- Current Trustees Continue to Protect the Interests of the
Board, UDF Management, and the Largest Borrower at
Shareholders' Expense
- Shareholders Should Not Be Misled by UDF IV's Ongoing
Attempts to Deflect from the Board's Egregious Actions
DALLAS,
Nov. 6,
2024 /PRNewswire/ -- NexPoint Real Estate
Opportunities, LLC (together with its affiliates "NexPoint") today
provided an update on United Development Funding IV ("UDF IV" or
the "Company"). NexPoint notes that UDF IV's current Board of
Trustees continues to deflect attention from the Board's egregious
actions and the Company's underperformance by pushing false and
misleading narratives about NexPoint. Shareholders should instead
focus on the ongoing conduct of this Board and recognize the need
for wholesale change; otherwise, questionable actions by UDF IV
management, the Board, and the Company's largest borrower,
Mehrdad Moayedi, are unlikely to be
investigated and remedied.
NexPoint nominated four highly regarded real
estate and finance industry professionals to replace the current
independent Trustees on the UDF IV Board. These accomplished
individuals bring relevant industry expertise and governance
experience at both public and private companies to their candidacy.
If elected, NexPoint's nominees are committed to working on behalf
of shareholders to enact critical change, establish accountability
and transparency, and recover value and liquidity at UDF IV. This
includes thoroughly investigating any improper transactions and,
where available, pursuing recoveries of misused funds for the
benefit of all shareholders.
Shareholders Should Note Major Red Flags from
Current Board of Trustees:
- UDF IV's current Board of Trustees does not want you to know
that the management fees it continues to approve for UDF's
advisor—over $10 million in the last
two years—enrich former UDF executives who are currently in federal
prison for committing fraud against UDF IV
shareholders. Not only do the convicted felons inordinately
profit from UDF IV's advisory agreement, but the advisory fees
appear even more unfounded considering the deficiencies in
portfolio management (one of the advisor's primary
responsibilities) that were revealed in the Company's latest
financials. Meanwhile, shareholders suffer without liquidity,
brought on by years of disclosure violations that led Nasdaq to
delist the stock and the SEC to revoke the Company's registration
altogether. This all occurred under the oversight of three of
the four trustees who are up for election.
- UDF IV's Board of Trustees has permitted the Company to use
shareholder funds for former executives' personal disgorgement and
legal defenses. Upon information and belief, the Company
advanced legal fees totaling more than $65
million, and a significant portion of those advancements may
have been improper. For example, the current Trustees authorized
the Company to pay millions in legal fees and indemnification
expenses for former management's criminal trial, despite the
clear language in the advisory agreement prohibiting
indemnification when the expense arises from "an
alleged violation of federal or state securities law."
Prior to that, the Board allowed UDF IV to pay former executives'
SEC disgorgements (totaling $7.2
million with pre-judgment interest), which were obligations
of the individuals, not the Company.
- UDF IV, under the Board of Trustees' oversight, has
permitted the Company to amass over 98% of UDF's unaffiliated debt
with a single borrower, Mehrdad
Moayedi and affiliates of Centurion American, a developer
with a history of failed projects. Inexplicably, the Company
appears to have released Mr. Moayedi from significant personal
guarantee liability.
These red flags underscore the urgent need for
shareholders to establish proper oversight at UDF IV by replacing
the Board of Trustees with NexPoint's highly qualified nominees:
Paul S. Broaddus, Edward N. Constantino, John A. Good, and Julie
Silcock.
Shareholders Should Not Be Fooled by UDF IV's
Expensive Misinformation Campaign, Which Defends and Protects the
Board and Management at Shareholders' Expense:
UDF continues to use shareholder funds to spread
misleading information about NexPoint to divert shareholder
attention from the Board and management's own actions and abysmal
performance.
In its attacks on NexPoint, UDF IV
mischaracterizes the performance of one NexPoint-advised REIT,
NexPoint Diversified Real Estate Trust (NYSE:NXDT), conveying
returns over a self-serving timeframe without including dividends.
NexPoint manages real estate assets in many different investment
vehicles, including several public and private REITs, registered
funds, and tax-advantaged vehicles, among other structures. As
responsible stewards of invested capital, NexPoint has a track
record of maintaining robust compliance practices and generating
meaningful dividends and capital appreciation for its
shareholders.
Other established public REITs at NexPoint
include NexPoint Residential Trust, Inc. (NYSE:NXRT) and NexPoint
Real Estate Finance, Inc. (NYSE:NREF), which delivered total
returns of 62.3% and 18.2% respectively over the last
year.1
Meanwhile, from the time of UDF IV's initial
listing to when SEC revoked its registration, UDF IV's share
price suffered a -93% decline. It is no wonder the Company
wants to divert shareholders' attention away from that
performance. Ignoring this severe decline, UDF IV touts
"shareholder returns" that management and the Board
allegedly delivered. The cash distributions they cite
in support of this are 100% return of capital and should be more
cause for concern than celebration.
UDF IV's communications also criticize management
incentives at NXDT, exclusively referencing stock grants awarded
under a long-term incentive plan that align the interests of
management with shareholders. Such alignment has been markedly
absent from UDF IV. Further, UDF IV makes this misleading claim
without acknowledging how members of the former management team—who
are currently in prison for defrauding shareholders—are getting
richly rewarded though UDF IV's own advisory agreement, which
directed over $10 million in fees to
the advisor over the last two years.
