and Perfection of Limited Partnership . The General Partner shall execute, acknowledge, record and file at the expense of the Partnership, any and all amendments to the Certificate(s) and all requisite fictitious name statements and notices in such places and jurisdictions as may be necessary to cause the Partnership to be treated as a limited partnership under, and otherwise to comply with, the laws of each state or other jurisdiction in which the Partnership conducts business.

 

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2.6           Certificates Describing Partnership Units . At the request of a Limited Partner, the General Partner, at its option, may issue (but in no way is obligated to issue) a certificate summarizing the terms of such Limited Partner’s interest in the Partnership, including the number and Class of Partnership Units owned and the Percentage Interest represented by such Partnership Units as of the date of such certificate. Any such certificate (i) shall be in form and substance as approved by the General Partner, (ii) shall not be negotiable and (iii) shall bear a legend to the following effect:

 

This certificate is not negotiable. The Partnership Units represented by this certificate are governed by and transferable only in accordance with the provisions of the Limited Partnership Agreement of Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, as amended from time to time.

 

Article 3

BUSINESS OF THE PARTNERSHIP

 

The purpose and nature of the business to be conducted by the Partnership is (i) to conduct any business that may be lawfully conducted by a limited partnership organized pursuant to the Act, provided, however, that such business shall be limited to and conducted in such a manner as to permit the General Partner at all times to qualify as a REIT, unless the General Partner otherwise ceases to qualify as a REIT, and in a manner such that the General Partner will not be subject to any taxes under Section 857 or 4981 of the Code, (ii) to enter into any partnership, joint venture or other similar arrangement to engage in any of the foregoing or the ownership of interests in any entity engaged in any of the foregoing and (iii) to do anything necessary or incidental to the foregoing. In connection with the foregoing, and without limiting the General Partner’s right in its sole and absolute discretion to qualify or cease qualifying as a REIT, the Partners acknowledge that the General Partner intends to qualify as a REIT for federal income tax purposes and upon such qualification the avoidance of income and excise taxes on the General Partner inures to the benefit of all the Partners and not solely to the General Partner. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the Limited Partners agree that the General Partner may terminate its status as a REIT under the Code at any time to the full extent permitted under the Articles of Incorporation. The General Partner on behalf of the Partnership shall also be empowered to do any and all acts and things necessary or prudent to ensure that the Partnership will not be classified as a “publicly traded partnership” for purposes of Section 7704 of the Code.

 

Article 4

CAPITAL CONTRIBUTIONS AND ACCOUNTS

 

4.1           Capital Contributions . The General Partner and the Limited Partners have made capital contributions to the Partnership in exchange for the Partnership Interests set forth opposite their names on Exhibit A , as such Exhibit may be amended from time to time. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the General Partner may keep Exhibit A current through separate revisions to the books and records of the Partnership that reflect periodic changes to the capital contributions made by the Partners and redemptions and other purchases of Partnership Units by the Partnership, and corresponding changes to the Partnership Interests of the Partners, without preparing a formal amendment to this Agreement, provided that such amendment shall be prepared upon the written request of any Limited Partner.

 

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4.2           Classes of Partnership Units . The General Partner is hereby authorized to cause the Partnership to issue Partnership Units designated as Class E Units (which may be designated by the General Partner upon issuance as Series 1 Class E Units or Series 2 Class E Units; provided, that all Class E Units issued to the General Partner shall be Series 1 Class E Units, and all other Class E Units issued prior to the effective date hereof shall be Series 1 Class E Units), Class A Units, Class I Units and Class W Units. Each such Class shall have the rights and obligations attributed to that Class under this Agreement.

 

4.3           Additional Capital Contributions and Issuances of Additional Partnership Interests . Except as provided in this Section 4.3 or in Section 4.4, the Partners shall have no right or obligation to make any additional Capital Contributions or loans to the Partnership. The General Partner may contribute additional capital to the Partnership, from time to time, and receive additional Partnership Interests in respect thereof, in the manner contemplated in this Section 4.3.

 

(a)           Issuances of Additional Partnership Interests .

 

(i)            General . The General Partner is hereby authorized to cause the Partnership to issue such additional Partnership Interests in the form of Partnership Units for any Partnership purpose at any time or from time to time, including but not limited to Partnership Units issued in connection with acquisitions of properties, to the Partners (including the General Partner) or to other Persons for such consideration and on such terms and conditions as shall be established by the General Partner in its sole and absolute discretion, all without the approval of any Limited Partners. Any additional Partnership Interests issued thereby may be issued in one or more classes (including the Classes specified in this Agreement or any other Classes), or one or more series of any of such classes, with such designations, preferences and relative, participating, optional or other special rights, powers and duties, including rights, powers and duties senior to Limited Partnership Interests, all as shall be determined by the General Partner in its sole and absolute discretion and without the approval of any Limited Partner, subject to Delaware law, including, without limitation, (i) the allocations of items of Partnership income, gain, loss, deduction and credit to each such class or series of Partnership Interests; (ii) the right of each such class or series of Partnership Interests to share in Partnership distributions; and (iii) the rights of each such class or series of Partnership Interests upon dissolution and liquidation of the Partnership; provided, however, that no additional Partnership Interests shall be issued to the General Partner unless:

 

(1)          (A) the additional Partnership Interests are issued in connection with an issuance of REIT Shares of or other interests in the General Partner, which shares or interests have designations, preferences and other rights, all such that the economic interests are substantially similar to the designations, preferences and other rights of the additional Partnership Interests issued to the General Partner by the Partnership in accordance with this Section 4.3 (without limiting the foregoing, for example, the Partnership shall issue Class W Units to the General Partner in connection with the issuance of Class W REIT Shares) and (B) the General Partner shall make a Capital Contribution to the Partnership in an amount equal to the proceeds raised in connection with the issuance of such shares of stock of or other interests in the General Partner;

 

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(2)          the additional Partnership Interests are issued in exchange for property owned by the General Partner with a fair market value, as determined by the General Partner, in good faith, equal to the value of the Partnership Interests; or

 

(3)          the additional Partnership Interests are issued to all Partners holding Partnership Units in proportion to their respective Percentage Interests.

 

Without limiting the foregoing, the General Partner is expressly authorized to cause the Partnership to issue Partnership Units for less than fair market value, so long as the General Partner concludes in good faith that such issuance is in the best interests of the General Partner and the Partnership.

 

(ii)         Upon Issuance of Additional Securities . The General Partner shall not issue any Additional Securities other than to all holders of REIT Shares, unless (A) the General Partner shall cause the Partnership to issue to the General Partner, as the General Partner may designate, Partnership Interests or rights, options, warrants or convertible or exchangeable securities of the Partnership having designations, preferences and other rights, all such that the economic interests are substantially similar to those of the Additional Securities, and (B) the General Partner contributes the proceeds from the issuance of such Additional Securities and from any exercise of rights contained in such Additional Securities, directly and through the General Partner, to the Partnership (without limiting the foregoing, for example, if the General Partner issues Class W REIT Shares, then the General Partner shall contribute the proceeds of the issuance of the Class W REIT Shares to the Partnership and shall cause the Partnership to issue Class W Units to the General Partner); provided, however, that the General Partner is allowed to issue Additional Securities in connection with an acquisition of a property to be held directly by the General Partner, but if and only if, such direct acquisition and issuance of Additional Securities have been approved and determined to be in the best interests of the General Partner and the Partnership. Without limiting the foregoing, the General Partner is expressly authorized to issue Additional Securities for less than fair market value, and to cause the Partnership to issue to the General Partner corresponding Partnership Interests, so long as (x) the General Partner concludes in good faith that such issuance is in the best interests of the General Partner and the Partnership, including without limitation, the issuance of REIT Shares and corresponding Partnership Units pursuant to an employee share purchase plan providing for employee purchases of REIT Shares at a discount from fair market value or employee stock options that have an exercise price that is less than the fair market value of the REIT Shares, either at the time of issuance or at the time of exercise, and (y) the General Partner contributes all proceeds from such issuance to the Partnership. For example, in the event the General Partner issues REIT Shares of any Class for a cash purchase price and contributes all of the proceeds of such issuance to the Partnership as required hereunder, the General Partner shall be issued a number of additional Partnership Units having the same Class designation as the issued REIT Shares equal to the product of (A) the number of such REIT Shares of that Class issued by the General Partner, the proceeds of which were so contributed, multiplied by (B) a fraction, the numerator of which is 100%, and the denominator of which is the Conversion Factor for that Class of Partnership Units in effect on the date of such contribution.

 

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(b)           Certain Deemed Contributions of Proceeds of Issuance of REIT Shares . In connection with any and all issuances of REIT Shares, the General Partner shall make Capital Contributions to the Partnership of the proceeds therefrom, provided that if the proceeds actually received and contributed by the General Partner are less than the gross proceeds of such issuance as a result of any underwriter’s discount or other expenses paid or incurred in connection with such issuance, then the General Partner shall be deemed to have made Capital Contributions to the Partnership in the aggregate amount of the gross proceeds of such issuance and the Partnership shall be deemed simultaneously to have paid such offering expenses in accordance with Section 6.5 and in connection with the required issuance of additional Partnership Units to the General Partner for such Capital Contributions pursuant to Section 4.3(a).

 

(c)           Minimum Limited Partnership Interest . In the event that either a redemption pursuant to Section 8.5 or additional Capital Contributions by the General Partner would result in the Limited Partners, in the aggregate, owning less than the Minimum Limited Partnership Interest, the General Partner and the Limited Partners shall form another partnership and contribute sufficient Limited Partnership Interests together with such other Limited Partners so that the limited partners of such partnership own at least the Minimum Limited Partnership Interest.

 

4.4           Additional Funding . If the General Partner determines that it is in the best interests of the Partnership to provide for additional Partnership funds (“Additional Funds”) for any Partnership purpose, the General Partner may (i) cause the Partnership to obtain such funds from outside borrowings, or (ii) elect to have the General Partner or any of its Affiliates provide such Additional Funds to the Partnership through loans or otherwise.

 

4.5           Capital Accounts . A separate capital account (a “Capital Account”) shall be established and maintained for each Partner in accordance with Regulations Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv). If (i) a new or existing Partner acquires an additional Partnership Interest in exchange for more than a de minimis Capital Contribution, (ii) the Partnership distributes to a Partner more than a de minimis amount of Partnership property or money as consideration for a Partnership Interest, (iii) the Partnership is liquidated within the meaning of Regulation Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(g), or (iv) the Partnership grants a Partnership Interest (other than a de minimis interest) as consideration for the provision of services to or for the benefit of the Partnership, the General Partner shall revalue the property of the Partnership to its fair market value (as determined by the General Partner, in its sole and absolute discretion, and taking into account Section 7701(g) of the Code) in accordance with Regulations Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(f). When the Partnership’s property is revalued by the General Partner, the Capital Accounts of the Partners shall be adjusted in accordance with Regulations Sections 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv)(f) and (g), which generally require such Capital Accounts to be adjusted to reflect the manner in which the unrealized gain or loss inherent in such property (that has not been reflected in the Capital Accounts previously) would be allocated among the Partners pursuant to Section 5.1 if there were a taxable disposition of such property for its fair market value (as determined by the General Partner, in its sole and absolute discretion, and taking into account Section 7701(g) of the Code) on the date of the revaluation.

 

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4.6           Percentage Interests . If the number of outstanding Partnership Units increases or decreases during a taxable year, each Partner’s Percentage Interest shall be adjusted by the General Partner effective as of the effective date of each such increase or decrease to a percentage equal to the number of Partnership Units held by such Partner divided by the aggregate number of Partnership Units outstanding after giving effect to such increase or decrease. If the Partners’ Percentage Interests are adjusted pursuant to this Section 4.6, the Profits and Losses for the taxable year in which the adjustment occurs shall be allocated between the part of the year ending on the day when the Partnership’s property is revalued by the General Partner and the part of the year beginning on the following day either (i) as if the taxable year had ended on the date of the adjustment or (ii) based on the number of days in each part. The General Partner, in its sole and absolute discretion, shall determine which method shall be used to allocate Profits and Losses for the taxable year in which the adjustment occurs. The allocation of Profits and Losses for the earlier part of the year shall be based on the Percentage Interests before adjustment, and the allocation of Profits and Losses for the later part shall be based on the adjusted Percentage Interests.

 

4.7           No Interest On Contributions . No Partner shall be entitled to interest on its Capital Contribution.

 

4.8           Return Of Capital Contributions . No Partner shall be entitled to withdraw any part of its Capital Contribution or its Capital Account or to receive any distribution from the Partnership, except as specifically provided in this Agreement. Except as otherwise provided herein, there shall be no obligation to return to any Partner or withdrawn Partner any part of such Partner’s Capital Contribution for so long as the Partnership continues in existence.

 

4.9           No Third Party Beneficiary . No creditor or other third party having dealings with the Partnership shall have the right to enforce the right or obligation of any Partner to make Capital Contributions or loans or to pursue any other right or remedy hereunder or at law or in equity, it being understood and agreed that the provisions of this Agreement shall be solely for the benefit of, and may be enforced solely by, the parties hereto and their respective successors and assigns. None of the rights or obligations of the Partners herein set forth to make Capital Contributions or loans to the Partnership shall be deemed an asset of the Partnership for any purpose by any creditor or other third party, nor may such rights or obligations be sold, transferred or assigned by the Partnership or pledged or encumbered by the Partnership to secure any debt or other obligation of the Partnership or of any of the Partners. In addition, it is the intent of the parties hereto that no distribution to any Limited Partner shall be deemed a return of money or other property in violation of the Act. However, if any court of competent jurisdiction holds that, notwithstanding the provisions of this Agreement, any Limited Partner is obligated to return such money or property, such obligation shall be the obligation of such Limited Partner and not of the General Partner. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, a deficit Capital Account of a Partner shall not be deemed to be a liability of such Partner nor an asset or property of the Partnership.

 

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Article 5

PROFITS AND LOSSES; DISTRIBUTIONS

 

5.1           Allocation of Profit and Loss .

 

(a)           General Partner Gross Income Allocation . There shall be specially allocated to the General Partner an amount of (i) first, items of Partnership income and (ii) second, items of Partnership gain during each fiscal year or other applicable period, before any other allocations are made hereunder, in an amount equal to the excess, if any, of the cumulative distributions made to the General Partner under Section 6.5(b) over the cumulative allocations of Partnership income and gain to the General Partner under this Section 5.1(a).

 

(b)           General Allocations . The items of Profit and Loss of the Partnership for each fiscal year or other applicable period, other than any items allocated under Section 5.1(a), shall be allocated among the Partners in a manner that will, as nearly as possible (after giving effect to the allocations under Section 5.1(a), 5.1(c), 5.1(d), 5.1(e) and 5.1(h)) cause the Capital Account balance of each Partner at the end of such fiscal year or other applicable period to equal (i) the amount of the hypothetical distribution that such Partner would receive if the Partnership were liquidated on the last day of such period and all assets of the Partnership, including cash, were sold for cash equal to their Carrying Values, taking into account any adjustments thereto for such period, all liabilities of the Partnership were satisfied in full in cash according to their terms (limited with respect to each nonrecourse liability to the Carrying Value of the assets securing such liability) and the remaining cash proceeds (after satisfaction of such liabilities) were distributed in full pursuant to Section 5.6, minus (ii) the sum of such Partner’s share of Partnership Minimum Gain and Partner Nonrecourse Debt Minimum Gain and the amount, if any and without duplication, that the Partner would be obligated to contribute to the capital of the Partnership, all computed as of the date of the hypothetical sale of assets .

 

(c)           Nonrecourse Deductions; Minimum Gain Chargeback . Notwithstanding any provision to the contrary, (i) any expense of the Partnership that is a “nonrecourse deduction” within the meaning of Regulations Section 1.704-2(b)(1) shall be allocated in accordance with the Partners’ respective Percentage Interests, (ii) any expense of the Partnership that is a “partner nonrecourse deduction” within the meaning of Regulations Section 1.704-2(i)(2) shall be allocated to the Partner or Partners that bear the “economic risk of loss” with respect to the liability to which such deductions are attributable in accordance with Regulations Section 1.704-2(i)(1), (iii) if there is a net decrease in Partnership Minimum Gain within the meaning of Regulations Section 1.704-2(f)(1) for any Partnership taxable year, then, subject to the exceptions set forth in Regulations Section 1.704-2(f)(2),(3), (4) and (5), items of gain and income shall be allocated among the Partners in accordance with Regulations Section 1.704-2(f) and the ordering rules contained in Regulations Section 1.704-2(j), and (iv) if there is a net decrease in Partner Nonrecourse Debt Minimum Gain within the meaning of Regulations Section 1.704-2(i)(4) for any Partnership taxable year, then, subject to the exceptions set forth in Regulations Section 1.704-(2)(g), items of gain and income shall be allocated among the Partners in accordance with Regulations Section 1.704-2(i)(4) and the ordering rules contained in Regulations Section 1.704-2(j). A Partner’s “interest in partnership profits” for purposes of determining its share of the excess nonrecourse liabilities of the Partnership within the meaning of Regulations Section 1.752-3(a)(3) shall be such Partner’s Percentage Interest.

 

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(d)           Qualified Income Offset . If a Partner unexpectedly receives in any taxable year an adjustment, allocation, or distribution described in subparagraphs (4), (5), or (6) of Regulations Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d) that causes or increases a deficit balance in such Partner’s Capital Account that exceeds the sum of such Partner’s shares of Partnership Minimum Gain and Partner Nonrecourse Debt Minimum Gain, as determined in accordance with Regulations Sections 1.704-2(g)(1) and 1.704-2(i)(5), such Partner shall be allocated specially for such taxable year (and, if necessary, later taxable years) items of income and gain in an amount and manner sufficient to eliminate such excess deficit Capital Account balance as quickly as possible as provided in Regulations Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d). This Section 5.1(d) is intended to constitute a “qualified income offset” under Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d) of the Regulations and shall be interpreted consistently therewith. After the occurrence of an allocation of income or gain to a Partner in accordance with this Section 5.1(d), to the extent permitted by Regulations Section 1.704-1(b), items of expense or loss shall be allocated to such Partner in an amount necessary to offset the income or gain previously allocated to such Partner under this Section 5.1(d).

 

(e)           Capital Account Deficits . Loss (or items of expense or loss) shall not be allocated to a Limited Partner to the extent that such allocation would cause or increase a deficit in such Partner’s Capital Account at the end of any fiscal year (after reduction to reflect the items described in Regulations Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(ii)(d)(4), (5) and (6)) to exceed the sum of such Partner’s shares of Partnership Minimum Gain and Partner Nonrecourse Debt Minimum Gain, as determined in accordance with Regulations Sections 1.704-2(g)(1) and 1.704-2(i)(5). Any Loss or item of expense or loss in excess of that limitation shall be allocated to the General Partner. After an allocation to the General Partner under the immediately preceding sentence, to the extent permitted by Regulations Section 1.704-1(b), Profit or items of income or gain shall be allocated to the General Partner in an amount necessary to offset the items allocated to the General Partner under the immediately preceding sentence.

 

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(f)           Allocations Between Transferor and Transferee . If a Partner transfers any part or all of its Partnership Interest, the distributive shares of the various items of Profit and Loss allocable among the Partners during such fiscal year of the Partnership shall be allocated between the transferor and the transferee Partner either (i) as if the Partnership’s fiscal year had ended on the date of the transfer, or (ii) based on the number of days of such fiscal year that each was a Partner without regard to the results of Partnership activities in the respective portions of such fiscal year in which the transferor and the transferee were Partners. The General Partner, in its sole and absolute discretion, shall determine which method shall be used to allocate the distributive shares of the various items of Profit and Loss between the transferor and the transferee Partner.

 

(g)           Definition of Profit and Loss . “Profit” and “Loss” and any items of income, gain, expense, or loss referred to in this Agreement shall be determined in accordance with federal income tax accounting principles, as modified by Regulations Section 1.704-1(b)(2)(iv), except that Profit and Loss shall not include items of income, gain and expense that are specially allocated pursuant to Section 5.1(a), 5.1(c), 5.1(d), 5.1(e), or 5.1(h). All allocations of Profit and Loss (and all items contained therein) for federal income tax purposes shall be identical to all allocations of such items set forth in this Section 5.1, except as otherwise required by Section 704(c) of the Code and Regulations Section 1.704-1(b)(4). The General Partner shall have the authority to elect the method to be used by the Partnership for allocating items of income, gain, and expense as required by Section 704(c) of the Code including a method that may result in a Partner receiving a disproportionately larger share of the Partnership tax depreciation deductions, and such election shall be binding on all Partners.

 

(h)           Curative Allocations . The allocations set forth in Section 5.1(c), (d) and (e) of this Agreement (the “Regulatory Allocations”) are intended to comply with certain requirements of the Regulations. The General Partner is authorized to offset all Regulatory Allocations either with other Regulatory Allocations or with special allocations of other items of Partnership income, gain, loss or deduction pursuant to this Section 5.1(h). Therefore, notwithstanding any other provision of this Section 5.1 (other than the Regulatory Allocations), the General Partner shall make such offsetting special allocations of Partnership income, gain, loss or deduction in whatever manner it deems appropriate so that, after such offsetting allocations are made, each Partner’s Capital Account is, to the extent possible, equal to the Capital Account balance such Partner would have had if the Regulatory Allocations were not part of this Agreement and all Partnership items were allocated pursuant to Sections 5.1(a), (b) and (f).

 

5.2           Distribution of Cash .

 

(a)          The Partnership shall distribute cash on a quarterly (or, at the election of the General Partner, more frequent) basis, in an amount determined by the General Partner in its sole and absolute discretion, to the Partners who are Partners on the Partnership Record Date with respect to such quarter (or other distribution period) in accordance with Section 5.2(b); provided, however, that if a new or existing Partner acquires an additional Partnership Interest in exchange for a Capital Contribution on any date other than a Partnership Record Date, the cash distribution attributable to such additional Partnership Interest relating to the Partnership Record Date next following the issuance of such additional Partnership Interest shall be reduced in the proportion equal to one minus (i) the number of days that such additional Partnership Interest is held by such Partner bears to (ii) the number of days between such Partnership Record Date and the immediately preceding Partnership Record Date.

 

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(b)          Except for distributions pursuant to Section 5.6 in connection with the dissolution and liquidation of the Partnership and subject to the provisions of Sections 5.2(c), 5.2(d), 5.3 and 5.5, all distributions of cash shall be made to the Partners in accordance with their respective Percentage Interests on the Partnership Record Date, except that the amount distributed per Partnership Unit of any Class may differ from the amount per Partnership Unit of another Class on account of differences in Class-specific expense allocations with respect to REIT Shares as described in the Prospectus or for other reasons as determined by the Board of Directors of the General Partner. Any such differences shall correspond to differences in the amount of distributions per REIT Share for REIT Shares of different Classes, with the same adjustments being made to the amount of distributions per Partnership Unit for Partnership Units of a particular Class as are made to the distributions per REIT Share by the General Partner with respect to REIT Shares having the same Class designation.

 

(c)          Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, the General Partner is authorized to take any action that it determines to be necessary or appropriate to cause the Partnership to comply with any withholding requirements established under the Code or any other federal, state or local law including, without limitation, pursuant to Sections 1441, 1442, 1445 and 1446 of the Code. To the extent that the Partnership is required to withhold and pay over to any taxing authority any amount resulting from the allocation or distribution of income to any Partner or assignee (including by reason of Section 1446 of the Code), either (i) if the actual amount to be distributed to the Partner equals or exceeds the amount required to be withheld by the Partnership, the amount withheld shall be treated as a distribution of cash in the amount of such withholding to such Partner, or (ii) if the actual amount to be distributed to the Partner is less than the amount required to be withheld by the Partnership, the actual amount to be distributed shall be treated as a distribution of cash in the amount of such withholding and the additional amount required to be withheld shall be treated as a loan (a “Partnership Loan”) from the Partnership to the Partner on the day the Partnership pays over such amount to a taxing authority. A Partnership Loan shall be repaid through withholding by the Partnership with respect to subsequent distributions to the applicable Partner or assignee. In the event that a Limited Partner (a “Defaulting Limited Partner”) fails to pay any amount owed to the Partnership with respect to the Partnership Loan within fifteen (15) days after demand for payment thereof is made by the Partnership on the Limited Partner, the General Partner, in its sole and absolute discretion, may elect to make the payment to the Partnership on behalf of such Defaulting Limited Partner. In such event, on the date of payment, the General Partner shall be deemed to have extended a loan (a “General Partner Loan”) to the Defaulting Limited Partner in the amount of the payment made by the General Partner and shall succeed to all rights and remedies of the Partnership against the Defaulting Limited Partner as to that amount. Without limitation, the General Partner shall have the right to receive any distributions that otherwise would be made by the Partnership to the Defaulting Limited Partner until such time as the General Partner Loan has been paid in full, and any such distributions so received by the General Partner shall be treated as having been received by the Defaulting Limited Partner and immediately paid to the General Partner.

 

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Any amounts treated as a Partnership Loan or a General Partner Loan pursuant to this Section 5.2(c) shall bear interest at the lesser of (i) the base rate on corporate loans at large United States money center commercial banks, as published from time to time in The Wall Street Journal, or (ii) the maximum lawful rate of interest on such obligation, such interest to accrue from the date the Partnership or the General Partner, as applicable, is deemed to extend the loan until such loan is repaid in full.

 

(d)          In no event may a Partner receive a distribution of cash with respect to a Partnership Unit if such Partner is entitled to receive a cash distribution as the holder of record of a REIT Share for which all or part of such Partnership Unit has been or will be exchanged.

 

5.3           REIT Distribution Requirements . The General Partner shall use its commercially reasonable efforts to cause the Partnership to distribute amounts sufficient to enable the General Partner to make shareholder distributions that will allow the General Partner to (i) meet its distribution requirement for qualification as a REIT as set forth in Section 857 of the Code and (ii) avoid any federal income or excise tax liability imposed by the Code.

 

5.4           No Right to Distributions in Kind . No Partner shall be entitled to demand property other than cash in connection with any distributions by the Partnership.

 

5.5           Limitations on Return of Capital Contributions . Notwithstanding any of the provisions of this Article 5, no Partner shall have the right to receive and the General Partner shall not have the right to make, a distribution that includes a return of all or part of a Partner’s Capital Contributions, unless after giving effect to the return of a Capital Contribution, the sum of all Partnership liabilities, other than the liabilities to a Partner for the return of his Capital Contribution, does not exceed the fair market value of the Partnership’s assets.

 

5.6           Distributions Upon Liquidation . Upon liquidation of the Partnership, after payment of, or adequate provision for, debts and obligations of the Partnership, including any Partner loans, any remaining assets of the Partnership shall be distributed to all Partners such that the holder of each Partnership Unit receives an amount equal to the Net Asset Value Per Unit for each Partnership Unit held. If, however, the remaining assets of the Partnership are not sufficient to pay in full the Net Asset Value Per Unit for each Partnership Unit, then the holders of Partnership Units of each Class shall be distributed an amount equal to the product of (i) the remaining assets of the Partnership that are legally available for distribution to the Partners and (ii) the quotient obtained by dividing (A) the net asset value of the General Partner allocable to the Class of REIT Shares having the same Class designation as such Class of Partnership Units by (B) the aggregate net asset value of the General Partner allocable to all Class E REIT Shares, all Class A REIT Shares, all Class I REIT Shares and all Class W REIT Shares, all as calculated as described in the Prospectus. Amounts to be distributed to the holders of each Class of Partnership Units shall be distributed among those holders in proportion to the number of Units of that Class held by each holder. After application of the foregoing, any remaining assets available for distribution to the Partners shall be distributed to the Partners in accordance with their Percentage Interests.

 

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Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, the amount by which the value, as determined in good faith by the General Partner, of any property other than cash to be distributed in kind to the Partners exceeds or is less than the Carrying Value of such property shall, to the extent not otherwise recognized by the Partnership, be taken into account in computing Profit and Loss of the Partnership for purposes of crediting or charging the Capital Accounts of, and distributing proceeds to, the Partners, pursuant to this Agreement. To the extent deemed advisable by the General Partner, appropriate arrangements (including the use of a liquidating trust) may be made to assure that adequate funds are available to pay any contingent debts or obligations.

 

5.7           Substantial Economic Effect . It is the intent of the Partners that the allocations of Profit and Loss under this Agreement have substantial economic effect (or be consistent with the Partners’ interests in the Partnership in the case of the allocation of losses attributable to nonrecourse debt) within the meaning of Section 704(b) of the Code as interpreted by the Regulations promulgated pursuant thereto. Article 5 and other relevant provisions of this Agreement shall be interpreted in a manner consistent with such intent.

 

Article 6

RIGHTS, OBLIGATIONS AND
POWERS OF THE GENERAL PARTNER

 

6.1           Management of the Partnership .

 

(a)          Except as otherwise expressly provided in this Agreement, the General Partner shall have full, complete and exclusive discretion to manage and control the business of the Partnership for the purposes herein stated, and shall make all decisions affecting the business and assets of the Partnership. Subject to the restrictions specifically contained in this Agreement, the powers of the General Partner shall include, without limitation, the authority to take the following actions on behalf of the Partnership:

 

(i)         to acquire, purchase, own, operate, lease and dispose of any real property and any other property or assets including, but not limited to notes and mortgages and other Real Estate Securities, that the General Partner determines are necessary or appropriate or in the best interests of the business of the Partnership;

 

(ii)        to construct buildings and make other improvements on the properties owned or leased by the Partnership;

 

(iii)       to authorize, issue, sell, redeem or otherwise purchase any Partnership Interests or any securities (including secured and unsecured debt obligations of the Partnership, debt obligations of the Partnership convertible into any class or series of Partnership Interests, or options, rights, warrants or appreciation rights relating to any Partnership Interests) of the Partnership;

 

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(iv)       to borrow or lend money for the Partnership, issue or receive evidences of indebtedness in connection therewith, refinance, increase the amount of, modify, amend or change the terms of, or extend the time for the payment of, any such indebtedness, and secure such indebtedness by mortgage, deed of trust, pledge or other lien on the Partnership’s assets;

 

(v)        to pay, either directly or by reimbursement, for all operating costs and general administrative expenses of the Partnership to third parties or to the General Partner or its Affiliates as set forth in this Agreement;

 

(vi)       to guarantee or become a co-maker of indebtedness of the General Partner or any Subsidiary thereof, refinance, increase the amount of, modify, amend or change the terms of, or extend the time for the payment of, any such guarantee or indebtedness, and secure such guarantee or indebtedness by mortgage, deed of trust, pledge or other lien on the Partnership’s assets;

 

(vii)      to use assets of the Partnership (including, without limitation, cash on hand) for any purpose consistent with this Agreement, including, without limitation, payment, either directly or by reimbursement, of all operating costs and general administrative expenses of the General Partner, the Partnership or any Subsidiary of either, to third parties or to the General Partner as set forth in this Agreement;

 

(viii)     to lease all or any portion of any of the Partnership’s assets, whether or not the terms of such leases extend beyond the termination date of the Partnership and whether or not any portion of the Partnership’s assets so leased are to be occupied by the lessee, or, in turn, subleased in whole or in part to others, for such consideration and on such terms as the General Partner may determine;

 

(ix)        to prosecute, defend, arbitrate, or compromise any and all claims or liabilities in favor of or against the Partnership, on such terms and in such manner as the General Partner may reasonably determine, and similarly to prosecute, settle or defend litigation with respect to the Partners, the Partnership, or the Partnership’s assets;

 

(x)         to file applications, communicate, and otherwise deal with any and all governmental agencies having jurisdiction over, or in any way affecting, the Partnership’s assets or any other aspect of the Partnership business;

 

(xi)        to make or revoke any election permitted or required of the Partnership by any taxing authority;

 

(xii)       to maintain such insurance coverage for public liability, fire and casualty, and any and all other insurance for the protection of the Partnership, for the conservation of Partnership assets, or for any other purpose convenient or beneficial to the Partnership, in such amounts and such types, as it shall determine from time to time;

 

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(xiii)      to determine whether or not to apply any insurance proceeds for any property to the restoration of such property or to distribute the same;

 

(xiv)      to establish one or more divisions of the Partnership, to hire and dismiss employees of the Partnership or any division of the Partnership, and to retain legal counsel, accountants, consultants, real estate brokers, and such other persons, as the General Partner may deem necessary or appropriate in connection with the Partnership business and to pay therefor such remuneration as the General Partner may deem reasonable and proper;

 

(xv)       to retain other services of any kind or nature in connection with the Partnership business, and to pay therefor such remuneration as the General Partner may deem reasonable and proper;

 

(xvi)      to negotiate and conclude agreements on behalf of the Partnership with respect to any of the rights, powers and authority conferred upon the General Partner;

 

(xvii)     to maintain accurate accounting records and to file promptly all federal, state and local income tax returns on behalf of the Partnership;

 

(xviii)    to distribute Partnership cash or other Partnership assets in accordance with this Agreement;

 

(xix)      to form or acquire an interest in, and contribute property to, any further limited or general partnerships, joint ventures or other relationships that it deems desirable (including, without limitation, the acquisition of interests in, and the contributions of property to, its Subsidiaries and any other Person in which it has an equity interest from time to time);

 

(xx)       to establish Partnership reserves for working capital, capital expenditures, contingent liabilities, or any other valid Partnership purpose;

 

(xxi)      to merge, consolidate or combine the Partnership with or into another Person;

 

(xxii)     to do any and all acts and things necessary or prudent to ensure that the Partnership will not be classified as a “publicly traded partnership” for purposes of Section 7704 of the Code; and

 

(xxiii)    to take such other action, execute, acknowledge, swear to or deliver such other documents and instruments, and perform any and all other acts that the General Partner deems necessary or appropriate for the formation, continuation and conduct of the business and affairs of the Partnership (including, without limitation, all actions consistent with allowing the General Partner at all times to qualify as a REIT unless the General Partner voluntarily terminates its REIT status) and to possess and enjoy all of the rights and powers of a general partner as provided by the Act.

 

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(b)          Except as otherwise provided herein, to the extent the duties of the General Partner require expenditures of funds to be paid to third parties, the General Partner shall not have any obligations hereunder except to the extent that partnership funds are reasonably available to it for the performance of such duties, and nothing herein contained shall be deemed to authorize or require the General Partner, in its capacity as such, to expend its individual funds for payment to third parties or to undertake any individual liability or obligation on behalf of the Partnership.

 

6.2           Delegation of Authority . The General Partner may delegate any or all of its powers, rights and obligations hereunder, and may appoint, employ, contract or otherwise deal with any Person for the transaction of the business of the Partnership, which Person may, under supervision of the General Partner, perform any acts or services for the Partnership as the General Partner may approve.

 

6.3           Indemnification and Exculpation of Indemnitees .

 

(a)          The Partnership shall indemnify an Indemnitee from and against any and all losses, claims, damages, liabilities, joint or several, expenses (including reasonable legal fees and expenses), judgments, fines, settlements, and other amounts arising from any and all claims, demands, actions, suits or proceedings, civil, criminal, administrative or investigative, that relate to the operations of the Partnership as set forth in this Agreement in which any Indemnitee may be involved, or is threatened to be involved, as a party or otherwise, unless it is established that: (i) the act or omission of the Indemnitee was material to the matter giving rise to the proceeding and either was committed in bad faith or was the result of active and deliberate dishonesty; (ii) the Indemnitee actually received an improper personal benefit in money, property or services; or (iii) in the case of any criminal proceeding, the Indemnitee had reasonable cause to believe that the act or omission was unlawful. Any indemnification pursuant to this Section 6.3 shall be made only out of the assets of the Partnership.

 

(b)          The Partnership shall reimburse an Indemnitee for reasonable expenses incurred by an Indemnitee who is a party to a proceeding in advance of the final disposition of the proceeding upon receipt by the Partnership of (i) a written affirmation by the Indemnitee of the Indemnitee’s good faith belief that the standard of conduct necessary for indemnification by the Partnership as authorized in this Section 6.3 has been met, and (ii) a written undertaking by or on behalf of the Indemnitee to repay the amount if it shall ultimately be determined that the standard of conduct has not been met.

 

(c)          The indemnification provided by this Section 6.3 shall be in addition to any other rights to which an Indemnitee or any other Person may be entitled under any agreement, pursuant to any vote of the Partners, as a matter of law or otherwise, and shall continue as to an Indemnitee who has ceased to serve in such capacity.

 

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(d)          The Partnership may purchase and maintain insurance, on behalf of the Indemnitees and such other Persons as the General Partner shall determine, against any liability that may be asserted against or expenses that may be incurred by such Person in connection with the Partnership’s activities, regardless of whether the Partnership would have the power to indemnify such Person against such liability under the provisions of this Agreement.

 

(e)          For purposes of this Section 6.3, the Partnership shall be deemed to have requested an Indemnitee to serve as fiduciary of an employee benefit plan whenever the performance by it of its duties to the Partnership also imposes duties on, or otherwise involves services by, it to the plan or participants or beneficiaries of the plan; excise taxes assessed on an Indemnitee with respect to an employee benefit plan pursuant to applicable law shall constitute fines within the meaning of this Section 6.3; and actions taken or omitted by the Indemnitee with respect to an employee benefit plan in the performance of its duties for a purpose reasonably believed by it to be in the interest of the participants and beneficiaries of the plan shall be deemed to be for a purpose which is not opposed to the best interests of the Partnership.

 

(f)           In no event may an Indemnitee subject the Limited Partners to personal liability by reason of the indemnification provisions set forth in this Agreement.

 

(g)          An Indemnitee shall not be denied indemnification in whole or in part under this Section 6.3 because the Indemnitee had an interest in the transaction with respect to which the indemnification applies if the transaction was otherwise permitted by the terms of this Agreement.

 

(h)          The provisions of this Section 6.3 are for the benefit of the Indemnitees, their heirs, successors, assigns and administrators and shall not be deemed to create any rights for the benefit of any other Persons.

 

6.4           Liability of the General Partner .

 

(a)          Notwithstanding anything to the contrary set forth in this Agreement, the General Partner shall not be liable for monetary damages to the Partnership or any Partners for losses sustained or liabilities incurred as a result of errors in judgment or of any act or omission if the General Partner acted in good faith. The General Partner shall not be in breach of any duty that the General Partner may owe to the Limited Partners or the Partnership or any other Persons under this Agreement or of any duty stated or implied by law or equity provided the General Partner, acting in good faith, abides by the terms of this Agreement.

 

(b)          The Limited Partners expressly acknowledge that the General Partner is acting on behalf of the Partnership, itself and its shareholders collectively, that the General Partner is under no obligation to consider the separate interests of the Limited Partners (including, without limitation, the tax consequences to Limited Partners or the tax consequences of some, but not all, of the Limited Partners) in deciding whether to cause the Partnership to take (or decline to take) any actions. In the event of a conflict between the interests of its shareholders on one hand and the Limited Partners on the other, the General Partner shall endeavor in good faith to resolve the conflict in a manner not adverse to either its shareholders or the Limited Partners; provided, however, that for so long as the General Partner directly owns a controlling interest in the Partnership, any such conflict that the General Partner, in its sole and absolute discretion, determines cannot be resolved in a manner not adverse to either its shareholders or the Limited Partner shall be resolved in favor of the shareholders. The General Partner shall not be liable for monetary damages for losses sustained, liabilities incurred, or benefits not derived by Limited Partners in connection with such decisions, provided that the General Partner has acted in good faith.

 

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(c)          Subject to its obligations and duties as General Partner set forth in Section 6.1 hereof, the General Partner may exercise any of the powers granted to it under this Agreement and perform any of the duties imposed upon it hereunder either directly or by or through its agents. The General Partner shall not be responsible for any misconduct or negligence on the part of any such agent appointed by it in good faith.

 

(d)          Notwithstanding any other provisions of this Agreement or the Act, any action of the General Partner on behalf of the Partnership or any decision of the General Partner to refrain from acting on behalf of the Partnership, undertaken in the good faith belief that such action or omission is necessary or advisable in order (i) to protect the ability of the General Partner to continue to qualify as a REIT or (ii) to prevent the General Partner from incurring any taxes under Section 857, Section 4981, or any other provision of the Code, is expressly authorized under this Agreement and is deemed approved by all of the Limited Partners.

 

(e)          Any amendment, modification or repeal of this Section 6.4 or any provision hereof shall be prospective only and shall not in any way affect the limitations on the General Partner’s liability to the Partnership and the Limited Partners under this Section 6.4 as in effect immediately prior to such amendment, modification or repeal with respect to matters occurring, in whole or in part, prior to such amendment, modification or repeal, regardless of when claims relating to such matters may arise or be asserted.

 

6.5           Reimbursement of General Partner .

 

(a)          Except as provided in this Section 6.5 and elsewhere in this Agreement (including the provisions of Articles 5 and 6 regarding distributions, payments, and allocations to which it may be entitled), the General Partner shall not be compensated for its services as general partner of the Partnership.

 

(b)          The General Partner shall be reimbursed on a monthly basis, or such other basis as the General Partner may determine in its sole and absolute discretion, for all Administrative Expenses incurred by the General Partner.

 

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6.6           Outside Activities . Subject to Section 6.8 hereof, the Articles of Incorporation and any agreements entered into by the General Partner or its Affiliates with the Partnership or a Subsidiary, any officer, director, employee, agent, trustee, Affiliate or shareholder of the General Partner, the General Partner shall be entitled to and may have business interests and engage in business activities in addition to those relating to the Partnership, including business interests and activities substantially similar or identical to those of the Partnership. Neither the Partnership nor any of the Limited Partners shall have any rights by virtue of this Agreement in any such business ventures, interests or activities. None of the Limited Partners nor any other Person shall have any rights by virtue of this Agreement or the partnership relationship established hereby in any such business ventures, interests or activities, and the General Partner shall have no obligation pursuant to this Agreement to offer any interest in any such business ventures, interests and activities to the Partnership or any Limited Partner, even if such opportunity is of a character which, if presented to the Partnership or any Limited Partner, could be taken by such Person.

 

6.7           Employment or Retention of Affiliates .

 

(a)          Any Affiliate of the General Partner may be employed or retained by the Partnership and may otherwise deal with the Partnership (whether as a buyer, lessor, lessee, manager, furnisher of goods or services, broker, agent, lender or otherwise) and may receive from the Partnership any compensation, price, or other payment therefor which the General Partner determines to be fair and reasonable.

 

(b)          The Partnership may lend or contribute to its Subsidiaries or other Persons in which it has an equity investment, and such Persons may borrow funds from the Partnership, on terms and conditions established in the sole and absolute discretion of the General Partner. The foregoing authority shall not create any right or benefit in favor of any Subsidiary or any other Person.

 

(c)          The Partnership may transfer assets to joint ventures, other partnerships, corporations or other business entities in which it is or thereby becomes a participant upon such terms and subject to such conditions as the General Partner deems are consistent with this Agreement, applicable law and the REIT status of the General Partner.

 

(d)          Except as expressly permitted by this Agreement, neither the General Partner nor any of its Affiliates shall sell, transfer or convey any property to, or purchase any property from, the Partnership, directly or indirectly, except pursuant to transactions that are, in the General Partner’s sole discretion, on terms that are fair and reasonable to the Partnership.

 

6.8           General Partner Participation . The General Partner agrees that all business activities of the General Partner, including activities pertaining to the acquisition, development or ownership of any office, retail, multifamily industrial, or other Real Property, Real Estate Securities or other property shall be conducted through the Partnership or one or more Subsidiary Partnerships; provided, however, that the General Partner is allowed to make a direct acquisition, but if and only if, such acquisition is made in connection with the issuance of Additional Securities, which direct acquisition and issuance have been approved and determined to be in the best interests of the General Partner and the Partnership.

 

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6.9           Title to Partnership Assets . Title to Partnership assets, whether real, personal or mixed and whether tangible or intangible, shall be deemed to be owned by the Partnership as an entity, and no Partner, individually or collectively, shall have any ownership interest in such Partnership assets or any portion thereof. Title to any or all of the Partnership assets may be held in the name of the Partnership, the General Partner or one or more nominees, as the General Partner may determine, including Affiliates of the General Partner. The General Partner hereby declares and warrants that any Partnership assets for which legal title is held in the name of the General Partner or any nominee or Affiliate of the General Partner shall be held by the General Partner for the use and benefit of the Partnership in accordance with the provisions of this Agreement; provided, however, that the General Partner shall use its best efforts to cause beneficial and record title to such assets to be vested in the Partnership as soon as reasonably practicable. All Partnership assets shall be recorded as the property of the Partnership in its books and records, irrespective of the name in which legal title to such Partnership assets is held.

 

6.10         Redemptions and Exchanges of REIT Shares .

 

(a)           Redemptions . If the General Partner redeems any REIT Shares (other than REIT Shares redeemed in accordance with the share redemption program of the General Partner through proceeds received from the General Partner’s dividend reinvestment plan), then the General Partner shall cause the Partnership to purchase from the General Partner a number of Partnership Units having the same Class designation as the redeemed REIT Shares as determined based on the application of the Conversion Factor for that Class of Partnership Units on the same terms that the General Partner redeemed such REIT Shares. Moreover, if the General Partner makes a cash tender offer or other offer to acquire REIT Shares, then the General Partner shall cause the Partnership to make a corresponding offer to the General Partner to acquire an equal number of Partnership Units held by the General Partner that have the same Class designation as the REIT Shares that are the subject of the offer. If any REIT Shares are redeemed by the General Partner pursuant to such offer, the Partnership shall redeem an equivalent number of the General Partner’s Partnership Units having the same Class designation as the redeemed REIT Shares for an equivalent purchase price based on the application of the Conversion Factor for that Class of Partnership Units.

 

(b)           Exchanges . If the General Partner exchanges any REIT Shares of any Class (“Exchanged REIT Shares”) for REIT Shares of a different Class (“Received REIT Shares”), then the General Partner shall, and shall cause the Partnership to, exchange a number of Partnership Units having the same Class designation as the Exchanged REIT Shares, as determined based on the application of the Conversion Factor for that Class of Partnership Units, for Partnership Units having the same Class designation as the Received REIT Shares on the same terms that the General Partner exchanged the Exchanged REIT Shares.

 

6.11         No Duplication of Fees or Expenses . The Partnership may not incur or be responsible for any fee or expense (in connection with an Offering or otherwise) that would be duplicative of fees and expenses paid by the General Partner.

 

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Article 7

CHANGES IN GENERAL PARTNER

 

7.1           Transfer of the General Partner’s Partnership Interest .

 

(a)          The General Partner shall not transfer all or any portion of its General Partnership Interest or withdraw as General Partner except as provided in, or in connection with a transaction contemplated by, Section 7.1(c), (d) or (e).

 

(b)          The General Partner agrees that its Percentage Interest will at all times be in the aggregate, at least 0.1%.

 

(c)          Except as otherwise provided in Section 6.4(b) or Section 7.1(d) or (e) hereof, the General Partner shall not engage in any merger, consolidation or other combination with or into another Person or sale of all or substantially all of its assets, (other than in connection with a change in the General Partner’s state of incorporation or organizational form) in each case which results in a change of control of the General Partner (a “Transaction”), unless:

 

(i)         the consent of Limited Partners holding more than 50% of the Percentage Interests of the Limited Partners is obtained;

 

(ii)        as a result of such Transaction all Limited Partners will receive for each Partnership Unit of each Class an amount of cash, securities, or other property equal to the product of the Conversion Factor for that Class of Partnership Unit and the greatest amount of cash, securities or other property paid in the Transaction to a holder of one REIT Share having the same Class designation as that Partnership Unit in consideration of such REIT Share; provided that if, in connection with the Transaction, a purchase, tender or exchange offer (“Offer”) shall have been made to and accepted by the holders of more than 50% of the outstanding REIT Shares, each holder of Class E Units shall be given the option to exchange its Class E Units for the greatest amount of cash, securities, or other property which a Limited Partner holding Class E Units would have received had it (1) exercised its Redemption Right and (2) sold, tendered or exchanged pursuant to the Offer the Class E REIT Shares received upon exercise of the Redemption Right immediately prior to the expiration of the Offer; or

 

(iii)       the General Partner is the surviving entity in the Transaction and either (A) the holders of REIT Shares do not receive cash, securities, or other property in the Transaction or (B) all Limited Partners (other than the General Partner or any Subsidiary) receive in exchange for their Partnership Units of each Class, an amount of cash, securities, or other property (expressed as an amount per REIT Share) that is no less than the product of the Conversion Factor for that Class of Partnership Unit and the greatest amount of cash, securities, or other property (expressed as an amount per REIT Share) received in the Transaction by any holder of REIT Shares having the same Class designation as the Partnership Units being exchanged.

 

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(d)          Notwithstanding Section 7.1(c), the General Partner may merge with or into or consolidate with another entity if immediately after such merger or consolidation (i) substantially all of the assets of the successor or surviving entity (the “Survivor”), other than Partnership Units held by the General Partner, are contributed, directly or indirectly, to the Partnership as a Capital Contribution in exchange for Partnership Units with a fair market value equal to the value of the assets so contributed as determined by the Survivor in good faith and (ii) the Survivor expressly agrees to assume all obligations of the General Partner, as appropriate, hereunder. Upon such contribution and assumption, the Survivor shall have the right and duty to amend this Agreement as set forth in this Section 7.1(d). The Survivor shall in good faith arrive at a new method for the calculation of the Cash Amount, the REIT Shares Amount and Conversion Factor for a Partnership Unit of each Class after any such merger or consolidation so as to approximate the existing method for such calculation as closely as reasonably possible. Such calculation shall take into account, among other things, the kind and amount of securities, cash and other property that was receivable upon such merger or consolidation by a holder of REIT Shares of each Class or options, warrants or other rights relating thereto, and which a holder of Partnership Units of any Class could have acquired had such Partnership Units been exchanged immediately prior to such merger or consolidation. Such amendment to this Agreement shall provide for adjustment to such method of calculation, which shall be as nearly equivalent as may be practicable to the adjustments provided for with respect to the Conversion Factor for each Class of Partnership Units. The Survivor also shall in good faith modify the definition of REIT Shares and make such amendments to Section 8.5 so as to approximate the existing rights and obligations set forth in Section 8.5 as closely as reasonably possible. The above provisions of this Section 7.1(d) shall similarly apply to successive mergers or consolidations permitted hereunder.

 

In respect of any transaction described in the preceding paragraph, the General Partner is required to use its commercially reasonable efforts to structure such transaction to avoid causing the Limited Partners to recognize a gain for federal income tax purposes by virtue of the occurrence of or their participation in such transaction, provided such efforts are consistent with the exercise of the Board of Directors’ fiduciary duties to the shareholders of the General Partner under applicable law.

 

(e)          Notwithstanding Section 7.1(c),

 

(i)         a General Partner may transfer all or any portion of its General Partnership Interest to (A) a wholly-owned Subsidiary of such General Partner or (B) the owner of all of the ownership interests of such General Partner, and following a transfer of all of its General Partnership Interest, may withdraw as General Partner; and

 

(ii)        the General Partner may engage in a transaction not required by law or by the rules of any national securities exchange on which the REIT Shares of one or more Classes are listed to be submitted to the vote of the holders of the REIT Shares of one or more Classes.

 

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7.2           Admission of a Substitute or Additional General Partner . A Person shall be admitted as a substitute or additional General Partner of the Partnership only if the following terms and conditions are satisfied:

 

(a)          the Person to be admitted as a substitute or additional General Partner shall have accepted and agreed to be bound by all the terms and provisions of this Agreement by executing a counterpart thereof and such other documents or instruments as may be required or appropriate in order to effect the admission of such Person as a General Partner, and a certificate evidencing the admission of such Person as a General Partner shall have been filed for recordation and all other actions required by Section 2.5 in connection with such admission shall have been performed;

 

(b)          if the Person to be admitted as a substitute or additional General Partner is a corporation or a partnership it shall have provided the Partnership with evidence satisfactory to counsel for the Partnership of such Person’s authority to become a General Partner and to be bound by the terms and provisions of this Agreement; and

 

(c)          counsel for the Partnership shall have rendered an opinion (relying on such opinions from other counsel and the state or any other jurisdiction as may be necessary) that (x) the admission of the person to be admitted as a substitute or additional General Partner is in conformity with the Act and (y) none of the actions taken in connection with the admission of such Person as a substitute or additional General Partner will cause (i) the Partnership to be classified other than as a partnership for federal tax purposes, or (ii) the loss of any Limited Partner’s limited liability.

