e424b3
Filed
Pursuant to Rule 424(b)(3)
Registration
No. 333-133652
GRUBB &
ELLIS HEALTHCARE REIT, INC.
SUPPLEMENT
NO. 3 DATED MARCH 19, 2009
TO THE PROSPECTUS DATED DECEMBER 3, 2008
This document supplements, and should be read in conjunction
with, our prospectus dated December 3, 2008, as
supplemented by Supplement No. 1 dated December 3,
2008 and Supplement No. 2 dated January 30, 2009,
relating to our offering of 221,052,632 shares of common
stock. The purpose of this Supplement No. 3 is to disclose:
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the status of our initial public offering;
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the resignation of our Chief Financial Officer and appointment
of a new principal financial officer;
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an update regarding our transition to self-management;
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an update to our risk factors disclosure;
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biographical information for a new employee and a new
independent consultant; and
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a chart illustrating our organizational structure upon the
completion of our transition to
self-management.
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Status of
Our Initial Public Offering
As of February 28, 2009, we had received and accepted
subscriptions in our offering for 85,794,678 shares of our
common stock, or approximately $856,957,000, excluding shares
issued under our distribution reinvestment plan. As of
February 28, 2009, approximately 114,205,322 shares
remained available for sale to the public under our initial
public offering, excluding shares available under our
distribution reinvestment plan. We will sell shares in our
offering until the earlier of September 20, 2009, or the
date on which the maximum offering has been sold.
Resignation
of our Chief Financial Officer and Appointment of New Principal
Financial Officer
On March 13, 2009, Shannon K S Johnson resigned from her
position as our Chief Financial Officer. Ms. Johnson will
continue to provide non-exclusive services to us in her role as
a Financial Reporting Manager of Grubb & Ellis Realty
Investors, LLC, the managing member of Grubb & Ellis
Healthcare REIT Advisor, LLC, or our advisor. Under our advisory
agreement, as amended and restated as of November 14, 2008,
effective as of October 24, 2008, or the amended advisory
agreement, our advisor currently serves as our financial
advisor. In that capacity, our advisor, through its officers and
the officers and employees of its affiliates, maintains our
books and records, assists with the implementation of our
financial policies and is responsible for preparing our
financial reports to be filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission, among its other responsibilities.
On March 17, 2009, our board of directors appointed Kellie
S. Pruitt, our Chief Accounting Officer and principal accounting
officer, to also serve as our principal financial officer. For
more information regarding Ms. Pruitt, see Supplement
No. 2 dated January 30, 2009.
Our self-management program, which is discussed in further
detail below, contemplates and provides for the replacement of
our executive officers, including our Chief Financial Officer,
who are also officers or employees of our advisor and its
affiliates.
Update
Regarding Our Transition to Self-Management
As disclosed in our prospectus, we have undertaken steps to
transition from an externally managed REIT to a self-managed
REIT. The amended advisory agreement with our advisor expires on
September 20, 2009, unless sooner terminated. Our
transition to self-management is intended to be completed on or
before September 20, 2009. Accordingly, we do not currently
intend to renew the amended advisory agreement or to
engage a successor advisor. Our internal management team is led
by our Chairman, Chief Executive Officer and President, Scott D.
Peters, under the governance of our board of directors. With
self-management, we will internally manage the business of our
company, including our day-to-day operations and the direct
oversight of third-party service providers retained by us on an
as-needed basis. Under the amended advisory agreement, our
advisor has agreed to use reasonable efforts to cooperate with
us as we pursue and implement our
self-management
program. For an illustration of our organizational structure
upon the completion of our transition to a self-management
program, please see Organizational Structure below.
At the commencement of this offering we had minimal assets and
operations and we did not believe that it was efficient at that
time to engage our own internal management team. As of
March 13, 2009, we had acquired 43 geographically diverse
properties and other real estate related assets for a total
purchase price of $1,000,520,000. As a result of our growth and
success, our board of directors believes that we now have the
critical mass required to support a self-management structure.
