þ
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ANNUAL
REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF
1934
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¨
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TRANSITION
REPORT PURSUANT TO SECTION 13 OR 15(d) OF THE SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF
1934
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NEVADA
(State
or other jurisdiction of incorporation or organization)
500
Citadel Drive, Suite 300
Commerce,
CA
(Address
of principal executive offices)
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95-3885184
(I.R.S.
Employer Identification Number)
90040
(Zip
Code)
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Title
of each class
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Name
of each exchange on which registered
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Class
A Nonvoting Common Stock, $0.01 par value
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American
Stock Exchange
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Class
B Voting Common Stock, $0.01 par value
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American
Stock Exchange
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·
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the
development, ownership and operation of multiplex cinemas in the United
States, Australia, and New Zealand;
and
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·
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the
development, ownership, and operation of retail and commercial real estate
in Australia, New Zealand, and the United States, including
entertainment-themed retail centers (“ETRCs”) in Australia and New Zealand
and live theater assets in Manhattan and Chicago in the United
States.
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·
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interests
in 44 cinemas comprising some 286
screens;
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·
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fee
ownership of approximately 1.1 million square feet of developed commercial
real estate, and approximately 15.3 million square feet of land (including
approximately 5.2 million square feet of land held for development),
located principally in urbanized areas of Australia, New Zealand and the
United States;
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·
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cash,
cash equivalents and investments in marketable securities aggregating
$20.8 million;
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·
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a
25% interest in the limited liability company that developed Place 57, the 36-story, 68-residential
unit mixed use condominium project on 57th Street near 3rd Avenue in
Manhattan, the principal remaining asset of which is approximately 3,700
square feet of retail space on the ground floor of that building onto 57th
Street;
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·
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an
approximately 20% interest in BGL, described above;
and
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·
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an
18.4% interest in Malulani Investments Limited (“MIL”), a private Hawaiian
corporation whose assets consist primarily of real estate, including
approximately 22,000 acres of land (a portion of which is improved with
the Guenoc Winery and vineyards), located in Napa and Lake Counties, in
California.
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·
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first,
notwithstanding the enormous advances that have been made in home
entertainment technology, humans are essentially social beings, and will
continue to want to go beyond the home for their entertainment, provided
that the they are offered clean, comfortable and convenient facilities,
with state of the art technology;
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|
·
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second,
cinemas can be used as anchors for larger retail developments, and our
involvement in the cinema business can give us an advantage over other
real estate developers or redevelopers who must identify and negotiate
exclusively with third party anchor
tenants;
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·
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third,
pure cinema operators can get themselves into financial difficulty as
demands upon them to produce cinema based earnings growth tempt them into
reinvesting their cash flow into increasingly marginal cinema
sites. While we believe that there will continue to be
attractive cinema acquisition opportunities in the future, and believe
that we have taken advantage of one such opportunity through our purchase
of Consolidated Cinemas, we do not feel pressure to build or acquire
cinemas for the sake of simply adding on units, and intend to focus our
cash flow on our real estate development and operating activities, to the
extent that attractive cinema opportunities are not available to us;
and
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·
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fourth,
we are never afraid to convert an entertainment property to another use,
if that is a higher and better use of our property, or to sell individual
assets, if we are presented with an attractive opportunity. Our
former Sutton Theater, for example, provided the real estate base for our
Place 57 development.
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Wholly
Owned
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Consolidated1
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Unconsolidated2
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Managed3
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Totals
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Australia
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16
cinemas
120
screens
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3
cinemas
16
screens
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1
cinema4
16
screens
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None
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20
cinemas
152
screens
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New
Zealand
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9
cinemas
48
screens
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None
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6
cinemas5
30
screens
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None
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15
cinemas
78
screens
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United
States
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6
cinemas
41
screens
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1
cinema6
6
screens
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None
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2
cinemas
9
screens
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9
cinemas
56
screens
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Totals
without Consolidated Cinemas
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31
cinemas
209
screens
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4
cinemas
22
screens
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7
cinemas
46
screens
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2
cinemas
9
screens
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44
cinemas
286
screens
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Consolidated
Cinemas
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14
cinemas
173
screens
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None
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None
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1
cinemas
8
screens
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15
cinemas
181
screens
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Totals
with Consolidated Cinemas
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45
cinemas
382
screens
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4
cinemas
22
screens
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7
cinemas
46
screens
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3
cinemas
17
screens
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59
cinemas
467
screens
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·
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first,
modern stadium seating multiplex cinemas featuring conventional film
product;
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·
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second,
specialty and art cinemas, such as our Angelika Film Centers in Manhattan
and Dallas and the Rialto cinema chain in New Zealand;
and
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·
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third,
in some markets, particularly small town markets that will not support the
development of a modern stadium design multiplex cinema, conventional
sloped floor cinemas.
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·
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the
ownership of fee or long term leasehold interests in properties used in
our cinema exhibition and live theater activities or which were acquired
in anticipation of the development of cinemas or
ETRCs;
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·
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the
acquisition of fee interests for the development of cinemas or ETRCs;
and
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·
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the
redevelopment of existing cinema sites to their highest and best
use.
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December 31,
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||||||||
2007
|
2006
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|||||||
Australia
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$ | 90,956 | $ | 86,317 | ||||
New
Zealand
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44,030 | 38,772 | ||||||
United
States
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43,188 | 45,578 | ||||||
Property
and equipment
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$ | 178,174 | $ | 170,667 |
December 31,
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||||||||||||
2007
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2006
|
2005
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||||||||||
Australia
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$ | 63,657 | $ | 53,434 | $ | 47,181 | ||||||
New
Zealand
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24,371 | 21,230 | 20,179 | |||||||||
United
States
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31,207 | 31,461 | 30,745 | |||||||||
Total
Revenues
|
$ | 119,235 | $ | 106,125 | $ | 98,105 |
Net
Assets
|
||||
Reading
Australia
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$ | 81,318 | ||
Reading
New Zealand
|
71,214 | |||
Net
Assets
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$ | 152,532 |
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·
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as
to when it will be available on an economically attractive
basis;
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·
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as
to who will pay for the conversion from conventional to digital technology
between exhibitors and
distributors;
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·
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as
to what the impact will be on film licensing expense;
and
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·
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as
to how to deal with security and potential pirating issues if film is
distributed in a digital format.
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·
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The identification and
acquisition of suitable development
properties. Competition for suitable development
properties is intense. Our ability to identify and acquire
development properties may be limited by our size and
resources. Also, as we and our affiliates are considered to be
“foreign owned” for purposes of certain Australia and New Zealand
statutes, we have been in the past, and may in the future be, subject to
regulations that are not applicable to other persons doing business in
those countries.
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·
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The procurement of necessary
land use entitlements for the project. This process can
take many years, particularly if opposed by competing
interests. Competitors and community groups (sometimes funded
by such competitors) may object based on various factors including, for
example, impacts on density, parking, traffic, noise levels and the
historic or architectural nature of the building being
replaced. If they are unsuccessful at the local governmental
level, they may seek recourse to the courts or other
tribunals. This can delay projects and increase
costs.