 

7.3           Effect of Bankruptcy, Withdrawal, Death or Dissolution of the sole remaining General Partner .

 

(a)          Upon the occurrence of an Event of Bankruptcy as to the sole remaining General Partner (and its removal pursuant to Section 7.4(a)) or the death, withdrawal, removal or dissolution of the sole remaining General Partner (except that, if the sole remaining General Partner is on the date of such occurrence a partnership, the withdrawal, death, dissolution, Event of Bankruptcy as to, or removal of a partner in, such partnership shall be deemed not to be a dissolution of such General Partner if the business of such General Partner is continued by the remaining partner or partners), the Partnership shall be dissolved and terminated unless the Partnership is continued pursuant to Section 7.3(b). The merger of the General Partner with or into any entity that is admitted as a substitute or successor General Partner pursuant to Section 7.2 shall not be deemed to be the withdrawal, dissolution or removal of the General Partner.

 

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(b)          Following the occurrence of an Event of Bankruptcy as to the sole remaining General Partner (and its removal pursuant to Section 7.4(a) hereof) or the death, withdrawal, removal or dissolution of the sole remaining General Partner (except that, if the sole remaining General Partner is, on the date of such occurrence, a partnership, the withdrawal of, death, dissolution, Event of Bankruptcy as to, or removal of a partner in, such partnership shall be deemed not to be a dissolution of such General Partner if the business of such General Partner is continued by the remaining partner or partners), the Limited Partners, within ninety (90) days after such occurrence, may elect to continue the business of the Partnership for the balance of the term specified in Section 2.4 by selecting, subject to Section 7.2 and any other provisions of this Agreement, a substitute General Partner by consent of the Limited Partners holding a majority of the Percentage Interests of all Limited Partners. If the Limited Partners elect to continue the business of the Partnership and admit a substitute General Partner, the relationship with the Partners and of any Person who has acquired an interest of a Partner in the Partnership shall be governed by this Agreement.

 

7.4           Removal of a General Partner .

 

(a)          Upon the occurrence of an Event of Bankruptcy as to, or the dissolution of, a General Partner, such General Partner shall be deemed to be removed automatically; provided, however, that if a General Partner is on the date of such occurrence a partnership, the withdrawal, death or dissolution of, Event of Bankruptcy as to, or removal of, a partner in, such partnership shall be deemed not to be a dissolution of the General Partner if the business of such General Partner is continued by the remaining partner or partners. The Limited Partners may not remove the General Partner, with or without cause.

 

(b)          If a General Partner has been removed pursuant to this Section 7.4 and the Partnership is continued pursuant to Section 7.3, such General Partner shall promptly transfer and assign its General Partnership Interest in the Partnership to the substitute General Partner approved by the Limited Partners in accordance with Section 7.3(b) and otherwise admitted to the Partnership in accordance with Section 7.2. At the time of assignment, the removed General Partner shall be entitled to receive from the substitute General Partner the fair market value of the General Partnership Interest of such removed General Partner as reduced by any damages caused to the Partnership by such General Partner. Such fair market value shall be determined by an appraiser mutually agreed upon by the General Partner and the Limited Partners holding a majority of the Percentage Interests of all Limited Partners within ten (10) days following the removal of the General Partner. If the parties are unable to agree upon an appraiser, the removed General Partner and the Limited Partners holding a majority of the Percentage Interests of all Limited Partners each shall select an appraiser. Each such appraiser shall complete an appraisal of the fair market value of the removed General Partner’s General Partnership Interest within thirty (30) days of the General Partner’s removal, and the fair market value of the removed General Partner’s General Partnership Interest shall be the average of the two appraisals; provided, however, that if the higher appraisal exceeds the lower appraisal by more than 20% of the amount of the lower appraisal, the two appraisers, no later than forty (40) days after the removal of the General Partner, shall select a third appraiser who shall complete an appraisal of the fair market value of the removed General Partner’s General Partnership Interest no later than sixty (60) days after the removal of the General Partner. In such case, the fair market value of the removed General Partner’s General Partnership Interest shall be the average of the two appraisals closest in value.

 

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(c)          The General Partnership Interest of a removed General Partner, during the time after default until transfer under Section 7.4(b), shall be converted to that of a special Limited Partner; provided, however, such removed General Partner shall not have any rights to participate in the management and affairs of the Partnership, and shall not be entitled to any portion of the income, expense, profit, gain or loss allocations or cash distributions allocable or payable, as the case may be, to the Limited Partners. Instead, such removed General Partner shall receive and be entitled only to retain distributions or allocations of such items that it would have been entitled to receive in its capacity as General Partner, until the transfer is effective pursuant to Section 7.4(b).

 

(d)          All Partners shall have given and hereby do give such consents, shall take such actions and shall execute such documents as shall be legally necessary , desirable and sufficient to effect all the foregoing provisions of this Section.

 

Article 8

RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS OF THE LIMITED PARTNERS

 

8.1           Management of the Partnership . The Limited Partners shall not participate in the management or control of Partnership business nor shall they transact any business for the Partnership, nor shall they have the power to sign for or bind the Partnership, such powers being vested solely and exclusively in the General Partner.

 

8.2           Power of Attorney . Each Limited Partner hereby irrevocably appoints the General Partner its true and lawful attorney-in-fact, who may act for each Limited Partner and in its name, place and stead, and for its use and benefit, to sign, acknowledge, swear to, deliver, file or record, at the appropriate public offices, any and all documents, certificates, and instruments as may be deemed necessary or desirable by the General Partner to carry out fully the provisions of this Agreement and the Act in accordance with their terms, which power of attorney is coupled with an interest and shall survive the death, dissolution or legal incapacity of the Limited Partner, or the transfer by the Limited Partner of any part or all of its Partnership Interest.

 

8.3           Limitation on Liability of Limited Partners . No Limited Partner shall be liable for any debts, liabilities, contracts or obligations of the Partnership. A Limited Partner shall be liable to the Partnership only to make payments of its Capital Contribution, if any, as and when due hereunder. After its Capital Contribution is fully paid, no Limited Partner shall, except as otherwise required by the Act, be required to make any further Capital Contributions or other payments or lend any funds to the Partnership.

 

8.4           Ownership by Limited Partner of Corporate General Partner or Affiliate . No Limited Partner shall at any time, either directly or indirectly, own any stock or other interest in the General Partner or in any Affiliate thereof, if such ownership by itself or in conjunction with other stock or other interests owned by other Limited Partners would, in the opinion of counsel for the Partnership, jeopardize the classification of the Partnership as a partnership for federal tax purposes. The General Partner shall be entitled to make such reasonable inquiry of the Limited Partners as is required to establish compliance by the Limited Partners with the provisions of this Section.

 

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8.5           Redemption Right .

 

(a)          Subject to Sections 8.5(b), 8.5(c), 8.5(d), 8.5(e) and 8.5(f) and the provisions of any agreements between the Partnership and one or more Limited Partners with respect to Partnership Units held by them, each Limited Partner other than the General Partner, after holding Series 1 Class E Units or Series 2 Class E Units for at least one year (such Partnership Units, “Eligible Units”), shall have the right (subject to the terms and conditions set forth herein) to require the Partnership to redeem (a “Redemption”) all or a portion of the Eligible Units held by such Limited Partner in exchange (a “Redemption Right”) for Class E REIT Shares (with respect to Eligible Units that are Series 1 Class E Units) or Class I REIT Shares (with respect to Eligible Units that are Series 2 Class E Units) issuable on, or the Cash Amount payable on, the Specified Redemption Date, as determined by the General Partner in its sole discretion, provided that such Eligible Units (the “Tendered Units”) shall have been outstanding for at least one year. Any Redemption Right shall be exercised pursuant to a Notice of Redemption delivered to the Partnership (with a copy to the General Partner) by the Limited Partner exercising the Redemption Right (the “Tendering Party”). Within 30 days of receipt of a Notice of Redemption, the Partnership will send to the Limited Partner submitting the Notice of Redemption a response stating whether the General Partner has determined the applicable Eligible Units will be redeemed for REIT Shares or the Cash Amount. Within 30 days of the Partnership’s delivery of its response, the Limited Partner must affirm to the Partnership that such Limited Partner wishes to proceed with the Redemption, or the request for Redemption will be cancelled (the date such affirmation is received by the Partnership is the “Affirmation Date”). Following such affirmation, the Limited Partner shall still be entitled to withdraw the Notice of Redemption if (i) it provides notice to the Partnership that it wishes to withdraw the request and (ii) the Partnership receives the notice no less than two business days prior to the Specified Redemption Date.

 

No Limited Partner may deliver more than two Notices of Redemption during each calendar year. A Limited Partner may not exercise the Redemption Right for less than 1,000 Partnership Units or, if such Limited Partner holds less than 1,000 Partnership Units, all of the Partnership Units held by such Partner. The Tendering Party shall have no right, with respect to any Partnership Units so redeemed, to receive any distribution paid with respect to such Partnership Units if the record date for such distribution is on or after the Specified Redemption Date.

 

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(b)          If the General Partner elects to redeem Tendered Units for REIT Shares rather than cash, then (I) Tendered Units that are Class 1 Class E Units shall be redeemed for Class E REIT Shares and Tendered Units that are Series 2 Class E Units shall be redeemed for Class I REIT Shares and (II) the Partnership shall direct the General Partner to issue and deliver such REIT Shares to the Tendering Party pursuant to the terms set forth in this Section 8.5(b), in which case, (i) the General Partner, acting as a distinct legal entity, shall assume directly the obligation with respect thereto and shall satisfy the Tendering Party’s exercise of its Redemption Right, and (ii) such transaction shall be treated, for federal income tax purposes, as a transfer by the Tendering Party of such Tendered Units to the General Partner in exchange for REIT Shares. The percentage of the Tendered Units tendered for Redemption by the Tendering Party for which the General Partner elects to issue REIT Shares (rather than cash) is referred to as the “Applicable Percentage.” In making such election to acquire Tendered Units, the Partnership shall act in a fair, equitable and reasonable manner that neither prefers one group or class of Limited Partners over another nor discriminates against a group or class of Limited Partners. If the Partnership elects to redeem any number of Tendered Units for REIT Shares rather than cash, on the Specified Redemption Date, the Tendering Party shall sell such number of the Tendered Units to the General Partner in exchange for a number of REIT Shares equal to the product of (A) the REIT Shares Amount, (B) the Applicable Percentage and (C) with respect to Redemption of Series 2 Class E Units, the Value of Class E REIT Shares divided by the Value of Class I REIT Shares as of the end of the Specified Redemption Date. Such number of REIT Shares shall be delivered by the General Partner as duly authorized, validly issued, fully paid and accessible REIT Shares free of any pledge, lien, encumbrance or restriction, other than the Aggregate Share Ownership Limit (as calculated in accordance with the Articles of Incorporation) and other restrictions provided in the Article of Incorporation, the bylaws of the General Partner, the Securities Act and relevant state securities or “blue sky” laws. Notwithstanding the provisions of Section 8.5(a) and this Section 8.5(b), the Tendering Parties shall have no rights under this Agreement that would otherwise be prohibited under the Articles of Incorporation.

 

(c)          In connection with an exercise of Redemption Rights pursuant to this Section 8.5, the Tendering Party shall submit the following to the General Partner, in addition to the Notice of Redemption:

 

(1)          A written affidavit, dated the same date as the Notice of Redemption, (a) disclosing the actual and constructive ownership, as determined for purposes of Code Sections 856(a)(6) and 856(h), of REIT Shares by (i) such Tendering Party and (ii) any Related Party and (b) representing that, after giving effect to the Redemption, neither the Tendering Party nor any Related Party will own REIT Shares in excess of the Aggregate Share Ownership Limit (or, if applicable the Excepted Holder Limit);

 

(2)          A written representation that neither the Tendering Party nor any Related Party has any intention to acquire any additional REIT Shares prior to the closing of the Redemption on the Specified Redemption Date; and

 

(3)          An undertaking to certify, at and as a condition to the closing of the Redemption on the Specified Redemption Date, that either (a) the actual and constructive ownership of REIT Shares by the Tendering Party and any Related Party remain unchanged from that disclosed in the affidavit required by Section 8.5(c)(1) or (b) after giving effect to the Redemption, neither the Tendering Party nor any Related Party shall own REIT Shares in violation of the Aggregate Share Ownership Limit (or, if applicable, the Excepted Holder Limit).

 

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(4)          Any other documents as the General Partner may reasonably require.

 

(d)          Any Cash Amount to be paid to a Tendering Party pursuant to this Section 8.5 shall be paid on the Specified Redemption Date; provided, however, that the General Partner may elect to cause the Specified Redemption Date to be delayed for up to an additional 180 days to the extent required for the General Partner to cause additional REIT Shares to be issued to provide financing to be used to make such payment of the Cash Amount. Notwithstanding the foregoing, the General Partner agrees to use its best efforts to cause the closing of the acquisition of Tendered Units hereunder to occur as quickly as reasonably possible.

 

(e)          Notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement, the General Partner shall place appropriate restrictions on the ability of the Limited Partners to exercise their Redemption Rights to prevent, among other things, (a) any person from owning shares in excess of the Common Share Ownership Limit, the Aggregate Share Ownership Limit and the Excepted Holder Limit, (b) the General Partner’s common stock from being owned by less than 100 persons, the General Partner from being “closely held” within the meaning of section 856(h) of the Code, and as and if deemed necessary to ensure that the Partnership does not constitute a “publicly traded partnership” under section 7704 of the Code. If and when the General Partner determines that imposing such restrictions is necessary, the General Partner shall give prompt written notice thereof (a “Restriction Notice”) to each of the Limited Partners holding Partnership Units, which notice shall be accompanied by a copy of an opinion of counsel to the Partnership which states that, in the opinion of such counsel, restrictions are necessary in order to avoid having the Partnership be treated as a “publicly traded partnership” under section 7704 of the Code.

 

(f)          A redemption fee may be charged in connection with an exercise of Redemption Rights pursuant to this Section 8.5. Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, a redemption fee of 1.5% of the Cash Amount or REIT Shares otherwise payable to a Limited Partner upon redemption of Series 2 Class E Units pursuant to this Section 8.5 shall be paid by such Limited Partner to DCX Manager LLC ; the Operating Partnership shall deduct such amount from the Cash Amount or REIT Shares otherwise payable to such Limited Partner and pay it to DCX Manager LLC on behalf of the Limited Partner.

 

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8.6           Registration . Subject to the terms of any agreement between the General Partner and one or more Limited Partners with respect to Series 2 Class E Units or Series 1 Class E Units held by them:

 

(a)           Registration of the Common Stock . The General Partner agrees to file with the Commission a registration statement covering the resale of the REIT Shares that may be issued upon redemption of such Partnership Units pursuant to Section 8.5 (“Redemption Shares”) if a Limited Partner or Limited Partners who together hold Redemption Shares that are Class E REIT Shares or Redemption Shares that are Class I REIT Shares that, in either case, have an aggregate value of at least $10 million (based on the then current price) request that the General Partner register for resale such Redemption Shares. Such requests shall be made in writing and shall state the number of Redemption Shares to be disposed of. Within 30 days after receipt of a request for registration, whatever the amount of the Redemption Shares requested to be registered, the General Partner shall give written notice of such request to all other Limited Partners holding Partnership Units; provided however, that the General Partner shall be obligated to give such notice no more than one time in any six-month period. Further, the General Partner shall include in a registration statement all such Redemption Shares with respect to which the General Partner has received written requests for inclusion therein (whether or not such Redemption Shares have been issued) within 15 days after the receipt of the General Partner’s notice. The General Partner further agrees to use its commercially reasonable efforts to file the registration statement within 90 days of its receipt of the written request described above, and to maintain the effectiveness of such registration statement for a period of no more than two years.

 

(b)           Listing on Securities Exchange . If the General Partner shall list or maintain the listing of Class E REIT Shares or Class I REIT Shares on any securities exchange or national market system, it will at its expense and as necessary to permit the registration and sale of the Redemption Shares of such listed class or classes hereunder, list thereon, maintain and, when necessary, increase such listing to include such Redemption Shares.

 

(c)           Registration Not Required . Notwithstanding the foregoing, the General Partner shall not be required to file or maintain the effectiveness of a registration statement covering the resale of Redemption Shares if, in the opinion of counsel to the General Partner, such Redemption Shares could be sold by the holders thereof pursuant to Rule 144 under the Securities Act, or any successor rule thereto.

 

8.7           Distribution Reinvestment Plan . Limited Partners may have the opportunity to join the General Partner’s distribution reinvestment plan by completing an enrollment form which is available upon request. A copy of the General Partner’s distribution reinvestment plan is also available upon request. The shares of the General Partner’s common stock which may be issued under the General Partner’s distribution reinvestment plan are offered only by a prospectus.

 

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Article 9

TRANSFERS OF LIMITED PARTNERSHIP INTERESTS

 

9.1           Purchase for Investment .

 

(a)          Each Limited Partner hereby represents and warrants to the General Partner and to the Partnership that the acquisition of his Partnership Interest is made as a principal for his account for investment purposes only and not with a view to the resale or distribution of such Partnership Interest.

 

(b)          Each Limited Partner agrees that he will not sell, assign or otherwise transfer his Partnership Interest or any fraction thereof, whether voluntarily or by operation of law or at judicial sale or otherwise, to any Person who does not make the representations and warranties to the General Partner set forth in Section 9.1(a) above and similarly agree not to sell, assign or transfer such Partnership Interest or fraction thereof to any Person who does not similarly represent, warrant and agree.

 

9.2           Restrictions on Transfer of Limited Partnership Interests .

 

(a)          Subject to the provisions of 9.2(b) and (c), no Limited Partner may offer, sell, assign, hypothecate, pledge or otherwise transfer all or any portion of his Limited Partnership Interest, or any of such Limited Partner’s economic rights as a Limited Partner, whether voluntarily or by operation of law or at judicial sale or otherwise (collectively, a “Transfer”) without the consent of the General Partner, which consent may be granted or withheld in its sole and absolute discretion. Any such purported transfer undertaken without such consent shall be considered to be null and void ab initio and shall not be given effect. The General Partner may require, as a condition of any Transfer to which it consents, that the transferor assume all costs incurred by the Partnership in connection therewith.

 

(b)          No Limited Partner may withdraw from the Partnership other than as a result of a permitted Transfer (i.e., a Transfer consented to as contemplated by clause (a) above or clause (c) below or a Transfer pursuant to Section 9.5 below) of all of its Partnership Interest pursuant to this Article 9 or pursuant to a redemption of all of its Partnership Units pursuant to Section 8.5. Upon the permitted Transfer or redemption of all of a Limited Partner’s Partnership Interest, such Limited Partner shall cease to be a Limited Partner.

 

(c)          Notwithstanding Section 9.2(a) and subject to Sections 9.2(d), (e) and (f) below, a Limited Partner may Transfer, without the consent of the General Partner, all or a portion of its Partnership Interest to (i) a parent or parent’s spouse, natural or adopted descendant or descendants, spouse of such descendant, or brother or sister, or a trust created by such Limited Partner for the benefit of such Limited Partner and/or any such person(s), of which trust such Limited Partner or any such person(s) is a trustee, (ii) a corporation controlled by a Person or Persons named in (i) above, or (iii) if the Limited Partner is an entity, its beneficial owners.

 

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(d)          No Limited Partner may effect a Transfer of its Limited Partnership Interest, in whole or in part, if, in the opinion of legal counsel for the Partnership, such proposed Transfer would require the registration of the Limited Partnership Interest under the Securities Act or would otherwise violate any applicable federal or state securities or blue sky law (including investment suitability standards).

 

(e)          No Transfer by a Limited Partner of its Partnership Interest, in whole or in part, may be made to any Person if (i) in the opinion of legal counsel for the Partnership, the transfer would result in the Partnership’s being treated as an association taxable as a corporation (other than a qualified REIT subsidiary within the meaning of Section 856(i) of the Code), (ii) in the opinion of legal counsel for the Partnership, it would adversely affect the ability of the General Partner to continue to qualify as a REIT or subject the General Partner to any additional taxes under Section 857 or Section 4981 of the Code, or (iii) such transfer is effectuated through an “established securities market” or a “secondary market (or the substantial equivalent thereof)” within the meaning of Section 7704 of the Code.

 

(f)           No transfer by a Limited Partner of any Partnership Interest may be made to a lender to the Partnership or any Person who is related (within the meaning of Regulations Section 1.752-4(b)) to any lender to the Partnership whose loan constitutes a nonrecourse liability (within the meaning of Regulations Section 1.752-1(a)(2)), without the consent of the General Partner, which may be withheld in its sole and absolute discretion, provided that as a condition to such consent the lender will be required to enter into an arrangement with the Partnership and the General Partner to exchange or redeem for the Cash Amount any Partnership Units in which a security interest is held simultaneously with the time at which such lender would be deemed to be a Partner in the Partnership for purposes of allocating liabilities to such lender under Section 752 of the Code.

 

(g)          Any Transfer in contravention of any of the provisions of this Article 9 shall be void and ineffectual and shall not be binding upon, or recognized by, the Partnership.

 

(h)          Prior to the consummation of any Transfer under this Article 9, the transferor and/or the transferee shall deliver to the General Partner such opinions, certificates and other documents as the General Partner shall request in connection with such Transfer.

 

9.3           Admission of Substitute Limited Partner .

 

(a)          Subject to the other provisions of this Article 9, an assignee of the Limited Partnership Interest of a Limited Partner (which shall be understood to include any purchaser, transferee, donee, or other recipient of any disposition of such Limited Partnership Interest) shall be deemed admitted as a Limited Partner of the Partnership only with the consent of the General Partner and upon the satisfactory completion of the following:

  

(i)         The assignee shall have accepted and agreed to be bound by the terms and provisions of this Agreement by executing a counterpart or an amendment thereof, including a revised Exhibit A, and such other documents or instruments as the General Partner may require in order to effect the admission of such Person as a Limited Partner.

 

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(ii)        To the extent required, an amended Certificate evidencing the admission of such Person as a Limited Partner shall have been signed, acknowledged and filed for record in accordance with the Act.

 

(iii)       The assignee shall have delivered a letter containing the representation set forth in Section 9.1(a) hereof and the agreement set forth in Section 9.1(b) hereof.

 

(iv)       If the assignee is a corporation, partnership or trust, the assignee shall have provided the General Partner with evidence satisfactory to counsel for the Partnership of the assignee’s authority to become a Limited Partner under the terms and provisions of this Agreement.

 

(v)        The assignee shall have executed a power of attorney containing the terms and provisions set forth in Section 8.2 hereof.

 

(vi)       The assignee shall have paid all legal fees and other expenses of the Partnership and the General Partner and filing and publication costs in connection with its substitution as a Limited Partner.

 

(vii)      The assignee has obtained the prior written consent of the General Partner to its admission as a Substitute Limited Partner, which consent may be given or denied in the exercise of the General Partner’s sole and absolute discretion.

 

(b)          For the purpose of allocating Profits and Losses and distributing cash received by the Partnership, a Substitute Limited Partner shall be treated as having become, and appearing in the records of the Partnership as, a Partner upon the filing of the Certificate described in Section 9.3(a)(ii) hereof or, if no such filing is required, the later of the date specified in the transfer documents or the date on which the General Partner has received all necessary instruments of transfer and substitution.

 

(c)          The General Partner shall cooperate with the Person seeking to become a Substitute Limited Partner by preparing the documentation required by this Section and making all official filings and publications. The Partnership shall take all such action as promptly as practicable after the satisfaction of the conditions in this Article 9 to the admission of such Person as a Limited Partner of the Partnership.

 

9.4           Rights of Assignees of Partnership Interests .

 

(a)          Subject to the provisions of Sections 9.1 and 9.2 hereof, except as required by operation of law, the Partnership shall not be obligated for any purposes whatsoever to recognize the assignment by any Limited Partner of its Partnership Interest until the Partnership has received notice thereof.

 

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(b)          Any Person who is the assignee of all or any portion of a Limited Partner’s Limited Partnership Interest, but does not become a Substitute Limited Partner and desires to make a further assignment of such Limited Partnership Interest, shall be subject to all the provisions of this Article 9 to the same extent and in the same manner as any Limited Partner desiring to make an assignment of its Limited Partnership Interest.

 

9.5           Effect of Bankruptcy, Death, Incompetence or Termination of a Limited Partner . The occurrence of an Event of Bankruptcy as to a Limited Partner, the death of a Limited Partner or a final adjudication that a Limited Partner is incompetent (which term shall include, but not be limited to, insanity) shall not cause the termination or dissolution of the Partnership, and the business of the Partnership shall continue if an order for relief in a bankruptcy proceeding is entered against a Limited Partner, the trustee or receiver of his estate or, if he dies, his executor, administrator or trustee, or, if he is finally adjudicated incompetent, his committee, guardian or conservator, shall have the rights of such Limited Partner for the purpose of settling or managing his estate property and such power as the bankrupt, deceased or incompetent Limited Partner possessed to assign all or any part of his Partnership Interest and to join with the assignee in satisfying conditions precedent to the admission of the assignee as a Substitute Limited Partner.

 

9.6           Joint Ownership of Interests . A Partnership Interest may be acquired by two individuals as joint tenants with right of survivorship, provided that such individuals either are married or are related and share the same home as tenants in common. The written consent or vote of both owners of any such jointly held Partnership Interest shall be required to constitute the action of the owners of such Partnership Interest; provided, however, that the written consent of only one joint owner will be required if the Partnership has been provided with evidence satisfactory to the counsel for the Partnership that the actions of a single joint owner can bind both owners under the applicable laws of the state of residence of such joint owners. Upon the death of one owner of a Partnership Interest held in a joint tenancy with a right of survivorship, the Partnership Interest shall become owned solely by the survivor as a Limited Partner and not as an assignee. The Partnership need not recognize the death of one of the owners of a jointly-held Partnership Interest until it shall have received notice of such death. Upon notice to the General Partner from either owner, the General Partner shall cause the Partnership Interest to be divided into two equal Partnership Interests, which shall thereafter be owned separately by each of the former owners.

 

Article 10

BOOKS AND RECORDS; ACCOUNTING; TAX MATTERS

 

10.1         Books and Records . At all times during the continuance of the Partnership, the Partners shall keep or cause to be kept at the Partnership’s specified office true and complete books of account in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles, including: (a) a current list of the full name and last known business address of each Partner, (b) a copy of the Certificate of Limited Partnership and all Certificates of amendment thereto, (c) copies of the Partnership’s federal, state and local income tax returns and reports, (d) copies of this Agreement and amendments thereto and any financial statements of the Partnership for the three most recent years and (e) all documents and information required under the Act. Any Partner or its duly authorized representative, upon paying the costs of collection, duplication and mailing, shall be entitled to inspect or copy such records during ordinary business hours.

 

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10.2         Custody of Partnership Funds; Bank Accounts .

 

(a)          All funds of the Partnership not otherwise invested shall be deposited in one or more accounts maintained in such banking or brokerage institutions as the General Partner shall determine, and withdrawals shall be made only on such signature or signatures as the General Partner may, from time to time, determine.

 

(b)          All deposits and other funds not needed in the operation of the business of the Partnership may be invested by the General Partner in investment grade instruments (or investment companies whose portfolio consists primarily thereof), government obligations, certificates of deposit, bankers’ acceptances and municipal notes and bonds. The funds of the Partnership shall not be commingled with the funds of any other Person except for such commingling as may necessarily result from an investment in those investment companies permitted by this Section 10.2(b).

 

10.3         Fiscal and Taxable Year . The fiscal and taxable year of the Partnership shall be the calendar year.

 

10.4         Annual Tax Information and Report . Within seventy-five (75) days after the end of each fiscal year of the Partnership, the General Partner shall furnish to each person who was a Limited Partner at any time during such year the tax information necessary to file such Limited Partner’s individual tax returns as shall be reasonably required by law.

 

10.5         Tax Matters Partner; Tax Elections; Special Basis Adjustments .

 

(a)          The General Partner shall be the Tax Matters Partner of the Partnership within the meaning of Section 6231(a)(7) of the Code. As Tax Matters Partner, the General Partner shall have the right and obligation to take all actions authorized and required, respectively, by the Code for the Tax Matters Partner. The General Partner shall have the right to retain professional assistance in respect of any audit of the Partnership by the Service and all out-of-pocket expenses and fees incurred by the General Partner on behalf of the Partnership as Tax Matters Partner shall constitute Partnership expenses. In the event the General Partner receives notice of a final Partnership adjustment under Section 6223(a)(2) of the Code, the General Partner shall either (i) file a court petition for judicial review of such final adjustment within the period provided under Section 6226(a) of the Code, a copy of which petition shall be mailed to all Limited Partners on the date such petition is filed, or (ii) mail a written notice to all Limited Partners, within such period, that describes the General Partner’s reasons for determining not to file such a petition.

 

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(b)          All elections required or permitted to be made by the Partnership under the Code or any applicable state or local tax law shall be made by the General Partner in its sole and absolute discretion.

 

(c)          In the event of a transfer of all or any part of the Partnership Interest of any Partner, the Partnership, at the option of the General Partner, may elect pursuant to Section 754 of the Code to adjust the basis of the Partnership’s assets. Notwithstanding anything contained in Article 5, any adjustments made pursuant to Section 754 of the Code shall affect only the successor in interest to the transferring Partner and in no event shall be taken into account in establishing, maintaining or computing Capital Accounts for the other Partners for any purpose under this Agreement. Each Partner will furnish the Partnership with all information necessary to give effect to such election.

 

10.6         Reports to Limited Partners .

 

(a)          As soon as practicable after the close of each fiscal quarter (other than the last quarter of the fiscal year), the General Partner shall cause to be mailed to each Limited Partner a quarterly report containing financial statements of the Partnership, or of the General Partner if such statements are prepared solely on a consolidated basis with the General Partner, for such fiscal quarter, presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. As soon as practicable after the close of each fiscal year, the General Partner shall cause to be mailed to each Limited Partner an annual report containing financial statements of the Partnership, or of the General Partner if such statements are prepared solely on a consolidated basis with the General Partner, for such fiscal year, presented in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles. The annual financial statements shall be audited by accountants selected by the General Partner.

 

(b)          Any Partner shall further have the right to a private audit of the books and records of the Partnership at the expense of such Partner, provided such audit is made for Partnership purposes and is made during normal business hours.

 

Article 11

AMENDMENT OF AGREEMENT; MERGER

 

The General Partner’s consent shall be required for any amendment to this Agreement. The General Partner, without the consent of the Limited Partners, may amend this Agreement in any respect or merge or consolidate the Partnership with or into any other partnership or business entity (as defined in Section 17-211 of the Act) in a transaction pursuant to Section 7.1(c), (d) or (e) hereof; provided, however, that the following amendments and any other merger or consolidation of the Partnership shall require the consent of Limited Partners holding more than 50% of the Percentage Interests of the Limited Partners:

 

(a)          any amendment affecting the operation of the Conversion Factor or the Redemption Right (except as provided in Section 8.5(d) or 7.1(d)) in a manner adverse to the Limited Partners;

 

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(b)          any amendment that would adversely affect the rights of the Limited Partners to receive the distributions payable to them hereunder, other than with respect to the issuance of additional Partnership Units pursuant to Section 4.3;

 

(c)          any amendment that would alter the Partnership’s allocations of Profit and Loss to the Limited Partners, other than with respect to the issuance of additional Partnership Units pursuant to Section 4.3; or

 

(d)          any amendment that would impose on the Limited Partners any obligation to make additional Capital Contributions to the Partnership.

 

Article 12

GENERAL PROVISIONS

 

12.1         Notices . All communications required or permitted under this Agreement shall be in writing and shall be deemed to have been given when delivered personally or upon deposit in the United States mail, registered, postage prepaid return receipt requested, to the Partners at the addresses set forth in Exhibit A ; provided, however, that any Partner may specify a different address by notifying the General Partner in writing of such different address. Notices to the Partnership shall be delivered at or mailed to its specified office.

 

12.2         Survival of Rights . Subject to the provisions hereof limiting transfers, this Agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the Partners and the Partnership and their respective legal representatives, successors, transferees and assigns.

 

12.3         Additional Documents . Each Partner agrees to perform all further acts and execute, swear to, acknowledge and deliver all further documents which may be reasonable, necessary, appropriate or desirable to carry out the provisions of this Agreement or the Act.

 

12.4         Severability . If any provision of this Agreement shall be declared illegal, invalid, or unenforceable in any jurisdiction, then such provision shall be deemed to be severable from this Agreement (to the extent permitted by law) and in any event such illegality, invalidity or unenforceability shall not affect the remainder hereof.

 

12.5         Entire Agreement . This Agreement and exhibits attached hereto constitute the entire Agreement of the Partners and supersede all prior written agreements (including the Prior Agreement) and prior and contemporaneous oral agreements, understandings and negotiations with respect to the subject matter hereof.

 

12.6         Pronouns and Plurals . When the context in which words are used in the Agreement indicates that such is the intent, words in the singular number shall include the plural and the masculine gender shall include the neuter or female gender as the context may require.

 

12.7         Headings . The Article headings or sections in this Agreement are for convenience only and shall not be used in construing the scope of this Agreement or any particular Article.

 

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12.8         Counterparts . This Agreement may be executed in several counterparts, each of which shall be deemed to be an original copy and all of which together shall constitute one and the same instrument binding on all parties hereto, notwithstanding that all parties shall not have signed the same counterpart.

 

12.9         Governing Law . This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware; provided, however, that any cause of action for violation of federal or state securities laws shall not be governed by this Section 12.9.

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have hereunder affixed their signatures to this Fifth Amended and Restated Limited Partnership Agreement, all as of the date first set forth above. 

     
  GENERAL PARTNER :
     
  DIVIDEND CAPITAL DIVERSIFIED PROPERTY FUND INC. , a Maryland corporation
     
  By: /s/ M. Kirk Scott
    Name: M. Kirk Scott
    Title: Chief Financial Officer
     
  LIMITED PARTNERS:
     
  DIVIDEND CAPITAL DIVERSIFIED PROPERTY FUND INC. , a Maryland corporation, attorney-in-fact for all Limited Partners
     
  By: /s/ M. Kirk Scott
    Name: M. Kirk Scott
    Title: Chief Financial Officer

 

 
 

 

EXHIBIT A

 

PARTNERS, CAPITAL CONTRIBUTIONS, UNITS AND PERCENTAGE INTEREST

 

Partner   Cash Contribution     Agreed Value of
Capital Contribution
    Class E Units     Class A Units     Class I Units     Class W Units    

Percentage
Interest

 

 

GENERAL PARTNER :

 

                                         
Dividend Capital Diversified
Property Fund Inc.
                                                       
                                                         
518 17 th Street, 17th Floor   $ 2,000     $ 2,000       200                         <0.01 %  
                                                         
Denver, CO 80202                                                        

 

LIMITED PARTNERS :

 

                                                       
Dividend Capital Diversified
Property Fund Inc.
                                                       
                                                         
518 17 th Street, 17th Floor   $ 1,662,020,456     $ 1,667,494,369       137,328,462       1,850,674       2,106,930       23,255,723       92.84 %
                                                       
Denver, CO 80202                                                        
Other Limited Partners   $ 120,499,148     $ 120,499,148       12,687,755                         7.16 %
Totals   $ 1,782,521,604     $ 1,787,995,517       150,016,417       1,850,674       2,106,930       23,255,723       100 %

 

A- 1
 

    

EXHIBIT B

NOTICE OF EXERCISE OF REDEMPTION RIGHT

 

In accordance with Section 8.5 of the Fifth Amended and Restated Limited Partnership Agreement (the “Agreement”) of Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, the undersigned hereby irrevocably (i) presents for redemption Series __ Class E Partnership Units in Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP in accordance with the terms of the Agreement and the Redemption Right referred to in Section 8.5 thereof, (ii) surrenders such Partnership Units and all right, title and interest therein, and (iii) directs that the Cash Amount or REIT Shares (as defined in the Agreement) as determined by the General Partner deliverable upon exercise of the Redemption Right be delivered to the address specified below, and if REIT Shares (as defined in the Agreement) are to be delivered, such REIT Shares be registered or placed in the name(s) and at the address(es) specified below.

         
Dated:________ __, _____    
      (Name of Limited Partner)
       
      (Signature of Limited Partner)
       
      (Mailing Address)
       
      (City)     (State)     (Zip Code)
       
      Signature Guaranteed by:
       
If REIT Shares are to be issued, issue to:    
       
Name:        
         
Social Security or    
Tax I.D. Number:      

  

B- 1

 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. POS AM

Exhibit 10.22

 

FINAL FORM

 

TRUST AGREEMENT


OF DCX [ · ] DST,
a Delaware statutory trust

DATED AS OF


[ · ], [ · ]

BY AND AMONG

 

TRT [ · ] LLC,
a Delaware limited liability company,


AS INITIAL DEPOSITOR

DCX [ · ] MANAGER LLC,
a Delaware limited liability company,

AS MANAGER & SIGNATORY TRUSTEE

 

AND

 

THE CORPORATION TRUST COMPANY,

 

AS DELAWARE TRUSTEE 

 

 
 

Table of Contents

       
      Page
       
ARTICLE 1 DEFINITIONS AND INTERPRETATION 2
   
  Section 1. Definitions 2
       
ARTICLE 2 GENERAL MATTERS 5
   
  Section 2.1 Organizational Matters 5
       
  Section 2.2 Declaration of Trust and Statement of Intent 6
       
  Section 2.3 Purposes 6
       
ARTICLE 3 PROVISIONS RELATING TO TAX TREATMENT 6
   
  Section 3.1 Article 3 Supersedes All Other Provisions of this Trust Agreement 6
       
  Section 3.2 Provisions Relating to Tax Treatment 7
 
ARTICLE 4 CONCERNING THE DELAWARE TRUSTEE AND THE SIGNATORY  TRUSTEE 8
       
  Section 4.1 Power and Authority of the Delaware Trustee 8
       
  Section 4.2 Delaware Trustee May Request Direction 9
       
  Section 4.3 Delaware Trustee’s Capacity 9
       
  Section 4.4 Duties 9
       
  Section 4.5 Indemnification 10
       
  Section 4.6 Removal; Resignation; Succession 11
       
  Section 4.7 Fees and Expenses 11
       
  Section 4.8 Signatory Trustee 11
       
ARTICLE 5 CONCERNING THE MANAGER 12
   
  Section 5.1 Power and Authority 12
       
  Section 5.2 Manager’s Capacity 12
       
  Section 5.3 Duties 12
       
  Section 5.4 Indemnification 14
       
  Section 5.5 Fees and Expenses 15
       
  Section 5.6 Sale of Trust Estate by Manager Is Binding 15
       
  Section 5.7 Removal/ Resignation; Succession 15
       
ARTICLE 6 BENEFICIAL INTERESTS 16
   
  Section 6.1 Issuance of Class 1 and Class 2 Beneficial Interests 16

 

 
 

 

       
  Section 6.2 Ownership Records 16
       
  Section 6.3 [Intentionally Omitted] 16
       
  Section 6.4 Restrictions on Transfer 16
       
  Section 6.5 Conditions to Admission of New Beneficial Owners 17
       
  Section 6.6 Limit on Number of Beneficial Owners 17
       
  Section 6.7 Representations and Acknowledgements of Beneficial Owners 18
       
  Section 6.8 Status of Relationship 18
       
  Section 6.9 No Legal Title to Trust Estate 18
       
  Section 6.10 In-Kind Distributions 18
       
  Section 6.11 Rights and Powers of Class 2 Beneficial Owner Prior to Conversion Notice 18
       
  Section 6.12 Issuance of Conversion Notice 19
       
  Section 6.13 Rights and Powers of Class 1 Beneficial Owners 19
   
  Section 6.14 Contributions by the Class 1 Beneficial Owners; Reduction in Class 2 Beneficial Interest 20
       
ARTICLE 7 DISTRIBUTIONS AND REPORTS 20
   
  Section 7.1 Payments From Trust Estate Only 20
       
  Section 7.2 Operating Account 20
       
  Section 7.3 Distributions in General 20
       
  Section 7.4 Distribution Upon Dissolution 21
       
  Section 7.5 Cash and other Accounts; Reports by the Manager 21
       
ARTICLE 8 RELIANCE; REPRESENTATIONS; COVENANTS 21
   
  Section 8.1 Good Faith Reliance 21
       
  Section 8.2 No Representations or Warranties as to Certain Matters 22
       
ARTICLE 9 TERMINATION 22
   
  Section 9.1 Termination in General 22
       
  Section 9.2 Termination to Protect and Conserve Trust Estate 22
       
  Section 9.3 Sale of the Trust Estate 23
       
  Section 9.4 Manager Fee on Sale 23
       
  Section 9.5 Distribution Upon Sale or Transfer Distribution 24
       
  Section 9.6 Certificate of Cancellation 24
       
ARTICLE 10 MISCELLANEOUS 24
   
  Section 10.1 Limitations on Rights of Others 24

 

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  Section 10.2 Successors and Assigns 24
       
  Section 10.3 Usage of Terms 24
       
  Section 10.4 Headings 24
       
  Section 10.5 Amendments 25
       
  Section 10.6 Notices 25
       
  Section 10.7 Governing Law 26
       

 

 

Section 10.8 Counterparts 26
  Section 10.9 Severability 26
       
  Section 10.10 Signature of Beneficial Owners 27
       
  Section 10.11 Arbitration 27

 

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TRUST AGREEMENT
OF
DCX [ · ] DST,
A DELAWARE STATUTORY TRUST

 

This TRUST AGREEMENT, dated as of [ · ], [ · ] (as the same may be amended or supplemented from time to time, this “ Trust Agreement ”), is made by and among TRT [ · ] LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (as the “ Initial Depositor ”), DCX [ · ] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, as Manager and Signatory Trustee, and the Corporation Trust Company of Delaware (“ CTC ”) as Delaware Trustee.

 

RECITALS

 

A.          On [ · ],[ · ], the Initial Depositor purchased from [ · ], a [ · ] (the “ Seller ”) the land parcel located in, [ · ], as more particularly described on Exhibit A (the “ Land Parcel ”; together with, and subject to, that certain [Development and Operating] Agreement dated [ · ],[ · ], as amended from time to time, and together with the rights and appurtenances pertaining to the Land Parcel, including all of Initial Depositor’s right, title and interest in and to (A) the adjacent streets, roads, alleys, strips, gores, easements, rights of ingress or egress, rights-of-way, reversionary rights, and any other interests in, on, or to any land, highway, street, road or avenue, open or proposed, in, on, across, in front of, abutting or adjoining the Land Parcel, and any awards made or to be made in connection therewith, and (B) the air rights or development rights, if any, owned by Initial Depositor appertaining to or otherwise benefitting the Land Parcel, and together with all of the Initial Depositor’s right, title and interest, if any, in all buildings, structures, fixtures and improvements located on the Land Parcel [(Initial Depositor’s interest being subject to certain subleases under which [ · ] and [ · ] are the owners of certain buildings, structures, fixtures and improvements subject to a reversionary interest of Initial Depositor)], collectively, the “ Real Estate ”).

 

B.          The Real Estate is subject to the Master Lease (as hereinafter defined).

 

C.          The Initial Depositor and CTC have agreed to form a statutory trust in accordance with Chapter 38 of Title 12 of the Delaware Code, 12 Del. C. §3801, et seq. (the “ Statutory Trust Act ”).

 

D.          The Initial Depositor will convey the Real Estate to the Trust (as hereinafter defined) in exchange for one hundred percent (100%) of the Class 2 Beneficial Interests (as hereinafter defined) in the Trust.

 

E.          It is anticipated that the Initial Depositor will sell and transfer (the “ Affiliate Transfer ”) all of its Class 2 Beneficial Interests to DCX [ · ] TRS LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (the “ Successor Depositor ”), at which time the Successor Depositor will execute a joinder to this Trust Agreement.

 

F.          It is anticipated that certain Persons (as hereinafter defined) will acquire Class 1 Beneficial Interests (as hereinafter defined) in the Trust in exchange for payment of money to the Trust and become Class 1 Beneficial Owners (as hereinafter defined) in accordance with the provisions of this Trust Agreement, which money will be distributed to the Depositor (as hereinafter defined) in whole or partial redemption of the Beneficial Interest held by the Depositor.

 

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G.          The Trust will retain DCX [ · ] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, as the Manager of the Trust to undertake certain actions and perform certain duties that would otherwise be performed by the Trust.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the mutual agreements contained in this Trust Agreement and other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, the parties hereby agree as follows:

 

Article 1
DEFINITIONS AND INTERPRETATION

  

Section 1.           Definitions . Capitalized terms used in this Trust Agreement shall have the following meanings:

 

Affiliate ” means, with respect to any specified Person, any other Person directly or indirectly controlling or controlled by or under direct or indirect common control with such specified Person. For purposes of this definition, “control,” when used with respect to any specified Person, means the power to direct the management and policies of such Person, directly or indirectly, whether through the ownership of voting securities, by contract, or otherwise; and the terms “controlling” and “controlled” shall have meanings correlative to the foregoing.

 

Affiliated Transfer ” has the meaning given to such term in Recital E .

 

Beneficial Interest ” means a beneficial interest in the Trust, as such term is used in the Statutory Trust Act, all of which interests shall be either Class 1 Beneficial Interests or Class 2 Beneficial Interests.

 

Beneficial Owner ” means each Person who, at the time of determination, holds a Beneficial Interest as reflected on the most recent Ownership Records.

 

Business Day ” is any day other than on Saturday, Sunday or legal holiday in the State of Delaware.

 

CTC ” means the Corporation Trust Company.

 

Cause ” shall mean willful misconduct, bad faith, fraud or gross negligence, as determined by arbitration under the procedures described in Section 10.11 .

 

Certificate of Trust ” means the certificate of trust of the Trust in substantially the form of Exhibit C .

 

Class 1 Beneficial Interests ” means the Beneficial Interests held by the Investors.

 

Class 2 Beneficial Interest ” means the Beneficial Interest held by the Depositor.

 

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Class 1 Beneficial Owners ” means the Investors.

 

Class 2 Beneficial Owner ” means the Depositor.

 

Closing Date ” means that date of the first sale of Beneficial Interests in the Trust to the Investors.

 

Code ” means the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended from time to time.

 

Conversion Notice ” means the notice, in substantially the form of Exhibit G , issued by the Depositor to the Delaware Trustee and the Manager stating that the provisions of Section 3.2(c) shall become effective upon receipt of the notice by the Delaware Trustee.

 

Delaware Trustee ” means the Person serving, at the time of determination, as the Delaware Trustee under this Trust Agreement. As of the Effective Date, the Delaware Trustee is CTC.

 

Deposit Date ” means the date on which the transaction described in Recital D occurs.

 

Depositor ” means, at any time prior to the Affiliate Transfer, the Initial Depositor and, at any time after the Affiliate Transfer, the Successor Depositor.

 

Effective Date ” means the date of this Trust Agreement as specified in the introductory paragraph of this Trust Agreement.

 

Exhibit ” means an exhibit attached to this Trust Agreement, unless otherwise specified.

 

Investors ” means the purchasers of Class 1 Beneficial Interests in the Trust.

 

LP ” has the meaning given to such term in Section 9.2 .

 

Manager ” means the Person serving, at the time of determination, as the manager under this Trust Agreement. As of the Effective Date, the Manager is DCX [ · ] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company.

 

Manager Covered Expenses ” has the meaning given to such term in Section 5.4 .

 

Manager Indemnified Persons ” has the meaning given to such term in Section 5.4 .

 

Master Lease ” means that master lease agreement between the Master Tenant and the Trust, relating to the Real Estate, together with all amendments, supplements and modifications thereto.

 

Master Tenant ” means DPF [ · ] Master Tenant LLC, a Delaware limited liability company.

 

Offered Interest ” means a Class 1 Beneficial Interest, or portion thereof, that is being offered for sale pursuant to a Third-Party Offer.

 

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Offerees ” means, with respect to a Third-Party Offer, the Manager and each Class 1 Beneficial Owner other than the Selling Beneficial Owner.

 

Ownership Records ” means the records maintained by the Manager, substantially in the form of Exhibit D , indicating from time to time the name, mailing address, and Percentage Share of each Beneficial Owner, which records shall initially indicate the Depositor as the sole Beneficial Owner and shall be revised by the Manager contemporaneously to reflect the issuance of Beneficial Interests in accordance with this Trust Agreement, changes in mailing addresses, or other changes.

 

Percentage Share ” means, for each Beneficial Owner, the percentage of the aggregate Beneficial Interests in the Trust held by such Beneficial Owner as reflected on the most recent Ownership Records. For the avoidance of doubt, the sum of (i) the Percentage Share of the Class 1 Beneficial Interests and (ii) the Percentage Share of the Class 2 Beneficial Interests at all times shall be one hundred percent (100%).

 

Permitted Investment ” has the meaning set forth in Section 7.3 .

 

Permitted Transfer ” means (a) the transfer of a Class 1 Beneficial Interest (i) by devise, descent or by operation of law upon the death of a Class 1 Beneficial Owner or the member, partner, or stockholder of a Class 1 Beneficial Owner or (ii) by an individual to a trust or other entity created for estate planning purposes primarily for the benefit of such individual or (b) the transfer of a Class 2 Beneficial Interest by the Depositor to an Affiliate.

 

Person ” means a natural person, corporation, limited partnership, general partnership, joint stock company, joint venture, association, company, trust, bank trust company, land trust, business trust, statutory trust or other organization, whether or not a legal entity, and a government or agency or political subdivision thereof.

 

Purchase Agreement ” means the agreement to be entered into by the Trust (through the Manager) and each Investor with respect to the acquisition of Class 1 Beneficial Interests by the Investors.

 

Real Estate ” has the meaning given to such term in Recital A .

 

Regulations ” means U.S. Treasury Regulations promulgated under the Code.

 

Reserves ” has the meaning given to such term in Section 7.3 .

 

ROFR Notice ” has the meaning given to such term in Section 6.4(a) .

 

Secretary of State ” has the meaning given to such term in Section 2.1(b).

 

Section ” means a section of this Trust Agreement, unless otherwise specified.

 

Securities Act ” means the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

 

Seller ” means [ · ], a [ · ].

 

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Selling Beneficial Owner ” means a Class 1 Beneficial Owner who receives a Third-Party Offer.

 

Signatory Trustee ” has the meaning given to such term in Section 4.8 .

 

Statutory Trust Act ” has the meaning given to such term in Recital C .

 

Successor Depositor ” has the meaning given to such term in Recital E .

 

Third-Party Offer ” means an offer, whether solicited or unsolicited, to purchase all or a portion of a Class 1 Beneficial Interest or a controlling ownership interest in the Selling Beneficial Owner that (a) is for a specified price and stated terms, (b) is made by a Person, identified therein by name and address and (c) contains all terms and conditions of the proposed purchase and sale thereof.

 

Transaction Documents ” means the Trust Agreement (including all agreements the forms of which are attached as exhibits thereto), the Purchase Agreement, the Master Lease, together with any other documents to be executed in furtherance of the investment activities of the Trust.

 

Transfer Distribution ” has the meaning given to such term in Section 9.2 .

 

Trust ” means DCX [ · ] DST, a Delaware statutory trust formed by and in accordance with, and governed by, this Trust Agreement.

 

Trust Agreement ” has the meaning given to such term in the introductory paragraph of this Trust Agreement.

 

Trust Year ” means (i) initially, the period of time commencing on the Deposit Date and ending on the date that is twelve (12) months later and (ii) subsequently, each successive twelve (12) month period thereafter.

 

Trustee Covered Expenses ” has the meaning given to such term in Section 4.5 .

 

Trustee Indemnified Persons ” has the meaning given to such term in Section 4.5 .

 

Trust Estate ” means all of the Trust’s right, title, and interest in and to the Master Lease, the Real Estate, and any and all other property and assets (whether tangible or intangible) in which the Trust at any time has any right, title or interest.