Our board of directors believes that
self-management
will enable us to better position our company for success in the
future for several reasons discussed below:
Management Team. We believe that our
management team, led by Mr. Peters, has the experience and
expertise to efficiently and effectively operate our company. In
addition, as previously reported in Supplement No. 2 dated
January 30, 2009, we have hired a Chief Accounting Officer,
Kellie S. Pruitt. We have also hired a Controller, Kelly Hogan,
and other personnel. We have also engaged Mark Engstrom as an
independent consultant to serve as our acquisition and asset
manager, and we expect to hire Mr. Engstrom as our
full-time employee in the future. For more information regarding
Ms. Hogan and Mr. Engstrom, please see
Biographical Information for New Employee and New
Independent Consultant below. We intend to continue to
hire additional employees and engage independent consultants to
expand our self-management infrastructure, assist in our
transition to a self-managed company and fulfill other
responsibilities, including acquisitions, accounting, asset
management, strategic investing and corporate and securities
compliance. Mr. Peters is leading our transition to a
self-management structure. Our internal management team, led by
Mr. Peters, will manage our day-to-day operations and
oversee and supervise our employees and third party service
providers, who will be retained on an as-needed basis. All key
personnel will report directly to Mr. Peters.
Governance. An integral part of our
self-management program is our experienced board of directors.
The board provides effective ongoing governance for our company
and spends a substantial amount of time overseeing our
transition to self-management. Our governance and management
framework is one of our key strengths.
Significantly Reduced Cost. From inception
through September 30, 2008, we incurred to our advisor and
its affiliates approximately $26,796,000 in acquisition fees;
approximately $6,302,000 in asset management fees; approximately
$2,188,000 in property management fees; and approximately
$1,088,000 in leasing fees. Although we will incur the costs
associated with having our own employees and independent
consultants and we expect third party property management
expenses and third party acquisition expenses, including legal
fees, due diligence fees and closing costs, to remain
approximately the same as under external management, we believe
that the total cost of the self-management program will be
substantially less than the cost of external management. While
our board of directors, including a majority of our independent
directors, previously determined that the fees to our advisor
were fair, competitive and commercially reasonable to us and on
terms and conditions not less favorable to us than those
available from unaffiliated third parties, we believe that by
having our own employees and independent consultants manage our
operations and retain third party service providers, we will
significantly reduce the cost structure of our company.
No Internalization Fees. Unlike many other
non-listed REITs that internalize or pay to acquire various
management functions and personnel, such as advisory and asset
management services, from their sponsor or advisor prior to
listing on a national securities exchange for substantial fees,
we will not be required to pay such fees under our
self-management program. We believe that by not paying such
fees, as well as operating more cost-effectively under our
self-management program, we will save a substantial amount of
money. To the
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extent that our management and board of directors determine that
utilizing third party service providers for certain services is
more cost-effective than conducting such services internally, we
will pay for these services based on negotiated terms and
conditions consistent with the current marketplace for such
services on an
as-needed
basis.
Funding of Self-Management. We believe that
the cost of the self-management program will be substantially
less than the cost of external management. Therefore, although
we are incurring additional costs now related to our transition
to self-management, we expect the cost of the self-management
program to be effectively funded by future cost savings.
Pursuant to the amended advisory agreement, we have already
reduced acquisition fees and asset management fees payable to
our advisor, which we believe will result in substantial cost
savings. In addition, we anticipate that we will achieve further
cost savings in the future as a result of reduced
and/or
eliminated acquisition fees, asset management fees,
internalization fees and other outside fees.
Dedicated Management and Increased
Accountability. Under our self-management
program, our officers and employees will only work for our
company and will not be associated with any outside advisor. Our
management team, led by Mr. Peters, has direct oversight of
employees, independent consultants and third party service
providers on an ongoing basis. We believe that these direct
reporting relationships along with our performance-based
compensation programs and ongoing oversight by our management
team create an environment for and will achieve increased
accountability and efficiency.
Conflicts of Interest. We believe that
self-management works to remove inherent conflicts of interest
that necessarily exist between an externally advised REIT and
its advisor. The elimination or reduction of these inherent
conflicts of interest is one of the major reasons that we
elected to proceed with the
self-management
program.
In connection with our transition to self-management, we have
established a new corporate office. The address of our new
office is The Promenade, 16427 North Scottsdale Road,
Suite 440, Scottsdale, Arizona 85254 and our telephone
number at that address is
(480) 998-3478.