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·
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The construction of the
project on time and on budget. Construction risks
include the availability and cost of finance; the availability and costs
of material and labor, the costs of dealing with unknown site conditions
(including addressing pollution or environmental wastes deposited upon the
property by prior owners), inclement weather conditions, and the ever
present potential for labor related
disruptions.
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·
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The leasing or sell-out of the
project. Ultimately, there are the risks involved in the
leasing of a rental property or the sale of condominium or built-for-sale
property. Leasing or sale can be influenced by economic factors
that are neither known nor knowable at the commencement of the development
process and by local, national, and even international economic
conditions, both real and
perceived.
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·
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The refinancing of completed
properties. Properties are often developed using
relatively short-term loans. Upon completion of the project, it
may be necessary to find replacement financing for these
loans. This process involves risk as to the availability of
such permanent or other take-out financing, the interest rates, and the
payment terms applicable to such financing, which may be adversely
influenced by local, national, or international factors. To
date, we have been successful in negotiating development loans with roll
over or other provisions mitigating our need to refinance immediately upon
completion of construction.
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·
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Risk of currency
fluctuations. While we report our earnings and assets in
US dollars, substantial portions of our revenues and of our obligations
are denominated in either Australian or New Zealand
dollars. The value of these currencies can vary significantly
compared to the US dollar and compared to each other. We
typically have not hedged against these currency fluctuations, but rather
have relied upon the natural hedges that exist as a result of the fact
that our film costs are typically fixed as a percentage of box office, and
our local operating costs and obligations are likewise typically
denominated in local currencies.
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·
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Risk of adverse government
regulation. At the present time, we believe that
relations between the United States, Australia, and New Zealand are
good. However, no assurances can be given that this
relationship will continue and that Australia and New Zealand will not in
the future seek to regulate more highly the business done by US companies
in their countries.
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Aggregate
Square Footage
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Approximate
Range of Remaining Lease Terms (including renewals)
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|
United
States
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339,000
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5 –
42 years
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Australia
|
869,000
|
29
– 40 years
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New
Zealand
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402,000
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5 –
10 years
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|
·
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the
Minetta Lane (399 seats);
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|
·
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the
Orpheum (364 seats); and
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·
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the
Union Square (499 seats).
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·
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in
Australia, we own a 66% unincorporated joint venture interest in a leased
5-screen multiplex cinema in Melbourne, a 75% interest in a subsidiary
company that leases two cinemas with eleven screens in two Australian
country towns, and a 33% unincorporated joint venture interest in a
16-screen leasehold cinema in a suburb of
Brisbane.
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·
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in
New Zealand, we own a 50% unincorporated joint venture interest in an
eight-screen mainstream cinema in a suburb of Auckland and we own a 50%
unincorporated joint venture interest in five cinemas with 22 screens in
the New Zealand cities of Auckland, Christchurch, Wellington, Dunedin, and
Hamilton.
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·
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in
the United States, we own a 50% membership interest in Angelika Film
Center, LLC, which holds the lease to the approximately 17,000 square foot
Angelika Film Center & Café in the Soho district of
Manhattan. We also hold the management rights with respect to
this asset. We also own a 75% managing member
interest in the limited liability company that owns our Cinemas 1, 2 &
3 property.
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·
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the
site is the largest undeveloped parcel of land in the Burwood Heights
“major activity centre” and the largest undeveloped parcel of land in any
“major activity centre” in Victoria. Approximately 430,000
people live within five miles of the site, which is well served by both
public transit and surface streets. We estimate that
approximately 70,000 people pass by the site each
day.
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·
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we
anticipate that the project will be built in phases, over a significant
period of years, and will not likely be completed before sometime in
2015. The initial phase, however, will likely be an ETRC, as
this is the area of development and construction with which we are most
familiar.
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·
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we
do not currently have any funding in place for the development, and are
paying for current master planning activities out of cash flow and working
capital. The permitted uses outlined in the rezoning for the
site are being defined through a Development Plan Overlay review by local
government. We currently estimate that complete build-out of
the site will require funding in the range of $500.0 million (AUS$570.0
million).
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·
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our
original cost basis in the site is approximately $4.2 million (AUS$5.3
million). The property was originally acquired in 1996, but was
revalued upward in connection with our Consolidation in 2001, which was
treated as a purchase for accounting purposes. This revaluation
was made prior to the designation of the site as a “major activity center”
in 2004. The current book value of this property under
construction is $42.0 million (AUS$47.8
million).
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·
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We
are currently working to refine our entitlements for the site, with the
intention of increasing densities to commercially reasonable
levels.
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·
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as
the property was used by its prior owner as a brickworks, it has been
necessary to remove or encapsulate the contaminated soil that resulted
from those operations from the site before it can be used for
mixed-use
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retail,
entertainment, commercial and residential purposes. During
2007, we conducted further testing on the site and developed a plan to
address these environmental concerns. Substantially all of the
contaminated soil slated for removal has now been removed. As
of December 31, 2007, we estimate that the total site preparation costs
associated with the removal of this contaminated soil will be $7.9 million
(AUS$9.0 million) and accordingly are not, in our view, material to the
overall projected development costs for the
project.
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Property1
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Square
Feet of Improvements
(rental/entertainment)
|
Percentage
Leased
|
Gross
Book Value
(in
U.S. Dollars)
|
Auburn
100
Parramatta Road
Auburn,
NSW, Australia
|
57,000
/ 57,000
Plus
an 871-space subterranean parking structure
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71%
|
$31,380,000
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Belmont
Knutsford
Ave and Fulham St
Belmont,
WA, Australia
|
19,000
/ 49,000
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80%
|
$13,263,000
|
Cinemas
1, 2 & 32
1003
Third Avenue
Manhattan,
NY, USA
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0 /
24,000
|
N/A
|
$23,674,000
|
Courtenay
Central
100
Courtenay Place
Wellington,
New Zealand
|
38,000
/ 68,000
Plus
a 245,000 square foot parking structure
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76%
|
$24,343,000
|
Invercargill
Cinema
29
Dee Street
Invercargill,
New Zealand
|
7,000
/ 20,000
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85%
|
$2,996,000
|
Maitland
Cinema
Ken
Tubman Drive
Maitland,
NSW, Australia
|
0 /
22,000
|
N/A
|
$2,088,000
|
Minetta
Lane Theatre
18-22
Minetta Lane
Manhattan,
NY, USA
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0 /
9,000
|
N/A
|
$8,228,000
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Napier
Cinema
154
Station Street
Napier,
New Zealand
|
5,000
/ 18,000
|
100%
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$3,102,000
|
Newmarket3
Newmarket,
QLD, Australia
|
93,000
/ 0
|
99%
|
$37,874,000
|
Orpheum
Theatre
126
2nd
Street
Manhattan,
NY, USA
|
0 /
5,000
|
N/A
|
$3,256,000
|
Royal
George
1633
N. Halsted Street
Chicago,
IL, USA
|
37,000
/ 23,000
Plus
21,000 square feet of parking
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91%
|
$3,306,000
|
Rotorua
Cinema
1281
Eruera Street
Rotorua,
New Zealand
|
0 /
19,000
|
N/A
|
$2,827,000
|
Union
Square Theatre
100
E. 17th
Street
Manhattan,
NY, USA
|
21,000
/ 17,000
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100%
|
$8,971,000
|
Property1
|
Square
Footage
(rental/entertainment)
|
Percentage
Leased
|
Gross
Book Value
(in
U.S. Dollars)
|
Manville
|
0 /
63,000
|
N/A
|
$1,642,000
|
Tower
|
0 /
16,000
|
N/A
|
$ 151,000
|
Village
East
|
5,000
/ 37,000
|
100%
|
$2,589,000
|
Waurn
Ponds
|
6,000
/ 52,000
|
100%
|
$6,177,000
|
|
·
|
by
the following vote, our eight directors were reelected to serve on the
Board of Directors until the 2008 Annual Meeting of
Stockholders:
|
Election
of Directors
|
For
|
Withheld
|
James
J. Cotter
|
1,117,201
|
28
|
Eric
Barr
|
1,117,201
|
28
|
James
J. Cotter, Jr.
|
1,117,201
|
28
|
Margaret
Cotter
|
1,117,201
|
28
|
William
D. Gould
|
1,117,201
|
28
|
Edward
L. Kane
|
1,117,201
|
28
|
Gerard
P. Laheney
|
1,117,201
|
28
|
Alfred
Villaseñor
|
1,117,201
|
28
|
(a)
|
Market Price of and
Dividends on the Registrant’s Common Equity and Related Stockholder
Matters
|
Class
A Nonvoting
|
Class
B Voting
|
||||||||||||||||
Common Stock
|
Common Stock
|
||||||||||||||||
High
|
Low
|
High
|
Low
|
||||||||||||||
2007:
|
Fourth
Quarter
|
$ | 10.22 | $ | 9.60 | $ | 10.50 | $ | 10.00 | ||||||||
Third
Quarter
|
$ | 10.64 | $ | 9.53 | $ | 10.75 | $ | 9.40 | |||||||||
Second
Quarter
|
$ | 9.34 | $ | 8.35 | $ | 9.57 | $ | 8.30 | |||||||||
First
Quarter
|
$ | 8.70 | $ | 8.18 | $ | 8.50 | $ | 8.00 | |||||||||
2006:
|
Fourth
Quarter
|
$ | 8.53 | $ | 7.77 | $ | 8.35 | $ | 7.65 | ||||||||
Third
Quarter
|
$ | 8.18 | $ | 7.75 | $ | 8.00 | $ | 7.35 | |||||||||
Second
Quarter
|
$ | 8.42 | $ | 7.89 | $ | 8.35 | $ | 7.50 | |||||||||
First
Quarter
|
$ | 8.62 | $ | 7.50 | $ | 8.60 | $ | 7.30 |
(b)
|
Recent Sales of
Unregistered Securities; Use of Proceeds from Registered
Securities
|
(c)
|
Purchases of Equity
Securities by the Issuer and Affiliated
Purchasers
|
At or for the Year Ended December
31,
|
||||||||||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
2003
|
||||||||||||||||
Revenue
|
$ | 119,235 | $ | 106,125 | $ | 98,105 | $ | 84,089 | $ | 73,911 | ||||||||||
Gain
(loss) from discontinued operations
|
$ | 1,912 | $ | -- | $ | 12,231 | $ | (469 | ) | $ | (288 | ) | ||||||||
Operating
income (loss)
|
$ | 5,149 | $ | 2,415 | $ | (6,372 | ) | $ | (6,322 | ) | $ | (5,839 | ) | |||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | (2,103 | ) | $ | 3,856 | $ | 989 | $ | (8,463 | ) | $ | (5,928 | ) | |||||||
Basic
earnings (loss) per share – continuing operations
|
$ | (0.18 | ) | $ | 0.17 | $ | (0.51 | ) | $ | (0.37 | ) | $ | (0.26 | ) | ||||||
Basic
earnings (loss) per share – discontinued operations
|
$ | 0.09 | $ | -- | $ | 0.55 | $ | (0.02 | ) | $ | (0.01 | ) | ||||||||
Basic
earnings (loss) per share
|
$ | (0.09 | ) | $ | 0.17 | $ | 0.04 | $ | (0.39 | ) | $ | (0.27 | ) | |||||||
Diluted
earnings (loss) per share – continuing operations
|
$ | (0.18 | ) | $ | 0.17 | $ | (0.51 | ) | $ | (0.37 | ) | $ | (0.26 | ) | ||||||
Diluted
earnings (loss) per share – discontinued operations
|
$ | 0.09 | $ | -- | $ | 0.55 | $ | (0.02 | ) | $ | (0.01 | ) | ||||||||
Diluted
earnings (loss) per share
|
$ | (0.09 | ) | $ | 0.17 | $ | 0.04 | $ | (0.39 | ) | $ | (0.27 | ) | |||||||
Other
Information:
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Shares
outstanding
|
22,482,605 | 22,476,355 | 22,485,948 | 21,998,239 | 21,899,290 | |||||||||||||||
Weighted
average shares outstanding
|
22,478,145 | 22,425,941 | 22,249,967 | 21,948,065 | 21,860,222 | |||||||||||||||
Weighted
average dilutive shares outstanding
|
22,478,145 | 22,674,818 | 22,249,967 | 21,948,065 | 21,860,222 | |||||||||||||||
Total
assets
|
$ | 346,071 | $ | 289,231 | $ | 253,057 | $ | 230,227 | $ | 222,866 | ||||||||||
Total
debt
|
$ | 177,195 | $ | 130,212 | $ | 109,320 | $ | 72,879 | $ | 60,765 | ||||||||||
Working
capital (deficit)
|
$ | 6,345 | $ | (6,997 | ) | $ | (14,282 | ) | $ | (6,915 | ) | $ | (154 | ) | ||||||
Stockholders’
equity
|
$ | 121,362 | $ | 107,659 | $ | 99,404 | $ | 102,010 | $ | 108,491 | ||||||||||
EBIT
|
$ | 8,098 | $ | 12,734 | $ | 6,671 | $ | (4,339 | ) | $ | (2,650 | ) | ||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
$ | 11,921 | $ | 13,212 | $ | 12,384 | $ | 11,823 | $ | 10,952 | ||||||||||
Add: Adjustments
for discontinued operations
|
$ | -- | $ | -- | $ | 567 | $ | 1,915 | $ | 1,907 | ||||||||||
EBITDA
|
$ | 20,019 | $ | 25,946 | $ | 19,622 | $ | 9,399 | $ | 10,209 | ||||||||||
Debt
to EBITDA
|
8.85 | 5.02 | 5.57 | 7.75 | 5.95 | |||||||||||||||
Capital
expenditure (including acquisitions)
|
$ | 42,414 | $ | 16,389 | $ | 53,954 | $ | 33,180 | $ | 5,809 | ||||||||||
Number
of employees at 12/31
|
1,383 | 1,451 | 1,523 | 1,677 | 1,453 |
|
·
|
since
we operate in multiple tax jurisdictions, we find EBIT removes the impact
of the varying tax rates and tax regimes in the jurisdictions in which we
operate.