 

Article 2
GENERAL MATTERS

 

Section 2.1           Organizational Matters .

 

(a)          CTC is hereby appointed as the Delaware Trustee, and CTC hereby accepts such appointment.

 

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(b)          The Depositor hereby authorizes and directs the Delaware Trustee to execute and file the Certificate of Trust in the office of the Secretary of State of the State of Delaware (the “ Secretary of State ”), and authorizes the Delaware Trustee to execute and file in the office of the Secretary of State such certificates as may from time to time be required under the Statutory Trust Act or any other Delaware law.

 

(c)          The name of the Trust is “DCX [ · ] DST.” The Manager shall have full power and authority, and is hereby authorized, to conduct the activities of the Trust, execute and deliver all documents (including, without limitation, the Transaction Documents) for or on behalf of the Trust, and cause the Trust to sue or be sued under its name. Any reference to the Trust shall be a reference to the statutory trust formed pursuant to the Certificate of Trust and this Trust Agreement and not to the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee or the Manager individually or to the officers, agents or employees of the Trust, the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee or the Manager.

 

(d)          The principal office of the Trust, and such additional offices as the Manager may determine to establish, shall be located at such places inside or outside of the State of Delaware as the Manager shall designate from time to time. As of the Effective Date, the principal office of the Trust is located c/o the Manager at 518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor, Denver, CO 80202.

 

(e)          Legal title to the Trust Estate shall be vested in the Trust as a separate legal entity.

 

Section 2.2      Declaration of Trust and Statement of Intent .

 

(a)          The Trust hereby declares that it shall hold the Trust Estate in trust for the benefit of the Beneficial Owners upon the terms set forth in this Trust Agreement.

 

(b)          It is the intention of the parties that the Trust constitute a “statutory trust,” the Delaware Trustee is a “trustee,” the Manager is an “agent” of the Trust, the Signatory Trustee is a co-trustee (subject to the limitations provided for in Section 4.8 ), the Beneficial Owners are “beneficial owners,” and this Trust Agreement is the “governing instrument” of the Trust, each within the respective meaning of such term as provided in or as used in the Statutory Trust Act.

 

Section 2.3      Purposes The purposes of the Trust are to engage in the following activities: (a) to acquire the Real Estate subject to the Master Lease; (b) to hold for investment and eventually dispose of the Real Estate; and (c) to take only such other actions as the Manager deems necessary to carry out the foregoing.

 

Article 3
PROVISIONS RELATING TO TAX TREATMENT

 

 

 

Section 3.1      Article 3 Supersedes All Other Provisions of this Trust Agreement . This Article 3 contains certain provisions intended to achieve the desired treatment of the Trust and Beneficial Interests for United States federal income tax purposes. To the extent of any inconsistency between this Article 3 and any other provision of this Trust Agreement, this Article 3 shall supersede and be controlling; provided, for the avoidance of doubt, that nothing in this Article 3 shall limit or impair the Trust’s power and authority to execute and deliver, and to perform its obligations under, the Transaction Documents, and further provided that the requirements of this Article 3 shall be enforceable to the maximum extent permissible under the Statutory Trust Act.

 

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Section 3.2      Provisions Relating to Tax Treatment .

 

(a)           Prior to the issuance of the Conversion Notice, the sole Beneficial Owner of the Trust shall be the Depositor. The rights of the Depositor (as the Class 2 Beneficial Owner) with respect to the assets and property held by the Trust, as provided in Section 6.11 , are such that the Trust will be characterized at such time as a “business entity” within the meaning of Regulation Section 301.7701-3. Because the Depositor will be the sole Beneficial Owner, the Trust will be characterized as a disregarded entity, and all assets and property of the Trust shall be treated for Federal income tax purposes as assets and property of the Depositor.

 

(b)           Upon the issuance of the Conversion Notice, the special rights of Depositor (as the Class 2 Beneficial Owner) set forth in Section 6.11 will terminate, as set forth in Section 6.12, and the Depositor will have the same rights as any Class 1 Beneficial Owner. At that time, the Depositor will be deemed for Federal income tax purposes to have transferred the Real Estate to a separate entity, the Trust, which will be classified for Federal income tax purposes as specified in Section 3.2(c) .

 

(c)           It is the intention of the parties to this Trust Agreement that upon and at all times after the issuance of the Conversion Notice that the Trust shall constitute an investment trust pursuant to Regulation Section 301.7701-4(c) and each Beneficial Owner shall be treated as a “grantor” within the meaning of Code Section 671. As such, the parties further intend that each Beneficial Owner shall be treated for Federal income tax purposes as if it holds a direct ownership interest in the Real Estate. Each Beneficial Owner agrees to report its interest in the Trust in a manner consistent with the foregoing and otherwise not to take any action that would be inconsistent with the foregoing. Upon and after issuance of the Conversion Notice, none of the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee, the Manager, the Beneficial Owners and/or the Trust shall have power and authority, or shall be authorized, and each of them is hereby expressly prohibited from taking, and none of them shall be allowed to take, any of the following actions:

 

(i)          sell, transfer or exchange the Real Estate except as required under Article 9 ;

 

(ii)          reinvest any monies of the Trust, except to make modifications or repairs to the Real Estate permitted under this Trust Agreement or in accordance with Section 7.3 ;

 

(iii)         renegotiate the terms of any loan or enter into new financing;

 

(iv)         renegotiate any lease or enter into new leases, except in the case of the tenant’s bankruptcy or insolvency;

 

(v)          make modifications to the Real Estate (other than minor non-structural modifications) unless required by law;

 

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(vi)        accept any capital from a Beneficial Owner (other than capital from an Investor that will be distributed to the Depositor and reduce the Depositor’s Percentage Share); or

 

(vii)       take any other action which would in the opinion of tax counsel to the Trust cause the Trust to be treated as a business entity for federal income tax purposes if the effect would be that such action or actions would constitute a power under the Trust Agreement to “vary the investment of the certificate holders” under Regulations Section 301.7701-4(c)(1) and Rev. Rul. 2004-86.

 

The Trust shall hold the Trust Estate for investment purposes and only lease the Real Estate to the Master Tenant. The activities of the Trust with respect to the Trust Estate shall be limited to the activities which are customary services in connection with the maintenance and repair of the Real Estate and none of the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee, Beneficial Owners, the Manager nor their agents shall provide non-customary services, as such term is defined in Code Sections 512 and 856 and Rev. Rul. 75-374, 1975-2 C.B. 261. The Trust shall conduct no business other than as specifically set forth in this Section 3.2 . Without limiting the generality of the foregoing, upon and after issuance of the Conversion Notice, (a) none of the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee, the Manager, the Beneficial Owners and the Trust shall have any power or authority to undertake any actions that are not permitted to be undertaken by an entity that is treated as a “trust” within the meaning of Regulations Section 1.7701-4 and not treated as a “business entity” within the meaning of Regulations Section 1.7701-3, and (b) this Trust Agreement shall be interpreted and enforced so as to be in compliance with the requirements of Rev. Rul. 2004-86, 2004-33 I.R.B. 191.

 

For Federal income tax purposes, after issuance of the Conversion Notice, the Trust is intended to be and shall constitute an investment trust pursuant to Regulations Section 301.7701-4(c) and a “grantor trust” under Subpart E of Part 1, Subchapter J of the Code (Code Sections 671 - 679) and shall not constitute a “business entity.”

 

Article 4
CONCERNING THE DELAWARE TRUSTEE AND THE SIGNATORY TRUSTEE 

 

Section 4.1      Power and Authority of the Delaware Trustee . The Delaware Trustee shall have the power and authority, and is hereby authorized and empowered, to (a) accept legal process served on the Trust in the State of Delaware; and (b) execute any certificates that are required to be executed under the Statutory Trust Act and file such certificates in the office of the Secretary of State, and take such action or refrain from taking such action under this Trust Agreement as may be directed in a writing delivered to the Delaware Trustee by the Manager; provided, however, that the Delaware Trustee shall not be required to take or to refrain from taking any such action if the Delaware Trustee shall believe, or shall have been advised by counsel, that such performance is likely to involve the Delaware Trustee in personal liability or to result in personal liability to the Delaware Trustee, or is contrary to the terms of this Trust Agreement or of any document contemplated hereby to which the Trust or the Delaware Trustee is or becomes a party or is otherwise contrary to law. The Manager agrees not to instruct the Delaware Trustee to take any action or to refrain from taking any action that is contrary to the terms of this Trust Agreement or of any document contemplated hereby to which the Trust or the Delaware Trustee is or becomes party or that is otherwise contrary to law. Other than as expressly provided for in this Trust Agreement, the Delaware Trustee shall have no duty to take any action for or on behalf of the Trust.

 

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Section 4.2      Delaware Trustee May Request Direction . If at any time the Delaware Trustee determines that it requires or desires guidance regarding the application of any provision of this Trust Agreement or any other document, or regarding action that must or may be taken in connection herewith or therewith, or regarding compliance with any direction it received under this Trust Agreement, then the Delaware Trustee may deliver a notice to a court of applicable jurisdiction or, in the Delaware Trustee’s sole and absolute discretion, to an arbitrator in accordance with Section 10.11 , requesting written instructions as to the desired course of action, and such instructions from the court or arbitrator shall constitute full and complete authorization and protection for actions taken and other performance by the Delaware Trustee in reliance thereon. Until the Delaware Trustee has received such instructions after delivering such notice, it shall be fully protected in refraining from taking any action with respect to the matters described in such notice.

 

Section 4.3       Delaware Trustee’s Capacity . In accepting the trust hereby created, CTC acts solely as Delaware Trustee under this Trust Agreement and not in its individual capacity, serves the Trust solely to fulfill the Trust’s obligation pursuant to Section 3807(a) of the Statutory Trust Act to have at least one trustee who has its principal place of business in the State of Delaware, and all Persons having any claim against the Delaware Trustee by reason of the transactions contemplated by this Trust Agreement, the Transaction Documents, or any other document shall look only to the Trust Estate for payment or satisfaction thereof. Notwithstanding any provision of this Trust Agreement or any other document to the contrary, under no circumstances shall CTC, in its individual capacity or in its capacity as Delaware Trustee, (a) have any duty to choose or supervise, nor shall it have any liability for the actions or inactions of, the Manager or any officer, manager, employee, or other Person (other than CTC and its own employees), or (b) be liable or responsible for, or obligated to perform, any contract, representation, warranty, obligation or liability of the Trust, the Manager, or any officer, manager, employee, or other Person (other than CTC and its own employees); provided, however, that this limitation shall not protect CTC against any liability to the Beneficial Owners to which it would otherwise be subject by reason of its willful misconduct, bad faith, fraud or gross negligence in the performance of its duties under this Trust Agreement.

 

Section 4.4      Duties . None of the Delaware Trustee, CTC or any successor Delaware Trustee shall have any duty or obligation under or in connection with this Trust Agreement, the Trust, or any transaction or document contemplated by this Trust Agreement, except as expressly provided by the terms of this Trust Agreement, and no implied duties or obligations shall be read into this Trust Agreement against the Delaware Trustee, CTC or any successor Delaware Trustee. The right of the Delaware Trustee to perform any discretionary act enumerated in this Trust Agreement shall not be construed as a duty. To the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, including without limitation Section 3806 of the Statutory Trust Act, the Delaware Trustee’s, CTC’s or any successor Delaware Trustee’s duties (including fiduciary duties) and liabilities relating thereto to the Trust and the Beneficial Owners shall be restricted to those duties (including fiduciary duties) expressly set forth in this Trust Agreement and liabilities relating thereto.

 

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Section 4.5      Indemnification . The Class 1 Beneficial Owners, jointly and severally, hereby agree to (a) reimburse the Delaware Trustee, CTC and/or any successor Delaware Trustee for all reasonable expenses (including reasonable fees and expenses of counsel and other professionals), incurred in connection with the negotiation, execution, delivery, or performance of, or exercise of rights or powers under, this Trust Agreement, (b) to the fullest extent permitted by law, indemnify, defend and hold harmless the Delaware Trustee, CTC and/or any successor Delaware Trustee, and the officers, directors, employees and agents of the Delaware Trustee and/or any successor Delaware Trustee (collectively, including the Delaware Trustee, CTC and/or any successor Delaware Trustee in its individual capacity, the “ Trustee Indemnified Persons ”) from and against any and all losses, damages, liabilities, claims, actions, suits, costs, expenses, disbursements (including the reasonable fees and expenses of counsel and other professionals), taxes and penalties of any kind and nature whatsoever (collectively, “ Trustee Covered Expenses ”), to the extent that such Trustee Covered Expenses arise out of or are imposed upon or asserted at any time against any such Trustee Indemnified Persons, including without limitation on the basis of ordinary negligence on the part of any such Trustee Indemnified Persons, with respect to or in connection with this Trust Agreement, the Trust, or any transaction or document contemplated hereby; provided, however, that the Beneficial Owners or the Trust shall not be required to indemnify a Trustee Indemnified Person for Trustee Covered Expenses to the extent such Trustee Covered Expenses result from the willful misconduct, bad faith, fraud or gross negligence of such Trustee Indemnified Person, and (c) to the fullest extent permitted by law, advance to each such Trustee Indemnified Person Trustee Covered Expenses incurred by such Trustee Indemnified Person in defending any claim, demand, action, suit or proceeding, in connection with this Trust Agreement, the Trust, or any transaction or document contemplated hereby, prior to the final disposition of such claim, demand, action, suit or proceeding only upon receipt by any Class 1 Beneficial Owner of an undertaking, by or on behalf of such Trustee Indemnified Person, to repay such amount if a court of competent jurisdiction renders a final, nonappealable judgment that includes a specific finding of fact that such Trustee Indemnified Person is not entitled to be indemnified therefor under this Section 4.5 . The obligations of the Class 1 Beneficial Owners under this Section 4.5 shall survive the resignation or removal of the Delaware Trustee, shall survive the dissolution and termination of the Trust, and shall survive the termination, amendment, supplement, and/or restatement of this Trust Agreement. The obligations of the Class 1 Beneficial Owners under this Section 4.5 shall be personal obligations irrespective of the sufficiency or insufficiency of the Trust Estate to satisfy any such obligations; provided, however, that the Manager shall utilize income from the Trust Estate to satisfy any such obligations prior to seeking contribution from the Beneficial Owners, which will reduce amounts that would otherwise be distributable to the Beneficial Owners. For the avoidance of doubt, pursuant to Section 3803(b) of the Statutory Trust Act, the Delaware Trustee shall not be liable to any person other than the Trust or a beneficiary of the Trust for any act, omission or obligation of the Trust or any trustee thereof and all persons having any claim against Statutory Trust Act by reason of the transactions contemplated by this Trust Agreement or any other agreement or instrument related to the Trust shall look only to the Trust Estate for payment or satisfaction thereto.

 

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Section 4.6      Removal; Resignation; Succession . The Delaware Trustee may resign at any time by giving at least sixty (60) days’ prior written notice to the Manager. The Manager may at any time remove the Delaware Trustee for Cause by written notice to the Delaware Trustee. Cause shall only result from the willful misconduct, bad faith, fraud or gross negligence of the Delaware Trustee, as determined by arbitration under the procedures described in Section 10.11 . Such resignation or removal shall be effective upon the acceptance of appointment by a successor Delaware Trustee, as hereinafter provided. In case of the removal or resignation of a Delaware Trustee, the Manager may appoint a successor by written instrument. If a successor Delaware Trustee shall not have been appointed within sixty (60) days after the giving of such notice, the Delaware Trustee or any of the Beneficial Owners may apply to any court of competent jurisdiction in the United States to appoint a successor Delaware Trustee to act until such time, if any, as a successor shall have been appointed as provided above. Any successor so appointed by such court shall immediately and without further act be superseded by any successor appointed as provided above within one (1) year from the date of the appointment by such court. Any successor, however appointed, shall execute and deliver to its predecessor Delaware Trustee an instrument accepting such appointment, and thereupon such successor, without further act, shall become vested with all the estates, properties, rights, powers, duties and trusts of the predecessor Delaware Trustee in the trusts under this Trust Agreement with like effect as if originally named the Delaware Trustee in this Trust Agreement; provided, however, that the predecessor Delaware Trustee shall take all action required to transfer title to the Trust Estate to such successor Delaware Trustee and upon the written request of such successor, such predecessor shall execute and deliver an instrument transferring to such successor, upon the trusts in this Trust Agreement expressed, all the estates, properties, rights, powers, duties and trusts of such predecessor, and such predecessor shall duly assign, transfer, deliver and pay over to such successor all monies or other property then held by such predecessor upon the trusts in this Trust Agreement expressed. Any right of the Beneficial Owners against a predecessor Delaware Trustee in its individual capacity shall survive the resignation or removal of such predecessor, shall survive the dissolution and termination of the Trust, and shall survive the termination, amendment, supplement, and/or restatement of this Trust Agreement.

 

Any successor Delaware Trustee, however appointed, shall be a bank or trust company satisfying the requirements of Section 3807(a) of the Statutory Trust Act. Any corporation into which the Delaware Trustee may be merged or converted or with which it may be consolidated, or any corporation resulting from any merger, conversion or consolidation to which such Delaware Trustee shall be a party, or any corporation to which substantially all the corporate trust business of the Delaware Trustee may be transferred, shall, subject to the preceding sentence, be the Delaware Trustee under this Trust Agreement without further act.

 

Section 4.7     Fees and Expenses . The Delaware Trustee shall receive as compensation for its services under this Trust Agreement such fees as have been reasonably approved by the Manager. The Delaware Trustee shall not have any obligation by virtue of this Trust Agreement to spend any of its own funds, or to take any action that could result in its incurring any cost or expense.

 

Section 4.8      Signatory Trustee . The Manager will appoint in its sole discretion, and at all times, a co-trustee to serve with the Delaware Trustee for the purpose of performing all obligations and duties other than fulfilling the Trust’s obligations pursuant to Section 3807(a) of the Statutory Trust Act, including, but not limited to executing any documentation that may require the signature of more than one trustee of the Trust (the “ Signatory Trustee ”). The Trust hereby grants the Signatory Trustee the power to act and sign documents on behalf of the Trust pursuant to the terms of this Section 4.8 . The Manager may appoint additional Signatory Trustees and replace any Signatory Trustee. The Signatory Trustee shall not receive any compensation for its services. The initial Signatory Trustee shall be the Manager.

 

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Article 5
CONCERNING THE MANAGER

  

Section 5.1        Power and Authority . The investment activities and affairs of the Trust shall be managed exclusively by or under the direction of the Manager. The Manager shall have the power and authority, and is hereby authorized and empowered, to manage the Trust Estate and the investment activities and affairs of the Trust, subject to and in accordance with the terms and provisions of this Trust Agreement, provided that the Manager shall have no power to engage on behalf of the Trust in any activities that the Trust could not engage in directly. The Manager shall have the power and authority, and is hereby authorized, empowered, and directed by the Trust, to enter into, execute and deliver, and to cause the Trust to perform its obligations under, each of the Transaction Documents to which the Trust is or becomes a party or signatory, and in furtherance thereof, the Class 2 Beneficial Owner, at any time prior to the issuance of the Conversion Notice, may confirm such authorization, empowerment, and direction and otherwise direct the Manager in connection with the investment activities and affairs of the Trust. The Manager may freely assign its power and authority pursuant to this Article 5 .

 

Section 5.2        Manager’s Capacity . The Manager acts solely as an agent of the Trust and not in its individual capacity, and all Persons having any claim against the Manager by reason of the transactions contemplated by this Trust Agreement, the Transaction Documents, or any other document shall look only to the Trust Estate for payment or satisfaction thereof. Notwithstanding any provision of this Trust Agreement to the contrary, the Manager shall not have any liability to any Person except for its own willful misconduct, bad faith, fraud or gross negligence.

 

Section 5.3        Duties.

 

(a)       The Manager has primary responsibility for performing the administrative actions set forth in this Section 5.3 . In addition, the Manager shall have the obligations with respect to a potential sale of the Trust Estate set forth in Article 9 . In performing its duties under this Agreement, the Manager will act in good faith and in the interest of the Beneficial Owners. The Manager shall not have any duty or obligation under or in connection with this Trust Agreement, the Trust, or any transaction or document contemplated hereby, except as expressly provided by the terms of this Trust Agreement, and no implied duties or obligations shall be read into this Trust Agreement against the Manager. The right of the Manager to perform any discretionary act enumerated in this Trust Agreement shall not be construed as a duty. To the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, including without limitation Section 3806 of the Statutory Trust Act, the Manager’s duties (including fiduciary duties) and liabilities relating thereto to the Trust and the Beneficial Owners shall be restricted to those duties (including fiduciary duties) expressly set forth in this Trust Agreement and liabilities relating thereto.

 

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(b)       Without limiting the generality of clause (a) above, upon and after the issuance of the Conversion Notice, the Manager, for and on behalf of the Trust, is hereby authorized and directed to take each of the following actions necessary to conserve and protect the Trust Estate:

 

(i)         receiving the contribution of the Real Estate (subject to the existing leases) and entering into the Master Lease;

 

(ii)        collecting rents and making distributions in accordance with Article 7 ;

 

(iii)       entering into any agreement for purposes of completing tax-free exchanges of real property with a Qualified Intermediary as defined in Section 1031 of the Code;

 

(iv)       notifying the relevant parties of any default by them under the Transaction Documents; and

 

(v)        solely to the extent necessitated by the bankruptcy or insolvency of the Master Tenant or any other tenant of the Real Estate, if the Trust has not terminated under Section 9.2 , entering into a new lease with respect to the Real Estate.

 

The foregoing notwithstanding, from and after the issuance of the Conversion Notice, under no circumstances shall the power or authority of the Manager include the ability to take any actions which would cause the Trust to cease to constitute an “investment trust” within the meaning of Regulation Section 1.7701-4(c). After issuance of the Conversion Notice, the power and authority of the Manager shall be strictly and narrowly construed so as to preserve and protect the status of the Trust as an “investment trust” for Federal income tax purposes.

 

(c)       The Manager shall keep customary and appropriate books and records relating to the Trust and the Trust Estate. The Manager shall maintain appropriate books and records in order to provide reports of income and expenses to each Beneficial Owner as necessary for such Beneficial Owner to prepare his/her income tax returns regarding the Trust Estate.

 

(d)       The Manager shall promptly furnish to the Beneficial Owners copies of all reports, notices, requests, demands, certificates, financial statements and any other writings required to be distributed to them pursuant to the Transaction Documents, unless the Manager reasonably believes the same to have been sent directly to the Beneficial Owners.

 

(e)       The Manager shall not be required to act or refrain from acting under this Trust Agreement if the Manager reasonably determines, or has been advised by counsel, that such actions may result in personal liability, unless the Manager is indemnified by the Trust and the Beneficial Owners against any liability and costs (including reasonable legal fees and expenses) which may result in a manner and form reasonably satisfactory to the Manager.

 

(f)        The Manager shall not, on its own behalf (in contrast to actions that the Manager is required to perform on behalf of the Trust), have any duty to (i) file, record or deposit any document or to maintain any such filing, recording or deposit or to refile, rerecord or redeposit any such document, (ii) obtain or maintain any insurance on the Real Estate, (iii) maintain the Real Estate, or (iv) pay or discharge any tax levied against any part of the Trust Estate.

 

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(g)       The Manager shall manage, control, dispose of or otherwise deal with the Trust Estate consistent with its duties to conserve and protect the Trust Estate, subject to any restrictions provided in this Trust Agreement.

 

(h)       The Manager shall provide to each Person who becomes a Beneficial Owner a copy of this Trust Agreement at or before the time such Person becomes a Beneficial Owner.

 

(i)         The Manager shall provide to the Delaware Trustee and the Signatory Trustee a copy of the Ownership Records contemporaneously with each revision thereto.

 

Section 5.4       Indemnification . The Class 1 Beneficial Owners, jointly and severally, hereby agree to (a) reimburse the Manager for all reasonable expenses (including reasonable fees and expenses of counsel and other professionals), incurred in connection with the negotiation, execution, delivery, or performance of, or exercise of rights or powers under, this Trust Agreement, (b) to the fullest extent permitted by law, indemnify, defend and hold harmless the Signatory Trustee, the Manager, and the officers, directors, employees and agents of the Signatory Trustee or the Manager (collectively, including the Manager in its individual capacity, the “ Manager Indemnified Persons ”) from and against any and all losses, damages, liabilities, claims, actions, suits, costs, expenses, disbursements (including the reasonable fees and expenses of counsel and other professionals), taxes and penalties of any kind and nature whatsoever (collectively, “ Manager Covered Expenses ”), to the extent that such Manager Covered Expenses arise out of or are imposed upon or asserted at any time against any such Manager Indemnified Persons, including without limitation on the basis of ordinary negligence on the part of any such Manager Indemnified Persons, with respect to or in connection with this Trust Agreement, the Trust, or any transaction or document contemplated hereby; provided, however, that the Class 1 Beneficial Owners shall not be required to indemnify a Manager Indemnified Person for Manager Covered Expenses to the extent such Manager Covered Expenses result from the willful misconduct, bad faith, fraud or gross negligence of such Manager Indemnified Person, and (c) to the fullest extent permitted by law, advance to each such Manager Indemnified Person Manager Covered Expenses incurred by such Manager Indemnified Person in defending any claim, demand, action, suit or proceeding, in connection with this Trust Agreement, the Trust, or any transaction or document contemplated hereby, prior to the final disposition of such claim, demand, action, suit or proceeding upon receipt by any Class 1 Beneficial Owner of an undertaking, by or on behalf of such Manager Indemnified Person, to repay such amount unless a court of competent jurisdiction renders a final, nonappealable judgment that includes a specific finding of fact that such Manager Indemnified Person is not entitled to be indemnified therefor under this Section 5.4 . The obligations of the Class 1 Beneficial Owners under this Section 5.4 shall survive the resignation or removal of the Manager, shall survive the dissolution and termination of the Trust, and shall survive the termination, amendment, supplement, and/or restatement of this Trust Agreement. The obligations of the Class 1 Beneficial Owners under this Section 5.4 shall be personal obligations irrespective of the sufficiency or insufficiency of the Trust Estate to satisfy any such obligations; provided, however, that the Manager shall utilize income from the Trust Estate to satisfy any such obligations prior to seeking contribution from the Beneficial Owners, which will reduce amounts that would otherwise be distributable to the Beneficial Owners.

 

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Section 5.5       Fees and Expenses . The Manager shall receive as compensation for its services as Manager under this Trust Agreement an annual fee in the amount of [ · ] percent ([ · ]%) of the gross rents payable by the Master Tenant to the Trust as landlord under the Master Lease (the “ Management Fee ”), which shall be payable monthly in arrears and pro-rated for any applicable portion of a calendar year, and the additional fee contemplated by Section 9.4 . The Manager shall not have any obligation by virtue of this Trust Agreement to spend any of its own funds, or to take any action that could result in its incurring any cost or expense.

 

Section 5.6      Sale of Trust Estate by Manager Is Binding . Any sale or other conveyance of the Trust Estate or any part thereof by the Manager made for and on behalf of the Trust pursuant to the terms of this Trust Agreement shall bind the Trust and the Beneficial Owners and be effective to transfer or convey all rights, title and interest of the Trust and the Beneficial Owners in and to the Trust Estate.

 

Section 5.7      Removal/ Resignation; Succession . The Manager may resign at any time by giving at least sixty (60) days’ prior written notice to the Delaware Trustee. The Delaware Trustee may, with the prior written consent of Beneficial Owners holding more than fifty percent (50%) of the Class 1 Beneficial Interests, remove the Manager for Cause by providing written notice to the Manager, and such removal shall become effective upon the acceptance of appointment by a successor Manager, as hereinafter provided. Such notice will provide that the Manager must either resign or, in the Manager’s sole discretion, select a qualified arbitrator within thirty (30) days to dispute such claim of Cause, and such claim of Cause will then be subject to arbitration in accordance with the procedures described in Section 10.11 . Cause shall only result from the willful misconduct, bad faith, fraud or gross negligence of the Manager, as determined by arbitration under the procedures described in Section 10.11 . The Manager will be removed upon a determination of Cause. Any resignation or removal shall be effective upon the acceptance of appointment by a successor Manager as hereinafter provided. Any such successor Manager shall be a nationally recognized property manager in the business of managing Class A commercial real estate assets. In case of the removal or resignation of the Manager, the Delaware Trustee may appoint a successor by written instrument. If a successor Manager shall not have been appointed within sixty (60) days after the giving of such notice, the Manager or any of the Beneficial Owners may apply to any court of competent jurisdiction in the United States to appoint a successor Manager to act until such time, if any, as a successor shall have been appointed as provided above. Any successor so appointed by such court shall immediately and without further act be superseded by a successor appointed as provided above within one (1) year from the date of the appointment by such court. Any successor, however appointed, shall execute and deliver to its predecessor Manager an instrument accepting such appointment, and thereupon such successor, without further act, shall become vested with all the rights, powers and duties of the predecessor Manager in the trusts under this Trust Agreement with like effect as if originally named the Manager in this Trust Agreement; but upon the written request of such successor, such predecessor shall execute and deliver an instrument transferring to such successor, upon the trusts in this Trust Agreement expressed, all the rights, powers and duties of such predecessor. Any right of the Beneficial Owners against a predecessor Manager in its individual capacity shall survive the resignation or removal of such predecessor Manager, shall survive the dissolution and termination of the Trust, and shall survive the termination, amendment, supplement, and/or restatement of this Trust Agreement.

 

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Article 6
beneficial INTERESTS 

 

Section 6.1         Issuance of Class 1 and Class 2 Beneficial Interests .

 

(a)        The Depositor shall convey the Real Estate to the Trust, and the Trust shall issue one hundred percent (100%) of the Class 2 Beneficial Interests to the Depositor.

 

(b)        No earlier than three (3) days after the issuance of the Conversion Notice, one or more Investors who have executed Purchase Agreement(s) shall contribute cash to the Trust, and the Trust shall issue Class 1 Beneficial Interests to each contributing Investor in accordance with their Percentage Share.

 

(c)        Any Beneficial Owner shall agree, accept and become bound by, and subject to, the provisions of this Trust Agreement pursuant to (i) such Beneficial Owner’s execution of the Purchase Agreement or (ii) such Beneficial Owner’s execution of an agreement substantially in the form of Exhibit E . In addition, any Beneficial Owner of a Class 1 Beneficial Interest shall agree, accept and be bound by and subject to, and shall execute and deliver (i) a Substitute Option Agreement substantially in the form of Exhibit B and (ii) a Call Agreement substantially in the form of Exhibit H . Each Beneficial Owner hereby acknowledges and agrees that, in its capacity as a Beneficial Owner, it has no ability either to (x) petition for a partition of the assets of the Trust, (y) file a petition in bankruptcy on behalf of the Trust, or (z) take any action that consents to, aids, supports, solicits or otherwise cooperates in the filing of an involuntary bankruptcy proceeding involving the Trust.

 

Section 6.2      Ownership Records . The Manager shall at all times be the Person at whose office notices and demands to or upon the Trust in respect of a Beneficial Owner may be served. The Manager shall keep Ownership Records, which shall include records of the transfer and exchange of Beneficial Interests. Notwithstanding any provision of this Trust Agreement to the contrary, transfer of a Beneficial Interest in the Trust, or of any right, title or interest therein, shall occur only upon and by virtue of the entry of such transfer in the Ownership Records. In the event of any transfer permitted under the terms of this Trust Agreement, the Manager shall update the Ownership Records as soon as reasonably possible thereafter. Except as specifically permitted by Section 6.4 , Section 6.5 and Section 6.6 , the Beneficial Interests shall be non-transferable and may not be negotiated, endorsed or otherwise transferred to a holder. Upon request by the Delaware Trustee or the Signatory Trustee, the Manager shall furnish to the Delaware Trustee and the Signatory Trustee the most current Ownership Records containing the names, addresses and phone numbers of the Class 1 Beneficial Owners.

 

Section 6.3      [Intentionally Omitted] .

 

Section 6.4      Restrictions on Transfer .

 

(a)        Subject to compliance with applicable securities laws, this Section 6.4 and Section 6.5 and Section 6.6 , all or any portion of the Beneficial Interest of any Beneficial Owner may be assigned or transferred without the prior consent of any of the Trust, the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee, the Manager, or the other Beneficial Owners. All expenses of any such transfer shall be paid by the assigning or transferring Beneficial Owner.

 

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(b)         Right of First Refusal . Upon the receipt of a Third-Party Offer by a Selling Beneficial Owner, such Selling Beneficial Owner shall provide the Depositor notice of such Third-Party Offer, together with a true, correct and complete copy of such Third-Party Offer (collectively, the “ ROFR Notice ”). The Depositor will then have the right, but not the obligation, assignable in its sole and absolute discretion to any other Person, within ten (10) Business Days after Depositor’s receipt of the ROFR Notice, to elect to purchase the Offered Interest for the price and upon the terms and conditions as are contained in the Third-Party Offer by providing notice of such election to the Selling Beneficial Owner; provided, however, that the price that the Depositor or its assignee shall pay for the Offered Interest shall be reduced by any broker’s fees or commissions that would have been payable to any person under the Third-Party Offer if the Offered Interest had been sold pursuant to the Third-Party Offer. The giving of a ROFR Notice by a Selling Beneficial Owner to the Depositor shall constitute a representation and warranty by the Selling Beneficial Owner to the Offerees that the Third-Party Offer is bona fide in all respects. If the Depositor elects to purchase or assign the right to purchase the Offered Interest as described above, the closing on the sale of the Offered Interest shall take place within sixty (60) days of Depositor’s election to purchase or assign the right to purchase the Offered Interest, at a place and time to be mutually agreed between the Selling Beneficial Owner and the Depositor or other purchasing party. If the Depositor does not elect, within ten (10) days of Depositor’s receipt of the ROFR Notice, to purchase or assign the right to purchase the Offered Interest as described above, then the Selling Beneficial Owner shall be free to sell the Offered Interest to the Person who made the Third-Party Offer in accordance with the terms and conditions of the Third-Party Offer; provided, that (i) if the Offered Interest will not be sold for the price or upon the other terms and conditions stated in the Third-Party Offer for any reason, the Offered Interest may not be sold unless and until the Depositor has been given an opportunity to accept the revised Third-Party Offer in accordance with the terms and conditions of the right of first refusal contained in this Trust Agreement and (ii) the Depositor’s election not to exercise its right of first refusal under this Trust Agreement shall not be deemed a waiver of its rights under this Trust Agreement with respect to any other Third-Party Offers. Any transfer in violation of this Section 6.4(b) shall, to the fullest extent permitted by law, be null, void and of no effect whatsoever and the Trust (through the Depositor) may enforce this Section 6.4(b) , without limitation, by injunction, specific performance or other equitable relief. Notwithstanding anything in this Trust Agreement to the contrary, the right of first refusal described in this Trust Agreement shall not be applicable with respect to a Permitted Transfer.

 

Section 6.5      Conditions to Admission of New Beneficial Owners . Any assignee or transferee of a Class 1 Beneficial Owner shall only become a Beneficial Owner upon such assignee’s or transferee’s written acceptance and adoption of this Trust Agreement, as manifested by its execution and delivery to the Manager of an executed agreement substantially in the form of Exhibit E , copies of which will be provided by the Manager to the Delaware Trustee and the Signatory Trustee.

 

Section 6.6      Limit on Number of Beneficial Owners . Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in this Trust Agreement, at no time shall the number of Beneficial Owners exceed 1,999 Persons. Any transfer that results in a violation of the preceding sentence shall, to the fullest extent permitted by law, be null, void and of no effect whatsoever.

 

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Section 6.7         Representations and Acknowledgements of Beneficial Owners . Each Beneficial Owner hereby represents and warrants that it (a) is not acquiring its Beneficial Interest with a view to any distribution thereof in a transaction that would violate the Securities Act or the securities laws of any state of the United States; and (b) is aware of the restrictions on transfer that are applicable to the Beneficial Interests and will not offer, sell, pledge or otherwise transfer its Beneficial Interest except in compliance with all applicable securities laws and regulations. Each Beneficial Owner hereby acknowledges that (y) no Beneficial Interest may be sold, transferred or otherwise disposed of unless expressly permitted under this Trust Agreement and it is registered or qualified under the Securities Act and all other applicable laws of any applicable jurisdiction or an exemption therefrom is available in accordance with all other laws of any applicable jurisdiction; and (z) no Beneficial Interest has been or is expected to be registered under the Securities Act, and accordingly, all Beneficial Interests are subject to restrictions on transfer.

 

Section 6.8         Status of Relationship . This Trust Agreement shall not be interpreted to impose a partnership or joint venture relationship on the Beneficial Owners either at law or in equity. Accordingly, no Beneficial Owner shall have any liability for the debts or obligations incurred by any other Beneficial Owner, with respect to the Trust Estate, or otherwise, and no Beneficial Owner shall have any authority, other than as specifically provided in this Trust Agreement, to act on behalf of any other Beneficial Owner or to impose any obligation on any other Beneficial Owner with respect to the Trust Estate. Neither the power to give direction to the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee, the Manager, or any other Person nor the exercise thereof by any Beneficial Owner shall cause such Beneficial Owner to have duties (including fiduciary duties) or liabilities relating thereto to the Trust or to any Beneficial Owner.

 

Section 6.9        No Legal Title to Trust Estate . The Beneficial Owners shall not have legal title to the Trust Estate. The death, incapacity, dissolution, termination, or bankruptcy of any Beneficial Owner shall not result in the termination or dissolution of the Trust.

 

Section 6.10      In-Kind Distributions . Except as expressly provided in this Trust Agreement, no Beneficial Owner (a) has an interest in specific Trust property or (b) shall have any right to demand and receive from the Trust an in-kind distribution of the Trust Estate or any portion thereof. In addition, each Beneficial Owner expressly waives any right, if any, under the Statutory Trust Act to seek a judicial dissolution of the Trust, to terminate the Trust, or, to the fullest extent permit by law, to partition the Trust Estate.

 

Section 6.11       Rights and Powers of Class 2 Beneficial Owner Prior to Conversion Notice . Prior to the issuance of the Conversion Notice, the Class 2 Beneficial Owner shall have the right and power, at its sole discretion (but subject to the restrictions in Article 3), to:

 

(a)        Contribute additional assets to the Trust;

 

(b)        Cause the Trust to negotiate or re-negotiate loans or leases;

 

(c)        Cause the Trust to sell all or any portion of its assets and re-invest the proceeds of such sale or sales; and

 

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(d)        Take any other action it deems appropriate in connection with the ownership and operation of the Real Estate.

 

It is expressly understood by the Class 2 Beneficial Owner that these powers are inconsistent with the ability to classify the Trust as an “investment trust” under Regulations Section 301.7701-4(c), and the Trust shall not be so classified prior to the issuance of the Conversion Notice. The Percentage Share of the Class 2 Beneficial Owner prior to the issuance of any Class 1 Beneficial Interests (pursuant to Section 6.14) shall be one hundred percent (100%).

 

Section 6.12      Issuance of Conversion Notice . The Class 2 Beneficial Owner may, at any time in its sole discretion, issue the Conversion Notice to the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee and the Manager. Upon issuance of the Conversion Notice, the Class 2 Beneficial Owner shall no longer have any of the rights or powers set forth in Section 6.11 . Instead, the Class 2 Beneficial Owner shall have the same rights and powers as apply to a Class 1 Beneficial Owner (as set forth in Section 6.13 ). In no event may any Class 1 Beneficial Interests be issued to Investors until at least three (3) days after the issuance of the Conversion Notice.

 

Section 6.13      Rights and Powers of Class 1 Beneficial Owners . The Class 1 Beneficial Owners shall only have the right to receive distributions from the Trust as a result of the operations or sale of the Real Estate. The Class 1 Beneficial Owners shall not have the right or power to direct in any manner the Trust or the Manager in connection with the operation of the Trust or the actions of the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee or the Manager. In addition, the Class 1 Beneficial Owners shall not have the right or power to:

 

(a)        Contribute additional assets to the Trust (other than the initial contribution of cash in exchange for Class 1 Beneficial Interests);

 

(b)        Be involved in any manner in the operation or management of the Trust or its assets;

 

(c)        Cause the Trust to negotiate or re-negotiate loans or leases; or

 

(d)        Cause the Trust to sell its assets and re-invest the proceeds of such sale.

 

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Section 6.14      Contributions by the Class 1 Beneficial Owners; Reduction in Class 2 Beneficial Interest . Upon the contribution of cash to the Trust by the Investors in exchange for Class 1 Beneficial Interests, such Investors shall become Class 1 Beneficial Owners. The amount of cash contributed by, and the Percentage Share of, each Investor shall be determined by the Manager and shall be set forth in the Purchase Agreement for each Investor. All cash contributed by Investors in exchange for Class 1 Beneficial Interests shall be used by the Trust to repurchase a corresponding portion of the Class 2 Beneficial Interest then held by the Depositor. With respect to each contribution by a Class 1 Beneficial Owner and related repurchase of a portion of the Class 2 Beneficial Interest then held by the Depositor, the reduction of the Percentage Share of the Depositor shall be equal to the Percentage Share granted by the Trust to the contributing Class 1 Beneficial Owner and shall be reflected on the books and records of the Trust. All funds received by the Trust from the Investors after issuance of the Conversion Notice (less any amounts required to pay expenses of the Trust) shall be used to repurchase a corresponding portion of the Class 2 Beneficial Interest then held by the Depositor, so that in no event may such repurchase result in a net increase or decrease in the corpus of the Trust. In no event shall any Class 2 Beneficial Interests be reissued.

 

Article 7
DISTRIBUTIONS AND REPORTS

 

Section 7.1         Payments From Trust Estate Only . All payments to be made by the Manager under this Trust Agreement shall be from the Trust Estate. 

 

Section 7.2          Operating Account .  The Manager shall deposit all rents and other funds collected from the operation of the Real Estate in a reputable bank or financial institution in a trust or depository account (the “ Operating Account ”). The Manager shall maintain books and records of the funds from the Real Estate deposited in such account, interest earned thereon, and withdrawals therefrom. The Manager shall pay from the Operating Account the operating expenses of the Real Estate (other than those paid by a tenant of the Real Estate as set forth in its lease) and any other payments relative to the Real Estate as required by this Agreement.

 

Section 7.3         Distributions in General . The Manager shall distribute all available cash to the Beneficial Owners in accordance with their Percentage Share on a quarterly basis, after paying or reimbursing the Manager or the Delaware Trustee for any fees or expenses paid by the Manager or the Delaware Trustee on behalf of the Trust and paying the Manager’s annual fee, and retaining such additional amounts as the Manager determines are necessary to pay anticipated ordinary current and future Trust expenses (“ Reserves ”). Reserves and any other cash retained pursuant to this paragraph shall be invested by the Manager only in short-term obligations of (or guaranteed by) the United States, or any agency or instrumentality thereof and in certificates of deposit or interest-bearing bank accounts of any bank or trust companies having a minimum stated capital and surplus of $100,000,000 (a “ Permitted Investment ”). All such obligations must mature prior to the next distribution date, and be held to maturity. All amounts distributable to the Beneficial Owners pursuant to this Trust Agreement shall be paid by check or in immediately available funds by transfer to a banking institution with bank wire transfer facilities for the account of such Beneficial Owner, as instructed from time to time by such Beneficial Owner on the last Business Day of each calendar quarter.

 

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Section 7.4         Distribution Upon Dissolution . In the event of the Trust’s dissolution in accordance with Article 9, all of the Trust Estate as may then exist after the winding up of its affairs in accordance with the Statutory Trust Act (including without limitation subsections (d) and (e) of Section 3808 of the Statutory Trust Act and providing for all costs and expenses, including any income or transfer taxes which may be assessed against the Trust, whether or not by reason of the dissolution of the Trust), shall, subject to Section 9.2 , be distributed to those Persons who are then Beneficial Owners in their respective Percentage Shares.

 

Section 7.5         Cash and other Accounts; Reports by the Manager . The Manager shall be responsible for receiving all cash from the Master Tenant and placing such cash into one or more accounts as required under the distribution and investment obligations of the Trust under Section 7.3 . The Manager shall furnish annual reports to each of the Beneficial Owners as to the amounts of rent received from the Master Tenant, the expenses incurred by the Trust with respect to the Real Estate (if any), the amount of any Reserves and the amount of the distributions made by the Trust to the Beneficial Owners.

 

Article 8
RELIANCE; REPRESENTATIONS; COVENANTS

 

Section 8.1         Good Faith Reliance . None of the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee or the Manager shall incur any liability to anyone in acting upon any signature, instrument, notice, resolution, request, consent, order, certificate, report, opinion, bond or other document or paper reasonably and in good faith believed by such Person to be genuine and signed by the proper party or parties thereto. As to any fact or matter, the manner of ascertainment of which is not specifically described in this Trust Agreement, the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee and the Manager may for all purposes of this Trust Agreement rely on a certificate, signed by or on behalf of the Person executing such certificate, as to such fact or matter, and such certificate shall constitute full protection of the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee and the Manager for any action taken or omitted to be taken by them in good faith in reliance thereon, and the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee and the Manager may conclusively rely upon any certificate furnished to such Person that on its face conforms to the requirements of this Trust Agreement. Each of the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee and the Manager may (a) exercise its powers and perform its duties by or through such attorneys and agents as it shall appoint with due care, and it shall not be liable for the acts or omissions of such attorneys and agents; and (b) consult with counsel, accountants and other experts, and shall be entitled to rely upon the advice of counsel, accountants and other experts selected by it in good faith and shall be protected by the advice of such counsel and other experts in anything done or omitted to be done by it in accordance with such advice. In particular, no provision of this Trust Agreement shall be deemed to impose any duty on the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee or the Manager to take any action if such Person shall have been advised by counsel that such action may involve it in personal liability or is contrary to the terms of this Trust Agreement or to applicable law. For all purposes of this Trust Agreement, the Delaware Trustee and the Signatory Trustee shall be fully protected in relying upon the most recent Ownership Records delivered to it by the Manager.

 

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Section 8.2         No Representations or Warranties as to Certain Matters . NONE OF THE DELAWARE TRUSTEE, THE SIGNATORY TRUSTEE OR THE MANAGER, EITHER WHEN ACTING UNDER THIS TRUST AGREEMENT IN ITS CAPACITY AS DELAWARE TRUSTEE, SIGNATORY TRUSTEE OR MANAGER OR IN ITS INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY, MAKES OR SHALL BE DEEMED TO HAVE MADE ANY REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, AS TO THE TITLE, LOCATION, VALUE, CONDITION, WORKMANSHIP, DESIGN, COMPLIANCE WITH SPECIFICATIONS, CONSTRUCTION, OPERATION, MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR USE FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE OF THE TRUST ESTATE OR ANY PART THEREOF, AS TO THE ABSENCE OF LATENT OR OTHER DEFECTS, WHETHER OR NOT DISCOVERABLE, AS TO THE ABSENCE OF ANY INFRINGEMENT OF ANY PATENT, TRADEMARK OR COPYRIGHT, AS TO THE ABSENCE OF OBLIGATIONS BASED ON STRICT LIABILITY IN TORT, OR ANY OTHER REPRESENTATION OR WARRANTY WHATSOEVER, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, WITH RESPECT TO THE TRUST ESTATE OR ANY PART THEREOF.

 

None of the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee or the Manager makes any representation or warranty as to (a) the title, value, condition or operation of the Real Estate and (b) the validity or enforceability of Transaction Documents or as to the correctness of any statement contained in any thereof, except as expressly made by the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee or the Manager in its individual capacity. Each of the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee and the Manager represents and warrants to the Beneficial Owners that it has authorized, executed and delivered the Trust Agreement.

  

Article 9
TERMINATION 

 

Section 9.1         Termination in General . The Trust shall not have perpetual existence and instead shall be dissolved and wound up in accordance with Section 3808 of the Statutory Trust Act upon the first to occur of a Transfer Distribution or the sale of Trust Estate pursuant to Section 9.3, at which time each Beneficial Owner’s Percentage Share of the Trust Estate shall be distributed to such Beneficial Owner in accordance with Section 7.4 . Notwithstanding anything in this Section 9.1 or the Trust Agreement to the contrary, the Trust shall dissolve and wind up not later than twenty-one (21) years after the death of the last living descendant of Barack Obama, the 44th President of the United States, who was alive on the Deposit Date.

 

Section 9.2         Termination to Protect and Conserve Trust Estate . Upon the first to occur of (a) a sale of the Trust Estate pursuant to Section 9.3 or (b) if the Conversion Notice has been issued and the Manager determines that (i) the Master Tenant has failed to timely pay rent due under the Master Lease after the expiration of any applicable notice and cure provisions in the Master Lease, if any, (ii) the Master Tenant files for bankruptcy, seeks appointment of a receiver, makes an assignment for the benefit of its creditors or there occurs any similar event, or (iii) the Trust is otherwise in violation of Section 3.2(c) , and if the Manager determines in writing that dissolution of the Trust is necessary and appropriate to preserve and protect the Trust Estate for the benefit of the Beneficial Owners, then, in either case, the Trust shall dissolve and wind up in accordance with Section 3808 of the Statutory Trust Act and each Beneficial Owner’s Percentage Share of the Trust Estate shall be distributed to such Beneficial Owner in accordance with this Section 9.2 in full and complete satisfaction and redemption of their Beneficial Interests. Subject to the requirements of Section 3808 of the Statutory Trust Act, immediately before any such liquidating distributions, and only in the event that a distribution is to be made to the Beneficial Owners under this Section 9.2 , the Manager shall transfer title to the assets comprising the Trust Estate to a newly formed Delaware limited partnership (the “ LP ”) that has a limited partnership agreement substantially similar to that set forth in Exhibit F (the “ Transfer Distribution ”). As part of the Transfer Distribution, the Manager shall cause the limited partnership interests in the LP to be distributed to the Beneficial Owners in complete satisfaction of their Beneficial Interests in order to consummate the dissolution of the Trust. It is the express intent of this Agreement that no distribution be made under this Section 9.2 . To the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, the Manager shall be fully protected in any such determination made in good faith, and shall have no liability to any Person, including without limitation the Beneficial Owners, with respect thereto, and each Beneficial Owner hereby releases Manager from any liability (and waives any rights to claims) with respect to any such determination made in good faith. If a determination has been made to dissolve the Trust under this Section 9.2 , the Manager may, in its discretion and upon advice of counsel, utilize such other form of transaction (including, without limitation, a conversion of the Trust into a limited partnership if then permitted by applicable law) to accomplish the transaction contemplated by the Transfer Distribution, provided that such alternative form of transaction is entered into to preserve and protect the Trust Estate for the benefit of the Beneficial Owners and is in compliance with the Statutory Trust Act.

 

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Section 9.3         Sale of the Trust Estate . The Manager may sell the Trust Estate at any time after the Trust Estate has been held by the Trust for at least two (2) years, or prior to the second anniversary of the Closing Date if there has been a material adverse change in the value of the Real Estate, as determined by the Manager (in its sole discretion), upon providing notice to the Delaware Trustee that, in the Manager’s sole discretion, a sale of the Trust Estate is appropriate. Any such sale of the Trust Estate shall occur as soon as practicable after the Manager has determined that such sale is appropriate. The Manager shall be responsible for (a) determining the fair market value of the Trust Estate, (b) providing notice to the Delaware Trustee that a sale of the Trust Estate is appropriate, (c) conducting the sale of the Trust Estate, and (d) after paying all amounts due to the Delaware Trustee under this Trust Agreement, and the Lender, if any, distributing the balance of the proceeds (net of any fee due to the Manager and applicable closing costs such as transfer taxes, title insurance and legal expenses) to the Beneficial Owners. The Delaware Trustee shall not be responsible for conducting the sale of the Trust Estate; provided, however, that the Delaware Trustee shall, at the Manager’s direction, execute any documents necessary to accomplish the sale of the Trust Estate as provided in this Trust Agreement. The Manager and the Delaware Trustee are expressly instructed to permit each Beneficial Owner to undertake its portion of the sale as a like-kind exchange within the meaning of Section 1031 of the Code or another type of tax-deferred exchange, including as described in Section 721 of the Code. Any sale of the Trust Estate shall be on an “as is, where is” basis and without any representations or warranties by the Delaware Trustee or the Manager (other than as to ownership of the Trust Estate and authority to enter into the sale).

