National Post

Brookfield Asset Management is sitting on US$60 billion to help weather pandemic.

Cash and credit allow it to act on opportunit­ies

- Scott Deveau

Cash is king in times of crisis, according to Brookfield Asset Management Inc.’s chief executive, and the alternativ­e- asset manager has more than US$60 billion to weather the coronaviru­s pandemic.

If a business isn’t prepared for situations like the Covid-19 outbreak that’s rattled markets, it’s often too late once such a crisis hits, Bruce Flatt said in a letter to shareholde­rs Thursday.

“In reflecting on what really matters to our business, it is liquidity, liquidity and liquidity, in that order,” he wrote in the letter.

“The most damaging thing for any business owner is to find yourself out of business and unable to participat­e in the recovery, or in a position of needing to issue shares which dilute the owners, and therefore make it impossible to ever recover from undue dilution at the wrong time.”

Brookfield is well- positioned to make it through the pandemic, with US$ 46 billion in client commitment­s for new investment­s and US$ 15 billion in cash, other financial assets and long- dated credit facilities across its various businesses that remain largely undrawn, Flatt said.

“We will continue to add to our liquidity and deploy capital as opportunit­ies arise,” he said.

During the first quarter, Brookfield shifted its strategy to investing in public companies that were trading at a fraction of what it cost to acquire assets directly from the companies. The company invested roughly US$ 2 billion in public equity markets, including repurchasi­ng its own shares and those of its publicly traded subsidiari­es, Flatt said.

“We have also built up toehold positions in the shares of several companies that we feel, like ours, are being significan­tly undervalue­d in the current market environmen­t,” he said.

Also on Thursday, Brookfield reported a first- quarter net loss of US$ 157 million, or 20 cents a share, compared with earnings of US$ 1.26 billion, or 39 cents, a year earlier. Funds from operations, a measure of cash flow, fell to US$ 884 million, or 55 cents a share, from US$ 1.05 billion, or 69 cents, a year earlier.

The company also said it plans to nominate former Royal Bank of Canada Chief Financial Officer Janice Fukakusa to its board at this year’s annual general meeting.

The coronaviru­s has had an impact on Brookfield’s various businesses, Flatt said, but they remain in “good shape,” with its Oaktree business continuing to find opportunit­ies in distressed debt.

Brookfield’s retail real estate business will be stronger than in the past over the medium term, benefiting from premier locations and consolidat­ion in the retail environmen­t, he said. The focus now is shifting to reopening.

“We are also working hard to ensure that in those businesses that have been affected, we are able to not only withstand the downturn, but also use our capital position to enhance operations through this period of stress,” Flatt said.

“While a large portion of our businesses have operated throughout this crisis as they are critical infrastruc­ture, we have now moved our focus to the reopening phase for all of our remaining operations and offices.”

We will continue to add to our liquidity.

 ?? Bryan Thomas / Gett
y Imag
es ?? Brookfield Asset Management has about US$60 billion in cash, client commitment­s and undrawn credit facilities
ready to deploy in the rebound from the COVID-19 crisis. Above, one of the company’s New York properties.
Bryan Thomas / Gett y Imag es Brookfield Asset Management has about US$60 billion in cash, client commitment­s and undrawn credit facilities ready to deploy in the rebound from the COVID-19 crisis. Above, one of the company’s New York properties.

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