Finally, UDF IV's attempts to link unrelated
bankruptcy proceedings to this election underscore the lengths the
Board and management will go to further entrench themselves and
distract from primary issues.
The 2019 bankruptcy proceedings of former
affiliate Highland Capital are completely unrelated to NexPoint's
investment in UDF IV and irrelevant to current efforts to drive
accountability at the Company. NexPoint's efforts are focused on
electing qualified, independent candidates to the UDF IV Board of
Trustees who would represent the interests of all shareholders.
Not only are the matters irrelevant, UDF IV's
account of them mischaracterizes the actions of NexPoint founder
James Dondero in these proceedings,
promoting misleading claims made by parties in the case who used
the process to turn a reorganization of a solvent estate into a
liquidation, wasting millions in professional fees and unduly
benefitting certain insiders while harming other stakeholders. (In
one instance, Highland bankruptcy professionals shirked commitments
to pay routine bonuses to rank-and-file employees, prompting Mr.
Dondero to use millions of his own personal funds to satisfy these
payments.) The improper liquidation forced Mr. Dondero to pursue
legal remedies to enforce his and other parties' rights, minimize
waste on unnecessary professional fees and expenses, and otherwise
recover funds in the bankruptcy process. Knowledgeable
parties involved in the bankruptcy calculate that as much as
$600 million was squandered that
could have been used to pay creditors in full and permit Highland
to emerge as a going concern. As such, interested parties continue
to raise concerns that the Chief Restructuring Officer in the case
has presided over immense value destruction and enriched himself
and undisclosed business relationships at the expense of
stakeholders.
(Details of bad acts by: (i) James Seery; and (ii) GCM Grovesnor
(NASDAQ:GCMG), Stonehill Capital Management, LLC, and Farallon
Capital Management, LLC.)
Mr. Dondero's actions are in pursuit of
accountability for this mismanagement of the estate and enforcement
of his and other stakeholders' rights within the bankruptcy
proceedings.
While NexPoint seeks to correct UDF's misleading
accounts of these matters, the bankruptcy proceedings and the legal
actions surrounding them have no bearing on NexPoint's efforts to
restore accountability at UDF IV. NexPoint urges shareholders not
to let the Company's misinformation and deception tactics distract
from the severe issues at UDF IV. Electing new Trustees to the UDF
IV Board is the only way to enact change and effectively address
those issues that truly matter for shareholders and directly affect
their investment.
Vote for Change by Electing NexPoint's
Nominees to UDF IV's Board of Trustees:
The UDF IV Board's red flags highlight the need
for change to prevent further value destruction. Today, in addition
to the current Trustees' track record, shareholders should be
concerned about the amount of time and money the Board is spending
to hide the truth and stay in power.
Shareholders can vote TODAY to replace the
current Trustees, voting FOR NexPoint's nominees using the GREEN
proxy card. Follow the voting instructions on your green proxy
materials to submit your vote.
If you have already submitted a white proxy card,
it's not too late to change your vote. Only the last date proxy
card submitted will be counted.
For detailed voting instructions, visit:
udfaccountability.com/voting-information
For voting assistance contact Okapi Partners
at: info@okapipartners.com or (877) 869-0171
IMPORTANT INFORMATION
NexPoint Real Estate Opportunities, LLC
("NexPoint") has delivered a proxy statement with respect to its
solicitation of proxies for nominees to be elected to the United
Development Funding IV ("UDF IV") Board of Trustees at the Annual
Meeting of Shareholders of UDF IV. The date for the Annual Meeting
has not yet been set at this time.
INVESTORS AND SECURITY HOLDERS ARE URGED TO READ
THE NEXPOINT PROXY STATEMENT (INCLUDING ANY AMENDMENTS OR
SUPPLEMENTS THERETO) IN ITS ENTIRETY AS IT CONTAINS IMPORTANT
INFORMATION ABOUT THE PROXY SOLICITATION.
Copies of the documents are available free of
charge from NexPoint by accessing the website
www.udfaccountability.com.
NexPoint, its affiliates, their directors and
executive officers and other members of management and employees
may be participants (collectively "Participants") in the
solicitation of proxies by NexPoint. Information about NexPoint's
nominees to the UDF IV Board of Trustees and information regarding
the direct or indirect interests in UDF IV, by security holdings or
otherwise, of NexPoint, the other Participants and NexPoint's
nominees will be available in the proxy statement. NexPoint's
disclosure of any security holdings will be based on information
made available to NexPoint by such Participants and nominees. UDF
IV is no longer subject to the reporting requirements of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Consequently,
NexPoint's knowledge of significant security holders of UDF IV and
as to UDF IV itself is limited.
Past performance does not guarantee future
results. Performance during time periods shown is limited and may
not reflect the performance in different economic and market
cycles. There can be no assurance that similar performance will be
experienced.
CONTACT INFORMATION
Media Contact:
nexpointteam@reevemark.com
Investor Relations: ir@nexpoint.com
___________________________
|
1 Based on cumulative dividends and
stock price as of 10/31/2024. Based on stock price only, NXRT
and NREF increased 54.3% and 2.0% during this period
respectively.
|
View original
content:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/nexpoint-raises-concerns-about-udf-iv-board-allowing-millions-in-management-fees-to-enrich-former-udf-executives-imprisoned-for-fraud-302298171.html
SOURCE NexPoint Advisors, L.P.