|
|
·
|
in
addition, we find EBIT useful as a financial measure that removes the
impact from our effective tax rate of factors not directly related to our
business operations, such as, whether we have acquired operating assets by
purchasing those assets directly, or indirectly by purchasing the stock of
a company that might hold such operating
assets.
|
|
·
|
the
use of EBIT as a financial measure also (i) removes the impact of tax
timing differences which may vary from time to time and from jurisdiction
to jurisdiction, (ii) allows us to compare our performance to that
achieved by other companies, and (iii) is useful as a financial measure
that removes the impact of our historically significant net loss
carryforwards.
|
|
·
|
the
elimination of net interest expense helps us to compare our operating
performance to those companies that may have more or less debt than we
do.
|
|
·
|
we
believe that EBITDA is an industry comparative measure of financial
performance. It is, in our experience, a measure commonly used
by analysts and financial commentators who report on the cinema exhibition
and real estate industries and a measure used by financial institutions in
underwriting the creditworthiness of companies in these
industries. Accordingly, our management monitors this
calculation as a method of judging our performance against our peers and
market expectations and our
creditworthiness.
|
|
·
|
also,
analysts, financial commentators, and persons active in the cinema
exhibition and real estate industries typically value enterprises engaged
in these businesses at various multiples of
EBITDA. Accordingly, we find EBITDA valuable as an indicator of
the underlying value of our
businesses.
|
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
2004
|
2003
|
||||||||||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | (2,103 | ) | $ | 3,856 | $ | 989 | $ | (8,463 | ) | $ | (5,928 | ) | |||||||
Add: Interest
expense, net
|
8,163 | 6,608 | 4,473 | 3,078 | 2,567 | |||||||||||||||
Add: Income
tax expense
|
2,038 | 2,270 | 1,209 | 1,046 | 711 | |||||||||||||||
EBIT
|
$ | 8,098 | $ | 12,734 | $ | 6,671 | $ | (4,339 | ) | $ | (2,650 | ) | ||||||||
Add:Depreciation
and amortization
|
11,921 | 13,212 | 12,384 | 11,823 | 10,952 | |||||||||||||||
Adjustments
for discontinued operations:
|
||||||||||||||||||||
Add: Interest
expense, net
|
-- | -- | 310 | 839 | 856 | |||||||||||||||
Add: Depreciation
and amortization
|
-- | -- | 257 | 1,076 | 1,051 | |||||||||||||||
EBITDA
|
$ | 20,019 | $ | 25,946 | $ | 19,622 | $ | 9,399 | $ | 10,209 |
|
·
|
the
development, ownership and operation of multiplex cinemas in the United
States, Australia, and New Zealand;
and
|
|
·
|
the
development, ownership, and operation of retail and commercial real estate
in Australia, New Zealand, and the United States, including
entertainment-themed retail centers (“ETRCs”) in Australia and New Zealand
and live theater assets in Manhattan and Chicago in the United
States.
|
|
·
|
in
the US, under the Reading, Angelika Film Center, Consolidated Amusements,
and City Cinemas brands;
|
|
·
|
in
Australia, under the Reading brand;
and
|
|
·
|
in
New Zealand, under the Reading, Berkeley Cinemas, and Rialto
brands.
|
|
·
|
directly
operated 35 cinemas with 231
screens;
|
|
·
|
had
interests in certain unconsolidated joint ventures in which we have
varying interests, which own an additional 7 cinemas with 46
screens;
|
|
·
|
managed
2 cinemas with 9 screens;
|
|
·
|
had
entered into an agreement for lease with respect to a new 8-screen cinema
currently under development in a regional shopping center located in a
fast growing suburban area in Australia. It is anticipated that
this cinema will open in March 2008;
and
|
|
·
|
our
Belmont, Western Australia ETRC, our Auburn, New South Wales ETRC and our
Wellington, New Zealand ETRC;
|
|
·
|
our
Newmarket shopping center in Newmarket, Queensland, a suburb of
Brisbane. The center is ultimately intended to be an ETRC, and
we recently obtained final government approvals for the construction of an
approximately 33,000 square foot cinema as a part of the
complex;
|
|
·
|
three
single auditorium live theaters in Manhattan (Minetta Lane, Orpheum, and
Union Square) and a four auditorium live theater complex in Chicago (The
Royal George) and, in the case of the Union Square and the Royal George
their accompanying ancillary retail and commercial
tenants;
|
|
·
|
a
New Zealand property rented to an unrelated third party, to be held for
current income and long-term
appreciation;
|
|
·
|
our
Lake Taupo property in New Zealand that is currently improved with a motel
which we are in the process of renovating its units to be
condominiums. A portion of this property includes unimproved
land that we do not intend to develop;
and
|
|
·
|
the
ancillary retail and commercial tenants at some of our non-ETRC cinema
properties.
|
|
·
|
Manukau
Land. On July 27, 2007, we purchased through a Landplan
Property Partners property trust a 64.0 acre parcel of undeveloped
agricultural real estate for approximately $9.3 million (NZ$12.1
million). We intend to rezone the property from its current
agricultural use to commercial use, and thereafter to redevelop the
property in accordance with its new zoning. No assurances can
be given that such rezoning will be achieved, or if achieved, that it will
occur in the near term.
|
|
·
|
New Zealand Commercial
Property. On June 29, 2007, we acquired a commercial
property for $5.9 million (NZ$7.6 million), rented to an unrelated third
party, to be held for current income and long-term
appreciation.
|
|
·
|
Cinemas 1, 2, & 3
Building. On June 28, 2007, we purchased the building
associated with our Cinemas 1, 2, & 3 for $100,000 from Sutton Hill
Capital (“SHC”). Our option to purchase that building has been
previously disclosed, and was granted to us by SHC at the time that we
acquired the underlying ground lease from SHC on June 1,
2005. As SHC is a related party to our corporation, our Board’s
Audit and Conflicts Committee, comprised entirely of outside independent
directors, and subsequently our entire Board of Directors unanimously
approved the purchase of the property. The Cinemas 1, 2 & 3
is located on 3rd Avenue between 59th and 60th
Streets.
|
|
·
|
Lake Taupo
Property. On February 14, 2007, we acquired, through a
Landplan Property Partners property trust, a 1.0 acre parcel of commercial
real estate for approximately $4.9 million (NZ$6.9
million). The property was improved with a motel, but we are
currently renovating the property’s units to be condominiums. A
portion of this property includes unimproved land that we do not intend to
develop. This land was determined to have a fair value of $1.8
million (NZ$2.6 million) at the time of purchase and is included on our
balance sheet as land held for sale. The remaining property and
its cost basis of $3.1 million (NZ$4.3 million) was included in property
under development. The operating activities of the motel are
not material.