 

Section 9.4         Manager Fee on Sale . The Manager shall receive a fee from the Trust equal to [ · ] percent ([ · ]%) of the gross proceeds of a sale of the Trust Estate to a third party (the “ Disposition Fee ”) as a result of offers received at any time as a result of negotiations by the Manager or its affiliates with, and submission of offers from, a prospective purchaser, and provided the Trust Agreement is in effect at the earlier of (a) the time of the Manager’s decision to sell the Trust Estate, and (b) the time of the submission of the offers. The Manager shall not have any obligation by virtue of this Trust Agreement to spend any of its own funds, or to take any action that could result in its incurring any cost or expense; provided , however , the Trust shall reimburse the Manager for any such out of pocket cost or expense reasonably incurred in connection with a sale of the Trust Estate to a third party as contemplated under this Trust Agreement. The Disposition Fee shall be reduced by the amount of any outstanding Manager Covered Expenses incurred by the Trust to the extent such Manager Covered Expenses result from the willful misconduct, bad faith, fraud or gross negligence of any Manager Indemnified Person.

 

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Section 9.5         Distribution Upon Sale or Transfer Distribution . It is the express understanding of the Depositor that upon a Transfer Distribution under Section 9.2 or a sale under Section 9.3 , the Trust shall distribute the interests in the LP or the proceeds of the sale, respectively, to the holders of Beneficial Interests in the Trust.

 

Section 9.6         Certificate of Cancellation . Upon the completion of the dissolution and winding up of the Trust, upon receipt of a written direction from the Manager, the Certificate of Trust shall be cancelled by the Delaware Trustee who shall execute and cause a certificate of cancellation to be filed in the office of the Secretary of State.

 

Article 10
MISCELLANEOUS

 

Section 10.1       Limitations on Rights of Others . Nothing in this Trust Agreement, whether express or implied, shall give to any Person other than the Depositor, the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee, the Manager, the Beneficial Owners, and the Trust any legal or equitable right, remedy or claim under this Trust Agreement.

 

Section 10.2      Successors and Assigns . All covenants and agreements contained in this Trust Agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the Depositor, the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee, the Manager, the Beneficial Owners, the Trust, and their successors and assigns, all as provided in this Trust Agreement. Any request, notice, direction, consent, waiver or other writing or action by any such Person shall bind its successors and assigns.

 

Section 10.3      Usage of Terms . With respect to all terms in this Trust Agreement, the singular includes the plural and the plural includes the singular; words importing any gender include the other gender; references to “writing” include printing, typing, lithography and other means of reproducing words in a visible form; references to agreements and other contractual instruments include all subsequent amendments thereto or changes therein entered into in accordance with their respective terms and not prohibited by this Trust Agreement; references to Persons include their successors and permitted assigns; and the term “including” means including without limitation.

 

Section 10.4       Headings . The headings of the various Articles and Sections in this Trust Agreement are for convenience of reference only and shall not define or limit any of the terms or provisions of this Trust Agreement.

 

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Section 10.5       Amendments . To the fullest extent permitted by applicable law, this Trust Agreement may not be supplemented or amended, and no term or provision of this Trust Agreement may be waived, discharged, or terminated orally, but only by a signed writing.

 

Section 10.6       Notices . All notices, consents, directions, approvals, instructions, requests and other communications required or permitted by the terms of this Trust Agreement shall be in writing, and given by (a) overnight courier, or (b) hand delivery and shall be deemed to have been duly given when received. Notices shall be provided to the parties at the addresses specified below.

 

If to the Depositor: 

 

TRT [ · ] LLC (or DCX [ · ] TRS LLC, as applicable) 

518 17 th Street, Suite 1700 

Denver, Colorado 80202 

Attention:      M. Kirk Scott
Facsimile:      (303) 577-9797
Telephone:    (303) 339-3609

  

with a copy to: 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. 

518 17 th Street, Suite 1700 

Denver, Colorado 80202 

Attention:      Joshua Widoff
Facsimile:      (303) 869-4602
Telephone:    (303) 597-0483

  

with a copy to: 

 

Bryan Cave LLP 

1700 Lincoln Street, Suite 4100
Denver, Colorado 80203
Attention:     Robert Bach
Facsimile:      (303) 335-3736
Telephone:    (303) 866-0236 

 

If to the Delaware Trustee: 

 

The Corporation Trust Company 

209 N Orange St 

Wilmington, DE 19801 

 

If to the Manager, to:

 

DCX [ · ] Manager LLC 

518 17 th Street, Suite 1700 

Denver, Colorado 80202 

Attention:      M. Kirk Scott
Facsimile:     (303) 577-9797
Telephone:    (303) 339-3609

 

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with a copy to:

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. 

518 17 th Street, Suite 1700 

Denver, Colorado 80202 

Attention:      Joshua Widoff
Facsimile:      (303) 869-4602
Telephone:    (303) 597-0483

  

with a copy to: 

 

Bryan Cave LLP 

1700 Lincoln Street, Suite 4100
Denver, Colorado 80203
Attention:      Robert Bach
Facsimile:      (303) 335-3736
Telephone:     (303) 866-0236 

 

If to a Beneficial Owner, at such Person’s address as specified in the most recent Ownership Records.

 

From time to time the Depositor, Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee or Manager may designate a new address for purposes of notice under this Trust Agreement by notice to the others, and any Beneficial Owner may designate a new address for purposes of notice under this Trust Agreement by notice to the Manager.

 

Section 10.7      Governing Law . This Trust Agreement shall be governed by and construed and enforced in accordance with the laws of the state of Delaware (without regard to conflict of law principles). The laws of the state of Delaware pertaining to trusts (other than the Statutory Trust Act) shall not apply to this Trust Agreement.

 

Section 10.8      Counterparts . This Trust Agreement may be signed in any number of counterparts, each of which shall be an original, with the same effect as if the signatures thereto and to this Trust Agreement were upon the same instrument.

 

Section 10.9      Severability . Any provision of this Trust Agreement that is prohibited or unenforceable in any jurisdiction shall, as to such jurisdiction only, be ineffective to the extent of such prohibition or unenforceability without invalidating the remaining provisions of this Trust Agreement, and any such prohibition or unenforceability in any jurisdiction shall not invalidate or render unenforceable such provision in any other jurisdiction. To the extent permitted by applicable law, each of the parties hereby waives any provision of applicable law that renders any such provision prohibited or unenforceable in any respect.

 

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Section 10.10     Signature of Beneficial Owners . Each Investor will execute the Signature Page for Assignee or Transferee Beneficial Owners of DCX [ · ] DST, a Delaware statutory trust in substantially the form set forth in Exhibit E (the “ Signature Page ”) in connection with their acquisition of a Class 1 Beneficial Interests. By executing the Signature Page, each Investor hereby acknowledges and agrees to be bound by the terms of the limited partnership agreement contemplated under Section 9.2 and in the form substantially similar to that set forth in Exhibit F (the “ LP Agreement ”) when and if such limited partnership is formed and pursuant to Section 19.19 of the LP Agreement. In addition, in light of their agreement to this Section 10.10 , each Investor hereby acknowledges and agrees that their signature to the LP Agreement will not be required as of the Kick-out Date (as defined in the LP Agreement).

 

Section 10.11     Arbitration .   Any dispute, claim or controversy arising out of or relating to this Trust Agreement, or breach, termination, enforcement, interpretation or validity thereof, including the determination of the scope or applicability of this Trust Agreement, shall be determined by binding arbitration in Denver, Colorado, before a sole arbitrator selected by the Signatory Trustee (or by the Manager, if explicitly provided in this Trust Agreement) in its sole and absolute discretion. Arbitration shall be administered by JAMS pursuant to its Streamlined Arbitration Rules and Procedures. Judgment on the award may be entered in any court having jurisdiction. The arbitrator shall, in the award, allocate all of the costs of the arbitration (and the mediation, if applicable), including the fees of the arbitrator and the reasonable attorneys’ fees of the prevailing party, against the party who did not prevail. Anything to the contrary in this Trust Agreement notwithstanding, the provisions of this Section 10.11 shall not apply with respect to any application made by any party to this Trust Agreement for injunctive relief under this Trust Agreement.

 


[ THE REMAINDER OF THIS PAGE INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK ]
[ SIGNATURE PAGE FOLLOWS ]

  

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF, each of the parties has caused this Trust Agreement to be duly executed as of the day and year first above written. 

       
  THE INITIAL DEPOSITOR:
   
  TRT [ · ] LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
       
    By: TRT Master Retail Holdco LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member
     
    By: DCTRT Real Estate Holdco LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member
     
    By: Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership, its sole member
     
     By: Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation, its general partner
     
    By:    
    Name:
    Title:
       
  THE MANAGER AND SIGNATORY TRUSTEE:
   
  DCX [ · ] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company
   
    By: DCX Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member
       
    By:    
    Name:
    Title:
       
  THE Delaware Trustee :
   
  The Corporation Trust Company

             
      By:        
     Name:      
      Title:      

 

[Signature Page to Trust Agreement ([ · ])]

 

 
 

  

EXHIBIT A

 


REAL ESTATE

 

(Legal Description)

 

 
 

 

EXHIBIT B

 

FORM OF substitute option agreement

 

[INSERT FORM]

 

2
 

  

EXHIBIT C

 

CERTIFICATE OF TRUST
OF
DCX [ · ] DST, a delaware statutory trust

  

THIS CERTIFICATE OF TRUST OF DCX [ · ] DST, a Delaware statutory trust (the “ Trust ”) is being duly executed and filed by the undersigned on behalf of the Trust to form a statutory trust under the Delaware Statutory Trust Act (12 Del. C. §§3801 et seq. ) (as amended, the “ Statutory Trust Act ”). 

 

1. Name . The name of the statutory trust being formed is DCX [ · ] DST

 

2. Delaware Resident Trustee . The name and business address of the Delaware resident trustee of the Trust with a principal place of business in the State of Delaware is as follows:
           
    The Corporation Trust Company  
    1209 N Orange St.   
    Wilmington, DE 19801  

  

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned has executed this Certificate of Trust in accordance with Section 3811(a) of the Statutory Trust Act.

           
  The Corporation Trust Company, not in its individual capacity, but solely as Delaware resident trustee  
             
    By:        
    Name:      
    Title:      
           
           
  DCX [●] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, as co-trustee
             
    By: DCX Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member  
             
    By:        
    Name:      
    Title:      
           

 

 
 

   

EXHIBIT D

 

OWNERSHIP RECORDS  

FOR  

DCX [ · ] DST, a Delaware statutory trust  

LAST REVISED [ · ] , [ · ] .

 

Name : Mailing Address : Telephone Number : Percentage (%)
Beneficial Interest
________________ ________________ ________________  ________________ 

  

[Signatures on Following Page]

 

 
 

  

I hereby certify that the foregoing Ownership Records are complete and accurate as of the date set forth above. 

     
  DCX [ · ] Manager LLC, not in its individual capacity, but solely as Manager
     
  By:    
  Name:  
  Title:  

 

[Signature Page to Trust Agreement Exhibit D]

 

 
 

 

 

 

EXHIBIT E

 

AGREEMENT OF ASSIGNEE OR TRANSFEREE BENEFICIAL OWNER OF

 

DCX [●] DST, A DELAWARE STATUTORY TRUST

 

The undersigned has received and reviewed, with assistance from such legal, tax, investment, and other advisors and skilled persons as the undersigned has deemed appropriate, the Trust Agreement of DCX [●] DST, a Delaware statutory trust dated as of [●],[●] (the “ Trust Agreement ”), by and among TRT [●] LLC, as Initial Depositor, DCX [●] MANAGER LLC, as Manager and Signatory Trustee, and the Corporation Trust Company, as Delaware Trustee, and hereby covenants and agrees to be bound by the Trust Agreement as a Class 1 Beneficial Owner. All capitalized terms used in this Agreement, and not defined in this Agreement shall have the meanings given to such terms in the Trust Agreement.

  

In connection with the purchase of the Class 1 Beneficial Interest, the undersigned hereby:

 

1.1           Acknowledges (a) that the Class 1 Beneficial Interest being acquired by the undersigned is subject to a right of first refusal in favor of the Manager, all as more particularly set forth in Section 6.4 of the Trust Agreement and (b) that the failure of the Manager being given the right to exercise said right of first refusal could void the undersigned’s acquisition of the subject Class 1 Beneficial Interest or otherwise have an adverse effect on the undersigned’s right, title and interest in and to the subject Class 1 Beneficial Interest.

 

1.2           Represents and warrants that the undersigned: (a) understands and is aware that there are substantial uncertainties regarding the treatment of the undersigned’s Class 1 Beneficial Interest as real estate for federal income tax purposes; (b) fully understands that there is significant risk that the undersigned’s Class 1 Beneficial Interest will not be treated as real estate for federal income tax purposes; (c) has independently obtained advice from its legal counsel and/or accountant regarding any tax-deferred exchange under Code Section 1031, including, without limitation, whether the acquisition of the undersigned’s Class 1 Beneficial Interest may qualify as part of a tax-deferred exchange, and the undersigned is relying on such advice and not on the opinion of counsel issued to the Trust or upon any statements in the Memorandum (as defined below) regarding the tax treatment of the Class 1 Beneficial Interests; (d) is aware that the Internal Revenue Service (“ IRS ”) has issued Revenue Ruling 2004-86 (the “ Revenue Ruling ”) specifically addressing Delaware Statutory Trusts, the Revenue Ruling is merely guidance and is not a “safe-harbor” for taxpayers or sponsors, and, without the issuance of a Private Letter Ruling on a specific offering, there is no assurance that the undersigned’s Class 1 Beneficial Interest will not be treated as a partnership interest for federal income tax purposes; (e) understands that Trust has not obtained a ruling from the IRS that the undersigned’s Class 1 Beneficial Interest will be treated as an undivided interest in real estate as opposed to an interest in a partnership; (f) understands that the tax consequences of an investment in the undersigned’s Class 1 Beneficial Interest, especially the treatment of the transaction described in this Agreement under Code Section 1031 and the related “1031 Exchange” rules, are complex and vary with the facts and circumstances of each individual purchaser; (g) understands that, notwithstanding the opinion of counsel issued to the Trust states that a purchaser’s Class 1 Beneficial Interest “should” be considered a real property interest and not a partnership interest for federal income tax purposes, no assurance can be given that the IRS will agree with this opinion; and (h) shall, for federal income tax purposes, report the purchase of the Class 1 Beneficial Interest by the undersigned as a purchase by the undersigned of a direct ownership interest in the Real Estate.

 

 

 

 

1.3           Acknowledges that the undersigned (a) has received from the undersigned’s transferor or assignor a courtesy copy of the Program Description Memorandum and applicable Supplement regarding the sale of the Class 1 Beneficial Interests by the Trust (together with any addendums or supplements thereto, the “ Memorandum ”) and the Trust Agreement and (b) is familiar with and understands each of the foregoing including the “Risk and Other Investment Factors” set forth in the Memorandum.

 

1.4           Represents and warrants that the undersigned, in determining to acquire the Class 1 Beneficial Interest, has relied solely upon the advice of the undersigned’s legal counsel and accountants or other financial advisors with respect to the tax and other consequences involved in acquiring the Class 1 Beneficial Interest and that none of the Trust, the Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee, the Manager or the Initial Depositor or the Successor Depositor has made any representation to the undersigned regarding the Class 1 Beneficial Interest or the Real Estate.

 

1.5           Acknowledges that the Class 1 Beneficial Interest being acquired will be governed by the terms and conditions of the Trust Agreement, and under certain circumstances by the limited partnership agreement contemplated under Section 9.2 of the Trust Agreement and attached as Exhibit F thereto, both of which the undersigned accepts and by which the undersigned agrees by execution of this Agreement to be legally bound notwithstanding that his signature will not be required on either agreement.

 

1.6           Represents and warrants that the undersigned either (a) is an “accredited investor” as such term is defined Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933, or (b) is acquiring the Class 1 Beneficial Interest in a fiduciary capacity for a person meeting such condition.

 

1.7           Represents and warrants that the Class 1 Beneficial Interest being acquired will be acquired for the undersigned’s own account without a view to public distribution or resale and that the undersigned has no contract, undertaking, agreement or arrangement to sell or otherwise transfer or dispose of the Class 1 Beneficial Interest or any portion thereof to any other Person.

 

1.8           Represents and warrants that the undersigned (a) can bear the economic risk of the purchase of the Class 1 Beneficial Interest including the total loss of the undersigned’s investment, (b) has such knowledge and experience in business and financial matters, including the analysis of or participation in offerings of privately issued securities, as to be capable of evaluating the merits and risks of purchasing Class 1 Beneficial Interests, and (c) if an individual, is at least nineteen (19) years of age.

 

1.9           Understands that the Class 1 Beneficial Interest has not been registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “ Securities Act ”), or the securities laws of any state and are subject to substantial restrictions on transfer as described in the Memorandum under “Transfer Limitations,” which restrictions are in addition to certain other restrictions set forth in the Trust Agreement.

 

 

 

 

1.10         Agrees that the undersigned will not sell or otherwise transfer or dispose of any Class 1 Beneficial Interest or any portion thereof unless (a) (i) such Class 1 Beneficial Interest is registered under the Securities Act and any applicable state securities laws, (ii) the transferee is an accredited investor as such term is defined Regulation D of the Securities Act of 1933 and (iii) if required by the Trust (through the Manager), the undersigned obtains an opinion of counsel that is satisfactory to the Trust that such Class 1 Beneficial Interest may be sold in reliance on an exemption from such registration requirements, and (b) the transfer is otherwise made in accordance with the Trust Agreement.

 

1.11         Understands that (a) the Trust has no obligation or intention to register any Class 1 Beneficial Interest for resale or transfer under the Securities Act or any state securities laws or to take any action (including the filing of reports or the publication of information as required by Rule 144 under the Securities Act) which would make available any exemption from the registration requirements of any such laws, and (b) the undersigned therefore may be precluded from selling or otherwise transferring or disposing of any Class 1 Beneficial Interest or any portion thereof for an indefinite period of time or at any particular time.

 

1.12         Understands that no federal or state agency including the Securities and Exchange Commission or the securities commission or authorities of any other state has approved or disapproved the Class 1 Beneficial Interests, passed upon or endorsed the merits of the Trust’s offering of Class 1 Beneficial Interests or the accuracy or adequacy of the Memorandum, or made any finding or determination as to the fairness of the Interest for public investment.

 

1.13         Represents, warrants and agrees that, if the undersigned is acquiring the Class 1 Beneficial Interest in a fiduciary capacity, (a) the above representations, warranties, agreements, acknowledgments and understandings shall be deemed to have been made on behalf of the Person or Persons for whose benefit such Class 1 Beneficial Interest is being acquired, (b) the name of such Person or Persons is indicated below the undersigned’s name, and (c) such further information as the Manager deems appropriate shall be furnished regarding such Person or Persons.

 

1.14         Acknowledges and agrees that counsel, including special tax counsel, to the Trust, the Initial Depositor, the Successor Depositor, the Manager and their Affiliates do not represent, and shall not be deemed under applicable codes of professional responsibility, to have represented or to be representing, any transferee or assignee, including the undersigned, in any way in connection with the transfer or assignment of a Class 1 Beneficial Interest.

 

 

 

 

1.15         Agrees to indemnify, defend and hold harmless the Trust, Delaware Trustee, the Signatory Trustee, Initial Depositor, the Successor Depositor, and Manager, and each of their members, managers, shareholders, officers, directors, employees, consultants, affiliates and advisors (collectively, the “ Indemnified Persons ”) of and from any and all damages, losses, liabilities, costs and expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs) that they may incur by reason of the untruth or inaccuracy of any of the representations, warranties, covenants or agreements contained in this Agreement or in any other document transferee or assignee has furnished to any of the foregoing in connection with this transaction. In addition, if any person shall assert a claim to a finder’s fee or real estate brokerage commission on account of alleged employment as a finder or real estate broker through or under the undersigned in connection with the undersigned’s acquisition of the Class 1 Beneficial Interest, the undersigned shall indemnify and hold the Indemnified Parties harmless from and against any such claim. This indemnification includes, but is not limited to, any damages, losses, liabilities, costs and expenses (including reasonable attorneys’ fees and costs) incurred by the Indemnified Parties defending against any alleged violation of federal or state securities laws, which is based upon or related to any untruth or inaccuracy of any of the representations, warranties or agreements contained in this Agreement or in any other documents the undersigned has furnished to any of the foregoing in connection with this transaction, and against any failure of the transaction to satisfy any Code Section 1031 requirements in connection with the undersigned’s exchange under such provisions.

 

1.16         Represents and warrants that neither the undersigned nor any Affiliate of the undersigned (a) is a Sanctioned Person (defined below), (b) has more than __% of its assets in Sanctioned Countries (defined below), or (c) derives more than __% of its operating income from investments in, or transactions with Sanctioned Persons or Sanctioned Countries. For purposes of the foregoing, a “Sanction Person” shall mean (y) a Person named on the list of “specially designated nationals” or “blocked persons” maintained by the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (“ OFAC ”) at http://www.treas.gov/offices/eotffc/ofac/sdn/index.html , or as otherwise published from time to time, or (z) (i) an agency of the government of a Sanctioned Country, (ii) an organization controlled by a Sanctioned Country, or (iii) a person resident in a Sanctioned Country, to the extent subject to a sanctions program administered by OFAC. A “Sanction Country” shall mean a country subject to a sanctions program identified on the list maintained by OFAC and available at http://www.treas.gov/offices/eotffc/ofac/sanctions/index.html , or as otherwise published from time to time.

 

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The representations, warranties, acknowledgments, understandings and indemnities of transferee or assignee set forth in this Agreement above shall survive the undersigned’s acquisition of the Class 1 Beneficial Interest.

 

         
      Name:  
         
STATE OF _____________ )      
  )            SS.    
COUNTY OF ____________ )      

  

SWORN AND SUBSCRIBED before me the __ day of _______, 20__.

 

     
     
  Name of Notary Public:______________  
     
  My Commission Expires:_____________  
     

 

 

 

 

EXHIBIT F

 

FORM OF LIMITED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT

 

 

 

 

 

 

LIMITED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT

OF

DCx [●] dst LP

 
 

 

Table of Contents

 

  Page
1.                             Organization 1
1.1                  Limited Partnership 1
1.2                  Name and Place of Business 2
1.3                  Business and Purpose of the Partnership 2
1.4                  Term 2
1.5                  Required Filings 2
1.6                  Registered Office and Registered Agent 2
1.7                  Certain Transactions 2
2.                             Definitions 2
3.                             Capitalization and Financing 3
3.1                  Limited Partners’ Capital Contributions 3
3.2                  Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions or Additional Class A Units 3
3.3                  General Partner Loans 4
4.                             Allocation of Income and Loss 4
4.1                  Allocation to the Partners 4
4.2                  Allocation Among Class A Units 4
4.3                  Allocation of Partnership Items 4
4.4                  Assignment 4
4.5                  Consent of Limited Partners 5
4.6                  Withholding Obligations 5
5.                             Distributions 5
5.1                  Cash from Operations 5
5.2                  Restrictions 6
6.                             Compensation to the General Partner and its Affiliates 6
6.1                  Fees and Compensation to the General Partner and its Affiliates 6
6.2                  Partnership Expenses 6
7.                             Authority and Responsibilities of the General Partner 7
7.1                  Management 7
7.2                  Number, Tenure and Qualifications 7

 

- i -
 

 

Table of Contents

(continued)

 

  Page
7.3                  General Partner Authority 7
7.4                  Restrictions on General Partner’s Authority 10
7.5                  Responsibilities of the General Partner 10
7.6                  Administration of Partnership 11
7.7                  Indemnification of General Partner 11
7.8                  No Personal Liability for Return of Capital 12
7.9                  Authority as to Third Persons 12
8.                             Rights, Authority And Voting Of The Limited Partners 13
8.1                  Limited Partners are Not Agents 13
8.2                  Voting Rights of Limited Partners 13
8.3                  Limited Partner Vote; Consent of General Partner 13
8.4                  Meetings of the Limited Partners 13
8.5                  Rights of Limited Partners 16
8.6                  Restrictions on the Limited Partner 16
8.7                  Return of Capital of Limited Partner 16
9.                             Resignation, Withdrawal or Removal of the General Partner 17
9.1                  Resignation or Withdrawal of General Partner 17
9.2                  Removal 17
9.3                  General Partner’s Fees 17
10.                           Assignment of the General Partner’s Interest 17
10.1                Permitted Assignments 17
10.2                Substitute General Partner 18
10.3                Transfer in Violation Not Recognized 18
11.                           Assignment of Units 18
11.1                Permitted Assignments 18
11.2                Substituted Limited Partner 19
11.3                Assignment of 50% or More of Units 19
11.4                Transfer Subject to Law 19
11.5                Termination of Limited Partnership Interest 19
12.                           Books, Records, Accounting and Reports 20
12.1                Records, Audits and Reports 20

 

- ii -
 

 

Table of Contents

(continued)

 

  Page
12.2                Delivery to Limited Partners and Inspection 20
12.3                Annual Report 20
12.4                Tax Information 21
13.                           Termination and Dissolution of the Partnership 21
13.1                Termination of Partnership 21
13.2                Certificate of Cancellation 21
13.3                Liquidation of Assets 22
13.4                Distributions Upon Dissolution 22
13.5                Limitation on Distributions 22
14.                           Special and Limited Power of Attorney 22
14.1                Power of Attorney 22
14.2                Provision of Power of Attorney 23
14.3                Notice to Limited Partners 23
15.                           Relationship of this Agreement to the Act 23
16.                           Amendment of Agreement 23
16.1                Admission of Limited Partner 23
16.2                Amendments with Consent of Limited Partners 24
16.3                Amendments Without Consent of the Limited Partners 24
16.4                Execution and Recording of Amendments 24
17.                           Limited Partner Representations 24
17.1                Authority 24
17.2                No Registration 24
18.                           Miscellaneous 25
18.1                Counterparts 25
18.2                Successors and Assigns 25
18.3                Severability 25
18.4                Notices 25
18.5                General Partner’s Address 25
18.6                Governing Law 26
18.7                Captions 26
18.8                Gender 26

 

- iii -
 

 

Table of Contents

(continued)

 

  Page
18.9                Time 26
18.10              Additional Documents 26
18.11              Descriptions 26
18.12              Binding Arbitration 26
18.13              Venue 26
18.14              Partition 26
18.15              Integrated and Binding Agreement 26
18.16              Legal Counsel 27
18.17              Title to Partnership Property 27
18.18              Conflict 27
18.19              Signature of the Limited Partners 27

 

- iv -
 

 

LIMITED PARTNERSHIP AGREEMENT
OF
dcx [●] dst LP

 

This Limited Partnership Agreement ( this Agreement ”) , effective as of the Transfer Date, is entered into by and between DCX [●] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited partnership, or its affiliate as the General Partner and in its capacity as Manager of the Initial Limited Partner, and the parties listed on Exhibit B and executing counterparts to this Agreement, as Limited Partners, pursuant to the Act on the following terms and conditions.

 

RECITALS

 

WHEREAS , an Affiliate of the General Partner established DCX [●] DST, a Delaware statutory trust (the “ Trust ”) to acquire and hold the Trust Estate and sell Beneficial Interests in such Trust to the Beneficial Owners pursuant to that certain Program Description Memorandum dated as of March 2, 2016 (the “ Memorandum ”) and that certain Property Supplement to the Memorandum dated as of [●] (the “ Supplement ”);

 

WHEREAS , the Limited Partners hold all of the Beneficial Interests in the Trust as the Beneficial Owners thereof and in the percentage amounts reflected on Exhibit B ;

 

WHEREAS , the Manager has determined that a distribution of Units to the Beneficial Owners in exchange for, and in termination of, their Beneficial Interests should be made pursuant to Section 9.2 of the Trust Agreement in order to preserve and protect the Trust Estate;

 

WHEREAS , in order to preserve and protect the Trust Estate, the General Partner established the Partnership to hold the Trust Estate and issue (a) all of the Class A Units to the Initial Limited Partner in exchange for its contribution of the Trust Estate to the Partnership, and (b) one Class B Unit to the General Partner in exchange for its contribution of cash to the Partnership in the amount reflected on Exhibit B ; and

 

WHEREAS , upon termination of the Trust (which will occur immediately after the transfer of the Trust Estate to the Partnership in exchange for the Class A Units), the Trust, as the Initial Limited Partner, will distribute all of the Class A Units held by the Trust to the Beneficial Owners (in the amounts reflected on Exhibit B , such that each Limited Partner shall receive a percentage amount of Class A Units which is equal to such Limited Partner’s percentage amount of Beneficial Interests as reflected on Exhibit B ) in exchange for, and in termination and redemption of, their Beneficial Interests, and, in connection therewith, the General Partner will admit the Beneficial Owners as Limited Partners of the Partnership and the interest of the Initial Limited Partner in the Partnership will be terminated.

 

AGREEMENT

 

NOW THEREFORE , the Limited Partners and the General Partner agree that the Partnership shall be governed by and operated pursuant to the Act and the terms of this Agreement as hereinafter set forth.

 

1.             Organization .

 

1.1               Limited Partnership . On the Transfer Date, or shortly thereafter, the General Partner shall file a Certificate of Limited Partnership with the office of the Secretary of State of Delaware in accordance with and pursuant to the Act to form the Partnership. The General Partner may at its discretion elect limited liability limited partnership status for the Partnership.

 

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1.2               Name and Place of Business . The name of the Partnership shall be DCX [●] DST LP, and its principal place of business shall be 518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202. The General Partner may change such name, change such place of business or establish additional places of business of the Partnership as the General Partner may determine to be necessary or desirable.

 

1.3               Business and Purpose of the Partnership . The nature of the business and the purposes to be conducted and promoted by the Partnership are to engage solely in the following activities:

 

1.3.1          To own, hold, sell, assign, transfer, and otherwise deal with the Trust Estate.

 

1.3.2         To exercise all powers enumerated in the Act if necessary or convenient to the conduct, promotion or attainment of the business or purposes otherwise set forth in this Agreement.

 

1.4               Term . The term of the Partnership shall terminate as provided in Section 13 of this Agreement.

 

1.5               Required Filings . The General Partner shall execute, acknowledge, file, record and/or publish such certificates and documents as may be required by this Agreement or by law in connection with the formation and operation of the Partnership.

 

1.6               Registered Office and Registered Agent . The Partnership’s initial registered office and initial registered agent shall be as provided in the Certificate of Limited Partnership. The registered office and registered agent may be changed from time to time by the General Partner by filing the address of the new registered office and/or the name of the new registered agent pursuant to the Act.

 

1.7               Certain Transactions . Any Partner, or any Affiliate of a Partner, or any shareholder, officer, director, employee, partner, member or any person owning an interest therein, may engage in or possess an interest in any other business or venture of any nature or description, whether or not competitive with the Partnership including, but not limited to, the acquisition, syndication, ownership, financing, leasing, operation, maintenance, management, brokerage, construction and development of property similar to the Property and no General Partner, Limited Partner or other person or entity shall have any interest in such other business or venture by reason of their interest in the Partnership.

 

2.             Definitions . Definitions for this Agreement are set forth on Exhibit A and are incorporated in this Agreement.

 

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3.             Capitalization and Financing .

 

3.1               Limited Partners’ Capital Contributions .

 

3.1.1         Initial Limited Partner; Contribution of the General Partner . The Trust, as the Initial Limited Partner, shall contribute the Trust Estate to the Partnership in exchange for all of the authorized Class A Units in the Partnership. The Trust shall then distribute the Class A Units to the Beneficial Owners in proportion to and in exchange for, and in termination of, their Beneficial Interests in the Trust. The General Partner shall contribute the amount of cash reflected on Exhibit B to the Partnership in exchange for the one Class B Unit authorized under this Agreement.

 

3.1.2         Units . The Partnership is hereby authorized to issue Class A Units and to admit the Beneficial Owners as Limited Partners of the Partnership. In addition, the Partnership is hereby authorized to issue one (1) Class B Unit to the General Partner.

 

3.1.3         Liabilities of Limited Partners . Except as specifically provided in this Agreement, neither the General Partner nor any Limited Partner shall be required to make any additional contributions to the Partnership and no General Partner or Limited Partner shall be liable for the debts, liabilities, contracts, or any other obligations of the Partnership, nor shall the General Partner or the Limited Partners be required to lend any funds to the Partnership.

 

3.2               Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions or Additional Class A Units . The General Partner may determine, in its sole discretion, that Capital Expenditures are in the best interest of the Partnership. The General Partner may request that the Limited Partners make additional voluntary capital contributions (“ Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions ”) in exchange for additional Class A Units or may sell additional Class A Units to new Limited Partners to enable the Partnership to make Capital Expenditures. In the event the General Partner requests Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions, the General Partner shall notify the Limited Partners in writing (the “ Contribution Notice ”) of the requested amount of such Additional Voluntary Capital Contribution, and a Limited Partner may, within twenty-one (21) days of receiving such notice, elect (in writing by notice given to the General Partner) to make the requested Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions. Limited Partners shall initially have the right to make Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions in proportion to their Class A Units in exchange for additional Class A Units. If less than all of the Limited Partners elect to make Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions, the Limited Partners agreeing to make Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions may elect to contribute additional amounts in proportion to their Class A Units in exchange for additional Class A Units. If the total amount the Limited Partners wishing to make the Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions agree to contribute is less than the amount requested by the General Partner, the General Partner is hereby authorized to sell Class A Units to new Limited Partners and to admit additional Limited Partners as necessary to insure that it receives the requested amount of Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions. In the event the General Partner determines to sell additional Class A Units, existing Limited Partners and the General Partner may participate on the same basis as new Limited Partners on a first-come, first-serve basis. Fractional Class A Units may be issued under this Agreement. To the extent that additional Class A Units are issued to any existing or new Partner in exchange for Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions in accordance with this Section 3.2 , the number of additional Class A Units issued to each Partner making Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions shall be equal to (a) the Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions made by such Partner in response to the Contribution Notice divided by (b) the “Adjusted Class A Unit Price.” The “ Adjusted Class A Unit Price ” shall be equal to (a) the net fair market value of the assets of the Partnership as determined by the General Partner in its sole discretion and set forth in the Contribution Notice, divided by (b) the aggregate number of Class A Units outstanding on the date the Contribution Notice is issued by the General Partner. The General Partner may amend Exhibit B from time to time to reflect the issuance of additional Class A Units and the admission of additional Limited Partners.

 

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3.3               General Partner Loans . The General Partner or its Affiliates may, but will have no obligation to, make loans to the Partnership to pay Partnership operating expenses. No such loan shall be made unless and until the Limited Partners have had the opportunity to make and have failed, within the twenty-one (21) day period set forth in Section 3.2 , to make sufficient Additional Voluntary Capital Contributions in an amount that would otherwise satisfy such Partnership operating expenses. Any such loan shall bear interest at the lesser of (a) fifteen percent (15%) or (b) the maximum rate allowable by law, and shall provide for the payment of principal and any accrued but unpaid interest in accordance with the terms of the promissory note evidencing such loan, but in no event later than dissolution of the Partnership.

 

4.             Allocation of Income and Loss .

 

4.1               Allocation to the Partners . For each fiscal year, the income and loss of the Partnership shall be allocated .0001% to the General Partner and the balance to the Limited Partners in proportion to their Class A Units.

 

4.2               Allocation Among Class A Units . Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, all Distributions and allocations made to the Class A Units shall be in the ratio of the number of Class A Units held by each such Limited Partner on the date of such allocation (which allocation date shall be deemed to be the last day of each month) to the total outstanding Class A Units as of such date, and, except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, without regard to the number of days during such month that the Units were held by each Limited Partner. In the event additional Limited Partners are admitted to the Partnership on different dates during any fiscal year, the income or loss allocated to Limited Partners for that fiscal year shall be apportioned among them in proportion to the number of Class A Units each Limited Partner held from time to time during the fiscal year in accordance with Code Section 706.

 

4.3               Allocation of Partnership Items . Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, whenever a proportionate part of income or loss is allocated to a Partner, every item of income, gain, loss or deduction entering into the computation of such income or loss, and every item of credit or tax preference related to such allocation and applicable to the period during which such income or loss was realized, shall be allocated to the Partner in the same proportion.

 

4.4               Assignment . In the event of the assignment of a Class A Unit, the income and loss shall be apportioned as between the Limited Partner and his or her assignee based upon the number of months of their respective ownership during the year in which the assignment occurs, without regard to the results of the Partnership’s operations during the period before or after such assignment. Distributions shall be made to the holder of record of the Class A Units as of the date of the Distribution. An assignee that receives Class A Units during the first fifteen (15) days of a month will receive any allocations relative to such month. An assignee that acquires Class A Units on or after the sixteenth (16 th ) day of a month will be treated as acquiring his or her Units on the first (1 st ) day of the following month.

 

4
 

 

4.5               Consent of Limited Partners . The methods for allocating income and loss are hereby expressly consented to by each Limited Partner as a condition of becoming a Limited Partner.

 

4.6               Withholding Obligations .

 

4.6.1         If the Partnership is required (as determined in good faith by the General Partner) to make a payment (“ Tax Payment ”) with respect to any Limited Partner to discharge any legal obligation on the part of the Partnership or the General Partner to make payments to any governmental authority with respect to any federal, foreign, state or local tax liability of such Limited Partner arising as a result of such Limited Partner’s interest in the Partnership, then, notwithstanding any other provision of this Agreement to the contrary, the amount of any such Tax Payment shall be deemed to be a loan by the Partnership to such Limited Partner, which loan shall bear interest at the Prime Rate and be payable upon demand or by offset to any Distribution which otherwise would be made to such Limited Partner.

 

4.6.2         If and to the extent the Partnership is required to make any Tax Payment with respect to any Limited Partner, or elects to make payment on any loan described in Section 4.6.1 by offset to a Distribution to a Limited Partner, either (a) such Limited Partner’s proportionate share of such Distribution shall be reduced by the amount of such Tax Payment, or (b) such Limited Partner shall pay to the Partnership prior to such Distribution an amount of cash equal to such Tax Payment. In the event a portion of a Distribution in kind is retained by the Partnership pursuant to clause (a) above, such retained property may, in the discretion of the General Partner, either (i) be distributed to the other Limited Partners, or (ii) be sold by the Partnership to generate the cash necessary to satisfy such Tax Payment. If the property is sold, then for purposes of income tax allocations only under the Agreement, any gain or loss from such sale or exchange shall be allocated to the Limited Partner to whom the Tax Payment relates. If the property is sold at a gain, and the Partnership is required to make any Tax Payment on such gain, the Limited Partner to whom the gain is allocated shall pay the Partnership prior to the due date of Tax Payment an amount of cash equal to such Tax Payment.

 

4.6.3         The General Partner shall be entitled to hold back any Distribution to any Limited Partner to the extent the General Partner believes in good faith that a Tax Payment will be required with respect to such Limited Partner in the future and the General Partner believes that there will not be sufficient subsequent Distributions to make such Tax Payment.

 

5.             Distributions .

 

5.1               Cash from Operations . Except as provided in Section 5.2 and as otherwise provided in Section 13 , Distributable Cash with respect to each calendar year shall be distributed .0001% to the General Partner and the balance to the Limited Partners in proportion to their Class A Units.

 

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5.2               Restrictions . The Partnership intends to make periodic distributions of substantially all cash determined by the General Partner to be distributable, subject to the following: (a) Distributions may be restricted or suspended for periods when the General Partner determines in its reasonable discretion that it is in the best interest of the Partnership; (b) all Distributions are subject to the payment, and the maintenance of reasonable reserves for payment, of Partnership obligations; and (c) all Distributions shall be paid only to the extent that all currently due operating expenses have been paid or otherwise provided for.

 

6.              Compensation to the General Partner and its Affiliates .

 

6.1               Fees and Compensation to the General Partner and its Affiliates . The General Partner, its Affiliates, and Affiliates of officers of the General Partner shall be entitled to receive as compensation an annual fee in an amount that is the greater of (a) [●] percent ([●]%) of the gross rents payable by the Master Tenant under the Master Lease or (b) $[●], which shall be payable monthly in arrears and pro-rated for any applicable portion of a calendar year. In addition, the General Partner, its Affiliates, and Affiliates of officers of the General Partner shall be entitled to receive a fee from the Partnership equal to [●]percent ([●]%) of the gross proceeds of a sale of the Trust Estate to a third party as a result of offers received at any time as a result of negotiations by the General Partner or its Affiliates with, and submission of offers from, a prospective purchaser, and provided this Limited Partnership Agreement is in effect at the earlier of (x) the time of the General Partner’s decision to sell the Trust Estate, and (y) the time of the submission of the offers. The General Partner shall not have any obligation by virtue of this Limited Partnership Agreement to spend any of its own funds, or to take any action that could result in its incurring any cost or expense; provided , however , the Partnership shall reimburse the General Partner for any such out of pocket cost or expense reasonably incurred in connection with a sale of the Trust Estate to a third party as contemplated under this Agreement.

 

6.2               Partnership Expenses .

 

6.2.1         Operating Expenses. Subject to the limitations set forth in Section 6.2.2, the Partnership shall pay directly, or reimburse the General Partner as the case may be, for all of the costs and expenses of the Partnership’s operations, including, without limitation, the following costs and expenses: (a) all Organization Expenses advanced or otherwise paid by the General Partner; (b) all costs of personnel employed by the Partnership and directly involved in the Partnership’s business; (c) all compensation due to the General Partner or its Affiliates; (d) all costs of personnel employed by the General Partner or its Affiliates and directly involved in the business of the Partnership; (e) all costs of borrowed money and taxes applicable to the Partnership; (f) legal, accounting, audit, brokerage, and other fees; (g) fees and expenses paid to independent contractors, mortgage bankers, real estate brokers, and other agents; (h) all expenses incurred in connection with the maintenance of Partnership books and records, the preparation and dissemination of reports, tax returns or other information to the Limited Partners and the making of Distributions to the Limited Partners; (i) expenses incurred in preparation and filing reports or other information with appropriate regulatory agencies; (j) expenses of insurance as required in connection with the business of the Partnership, other than any insurance insuring the General Partner against losses for which it is not entitled to be indemnified under Section 7.7; (k) costs incurred in connection with any litigation in which the Partnership may become involved, or any examination, investigation, or other proceedings conducted by any regulatory agency, including legal and accounting fees; (l) the actual costs of goods and materials used by or for the Partnership; (m) the costs of services that could be performed directly for the Partnership by independent parties such as legal, accounting, secretarial or clerical, reporting, transfer agent, data processing and duplicating services but which are in fact performed by the General Partner or its Affiliates, but not in excess of the lesser of: (i) the actual costs to the General Partner or its Affiliates of providing such services; or (ii) the amounts which the Partnership would otherwise be required to pay to independent parties for comparable services in the same geographic locale; (n) expenses of Partnership administration, accounting, documentation and reporting; (o) expenses of revising, amending, modifying, or terminating this Agreement; (p) all travel expenses incurred in connection with the Partnership’s business; and (q) all other costs and expenses incurred in connection with the business of the Partnership exclusive of those set forth in Section 6.2.2. All payments set forth in this Agreement shall be paid from any funds available after payment of, or other provision for, all other currently due operating expenses for the Property.

 

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6.2.2         General Partner Overhead. Except as set forth in this Section 6 , the General Partner and its Affiliates shall not be reimbursed for overhead expenses incurred in connection with the Partnership, including but not limited to rent, depreciation, utilities, capital equipment, or other administrative items.

 

7.             Authority and Responsibilities of the General Partner .

 

7.1               Management . The General Partner shall manage the business and affairs of the Partnership. Except as otherwise set forth in this Agreement and the Certificate of Limited Partnership, and to the maximum extent permitted by law, the General Partner shall have full and complete authority, power and discretion to manage and control the business, affairs and properties of the Partnership, to make all decisions regarding those matters, and to perform any and all other acts or activities customary or incident to the management of the Partnership’s business.

 

7.2               Number, Tenure and Qualifications . The Partnership shall have one General Partner, which shall initially be DCX [●] Manager LLC. The General Partner shall remain the General Partner until such General Partner is removed, withdraws or resigns.

 

7.3               General Partner Authority . The General Partner shall have all authority, rights and powers conferred by law (subject only to Section 7.4 and the Certificate of Limited Partnership) and those required or appropriate to the management of the Partnership’s business, as limited by Section 1.3 , which, by way of illustration but not by way of limitation, shall include the right, authority and power to cause the Partnership to:

 

7.3.1         Take all actions relating to the management of the Trust Estate;

 

7.3.2         Hold, sell, exchange and otherwise dispose of the Trust Estate;

 

7.3.3         Borrow money, and, if security is required therefor subject the Trust Estate to any security device, and to prepay, in whole or in part, refinance, increase, modify, consolidate, or extend any security device. All of the foregoing shall be on such terms and in such amounts as the General Partner, in its sole discretion, deems to be in the best interest of the Partnership;

 

7
 

 

7.3.4         Enter into such contracts and agreements, including lease agreements in connection with the Property, as the General Partner determines to be reasonably necessary or appropriate in connection with the Partnership’s business and purpose (including contracts with Affiliates of the General Partner), and any contract of insurance that the General Partner deems necessary or appropriate for the protection of the Partnership and the General Partner, including errors and omissions insurance, for the conservation of Partnership assets, or for any purpose convenient or beneficial to the Partnership;

 

7.3.5        Employ persons, who may be Affiliates of the General Partner, in the operation and management of the business of the Partnership;

 

7.3.6         Prepare or cause to be prepared reports, statements, and other relevant information for distribution to the Limited Partners;

 

7.3.7         Open accounts and deposits and maintain funds in the name of the Partnership in banks, savings and loan associations, “money market” mutual funds and other instruments as the General Partner may deem in its discretion to be necessary or desirable;

 

7.3.8         Cause the Partnership to make or revoke any of the elections referred to in the Code (the General Partner shall have no obligation to make any such elections);

 

7.3.9         Select as its accounting year a calendar or fiscal year as may be approved by the Internal Revenue Service (the Partnership initially intends to adopt the calendar year);

 

7.3.10       Determine the appropriate accounting method or methods to be used by the Partnership;

 

7.3.11       In addition to any amendments otherwise authorized in this Agreement, amend this Agreement without any action on the part of the Limited Partners by special or general power of attorney or otherwise to:

 

       (a)            Add to the representations, duties, services or obligations of the General Partner or its Affiliates, for the benefit of the Limited Partners;

 

      (b)           Cure any ambiguity or mistake, correct or supplement any provision in this Agreement that may be inconsistent with any other provision in this Agreement, or make any other provision with respect to matters or questions arising under this Agreement that will not be inconsistent with the provisions of this Agreement;

 

      (c)            Amend this Agreement to reflect the addition or substitution of Limited Partners;

 

      (d)           Minimize the adverse impact of, or comply with, any final regulation of the United States Department of Labor, or other federal agency having jurisdiction, defining “plan assets” for ERISA purposes;

 

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      (e)           Reconstitute the Partnership under the laws of another state if beneficial;

 

      (f)            Execute, acknowledge and deliver any and all instruments to effectuate the foregoing, including the execution, acknowledgment and delivery of any such instrument by the attorney-in-fact for the General Partner under a special or limited power of attorney, and to take all such actions in connection therewith as the General Partner shall deem necessary or appropriate with the signature of the General Partner acting alone; and

 

      (g)          Make any changes to this Agreement as requested or required by any lender that may be required to obtain financing, as needed.

 

7.3.12        Require in any Partnership contract that the General Partner shall not have any personal liability, but that the person or entity contracting with the Partnership is to look solely to the Partnership and its assets for satisfaction;

 

7.3.13       Lease personal property for use by the Partnership;

 

7.3.14        Establish reserves from income in such amounts as the General Partner may deem appropriate;

 

7.3.15       Make secured or unsecured loans to the Partnership and receive interest at the rates set forth in this Agreement;

 

7.3.16     Represent the Partnership and the Limited Partners as “Tax Matters Partner” or “Partnership Representative” as set forth in Section 7.9.4 regarding the tax treatment of items of Partnership income, loss, deduction or credit, or any other matter reflected in the Partnership’s returns, and, if deemed in the best interest of the Limited Partners, to agree to final Partnership administrative adjustments or file a petition for a readjustment of the Partnership items in question with the applicable court;

 

7.3.17       Redeem or repurchase Class A Units on behalf of the Partnership;

 

7.3.18       Hold an election for a successor General Partner before the resignation, withdrawal, expulsion or dissolution of the General Partner;

 

7.3.19       Initiate, settle and defend legal actions on behalf of the Partnership;

 

7.3.20       Admit itself as a Limited Partner;

 

7.3.21       Enter into any transaction with any partnership or venture;

 

7.3.22       Perform any and all other acts which the General Partner is obligated to perform under this Agreement; and

 

7.3.23      Execute, acknowledge and deliver any and all instruments to effectuate the foregoing and take all such actions in connection therewith as the General Partner may deem necessary or appropriate. The General Partner may, on behalf and in the name of the Partnership, execute any and all documents or instruments.

 

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7.4              Restrictions on General Partner’s Authority . Subject to the balance of the terms of this Agreement and the Certificate of Limited Partnership, neither the General Partner nor any Affiliates shall have authority, without a Majority Vote of the Units, to:

 

7.4.1         Use or permit any other person to use Partnership funds or assets in any manner except for the exclusive benefit of the Partnership;

 

7.4.2         Alter the primary purpose of the Partnership;

 

7.4.3         Sell or lease to the Partnership any real property in which the General Partner or any Affiliate has any interest;

 

7.4.4         Admit another person or entity as the General Partner, except with the consent of the Limited Partners as provided in this Agreement;

 

7.4.5         Reinvest Cash from Operations in any additional properties;

 

7.4.6         Enter into any agreement imposing personal liability on any Limited Partner; or

 

7.4.7        Commingle the Partnership funds with those of any other person or entity, except for (a) the temporary deposit of funds in a bank checking account for the sole purpose of making Distributions immediately thereafter to the Limited Partners and the General Partner or (b) funds attributable to the Property and held for use in the management of the operations of the Property.

 

7.5               Responsibilities of the General Partner . The General Partner shall:

 

7.5.1         Devote such of its time and business efforts to the business of the Partnership as it shall in its discretion, exercised in good faith, determine to be necessary to, directly or indirectly, conduct the business of the Partnership for the benefit of the Partnership and the Limited Partners (it being understood, however, that this Section 7.5.1 shall in no way impose limitations or restrictions upon Affiliates of the General Partner to engage in activities that may conflict or compete with the business of the Partnership);

 

7.5.2         File and publish all certificates, statements, or other instruments required by law for formation, qualification and operation of the Partnership and for the conduct of its business in all appropriate jurisdictions;

 

7.5.3         Cause the Partnership, at the Partnership’s cost and expense, to be protected by public liability, property damage and other insurance determined by the General Partner in its discretion to be appropriate to the business of the Partnership; and

 

7.5.4          At all times use its best efforts to meet applicable requirements for the Partnership to be taxed as a partnership and not as an association taxable as a corporation.

 

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7.5.5         To the maximum extent not prohibited by applicable law, including, but not limited to, the Act, none of the General Partner or any member, manager, officer, employee, agent, advisor, representative or Affiliate of the General Partner (or any of their respective members, managers, shareholders, partners, directors, officers, employees, agents, advisors, representatives or Affiliates), shall be liable to any Limited Partner or the Partnership for (a) any action taken, or failure to act, as the General Partner, or on behalf of the General Partner, with respect to the Partnership, unless and only to the extent that such action taken or failure to act is a willful violation of the material provisions of this Agreement or constitutes gross negligence or willful malfeasance by such Person or was in bad faith taken or failed to be taken, (b) any action or inaction arising from reliance in good faith upon the opinion or advice as to legal matters of legal counsel or as to accounting matters of accountants selected by any of them with reasonable care or (c) the action or inaction of any agent, contractor or consultant selected by any of them with reasonable care. To the extent that, at law or in equity, the General Partner or any other Person has duties (including fiduciary duties) and liabilities relating thereto to the Partnership or any Limited Partner, any such Person acting under this Agreement shall not be liable to the Partnership or any Limited Partner for its good faith reliance on the provisions of this Agreement. The provisions of this Agreement, to the extent they restrict or eliminate the duties and liabilities of the General Partner or any other Person otherwise existing at law or in equity, are agreed by the Partners to replace such other duties and liabilities of such Person. Nothing in this Agreement is intended to or shall eliminate any implied contractual covenant of good faith and fair dealing, the requirement not to waste Partnership assets or otherwise relieve or discharge the General Partner from liability to any Limited Partner or the Partnership on account of any fraudulent or intentional misconduct of the General Partner.

