Whitestone REIT attracts takeover interest, faces proxy fights, sources say

Industry:    24 hours ago

Private equity firms including Blackstone and TPG have ​expressed interest in buying shopping center operator Whitestone REIT, three people familiar with the matter ‌told Reuters.

Houston-headquartered Whitestone, which acquires, owns, operates and develops open-air retail centers, has hired Bank of America to oversee the proceedings, the sources said. Its shopping centers are located in Phoenix, as well as in Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, San Antonio and Austin, Texas.

News ​of the sales process comes just weeks after the company was notified that it now faces two ​proxy fights for board seats and months after it received a takeover bid from ⁠a major shareholder, the sources said. It has yet to respond to the takeover bid, the sources said.

Whitestone ​did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The private equity firms have signed confidentiality agreements with the company, ​allowing them to review documents and receive other information to shape a potential bid, the sources said.

There is no guarantee, however, that the firms will submit bids or that a sale will occur.

Blackstone, TPG and Bank of America declined to comment.

Whitestone has faced ​pressure from shareholders for years as several top 10 investors criticized the company’s cost structure and governance. Several ​shareholders have said privately that the company, which focuses largely on renting to local businesses like nail salons instead of national ‌chains that ⁠often anchor centers, should be privately held instead of publicly listed.

In January, Emmett Investment Management, which owned roughly 2.5% of Whitestone at the end of 2025 according to LSEG data, nominated four director candidates to replace the majority of the six-member board.

Emmett, a New York-based investment firm run by Alexander Rohr, hinted at a possible proxy fight ​six months ago and its ​decision to nominate in ⁠2026 has not been previously reported. Emmett also nominated candidates for election in 2025. A representative for Emmett declined to comment.

Also in early January, former Whitestone CEO James ​Mastandrea said publicly that he would nominate six candidates to replace the current board. ​A representative ⁠for Mastandrea did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Separately, leading commercial real estate developer and investment management firm MCB Real Estate, which owns more than 9% of Whitestone, offered to buy the company at $15.20 a share in November ⁠and ​said publicly in early January that the company had not responded to ​the offer.

The November offer was the second time MCB offered to buy Whitestone. A representative for MCB declined to comment.

Whitestone’s stock price closed ​at $14.98 on Thursday, valuing the company at roughly $763 million.

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