|
|
·
|
Tower Ground
Lease. On February 8, 2007, we purchased the tenant’s
interest in the ground lease underlying the building lease for one of our
domestic cinemas for $493,000.
|
|
·
|
Indooroopilly
Land. On September 18, 2006, we purchased a 0.3 acre
property for $1.8 million (AUS$2.3 million) as part of our Landplan
Property Partners initiative. We have obtained approval to
develop the property to be a 28,000 square foot grade A commercial office
building comprising six floors of office space and two basement levels of
parking with 33 parking spaces. We expect to spend US$8.2
million (AUS$9.4 million) in development costs. We plan to
complete the project in December
2008.
|
|
·
|
Moonee Ponds
Land. On September 1, 2006, we purchased two parcels of
land aggregating 0.4 acres adjacent to our Moonee Ponds property for $2.5
million (AUS$3.3 million). This acquisition increases our
holdings at Moonee Ponds to 3.3 acres and gives us frontage facing the
principal transit station servicing the area. We are currently
working to finalize plans for the development of this property into a
mixed-use entertainment based retail and commercial
complex.
|
|
·
|
Malulani
Investments. On June 28, 2006, we acquired for $1.8
million, an 18.4% equity interest in Malulani Investments, Limited
(“MIL”), a closely held Hawaiian company which currently owns
approximately 763,000 square feet of developed commercial real estate
principally in California, Hawaii, and Texas, and approximately 22,000
acres of agricultural land in Northern California. Included
among MIL’s assets is the Guenoc Winery, consisting of approximately 400
acres of vineyard land and a winery equipped to bottle up to 120,000 cases
of wine annually. This land and commercial real estate holdings
are encumbered by debt.
|
|
·
|
an
approximately 50.6 acre property located in the Burwood area of Melbourne,
Australia, recently rezoned from an essentially industrial zone to a
priority zone allowing a variety of retail, entertainment, commercial and
residential uses and currently in the planning stages of
development;
|
|
·
|
an
approximately 3.3 acre property located in the Moonee Ponds area of
Melbourne, Australia. We are currently working to finalize
plans for the development of this property into a mixed use entertainment
based retail and commercial
complex;
|
|
·
|
an
approximately 0.9 acre property located adjacent to the Courtenay Central
ETRC in Wellington, New Zealand. We have received all necessary
governmental approvals to develop the site for retail, commercial and
entertainment purposes as Phase II of our existing ETRC. We
anticipate the construction of an approximately 162,000 square foot retail
project which, when completed, will be integrated into the common areas of
our existing ETRC;
|
|
·
|
a
25% interest, representing an investment of $3.0 million, in the company
redeveloping the site of our old Sutton Cinema site in Manhattan, New
York. The property has been redeveloped as an approximately
100,000 square foot residential condominium project with ground floor
retail and marketed under the name “Place
57.” In 2006, the joint venture was able to close on the
sales of 59 condominiums resulting in gross sales of $117.7 million and
equity earnings from unconsolidated joint venture to us of $8.3
million. During 2007, this joint venture sold the remaining
eight residential condominiums resulting in gross sales of $25.7 million
and equity earnings from unconsolidated joint venture to us of $1.3
million. Only the commercial unit is still available for
sale;
|
|
·
|
a
0.3 acre property with a two-story 3,464 square foot building
Indooroopilly, Brisbane, Australia. We have obtained approval
to develop the property to be a 28,000 square foot grade A commercial
office building comprising six floors of office space and two basement
levels of parking with 33 parking spaces. We expect to spend
US$8 million (AUS$9.4 million) in development costs. We plan to
complete the project in December
2008;
|
|
·
|
the
Manukau land parcel was purchased on July 27, 2007 through a Landplan
Property Partners property trust a 64.0 acre parcel of undeveloped
agricultural real estate for approximately $9.3 million (NZ$12.1
million). We intend to rezone the property from its current
agricultural use to commercial use, and thereafter to redevelop the
property in accordance with its new zoning. No assurances can
be given that such rezoning will be achieved, or if achieved, that it will
occur in the near term; and
|
|
·
|
a
1.0-acre parcel of commercial real estate located in Lake Taupo, New
Zealand. The property was improved with a motel, but we are
currently renovating the property’s units to be
condominiums.
|
·
|
Consolidated
Cinemas. On October 8, 2007, we entered into agreements
to acquire leasehold interests in 15 cinemas then owned by Pacific
Theatres Exhibition Corp. and its’ affiliates. The cinemas,
which are located in the United States, contain 181 screens with annual
revenue of approximately $78.0 million. The aggregate purchase
price of the cinemas and related assets is $69.3 million. This
acquisition closed on February 22,
2008.
|
·
|
Manukau
Land. On July 27, 2007, we purchased through a Landplan
Property Partners property trust a 64.0 acre parcel of undeveloped
agricultural real estate for approximately $9.3 million (NZ$12.1
million). We intend to rezone the property from its current
agricultural use to commercial use, and thereafter to redevelop the
property in accordance with its new zoning. No assurances can
be given that such rezoning will be achieved, or if achieved, that it will
occur in the near term.
|
·
|
New Zealand Commercial
Property. On June 29, 2007, we acquired a commercial
property for $5.9 million (NZ$7.6 million), rented to an unrelated third
party, to be held for current income and long-term
appreciation. The purchase price allocation for this
acquisition is $1.2 million (NZ$1.6 million) allocated to land and $4.7
million (NZ$6.1 million) allocated to
building.
|
·
|
Lake Taupo
Property. On February 14, 2007, we acquired, through a
Landplan Property Partners property trust, a 1.0 acre parcel of commercial
real estate for approximately $4.9 million (NZ$6.9
million). The property was improved with a motel, but we are
currently renovating the property’s units to be condominiums. A
portion of this property includes unimproved land that we do not intend to
develop. This land was determined to have a fair value of $1.8
million (NZ$2.6 million) at the time of purchase and is included on our
balance sheet as land held for sale. The remaining property and
its cost basis of $3.1 million (NZ$4.3 million) was included in property
under development. The operating activities of the motel are
not material.
|
·
|
Cinemas 1, 2, & 3
Building. On June 28, 2007, we purchased the building
associated with our Cinemas 1, 2, & 3 for $100,000 from Sutton Hill
Capital (“SHC”). Our option to purchase that building has been
previously disclosed, and was granted to us by SHC at the time that we
acquired the underlying ground lease from SHC on June 1,
2005. As SHC is a related party to our corporation, our Board’s
Audit and Conflicts Committee, comprised entirely of outside independent
directors, and subsequently our entire Board of Directors unanimously
approved the purchase of the property. The Cinemas 1, 2 & 3
is located on 3rd Avenue between 59th and 60th
Streets.