 

7.6              Administration of Partnership . So long as it is the General Partner and the provisions of this Agreement for compensation and reimbursement of expenses of the General Partner are observed, the General Partner shall have the responsibility of providing continuing administrative and executive support, advice, consultation, analysis and supervision with respect to the functions of the Partnership, and compliance with federal, state and local regulatory requirements and procedures. In this regard, the General Partner may retain the services of such Affiliates or unaffiliated parties as the General Partner may deem appropriate to provide management and financial consultation and advice, and may enter into agreements for the management and operation of Partnership assets.

 

7.7               Indemnification of General Partner .

 

7.7.1         The General Partner, its shareholders, Affiliates, officers, directors, partners, manager, members, employees, agents and assigns, shall not be liable for, and shall be indemnified and held harmless by the Partnership (to the extent of the Partnership’s assets) from, any loss or damage incurred by them, the Partnership or the Partners in connection with the business of the Partnership, including costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees and any amounts expended in the settlement of any claims of loss or damage resulting from any act or omission, which shall not constitute willful misconduct, bad faith, fraud or gross negligence, pursuant to the authority granted, to promote the interests of the Partnership. Moreover, the General Partner shall not be liable to the Partnership or the Limited Partners because any taxing authorities disallow or adjust any deductions or credits in the Partnership income tax returns.

 

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7.7.2         Notwithstanding anything contained in this Agreement to the contrary, any indemnification of the General Partner or any Limited Partner shall be fully subordinated to any obligations respecting the Property and such indemnification shall not constitute a claim against the Partnership in the event that cash flow in excess of amounts necessary to pay holders of such obligations is insufficient to pay such indemnification obligations.

 

7.8               No Personal Liability for Return of Capital . The General Partner shall not be personally liable or responsible for the return or repayment of all or any portion of the Capital Contribution of any Limited Partner or any loan made by any Limited Partner to the Partnership, it being expressly understood that any such return of capital or repayment of any loan shall be made solely from the assets (which shall not include any right of contribution from any Limited Partner) of the Partnership.

 

7.9               Authority as to Third Persons .

 

7.9.1         No third party dealing with the Partnership shall be required to investigate the authority of the General Partner or secure the approval or confirmation by any Limited Partner of any act of the General Partner in connection with the Partnership business. No purchaser of any property or interest owned by the Partnership shall be required to determine the right to sell or the authority of the General Partner to sign and deliver any instrument of transfer on behalf of the Partnership, or to see to the application or distribution of revenues or proceeds paid or credited in connection therewith.

 

7.9.2         The General Partner shall have full authority to execute on behalf of the Partnership any and all agreements, contracts, conveyances, deeds, mortgages and other instruments, and the execution thereof by the General Partner, executing on behalf of the Partnership, shall be the only execution necessary to bind the Partnership thereto. No signature of any Limited Partner shall be required.

 

7.9.3         The General Partner shall have the right by separate instrument or document to authorize one or more individuals or entities to execute leases and lease-related documents on behalf of the Partnership and any leases and documents executed by such agent shall be binding upon the Partnership as if executed by the General Partner.

 

7.9.4         The General Partner is hereby designated (i) as the Partnership’s “tax matters partner” within the meaning of Section 6231(a)(7) of the Code (“ Tax Matters Partner ”) and (ii) commencing with respect to taxable years commencing after December 31, 2017, as the Partnership’s “partnership representative” in accordance with Section 6223 of the Code (“ Partnership Representative ”), in all cases to exercise all authority permitted of a Tax Matters Partner or Partnership Representative, as applicable, under the Code. The General Partner, in its capacity as Partnership Representative, may exercise any authority granted to the Partnership Representative under the Code. In particular, as Partnership Representative, the General Partner may, in its sole discretion, make any elections provided for under the new partnership audit rules enacted under the Bipartisan Budget Act of 2015 (the “ New Audit Rules ”) and may, in its sole discretion, settle and/or litigate any audit adjustments proposed by the Internal Revenue Service in any audit governed by the New Audit Rules. The Partnership shall fully reimburse the General Partner for any and all costs and expenses incurred as a result of acting as Tax Matters Partner or Partnership Representative, as the case may be. [The General Partner, is authorized to amend the provisions of this Agreement concerning the Tax Matters Partner and related provisions to reflect new tax rules and regulations scheduled to go into effect at the end of 2016.]

 

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8.            Rights, Authority And Voting Of The Limited Partners .

 

8.1               Limited Partners are Not Agents . Pursuant to Section 7 and the Certificate of Limited Partnership, the management of the Partnership is vested in the General Partner. No Limited Partner, acting solely in the capacity of a Limited Partner, is an agent of the Partnership nor can any Limited Partner in such capacity bind or execute any instrument on behalf of the Partnership.

 

8.2               Voting Rights of Limited Partners . Limited Partners who own Class A Units shall be entitled to cast one vote for each Class A Unit they own. Except as otherwise specifically provided in this Agreement, Limited Partners shall have the right to vote only upon the following matters:

 

8.2.1         remove the General Partner as provided in Section 9.2 of this Agreement;

 

8.2.2         remove the current Tax Matters Partner (or Partnership Representative, as the case may be) and elect a successor Tax Matters Partner (or Partnership Representative, as the case may be);

 

8.2.3         amend this Agreement;

 

8.2.4         extend the term of the Partnership as provided in Section 13.1.4 when there is a Dissolution Event;

 

8.2.5         elect an additional General Partner;

 

8.2.6         elect a successor General Partner; or

 

8.2.7         upon a Supermajority Vote, direct the disposition of the Trust Estate without the consent of the General Partner.

 

8.3               Limited Partner Vote; Consent of General Partner . All matters upon which the Limited Partners may vote, except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, shall require a Majority Vote and (except for removal of the General Partner as provided in Section 9.2 or directing the disposition of the Trust Estate without the consent of the General Partner) the consent of the General Partner to pass and become effective.

 

8.4               Meetings of the Limited Partners . The General Partner may at any time call for a meeting of the Limited Partners, or for a vote without a meeting, on matters on which the Limited Partners are entitled to vote, and shall call for such a meeting (but not a vote without a meeting) following receipt of a written request therefor of Limited Partners holding more than twenty-five percent (25%) of the Units entitled to vote as of the record date. Within twenty (20) days after receipt of such request, the General Partner shall notify all Limited Partners of record on the record date of the meeting.

 

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8.4.1         Notice. Except as provided by Section 8.4.5, written notice of each meeting shall be given to each Limited Partner entitled to vote, either personally or by mail or other means of written communication, charges prepaid, addressed to such Limited Partner at his or her address appearing on the books of the Partnership or given by him or her to the Partnership for the purpose of notice or, if no such address appears or is given, at the principal executive office of the Partnership, or by publication of notice at least once in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which such office is located. All such notices shall be sent not less than five (5), nor more than sixty (60), days before such meeting. The notice shall specify the place, date and hour of the meeting and the general nature of business to be transacted, and no other business shall be transacted at the meeting.

 

8.4.2         Adjourned Meeting and Notice Thereof. When a Limited Partners’ meeting is adjourned to another time or place, notice need not be given of the adjourned meeting if the time and place thereof are announced at the meeting at which the adjournment is taken. At the adjourned meeting, the Partnership may transact any business that might have been transacted at the original meeting. If the adjournment is for more than forty-five (45) days or if after the adjournment a new record date is fixed for the adjourned meeting, a notice of the adjourned meeting shall be given to each Limited Partner of record entitled to vote at the meeting.

 

8.4.3         Quorum. The presence in person or by proxy of the persons entitled to vote a majority of the Units shall constitute a quorum for the transaction of business. The Limited Partners present at a duly called or held meeting at which a quorum is present may continue to transact business until adjournment. Any meeting of Limited Partners may be adjourned from time to time by a Majority Vote of the Units represented either in person or by proxy.

 

8.4.4         Consent of Absentees. The transactions of any meeting of Limited Partners, however called and noticed and wherever held, are as valid as though they occurred at a meeting duly held after regular call and notice, if a quorum is present either in person or by proxy, and if, either before or after the meeting, each of the persons entitled to vote, not present in person or by proxy, signs a written waiver of notice, or a consent to the holding of the meeting or an approval of the minutes thereof. All waivers, consents and approvals shall be filed with the Partnership records or made a part of the minutes of the meeting.

 

8.4.5         Action Without Meeting. Except as otherwise provided in this Agreement, any action which may be taken at any meeting of the Limited Partners may be taken without a meeting if a consent in writing, setting forth the action so taken, shall be signed by Limited Partners having not less than the minimum number of votes that would be necessary to authorize or take that action at a meeting at which all entitled to vote thereon were present and voted. In the event the Limited Partners are requested to consent on a matter without a meeting, each Limited Partner shall be given not less than five (5), nor more than sixty (60), days’ notice.

 

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8.4.6         Record Dates. For purposes of determining the Limited Partners entitled to notice of any meeting or to vote or entitled to receive any Distributions or to exercise any rights in respect of any other lawful matter, the General Partner may fix in advance a record date, which is not more than sixty (60) nor less than five (5) days’ prior to the date of the meeting nor more than sixty (60) days’ prior to any other action. If no record date is fixed:

 

      (a)            The record date for determining Limited Partners entitled to notice of or to vote at a meeting of Limited Partners shall be at the close of business on the business day next preceding the day on which notice is given or, if notice is waived, at the close of business on the business day next preceding the day on which the meeting is held;

 

      (b)            The record date for determining Limited Partners entitled to give consent to Partnership action in writing without a meeting shall be the day on which the first written consent is given;

 

      (c)            The record date for determining Limited Partners for any other purpose shall be at the close of business on the day on which the General Partner adopts it, or the 60th day before the date of the other action, whichever is later; and

 

       (d)            A determination of Limited Partners of record entitled to notice of or to vote at a meeting of Limited Partners shall apply to any adjournment of the meeting unless the General Partner, or the Limited Partners who requested the meeting, fix a new record date for the adjourned meeting, but the General Partner, or such Limited Partners, shall fix a new record date if the meeting is adjourned for more than forty-five (45) days from the date set for the original meeting.

 

8.4.7         Proxies. Every person entitled to vote or execute consents shall have the right to do so either in person or by one or more agents authorized by a written proxy executed by such person or his duly authorized agent and filed with the General Partner. No proxy shall be valid after the expiration of three (3) months from the date thereof unless otherwise provided in the proxy. Every proxy continues in full force and effect until revoked as specified or unless it states that it is irrevocable. A proxy that states that it is irrevocable is irrevocable for the period specified therein to the fullest extent permitted by law.

 

8.4.8         Chairman of Meeting. The General Partner may select any person to preside as Chairman of any meeting of the Limited Partners, and if such person shall be absent from the meeting, or fail or be unable to preside, the General Partner may name any other person in substitution therefor as Chairman. The Chairman of the meeting shall designate a secretary for such meeting, who shall take and keep or cause to be taken and kept minutes of the proceedings thereof. The conduct of all Limited Partners’ meetings shall at all times be within the discretion of the Chairman of the meeting and shall be conducted under such rules as he may prescribe. The Chairman shall have the right and power to adjourn any meeting at any time, without a vote of the Units present in person or represented by proxy, if the Chairman shall determine such action to be in the best interests of the Partnership.

 

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8.4.9         Inspectors of Election. In advance of any meeting of Limited Partners, the General Partner may appoint any persons other than nominees for General Partner or other office as the inspector of election to act at the meeting and any adjournment thereof. If an inspector of election is not so appointed, or if any such person fails to appear or refuses to act, the Chairman of any such meeting may, and on the request of any Limited Partner or his proxy shall, make such appointment at the meeting. The inspector of election shall determine the number of Units outstanding and the voting power of each, the Units represented at the meeting, the existence of a quorum, the authenticity, validity and effect of proxies, receive votes, ballots or consents, hear and determine all challenges and questions in any way arising in connection with the right to vote, count and tabulate all votes or consents, determine when the polls shall close, determine the result and do such acts as may be proper to conduct the election or vote with fairness to all Limited Partners.

 

8.4.10       Record Date and Closing Partnership Books. When a record date is fixed, only Limited Partners of record on that date are entitled to notice of and to vote at the meeting or to receive a Distribution, or allotment of rights, or to exercise the rights, as the case may be, notwithstanding any transfer of any Units on the books of the Partnership after the record date.

 

8.5               Rights of Limited Partners . No Limited Partner shall have the right or power to: (a) withdraw or reduce his contribution to the capital of the Partnership, except as a result of the dissolution and termination of the Partnership or as otherwise provided in this Agreement or by law; (b) bring an action for partition against the Partnership; or (c) demand or receive property other than cash in return for his Capital Contribution. Except as provided in this Agreement, no Limited Partner shall have priority over any other Limited Partner either as to the return of Capital Contributions or as to allocations of the income, loss or Distributions of the Partnership. Other than upon the termination and dissolution of the Partnership as provided by this Agreement, there has been no time agreed upon when the contribution of each Limited Partner (other than the Initial Limited Partner) is to be returned.

 

8.6               Restrictions on the Limited Partner . No Limited Partner shall:

 

8.6.1          Disclose to any non-Limited Partner other than their lawyers, accountants or consultants and/or commercially exploit any of the Partnership’s business practices, trade secrets or any other information not generally known to the business community;

 

8.6.2         Do any other act or deed with the intention of harming the business operations of the Partnership; or

 

8.6.3         Do any act contrary to the Agreement.

 

8.7              Return of Capital of Limited Partner . In accordance with the Act, a Limited Partner may, under certain circumstances, be required to return to the Partnership, for the benefit of the Partnership’s creditors, amounts previously distributed to the Limited Partner. If any court of competent jurisdiction holds that any Limited Partner is obligated to make any such payment, such obligation shall be the obligation of such Limited Partner and not of the Partnership, the General Partner or any other Limited Partner.

 

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9.             Resignation, Withdrawal or Removal of the General Partner .

 

9.1               Resignation or Withdrawal of General Partner . Subject to Section 9, the General Partner may withdraw upon sixty (60) days’ written notice to the Limited Partners. An additional General Partner of the Partnership may be admitted to the Partnership by Majority Vote of the Limited Partners and upon its execution of an instrument signifying its agreement to be bound by the terms and conditions of this Agreement, which instrument may be a counterpart signature page to this Agreement. Such admission shall be deemed effective immediately prior to the resignation and, immediately following such admission, the resigning General Partner shall cease to be a General Partner of the Partnership.

 

9.2               Removal . The General Partner may be removed by a Supermajority Vote for “cause.” For purposes of this Section 9.2 “cause” shall be deemed to exist (a) if the General Partner has engaged in willful misconduct, gross negligence, breach of fiduciary duty or a material breach of this Agreement and, to the extent such breach is susceptible of being cured, such breach has continued for thirty (30) days after written notice thereof from the Limited Partners to the General Partner (provided, however, that if such breach is susceptible of cure but such cure cannot be accomplished with reasonable diligence within said period of time, and if the General Partner commences to cure such breach promptly after receipt of notice thereof from the Limited Partners, and thereafter prosecutes the curing of such breach with reasonable diligence, such period of time shall be extended for such period of time as may be necessary to cure such breach with reasonable diligence) or (b) upon an Event of Insolvency of the General Partner. Any indemnification of the General Partner pursuant to this Agreement shall survive the removal of the General Partner.

 

9.3               General Partner’s Fees . Upon the removal of the General Partner pursuant to Section 9.2 or its withdrawal with the approval of a Majority Vote, the Partnership shall redeem the General Partner’s Class B Unit for $100, and such General Partner shall be paid all of its earned but unpaid fees and other compensation remaining to be paid under this Agreement. The Partnership shall pay these amounts to the General Partner in cash within sixty (60) days of the removal or withdrawal of the General Partner. If the General Partner and the Partnership cannot agree upon the accrued but unpaid fees within thirty (30) days, the amount shall be determined by arbitration as described in Section 18.12.

 

10.           Assignment of the General Partner’s Interest .

 

10.1             Permitted Assignments . The General Partner may sell, assign, hypothecate, encumber or otherwise transfer any part or all of its interest in the Partnership in its sole and absolute discretion.

 

10.1.1      Any assignment or transfer of the General Partner’s interest provided for by this Agreement can be an assignment or transfer of all of its interest or any portion or part of its interest.

 

10.1.2       Any transfer of all or a part of the General Partner’s interest may be made only pursuant to the terms and conditions contained in this Section 10 .

 

10.1.3     Any such assignment shall be by a written instrument of assignment, the terms of which are not in contravention of any of the provisions of this Agreement, and which has been duly executed by the assignor of such General Partner’s interest.

 

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10.2             Substitute General Partner . Upon acceptance by the Limited Partners, any assignee of such General Partner’s interest in compliance with this Section 10 shall be substituted as the General Partner.

 

10.3             Transfer in Violation Not Recognized . Any assignment, sale, exchange or other transfer in contravention of the provisions of this Section 10 shall be void and ineffectual and shall not bind or be recognized by the Partnership.

 

11.            Assignment of Units .

 

11.1             Permitted Assignments . A Limited Partner (other than the General Partner) may only sell, assign, hypothecate, encumber or otherwise transfer all or any part of his or her interest in the Partnership if the following requirements are satisfied:

 

11.1.1     The General Partner consents in its sole and absolute discretion in writing to the transfer;

 

11.1.2     No Limited Partner shall transfer, assign or convey or offer to transfer, assign or convey all or any portion of a Unit to any person who does not possess the financial qualifications required of all persons who become Limited Partners (including, but not limited to, being an “accredited investor”), as described in the Memorandum and the Supplement;

 

11.1.3     No Limited Partner shall have the right to transfer any Unit to any minor or to any person who, for any reason, lacks the capacity to contract for himself or herself under applicable law. Such limitations shall not, however, restrict the right of any Limited Partner to transfer any one or more Units to a custodian or a trustee for a minor or other person who lacks such contractual capacity;

 

11.1.4     The General Partner, with advice of counsel, must determine that such transfer will not jeopardize the applicability of the exemptions from the registration requirements under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and registration or qualification under state securities laws relied upon by the Partnership and General Partner in offering and selling the Units or otherwise violate any federal or state securities laws;

 

11.1.5     The General Partner, with advice of counsel, must determine that, despite such transfer, Units will not be deemed traded on an established securities market or “readily tradable on a secondary market (or the substantial equivalent thereof)” under the provisions applicable to publicly traded partnership status;

 

11.1.6     Any such transfer shall be by a written instrument of assignment, the terms of which are not in contravention of any of the provisions of this Agreement, and which has been duly executed by the assignor of such Units and accepted by the General Partner in writing;

 

11.1.7     A transfer fee shall be paid by the transferring Limited Partner in such amount as may be required by the General Partner and/or Lender to cover all reasonable expenses, including attorneys’ fees, connected with such assignment; and

 

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11.1.8     The transfer will not result in qualified benefit plans owning twenty-five percent (25%) or more of the Units.

 

11.2             Substituted Limited Partner .

 

11.2.1     Conditions to be Satisfied. No person shall have the right to become a Substituted Limited Partner unless the General Partner shall consent thereto in accordance with Section 11.2.2 and all of the following conditions are satisfied:

 

     (a)             A duly executed and acknowledged written instrument of assignment shall have been filed with the Partnership, which instrument shall specify the number of Units being assigned and set forth the intention of the assignor that the assignee succeed to the assignor’s interest as a Substituted Limited Partner in his or her place;

 

     (b)             The assignor and assignee shall have executed, acknowledged and delivered such other instruments as the General Partner may deem necessary or desirable to effect such substitution, which may include an opinion of counsel regarding the effect and legality of any such proposed transfer, and which shall include: (i) the written acceptance and adoption by the assignee of the provisions of this Agreement and (ii) the execution, acknowledgment and delivery to the General Partner of a special power of attorney, the form and content of which are more fully described in this Agreement; and

 

    (c)             A transfer fee sufficient to cover all reasonable expenses connected with such substitution shall have been paid to the Partnership.

 

11.2.2     Consent of General Partner. The consent of the General Partner shall be required to admit a person as a Substituted Limited Partner. The granting or withholding of such consent shall be within the sole and absolute discretion of the General Partner.

 

11.2.3     Consent of Limited Partner. By executing or adopting this Agreement, each Limited Partner hereby consents to the admission of additional or Substituted Limited Partners upon consent of the General Partner and in compliance with this Agreement.

 

11.3             Assignment of 50% or More of Units . No assignment of any Units may be made if the Units to be assigned, when added to the total of all other Units and General Partner interests assigned within the thirteen (13) immediately preceding months, would, in the opinion of counsel for the Partnership, result in the termination of the Partnership under the Code.

 

11.4             Transfer Subject to Law . No assignment, sale, transfer, exchange or other disposition of any Units may be made except in compliance with the applicable governmental laws and regulations, including state and federal securities laws.

 

11.5             Termination of Limited Partnership Interest . Upon the transfer of a Unit in violation of this Agreement or the occurrence of a Limited Partner Dissolution that does not result in the dissolution of the Partnership, the Limited Partnership Interest of a Limited Partner shall be converted into an Economic Interest.

 

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12.           Books, Records, Accounting and Reports .

 

12.1             Records, Audits and Reports . The Partnership shall maintain at its principal office the Partnership’s records and accounts of all operations and expenditures of the Partnership including the following:

 

12.1.1     A current list in alphabetical order of the full name and last known business or resident address of each Limited Partner and General Partner, together with the number of Units owned by each Limited Partner;

 

12.1.2     A copy of the Certificate of Limited Partnership and all amendments thereto, together with any powers of attorney pursuant to which the Certificate of Limited Partnership or any amendments thereto were executed;

 

12.1.3     Copies of the Partnership’s federal, state, and local income tax or information returns and reports, if any, for the six (6) most recent taxable years;

 

12.1.4     Copies of this Agreement and any amendments thereto together with any powers of attorney pursuant to which any written accounting or any amendments thereto were executed;

 

12.1.5     Copies of any financial statements of the Partnership, if any, for the six (6) most recent years; and

 

12.1.6     The Partnership’s books and records as they relate to the internal affairs of the Partnership for at least the current and past four (4) fiscal years.

 

12.2             Delivery to Limited Partners and Inspection.  

 

12.2.1     Each Limited Partner, or its representative designated in writing, has the right, upon reasonable written request for purposes related to the interest of that person as a Limited Partner, which purposes are set forth in the written request, to receive from the Partnership:

 

     (a)            True and full information regarding the status of the business and financial condition of the Partnership;

 

      (b)            Promptly after becoming available, a copy of the Partnership’s federal, state and local income tax returns for each year; and

 

     (c)            A copy of this Agreement and the Certificate of Limited Partnership and all amendments thereto, together with executed copies of any written powers of attorney pursuant to which this Agreement and any certificate and all amendments thereto have been executed.

 

12.3             Annual Report . The General Partner will cause the Partnership to send to each Limited Partner such tax information as may be necessary for the preparation of the Limited Partner’s tax returns. The General Partner will use reasonable efforts to provide this information by the original due date of Limited Partner’s tax returns; however, it may be necessary for the Limited Partners to extend their tax returns.

 

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12.4             Tax Information . The General Partner shall cause the Partnership, at the Partnership’s expense, to prepare and timely file income tax returns for the Partnership with the appropriate authorities, and shall cause all Partnership information necessary in the preparation of the Limited Partners’ individual income tax returns to be distributed to the Limited Partners not later than seventy-five (75) days after the end of the Partnership’s fiscal year. The General Partner shall also distribute a copy of the Partnership’s tax return to a Limited Partner, if requested by such Limited Partner.

 

13.           Termination and Dissolution of the Partnership .

 

13.1             Termination of Partnership . Subject to the limitations contained in Section 1.4 and Section 9 and to the Certificate of Limited Partnership, the Partnership shall be dissolved, shall terminate and its assets shall be disposed of, and its affairs wound up, upon the earliest to occur of the following:

 

13.1.1     Upon the happening of any event of dissolution specified in the Certificate of Limited Partnership;

 

13.1.2     A determination by the General Partner to terminate the Partnership;

 

13.1.3     After (i) the sale of the Trust Estate held by the Partnership, or the receipt of the final payment on any seller financing provided by the Partnership on the sale of the Trust Estate, if later and (ii) the General Partner has determined in its sole and absolute discretion that such termination is appropriate; or

 

13.1.4     The occurrence of a Dissolution Event unless the business of the Partnership is continued by a Majority Vote of the remaining Limited Partners within ninety (90) days following the occurrence of the event.

 

The bankruptcy, death, dissolution, liquidation, termination or adjudication of incompetency of a Limited Partner (a “ Limited Partner Dissolution ”) shall not cause the termination or dissolution of the Partnership and the business of the Partnership shall continue.

  

13.2             Certificate of Cancellation . As soon as possible following the completion of the winding up of the Partnership, the General Partner who has not wrongfully dissolved the Partnership or, if none, the Limited Partners, shall execute and file a Certificate of Cancellation in such form as shall be required by the Act. The Partnership shall continue to exist as a separate legal entity until the Certificate of Cancellation has been filed in accordance with the Act.

 

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13.3             Liquidation of Assets . Upon a dissolution and termination of the Partnership, the General Partner (or in case there is no General Partner, the Limited Partners or person designated by a Majority Vote) shall take full account of the Partnership assets and liabilities, shall liquidate the assets as promptly as is consistent with obtaining the fair market value thereof, and shall apply and distribute the proceeds therefrom in the following order:

 

13.3.1     To the payment of creditors of the Partnership, including the Lender, other than Limited Partners who are creditors, but excluding secured creditors whose obligations will be assumed or otherwise transferred on liquidation of Partnership assets, and then to the payment of Limited Partners who are creditors of the Partnership;

 

13.3.2     To the setting up of any reserves as required by law for any liabilities or obligations of the Partnership; provided, however, that said reserves shall be deposited with a bank or trust company in escrow with interest for the purpose of disbursing such reserves for the payment of any of the aforementioned contingencies and, at the expiration of a reasonable period, for the purpose of distributing the balance remaining in accordance with the remaining provisions of this Section 13.3; and

 

13.3.3     To the General Partner .0001% and the balance to the Limited Partners in proportion to their Units.

 

13.4             Distributions Upon Dissolution . Each Limited Partner shall look solely to the assets of the Partnership for all Distributions, and shall have no recourse therefor (upon dissolution or otherwise) against any General Partner or any Limited Partner.

 

13.5             Limitation on Distributions . Notwithstanding any other provision in this Agreement, the Partnership shall make no distribution that would violate the Act or other applicable law.

 

14.           Special and Limited Power of Attorney .

 

14.1             Power of Attorney . The General Partner shall at all times during the term of the Partnership have a special and limited power of attorney as the attorney-in-fact for each Limited Partner, with power and authority to act in the name and on behalf of each such Limited Partner to execute, acknowledge, and swear to in the execution, acknowledgment and filing of documents that are not inconsistent with the provisions of this Agreement and which may include, by way of illustration but not by way of limitation, the following:

 

14.1.1     This Agreement, as well as any amendments to the foregoing which, under the laws of the State of Delaware or the laws of any other state, are required to be filed or which the General Partner shall deem it advisable to file;

 

14.1.2     Any other instrument or document that may be required to be filed by the Partnership under the laws of any state or by any governmental agency or which the General Partner shall deem it advisable to file;

 

14.1.3     Any instrument or document that may be required to effect the continuation of the Partnership, the admission of Substituted Limited Partners, or the dissolution and termination of the Partnership (provided such continuation, admission or dissolution and termination are in accordance with the terms of this Agreement);

 

14.1.4     Any instrument of conveyance or encumbrance with respect to the Trust Estate;

 

22
 

 

14.1.5     This Agreement or any other instrument or document to include any special purpose entity or bankruptcy remote entity requirement imposed by the Lender; and

 

14.1.6     Any and all other instruments as the General Partner may deem necessary or desirable to effect the purposes of this Agreement and carry out fully its provisions, including, but not limited to, those in Section 16.

 

14.2             Provision of Power of Attorney . The special and limited power of attorney of the General Partner:

 

14.2.1     Is a special power of attorney coupled with the interest of the General Partner in the Partnership, and its assets, is irrevocable, shall survive the death, incapacity, termination or dissolution of the granting Limited Partner, and is limited to those matters in this Agreement set forth;

 

14.2.2     May be exercised by the General Partner by and through one or more of the officers of the General Partner, for each of the Limited Partners by the signature of the General Partner acting as attorney-in-fact for the Limited Partners, together with a list of all Limited Partners executing such instrument by their attorney-in-fact or by such other method as may be required or requested in connection with the recording or filing of any instrument or other document so executed; and

 

14.2.3     Shall survive an assignment by a Limited Partner of all or any portion of his or her Units except that, where the assignee of the Units owned by the Limited Partner has been approved by the General Partner for admission to the Partnership as a Substituted Limited Partner, the special power of attorney shall survive such assignment for the sole purpose of enabling the General Partner to execute, acknowledge and file any instrument or document necessary to effect such substitution to the fullest extent permitted by law.

 

14.3             Notice to Limited Partners . The General Partner shall promptly furnish to a Limited Partner a copy of any amendment to the Partnership Agreement executed by the General Partner pursuant to a power of attorney from the Limited Partner.

 

15.           Relationship of this Agreement to the Act . Many of the terms of this Agreement are intended to alter or extend provisions of the Act as they may apply to the Partnership or the Limited Partners. Any failure of this Agreement to mention or specify the relationship of such terms to provisions of the Act that may affect the scope or application of such terms shall not be construed to mean that any of such terms are not intended to be a partnership agreement provision authorized or permitted by the Act or which in whole or in part alters, extends or supplants provisions of the Act as may be allowed thereby.

 

16.          Amendment of Agreement .

 

16.1             Admission of Limited Partner . Amendments to this Agreement for the admission of any Limited Partner or Substituted Limited Partner shall not, if in accordance with the terms of this Agreement, require the consent of any Limited Partner.

 

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16.2             Amendments with Consent of Limited Partners . Subject to the terms of Section 9.1 and the Certificate of Limited Partnership, in addition to any amendments otherwise authorized in this Agreement, this Agreement may be amended by the General Partner with a Majority Vote of the Units; provided, however, that any amendment that would treat a specific Limited Partner less favorably than another Limited Partner (in application but not in effect), then such amendment shall require the vote of such adversely affected Limited Partner.

 

16.3             Amendments Without Consent of the Limited Partners . Subject to the Certificate of Limited Partnership, in addition to the Amendments authorized pursuant to Section 7.3.11 or otherwise authorized in this Agreement, the General Partner may amend this Agreement, without the consent of any of the Limited Partners, to (a) change the name and/or principal place of business of the Partnership; (b) decrease the rights and powers of the General Partner (so long as such decrease does not impair the ability of the General Partner to manage the Partnership and conduct its business and affairs) and/or add to the representations, duties, services or obligations of the General Partner; provided, however, that no amendment shall be adopted pursuant to this Section 16.3 unless the adoption thereof (i) is for the benefit of or not adverse to the interests of the Limited Partners, (ii) is not inconsistent with Section 7 , and (iii) does not affect the limited liability of the Limited Partners or the status of the Partnership as a partnership for federal income tax purposes; (iii) cure any ambiguity or mistake or make any other provision with respect to matters or questions arising under this Agreement that will not be inconsistent with the provisions of this Agreement; and delete or add any provision of this Agreement required to be so deleted or added for the benefit of the Limited Partners by the staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission or by a state “Blue Sky” Commissioner or similar official. Further, the General Partner shall be allowed to amend this Agreement without the consent of any of the Limited Partners to comply with any terms or modifications required by any lender to make this Agreement comply with any special purpose entity requirements or otherwise.

 

16.4             Execution and Recording of Amendments . Any amendment to this Agreement shall be executed by the General Partner, and by the General Partner as attorney-in-fact for the Limited Partners pursuant to the power of attorney contained in Section 14 . After the execution of such amendment, the General Partner shall also prepare and record or file any certificate or other document which may be required to be recorded or filed with respect to such amendment, either under the Act or under the laws of any other jurisdiction in which the Partnership holds any property or otherwise does business.

 

17.          Limited Partner Representations . Each Limited Partner hereby represents and warrants to the Partnership, the General Partner and all other Limited Partners that:

 

17.1             Authority . Such Limited Partner has the power and authority to execute and comply with the terms and provisions of this Agreement.

 

17.2             No Registration . Such Limited Partner’s interest in the Partnership has not and will not be registered under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended, or the securities laws of any state, and cannot be sold or transferred without compliance with the registration provisions of said Securities Act of 1933, as amended, and the applicable state securities laws, or compliance with the exemptions, if any, available thereunder. Such Limited Partner understands that neither the Partnership nor the General Partner or any other Limited Partner has any obligation or intention to register the Limited Partner interests under any federal or state securities act or law, or to file the reports to make public the information required by Rule 144 under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended.

 

24
 

 

18.          Miscellaneous .

 

18.1             Counterparts . This Agreement may be executed in several counterparts, and all so executed shall constitute one Agreement, binding on all of the parties to this Agreement, notwithstanding that all of the parties are not signatory to the original or the same counterpart.

 

18.2             Successors and Assigns . The terms and provisions of this Agreement shall be binding upon and shall inure to the benefit of the successors and assigns of the respective Limited Partners.

 

18.3             Severability . In the event any sentence or Section of this Agreement is declared by a court of competent jurisdiction to be void, such sentence or Section shall be deemed severed from the remainder of this Agreement and the balance of this Agreement shall remain in full force and effect.

 

18.4             Notices . All notices under this Agreement shall be in writing and shall be given to the Limited Partner entitled thereto, by personal service or by mail, posted to the address maintained by the Partnership for such person or at such other address as he or she may specify in writing; provided, however, that in the event that any such Limited Partner does not respond to the personal service or mail as set forth above, that the General Partner shall send out one additional notice by certified mail return receipt requested or by a delivery service that maintains records regarding their deliveries or attempted deliveries.

 

18.5             General Partner’s Address . The name and address of the General Partner is as follows:

       
  DCX [ ] Manager LLC  
  518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor  
  Denver, Colorado 80202  
  Attention: M. Kirk Scott  
  Facsimile: (303) 577-9797  
  Telephone: (303) 339-3609  
       
  With a copy to:  
  Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.  
  518 17 th Street, Suite 1700  
  Denver, Colorado 80202  
  Attention: Joshua Widoff  
  Facsimile: (303) 869-4602  
  Telephone: (303) 597-0483  

 

25
 

 

18.6          Governing Law . This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of Delaware.

 

18.7         Captions . Section titles or captions contained in this Agreement are inserted only as a matter of convenience and reference. Such titles and captions in no way define, limit, extend or describe the scope of this Agreement nor the intent of any provisions of this Agreement.

 

18.8         Gender . Whenever required by the context of this Agreement, the singular shall include the plural, and vice versa, the masculine gender shall include the feminine and neuter genders, and vice versa.

 

18.9         Time . Time is of the essence with respect to this Agreement.

 

18.10       Additional Documents . Each Limited Partner, upon the request of the General Partner, shall perform any further acts and execute and deliver any documents that may be reasonably necessary to carry out the provisions of this Agreement, including, but not limited to, providing acknowledgment before a Notary Public of any signature made by a Limited Partner.

 

18.11       Descriptions . All descriptions referred to in this Agreement are expressly incorporated in this Agreement by reference as if set forth in full, whether or not attached to this Agreement.

 

18.12       Binding Arbitration . Any dispute, claim or controversy arising out of or relating to this Agreement or breach, termination, enforcement, interpretation or validity thereof, including the determination of the scope or applicability of this Agreement to arbitrate, shall be determined by arbitration in Denver, Colorado, before a sole arbitrator. The arbitration shall be administered by JAMS pursuant to its Streamlined Arbitration Rules and Procedures. Judgment on the award may be entered in any court having jurisdiction. The arbitrator shall, in the award, allocate all of the costs of the arbitration (and the mediation, if applicable), including the fees of the arbitrator and the reasonable attorneys’ fees of the prevailing party, against the party who did not prevail. Anything to the contrary in this Agreement notwithstanding, the provisions of this Section 18.12 shall not apply with respect to any application made by any party to this Agreement for injunctive relief under this Limited Partnership Agreement.

 

18.13       Venue . Subject to Section 18.12 , any action relating to or arising out of this Agreement shall be brought only in a court of competent jurisdiction located in Denver, CO.

 

18.14       Partition . The Limited Partners agree that the assets of the Partnership are not and will not be suitable for partition. Accordingly, each of the Limited Partners hereby irrevocably waives any and all rights that he may have, or may obtain, to maintain any action for partition of any of the assets of the Partnership.

 

18.15       Integrated and Binding Agreement . This Agreement contains the entire understanding and agreement among the Limited Partners with respect to the subject matter of this Agreement, and there are no other agreements, understandings, representations or warranties among the Partners other than those set forth in this Agreement except the purchase agreement executed in connection with the purchase of Beneficial Interests in the Trust (the “ Purchase Agreement ”). This Agreement may be amended only as provided in this Agreement.

 

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18.16       Legal Counsel . Each Limited Partner acknowledges and agrees that counsel representing the Partnership, the General Partner and its Affiliates does not represent and shall not be deemed under the applicable codes of professional responsibility to have represented or to be representing any or all of the Limited Partners, other than the General Partner, in any respect. In addition, each Limited Partner consents to the General Partner hiring counsel for the Partnership that is also counsel to one or more of the General Partners.

 

18.17       Title to Partnership Property . All Property owned by the Partnership shall be owned by the Partnership as an entity and, insofar as permitted by applicable law, no Limited Partner shall have any ownership interest in any Partnership Property in its individual name or right, and each Limited Partner’s Limited Partnership Interest shall be personal property for all purposes. As long as any obligation to the Lender is outstanding, nothing in this Agreement is intended to give any creditor of a Limited Partner any rights in the Limited Partner’s interest in the Partnership other than as an assignee of the Limited Partner’s interest in the Partnership and such creditor will have no direct claim to the assets of the Partnership.

 

18.18       Conflict . In the event of a conflict between the terms of this Agreement and the Certificate of Limited Partnership, the terms of the Certificate of Limited Partnership shall control.

 

18.19       Signature of the Limited Partners . The Limited Partners hereby acknowledge and agree that by signing the Purchase Agreement they are also agreeing to be bound by the terms of this Agreement and that their signature to this Agreement will not be required as of the Transfer Date.

 

* * * *

 

[Remainder of page intentionally left blank; signatures follow.]

 

27
 

 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the undersigned have set their hands to this Limited Partnership Agreement as of the date set forth below.

  

GENERAL PARTNER:  

  

DCX [ ] MANAGER LLC or its affiliate a
Delaware limited liability company

 

By: DCX Manager LLC, a Delaware limited
liability company, its sole member

   
By:    
Name:  
Title:  
Date:  

 

INITIAL LIMITED PARTNER:

DCX [ ] DST, a Delaware statutory trust 

 

By: DCX [ ] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited
liability company, its manager

  

By: DCX Manager LLC, a Delaware limited
liability company, its manager

   
By:    
Name:  
Title:  
Date:  

[Signature Page to Limited Partnership Agreement ([ · ])]
 

 

COUNTERPART SIGNATURE PAGE

 

Limited partner: 

     
By:    
Name:    
Title:     
     
Date:     

 

 

 
 

 

EXHIBIT A

Definitions

 

Act ” shall mean the Delaware Revised Uniform Limited Partnership Act, as the same may be amended from time to time.

 

Additional Capital Contributions ” means those additional Capital Contributions which may be voluntarily given pursuant to Section 3.2 .

 

Affiliate ” shall mean (a) any person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled by or under common control with another person; (b) a person owning or controlling ten percent (10%) or more of the outstanding voting securities of such other person; (c) any officer, director or partner of such other person; and (d) if such other person is an officer, director or partner, any company for which such person acts in any capacity. The term “ person ” shall include any natural person, corporation, partnership, trust, unincorporated association or other legal entity.

 

Agreement ” shall mean this Limited Partnership Agreement, as amended from time to time.

 

Beneficial Interest ” means a beneficial interest in the Trust as defined in the Trust Agreement.

 

Beneficial Owner ” means each Person who, at the time of determination, holds a Beneficial Interest as reflected on the Ownership Records (as defined in the Trust Agreement) as of the Transfer Date.

 

Capital Contribution(s) ” means, with respect to any Partner, or all of the Partners, all cash and properties contributed to the Partnership pursuant to Section 3.1.1 net of liabilities assumed or taken subject to by the Partnership.

 

Capital Expenditures ” means expenditures for items that are capital in nature, including, but not limited to, tenant improvements, leasing commissions, and major repairs, made at the discretion of the General Partner.

 

Cash from Operations ” shall mean the net cash realized by the Partnership from all sources, including, but not limited to, the operations of the Partnership including the sale, financing, refinancing or other disposition of the Trust Estate, after payment of all cash expenditures of the Partnership, including, but not limited to, all operating expenses including all fees payable to the General Partner or Affiliates, all payments of principal and interest on indebtedness, and such reserves and retentions as the General Partner reasonably determines to be necessary and desirable in connection with Partnership operations with its then existing assets and any anticipated acquisitions.

 

Certificate of Limited Partnership ” shall mean the Certificate of Limited Partnership of the Partnership as filed with the Secretary of State of Delaware as the same may be amended or restated from time to time.

 

“Class A Units ” shall mean the Class A Units authorized and issued pursuant to Section 3 .

 

Class B Unit ” shall mean the one (1) Class B Unit authorized and issued pursuant to Section 3 .

 

Code ” shall mean the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended, or corresponding provisions of subsequently enacted federal revenue laws.

 

Delaware Trustee ” means the person serving, at the time of determination, as the Delaware Trustee under the Trust.

 

 
 

 

Dissolution Event ” shall mean with respect to the General Partner one or more of the following: the death, insanity, withdrawal, retirement, resignation, expulsion, Event of Insolvency or dissolution (unless reconstituted by the General Partner) of the General Partner unless the Limited Partners consent to continue the business of the Partnership pursuant to Section 14.1.5 .

 

Distributable Cash ” shall mean Cash from Operations and Capital Contributions determined by the General Partner to be available for Distribution to the Limited Partners.

 

Distribution ” shall refer to any money or other property transferred without consideration (other than repurchased Units) to Limited Partners with respect to their interests or Units in the Partnership, but shall not include any payments to the General Partner pursuant to Section 6 .

 

Economic Interest ” shall mean an interest in the income, loss and Distributions of the Partnership but shall not include any right to vote or to participate in the management of the Partnership.

 

Event of Insolvency ” shall occur when an order for relief against the General Partner is entered under Chapter 7 of the federal bankruptcy law, or (a) the General Partner: (i) makes a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, (ii) files a voluntary petition under the federal bankruptcy law, (iii) files a petition or answer seeking for that General Partner a reorganization, arrangement, composition, readjustment, liquidation, dissolution or similar relief under any statute, law or regulation, (iv) files an answer or other pleading admitting or failing to contest the material allegations of a petition filed against the General Partner in any proceeding of this nature, or (v) seeks, consents to, or acquiesces in the appointment of a trustee, receiver, or liquidator of that General Partner or of all or a substantial part of that General Partner’s properties, or (b) the expiration of sixty (60) days after either (i) the commencement of any proceeding against the General Partner seeking reorganization, arrangement, composition, readjustment, liquidation, dissolution or similar relief under any statute, law, or regulation, if the proceeding has not been dismissed, or (ii) the appointment without the General Partner’s consent or acquiescence of a trustee, receiver, or liquidator of the General Partner or of all or any substantial part of the General Partner’s properties, if the appointment has not been vacated or stayed (or if within sixty (60) days after the expiration of any such stay, the appointment is not vacated).

 

General Partner ” shall refer to DCX [●] Manager LLC or its affiliate, a Delaware limited liability company. The term “General Partner” shall also refer to any successor or additional General Partner who is admitted to the Partnership as the General Partner.

 

Initial Limited Partner ” shall mean the Trust.

 

Liquidation ” means in respect to the Partnership the earlier of the date upon which the Partnership is terminated under Section 708(b)(1) of the Code or the date upon which the Partnership ceases to be a going concern (even though it may exist for purposes of winding up its affairs, paying its debts and distributing any remaining balance to its Partners), and in respect to a Limited Partner where the Partnership is not in Liquidation means the date upon which occurs the termination of the Limited Partner’s entire interest in the Partnership by means of a Distribution or the making of the last of a series of Distributions (whether or not made in more than one (1) year) to the Limited Partner by the Partnership.

 

Limited Partner ” or “ Limited Partners ” shall mean the persons listed on Exhibit B .

 

Limited Partnership Interest ” shall mean a Limited Partner’s entire interest in the Partnership including such Limited Partner’s Economic Interest and such voting and other rights and privileges that the Limited Partner may enjoy by being a Limited Partner.

 

Majority Vote ” shall mean the vote of more than fifty percent (50%) of the Class A Units entitled to vote. Limited Partners shall be entitled to cast one vote for each Class A Unit they own, and a fractional vote for each fractional Class A Unit they own.

 

 
 

 

Master Lease ” means that master agreement between the Master Tenant and the Trust, relating to the Property, together with all amendments, supplements and modifications thereto.

 

Master Tenant ” shall mean DCX [●] Master Tenant LLC, a Delaware limited liability company.

 

New Audit Rules ” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 7.9.4 .

 

Organization Expenses ” shall mean all expenses incurred in connection with the organization and formation of the Partnership, including but not limited to legal and accounting fees, tax planning fees, promotional fees or expenses, filing and recording fees and other costs or expenses incurred in connection therewith.

 

Partners ” shall mean the General Partner and the Limited Partners.

 

Partnership ” shall mean DCX [●] DST LP.

 

Partnership Representative ” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 7.9.4 .

 

Prime Rate ” shall mean the reference rate announced from time-to-time by the Wall Street Journal, and changes in the Prime Rate shall be deemed to occur on the date that changes in such rate are announced.

 

Property ” shall refer to any or all of such real and tangible or intangible personal property or properties held by the Trust on the Transfer Date.

 

Substituted Limited Partner ” shall mean any person admitted as a substituted Limited Partner pursuant to this Agreement.

 

Supermajority Vote ” shall mean the vote of more than sixty-six percent (66%) of the Class A Units entitled to vote. Limited Partners shall be entitled to cast one vote for each Class A Unit they own, and a fractional vote for each fractional Class A Unit they own

 

Tax Matters Partner ” means the “tax matters partner,” as defined in section 6231(a)(7) of the Code. The Tax Matters Partner shall be the General Partner until such time as a new Tax Matters Partner is selected by the Partnership.

 

Tax Payment ” shall have the meaning set forth in Section 4.6.1 .

 

Transfer Date ” shall mean the date the Trust Estate is distributed to the Partnership pursuant to Section 9.2 of the Trust Agreement.

 

Trust ” means DCX [●] DST, that certain Delaware statutory trust formed by and in accordance with, and governed by, the Trust Agreement.

 

Trust Agreement ” means that certain Trust Agreement dated as of [●], [●], by and among TRT [●] LLC as Initial Depositor, DCX [●] Manager LLC as Manager and Signatory Trustee, the Corporation Trust Company as Delaware Trustee, and certain Beneficial Owners holding a Beneficial Interest in the Trust.

 

Trust Estate ” means all of the Trust’s right, title, and interest in and to the Property and any and all other property and assets (whether tangible or intangible) in which the Trust at any time has any right, title or interest, all of which are or will be acquired by the Partnership in connection with the formation of the Partnership.

 

 
 

 

Unit ” shall represent an interest in the Partnership entitling the owner of the Unit if admitted as a Partner to the respective voting and other rights afforded to a Partner holding a Unit, and affording to such Partner a share in income, loss and Distributions as provided for in this Agreement. The Units shall consist of Class A Units held by the Limited Partners and one Class B Unit held by the General Partner.

 

 
 

 

Table of Contents

  

Page

 

EXHIBIT B

PARTNERS

 

Limited Partners

 

(prior Beneficial Owners under the Trust Agreement)

 

Name   Percentage Interest   Units  

 

General Partner

 

Name     Percentage Interest   Units    
DCX [●] Manager LLC 0.0001%   1 Class B Unit

 

 

- 1 -
 

 

EXHIBIT G

  

FORM OF CONVERSION NOTICE

  

TRT [●] LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (the “ Depositor ”), as the sole Class 2 Beneficial Owner in DCX [●] DST, a Delaware statutory trust (the “ Trust ”), hereby provides a Conversion Notice pursuant to Section 6.12 of the Trust Agreement dated as of [●],[●].

  

Date: ____________

         
  TRT [●] LLC, a
  Delaware limited liability company
   
  By: TRT Master Retail Holdco LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member
   
  By: DCTRT Real Estate Holdco LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member
   
  By: Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership, its sole member
 
  By: Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation, its general partner
   
  By:    
  Name:
  Title:

 

 
 

 

EXHIBIT H

 

FORM OF CALL AGREEMENT

  

[INSERT FORM]

 

 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. POS AM

 

Exhibit 10.23

 

FINAL FORM

 

MASTER LEASE

DCX [●] DST, a Delaware statutory trust ,
as Landlord ,

- to -

DCX [●] Master Tenant LLC, a Delaware limited liability company

as Tenant

Premises :          [●]

 

Dated as of: [●], [●]

 

 
 

 

TABLE OF CONTENTS

     
      Page
       
Paragraph 1: Term   1
Paragraph 2: Rental   2
Paragraph 3: Use of Demised Premises   3
Paragraph 4: Payment of Taxes   3
Paragraph 5: Proration   5
Paragraph 6: Tenant’s Improvements and Alterations   5
Paragraph 7: Repairs   6
Paragraph 8: Compliance With Laws   6
Paragraph 9: Indemnification   7
Paragraph 10: Insurance   7
Paragraph 11: Damage or Destruction   8
Paragraph 12: Condemnation   10
Paragraph 13: Landlord’s Right to Perform Tenant’s Covenants   11
Paragraph 14: Discharge of Liens   12
Paragraph 15: Landlord’s Access to Premises   13
Paragraph 16: Assignment, Mortgage, Etc.   14
Paragraph 17: Default   14
Paragraph 18: Representations by Landlord   17
Paragraph 19: Quiet Enjoyment   18
Paragraph 20: Subordination; Subleases   18
Paragraph 21: Brokerage   20
Paragraph 22: Lease Status   21
Paragraph 23: Holdover   21
Paragraph 24: Definition and Liability of Landlord   21
Paragraph 25: Environmental Covenants   22
Paragraph 26: Memorandum of Lease   22
Paragraph 27: Arbitration   22
Paragraph 28: Governing Law   23
Paragraph 29: Notices   23
Paragraph 30: Entire Agreement   24
Paragraph 31: Assigns   25
Paragraph 32: Invalidity of Particular Provisions   25
Paragraph 33: Severability   25
Paragraph 34: Captions   25
Paragraph 35: Surrender of the Demised Premises   25
Paragraph 36: Certificate of Occupancy   25

 

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TABLE OF CONTENTS

(continued)

     
      Page
       
Paragraph 37: Name Buildings/Demised Premises; Signs   26
Paragraph 38: Attorneys’ Fees   26
Paragraph 39: Definitions   26
       
EXHIBIT A Legal Description    
     
EXHIBIT B Form of Memorandum of Lease    
     
EXHIBIT C Form of Termination of Memorandum of Lease    
     
EXHIBIT D Form of Assignment and Assumption of Subleases    
       
SCHEDULE 1 Rent    
     
SCHEDULE 2 Percentage Interests    

 

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MASTER LEASE

 

This Master Lease, dated as of [●],[●] (this “ Lease ”) is by and among DCX [●] DST, a Delaware statutory trust (together with its successors and assigns, “ Landlord ”), and DCX [●] Master Tenant LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, having an address at 518 17th Street, 17 th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202 (together with its successors and assigns, “ Tenant ”).