We anticipate that upon or prior to the completion of our
transition to self-management, this office will serve as our
principal executive office. Upon the completion of our
transition to self-management, we intend to change our name to
Healthcare Trust of America, Inc.
Update to
Risk Factors
The Risk Factors section of the prospectus is hereby
supplemented by the following additional section and risk
factors:
Risks
Associated with Our Transition to Self-Management
As we
transition to self-management, our success is increasingly
dependent on the performance of our board of directors and our
Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer and
President.
As we transition to self-management, our ability to achieve our
investment objectives and to pay distributions is increasingly
dependent upon the performance of our board of directors, Scott
D. Peters, our Chairman of the Board, Chief Executive Officer
and President, and our employees, in the identification and
acquisition of investments, the determination of any financing
arrangements, the asset management of our investments and
operation of our day-to-day activities. You will have no
opportunity to evaluate the terms of transactions or other
economic or financial data concerning our investments that are
not described in this prospectus or other periodic filings with
the SEC. We rely primarily on the management ability of our
Chief Executive Officer and the governance of our board of
directors. We do not have any key man life insurance on
Mr. Peters. We have entered into an employment agreement
for a term beginning November 1, 2008 to November 1,
2010 with Mr. Peters, but the employment agreement contains
various termination rights. If we were to lose the benefit of
his experience, efforts and abilities, our operating results
could suffer. In addition, if any member of our board of
directors were to resign, we would lose the benefit of such
directors
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governance and experience. As a result of the foregoing, we may
be unable to achieve our investment objectives or to pay
distributions to our stockholders.
We are
transitioning to be a self-managed company and we may not be
successful in hiring additional employees and/or third party
service providers, which could impact our ability to achieve our
investment objectives.
We currently have a full-time Chief Executive Officer and
President, Scott D. Peters, a Chief Accounting Officer, Kellie
S. Pruitt, a Controller, Kelly Hogan, and other personnel. We
have also engaged Mark Engstrom as an independent consultant to
serve as our acquisition and asset manager, and we expect to
hire Mr. Engstrom as our full-time employee in the future.
We intend to engage additional employees and independent
consultants. We may also outsource certain services, including
property management, to third parties. As we continue to
implement our self-management program, we will rely less on our
advisor and will increasingly rely on our board of directors,
Mr. Peters and our other employees and consultants to
manage our investments and operate our day-to-day activities. If
we are unsuccessful in hiring additional employees or engaging
consultants and other third parties to provide services to us,
or if our employees and consultants and the additional employees
that we hire or consultants and third parties we engage do not
perform at the level we expect, our ability to achieve our
investment objectives and pay distributions to you could suffer.
After
the termination or expiration of our amended advisory agreement
and upon the completion of our transition to a self-management
program, we will not be able to rely on our advisor to manage
our operations, which could adversely impact our ability to
achieve our investment objectives and pay distributions to our
stockholders.
We are currently transitioning to a self-management program,
which means that when our amended advisory agreement expires or
is terminated, we do not intend to renew such agreement with our
advisor or engage a successor advisor; provided the parties may
mutually agree to specified service arrangements. As we continue
to implement our self-management program, our advisor will have
a more limited role in managing our business and operations.
After the termination or expiration of the amended advisory
agreement, we will not be able to rely on our advisor to provide
services to us, including asset management services, property
management services and investor relations services. In
addition, the amended advisory agreement provides that after
termination or expiration, upon the request of our advisor, we
cannot use the name Grubb & Ellis. Upon
the completion of our transition to self-management, we intend
to change our name to Healthcare Trust of America,
Inc. We will rely on our board of directors,
Mr. Peters and our management team, as well as third party
service providers, to identify and acquire future investments
for us, determine any financing arrangements, manage our
investments and operate our day-to-day activities. If we are not
successful in hiring additional employees, engaging independent
consultants or finding third parties to manage our operations,
our ability to achieve our investment objectives and pay
distributions to you could suffer.
In
connection with our transition to self-management, we may be
required to provide notice or obtain the consent of certain of
our lenders, and our failure to obtain any required consents
could result in a default under our loan
documents.