|
·
|
Tower Ground
Lease. On February 8, 2007, we purchased the tenant’s
interest in the ground lease underlying the building lease for one of our
domestic cinemas. The purchase price of $493,000 was paid in
two installments; $243,000 was paid on February 8, 2007 and $250,000 was
paid on June 28, 2007.
|
·
|
Place 57,
Manhattan. We own a 25% membership interest in the
limited liability company that has been developing the site of our former
Sutton Cinema on 57th
Street just east of 3rd
Avenue in Manhattan, as a 143,000 square foot residential condominium
tower, with the ground floor retail unit and the resident manager’s
apartment. All of the residential units have now been sold and
only the commercial unit is still available for sale. As of
December 31, 2007, we had received distributions totaling $9.8 million
from the earnings of this project and we have received $1.9 million of
return of capital investment.
|
·
|
Indooroopilly
Land. On September 18, 2006, we purchased a 0.3 acre
property for $1.8 million (AUS$2.3 million) as part of our newly
established Landplan Property Partners initiative. We have
obtained approval to develop the property to be a 28,000 square foot grade
A commercial office building comprising six floors of office space and two
basement levels of parking with 33 parking spaces. We expect to
spend US$8.2 million (AUS$9.4 million) in development costs. We
plan to complete the project in December
2008.
|
·
|
Moonee Ponds
Land. On September 1, 2006, we purchased two parcels of
land aggregating 0.4 acres adjacent to our Moonee Ponds property for $2.5
million (AUS$3.3 million). This acquisition increased our
holdings at Moonee Ponds to 3.3 acres and gave us frontage facing the
principal transit station servicing the area. We are now in the
process of developing the entire site and anticipate completion of this
project in 2008.
|
·
|
Berkeley
Cinemas. On August 28, 2006, we sold to our joint
venture partner our interest in the cinemas at Whangaparaoa, Takapuna and
Mission Bay, New Zealand, the Berkeley Cinema Group, for $4.6 million
(NZ$7.2 million) in cash and the assumption of $1.6 million (NZ$2.5
million) in debt. The sale resulted in a gain on sale of
unconsolidated joint venture in 2006 of $3.4 million (NZ$5.4
million). See Note 11 – Investments in and Advances to
Unconsolidated Joint Ventures and Entities for the Berkeley Cinema
Group Condensed Balance Sheet and Statement of
Operations.
|
·
|
Malulani Investments,
Ltd. On June 26, 2006, we acquired for $1.8 million, an
18.4% interest in a private real estate company with holdings principally
in California, Texas and Hawaii including, the Guenoc Winery located on
approximately 22,000 acres of land located in Northern
California. This land and commercial real estate holdings are
encumbered by debt.
|
·
|
Queenstown
Cinema. Effective February 23, 2006, we purchased a
3-screen leasehold cinema in Queenstown, New Zealand for $939,000 (NZ$1.4
million). We funded this acquisition through internal
sources.
|
·
|
Newmarket
Property: At the end of 2005 and during the first few
months of 2006, we opened the retail elements of our Newmarket ETRC, a
100,373 square foot retail facility situated on an approximately 177,497
square foot parcel in Newmarket, a suburb of Brisbane. The
total construction costs for the site were $26.7 million (AUS$34.2
million) including $1.4 million (AUS$1.9 million) of capitalized
interest. This project was funded through our $78.8 million
(AUS$100.0 million) Australian Corporate Credit Facility with the Bank of
Western Australia, Ltd.
|
|
·
|
impairment
of long-lived assets, including goodwill and intangible
assets;
|
|
·
|
tax
valuation allowance and obligations;
and
|
|
·
|
legal
and environmental obligations.
|
Year
Ended December 31, 2007
|
Cinema
|
Real
Estate
|
Intersegment
Eliminations
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Revenue
|
$ | 103,467 | $ | 21,887 | $ | (6,119 | ) | $ | 119,235 | |||||||
Operating
expense
|
83,875 | 8,324 | (6,119 | ) | 86,080 | |||||||||||
Depreciation
& amortization
|
6,942 | 4,418 | -- | 11,360 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
3,195 | 831 | -- | 4,026 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income
|
$ | 9,455 | $ | 8,314 | $ | -- | $ | 17,769 | ||||||||
Year
Ended December 31, 2006
|
Cinema
|
Real
Estate
|
Intersegment
Eliminations
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Revenue
|
$ | 94,048 | $ | 17,285 | $ | (5,208 | ) | $ | 106,125 | |||||||
Operating
expense
|
75,350 | 7,365 | (5,208 | ) | 77,507 | |||||||||||
Depreciation
& amortization
|
8,648 | 4,080 | -- | 12,728 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
3,658 | 782 | -- | 4,440 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income
|
$ | 6,392 | $ | 5,058 | $ | -- | $ | 11,450 | ||||||||
Year
Ended December 31, 2005
|
Cinema
|
Real
Estate
|
Intersegment
Eliminations
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Revenue
|
$ | 86,760 | $ | 16,523 | $ | (5,178 | ) | $ | 98,105 | |||||||
Operating
expense
|
72,665 | 7,359 | (5,178 | ) | 74,846 | |||||||||||
Depreciation
& amortization
|
8,323 | 3,674 | -- | 11,997 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
6,802 | 328 | -- | 7,130 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income (loss)
|
$ | (1,030 | ) | $ | 5,162 | $ | -- | $ | 4,132 |
Reconciliation
to net income:
|
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
|||||||||
Total
segment operating income
|
$ | 17,769 | $ | 11,450 | $ | 4,132 | ||||||
Non-segment:
|
||||||||||||
Depreciation and amortization
expense
|
561 | 484 | 387 | |||||||||
General and administrative
expense
|
12,059 | 8,551 | 10,117 | |||||||||
Operating
income (loss)
|
5,149 | 2,415 | (6,372 | ) | ||||||||
Interest expense,
net
|
(8,163 | ) | (6,608 | ) | (4,473 | ) | ||||||
Other income
(expense)
|
(505 | ) | (1,998 | ) | 19 | |||||||
Minority
interest
|
(1,003 | ) | (672 | ) | (579 | ) | ||||||
Gain on disposal of discontinued
operations
|
1,912 | -- | 13,610 | 1 | ||||||||
Loss from discontinued
operations
|
-- | -- | (1,379 | ) | ||||||||
Income tax
expense
|
(2,038 | ) | (2,270 | ) | (1,209 | ) | ||||||
Equity earnings of
unconsolidated joint ventures and entities
|
2,545 | 9,547 | 1,372 | |||||||||
Gain on sale of unconsolidated
joint venture
|
-- | 3,442 | -- | |||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | (2,103 | ) | $ | 3,856 | $ | 989 |
Year
Ended December 31, 2007
|
United
States
|
Australia
|
New
Zealand
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Admissions
revenue
|
$ | 18,647 | $ | 41,722 | $ | 14,683 | $ | 75,052 | ||||||||
Concessions
revenue
|
5,314 | 13,577 | 4,302 | 23,193 | ||||||||||||
Advertising
and other revenues
|