 

W I T N E S S E T H:

 

Landlord hereby leases to Tenant and Tenant hereby hires from Landlord all of Landlord’s right, title and interest in and to the land parcel (the “ Land ”) described in Exhibit A annexed to this Lease and made a part of this Lease, together with [●] 1 (the “ Improvements ”).

 

TOGETHER WITH:

 

(a)          and subject to, that certain [●] 2 dated [●],[●], as amended from time to time; and

 

(b)          the rights and appurtenances pertaining to the Land, including [●] 3 (the Land and all of the foregoing, including the Improvements sometimes referred to hereafter as the “ Demised Premises ”).

 

SUBJECT TO the Permitted Exceptions (as hereinafter defined). The demise of the Demised Premises includes, without limitation, Tenant’s right to use the furniture, fixtures, equipment and other personal property, if any, owned by Landlord and located in, on or about the Demised Premises (the “ Personalty ”), and Tenant hereby waives any right, title or interest to the ownership thereof, whether pursuant to statute or common law.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, IT IS MUTUALLY COVENANTED AND AGREED between Landlord and Tenant as follows:

 

Paragraph 1:          Term.

 

The term (the “ Term ”) of this Lease shall commence on [●], [●] (the “ Commencement Date ”) and expire on the twentieth (20th) anniversary of the Commencement Date (the “ Expiration Date ”) unless sooner terminated as hereinafter provided.

 

All of the terms, provisions and conditions of this Lease shall be effective as of the Commencement Date.

 

1 Note to Draft : Include appropriate description of improvements.

2 Note to Draft : Clause (a) is intended to capture any additional agreements that should be included in the property description.

3 Note to Draft : Include appropriate description of appurtenances.  

 

 
 

 

Paragraph 2:          Rental .

 

A.          Tenant agrees to pay Landlord (or as otherwise directed by Landlord), without any setoff or deduction whatsoever, except as otherwise specifically provided under this Lease, a fixed rental (“ Fixed Rent ”) in accordance with the terms of Schedule 1 annexed to this Lease and made a part of this Lease. During the Term, the Fixed Rent shall be payable in quarterly installments as set forth on Schedule 1 , on the dates set forth on said Schedule 1 , provided, that if this Lease is terminated prior to the Expiration Date, then Tenant agrees to pay Landlord the pro rata portion of the then current quarterly installment of the Fixed Rent through and including the date of such early termination. The Fixed Rent payable by Tenant pursuant to this Lease shall be over and above all other payments required to be made by Tenant as provided in this Lease.

 

B.          All Fixed Rent, additional rent, and other sums payable by Tenant hereunder shall be paid in lawful money of the United States of America and without relief from valuation and appraisement laws. Any installment or installments of Fixed Rent, additional rent, and/or other sums coming due to Landlord under the provisions of this Lease which are not paid when due and remain unpaid for thirty (30) days following notice and demand from Landlord, shall bear interest at the Default Rate (as hereinafter defined) from the date such amounts had originally become due hereunder, until such amounts shall have been paid by Tenant. As used throughout this Lease, the term “ Default Rate ” shall mean a rate per annum equal to the lesser of (i) the Prime Rate (as hereinafter defined) plus two percent (2.00%) and (ii) the maximum legal rate, if any. As used herein, the term “ Prime Rate ” means, for any period of time, the then published prime interest rate upon unsecured loans charged by JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. or its successor (or Citibank or its successor if JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A. or its successor shall cease to exist or shall not have an announced prime rate or lastly, if Citibank, or its successor, shall cease to exist or shall not have an announced prime rate, the prime rate of the largest commercial bank headquartered in the City of New York) on loans of ninety (90) days.

 

C.          Commencing on the Commencement Date and at all times during the Term, Tenant shall pay or shall cause all Sublessees (as hereinafter defined) to pay for all public utilities, including all charges for electricity, water, fuel oil, gas and telephone, incurred in connection with the occupancy, maintenance and/or operation of the Demised Premises, and any and all other costs and expenses incurred in connection with the occupancy, maintenance and/or operation of the Demised Premises.

 

D.          Except as expressly provided otherwise in this Lease, this Lease shall be deemed and construed to be a “net lease” and Tenant shall pay absolutely net to Landlord throughout the term of this Lease, the Fixed Rent, and all other charges payable by Tenant hereunder, free of any charges, assessments, impositions, expenses or deductions of any kind and, except as specifically provided in this Lease, without abatement, deduction or setoff, and under no circumstances or conditions, whether now existing or hereafter arising, or whether within or beyond the present contemplation of the parties, shall Landlord be expected or required to make any payment of any kind whatsoever or be under any other obligation or liability hereunder except as set forth herein, and Tenant agrees to pay all costs and expenses of every kind and nature whatsoever arising out of or in connection with the Demised Premises which may arise or become due during, or in connection with, the term of this Lease, and which, except for the execution and delivery of this Lease, would have been payable by Landlord. Landlord and Tenant agree that this Lease is a “true lease” and does not represent a financing arrangement, joint venture, management arrangement, or any arrangement other than a true lease. Each party shall reflect the transactions represented by this Lease in all applicable books, records and reports (including, without limitation, income tax filings) in a manner consistent with “true lease” treatment.

 

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E.          Except as otherwise expressly provided in this Lease, this Lease shall not terminate, nor shall Tenant have any right to terminate this Lease, nor shall Tenant be entitled to any abatement or reduction of Fixed Rent or additional rent hereunder, nor shall the obligations of Tenant under this Lease be in any way affected, by reason of (i) any damage to or destruction of all or any part of the Demised Premises from whatever cause, (ii) the taking of the Demised Premises or any portion thereof by condemnation, requisition or otherwise, (iii) the prohibition, limitation or restriction of Tenant’s use of all or any part of the Demised Premises or any interference with such use by law or ordinance or other governmental regulation or by injunction, (iv) any default on the part of Landlord under this Lease or under any other agreement to which Landlord and Tenant may be parties, or (v) the bankruptcy, insolvency, reorganization, composition, readjustment, liquidation, dissolution, winding up or other proceeding affecting Landlord or any assignee of Landlord. It is the intention of the parties to this Lease that the obligations of Tenant hereunder shall be separate and independent covenants and agreements, that the Fixed Rent, additional rent and all other sums payable by Tenant hereunder shall continue to be payable in all events and that the obligations of Tenant hereunder shall continue unaffected, unless the requirement to pay or perform the same shall have been suspended or terminated pursuant to an express provision of this Lease.

 

F.          Tenant and Landlord shall keep separate books and records as to rental payments received and/or paid by each, as the case may be, and each party shall separately report rental expense and income. Tenant shall not keep books or records on behalf of Landlord.

 

Paragraph 3:         Use of Demised Premises .

 

Subject to and in accordance with all rules, regulations, laws, ordinances, statutes and requirements of all governmental authorities having jurisdiction thereof, Tenant covenants and agrees that it shall use the Demised Premises for any lawful purpose (and for no other purpose). Anything herein contained to the contrary notwithstanding, Tenant shall not use or permit the use of the Demised Premises or any part thereof for any unlawful or illegal purposes or in violation of any certificate of occupancy, or for any extra-hazardous purpose or in such manner as to create or constitute a nuisance of any kind.

 

Paragraph 4:         Payment of Taxes .

 

A.         As used herein, the term “ Taxes ” shall mean all taxes, assessments, water charges and sewer rents, rates and charges, transit taxes, charges for public utilities, excises, levies, license and permit fees and other governmental charges, general and special, ordinary and extraordinary, foreseen and unforeseen, of any kind and nature whatsoever which at any time prior to or during the term of this Lease may be assessed, levied, confirmed, imposed upon or become a lien on the Demised Premises or the Land, or any part thereof, or for any use or occupation of the Demised Premises, and such franchises as may be appurtenant to the use of the Demised Premises, this transaction or any document to which Tenant is a party. The term “ Taxes ” as used herein shall not include any franchise, excise, corporate, inheritance, succession, capital levy or transfer tax of Landlord, or any income, profits or revenue tax upon the income of Landlord.

 

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B.          As additional rent, Tenant shall pay or shall cause to be paid, as the same shall become due and payable, all Taxes which are assessed and are, or become, a lien during the term of this Lease; provided , however , that with respect to any bill or statement for Taxes issued by any taxing authority directly to Landlord, Tenant shall have no obligation to pay such Taxes, or interest or penalties accrued with respect thereto, until seven (7) business days shall have expired following Tenant’s receipt of such bill or statement. Tenant shall, promptly after payment, deliver to Landlord receipts evidencing payment of all such Taxes. Tenant may pay or shall cause to be paid any Taxes in installments, if payment may be so made, without fine or penalty. Notwithstanding the foregoing, in the event the holder (the “ Fee Mortgagee ”) of any mortgage which affects Landlord’s interest in the Demised Premises or any portion thereof (each such mortgage, a “ Fee Mortgage ”) requires that Taxes be paid in advance of their due date, or in installments in advance of the due date to be held in escrow by the Fee Mortgagee, Tenant hereby agrees to pay or shall cause to be paid Taxes as required by the Fee Mortgagee.

 

C.          Landlord hereby designates Tenant to act on its behalf and, during the Term of this Lease, assigns to Tenant Landlord’s rights and interest: (a) to complete, terminate or settle any appeal proceedings pending on the Commencement Date with respect to real estate tax assessments of the Demised Premises for periods prior to the Commencement Date, (b) to determine the need to initiate an appeal of any real estate tax assessment of the Demised Premises with respect to periods prior to or after the Commencement Date, and to complete, terminate or settle any such appeals, and (c) to engage legal counsel in connection with the foregoing, provided , however , that any refunds or settlement monies resulting from such appeals shall be applied as follows subject to the terms of any Fee Mortgage: (i) first, to the payment of all attorneys’ fees and costs attendant to such appeals, (ii) second, to Sublessees to the extent such Sublessees are entitled to a portion of such refunds or monies under their respective subleases and (iii) third, so long as an Event of Default is not occurring hereunder, to Tenant. Tenant shall pay all costs, including attorneys’ fees and costs, attendant to such appeals (to the extent not covered by the application of any refunds or settlement monies) and Landlord shall have no obligation to pay the same. To the extent any refund or settlement monies are received that relate to the period after the Expiration Date, after the application set forth in clauses (i) and (ii) above, the remainder of such refunds shall be for Tenant, to the extent such refunds or settlement relates to a period of time on or prior to the Expiration Date, and to Landlord, to the extent such refunds or settlement relates to a period of time after the Expiration Date. At Tenant’s sole cost and expense, Landlord shall cooperate with Tenant to the extent Landlord’s participation is necessary to initiate, settle, terminate, extend or amend such appeals or to otherwise secure any refunds.

 

D.          All Taxes assessed for the tax year in which this Lease shall commence or terminate (including any installment or installments of such Taxes which Tenant has elected to pay in installments) shall be apportioned between Landlord and Tenant. The allocation provided herein shall be on the basis of the number of days elapsed during the fiscal year for which Taxes are being paid. If this Lease shall have terminated by reason of Tenant’s default, all Taxes outstanding to the date of such termination shall be paid in full by Tenant.

 

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Paragraph 5:         Proration .

 

All utility costs, insurance premiums on policies transferred to Tenant, if any (or Landlord, upon the expiration of the term of this Lease), and similar items of expense pertaining to the Demised Premises for the years of commencement and termination of this Lease shall be prorated between Landlord and Tenant.

 

Paragraph 6:         Tenant’s Improvements and Alterations .

 

A.          Tenant shall have the right to make any improvements or alterations (“ Tenant Improvements ”) to the Demised Premises, provided that such Tenant Improvements (i) would not diminish, by more than a de minimus amount, the current or residual value, remaining useful life or utility of the Demised Premises immediately prior to such Tenant Improvements, (ii) would not cause the Demised Premises to become a “limited use” property within the meaning of IRS Revenue Procedure 2001-28, 2001-1 C.B. 1156 or (iii) would not otherwise cause this Lease to be treated as other than a “true lease” for federal income tax purposes. All Tenant Improvements shall be done at Tenant’s full cost, expense and risk, shall comply with all applicable governmental rules and regulations, and shall be done in a first class workmanlike manner. Tenant shall provide ten (10) days prior written notice to Landlord for any Tenant Improvements other than non-structural repairs and maintenance consistent with keeping the Demised Premises in good repair.

 

B.          Promptly following completion of any Tenant Improvements, Tenant shall furnish to Landlord a copy of any and all “as-built” plans and specifications if and to the extent prepared by Tenant in connection with such Tenant Improvements.

 

C.          Tenant Improvements and all movable property, furniture, furnishings and trade fixtures including those affixed to the Improvements or the Land (but in no event any Personalty) shall remain the property of Tenant and may be removed by Tenant at its option at any time on or before the expiration of the term of this Lease, provided, that such removal (i) would not diminish, by more than a de minimus amount, the current or residual value, remaining useful life or utility of the Demised Premises immediately prior to such Tenant Improvement(s), (ii) would not cause the Demised Premises to become a “limited use” property within the meaning of IRS Revenue Procedure 2001-28, 2001-1 C.B. 1156 or (iii) would not otherwise cause this Lease to be treated as other than a “true lease” for federal income tax purposes. In the case of any damage to the Demised Premises by such removal, Tenant shall restore the Demised Premises to substantially the same condition existing prior to such damage. Any Tenant Improvements, fixtures, or equipment not removed by Tenant at the end of the term of this Lease may, at the option of Landlord, be deemed to have been abandoned, and in such case shall be retained by Landlord as its property. Tenant’s obligations pursuant to this Subparagraph 6.C shall survive the termination of this Lease. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Tenant shall remove any Specialty Items (as hereinafter defined) and repair any damage to the Demised Premises occasioned by such removal. The term “ Specialty Items ” shall mean Tenant Improvements affixed to the Improvements or the Land, the removal of which Landlord has notified Tenant will be required, such notification to occur at the time Tenant has submitted plans and specifications for such Tenant Improvements in accordance with Subparagraph 6.B .

 

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Paragraph 7:         Repairs .

 

A.          Tenant will (i) make all necessary repairs and replacements to the Demised Premises, whether ordinary or extraordinary, foreseen or unforeseen, structural or non-structural, during the term of this Lease, (ii) keep the same in substantially the same condition and repair as when received and (iii) at the expiration or sooner termination of this Lease, return the Demised Premises to Landlord in substantially the same condition and repair as when received, ordinary wear and tear and casualty and condemnation losses excepted. In furtherance and not in limitation of the foregoing, but subject to the provisions of Paragraph 11 , Tenant agrees to perform any necessary capital repairs, replacements and restorations to the Demised Premises as and when the same are necessary (in Tenant’s sole judgment).

 

B.          Except as provided in Paragraph 13 , Landlord will not make any repairs or alterations to the Demised Premises during the term of this Lease.

 

Paragraph 8:         Compliance With Laws .

 

Tenant shall comply with all orders, regulations, rules and requirements of every kind and nature relating to the Demised Premises, now or hereafter in effect, of all governmental authorities, whether they be usual or unusual, ordinary or extraordinary, or whether they or any of them relate to any structural changes or requirements of whatever nature, or to changes or requirements incident to or as the result of any use or occupation thereof or otherwise. Except as expressly provided otherwise in Paragraph 9 , Tenant shall pay all costs and expenses incidental to such compliance and will indemnify and save Landlord harmless from and against all expenses, costs and damages of every nature by reason of any notice, orders, violations or penalties filed against or imposed upon the Demised Premises or against Landlord as owner thereof, because of the failure of Tenant to comply with this covenant. Tenant shall have the right to contest or review any such order by legal proceedings or in such manner as Tenant may deem advisable and may have any such order cancelled, removed or revoked, without actual compliance therewith. If any such actions or proceedings are instituted by Tenant, they shall be instituted and conducted diligently and in good faith at the expense of Tenant and free of expenses to Landlord. In the event of any default under this Paragraph 8 , Landlord may comply with any such order, regulation, rule or requirement and the cost and expense of so doing may be paid by Landlord and shall be repaid to Landlord by Tenant within thirty (30) days of demand therefor, as additional rent due hereunder.

 

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Paragraph 9:         Indemnification .

 

Tenant shall indemnify and save harmless Landlord, each Fee Mortgagee and their respective successors and assigns, and any partner, or principal (disclosed or undisclosed) of Landlord from and against any and all liability and damages, and from and against any and all suits, claims, and demands of every kind and nature, including reasonable counsel fees and expenses, by or on behalf of any person, firm, association or corporation to the extent arising out of or based upon the negligence or willful misconduct of Tenant or any agent, employee or contractor of Tenant, or any accident, injury or damage, however occurring, which shall or may happen during the term of this Lease, on or about the Demised Premises. Nothing herein contained shall require Tenant to indemnify Landlord, any Fee Mortgagee, or any parties or principal (disclosed or undisclosed) of Landlord based upon the following (each, an “ Excepted Item ”): (a) any accident, injury or damage on or about the Demised Premises, arising out of the gross negligence or willful misconduct of Landlord or any agent of Landlord; (b) any misrepresentation made by Landlord herein; (c) any condition of the Land or Improvements existing prior to Tenant’s first occupancy of the Demised Premises; or (d) the presence on, within or under the Land or Improvements, which existed prior to Tenant’s first occupancy of the Demised Premises, of any materials that are regulated by or form the basis of liability under any Environmental Law (as hereinafter defined), including, without limitation, (i) any substance identified under any Environmental Law as a pollutant, contaminant, hazardous substance, liquid, industrial or solid or hazardous waste, hazardous material or toxic substance, (ii) any petroleum or petroleum derived substance or waste, (iii) any asbestos or asbestos-containing material, (iv) any PCB or PCB-containing or urea-formaldehyde-containing material or fluid and (v) any radioactive material or substance (collectively, “ Hazardous Substances ”). Tenant, at its expense, shall have the right to defend with counsel of its own choice any legal proceeding commenced or threatened against Landlord or Tenant, in connection with which a claim for indemnification may be asserted by Landlord. Landlord shall indemnify and save harmless Tenant, its officers, directors, shareholders, successors, permitted assigns, and any guarantor of Tenant’s obligations hereunder from and against any liability and damages, and from and against any and all suits, claims and demands of every kind and nature, including reasonable counsel fees and expenses, to the extent arising out of or based upon any Excepted Item. Landlord, at its expense, shall have the right to defend with counsel of its own choice any legal proceeding commenced or threatened against Landlord or Tenant, in connection with which a claim for indemnification may be asserted by Tenant on account of any Excepted Item.

 

Landlord shall not be required to furnish any services or facilities or to make any repairs or alterations of any nature in or to the Demised Premises, Tenant hereby assuming the full and exclusive control thereof and responsibility for the condition, operation, repair, replacement, maintenance and management of the Demised Premises.

 

Paragraph 10:        Insurance .

 

Tenant shall obtain (or cause to be obtained) and keep in full force and effect either builder’s risk insurance (the “ Builder’s Risk Insurance Policy ”) coverage or permanent All Risk/All Perils insurance coverage as appropriate and to the extent applicable. All insurance policies shall be commercially reasonable and issued by carriers licensed in the state in which the Demised Premises is located with a Best’s Insurance Reports policy holder’s rating of “A” and a financial size category of Class “X”. The policies shall provide for the following, and any other coverage that a Fee Mortgagee may from time to time deem necessary:

 

A.          Coverage against all perils and/or builders risk in the amount of one hundred percent (100%) of the replacement cost of all Improvements located or to be located on the Land. If the policy is written on a “co-insurance” basis, the policy shall contain an “agreed amount endorsement” as evidence that the coverage is in an amount sufficient to insure the full amount of any fee first mortgage indebtedness secured by the Demised Premises;

 

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B.          Commercial general liability coverage in a minimum amount of not less than $1,000,000 per occurrence and $2,000,000 in the aggregate, with umbrella coverage for $5,000,000;

 

C.          Rent loss or business interruption coverage in a minimum amount approved by Fee Mortgagee of not less than the appraised rentals for a minimum of one year;

 

D.          Flood hazard coverage in a minimum amount available, if the premises are located in a special flood hazard area (“ Flood Hazard Area ”) as designated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency on its Flood Hazard Boundary Map and Flood Insurance Rate Maps, and the Department of Housing and Urban Development, Federal Insurance Administration, Special Flood Hazard Area Maps; and

 

E.          Workers Compensation and Disability insurance as required by law.

 

Each policy shall provide that the insurer will endeavor to deliver written notice to Landlord at least thirty (30) days’ prior to cancellation, reduction or termination.

 

Paragraph 11:        Damage or Destruction .

 

A.          If during the Term of this Lease any portion of the Demised Premises or the Improvements are damaged or destroyed by fire or other casualty, Tenant shall forthwith give notice thereof to Landlord. Unless Landlord or Tenant exercises its express right to terminate this Lease as a result of such fire or other casualty in accordance with this Paragraph 11 , Tenant shall (or shall cause the applicable Sublessees to) promptly repair, replace and rebuild (collectively, “ Repair ”) the same, at least to the extent of the value, and as nearly as reasonably possible to the character of the property involved, as it was immediately before the loss. Prior to the commencement by Tenant of the Repair of any such damage as required pursuant to this Paragraph 11 , Tenant shall submit plans and specifications for such Repair to Landlord for approval, which approval will not be unreasonably withheld or delayed. Any such Repair shall be done in a first class workmanlike manner, and in compliance with all applicable laws. Tenant shall also furnish to Landlord an estimate of the cost of any Repairs, which estimate shall be prepared by a licensed architect (the “ Architect ”) reasonably acceptable to Landlord.

 

B.          Unless any Fee Mortgage requires payment of any insurance proceeds to the Fee Mortgagee thereunder or except as set forth in Subparagraph 11.F , all insurance proceeds under the insurance policies to be maintained by Tenant hereunder shall be paid to Tenant. If the insurance proceeds from such policies made available to Tenant shall be insufficient for the proper and complete Repair of the damaged property, or if there be no insurance proceeds, Tenant shall nevertheless be required to make the Repairs at its own cost and expense or to pay for any such deficiency. If the amount of such net insurance proceeds shall be in excess of the cost of the Repairs, such excess shall be paid to Tenant, unless any Fee Mortgage requires payment thereof to the Fee Mortgagee thereunder, in which event such excess shall be delivered to such Fee Mortgagee and Landlord shall promptly pay to Tenant an amount equivalent to the amount delivered to such Fee Mortgagee.

 

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C.          Notwithstanding anything herein contained to the contrary, if all or a portion of the Demised Premises shall be damaged or destroyed, and the cost of restoring the Demised Premises following such damage or destruction, as determined by the Architect, is thirty percent (30%) or more of the fair market value of the Improvements immediately prior to such damage or destruction, Tenant shall have the right, exercisable by written notice delivered to Landlord within thirty (30) days of such damage or destruction, to terminate this Lease (as opposed to Tenant proceeding with the Repair of the Demised Premises), and upon delivery of the foregoing notice to Landlord, this Lease and the terms of this Lease shall cease and come to an end and all rentals shall be apportioned as of the date of such damage or destruction.

 

D.          Tenant shall control the negotiations with the relevant federal, state, county, municipal or other governmental or regulatory authority, agency, board, body, commission, court or quasi-governmental authority (the “ Governmental Authority ”) in connection with any destruction or damage. Tenant shall give to Landlord such information, and copies of such documents, which relate to such proceedings and are in the possession of Tenant or are readily obtainable by Tenant, when and as reasonably requested.

 

E.          If any damage or destruction to the Demised Premises occurs at a time when the then current Term of this Lease has two (2) years or less to run, and the cost of restoring the Demised Premises following such damage or destruction, as determined by the Architect, is thirty percent (30%) percent or more of the fair market value of the Improvements immediately prior to such damage or destruction, this Lease, except as hereinafter provided, may be terminated and ended at the election of either Landlord or Tenant (as opposed to Tenant proceeding with the Repair of the Demised Premises), provided that notice in writing of such election shall be sent by the party so electing to the other, within thirty (30) days after the occurrence of such damage or destruction. Upon such termination, this Lease and the Term thereof shall cease and come to an end and all rentals shall be apportioned as of the date of such destruction or damage. If pursuant to this Subparagraph 11.E Landlord shall elect to terminate this Lease, Tenant shall then have the right to exercise any unexpired options to extend the Term of this Lease, in accordance with the terms of this Lease, and in the event Tenant exercises any such renewal option within twenty (20) days after receiving such notice of termination from Landlord, such termination notice shall be void and of no effect and Tenant shall Repair the Demised Premises as provided in this Paragraph 11 .

 

F.          If this Lease is terminated as a result of any damage or destruction in accordance with this Paragraph 11 , the entire insurance proceeds payable on account of such damage and destruction shall be paid to Landlord unless any Fee Mortgage requires payment of any insurance proceeds to the Fee Mortgagee thereunder. Subject to any Fee Mortgage, if Tenant shall not commence the repair or rebuilding of the Demised Premises within a period of ninety (90) days after damage or destruction, subject to extension for force majeure, and prosecute the same thereafter with such dispatch as may be necessary to complete the same within a reasonable period after said damage or destruction occurs, not to exceed three hundred and sixty (360) days from the date of commencement of such repair or rebuilding, then, in addition to whatever other remedies Landlord may have either under this Lease, at law or in equity, any insurance proceeds received by Tenant shall be paid to and retained by Landlord as security for the continued performance and observance by Tenant of Tenant’s covenants and agreements hereunder, subject to the terms of any applicable Fee Mortgage, such proceeds to be released to Tenant only upon the completion of reconstruction or repairs in accordance with such disbursement requirements as Landlord may reasonably impose, including, without limitation, reasonable approval by Landlord of any plans, specifications and budget for such reconstruction or repair, and receipt by Landlord of all lien waivers.

 

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G.          So long as this Lease is not terminated in accordance with this Paragraph 11 , neither the rent payable by Tenant nor any of Tenant’s other obligations under the other provisions of this Lease shall be affected by any damage to or destruction of the Demised Premises, and Tenant expressly waives such additional rights as it might otherwise have under any law or statute by reason of damage or destruction of the Demised Premises by fire or any other cause.

 

Paragraph 12:        Condemnation .

 

A.          If at any time during the term of this Lease, all or substantially all of the Demised Premises shall be taken for any public or quasi-public purpose by any lawful power or authority by the exercise of the right of condemnation or eminent domain or by agreement between Landlord and those authorized to exercise such right, this Lease and the term of this Lease shall terminate and expire on the date of such taking and the Fixed Rent and other sums of money and charges herein reserved and provided to be paid by Tenant shall be apportioned and paid by Tenant to the date of such taking.

 

B.          If less than substantially all of the Demised Premises shall be taken as aforesaid, this Lease and the term of this Lease shall continue, without reduction, abatement or effect of any nature whatsoever upon said term or the liability of Tenant to pay in full the additional rent and other sums of money and charges herein reserved and provided to be paid by Tenant; provided , however , that the Fixed Rent payable by Tenant shall be reduced to equal an amount which bears the same ratio to the Fixed Rent payable immediately prior to such taking as the rentable area of the untaken portion of the Improvements bears to the rentable area of the Improvements immediately before the taking. Notwithstanding the foregoing, if at any time during the term of this Lease twenty-five percent (25%) or more of (i) the Improvements, or (ii) the parking areas within the Demised Premises, shall be taken as aforesaid, or if access to all of the parking areas upon the Demised Premises shall be obstructed for at least six (6) consecutive months as a result of such taking, Tenant shall have the right, exercisable by written notice to Landlord delivered at any time within thirty (30) days of such taking, to terminate this Lease, whereupon this Lease and the term of this Lease shall terminate and expire on the date of such taking, and the Fixed Rent and other sums of money and charges herein reserved and provided to be paid by Tenant shall be apportioned and paid by Tenant to the date of such taking.

 

C.          All compensation awarded or paid upon such a total or partial taking of the Demised Premises shall belong to and be the property of Landlord without any participation by Tenant. Nothing contained herein shall be construed to preclude Tenant from prosecuting any claim directly against the condemning authority in such condemnation proceedings for loss of business, depreciation or damage to and/or cost of removal or the value of stock and/or trade fixtures, furniture and other personal property belonging to Tenant; provided , however , that no such claim or award shall diminish or otherwise adversely affect Landlord’s claim or award, nor any claim or award of any Fee Mortgagee. In no event shall Tenant make any claim for the value of the unexpired term of this Lease. If any award pursuant to a taking of the nature described in Subparagraph 12.B above shall have a “loss of use” component specifically allocated, such component of the award shall be paid to Tenant.

 

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D.          In the event of a condemnation for a temporary use or occupancy of a portion of the Demised Premises for any public or quasi-public use or purpose during the term of the Lease, this Lease shall be and remain unaffected by such condemnation and Tenant shall continue to be responsible for all of its obligations hereunder and it shall continue to pay all Fixed Rent, additional rent, and other sums of money and charges herein reserved. In the event of any such condemnation, Tenant shall be entitled to appear, claim, prove and receive the entire award unless the period of temporary use or occupancy extends beyond the Expiration Date (as extended in the event Tenant exercises its option to extend the term of this Lease), in which event Landlord shall be entitled to appear, claim, prove and receive the entire award as represents the cost of restoration of the Demised Premises and the portion of any such award allocable to the period following the Expiration Date. At the termination of such public or quasi-public occupancy prior to the Expiration Date, Tenant shall, at its own expense, restore the Demised Premises as nearly as reasonably possible to the condition in which they were prior to the condemnation. Notwithstanding the preceding provisions of this Paragraph 12 , any lump sum award received by Tenant as compensation for temporary use and occupancy of the Demised Premises shall be delivered forthwith to Landlord to be held by Landlord in trust for the payment of future installments of Fixed Rent and other money and charges herein reserved by Tenant as provided in this Lease, and the restoration of the Demised Premises. Notwithstanding the foregoing, a temporary taking of more than twenty-five percent (25%) of the Improvements or all of the parking areas upon the Demised Premises which in either case lasts more than six (6) consecutive months shall be deemed a permanent taking of all the Property hereunder.

 

E.          Tenant shall control the negotiations with the Governmental Authority in connection with any taking. Tenant shall give to Landlord such information, and copies of such documents, which relate to such proceedings and are in the possession of Tenant or are readily obtainable by Tenant, as reasonably requested.

 

Paragraph 13:        Landlord’s Right to Perform Tenant’s Covenants .

 

If Tenant shall at any time fail to make any payment or perform any act on its part to be made or performed hereunder, then Landlord, without waiving or releasing Tenant from any obligation of Tenant contained in this Lease, may at its option pay any sum or perform any act on Tenant’s part to be paid or performed as provided herein, and may enter upon the Demised Premises for any purpose and take any action thereon as may be necessary to cure such failure. The amount of any payment made or expense incurred by Landlord in connection with the foregoing, with interest thereon at the Default Rate from the date of payment, shall constitute additional rent and shall be paid by Tenant to Landlord on demand. Notwithstanding the foregoing, Landlord may not, except in the case of an emergency, exercise any rights pursuant to this Paragraph 13 , except upon thirty (30) days’ prior written notice to Tenant.

 

In the event Tenant fails to pay Taxes or any other sum which Tenant is required by the terms of this Lease to pay, and Landlord, in its absolute discretion elects to pay such sum on behalf of Tenant, Tenant shall pay to Landlord, as additional rent hereunder, within fifteen (15) days of demand therefor, the amount of such payment, together with interest at the Default Rate, from the date of such payment by Landlord until the date Tenant pays such sums to Landlord.

 

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Paragraph 14:        Discharge of Liens .

 

A.          Tenant shall not create, permit to be created or to remain, and covenants to discharge any lien, encumbrance or charge upon the Demised Premises or any part thereof or the income therefrom having any priority or preference over this Lease or ranking on a parity with the estate, right and interest of Landlord in the Demised Premises or the Land, or any part thereof, or the income therefrom, and Tenant will not suffer any matter or thing whereby the estate, right and interest of Landlord might be impaired except as expressly provided in this Lease. Except for any Fee Mortgage, Landlord shall not create, permit to be created or to remain, and covenants to discharge any lien, encumbrance or charge upon the Land or the Improvements or any part thereof or the income therefrom, and Landlord will not suffer any matter or thing whereby the estate, right and interest of Tenant might be impaired except as expressly provided in this Lease.

 

B.          If, as a result of action or inaction by Tenant, any mechanic’s, laborer’s or materialmen’s lien shall at any time be filed against any part of the Demised Premises, Tenant shall within sixty (60) days after the notice of the filing thereof cause the same to be discharged of record by payment, deposit, bond, order of a court of competent jurisdiction or otherwise. If Tenant fails to cause such lien to be so discharged, then in addition to any other right or remedy of Landlord, Landlord may, but shall not be obligated to, discharge the same. Any amount paid by Landlord and all costs and expenses incurred by Landlord in connection therewith, together with interest thereon at the Default Rate, shall constitute additional rent paid by Tenant hereunder and shall be paid by Tenant to Landlord on demand. Tenant shall defend on behalf of Landlord and at Tenant’s own cost and expense any action which may be brought for the enforcement of any such liens, and Tenant shall pay any damages and discharge any judgment entered thereon and indemnify and save Landlord and any Fee Mortgagee harmless from and against any claim or damage resulting therefrom. In the event any mechanic, laborer or materialman shall send a notice of lien to Landlord, and not to Tenant, Landlord shall forward a copy of such notice of lien to Tenant, and the foregoing sixty (60) day period shall commence as of the date Tenant receives such notice.

 

C.          Anything to the contrary in the foregoing notwithstanding, Tenant shall not be required to pay, discharge or remove any mechanic’s, laborer’s or materialman’s lien filed against the Demised Premises, or any part thereof, so long as Tenant shall in good faith proceed to contest the same, or the validity thereof, by appropriate legal proceedings, which shall operate to prevent enforcement of such lien, so long as Tenant’s failure to pay, discharge or remove such lien does not result in a default under the terms of any Fee Mortgage or other agreement affecting the Demised Premises.

 

D.          All materialmen, contractors, artisans, mechanics, laborers and any other persons who now or hereafter have contracted with Tenant (or any Sublessee) for the furnishings of any labor, services, materials, supplies or equipment with respect to any portion of the Demised Premises at any time from the date of this Lease until the end of the term of this Lease, are hereby charged with notice that they must look exclusively to Tenant (or such Sublessee) to obtain payment for the same.

 

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Paragraph 15:        Landlord’s Access to Premises .

 

A.          Subject to the terms of any Subleases, Tenant will permit Landlord and its authorized representatives upon reasonable notice to enter the Demised Premises during business hours (but not more than one time during any calendar year) for the purpose of inspecting the same and performing any work therein that may be necessary by reason of Tenant’s failure to make any repairs or perform any work required of Tenant pursuant to the terms of this Lease. Nothing herein shall imply any duty upon the part of Landlord to do any such work, and performance thereof by Landlord shall not constitute a waiver of Tenant’s default in failing to perform the same.

 

B.          Landlord, upon reasonable notice, shall have the right to enter the Demised Premises during business hours, for the purpose of showing same to prospective purchasers of the Demised Premises and, at any time within twelve (12) months prior to the expiration of the term of this Lease (unless Tenant shall have exercised its option to extend the term of this Lease as hereinafter provided), for the purpose of showing same to prospective tenants.

 

C.          Landlord’s rights under this Paragraph 15 shall be subject to the limitations that (i) Landlord shall use all reasonable efforts to avoid interference with or disruption to Tenant’s operations in the Demised Premises, and (ii) Tenant shall have the right to designate secure areas within the Demised Premises in which access shall be permitted only in the company of a designated representative of Tenant.

 

D.          Tenant shall not enter into any future Sublease unless such Sublease contains the following provision:

 

Master Lease . Tenant acknowledges that the Premises is subject to that certain Master Lease (the “ Master Lease ”) dated as of [●],[●], by and between various parties as landlord (the “ Master Landlord ”), and Landlord as tenant, and that this Lease shall in all respects be subject and subordinate to the terms of the Master Lease and any other ground lease, master lease or underlying lease now or hereafter placed on the property containing the Premises. No further documentation shall be required to evidence the foregoing; provided, however, that in confirmation of such subordination, Tenant shall execute promptly any certificate, in recordable form, that Landlord may reasonably request.

 

In the event Master Landlord shall succeed to the rights of Landlord, or if any lessor of any underlying or ground lease shall succeed to the position of Landlord under this Lease, then Tenant will recognize such successor landlord as Landlord of this Lease and pay the rent and attorn to and perform the provisions of this Lease for the benefit of any such successor Landlord, and Master Landlord will recognize Tenant under this Lease. No documentation other than this Lease shall be necessary to evidence such attornment but Tenant agrees to execute any documents, in recordable form, reasonably requested by the successor Landlord to confirm such attornment or to otherwise carry out the intent and purposes of this Paragraph ____.”

 

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The requirements of this Subparagraph 15.D shall not apply to the Subleases in existence as of the date of this Lease or to any amendments, modifications or supplements thereto.

 

Paragraph 16:         Assignment, Mortgage, Etc .

 

A.           Tenant shall have the right to assign this Lease or the leasehold estate created hereby without the consent of Landlord. Tenant shall have the right to sublet all or any portion of the Demised Premises without the consent of Landlord, including, without limitation, the right to enter into Subleases that extend beyond the Term of this Lease.

 

B.           Subject to the terms of any Fee Mortgage, Tenant shall have the right to mortgage, hypothecate, or otherwise encumber (collectively, a “ Leasehold Mortgage ”) this Lease, or Tenant’s interest in the Demised Premises or any part thereof, without Landlord’s prior written consent.

 

Paragraph 17:         Default .

 

A.           If any one or more of the following events (herein sometimes called “ Events of Default ”) shall happen:

 

(1)          if Tenant shall fail to make due and punctual payment of any Fixed Rent or additional rent payable under this Lease or any other sum when and as the same shall become due and payable, and such failure shall continue for a period of five (5) days after written notice from Landlord; or

 

(2)          if Tenant shall fail in the performance or compliance with any of the agreements, terms, covenants or conditions in this Lease (other than those referred to in the foregoing Subparagraph 17.A.(l) ) for a period of thirty (30) days after written notice from Landlord to Tenant specifying the items which Tenant has failed to perform or comply with, or in the case of any failure or a contingency which cannot with due diligence be cured within said thirty (30) day period, if Tenant fails to proceed within said thirty (30) day period to commence to cure the same and thereafter to prosecute the curing of such failure with due diligence (it being intended in connection with a failure not susceptible of being cured with due diligence within said thirty (30) day period that the time of Tenant within which to cure the same shall be extended for such period as may be necessary to complete the same with all due diligence); or

 

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(3)          if Tenant shall (i) apply for, or consent in writing to, the appointment of a custodian, receiver, trustee or liquidator of Tenant or of all or substantially all of its assets, (ii) file a voluntary petition in bankruptcy or admit in writing its inability to pay its debts as they become due, (iii) make a general assignment for the benefit of creditors, or (iv) file a petition or an answer seeking a reorganization (other than a reorganization not involving the liabilities of Tenant) or an arrangement with creditors, or take advantage of any insolvency law, (v) file an answer admitting the material allegations of a petition filed against Tenant in any bankruptcy, reorganization or insolvency proceedings, (vi) admit in writing its inability to pay its debts as they mature, or (vii) be dissolved as the result of any adversary suit or proceedings; or

 

(4)          if an order, judgment or decree shall be entered by any court of competent jurisdiction approving a petition seeking a reorganization of Tenant or the appointment of a custodian, receiver, trustee or liquidator of Tenant, or of all or substantially all of Tenant’s assets, and such order, judgment or decree shall continue unstayed and in effect, whether pursuant to appeal or otherwise, for any period of ninety (90) days; or

 

(5)          if an involuntary case is commenced against Tenant by the filing of a petition under Chapter 7 or Chapter 11 of Title 11 of the United States Bankruptcy Code and an order for relief is entered therein or the petition is not dismissed within ninety (90) days after the filing of such petition; or

 

(6)          if Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP (the “ Operating Partnership ”) shall default under that certain Guaranty dated as of the date of this Lease from the Operating Partnership to Landlord (the “ Guaranty ”) beyond any applicable notice and cure period contained therein; then and in any such event Landlord, at any time thereafter, may give written notice to Tenant specifying such Event of Default or Events of Default and stating that this Lease and the term hereby demised shall expire and terminate on the date specified in such notice, which shall be no less than ten (10) days after the giving of such written notice, and upon said date this Lease and the term hereby demised and all rights of Tenant under this Lease, including any renewal privileges whether or not exercised, shall expire and terminate, and Tenant shall remain liable as hereinafter provided.

 

B.          Upon any such expiration or termination of this Lease, Tenant shall quit and peacefully surrender the Demised Premises to Landlord and Landlord, upon or at any time after any such expiration or termination, may without further notice enter upon and re-enter the Demised Premises and possess and repossess itself thereof, by force, summary proceedings, ejectment or otherwise, and may dispossess Tenant and remove Tenant and (subject to the provisions of Subparagraph 17.D ) all other persons and property from the Demised Premises and may have, hold and enjoy the Demised Premises and the right to receive all rental income of and from the same.

 

C.          At any time or from time to time after any such expiration or termination, Landlord may relet the Demised Premises or any part thereof, in the name of Landlord or otherwise, for such term or terms (which may be greater or less than the period which would otherwise have constituted the balance of the term of this Lease) and on such conditions (which may include concessions or free rent) as Landlord in its uncontrolled discretion may determine and may collect and receive the rents therefor. Landlord shall in no way be responsible or liable for any failure to relet the Demised Premises or any part thereof, or for any failure to collect any rent due upon any such re-letting.

 

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D.         No such expiration or termination of this Lease shall relieve Tenant of Tenant’s liability and obligations under this Lease, and such liability and obligations shall survive any such expiration or termination. In the event of any such expiration or termination, whether or not the Demised Premises or any part thereof shall have been relet, Tenant shall pay to Landlord the Fixed Rent and all other charges required to be paid by Tenant up to the time of such expiration or termination of this Lease. Thereafter, until the end of what would have been the term of this Lease in the absence of such expiration or termination, Tenant shall be liable to Landlord for and shall pay to Landlord as and for liquidated and agreed current damages for Tenant’s default, the equivalent of the amount of the Fixed Rent and the other rent and charges which would be payable under this Lease by Tenant if this Lease were still in effect, less the net proceeds of any re-letting effected pursuant to the provisions of Subparagraph 17.C and any rent collected by Lender under any subleases not terminated, after deducting all of Landlord’s reasonable expenses in connection with such re-letting, including, without limitation, all repossession costs and reasonable attorneys’ fees.

 

E.          Tenant shall pay such current damages (herein called “ deficiency ”) to Landlord monthly on the days on which the Fixed Rent and other charges would have been payable under this Lease if this Lease were still in effect and Landlord shall be entitled to recover from Tenant each monthly deficiency as the same shall arise. In addition, at any time after any such expiration or termination, whether or not Landlord shall have collected any deficiencies as aforesaid, Landlord shall be entitled to recover from Tenant, and Tenant shall pay to Landlord on demand, as and for liquidated and agreed final damages for Tenant’s default, an amount equal to the difference between the total of the Fixed Rent and other charges reserved under this Lease from the date of such expiration or termination for what would be the then unexpired term of this Lease if the same had remained in effect, and the then fair rental value of the Demised Premises for the same period, discounted at the rate of eight percent (8%) per annum.

 

F.          Tenant hereby expressly waives, so far as permitted by law, the service of any notice of intention to reenter provided for in any statute, or of the institution of legal proceedings to that end. Tenant, for and on behalf of Tenant and all persons claiming through or under Tenant, also waives any and all right of redemption or reentry or repossession or to restore the operation of this Lease in case Tenant shall be dispossessed by a judgment or by warrant of any court or judge or in case of re-entry or repossession by Landlord or in case of any expiration or termination of this Lease. Landlord and Tenant, so far as permitted by law, waive and will waive any and all right to a trial by jury in any action, proceeding or counterclaim brought by either of the parties to this Lease against the other in connection with any matters whatever arising out of or in any way connected with this Lease, the relationship of Landlord and Tenant, Tenant’s use or occupancy of the Demised Premises and any claim of injury or damage. The terms “enter,” “re-enter,” “entry” or “re-entry,” as used in this Lease are not restricted in their technical legal meaning.

 

G.          No failure by either party to insist upon the strict performance of any covenant, agreement, term or condition of this Lease or to exercise any right or remedy consequent upon a breach thereof, and no acceptance of full or partial rent during the continuance of any such breach, shall constitute a waiver of any such breach or of such covenant, agreement, term or condition. No covenant, agreement, term or condition of this Lease to be performed or complied with by either party and no breach thereof, shall be waived, altered or modified except by a written instrument executed by the other party. No waiver of any breach shall affect or alter this Lease but each and every covenant, agreement, term and condition of this Lease shall continue in full force and effect with respect to any other then existing or subsequent breach thereof.

 

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H.           Each right and remedy of the parties provided for in this Lease shall be cumulative and shall be in addition to every other right or remedy provided for in this Lease or now or hereafter existing at law or in equity or by statute or otherwise. The exercise or beginning of the exercise by either party of any one or more of the rights or remedies provided for in this Lease or now or hereafter existing at law or in equity or by statute or otherwise shall not preclude the simultaneous or later exercise by such party of any or all other rights or remedies provided for in this Lease or now or hereafter existing at law or in equity or by statute or otherwise.

 

I.            Upon an Event of Default by Landlord hereunder, Tenant shall be entitled to recover against Landlord all of its reasonable costs and expenses, together with interest at the Default Rate on any sums determined to be due and payable to Tenant, in connection with any such default.

 

Paragraph 18:        Representations by Landlord .

 

A.          Tenant has inspected the Demised Premises and agrees to accept the Demised Premises in its “as is” condition as of the date of this Lease, and agrees that Landlord shall not be required to do any work to prepare the Demised Premises for use or occupancy by Tenant. Landlord’s agents have made no representations or promises with respect to the Improvements or the Demised Premises except as herein expressly set forth.

 

B.           Landlord hereby represents and warrants to Tenant as follows:

 

(i)          Landlord has fee title to the Demised Premises, subject to no liens or encumbrances other than Permitted Exceptions. The representation contained in this Subparagraph 18.B.(i) shall be true and correct as of this date and the Commencement Date.

 

(ii)        The Improvements were constructed in accordance with all applicable laws, legal requirements and building codes, the compliance with which was necessary in order to obtain a certificate of occupancy for the Improvements.

 

(iii)       Landlord, if a partnership, limited liability company, trust or corporation, is duly organized and validly existing under the laws of the state of its organization and is duly registered and qualified to do business in each jurisdiction where such registration or qualification is material to the transactions contemplated hereby and has been duly authorized by all necessary and appropriate action to enter into this Lease and to consummate the transaction contemplated herein, and the individuals executing this Lease on behalf of Landlord, have been duly authorized by all necessary and appropriate action on behalf of Landlord. Landlord, if an individual, has full power, authority and capacity to enter into this Lease and to consummate the transaction contemplated herein. When executed and delivered by Landlord, this Lease will constitute valid and legally binding obligations of Landlord, enforceable against Landlord in accordance with its terms.

 

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(iv)        Neither the execution nor the delivery of this Lease nor the consummation of the transaction contemplated hereby nor fulfillment of or compliance with the terms and conditions of this Lease conflict with or will result in a breach of any of the terms, conditions or provisions of any agreement, order, judgment, decree, arbitration award, statute, regulation or instrument to which Landlord is a party or by which it is bound, or constitutes or will constitute a breach, violation or default under any of the foregoing.

 

C.          During the term of this Lease, Landlord shall not voluntarily pursue an application for a zoning variance, land use approval, assessment, special improvement or similar action which would materially adversely affect Tenant’s use of the Demised Premises or materially increases Tenant’s cost to operate and maintain the Demised Premises.

 

D.          Landlord hereby transfers and assigns to Tenant any and all warranties and guaranties in Landlord’s possession which were obtained by Landlord (whether by specific agreement or as a matter of law) in connection with the construction or acquisition of the Improvements, and preparation of the Demised Premises, and agrees to cooperate with Tenant in connection with the enforcement of any of the foregoing. Landlord further agrees to execute any documents which Tenant may reasonably request in furtherance of the foregoing assignment.

 

Paragraph 19:        Quiet Enjoyment .

 

Landlord represents and covenants that Landlord has full right, power and authority to enter this Lease for the term herein granted and Landlord covenants and agrees with Tenant that upon Tenant paying the Fixed Rent and other charges due hereunder, and observing and performing all the terms, covenants and conditions on Tenant’s part to be observed and performed, Tenant may peaceably and quietly enjoy the Demised Premises, free from any interference, molestation or acts of Landlord or of anyone claiming by, through or under Landlord, subject, nevertheless, to the terms and conditions of this Lease.

 

Paragraph 20:        Subordination; Subleases .

 

A.          Subject to Tenant receiving a subordination and non-disturbance agreement as provided in Subparagraph 20.D from any existing or future Fee Mortgagee(s) or underlying lessors, this Lease, and all the rights of Tenant hereunder, are and shall be subject and subordinate to any and all Fee Mortgages now or hereafter existing and any other liens either in whole or in part on the Demised Premises, and any extension, renewal or modification of any such Fee Mortgages, and to any and all ground or underlying leases which may now or hereafter affect the Demised Premises or any portion thereof, and any extensions, renewals or modifications thereof. In confirmation of such subordination, Tenant shall execute promptly any certificate, in recordable form, that Landlord may reasonably request.

 

B.          Subject to Tenant receiving a subordination and non-disturbance agreement as provided in Subparagraph 20.D from any existing or future Fee Mortgagee(s) or underlying lessors, Tenant hereby agrees that, in the event that any Fee Mortgagee shall succeed to the rights of Landlord, or if any lessor of any underlying lease shall succeed to the position of Landlord under this Lease, then Tenant will recognize such successor Landlord as Landlord of this Lease and pay the rent and attorn to and perform the provisions of this Lease for the benefit of any such successor Landlord. No documentation other than this Lease shall be necessary to evidence such attornment but Tenant agrees to execute any documents, in recordable form, reasonably requested by the successor Landlord to confirm such attornment or to otherwise carry out the intent and purposes of this Paragraph 20 .

 

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C.          Intentionally omitted.

 

D.          Landlord, at no cost to Tenant, shall obtain from any future Fee Mortgagee or from any future lessor of any underlying lease, an agreement to the effect that, so long as no Event of Default shall at the time have occurred and be continuing hereunder, Tenant and its permitted subtenants and assigns shall not be made party to any proceeding to foreclose the Fee Mortgage or to terminate the underlying lease; that Tenant’s possession (and its permitted subtenants’ possession) of the Demised Premises under the term of this Lease shall not be terminated or disturbed as a result of the foreclosure of any Fee Mortgage or termination of any underlying lease; that such Fee Mortgagee or underlying lessor, as the case may be, will recognize Tenant as the direct tenant of such Fee Mortgagee or lessor on all of the terms and conditions of this Lease subject to the provisions hereinafter set forth; together with such other terms as are customarily contained in a subordination, non-disturbance and attornment agreement (any such agreement from a Fee Mortgagee or lessor is called a “ Nondisturbance Agreement ”). Tenant agrees it will execute any agreement consistent with the foregoing provisions which may be required to confirm the subordination of this Lease subject to the non-disturbance provisions above outlined. In any such agreement Tenant shall agree that, in the event that the Fee Mortgagee shall succeed to the rights of Landlord herein named, or if any lessor of any underlying lease shall succeed to the position of Landlord under this Lease, then Tenant will recognize such successor Landlord as the landlord of this Lease and pay the rent and attorn to and perform the provisions of this Lease for the benefit of any such successor Landlord.