We may be required to provide notice to,
and/or
obtain consent from, certain of our lenders in connection with
our transition to self-management. To the extent that we are
required to obtain the consent of a lender and such lender does
not provide consent, then in the event that we are otherwise
unable to amend, refinance or pay off the applicable loan, we
may be in default under the loan documents. Such default would
afford the applicable lender the right to exercise the remedies
available to it under the loan documents, including the right to
accelerate the repayment of the loan. To the extent that any of
our loan repayments are accelerated, we may have difficulty,
particularly given the current status of the credit markets,
obtaining replacement financing, or alternatively, the
replacement financing we may obtain may not be on terms as
advantageous as the terms of our current financing arrangements.
In addition, any acceleration of any of our debt without
replacement financing may leave us with insufficient cash to pay
the distributions that we are required to pay to maintain our
qualification as a REIT and could have a significant, negative
impact on your investment.
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The risk factor entitled Our success is dependent on the
performance of our sponsor included under Risk
Factors Risks Related to Our Business in the
prospectus is hereby updated with the following:
Until
the termination or expiration of the amended advisory agreement,
our success is dependent in part on the performance of our
advisor, which is a subsidiary of our sponsor.
Until the termination or expiration of the amended advisory
agreement, our ability to achieve our investment objectives and
to pay distributions is dependent in part upon the performance
of our advisor, which is a subsidiary of our sponsor,
Grubb & Ellis Company, or Grubb & Ellis.
Grubb & Ellis has reported that due to the disruptions
in the credit markets, the severe and extended general economic
recession, and the significant decline in the commercial real
estate market in 2008, it anticipates that it will report a
significant decline in operating earnings and net income for the
fourth calendar quarter of 2008 as compared to the fourth
quarter of 2007 and for the year ended December 31, 2008 as
compared to the year ended December 31, 2007. In addition,
Grubb & Ellis anticipates that it will recognize
significant impairment charges to goodwill, impairments on the
value of real estate assets held as investments, and additional
charges related to its activities as a sponsor of investment
programs in the quarter ended December 31, 2008.
Grubb & Ellis has also reported that it is restating
certain of its previously issued financial statements. To the
extent that any of the foregoing or any other matters related to
our sponsor impact the performance of our advisor, our results
of operations, financial condition and ability to pay
distributions to our stockholders could also suffer.
Biographical
Information for New Employee and New Independent
Consultant
As noted above in Update Regarding Our Transition to
Self-Management, we have hired a Controller, Kelly Hogan,
and have also engaged Mark Engstrom as an independent consultant
to serve as our acquisition and asset manager.
Kelly Hogan, age 30, has served as our Controller
since February 2009. From 2002 to 2008, she served as an Audit
Manager at Deloitte & Touche LLP, in both their
Phoenix and Minneapolis offices, where she performed financial
statement audits of both public and privately held companies and
spent three of those years as an Audit Manager of a publicly
registered REIT. Prior to joining Deloitte & Touche
LLP in 2002, Ms. Hogan served as an Accountant at Arthur
Andersen from 2000 to 2002. She graduated cum laude from
the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul, Minnesota with a B.A.
degree in Accounting. Ms. Hogan is a Certified Public
Accountant licensed in Arizona and Minnesota.
Mark Engstrom, age 49, has served as our independent
consultant since February 2009. Mr. Engstrom provides
acquisition and asset management support, and we expect to hire
Mr. Engstrom as a full-time employee in the future.
Mr. Engstrom has 22 years of experience in
organizational leadership, acquisitions, management, asset
management, project management, leasing, planning, facilities
development, financing, and establishing industry leading real
estate and facilities groups. From 2006 through 2009,
Mr. Engstrom was the Chief Executive Officer of Insite
Medical Properties, a real estate services and investment
company. From 2001 through 2005, Mr. Engstrom served as a
Manager of Real Estate Services for Hammes Company and created a
new business unit within the company which was responsible for
providing asset and property management. Mr. Engstrom
graduated in 1983 from Michigan State University with a Bachelor
of Arts degree in Pre-Law and Public Administration. In 1987 he
graduated with a Masters Degree in Hospital and Healthcare
Administration from the University of Minnesota.
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Organizational
Structure
The chart included on page 9 of our prospectus dated
December 3, 2008 shows our current organizational
structure. The following chart shows our structure upon the
completion of our transition to self-management:
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Grubb & Ellis Healthcare REIT Advisor, LLC owns less
than a 0.01% interest in our company and in our operating
partnership. |
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