2,043 | 2,277 | 902 | 5,222 | ||||||||||||
Total
revenues
|
26,004 | 57,576 | 19,887 | 103,467 | ||||||||||||
Cinema
costs
|
18,385 | 44,460 | 15,868 | 78,713 | ||||||||||||
Concession
costs
|
1,029 | 3,017 | 1,116 | 5,162 | ||||||||||||
Total
operating expense
|
19,414 | 47,477 | 16,984 | 83,875 | ||||||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
2,003 | 3,212 | 1,727 | 6,942 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
2,140 | 1,036 | 19 | 3,195 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income
|
$ | 2,447 | $ | 5,851 | $ | 1,157 | $ | 9,455 |
Year
Ended December 31, 2006
|
United
States
|
Australia
|
New
Zealand
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Admissions
revenue
|
$ | 18,891 | $ | 36,564 | $ | 13,109 | $ | 68,564 | ||||||||
Concessions
revenue
|
5,472 | 11,288 | 4,001 | 20,761 | ||||||||||||
Advertising
and other revenues
|
1,710 | 2,098 | 915 | 4,723 | ||||||||||||
Total
revenues
|
26,073 | 49,950 | 18,025 | 94,048 | ||||||||||||
Cinema
costs
|
18,176 | 38,743 | 13,763 | 70,682 | ||||||||||||
Concession
costs
|
1,047 | 2,584 | 1,037 | 4,668 | ||||||||||||
Total
operating expense
|
19,223 | 41,327 | 14,800 | 75,350 | ||||||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
1,890 | 5,445 | 1,313 | 8,648 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
2,614 | 1,027 | 17 | 3,658 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income (loss)
|
$ | 2,346 | $ | 2,151 | $ | 1,895 | $ | 6,392 | ||||||||
Year
Ended December 31, 2005
|
United
States
|
Australia
|
New
Zealand
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Admissions
revenue
|
$ | 17,802 | $ | 33,142 | $ | 11,926 | $ | 62,870 | ||||||||
Concessions
revenue
|
4,979 | 10,505 | 3,618 | 19,102 | ||||||||||||
Advertising
and other revenues
|
1,646 | 2,233 | 909 | 4,788 | ||||||||||||
Total
revenues
|
24,427 | 45,880 | 16,453 | 86,760 | ||||||||||||
Cinema
costs
|
17,869 | 38,045 | 12,157 | 68,071 | ||||||||||||
Concession
costs
|
1,054 | 2,448 | 1,092 | 4,594 | ||||||||||||
Total
operating expense
|
18,923 | 40,493 | 13,249 | 72,665 | ||||||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
1,822 | 5,537 | 964 | 8,323 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
5,839 | 982 | (19 | ) | 6,802 | |||||||||||
Segment
operating income (loss)
|
$ | (2,157 | ) | $ | (1,132 | ) | $ | 2,259 | $ | (1,030 | ) |
|
·
|
cinema
revenue increased in 2007 by $9.4 million or 10.0% compared to
2006. The geographic activity of our revenues can be summarized
as follows:
|
|
o
|
United
States - Revenues in the United States decreased by $69,000 or
0.3%. This decrease in revenues was attributable to a decrease
in admissions revenues of $244,000 and concessions revenues of $158,000
offset by in increase in advertising and other revenues of
$333,000. The decrease in admissions and concessions revenues
resulted from lower year-end holiday admissions compared to last
year. The increase in others revenues related to more screen
rentals during 2007 than in 2006.
|
|
o
|
Australia
- Revenues in Australia increased by $7.6 million or
15.3%. This increase in revenues was attributable to an
increase in admissions revenues of $5.2 million related to an increase in
box office admissions of 118,000 coupled with a $0.52 increase in average
ticket price, concessions revenues of $2.3 million, and advertising and
other revenues of $179,000. This increase in revenues was
primarily related to more appealing film product in late 2007 compared to
the film offerings in 2006 coupled with an increase in the average
admissions price of 5.3%.
|
|
o
|
New
Zealand - Revenues in New Zealand increased by $1.9 million or
10.3%. This increase in revenues was attributable to an
increase in admissions revenues of $1.6 million primarily related to a
$0.42 increase in average ticket price, an increase in concessions
revenues of $301,000, and a decrease in advertising and other revenues of
$13,000. This increase in revenues was primarily related to
improved film product in 2007 compared to
2006.
|
|
·
|
operating
expense increased in 2007 by $8.5 million or 11.3% compared to
2006. The year on year comparison of operating expenses held
steady in relation to revenues at 81% in 2007 compared to 80% in
2006.
|
|
o
|
United
States - Operating expenses in the United States increased by $191,000 or
1.0%.
|
|
o
|
Australia
- Operating expenses in Australia increased by $6.2 million or
14.9%. This increase was in line with the above-mentioned
increase in cinema revenues.
|
|
o
|
New
Zealand - Operating expenses in New Zealand increased by $2.2 million or
14.8%. This increase was somewhat in line with the increase in
revenues noted above.
|
|
·
|
depreciation
expense decreased in 2007 by $1.7 million or 19.7% compared to
2006. This decrease is primarily related to several Australia
cinema assets reaching the end of their depreciable lives as of December
31, 2006.
|
|
·
|
general
and administrative expense decreased in 2007 by $463,000 or 12.7% compared
to 2006. The change was primarily related to a decrease in
legal costs associated with our anti-trust claims against Regal and
certain distributors.
|
|
·
|
the
Australia and New Zealand annual average exchange rates have changed by
11.4% and 13.5%, respectively, since 2006, which had an impact on the
individual components of the income statement. However, the
overall effect of the foreign currency change on operating income was
minimal.
|
|
·
|
cinema
segment operating income increased in 2007 by $3.1 million compared to
2006 primarily resulting from our improved cinema operations in each
region, our increased admissions from better film product, and a reduction
in general and administrative expense primarily associated with legal
expenses.
|
|
·
|
cinema
revenue increased in 2006 by $7.3 million or 8.4% compared to
2005. The geographic activity of our revenues can be summarized
as follows:
|
|
o
|
United
States - Revenues in the United States increased by $1.6 million or
6.7%. This increase in revenues was attributable to an increase
in admissions revenues by $1.1 million, concessions revenues by $493,000,
and advertising and other revenues by $64,000. The significant
increase in admissions revenues resulted from higher admissions related in
part to more appealing film product in 2006 compared to the film offerings
in 2005.
|
|
o
|
Australia
- Revenues in Australia increased by $4.1 million or 8.9%. This
increase in revenues was attributable to an increase in admissions
revenues by $3.4 million, concessions revenues by $783,000, and
advertising offset by a decrease in other revenues of
$135,000. This increase in revenues was primarily related to
more appealing film product in 2006 compared to the film offerings in
2005.