 

E.          Any Nondisturbance Agreement may be made on the condition that, and Tenant hereby agrees that neither the Fee Mortgagee nor the lessor, as the case may be, nor anyone claiming by, through or under such Fee Mortgagee or lessor, as the case may be, including a purchaser at a foreclosure sale, shall be:

 

(i)          liable for any previous act or omission of Landlord under this Lease, except to the extent that a default continues after the date of foreclosure or purchase of the Demised Premises (in which case such default shall be deemed to have occurred on the date of transfer of title to the Demised Premises); or

 

(ii)        subject to any credit, claim, counterclaim, demand, defense or offset that previously accrued to Tenant against Landlord under this Lease; or

 

(iii)       obligated to perform any alteration or improvements of the premises not expressly required under this Lease; or

 

(iv)        be responsible for (a) the performance or completion of any construction work to be performed by Landlord under this Lease, or (b) any reimbursement or payment required by Landlord to Tenant or its designees pursuant to this Lease on account of work performed by, or for the account of, Tenant; or

 

(v)          be liable for the repayment of any monies owed by Landlord to Tenant; or

 

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(vi)        have any obligation with respect to any security deposited under this Lease unless and to the extent such security shall have been transferred to the Fee Mortgagee or lessor, as the case may be, or anyone claiming by, through or under such party; or

 

(vii)       be bound by any previous prepayment of Fixed Rent or additional rent for more than one (1) quarter.

 

F.          On the date of this Lease, Tenant and Landlord shall execute and deliver an Assignment and Assumption of Subleases substantially in the form of Exhibit D , pursuant to which Landlord shall assign to Tenant and Tenant shall assume from Landlord all of Landlord’s right, title and interest in and obligations under each sublease for space at the Demised Premises (each, a “ Sublease ”; the sublessee under each Sublease being a “ Sublesssee ”), subject to the terms of this Subparagraph 20.F .

 

G.          Landlord agrees that upon the request of Tenant, Landlord shall execute and deliver to any Sublessee a commercially reasonable subordination, non-disturbance and attornment agreement pursuant to which Landlord will agree (i) that such Sublessee’s possession of the premises leased under such Sublessee’s lease shall not be disturbed as a result of the termination of this Lease and (ii) to recognize such Sublessee as a direct tenant of Landlord in the event of any such termination. Such subordination, non-disturbance and attornment agreement shall contain such other customary terms as are reasonably requested by such Sublessee, Landlord or Tenant. Tenant shall deliver to Landlord a true copy of each executed lease within seven (7) days of the date of execution and delivery thereof.

 

H.          In the event of a termination of this Lease by operation of law or otherwise, each Sublease shall continue in full force and effect as a direct lease between Landlord and Sublessee, and each Sublessee’s possession of the premises leased under the applicable Sublease shall not be disturbed as a result of the termination of this Lease.

 

Paragraph 21:        Brokerage .

 

A.          Tenant warrants and represents that it has not dealt with any realtor, broker or agent, in connection with the negotiation of this Lease and agrees to pay and to hold Landlord (and any partner, affiliate or principal (disclosed or undisclosed) of Landlord) harmless from any cost, expense or liability (including costs of suit and reasonable attorney’s fees) for any compensation, commission or charges claimed by any broker with respect to this Lease (other than any compensation, fees and expenses as set forth in in that certain Program Description Memorandum dated March 2, 2016 (the “ Memorandum ”) and the Property Supplement to the Memorandum dated [●],[●]), arising as a result of the acts of Tenant.

 

B.          Landlord warrants and represents that it has not dealt with any realtor, broker or agent in connection with the negotiation of this Lease (other than the Operating Partnership and its affiliates and subsidiaries) and agrees to pay and to hold Tenant harmless from any cost, expense or liability (including costs of suit and reasonable attorney’s fees) for any compensation, commission or charges claimed by any broker with respect to this Lease, arising as a result of the acts of Landlord.

 

20  -
 

 

Paragraph 22:        Lease Status .

 

Upon request of either party to this Lease, the other party will execute and deliver (within ten (10) business days after request therefor) an instrument stating, if the same be true, that this Lease is a true and exact copy of the Lease between the parties to this Lease, that there are no amendments of this Lease (or stating what amendments there may be), that the same is then in full force and effect and that, to the best of such party’s knowledge, there are then no offsets, defenses or counterclaims with respect to the payment of rent reserved hereunder or in the performance of the other terms, covenants and conditions of this Lease to be performed by either party to this Lease, and that as of such date no default has been declared hereunder by either party to this Lease and that such party at the time has no knowledge of any factor or circumstance which it might reasonably believe would give rise to a default by either party.

 

Paragraph 23:        Holdover .

 

After the expiration of the term of this Lease if not extended, or extended term, if extended, if Tenant shall continue in possession thereafter, such possession shall be on a month-to-month basis upon the same terms of this Lease (except that the Fixed Rent payable by Tenant shall be at a rate equal to one hundred fifty percent (150%) of the average quarterly rent paid during the expired term) until terminated at the end of a month by either party upon thirty (30) days’ advance written notice to the other party.

 

Paragraph 24:        Definition and Liability of Landlord .

 

The term “Landlord” as used in this Lease means only the owner(s) or the mortgagee(s) in possession for the time being of the Demised Premises, so that in the event of any sale of the Demised Premises or an assignment of this Lease by Landlord or such mortgagee, or a demise of the Demised Premises, Landlord (and each of the partners and principals (disclosed and undisclosed) of Landlord) shall be and hereby is entirely freed and relieved of all obligations of Landlord hereunder, provided such successor Landlord agrees in writing to assume all such obligations, whether arising prior or subsequent to the date of such assignment. In the event of any of the foregoing transfers by Landlord (or any assignee of Landlord), Landlord (or such assignee) shall deliver to Tenant a written agreement from the purchaser(s), assignee(s) or lessee(s) of Landlord’s (or such assignee’s) interest in this Lease or the Demised Premises, that the purchaser, assignee or lessee has assumed and agreed to observe and perform all obligations of Landlord hereunder including, without limitation, all obligations which were the responsibility of the prior Landlord hereunder, but only with respect to the period ending with a subsequent transfer of such purchaser’s, assignee’s, or lessee’s interest in the Demised Premises.

 

It is specifically understood and agreed that there shall be no personal liability on Landlord (or any of the partners or principals (disclosed or undisclosed) of Landlord) in respect of any of the covenants, conditions or provisions of this Lease; and in the event of a breach or default by Landlord of any of its obligations under this Lease, Tenant shall look solely to the equity of Landlord in the Demised Premises, the Improvements, and the Land for the satisfaction of Tenant’s remedies.

 

21  -
 

 

Paragraph 25:        Environmental Covenants .

 

Tenant hereby unconditionally covenants and agrees with Landlord, as follows:

 

A.          Tenant shall not use, generate, manufacture, produce, store, release, discharge, treat, or dispose of on, under, from or about the Demised Premises or transport to or from the Demised Premises any Hazardous Substance, and shall use reasonable efforts to not allow any other person or entity to do so, except in compliance with Environmental Laws. Tenant shall not install or permit to be installed any asbestos or storage tanks at the Demised Premises and shall remedy all violations of Environmental Laws with respect thereto which arise as a direct result of Tenant’s actions, including, but not limited to, removal of asbestos and/or storage tanks in the manner and as required by applicable Environmental Laws.

 

B.          During the term of this Lease, Tenant shall use reasonable efforts to keep and maintain the Demised Premises in compliance with, and to not cause or permit the Demised Premises to be in violation of any Environmental Law and shall promptly take corrective action to remedy such noncompliance which arises as a direct result of Tenant’s actions.

 

Paragraph 26:        Memorandum of Lease .

 

At Tenant’s request, Landlord and Tenant shall enter into a Memorandum of Lease for recording substantially in the form of Exhibit B (the “ Memorandum of Lease ”). Tenant shall have the right, at Tenant’s expense, to record said Memorandum of Lease; provided , however , that upon the termination of the Lease, Tenant shall terminate the Memorandum of Lease of record pursuant to the Termination of Memorandum of Lease set forth in Exhibit C (the “ Termination of Memorandum of Lease ”), and Tenant hereby appoints Landlord its attorney-in-fact to execute and record such Termination of Memorandum of Lease if Tenant shall fail to do so as required herein. Tenant shall indemnify, defend and hold Landlord harmless from and against any and all loss, cost, damage, expense, liability and claims (including, without limitation, reasonable attorneys’ fees and disbursements) incurred by Landlord as the result of Tenant’s breach of this Paragraph 26 .

 

Paragraph 27:        Arbitration .

 

A.          Any dispute, claim or controversy arising out of or relating to this Lease, or breach, termination, enforcement, interpretation or validity thereof, including the determination of the scope or applicability of this Lease, shall be determined by binding arbitration in Denver, Colorado, before a sole arbitrator. Arbitration shall be administered by JAMS pursuant to its Streamlined Arbitration Rules and Procedures. Judgment on the award may be entered in any court having jurisdiction. The arbitrator shall, in the award, allocate all of the costs of the arbitration (and the mediation, if applicable), including the fees of the arbitrator and the reasonable attorneys’ fees of the prevailing party, against the party who did not prevail.

 

B.          Anything to the contrary therein notwithstanding, the provisions of Subparagraph 27.A shall not apply with respect to any application made by any party to this Lease for injunctive relief under this Lease.

 

22  -
 

 

Paragraph 28:        Governing Law .

 

This Lease shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of [●]. The parties hereby: (a) submit to personal jurisdiction in Denver, Colorado for the enforcement of this Lease; and (b) waive any and all personal rights under the law of any state or the District of Columbia to object to jurisdiction within Denver, Colorado for the purposes of litigation to enforce this Lease. Tenant agrees that in any action or proceeding brought under this Lease, Tenant shall waive trial by jury.

 

Paragraph 29:        Notices .

 

Any notice to be given or other document or payment to be delivered by any party to any other party hereunder may be delivered by (a) depositing the same with the United States Postal Service, addressed to the party to be notified, postage prepaid, registered or certified mail with return receipt requested, (b) delivering the same in person to such party via a hand delivery service, Federal Express or any other courier service that provides a return receipt showing the date of actual delivery of same to the addressee thereof, or (c) facsimile transmission with confirmation of receipt to the party sending same, if a copy is deposited with the United States Postal Service as provided in subpart (a) above, and addressed to the party for whom intended, as follows:

 

If to Tenant: DCX [●] MASTER TENANT LLC
c/o Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP
518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor
Denver, Colorado 80202
Attention:        M. Kirk Scott
Facsimile:        (303) 577-9797
Telephone:      (303) 339-3609
With a copy to: DIVIDEND CAPITAL DIVERSIFIED PROPERTY FUND INC.
518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor
Denver, Colorado 80202
Attention:        Joshua Widoff
Facsimile:        (303) 869-4602
Telephone:      (303) 597-0483

 

23  -
 

 

With a copy to: BRYAN CAVE LLP
1700 Lincoln Street, Suite 4100
Denver, Colorado 80203
Attention:        Robert Bach
Facsimile:        (303) 335-3736
Telephone:      (303) 866-0236
If to Landlord: DCX [●] DST
c/o DCX [●] Manager LLC
518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor
Denver, Colorado 80202
Attention:        M. Kirk Scott
Facsimile:        (303) 577-9797
Telephone:      (303) 339-3609
With a copy to: DIVIDEND CAPITAL DIVERSIFIED PROPERTY FUND INC.
518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor
Denver, Colorado 80202
Attention:        Joshua Widoff
Facsimile:        (303) 869-4602
Telephone:      (303) 597-0483
With a copy to: BRYAN CAVE LLP
1700 Lincoln Street, Suite 4100
Denver, Colorado 80203
Attention:        Robert Bach
Facsimile:        (303) 335-3736
Telephone:      (303) 866-0236

Either party may, by notice given to the other party, designate a new address to which notices, demands and requests shall be sent and, thereafter, any of the foregoing shall be sent to the address most recently designated by such party. Notice shall be conclusively be presumed to have been received by a party on the date the notice is shown as received on a registered or certified mail return receipt, Federal Express or courier return receipt or fax confirmation of receipt.

 

Paragraph 30:        Entire Agreement .

 

This Lease and the Exhibits and Schedules attached to this Lease set forth the entire agreement between the parties. Any prior conversations or writings are merged herein and extinguished. No subsequent amendment to this Lease shall be binding upon Landlord or Tenant unless reduced to writing and signed by Landlord and Tenant.

 

24  -
 

 

Paragraph 31:        Assigns .

 

Subject to the terms and conditions of this Lease, the covenants, conditions and agreements contained in this Lease shall bind and inure to the benefit of Landlord and Tenant and their respective successors, assigns and legal representatives (including any Fee Mortgagee(s)). Tenant hereby acknowledges that Landlord shall have the absolute right to transfer one or more undivided interests in the Demised Premises without the consent of or notice to Tenant, in which event such transferee shall be deemed to be a “Landlord” hereunder. As soon as reasonably practicable after any such transfer, the transferor of such interests in the Demised Premises shall deliver a notice to Landlord and Tenant of such transfer, which notice shall include a revised Schedule 2 reflecting each Landlord’s undivided percentage interest in the Demised Premises, but the failure to deliver any such notice shall not affect Landlord’s rights or Tenant’s obligations hereunder.

 

Paragraph 32:        Invalidity of Particular Provisions .

 

If any term or provision of this Lease or the application thereof to any persons or circumstances shall, to any extent, be invalid or unenforceable, the remainder of this Lease or the application of such term or provision to other persons or circumstances shall not be affected thereby, and each term and provision of this Lease shall be valid and be enforced to the fullest extent permitted by law.

 

Paragraph 33:        Severability .

 

If any portion of this Lease shall become illegal, null or void or against public policy, for any reason, or shall be held by any court of competent jurisdiction to be illegal, null or void or against public policy (a) the remaining portions of this Lease shall not be affected thereby and shall remain in full force and effect to the fullest extent permissible by law and (b) in lieu of such invalid and unenforceable provision, there will be added automatically as a part of this Lease a provision as similar in terms to the invalid or unenforceable provision as may be possible and be valid and enforceable.

 

Paragraph 34:        Captions .

 

Captions or titles of the sections, paragraphs and subparagraphs of this Lease are inserted solely for convenience of reference and shall not constitute a part of this Lease, nor shall they affect its meaning, construction or effect.

 

Paragraph 35:        Surrender of the Demised Premises .

 

Except as otherwise herein provided, at the expiration of the term of this Lease, Tenant will peaceably yield up to Landlord the Demised Premises, broom clean, in as good order and repair as when delivered to Tenant, ordinary wear and tear and damage by the elements excepted.

 

Paragraph 36:        Certificate of Occupancy .

 

Landlord agrees to cooperate with Tenant, and to use reasonable efforts to cause Landlord’s architect to cooperate with Tenant, in connection with Tenant’s obtaining any certificate of occupancy which may be required as a result of any work done in the Demised Premises by Tenant.

 

25  -
 

 

Paragraph 37:        Name Buildings/Demised Premises; Signs .

 

Pursuant to and in compliance with any applicable rules, regulations and legal requirements, Tenant shall have the right to name the any building located at the Demised Premises, or the Demised Premises themselves and, at its expense, to install and maintain a sign on the exterior of such building, or on the Land. Tenant shall, prior to erecting any such sign, submit to Landlord final drawings of the sign proposed to be installed by Tenant, showing the location, proposed appearance, dimensions, and manner of affixation to the Demised Premises. Tenant, at its expense, shall obtain prior to the erection of any sign, such permits as Tenant may be required to obtain from any and all public authorities having jurisdiction with respect to the erection, installation, maintenance or use of said sign. Landlord agrees to cooperate with Tenant in the obtaining of any such permits. Tenant shall, at its expense, maintain and repair said sign in compliance with all applicable laws and requirements of public authorities. At the expiration or earlier termination of this Lease, or in the event that any governmental authority having jurisdiction shall revoke any permits required to maintain the sign, Landlord may require Tenant to remove, at Tenant’s expense, any sign installed pursuant to this Lease, and to restore any affected areas of the Demised Premises to their preexisting condition as nearly as may be practicable.

 

Paragraph 38:        Attorneys’ Fees .

 

If either party institutes an action or proceeding against the other party relating to the provisions of this Lease, then the non-prevailing party in such action or proceeding shall reimburse the prevailing party for its actual attorneys’ fees, and all fees, costs and expenses incurred on any appeal or in collection of any judgment.

 

Paragraph 39:        Definitions .

 

The following terms have been defined in the locations set forth below:

 

(a)          “ Architect ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 11.A .

 

(b)          “ Builder’s Risk Insurance Policy ” has the meaning set forth in Paragraph 10 .

 

(c)          “ Commencement Date ” has the meaning set forth in Paragraph 1 .

 

(d)          “ Default Rate ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 2.B .

 

(e)          “ Demised Premises ” has the meaning set forth in the recitals.

 

(f)          “ Environmental Law ” means all applicable present and future laws, statutes, regulations, ordinances, rules, codes, judgments, orders or other similar enactments of any governmental authority or agency regulating or relating to health, safety, or environmental conditions on, under, or about the Demised Premises or the environment, including without limitation, the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation and Liability Act, the Resource Conservation and Recovery Act, and all state and local counterparts thereto, and any regulations or policies promulgated or issued thereunder.

 

26  -
 

 

(g)          “ Environmental Law ” means all applicable present and future laws, statutes, regulations, ordinances, rules, codes, judgments, orders or other similar enactments of any governmental authority or agency regulating or relating to health, safety, or environmental conditions on, under, or about the Demised Premises or the environment.

 

(h)          “ Events of Default ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 17.A .

 

(i)           “ Excepted Item ” has the meaning set forth in Paragraph 9 .

 

(j)           “ Expiration Date ” has the meaning set forth in Paragraph 1 .

 

(k)          “ Fee Mortgage ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 4.B .

 

(l)           “ Fee Mortgagee ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 4.B .

 

(m)         “ Flood Hazard Area ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 10.D .

 

(n)          “ Fixed Rent ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 2.A .

 

(o)          “ Governmental Authority ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 11.D.

 

(p)          “ Guaranty ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 17.A.(6) .

 

(q)          “ Hazardous Substances ” has the meaning set forth in Paragraph 9 .

 

(r)           “ Improvements ” has the meaning set forth in the Recitals.

 

(s)          “ Land ” has the meaning set forth in the Recitals.

 

(t)           “ Landlord ” has the meaning set forth in the initial paragraph of this Lease as further defined in Paragraph 24 and Paragraph 31 .

 

(u)          “ Lease ” has the meaning set forth in the initial paragraph of this Lease.

 

(v)          “ Leasehold Mortgage ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 16.C

 

(w)         “ Memorandum of Lease ” has the meaning set forth in Paragraph 26 .

 

(x)          “ Nondisturbance Agreement ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 20.E .

 

(y)          “ Personalty ” has the meaning set forth in the Recitals.

 

27  -
 

 

(z)          “ Prime Rate ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 2.B .

 

(aa)        “ Repair ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 11.A .

 

(bb)       “ Specialty Items ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 6.C .

 

(cc)        “ Sublease ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 20.F .

 

(dd)       “ Sublessee ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 20.F .

 

(ee)        “ Taxes ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 4.A .

 

(ff)         “ Tenant ” has the meaning set forth in the initial paragraph of this Lease.

 

(gg)       “ Tenant Improvements ” has the meaning set forth in Subparagraph 6.A .

 

(hh)       “ Term ” has the meaning set forth in Paragraph 1 .

 

(ii)          “ Termination of Memorandum of Lease ” has the meaning set forth in Paragraph 26 .

 

(Signatures appear on the following page)

 

28  -
 

 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties hereto have hereunto set their hands and seals the day and year first above written.

     
[INSERT WITNESS BLOCKS, IF NECESSARY]    
     
  LANDLORD:
   
  DCX [●] DST, a Delaware statutory trust
   
  By: DCX [●] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its manager
   
  By: DCX Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member
     
  By:  
   
Name:
    Title:

  

[INSERT PROPER NOTARY BLOCKS, IF NECESSARY]

  

[Signature Page to Master Lease ([●])] 

 
 

 

     
 

TENANT:

 

DCX [●] MASTER TENANT LLC, a Delaware limited liability company,

 

By: DCX Master Tenant LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member

 

By: DCTRT Real Estate Holdco LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member

 

By: Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership, its sole member

 

By: Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation, its general partner

     
  By:  
    Name:
    Title:

 

[INSERT PROPER NOTARY BLOCKS, IF NECESSARY]

 

[Signature Page to Master Lease ([●])] 

 
 

  

EXHIBIT A

(Legal Description)

 

 
 

  

EXHIBIT B

Form of Memorandum of Lease

 

MEMORANDUM OF LEASE

 

THIS MEMORANDUM OF LEASE, is made and entered into as of this [●] day of [●],[●], by and between DCX [●] DST, a Delaware statutory trust (together with its successors and assigns, “ Landlord ”), and DCX [●] Master Tenant LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, having an address at 518 17th Street, 17th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202 (together with its successors and assigns, “ Tenant ”).

 

W I T N E S S E T H :

 

Landlord and Tenant have entered into that certain Master Lease dated as of [●],[●], by and between Landlord and Tenant (the “ Master Lease ”) to which reference is here made, with respect to all that certain piece or parcel of land, together with all appurtenances thereto (but excluding any Tenant Improvements to be constructed or placed thereon, which shall remain the property of Tenant until the termination hereof), situated, lying and being in the City of [●], County of [●], State of [●], and being bounded and described as set forth in Exhibit A attached hereto and made a part of this Memorandum (the “ Demised Premises ”). Capitalized terms used herein and not otherwise defined have the meaning ascribed thereto in the Master Lease.

 

Landlord acquired title to the Demised Premises by deed filed with [●] as [Document No. ________].

 

The term of the Master Lease shall commence on [●],[●] and shall end at midnight on the date which shall be twenty (20) years from the date the Master Lease commences.

 

Notice is hereby given that Landlord shall not be liable for any labor or materials furnished or to be furnished to Tenant upon credit, and that no mechanics’ or other liens for such labor or materials shall attach to or affect the estate or interest of Landlord in and to the Demised Premises.

 

All contracts Tenant makes for such labor or materials shall include a provision declaring that Tenant in no way acts as Landlord’s agent in making such contract, and that Landlord’s interest in the Demised Premises shall not be subject to any mechanics’ or other liens, on account of such labor or materials.

 

The sole purpose of this instrument is to give notice of the Master Lease and all of its terms, covenants and conditions to the same extent as if the same were fully set forth herein.

 

[Signatures follow]

 

 
 

 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have hereunto set their hands and seals as of the day and date first above written.

 

[INSERT WITNESS BLOCKS, IF NECESSARY]    
     
  LANDLORD:
   
  DCX [●] DST, a Delaware statutory trust
   
  By:  DCX [●] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its manager
   
  By: DCX Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member
   
  By:  
   
Name:  
    Title:  

 

[INSERT PROPER NOTARY BLOCKS, IF NECESSARY]

 

[Signature Page to Memorandum of Lease ([●])]

 
 

  

   
     
 

TENANT:

 

DCX [●] MASTER TENANT LLC, a Delaware limited liability company,

 

By: DCX Master Tenant LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member

 

By: DCTRT Real Estate Holdco LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member

 

By: Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership, its sole member

 

By: Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation, its general partner

   
  By:   
    Name:  
    Title:  

 

[INSERT PROPER NOTARY BLOCKS, IF NECESSARY]

 

[Signature Page to Memorandum of Lease ([●])]

 
 

  

EXHIBIT C

Form of Termination of Memorandum of Lease

 

THIS AGREEMENT made as of the _____ day of _________, 20__, by and between _______________________(the “ Landlord ”) and ____________________ (the “ Tenant ”).

 

W I T N E S S E T H:

 

WHEREAS, by that certain Master Lease dated as of [_________________], (the “ Lease ”) Landlord leased to Tenant the real estate described in Exhibit A attached hereto, and the improvements thereon, a memorandum of which Lease is filed with [●] as [Document No. ________]; and

 

WHEREAS, Tenant has offered to terminate said Lease and Landlord desires to accept such offer.

 

NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the premises and the mutual covenants herein contained, the parties hereto agree as follows:

 

1.          The term of said Lease shall be cancelled as of _____________, 20__.

 

2.          Landlord hereby agrees that Tenant shall be and is hereby released from all obligations and liabilities of the Tenant to be performed under the Lease from and after the date of cancellation.

 

3.          Tenant hereby agrees that Landlord shall be and is hereby released from all obligations, duties and liabilities of Landlord to be performed under the Lease from and after the date of cancellation.

 

4.          This Agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the parties hereto, their (heirs) (successors) and assigns.

 

 
 

 

     
 

LANDLORD:

 

DCX [●] DST, a Delaware statutory trust

 

By: DCX [●] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its manager

 

By: DCX Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member

   
  By:  
   
Name:  
    Title:  

 

[Signature Page to Termination of Memorandum of Lease ([●])]

 
 

 

     
 

TENANT:

 

DCX [●] MASTER TENANT LLC, a Delaware limited liability company,

 

By: DCX Master Tenant LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member

 

By: DCTRT Real Estate Holdco LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member

 

By: Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership, its sole member

 

By: Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation, its general partner

   
  By:  
     
    Name:  
    Title:  

 

[INSERT PROPER NOTARY BLOCKS, IF NECESSARY]

 

[Signature Page to Termination of Memorandum of Lease ([●])]

 
 

  

EXHIBIT D

Form of Assignment and Assumption of Subleases

 

FORM OF ASSIGNMENT AND ASSUMPTION OF SUBLEASE

 

THIS ASSIGNMENT AND ASSUMPTION OF SUBLEASES (this “ Assignment ”) is made as of [●],[●], by and among DCX [●] DST , a Delaware statutory trust, having an address at 518 17th Street, 17th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202 (together with its successors and assigns, collectively, “ Assignor ”), and DCX [●] Master Tenant LLC , a Delaware limited liability company, having an address at 518 17th Street, 17th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202 (together with its successors and assigns, collectively “ Assignee ”).

 

WITNESSETH:

 

WHEREAS, the Property (as defined below) is subject to that certain Master Lease dated as of the date hereof (as the same may be amended, modified or supplemented from time to time, the “ Master Lease ”), pursuant to which Assignee will lease from Assignor the Property (as defined below);

 

WHEREAS, Assignor is the landlord under those certain leases described on Exhibit A attached hereto and made a part hereof (such leases, as amended, modified and/or supplemented to date, the “ Subleases ” and the leasehold interests created thereby, the “ Sublease Interests ”) of certain improved real property commonly known as the [●] with a street address of [●] as more particularly described on Exhibit B attached hereto and made a part hereof (the “ Property ”);

 

WHEREAS, under the terms and conditions of the Master Lease, it was contemplated that Assignor and Assignee would enter into this Assignment; and

 

WHEREAS, Assignor desires to assign to Assignee all of Assignor’s right, title and interest in and to the Subleases, the Sublease Interests and all guaranties, if any (collectively, the “ Guaranties ”), of the obligations of the tenants under the Subleases and all security deposits of such tenants, if any (collectively, the “ Security Deposits ”), and Assignee desires to accept such assignment, each upon the terms, covenants and conditions herein contained.

 

NOW THEREFORE, for Ten Dollars ($10.00) and other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and legal sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, and intending to be legally bound hereby, the parties hereto agree as follows:

 

AGREEMENT:

 

1.            Assignment . Assignor hereby transfers and assigns to Assignee all right, title and interest of Assignor as landlord under all of the Subleases, the Sublease Interests, the Guaranties and the Security Deposits, TO HAVE AND TO HOLD all of the foregoing unto Assignee, its successors and assigns, from and after the date hereof, subject to the terms, covenants, conditions and provisions contained herein.

 

 
 

 

2.            Assumption . Assignee hereby accepts the foregoing assignment of the Subleases, the Sublease Interests, the Guaranties and the Security Deposits from and after the date hereof, and assumes the obligations thereunder first arising from and after the date hereof.

 

3.            Binding Effect; Governing Law . This Assignment and the obligations of the parties hereunder shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the parties hereto, their respective legal representatives, successors and assigns and shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of [●] and may not be modified or amended except by written agreement signed by both parties.

 

4.            Indemnity . Assignor shall be responsible for all matters, constituting obligations of the lessor under the Subleases, arising in connection with the Subleases or the Property prior to the date hereof, and Assignee shall be responsible for all matters, constituting obligations under the Subleases, arising in connection with the Subleases or the Property on and after the date hereof, subject to the terms of the Master Lease.

 

(a)          Assignor agrees to defend, indemnify, and hold Assignee and all affiliates, subsidiaries, related corporations, related partnerships, officers, directors, employees and agents of Assignee fully and completely harmless from and against any and all cost, expense, liability, claim, damages, assertion or demand whatsoever, of any kind or nature (collectively, the “ Liabilities ”), asserted by any third party whatsoever, arising prior to the date hereof in connection with the Subleases, which Liabilities result from unperformed obligations under the Subleases or otherwise arise solely as a result of the acts or omissions to act of Assignor.

 

(b)          Assignee agrees to defend, indemnify, and hold Assignor and all affiliates, subsidiaries, related corporations, related partnerships, officers, directors, employees and agents of Assignor fully and completely harmless from and against any and all Liabilities, asserted by any third party whatsoever, arising on or subsequent to the date hereof in connection with the Subleases, which Liabilities result from unperformed obligations under the Subleases or otherwise arise solely as a result of the acts or omissions to act of Assignee.

 

(c)          The parties acknowledge that these indemnities are a material part of this Assignment and that the parties would not enter into this Assignment without the indemnities contained herein.

 

5.            Ratification . Nothing in this Assignment alters or amends any covenants, representations, warranties or indemnities set forth in the Subleases, all of which shall be independent of the terms and conditions of this Assignment.

 

6.            No Warranties . This Assignment is made without representation, warranty (express or implied) or recourse of any kind.

 

 
 

 

7.            Counterparts; Execution . This Assignment may be executed in one or more counterparts, each of which will constitute an original, and all of which together shall constitute one and the same agreement. Executed copies hereof may be delivered by facsimile, PDF or email, and, upon receipt, shall be deemed originals and binding upon the parties hereto. Without limiting or otherwise affecting the validity of executed copies hereof that have been delivered by facsimile, PDF or email, the parties will use their best efforts to deliver originals as promptly as possible after execution.

 

[THE REMAINDER OF THIS PAGE IS INTENTIONALLY LEFT BLANK]

 

 
 

 

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have executed this Assignment on the day and year first above written.

 

     
 

ASSIGNOR :

 

DCX [●] DST, a Delaware statutory trust

 

By: DCX [●] Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its manager

 

By: DCX Manager LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member

   
  By:  
    Name:  
    Title:  

 

[Signature Page to Assignment and Assumption of Subleases ([●])]

 
 

 

     
 

ASSIGNEE :

 

DCX [●] MASTER TENANT LLC, a Delaware limited liability company,

 

By: DCX Master Tenant LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member

 

By: DCTRT Real Estate Holdco LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, its sole member

 

By: Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership, its sole member

 

By: Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation, its general partner

   
  By:  
    Name:  
    Title:  

 

[INSERT PROPER NOTARY BLOCKS, IF NECESSARY]

 

[Signature Page to Assignment and Assumption of Subleases ([●])]

 
 

 

SCHEDULE 1

Rent

 

Payment Date Fixed Rent Payment

 

 
 

 

SCHEDULE 2

Percentage Interests

 

Landlord Address for Notice Percentage Interest
TRT [●] LLC 518 17th Street, 17th Floor,
Denver, Colorado 80202
100%

 

 

 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. POS AM

Exhibit 10.24

 

FINAL FORM

  

GUARANTY

 

THIS GUARANTY (this “ Guaranty ”) is made as of [●], [●] by DIVIDEND CAPITAL TOTAL REALTY OPERATING PARTNERSHIP LP, a Delaware limited partnership, having an address at 518 17th Avenue, 17th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202 (“ Guarantor ”).

 

RECITALS

 

A.   DCX [●] MASTER TENANT LLC, a Delaware limited liability company, is the tenant (“ Tenant ” which term shall be deemed to include the named Tenant and its successors and assigns) under that certain Master Lease (as the same may be amended, modified or supplemented from time to time, the “ Lease ”) dated as of the date of this Guaranty with the persons listed on Schedule 2 of the Lease, as landlord, (collectively, “ Landlord ” which term shall be deemed to include each such named Landlord and its successors and assigns) covering that certain premises located in [●], as more particularly described in the Lease (the “ Demised Premises ”); capitalized terms used herein and not otherwise defined herein have the meanings ascribed thereto in the Lease.

 

B.   Guarantor agrees to guarantee to Landlord certain obligations of Tenant.

 

NOW THEREFORE , in consideration of the mutual covenants and conditions contained in this Agreement and for other good and valuable consideration, the receipt and sufficiency of which are hereby acknowledged, Guarantor hereby agrees as follows:

 

1.      Guarantor hereby unconditionally and irrevocably guarantees to Landlord (a) the payment in full (and not merely of collection) of all amounts due under the Lease including, without limitation, Fixed Rent, additional rent, and other amounts due thereunder; (b) the full and timely performance and observance of all of the terms, covenants, conditions and agreements provided to be performed and/or observed by Tenant under the Lease; and (c) the payment of all costs and expenses incurred by Landlord in connection with the enforcement of any of the provisions of this Guaranty or the Lease, or the attempted collection of any amounts due hereunder or thereunder, provided, that such enforcement or attempted collection shall have been commenced within twelve (12) months from the Expiration Date (collectively, the “ Guaranteed Obligations ”). If Tenant shall fail to duly and punctually pay any such amount, Guarantor shall forthwith pay or perform or observe the same on demand.

 

2.      Guarantor expressly agrees that Landlord may, without notice to or further assent from Guarantor and without in any way releasing, affecting or impairing the obligations and liabilities of Guarantor hereunder: (a) waive compliance with or any default under or grant any other indulgence with respect to the Lease; (b) modify, amend or change any provisions of the Lease; (c) make advances for the purposes of performing any term or covenant contained in the Lease, with respect to which Tenant is or shall be in default; (d) convey, assign or otherwise transfer all or any portion of its interest in the Improvements, the Lease or this Guaranty; (e) consent to the assignment or other transfer of Tenant’s interest under the Lease provided Guarantor is released in writing by Landlord from its obligations hereunder from and after the date of the assignment of the Lease; (f) grant extensions or renewals of the Lease and/or effect any release, compromise or settlement in connection therewith; (g) agree to the substitution, exchange, release or other disposition of all or any part of the Demised Premises under the Lease; and (h) deal in all respects with Tenant as if this Guaranty were not in effect.

 

3.      The obligations of Guarantor under this Guaranty shall be absolute and unconditional, irrespective of the genuineness, validity, regularity or enforceability of the Lease or any provision therein or security given therefore or in connection therewith or any other circumstances which might otherwise constitute a legal or equitable discharge of a surety of Guarantor. Notwithstanding anything herein contained to the contrary, the liability of Guarantor under this Guaranty shall be primary, direct and immediate, and not conditional or contingent upon pursuit by Landlord of any remedies it may have against Tenant and/or any other party, with respect to the Lease, whether pursuant to the terms thereof, by law or pursuant to any other security agreement or guaranty.

 

4.      The obligations of Guarantor hereunder shall not be released by Landlord’s receipt, application or release of any security given for the performance and observance of covenants and conditions in the Lease contained on Tenant’s part to be performed or observed.

 

 

 

 

5.      The liability of Guarantor hereunder shall in no way be affected by (a) the release or discharge of Tenant in any creditors’ receivership, bankruptcy or other proceedings; (b) the impairment, limitation or modification of the liability of Tenant or the estate of Tenant in bankruptcy, or of any remedy for the enforcement of Tenant’s said liability under the Lease, resulting from the operation of any present or future provision of the bankruptcy act or other statute or from the decision in any court; (c) the rejection or disaffirmance of the Lease in any such proceedings; (d) except as expressly provided herein, the assignment or transfer of the Lease by Tenant; (e) any disability or other defense of Tenant; or (f) the cessation from any cause whatsoever of the liability of Tenant.

 

6.      Guarantor hereby expressly waives: (a) presentment and demand for payment and protest of nonpayment; (b) notices of acceptance of this Guaranty and of presentment, demand and protest; (c) all indulgences under any notice of default; (d) demand for observance, performance or enforcement of any terms and provisions of this Guaranty or the Lease; and (e) all other notices (other than notices of default) and demands otherwise required by law which Guarantor may lawfully waive. Guarantor also waives, but only if and to the extent that Guarantor may lawfully do so, trial by jury in any action brought on or with respect to this Guaranty.

 

7.      No delay on the part of Landlord in exercising any rights hereunder or failure to exercise the same shall operate as a waiver of such rights; no notice to or demand on the undersigned shall be deemed to be a waiver of the obligations of the undersigned or of the right of Landlord to take further action without notice or demand as provided herein; nor in any event shall any modification or waiver of the provisions of this Guaranty be effective unless in writing, nor shall any such waiver be applicable except in the specific instance for which given.

 

8.      Each of the following events shall be an immediate event of default under this Guaranty:

 

8.1.           an involuntary proceeding shall be commenced or an involuntary petition shall be filed seeking (a) liquidation, reorganization or other relief in respect of Guarantor or its debts, or of a substantial part of its assets, under any Federal, state or foreign bankruptcy, insolvency, receivership or similar law now or hereafter in effect or (b) the appointment of a receiver, trustee, custodian, sequestrator, conservator or similar official for Guarantor for a substantial part of its assets, and, in any such case, such proceeding or petition shall continue undismissed for ninety (90) days or an order or decree approving or ordering any of the foregoing shall be entered;

 

8.2.           Guarantor shall (a) voluntarily commence any proceeding or file any petition seeking liquidation, reorganization or other relief under any Federal, state or foreign bankruptcy, insolvency, receivership or similar law now or hereafter in effect, (b) consent to the institution of, or fail to contest in a timely and appropriate manner, any proceeding or petition described in Section 8.2(a) , (c) apply for or consent to the appointment of a receiver, trustee, custodian, sequestrator, conservator or similar official for Guarantor or for a substantial part of its assets, (d) file an answer admitting the material allegations of a petition filed against it in any such proceeding, (e) make a general assignment for the benefit of creditors or (f) take any action for the purpose of effecting any of the foregoing; or

 

8.3.           Guarantor shall become unable, admit in writing its inability or fail generally to pay its debts as they become due.

 

9.      Guarantor agrees that any liens, security interests, judgment liens, charges or other encumbrances upon Tenant’s assets securing payment of any claims by Guarantor shall be and remain inferior and subordinate to any liens, security interests, judgment liens, charges or other encumbrances upon Tenant’s assets securing payment of the Guaranteed Obligations, regardless of whether such encumbrances in favor of Guarantor presently exist or are hereafter created or attach.

 

10.    Any part of the Guaranteed Obligations required to be paid when due, whether at demand, acceleration or otherwise, shall be paid by Guarantor in lawful money of the United States of America within the time and in the manner set forth in the Lease.

 

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11.    Arbitration .

 

11.1.         Any dispute, claim or controversy arising out of or relating to this Guaranty or breach, termination, enforcement, interpretation or validity thereof, including the determination of the scope or applicability of this Guaranty to arbitrate, shall be determined by arbitration in Denver, Colorado, before a sole arbitrator. The arbitration shall be administered by JAMS pursuant to its Streamlined Arbitration Rules and Procedures. Judgment on the award may be entered in any court having jurisdiction. The arbitrator shall, in the award, allocate all of the costs of the arbitration (and the mediation, if applicable), including the fees of the arbitrator and the reasonable attorneys’ fees of the prevailing party, against the party who did not prevail.

 

11.2.         Anything to the contrary therein notwithstanding, the provisions of Section 11.1 shall not apply with respect to any application made by any party hereto for injunctive relief under this Guaranty.

 

12.    Governing Law . This Guaranty shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of Colorado without regard to principles of conflict of laws. The parties hereby: (a) submit to personal jurisdiction in Colorado for the enforcement of this Guaranty; and (b) waive any and all personal rights under the law of any state or the District of Columbia to object to jurisdiction within Colorado for the purposes of litigation to enforce this Guaranty. Guarantor agrees that in any action or proceeding brought under this Guaranty, Guarantor shall waive trial by jury.

 

13.    Notices . Any notice to be given or other document or payment to be delivered by any party to any other party hereunder may be delivered by (a) depositing the same with the United States Postal Service, addressed to the party to be notified, postage prepaid, registered or certified mail with return receipt requested, (b) delivering the same in person to such party via a hand delivery service, Federal Express or any other courier service that provides a return receipt showing the date of actual delivery of same to the addressee thereof, or (c) facsimile transmission with confirmation of receipt to the party sending same, if a copy is deposited with the United States Postal Service as provided in subpart (a) above, and addressed to the party for whom intended, as follows:

 

  If to Guarantor:

Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP
518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor
Denver, Colorado 80202
Attention:          Joshua Widoff

Facsimile:          (303) 869-4602

Telephone:        (303) 597-0483

 

  With a copy to:

Bryan Cave LLP 

1700 Lincoln Street, Suite 4100 

Denver, Colorado 80203 

Attention:          Robert Bach 

Facsimile:          (303) 335-3736 

Telephone:        (303) 866-0236

 

  If to Landlord:

DCX [●] Manager LLC, as Manager
c/o Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP
518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor
Denver, Colorado 80202
Attention:          M. Kirk Scott 

Facsimile:          (303) 577-9797 

Telephone:        (303) 339-3609

 

  With a copy to:

Bryan Cave LLP 

1700 Lincoln Street, Suite 4100 

Denver, Colorado 80203 

Attention:          Robert Bach 

Facsimile:          (303) 335-3736 

Telephone:        (303) 866-0236 

 

 

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Either party may, by notice given to the other party, designate a new address to which notices, demands and requests shall be sent and, thereafter, any of the foregoing shall be sent to the address most recently designated by such party. Notice shall be conclusively presumed to have been received by a party on the date the notice is shown as received on a registered or certified mail return receipt, Federal Express or courier return receipt or fax confirmation of receipt.

 

14.    Entire Agreement . This Guaranty sets forth the entire agreement between the parties. Any prior conversations or writings are merged herein and extinguished. No subsequent amendment to this Guaranty shall be binding upon Landlord or Guarantor unless reduced to writing and signed by Landlord and Guarantor.

 

15.    Assigns . Guarantor, in its sole and absolute discretion, may freely assign its rights and obligations under this Agreement. Subject to the terms and conditions of this Guaranty, the covenants, conditions and agreements contained in this Guaranty shall bind and inure to the benefit of Landlord and Guarantor and their respective successors, assigns and legal representatives (including any Fee Mortgagee(s)). Guarantor hereby acknowledges that Landlord shall have the absolute right to transfer one or more undivided interests in the Demised Premises, in which event such transferee shall be deemed to be a “Landlord” hereunder. Notwithstanding anything to the contrary herein, any beneficiary pursuant to this Guaranty shall have no right to assign its interest hereunder.

 

16.    Severability . If any portion of this Guaranty shall become illegal, null or void or against public policy, for any reason, or shall be held by any court of competent jurisdiction to be illegal, null or void or against public policy (a) the remaining portions of this Guaranty shall not be affected thereby and shall remain in full force and effect to the fullest extent permissible by law and (b) in lieu of such invalid and unenforceable provision, there will be added automatically as a part of this Guaranty a provision as similar in terms to the invalid or unenforceable provision as may be possible and be valid and enforceable.

 

17.    Captions . Captions or titles of the sections, paragraphs and subparagraphs of this Guaranty are inserted solely for convenience of reference and shall not constitute a part of this Guaranty, nor shall they affect its meaning, construction or effect.

 

18.    Attorneys’ Fees . If either party institutes an action or proceeding against the other party relating to the provisions of this Guaranty, then the non-prevailing party in such action or proceeding shall reimburse the prevailing party for its actual attorneys’ fees, and all fees, costs and expenses incurred on any appeal or in collection of any judgment.

  

[Signatures Follow on Next Page]

 

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IN WITNESS WHEREOF , Guarantor has duly executed this Guaranty as of the day and year first above written.

 

  DIVIDEND CAPITAL TOTAL REALTY OPERATING PARTNERSHIP LP, a Delaware limited partnership
     
  By: Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund, Inc., a Maryland corporation, its general partner
     
  By:  
    Name:
    Title:

 

[Signature Page to Guaranty ( [●] )]

  

 

 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. POS AM

Exhibit 10.25

 

DEALER MANAGER AGREEMENT

 

March 2, 2016

 

Dividend Capital Securities LLC
518 17th Street, 17th Floor
Denver, CO 80202

 

Dividend Capital Exchange LLC, a Delaware limited liability company (the “Company”), is offering for sale from time to time, either directly or through wholly-owned subsidiaries, in one or more private placements (each, a “Private Placement,” and collectively, the “Private Placements”) of beneficial interests in specific Delaware statutory trusts (each, an “Interest” and, collectively, the “Interests”) reflecting an indirect ownership of up to $500,000,000 of Interests, pursuant to the Confidential Program Description Memorandum, dated as of March 2, 2016 (as may be amended or supplemented from time to time, the “Memorandum”). The Company is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership (the “Operating Partnership”). The Operating Partnership is the entity through which Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation (“Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund” or “DPF”), its general partner, conducts substantially all of its business and owns substantially all of its assets. An Interest is an interest in a master Delaware statutory trust that will beneficially own either (i) a series of Delaware statutory trusts, each of which will hold one commercial property (each, a “Property” and collectively, the “Properties”); or (ii) a Property directly. Information regarding each Property in which Interests will be offered will be included in a property-specific supplement (the “Property Supplement”) to the Memorandum. Each Private Placement is intended to be exempt from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”). The Private Placements will be made only to “accredited investors,” as that term is defined in Rule 501(a) of Regulation D (“Regulation D”) promulgated under the Securities Act (“Accredited Investors”).

 

The required minimum net equity investment per investor for a particular Property will be set forth in the Property Supplement relating to that Property (such investment, the “Equity Amount”). However, the Company retains the right, in its sole discretion, to increase or reduce this minimum net equity investment requirement with respect to any investor or any Property.

 

Terms not defined herein shall have the same meaning as in the Memorandum.

 

In connection herewith, the Company hereby agrees with you, Dividend Capital Securities LLC (the “Dealer Manager”), as follows:

 

1.      Representations and Warranties of the Company . The Company represents and warrants to the Dealer Manager that:

 

a.     The Private Placements have not been and will not be registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (the “Commission”). The Interests are to be offered and sold in reliance upon an exemption from the registration requirements of Section 5 of the Securities Act. The Company will use its best efforts to conduct the Private Placements in compliance with the requirements of Regulation D and will file all appropriate notices of the Private Placements with the Commission.

 

 
 

 

b.     The Company is a corporation duly incorporated, validly existing and in good standing under the laws of the State of Delaware, with all requisite power and authority to conduct its business as described in the Memorandum.

 

c.     Neither the Memorandum (as amended or supplemented, if applicable) nor the prospectus relating to a public offering from time to time of the Class A, Class W and Class I shares of common stock of DPF (such prospectus, as the same may be supplemented or amended from time to time, and including the documents incorporated by reference therein, is referred to herein as the “DPF Prospectus”)) (as amended or supplemented, if applicable), each as of its date (or as of the date of any such amendment or supplement, if applicable), contains any untrue statement of material fact or omits to state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in order to make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading; provided, however, that the foregoing provisions of this Section 1c. will not extend to such statements contained in or omitted from the Memorandum or DPF Prospectus which are based upon information furnished by the Dealer Manager in writing to the Company specifically for inclusion therein.

 

d.     This Agreement has been duly authorized, executed and delivered by the Company, and assuming due authorization, execution and delivery of this Agreement by the Dealer Manager, will constitute a valid and legally binding agreement of the Company enforceable against the Company in accordance with its terms, except as enforceability may be limited by applicable bankruptcy, insolvency or similar laws affecting the enforcement of creditors’ rights generally or by equitable principles relating to enforceability and except that rights to indemnity and contribution hereunder may be limited by applicable law and public policy.

 

e.     No consent, approval, authorization or other order of any governmental authority is required in connection with the execution or delivery by the Company of this Agreement or the sale by the Company of Interests, except such as have already been obtained or as may be required under the Securities Act or applicable state securities laws.

 

f.     There are no actions, suits or proceedings pending or, to the knowledge of the Company, threatened against the Company at law or in equity or before or by any Federal or state commission, regulatory body or administrative agency or other governmental body, domestic or foreign, which could reasonably be expected to have a material adverse effect on the business or property of the Company and its subsidiaries, taken as a whole.

 

g.     The execution and delivery of this Agreement, the consummation of the transactions herein contemplated and compliance with the terms of this Agreement by the Company will not conflict with or constitute a default under (i) its organizational documents, (ii) any indenture, mortgage, deed of trust or lease to which the Company or any of its subsidiaries is a party or by which it or any of them may be bound, or to which any of the property or assets of the Company or any of its subsidiaries is subject, or (iii) any rule, regulation, writ, injunction or decree of any government, governmental instrumentality or court, domestic or foreign, having jurisdiction over the Company or any subsidiary or any of their assets, properties or operations, except in the case of clause (ii) or (iii) for such conflicts or defaults that would not individually or in the aggregate have a material adverse effect on the condition (financial or otherwise), business, properties or results of operations of the Company and its subsidiaries taken as a whole.

 

h.     The Company has full legal right, power and authority to enter into this Agreement and to perform the Private Placement transactions contemplated hereby.

 

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i.     At the time of the offer of any Interests, such Interests will be exempt from registration in each state that the Dealer Manager has notified the Company in advance in writing that the Dealer Manager plans to offer the Interests, unless the Company has notified the Dealer Manager in writing that the Interests are not eligible to be sold.

 

j.     Neither the Company nor any of its predecessors or affiliates have, to the best of its knowledge, offered or sold any Interests or any other securities the offer or sale of which would be deemed to be “integrated” by the Commission or the courts under the standards of existing judicial interpretations or rules or regulations under the Securities Act with offers or sales of the Interests proposed to be made pursuant hereto or for the purpose of determining whether a public offering of the Interests had been made.

 

k.    None of the Company, any of its predecessors, any affiliated issuer, any director, executive officer, other officer of the Company participating in the Private Placements, any beneficial owner (as that term is defined under Rule 13d-3 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended (the “Exchange Act”)) of 20% or more of the Company’s outstanding voting equity securities, calculated on the basis of voting power, nor any promoter (as that term is defined in Rule 405 under the Securities Act) connected with the Company in any capacity at the time of sale (each, a “ Company Covered Person ” and, together, “ Company Covered Persons ”) is subject to any of the “Bad Actor” disqualifications described in Rule 506(d)(1)(i) to (viii) under the Securities Act (a “ Disqualification Event ”), except for a Disqualification Event covered by Rule 506(d)(2) or (d)(3) under the Securities Act. The Company has exercised, and during the term of the Private Placements will continue to exercise, reasonable care to determine whether any Company Covered Person, any Dealer Manager Covered Person (as defined in Section 4m. below) and any Dealer Covered Person (as defined in Section 4n. below) is subject to a Disqualification Event. The Company will immediately comply, to the extent applicable, with its disclosure obligations under Rule 506(e), and will immediately effect the preparation of an amended or supplemented Memorandum that will contain any such required disclosure and will, at no expense to the Dealer Manager, promptly furnish the Dealer Manager with such number of printed copies of such amended or supplemented Memorandum containing any such required disclosure, including any exhibits thereto, as the Dealer Manager may reasonably request.

 

l.     The Company is not aware of any person (other than any Company Covered Person, Dealer Manager Covered Person or Dealer Covered Person) that has been or will be paid (directly or indirectly) remuneration for solicitation of purchasers in connection with the sale of any Interests.

 

m.   With respect to each Company Covered Person, the Company has established procedures reasonably designed to ensure that the Company receives notice from each such Company Covered Person of (i) any Disqualification Event relating to that Company Covered Person, and (ii) any event that would, with the passage of time, become a Disqualification Event relating to that Company Covered Person.

 

n.    The representations and warranties in Sections 1k. through 1m. are and shall be continuing representations and warranties throughout the term of the Private Placements. The Company will promptly notify the Dealer Manager in writing upon becoming aware of any fact which makes any such representation or warranty untrue.

 

2.      Covenants of the Company . The Company covenants and agrees with the Dealer Manager that:

 

a.     It will, at no expense to the Dealer Manager, furnish the Dealer Manager with such number of serially numbered copies of the Memorandum, including all amendments, supplements and exhibits thereto, as the Dealer Manager may reasonably request for the purposes contemplated by federal and state securities laws. It will similarly furnish to the Dealer Manager and others designated by the Dealer Manager as many copies of the following documents as the Dealer Manager may reasonably request: (a) this Agreement; (b) Property Supplements; (c) the DPF Prospectus and (d) any other printed sales literature or other materials the use of which has been approved in writing by the Company.

 

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b.     If at any time during a Private Placement, any event occurs as a result of which, in the opinion of the Company, the Memorandum or DPF Prospectus would include an untrue statement of a material fact or, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, omit to state any material fact necessary to make the statements therein not misleading, the Company will promptly notify the Dealer Manager thereof (unless the information shall have been received from the Dealer Manager) and will effect or cause the effect of the preparation of an amended or supplemented Memorandum or DPF Prospectus, as applicable, which will correct such statement or omission and will furnish to the Dealer Manager such number of copies of such amended or supplemented Memorandum or DPF Prospectus, as applicable, as the Dealer Manager may reasonably request.

 

c.     The Company will not conduct the Private Placements or offer or sell any of the Interests by means of any form of general solicitation or general advertising within the meaning of Rule 502(c) of Regulation D.

 

d.     The Company will cause to be prepared, executed and timely filed with the Commission such notices on Form D as are required by Rule 503 of Regulation D and will take all action necessary to comply with Rule 503 of Regulation D

 

e.     The Company will notify the Dealer Manager in writing, promptly upon the occurrence of (i) any Disqualification Event relating to any Company Covered Person and (ii) any event that would, with the passage of time, become a Disqualification Event relating to any Company Covered Person.

 

3.      Representations and Warranties of the Dealer Manager .

 

The Dealer Manager represents and warrants to the Company that:

 

a.     The Dealer Manager is a limited liability company duly organized, validly existing and in good standing under the laws of the State of Colorado, with all requisite power and authority to enter into this Agreement and to carry out its obligations hereunder.

 

b.     This Agreement has been duly authorized, executed and delivered by the Dealer Manager, and assuming due authorization, execution and delivery of this Agreement by the Company, will constitute a valid and legally binding agreement of the Dealer Manager enforceable against the Dealer Manager in accordance with its terms, except as enforceability may be limited by applicable bankruptcy, insolvency or similar laws affecting the enforcement of creditors’ rights generally or by equitable principles relating to enforceability and except that rights to indemnity and contribution hereunder may be limited by applicable law and public policy.

 

c.     The execution and delivery of this Agreement, the consummation of the transactions herein contemplated and compliance with the terms of this Agreement by the Dealer Manager will not conflict with or constitute a default under (i) its organizational documents, (ii) any indenture, mortgage, deed of trust or lease to which the Dealer Manager or any of its subsidiaries is a party or by which it or any of them may be bound, or to which any of the property or assets of the Dealer Manager or any of its subsidiaries is subject, or (iii) any rule, regulation, writ, injunction or decree of any government, governmental instrumentality or court, domestic or foreign, having jurisdiction over the Dealer Manager or any subsidiary or any of their assets, properties or operations, except in the case of clause (ii) or (iii) for such conflicts or defaults that would not individually or in the aggregate have a material adverse effect on the condition (financial or otherwise), business, properties or results of operations of the Dealer Manager and its subsidiaries taken as a whole.

 

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d.     The Dealer Manager is, and during the term of this Agreement will be, duly registered as a broker-dealer pursuant to the provisions of the Exchange Act, a broker-dealer duly registered as such in the State of Colorado, a member in good standing of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, Inc. ( “FINRA”), and a broker or dealer duly registered as such in those states where the Dealer Manager is required to be registered in order to carry out the Private Placements contemplated by the Memorandum and the Property Supplements. The Dealer Manager is in compliance with all applicable rules and regulations to which it is subject, including without limitation, those under the Exchange Act and the Rules promulgated by FINRA.

 

e.     The information under the caption “Private Placement” in the Memorandum and all other information furnished to the Company by the Dealer Manager in writing expressly for use in the Memorandum, or any amendment or supplement thereto, does not contain any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary in order to make the statements therein, in light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading.

 

4.      Covenants of the Dealer Manager .

 

The Dealer Manager will conduct the Private Placements in compliance with (i) the private placement procedures set forth in the Memorandum of Private Placement Procedures attached hereto as Exhibit “B” (the “Private Placement Procedures”); (ii) the private placement procedures set forth in the Memorandum and the Property Supplements; (iii) the requirements of the Securities Act, including without limitation, Regulation D; (iv) the requirements of the Exchange Act; (v) all applicable state securities laws; and (vi) the Rules promulgated by FINRA. The Dealer Manager covenants and agrees with the Company that:

 

a.     During the course of a Private Placement, the Dealer Manager will not make any untrue statement of a material fact or omit to state a material fact required to be stated or necessary to make any statement, in light of the circumstances under which it was made, not misleading concerning the Private Placement or any matters set forth in or contemplated by the Memorandum or the Property Supplement.

 

b.     The Dealer Manager will not conduct a Private Placement or offer or sell the Interests by means of:

 

(i)         any advertisement, article, notice or other communication mentioning the Private Placement, Interests or Property published in any newspaper, magazine or similar medium, cold mass mailings, broadcast over television, radio or the internet, or an e-mail message sent to a large number of previously unknown persons;

 

(ii)        any seminar or meeting, the attendees of which have been invited by any general solicitation or general advertising; or

 

(iii)       any letter, circular, notice or other written communication constituting a form of general solicitation or general advertising.

 

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c.     The Dealer Manager will only use sales materials (other than the Memorandum) the use of which in connection with a Private Placement has been approved by the Company in writing, and will not provide any such materials to any offeree unless such materials were accompanied or preceded by the Memorandum.

 

d.     The Dealer Manager will notify the Company in advance in writing of the states in which it or a Dealer plans to offer the Interests. If the Company advises the Dealer Manager in writing that the Interests are not eligible to be sold pursuant to an exemption from registration in, or if the Company (in its sole discretion) otherwise elects not to offer the Interests in, one or more states, the Dealer Manager will immediately cease and desist from offering Interests to persons in such states.

 

e.     During the course of a Private Placement and prior to the sale of Interests, the Dealer Manager will provide each offeree with a copy of the Memorandum and a copy of the applicable Property Supplement for the Property relating to such offer.

 

f.     Until the termination of the Private Placement, if the Dealer Manager has been provided with a supplement or amendment to the Memorandum or a Property Supplement, the Dealer Manager will promptly distribute such supplement or amendment to persons who previously received a copy of the Memorandum or Property Supplement from it and who it believes continue to be interested in participating in such Private Placement and will include such supplement or amendment in all deliveries of the Memorandum and Property Supplement after receipt of any such supplement or amendment.

 

g.     The Dealer Manager will not make any oral or written representations on behalf of the Company other than those contained in the Memorandum or DPF Prospectus unless the making of such representations has been approved by the Company in writing, nor will the Dealer Manager act as an agent of the Company or for the Company in any other capacity except as expressly set forth herein.

 

h.     The Dealer Manager will not execute any transaction in which a subscriber invests in the Interests in a discretionary account without prior written approval of the transaction by the subscriber.

 

i.     Except for the Selected Dealer Agreements, no agreement will be made by the Dealer Manager with any person permitting the resale, repurchase or distribution of any Interests.

 

j.     The Dealer Manager will not accept, and will not be required to accept, any checks or funds representing an equity investment by a subscriber in the Interests. Any checks or funds are to be transmitted by subscribers directly to the escrow agent in accordance with the procedures set forth in the escrow agreement in the form attached hereto as Exhibit “C” (the “Escrow Agreement”).

 

k.     The Dealer Manager will furnish to the Company upon request a complete list of all persons and entities who have received a Memorandum and such parties’ addresses.

 

l.     The Dealer Manager will comply with all applicable federal and state laws and regulations relating to the collection, maintenance and disclosure of non-public information provided by prospective investors in connection with their proposed investment in the Interests.

 

m.    The Dealer Manager represents that neither it, nor any of its directors, executive officers, general partners, managing members or other officers participating in the offering of Interests, nor any of the directors, executive officers or other officers participating in the offering of Interests of any such general partner or managing member, nor any other officers, employees or associated persons of the Dealer Manager or any such general partner or managing member that have been or will be paid (directly or indirectly) remuneration for solicitation of purchasers in connection with the sale of any Interests (each, a “ Dealer Manager Covered Person ” and, together, “ Dealer Manager Covered Persons ”), is subject to any Disqualification Event except for a Disqualification Event (i) contemplated by Rule 506(d)(2) of the Securities Act and (ii) a description of which has been furnished in writing to the Company prior to the date hereof.

 

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n.     In its agreements with the Dealers, the Dealer Manager will require the Dealers to represent that neither the Dealer, nor any of its directors, executive officers, general partners, managing members or other officers participating in the offering of Interests, nor any of the directors, executive officers or other officers participating in the offering of Interests of any such general partner or managing member, nor any other officers, employees or associated persons of the Dealer or any such general partner or managing member that have been or will be paid (directly or indirectly) remuneration for solicitation of purchasers in connection with the sale of any Interests (each, a “ Dealer Covered Person ” and, together, “ Dealer Covered Persons ”), is subject to any Disqualification Event except for a Disqualification Event (i) contemplated by Rule 506(d)(2) of the Securities Act and (ii) a description of which has been furnished in writing to the Dealer Manager prior to the date of the Selected Dealer Agreement between the Dealer Manager and such Dealer.

 

o.     The Dealer Manager represents that it is not aware of any person (other than any Company Covered Person, Dealer Manager Covered Person or Dealer Covered Person) that has been or will be paid (directly or indirectly) remuneration for solicitation of purchasers in connection with the sale of any Interests. The Dealer Manager will notify the Company of any agreement entered into between the Dealer Manager and any such person in connection with such sale.

 

p.     The representations, warranties and covenants in Sections 4m. through 4o. above are and shall be continuing representations, warranties and covenants throughout the term of the Private Placements. The Dealer Manager will notify the Company in writing promptly upon the occurrence of (i) any Disqualification Event relating to any Dealer Manager Covered Person not previously disclosed to the Company in accordance with Section 4m. above, and (ii) any event that would, with the passage of time, become a Disqualification Event relating to any Dealer Manager Covered Person.

 

q.     In its agreements with the Dealers, the Dealer Manager will require that the Dealers notify the Dealer Manager in writing promptly upon the occurrence of (i) any Disqualification Event relating to any Dealer Covered Person not previously disclosed to the Dealer Manager, and (ii) any event that would, with the passage of time, become a Disqualification Event relating to any Dealer Covered Person. The Dealer Manager will notify the Company in writing promptly upon receiving notification from any Dealer of the occurrence of any such event described in this paragraph.

 

r.     The Dealer Manager acknowledges that, with respect to each Dealer Manager Covered Person and Dealer Covered Person, the Company is relying upon the representations, covenants and agreements of the Dealer Manager set forth in this Section 4 and the representations, covenants and agreements of the Dealers referred to in this Section 4 as procedures reasonably designed to ensure that the Company receives notice from each such Dealer Manager Covered Person or Dealer Covered Person of (i) any Disqualification Event relating to that Dealer Manager Covered Person or Dealer Covered Person, and (ii) any event that would, with the passage of time, become a Disqualification Event relating to that Dealer Manager Covered Person or Dealer Covered Person.

 

s.     The Dealer Manager will provide, and in its agreements with the Dealers will require the Dealers to provide, such certifications, documentation, and other information reasonably requested by the Company from time to time which the Company deems to be necessary or advisable to carry out the exercise of reasonable care under Rule 506(d) and (e) under the Securities Act in connection with the Private Placements.

 

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5.      Purchase, Sale and Delivery of Interests .

 

On the basis of the covenants, representations and warranties herein contained and subject to the terms and conditions herein set forth:

 

a.     The Company hereby appoints the Dealer Manager as its agent and primary distributor for the purpose of conducting the Private Placements and soliciting subscriptions for Interests reflecting an indirect ownership of up to $500,000,000 of Interests in accordance with the terms of the Private Placement Procedures, the Memorandum, the Property Supplements and this Agreement, and the Dealer Manager agrees to use its best efforts to solicit such subscriptions. The Dealer Manager may, however, discharge its responsibilities under this Agreement by forming a group of securities dealers (referred to herein as “Dealers”) who are members of FINRA acceptable to the Company, to conduct the Private Placements and solicit subscribers for Interests. The Dealer Manager will enter into a Selected Dealer Agreement in substantially the form attached to this Agreement as Exhibit “A” (the “Selected Dealer Agreement”) with each such Dealer. Each Selected Dealer Agreement will require the applicable Dealer to represent and warrant, for the benefit of the Company, that it will conduct the Private Placements in the manner set forth in Sections 3 and 4 of this Agreement, including the Private Placement Procedures attached as Exhibit “B” hereto. The Dealer Manager will have no authority to appoint any person or other entity as an agent or sub-agent of the Dealer Manager or the Company in connection with the Private Placements, except to appoint Dealers acceptable to the Company pursuant to the Selected Dealer Agreements. The subscriptions shall be evidenced by the completion and execution by each prospective subscriber and acceptance by the Company of a Purchase Agreement for the Interests. It is understood that no subscription shall be regarded as effective unless and until accepted by the Company or one of its agents on behalf of the Company, and the Company reserves the right in its sole discretion for any reason to refuse any subscription to participate in a Private Placement from any person at any time.

 

b.     Promptly after receiving written notification from the Company to commence a Private Placement, the Dealer Manager and the Dealers shall commence the offering of Interests to Accredited Investors, in jurisdictions in which the Company has qualified for an exemption from registration or in which the Private Placement is otherwise permitted. The Dealer Manager and the Dealers will suspend or terminate offering Interests upon request of the Company at any time and will resume offering Interests upon any subsequent request of the Company.

 

c.     Except as provided in the section entitled “Private Placement” in the Memorandum or in the Property Supplement, as compensation for the services rendered by the Dealer Manager, the Company agrees that it will pay to the Dealer Manager selling commissions in the amount of up to 5% of the Equity Amount, plus a dealer manager fee in the amount of up to 1.5% of the Equity Amount relating to transactions consummated pursuant to the Private Placement.

 

d.     The Company will not be liable or responsible to any Dealer for direct payment of commissions to such Dealer, it being the sole and exclusive responsibility of the Dealer Manager for payment of commissions to Dealers. Notwithstanding the above, at its discretion, the Company may act as agent of the Dealer Manager by making direct payment of commissions to such Dealers without incurring any liability therefor.

 

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e.     The selling commission may be reduced to zero by the Dealer Manager in connection with certain categories of sales, including sales through investment advisors or banks acting as trustees or fiduciaries and sales to our affiliates. Certain Dealers may also agree to reduce the selling commission to less than 5% for certain purchasers. If the selling commission is reduced, the purchase price will also be reduced by the “Reduced Commission Discount” which is defined as: 1 minus the ratio of (1) 92% divided by (2) 92% plus the percentage points that the commission is reduced. For example, if a Dealer wanted to reduce its commission from 5% to 3% and the purchase price was $100,000, then the Reduced Commission Discount would equal approximately 2.13% and the reduced purchase price would equal $97,872.34 for that purchaser.

 

f.     In addition to the other items of underwriting compensation set forth in this Section 5, the Company shall reimburse the Dealer Manager or Dividend Capital Total Advisors LLC (the “Advisor”) for certain costs and expenses incurred by such entities incident to the Private Placements, to the extent permitted pursuant to prevailing rules and regulations of FINRA, including expenses, fees and taxes incurred in connection with: (a) customary travel, lodging, meals and reasonable entertainment expenses incurred in connection with the Private Placements; (b) costs and expenses of conducting educational conferences and seminars, attending broker-dealer sponsored conferences, or educational conferences sponsored by the Company; (c) customary promotional items; and (d) legal fees of the Dealer Manager.

 

g.     In addition to reimbursement as provided under Section 5.f, the Company shall also reimburse the Dealer Manager for reasonable bona fide due diligence expenses incurred by any Dealer. The Dealer Manager shall obtain from any Dealer and provide to the Company a detailed and itemized invoice for any such due diligence expenses.

 

h.     The Company reserves the right, in its sole discretion, to refuse to accept any or all subscriptions for Interests tendered by the Dealer Manager or its Dealers, and/or to terminate a Private Placement of Interests at any time prior to the scheduled termination date of a Private Placement. In the event that a Private Placement is terminated for any reason prior to its completion and the purchase of the Interests as contemplated in the Memorandum, the Dealer Manager will be entitled to no compensation in connection with its offering or sale of the offered Interests.

 

i.     A Private Placement of Interests will be at the offering prices and upon all the terms and conditions set forth in the Memorandum and the Property Supplements and the exhibits and any supplements thereto.

 

6.      Indemnification .

 

a.     Subject to the conditions set forth below, the Company agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Dealer Manager, the Dealers and their respective affiliates, directors, officers, employees and agents and each person, if any, who controls the Dealer Manager or Dealer within the meaning of Section 15 of the Securities Act or Section 20 of the Exchange Act (each and collectively, a “DM Related Party”), from and against any and all losses, claims, damages and liabilities (including, without limitation, legal fees and other reasonable expenses incurred in connection with any suit, action or proceeding or any claim asserted, as such fees and expenses are incurred) (collectively, “Claims”), caused by, arising out of or based upon:

 

(i)          any untrue statement or alleged untrue statement of a material fact contained in the Memorandum (or any amendment or supplement thereto), a Property Supplement or the DPF Prospectus (or any amendment or supplement thereto), or any omission or alleged omission to state therein a material fact necessary in order to make the statements therein, in the light of the circumstances under which they were made, not misleading; provided , however , that the Company shall not be responsible for any Claims relating to this Section 6.a. to the extent that (A) such Claims are attributable to the failure of the Dealer Manager or a Dealer to deliver to a purchaser an updated or supplemented Memorandum, Property Supplement or DPF Prospectus that corrects such untrue statement(s) or omission(s); or (B) such Claims arise out of, or are based upon, any untrue statement or omission or alleged untrue statement or omission made by the Dealer Manager, a Dealer or any other agents of the Dealer Manager, or made in reliance upon and in conformity with any information furnished to the Company in writing by such Dealer Manager or a Dealer;

 

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(ii)        the failure of the Company to comply (through no failure of a DM Related Party) with any of the applicable provisions of the Securities Act, the Exchange Act, the rules and regulations promulgated under the Securities Act and the Exchange Act (including, without limitation, Rule 506 of Regulation D) or any other applicable state securities laws, rules or regulations (other than as a result of breach of this Agreement or non-compliance with applicable securities laws, rules or regulations or the Private Placement Procedures by the Dealer Manager or any Dealer); or

 

(iii)       the material breach by the Company (through no failure of an DM Related Party) of any term, condition, representation, warranty or covenant of the Company set forth in this Agreement.

 

b.    Subject to the conditions set forth below, the Dealer Manager agrees to indemnify and hold harmless the Company and its affiliates, directors, officers, employees and agents and each person, if any, who controls the Company within the meaning of Section 15 of the Securities Act or Section 20 of the Exchange Act (each and collectively, a “Company Related Party”), from and against any and all Claims, caused by, arising out of or based upon:

 

(i)         any untrue statement or omission or alleged untrue statement or omission made in reliance upon and in conformity with any information furnished to the Company in writing by the Dealer Manager expressly for use in the Memorandum or any amendment or supplement thereto or a Property Supplement;

 

(ii)        any offers or sales in violation of the private placement procedures set forth in the Private Placement Procedures by the Dealer Manager or its representatives, employees or agents (other than a Dealer);

 

(iii)       any unauthorized use of sales materials or unauthorized verbal or written representations in connection with the Private Placement made by the Dealer Manager or its representatives, employees or agents (other than a Dealer) in violation of the Securities Act, or any other applicable federal or state securities laws and regulations;

 

(iv)       the Dealer Manager’s failure to comply (through no failure of a Company Related Party) with any of the applicable provisions of the Securities Act, the Exchange Act, the rules and regulations promulgated under the Securities Act and the Exchange Act (including without limitation Rule 506 of Regulation D) or any other applicable state securities laws, rules or regulations;

 

(v)        the material breach by the Dealer Manager of any term, condition, representation, warranty or covenant of the Dealer Manager set forth in this Agreement; and

 

(vi)       the failure of the Dealer Manager to maintain its status as a registered broker-dealer in accordance with the rules and regulations of the FINRA and any applicable state broker-dealer registration requirements or the violation by the Dealer Manager or any of its principals, managers, members, directors, officers, employees or agents of any requirements, rules or regulations of the FINRA or any other state laws, rules or regulations governing the licensing of or acting as a securities broker-dealer.

 

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c.     Promptly after receipt by an indemnified party under this Section 6 of notice of the commencement of any action, such indemnified party will, if a claim in respect thereof is to be made against any indemnifying party under this Section 6, notify in writing the indemnifying party of the commencement thereof; the omission so to notify the indemnifying party will relieve it from liability under this Section 6 only in the event and to the extent the failure to provide such notice adversely affects the ability to defend such action. In case any such action is brought against any indemnified party, and it notifies an indemnifying party of the commencement thereof, the indemnifying party will be entitled, to the extent it may wish, jointly with any other indemnifying party similarly notified, to participate in the defense thereof, with separate counsel. Such participation shall not relieve such indemnifying party of the obligation to reimburse the indemnified party for reasonable legal and other expenses (subject to paragraph d. of this Section 6) incurred by such indemnified party in defending itself, except for such expenses incurred after the indemnifying party has deposited funds sufficient to effect the settlement, with prejudice, of the claim in respect of which indemnity is sought. Any such indemnifying party shall not be liable to any such indemnified party on account of any settlement of any claim or action effected without the consent of such indemnifying party.

 

d.     The indemnifying party shall pay all legal fees and expenses of the indemnified party in the defense of such claims or actions; provided , however , that the indemnifying party shall not be obliged to pay legal expenses and fees to more than one law firm in connection with the defense of similar claims arising out of the same alleged acts or omissions giving rise to such claims notwithstanding that such actions or claims are alleged or brought by one or more parties against more than one indemnified party. If such claims or actions are alleged or brought against more than one indemnified party, then the indemnifying party shall only be obliged to reimburse the expenses and fees of the one law firm that has been selected by a majority of the indemnified parties against which such action is finally brought; and in the event a majority of such indemnified parties is unable to agree on which law firm for which expenses or fees will be reimbursable by the indemnifying party, then payment shall be made to the first law firm of record representing an indemnified party against the action or claim. Such law firm shall be paid only to the extent of services performed by such law firm and no reimbursement shall be payable to such law firm on account of legal services performed by another law firm.

 

e.     If the indemnification provided for in paragraphs a. and b. above is unavailable to an indemnified party or insufficient in respect of any losses, claims, damages or liabilities referred to therein, then each indemnifying party under such paragraph, in lieu of indemnifying such indemnified party thereunder, shall contribute to the amount paid or payable by such indemnified party as a result of such losses, claims, damages or liabilities in such proportion as is appropriate to reflect both the relative benefits received by the indemnified party or parties on the one hand and indemnifying party or parties on the other hand, from the Private Placement and the relative fault of the indemnified party or parties on the one hand and the indemnifying party or parties on the other hand in connection with the statements, omissions, representations, violations, actions or failures to act that resulted in such losses, claims, damages or liabilities, as well as any other relevant equitable considerations.

 

f.     The Company and the Dealer Manager agree that it would not be just and equitable if contribution pursuant to this Section 6 were determined by pro rata allocation or by any other method of allocation that does not take account of the equitable considerations referred to in paragraph e. above. The amount paid or payable by an indemnified party as a result of the losses, claims, damages and liabilities referred to in paragraph e. above shall be deemed to include, subject to the limitations set forth above, any legal or other expenses incurred by such indemnified party in connection with any such action or claim. No person guilty of fraudulent misrepresentation (within the meaning of Section 11(f) of the Securities Act) shall be entitled to contribution from any person who was not guilty of such fraudulent misrepresentation. The Dealer Manager’s and Dealers’ obligations to contribute pursuant to this Section 6 are several in proportion to their respective obligations hereunder and under any Selected Dealer Agreement and not joint.

 

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g.     The remedies provided for in this Section 6 are not exclusive and shall not limit any rights or remedies that may otherwise be available to any indemnified party at law or in equity.

 

h.     A successor of any of the parties to this Agreement shall be entitled to the benefits of the indemnity agreements contained in this Section 6.

 

7.      Arbitration . Any dispute, controversy or claim arising between the parties relating to this Agreement (whether such dispute arises under any federal, state or local statute or regulation, or at common law), shall be resolved by final and binding arbitration administered in accordance with the then current rules of the American Arbitration Association (“ AAA ”). Any matter to be settled by arbitration shall be submitted to the AAA in Denver, Colorado and the parties agree to abide by all awards rendered in such proceedings. The parties shall attempt to designate one arbitrator from the AAA, but if they are unable to do so, then the AAA shall designate an arbitrator. Any arbitrator selected by the parties or the AAA shall be a qualified Person with no less than ten (10) years of experience as a business appraiser and who has experience with complex real estate disputes. The arbitration shall be final and binding, and enforceable in any court of competent jurisdiction. All awards may be filed with the clerk of one or more courts, state or federal having jurisdiction over the party against whom such award is rendered or his or her property, as a basis of judgment and of the issuance of execution for its collection.

 

8.      Survival of Provisions . The respective agreements, representations and warranties of the Company and the Dealer Manager set forth in this Agreement shall remain operative and in full force and effect regardless of (a) any termination of this Agreement, (b) any investigation made by or on behalf of the Dealer Manager or any Dealer or any person controlling the Dealer Manager or any Dealer or by or on behalf of the Company or any person controlling the Company, and (c) the acceptance of any subscription for the Interests.

 

9.      Notice . All notices will be in writing and will be duly given to the Dealer Manager when mailed to Dividend Capital Securities LLC, 518 17 th Street, 17 th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202, Attn: Charles Murray, and to the Company when mailed to Dividend Capital Exchange LLC, 518 17 th Floor, Denver, Colorado 80202, Attn: M. Kirk Scott.

 

10.    Costs of Compliance and Private Placement . The Dealer Manager will pay all of its own costs and expenses necessary for the Dealer Manager to remain in compliance with any applicable federal, state or FINRA laws, rules or regulations in order to participate in the Private Placement as a broker/dealer. The Company agrees to pay all other expenses incident to the performance of its obligations hereunder, including all expenses incident to filings with federal and state regulatory authorities and to the exemption of the Interests under federal and state securities laws, including fees and disbursements of the Company’s counsel, and all costs of reproduction and distribution of the Memorandum, Property Supplements and any amendment or supplement thereto.

 

11.    Applicable Law . This Agreement shall be governed by and construed in accordance with the laws of the State of New York.

 

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12.      Severability . If any portion of this Agreement shall be held invalid or inoperative, then so far as is reasonable and possible the remainder of this Agreement shall be considered valid and operative and effect shall be given to the intent manifested by the portion held invalid or inoperative.

 

13.      Delay . Neither the failure nor any delay on the part of any party to this Agreement to exercise any right, remedy, power, or privilege under this Agreement shall operate as a waiver thereof, nor shall a waiver of any right, remedy, power, or privilege with respect to any occurrence be construed as a waiver of such right, remedy, power, or privilege with respect to any subsequent occurrence.

 

14.      Counterparts . This Agreement may be executed in any number of counterparts. Each counterpart, when executed and delivered, shall be an original contract, but all counterparts, when taken together, shall constitute one and the same Agreement.

 

15.      Third Party Beneficiaries; Successors; Assignment; Amendment .

 

a.     This Agreement shall inure to the benefit of and be binding upon the Dealer Manager, the Company, each Dealer who enters into a Selected Dealer Agreement with the Dealer Manager and their respective successors. Nothing in this Agreement is intended or shall be construed to give to any other person any right, remedy or claim, except as otherwise specifically provided herein.

 

b.     Subject to the prior written consent of the Company, which consent shall not be unreasonably withheld, the Dealer Manager may assign its rights and obligations under this Agreement to a registered broker-dealer that is a member in good standing of the FINRA.

 

c.     This Agreement may be amended by the written agreement of the Dealer Manager and the Company.

 

16.      Term . Any party to this Agreement shall have the right to terminate this Agreement on 60 days’ written notice.

 

******

 

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If the foregoing correctly sets forth our understanding, please indicate your acceptance thereof in the space provided below for that purpose, whereupon this letter and your acceptance shall constitute a binding agreement between us as of the date first above written.

             
    Very truly yours,
       
    DIVIDEND CAPITAL EXCHANGE LLC,
    a Delaware limited liability company
         
        By:     DCTRT LEASING CORP., a Delaware corporation, its sole member
         
        By:     Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP, a Delaware limited partnership, its sole stockholder
         
        By:     Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., a Maryland corporation, its general partner
         
    By:   /s/ M. Kirk Scott  
      Name: M. Kirk Scott
      Title: Chief Financial Officer
       
Accepted and agreed to as of the date first above written:      
       
DIVIDEND CAPITAL SECURITIES LLC,      
a Colorado limited liability company      
       
By: /s/ Charles Murray      
  Name: Charles Murray      
  Title:   President      

 

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EXHIBIT “A”

 

Form of Selected Dealer Agreement

 

 
 

 

EXHIBIT “B”

 

Memorandum of Private Placement Procedures

 

Dividend Capital Securities LLC (the “Dealer Manager”) is acting as Dealer Manager on behalf of Dividend Capital Exchange LLC , a Delaware limited liability company (the “Company”), in connection with one or more private placements (each, a “Private Placement,” and collectively, the “Private Placements”) that are offered for sale from time to time, either directly or through wholly-owned subsidiaries, of beneficial interests in specific Delaware statutory trusts (the “Interests”) reflecting an indirect ownership of up to $500,000,000 of Interests. An Interest is an interest in a master Delaware statutory trust that will beneficially own either (i) a series of Delaware statutory trusts, each of which will hold one commercial property (each, a “Property” and collectively, the “Properties”); or (ii) a Property directly. Each Private Placement is intended to be exempt from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the “Securities Act”). The Private Placement will be made only to “accredited investors,” as that term is defined in Rule 501(a) of Regulation D (“Regulation D”) promulgated under the Securities Act (referred to herein as “Accredited Investors”), pursuant to the Confidential Program Description Memorandum, dated as of March 2, 2016, which, together with all exhibits thereto and as amended or supplemented from time to time, is referred to herein as the “Memorandum,” a copy of which will be delivered to each offeree. Information regarding each Property in which Interests will be offered will be included in a property-specific supplement (the “Property Supplement”) to the Memorandum. Capitalized terms used herein and not otherwise defined shall have the meanings set forth in the Memorandum.

 

In order to ensure that the Private Placements are made in conformity with applicable federal and state securities laws, the Dealer Manager will observe the private placement procedures set forth below, which will be varied or modified only in writing by the Company. The Dealer Manager will also take such steps as are necessary to ensure that the Dealers and their agents and employees will observe the private placement procedures contained herein. Compliance with the Federal and state securities laws is the responsibility of each person participating in the Private Placement.

 

Exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act and from the “blue sky” laws of most states is available only if the Private Placement does not involve a “general solicitation” and only if the Private Placement is made in conformance with the safe harbor provisions of Regulation D.

 

A specifically appointed supervisor of the Dealer Manager (the “Designated Supervisor”) will review each prospective offeree’s qualifications before permitting an offer. Only (i) the Dealer Manager and (ii) registered representatives of a Dealer (either or both of which are hereinafter referred to as the “Registered Representative”) may make offers to persons who have been pre-qualified.

 

1.           Prospective Offerees . Offers may be made only to investors who are Accredited Investors. In addition, prospective offerees may not be contacted through any form of general solicitation or advertising. Marketing materials furnished by the Company or the Dealer Manager and marked “for broker-dealer use only” shall not be furnished to prospective offerees, and marketing materials intended for distribution to prospective offerees shall not be delivered to any offeree unless such materials were accompanied or preceded by the Memorandum. The Interests with respect to a Private Placement may be offered during a period commencing on the date specified in the Property Supplement and continuing until the termination date for such Private Placement set forth in the Property Supplement.

 

 
 

 

2.           Certification of Registered Representative . Before a Memorandum and Property Supplement is delivered to an offeree and an offer is made, the “Registered Representative Certification” section of each prospective offeree’s Investor Questionnaire (the “Certification”) must be executed by the Registered Representative. The Certification will constitute a representation to the Dealer Manager, the Dealer and the Company that (i) the offeree was not contacted through any form of general solicitation and has a pre - existing relationship with the Dealer; and (ii) based upon the offeree’s execution and delivery of such Investor Questionnaire and any other information in the Registered Representative’s files or otherwise presented by the offeree, the offeree is an Accredited Investor, participation in the Private Placement would be a suitable investment for the offeree, and the offeree has such financial and business experience (either alone or together with his advisor) as to be able to understand and appreciate the risks and merits of participating in the Private Placement.

 

3.           Indications of Interest . The Certification must be based on the Investor Questionnaire executed by such prospective offeree, information in the Registered Representative’s files (and procedures necessary to update such information) and upon knowledge of the prospective offeree and current information supplied by or otherwise available concerning such prospective offeree. If a prospective offeree satisfies the requirements of paragraph 1 above, the Registered Representative may seek to determine orally whether a prospective offeree is likely to be interested in participating in the Private Placement prior to receiving a completed Investor Questionnaire. However, indications of interest may be solicited if, but only if, such solicitations do not become so precise and detailed as to constitute “offers,” including, but not limited to, those forms of offers prohibited by Section 10 of this Memorandum of Private Placement Procedures. The point at which solicitations of indications of interest become so precise as to constitute “offers” cannot be defined with precision. However, if a prospective offeree’s interest cannot be ascertained without making specific disclosures regarding the transaction structures described in the Memorandum, such offeree shall not be allowed to participate in the Private Placement.

 

4.           Review of Investor Questionnaires . Each Investor Questionnaire will be reviewed by the Designated Supervisor. If the Designated Supervisor determines that (i) a prospective offeree qualifies as an Accredited Investor and (ii) participation in the Private Placement would be suitable for the prospective offeree, the Designated Supervisor may permit Interests to be offered to the prospective offeree through the delivery of a Memorandum and Property Supplement.

 

5.           Delivery of Memorandum and Marketing Materials . If the Designated Supervisor elects to permit Interests to be offered to a prospective offeree, the Designated Supervisor shall write the offeree’s name on the Memorandum and deliver that copy of the Memorandum, together with copies of a Property Supplement relating to the Property with respect to which Interests are being offering, the DPF Prospectus and the Investor Application (together, the “Exhibits”), to the Registered Representative for delivery to such offeree. That copy of the Memorandum must be delivered only to the named offeree and may not be duplicated or furnished to any other person. In addition, only marketing materials (other than the Memorandum) the use of which in connection with the Private Placement has been approved by the Company in writing shall be delivered to prospective offerees, and such marketing materials shall only be provided to prospective offerees when accompanied or preceded by the Memorandum.

 

 
 

 

6.           Control Numbers . The Designated Supervisor shall keep a log or other written record of every copy of the Memorandum furnished to any person (including copies of the Memorandum furnished to Registered Representatives for their information, copies furnished to offerees, copies furnished to advisors of offerees and copies furnished to regulatory or administrative authorities). The records or logs so maintained must indicate (a) the number of each copy, (b) the name and address of the person to whom such copy was furnished, and (c) the capacity in which such person received the copy of the Memorandum. If, for any reason, such copy is not delivered to the person for whom it was intended, or is returned, the Designated Supervisor should be notified and, upon receipt of such notice, that fact should be entered in such log. A Memorandum not delivered to the person for whom it is intended, or returned, may not be reassigned or delivered to any other offeree. A copy of the log will be made available for review by the Company.

 

7.           State Securities Law Procedures . Prior to sending a copy of the Memorandum and/or the Property Supplement to any offeree, the Dealer Manager must have notified the Company in writing as to the state of residence of such offeree to ensure compliance with the securities laws of such state. If there is any question, uncertainty, qualification or limitation upon the making of any such offer, such offer shall be made only after the Designated Supervisor has reviewed the matter with the Company.

 

8.           Prospecting . This Private Placement is inappropriate for and shall not be used for any form of prospecting (see Sections 1 and 2 above). In addition, the Staff of the Securities and Exchange Commission has indicated that it believes furnishing copies of a private placement memorandum (or a description of the terms of a security to be privately placed) to lawyers, accountants or other professionals and asking such lawyers, accountants or other professionals to call an offering to the attention of their clients who might be interested or to otherwise facilitate the offering (the “Financial Intermediaries”) may constitute a “general solicitation.” Thus, the use of Financial Intermediaries in this manner is inconsistent with a private placement under Regulation D. Accordingly, no person shall initiate contact with a Financial Intermediary, other than a Registered Representative, for the purpose of soliciting, directly or indirectly, an offer to participate in the Private Placement.

 

9.           Prohibited Disclosures . Offers will be made only by the Memorandum, the Property Supplements and any other material expressly approved by the Dealer Manager and the Company and only after the procedures set forth in Sections 1 through 8 above have been satisfied.

 

10.         Advertising and Seminars . Offers may be made only through direct contact with an offeree with whom a Registered Representative has a pre-existing relationship. No representative of the Dealer Manager, a Dealer or the Company may discuss a Private Placement with any member of the press or the radio or television media. No advertisement relating, directly or indirectly, to a Private Placement, including tombstone advertisements prior to termination of such Private Placement, may be published. Letters, circulars, notices, postings on websites, memoranda, including tombstone advertisements prior to such termination, or other written communications to customers announcing or describing a Private Placement or inviting inquiries concerning a Private Placement or similar investments are strictly prohibited. Seminars or meetings (other than those approved by the Designated Supervisor, in consultation with the Company) relating to a Private Placement are strictly prohibited.

 

 
 

 

11.           How to Subscribe . All prospective offerees must execute and deliver an Investor Questionnaire prior to the receipt of a Memorandum or Property Supplement. The Investor Questionnaire should be completed by offerees in as much detail as possible since it substantiates the Certification and is relied on by the Designated Supervisor and the Company in determining that offerees are Accredited Investors and are otherwise suitable to participate in the Private Placement. The Exhibits furnished to offerees with the Memorandum will include the Investor Application. If an offeree completes and returns the Investor Application and it is approved, the offeree will receive the Purchase Agreement and other closing documents. If an offeree elects to participate in a Private Placement, the Registered Representative should review the “Private Placement” section of the Memorandum and the more detailed information in the Investor Application and ensure that the appropriate documents are completed in their entirety and the required Deposit is paid by the offeree. Under no circumstances should any Registered Representative alter in any respect subscription documents that have been signed and delivered by an offeree. Any subscription document that is incomplete or incorrectly completed should be returned to the prospective investor for completion or revision. All documents must be exactly in the form in which they are delivered to the prospective investor or they will be rejected.

 

12.           Approval of Subscribers . No offeree’s subscription may be accepted until the Designated Supervisor and the Company have reviewed such offeree’s Investor Questionnaire and Investor Application, have determined that such documents have been completed properly and have determined that there is a reasonable basis for belief that such offeree is an Accredited Investor and that such offeree meets any other applicable suitability standards. No sale of an Interest shall be regarded as effective unless and until a subscription for such Interest has been formally accepted by the Company.

 

13.           Rejections . The Designated Supervisor and the Company each may determine, in its sole and absolute discretion, not to accept the subscription of any person, without regard to whether it appears that from such person’s Investor Questionnaire and Investor Application that such person is an Accredited Investor and/or meets any or all other applicable standards.

 

14.           Questions . If questions arise regarding a Private Placement, a Registered Representative or the Dealer Manager should be consulted.

 

 
 

 

EXHIBIT “C”

 

Escrow Agreement

 

 

 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. POS AM

Exhibit 21

 

DPF Entity Name State of Formation
1717 Dallas Partners, LLC Delaware
American Financial Exchange L.L.C. New Jersey
Bala Pointe GP, LLC Delaware
Bala Pointe Owner LP Delaware
BRE/Liberty Avenue Mezzanine LLC Delaware
CB Square Leasing LLC Delaware
Centerton Square LLC Delaware
DCTRT Bala Pointe GP LLC Delaware
DCTRT Bala Pointe LP Delaware
DCTRT Greenwood Lease Management LLC Delaware
DCTRT Greenwood Leasing LLC Delaware
DCTRT Leasing Corp. (TRS) Delaware
DCTRT Real Estate Holdco LLC Delaware
DCTRT REPO Holdco LLC Delaware
DCTRT Securities Holdco LLC Delaware
DCTRT Springing Member Inc. Delaware
DCX Flying Cloud Drive DST Delaware
DCX Greenwood DST Delaware
DCX Kingston Leasing LLC Delaware
DCX Manager Group LLC Delaware
DCX Manager LLC Delaware
DCX Master Tenant LLC Delaware
DCX Sandwich Leasing LLC Delaware
DCX Springdale DST Delaware
DCX Springdale Manager LLC Delaware
DCX Springdale Master Tenant LLC Delaware
DCX Springdale TRS LLC Delaware
Div Cap Amerimar Bala Pointe 1 General Partnership Delaware
Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. Maryland
Dividend Capital DST Flying Cloud Drive Property Management LLC Colorado
Dividend Capital Exchange LLC Delaware
Dividend Capital Total Realty Operating Partnership LP Delaware
Dividend Jay, LLC Delaware
Dividend Lundy, LLC Delaware
DPF 1031 Parent LLC Delaware
DPF 1500 Wilson Mezz LLC Delaware
DPF 1600 Woodbury Avenue LLC Delaware
DPF 1618 Woodbury Avenue LLC Delaware
DPF 655 Montgomery GP LLC Delaware
DPF 655 Montgomery Holdings General Partnership Delaware
DPF 655 Montgomery Lease Management LLC Delaware
DPF 655 Montgomery LP Delaware
DPF Acquisitions LLC Delaware
DPF Brockton Westgate Plaza II LLC Delaware
DPF Cherry Creek Lease Management LLC Delaware
DPF Cherry Creek LLC Delaware
DPF Chester LLC Delaware
DPF CityView GP LLC Delaware
DPF CityView Lease Management LLC Delaware

 

 
 

 

Exhibit 21

 

DPF CityView LP Delaware
DPF DeGuigne JV Owner II LLC Delaware
DPF DeGuigne Owner LLC Delaware
DPF DeGuigne Partners Delaware
DPF Jay JV Owner II LLC Delaware
DPF Jay Owner LLC Delaware
DPF Jay Partners Delaware
DPF LOC Lender LLC Delaware
DPF Lundy JV Owner II LLC Delaware
DPF Lundy Owner LLC Delaware
DPF Lundy Partners Delaware
DPF Mashpee Lease Management LLC Delaware
DPF Mashpee LLC Delaware
DPF Mashpee Manager LLC Delaware
DPF Narragansett Lease Management LLC Delaware
DPF Narragansett LLC Delaware
DPF Palmetto Park Road Lease Management LLC Delaware
DPF Palmetto Park Road LLC Delaware
DPF Property Management LLC Delaware
DPF Rialto GP LLC Delaware
DPF Rialto Lease Management LLC Delaware
DPF Rialto LP Delaware
DPF Services LLC Delaware
DPF Shenandoah Square LLC Delaware
DPF Shiloh JV Owner II LLC Delaware
DPF Shiloh Owner LLC Delaware
DPF Shiloh Partners Delaware
DPF TRS Holdings I LLC Delaware
DPF Venture Corporate Center Lease Management LLC Delaware
DPF Venture Corporate Center LLC Delaware
DPF Weymouth III LLC Delaware
DPF Yale Village Lease Management LLC Delaware
DPF Yale Village LLC Delaware
Greensboro Park 8180-8200, LLC Delaware
iStar CTL Sunset Hills – Reston LLC Delaware
Liberty Avenue Holdings LLC Delaware
Liberty Avenue Partners Delaware
Mibarev Development I, LLC Georgia
Plaza X Leasing Associates L.L.C New Jersey
Plaza X Realty L.L.C. New Jersey
Plaza X Urban Renewal Associates L.L.C. New Jersey
Shackleford West Leasing LLC Delaware
Southcape Village, LLC Massachusetts
TRS Interest Holdco I LLC Delaware
TRS NOIP Mezz Holdco LLC Delaware
TRS NOIP Real Estate Holdco Delaware
TRT 1100 Campus Road LLC Delaware
TRT 1300 Connecticut Avenue GP LLC Delaware
TRT 1300 Connecticut Avenue Limited Partnership Delaware
TRT 1300 Connecticut Avenue LP Partner LLC Delaware

 

 
 

 

Exhibit 21

 

TRT 1300 Connecticut Avenue Owner LLC Delaware
TRT 1303 Joyce Blvd LLC Delaware
TRT 1345 Philomena Street GP LLC Delaware
TRT 1345 Philomena Street Limited Partnership Delaware
TRT 1345 Philomena Street LP LLC Delaware
TRT 1345 Philomena Street Owner LLC Delaware
TRT 270 Center Holdings LLC Delaware
TRT 270 Center Owner LLC Delaware
TRT 625 Liberty Avenue JV LLC Delaware
TRT Abington LLC Delaware
TRT Alliance Diehl LLC Delaware
TRT Alliance JV I Diehl LLC Delaware
TRT Alliance JV I GP Delaware
TRT Alliance JV II GP Delaware
TRT Alliance JV II Skokie LLC Delaware
TRT Alliance Skokie LLC Delaware
TRT Beaver Creek LLC Delaware
TRT Braintree II LLC Delaware
TRT Braintree LLC Delaware
TRT Brockton Eastway Plaza LLC Delaware
TRT Brockton Westgate Plaza LLC Delaware
TRT Cohasset LLC Delaware
TRT Comerica Mezz LLC Delaware
TRT Cranston LLC Delaware
TRT Eastern Retail Holdings I LLC Delaware
TRT Eastern Retail Holdings I Owner LLC Delaware
TRT Flying Cloud Drive LLC Delaware
TRT Hanover LLC Delaware
TRT Harborside LLC Delaware
TRT Harwich LLC Delaware
TRT HEB Marketplace GP LLC Delaware
TRT HEB Marketplace LP Delaware
TRT Holbrook LLC Delaware
TRT Hyannis LLC Delaware
TRT Industrial Fund I LLC Delaware
TRT Industrial Fund II LLC Delaware
TRT Industrial Fund III LLC Delaware
TRT Kingston II LLC Delaware
TRT Kingston LLC Delaware
TRT Lending LLC Delaware
TRT Lending Subsidiary I Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT Lending Subsidiary I LLC Delaware
TRT Lending Subsidiary II Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT Lending Subsidiary II LLC Delaware
TRT Manomet LLC Delaware
TRT Mansfield LLC Delaware
TRT Master Retail Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT Meriden LLC Delaware
TRT Millennium Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT Millennium LLC Delaware

 

 
 

 

Exhibit 21

 

TRT Mt. Nebo Pad LLC Delaware
TRT Narragansett LLC Delaware
TRT New Bedford LLC Delaware
TRT New England Retail Floating Rate Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP CEVA Lease Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Colshire McLean GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Colshire McLean LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Colshire McLean LP Delaware
TRT NOIP Columbia – Campbellsville LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Columbia – Richfield LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Connection – Irving GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Connection – Irving LP Delaware
TRT NOIP Connection – Irving LP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Corporate Center Drive – Newbury Park GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Corporate Center Drive – Newbury Park LP Delaware
TRT NOIP Corporate Drive – Dixon LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Crown Colony – Quincy LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Doolittle – Redondo Beach GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Doolittle – Redondo Beach LP Delaware
TRT NOIP Dublin GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Dublin LP Delaware
TRT NOIP Eagle GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Eagle LP Delaware
TRT NOIP East 28 – Aurora LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Fixed CA Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Fixed Mezz Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Fixed Real Estate Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Floating CA LP Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Floating Mezz Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Floating Real Estate Holdco LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Glenville – Richardson GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Glenville – Richardson LP Delaware
TRT NOIP Glenville – Richardson LP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Inverness - Englewood II LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Inverness - Englewood LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Maple – El Segundo GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Maple El Segundo LP Delaware
TRT NOIP North Fairway Drive - Vernon Hills LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Shadelands – Walnut Creek GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Shadelands – Walnut Creek LP Delaware
TRT NOIP Sheila – Commerce LP Delaware
TRT NOIP Sheila Commerce GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP South Havana – Englewood LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Sunset Hills – Reston LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP SW 80 – Plantation LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Sylvan Way – Parsippany LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Waterview – Dallas GP LLC Delaware
TRT NOIP Waterview – Dallas LP Delaware
TRT NOIP Waterview – Dallas LP LLC Delaware
TRT Norwell LLC Delaware

 

 
 

 

Exhibit 21

 

TRT Orleans LLC Delaware
TRT Park Place LLC Delaware
TRT Preston Sherry LLC Delaware
TRT Rockland 201 Market LLC Delaware
TRT Rockland 360-372 Market LLC Delaware
TRT Sandwich LLC Delaware
TRT Saugus LLC Delaware
TRT Shackleford West Boulevard LLC Delaware
TRT Shiloh LLC Delaware
TRT Springdale LLC Delaware
TRT Wareham LLC Delaware
TRT Weymouth II LLC Delaware
TRT Weymouth LLC Delaware
TRT Whitman 475 Bedford LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT 130 Greenwood II LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT 130 Greenwood LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT 4155 Patriot Drive TX GP LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT 4155 Patriot Drive TX LP Delaware
TRT-DCT 4255 Patriot Drive TX GP LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT 4255 Patriot Drive TX LP Delaware
TRT-DCT 6900 Riverport LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT 7000 Riverport LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT 7050 Riverport LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT 7201 Intermodal LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Creekside V LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Eagle Creek East LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Eagle Creek West LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Hanson Way LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Industrial JV II General Partnership Delaware
TRT-DCT Industrial JV III General Partnership Delaware
TRT-DCT Minnesota Valley III LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Park West L1 LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Park West Q LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Pencader LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Perry Road LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Rickenbacker IV LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Westport LLC Delaware
TRT-DCT Westport Owner LLC Delaware
TRT-FAC Liberty Avenue Investors Delaware
TRT-Westcore De Guigne Owner LLC Delaware

 

 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. POS AM

Exhibit 23.1

 

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

The Board of Directors
Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.:

 

We consent to the use of our reports dated March 3, 2016, with respect to the consolidated balance sheets of Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. and subsidiaries as of December 31, 2015 and 2014, and the related consolidated statements of income, comprehensive income, equity and cash flows for each of the years in the three-year period ended December 31, 2015, and the related financial statement schedule, Schedule III – Real Estate and Accumulated Depreciation, incorporated by reference herein, and to the reference to our firm under the heading “Experts” in the prospectus. Our reports refer to a change in the method of reporting for discontinued operations.

 

  (signed) KPMG LLP
   

 

Denver, Colorado

 

April 7, 2016

 

 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. POS AM

 

Exhibit 23.3

 

Consent of Independent Registered Public Accounting Firm

 

The Board of Directors

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc.:

 

We consent to the use of our reports dated September 4, 2015, with respect to the statements of revenues and certain expenses of City View and Venture Corporate Center for the year ended December 31, 2014, which are incorporated by reference herein. We further consent to the reference to our firm under the heading “Experts” in the prospectus.

 

  /s/ EKS&H LLLP

 

Denver, Colorado

 

April 7, 2016

 

 

 

 

Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc. POS AM

Exhibit 99.2

CONSENT OF INDEPENDENT VALUATION FIRM

 

We hereby consent to the reference to our name and the description of our role and the valuation of the real properties and related assumptions and the reference to our firm under the captions “Net Asset Value Calculation and Valuation Procedures” and “Experts” being included in Post-Effective Amendment No. 3 to the Registration Statement on Form S-11 (File No. 333-197767) of Dividend Capital Diversified Property Fund Inc., and the prospectus included therein. In giving such consent, we do not thereby admit that we are in the category of persons whose consent is required under Section 7 of the Securities Act of 1933. 

             
            /s/ Altus Group U.S., Inc.
            Altus Group U.S., Inc.
       
April 7, 2016