|
|
o
|
New
Zealand - Revenues in New Zealand increased by $1.6 million or
9.6%. This increase in revenues was attributable to an increase
in admissions revenues by $1.2 million, concessions revenues by $383,000,
and advertising and other revenues by $6,000. This increase in
revenues was primarily related to the acquisition of the Queenstown cinema
in February 2006 and the inclusion of 100% of the revenues from the Palms
cinema after our purchase of the remaining 50% which we did not already
own, at the beginning of the second quarter of
2006.
|
|
·
|
operating
expense increased in 2006 by $2.7 million or 3.7% compared to
2005.
|
|
o
|
United
States - Operating expenses in the United States increased by only
$300,000 or 1.6%. This small increase was due to efforts to
hold operating costs steady even with increased
admissions.
|
|
o
|
Australia
- Operating expenses in Australia increased by only $834,000 or
2.1%. This small increase was due to efforts to hold operating
costs steady even with increased
admissions.
|
|
o
|
New
Zealand - Operating expenses in New Zealand increased by $1.6 million or
11.7%. This increase was due to higher admissions and
concessions predominately resulting from the addition of the Queenstown
and Palms cinemas in 2006.
|
|
·
|
depreciation
expense increased in 2006 by $325,000 or 3.9% compared to
2005. The increase was primarily from our 2006 acquisitions in
New Zealand of the Queenstown Cinema in February 2006 and the Palms Cinema
in early April 2006.
|
|
·
|
general
and administrative expense decreased in 2006 by $3.1 million or 46.2%
compared to 2005. The change was primarily related to a
decrease in legal costs associated with our anti-trust claims against
Regal and certain distributors.
|
|
·
|
cinema
segment operating income increased in 2006 by $7.4 million compared to
2005 primarily resulting from our improved cinema operations in each
region, our increased admissions from better film product, and a dramatic
reduction in general and administrative expense, driven by a reduction in
legal expenses.
|
Year
Ended December 31, 2007
|
United
States
|
Australia
|
New
Zealand
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Live
theater rental and ancillary income
|
$ | 4,043 | $ | -- | $ | -- | $ | 4,043 | ||||||||
Property
rental income
|
1,534 | 9,336 | 6,974 | 17,844 | ||||||||||||
Total
revenues
|
5,577 | 9,336 | 6,974 | 21,887 | ||||||||||||
Live
theater costs
|
2,105 | -- | -- | 2,105 | ||||||||||||
Property
rental cost
|
1,210 | 3,076 | 1,933 | 6,219 | ||||||||||||
Total
operating expense
|
3,315 | 3,076 | 1,933 | 8,324 | ||||||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
376 | 2,355 | 1,687 | 4,418 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
15 | 665 | 151 | 831 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income
|
$ | 1,871 | $ | 3,240 | $ | 3,203 | $ | 8,314 | ||||||||
Year
Ended December 31, 2006
|
United
States
|
Australia
|
New
Zealand
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Live
theater rental and ancillary income
|
$ | 3,667 | $ | -- | $ | -- | $ | 3,667 | ||||||||
Property
rental income
|
1,720 | 6,334 | 5,564 | 13,618 | ||||||||||||
Total
revenues
|
5,387 | 6,334 | 5,564 | 17,285 | ||||||||||||
Live
theater costs
|
2,193 | -- | -- | 2,193 | ||||||||||||
Property
rental cost
|
1,164 | 2,658 | 1,350 | 5,172 | ||||||||||||
Total
operating expense
|
3,357 | 2,658 | 1,350 | 7,365 | ||||||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
427 | 2,129 | 1,524 | 4,080 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
-- | 782 | -- | 782 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income
|
$ | 1,603 | $ | 765 | $ | 2,690 | $ | 5,058 |
Year
Ended December 31, 2005
|
United
States
|
Australia
|
New
Zealand
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Live
theater rental and ancillary income
|
$ | 5,199 | $ | -- | $ | -- | $ | 5,199 | ||||||||
Property
rental income
|
1,118 | 4,266 | 5,940 | 11,324 | ||||||||||||
Total
revenues
|
6,317 | 4,266 | 5,940 | 16,523 | ||||||||||||
Live
theater costs
|
2,925 | -- | -- | 2,925 | ||||||||||||
Property
rental cost
|
692 | 2,118 | 1,624 | 4,434 | ||||||||||||
Total
operating expense
|
3,617 | 2,118 | 1,624 | 7,359 | ||||||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
296 | 1,588 | 1,790 | 3,674 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
29 | 298 | 1 | 328 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income
|
$ | 2,375 | $ | 262 | $ | 2,525 | $ | 5,162 |
|
·
|
revenue
increased by $4.6 million or 26.6% when compared 2006. The
increase was primarily related to an enhanced rental stream from our
Australia Newmarket shopping center, opened in 2006, and our New Zealand
properties. This increase in rents was offset in part by
decreased rents from our domestic live theatres due to fewer shows in 2007
compared to 2006.
|
|
·
|
operating
expense increased by $959,000 or 13.0% when compared to
2006. This increase in expense was primarily due to higher
operating costs related to our recently opened Australia Newmarket
shopping center.
|
|
·
|
depreciation
expense increased by $338,000 or 8.3% when compared to
2006. The majority of this increase was attributed to the
Newmarket shopping center assets in Australia which were put into service
during the first quarter 2006.
|
|
·
|
general
and administrative expense increased by $49,000 when compared to 2006
primarily due to increased property activities related to our acquisitions
in New Zealand.
|
|
·
|
the
Australia and New Zealand annual average exchange rates have changed by
11.4% and 13.5%, respectively, since 2006, which had an impact on the
individual components of the income statement. However, the
overall effect of the foreign currency change on operating income was
minimal.
|
|
·
|
real
estate segment operating income increased by $3.3 million when compared to
2006 mostly related to an increase in revenues in Australia from our
Newmarket shopping centre offset by a decrease in domestic live theater
income.
|
|
·
|
revenue
increased by $762,000 or 4.6% when compared 2005. Of this
increase, approximately $2.1 million was primarily attributable to an
increase in rent from our Newmarket shopping centre that opened early
2006. This increase in rents was offset in part by decreased
rents from our domestic live theatres due to fewer shows in 2006 compared
to 2005.
|
|
·
|
operating
expense increased by $6,000 or 0.1% when compared to 2005. This
decrease primarily relates to a decrease in costs associated with our live
theater facilities offset in part by increased costs from our newly opened
Newmarket shopping centre.
|
|
·
|
depreciation
expense increased by $406,000 or 11.1% when compared to
2005. The majority of this increase was attributable to our
newly opened Newmarket shopping centre in
Australia.
|
|
·
|
general
and administrative expense increased by $454,000 when compared to 2005
primarily due to increased property activities related to our Australia
properties.
|
|
·
|
real
estate segment operating income decreased by $104,000 when compared to
2005 mostly related to an increase in revenues in Australia from our
Newmarket shopping centre offset by a decrease in domestic live theater
income.
|
·
|
$320,000
in increased corporate compensation expense related to the granting of
70,000 fully vested options to our directors coupled with an $85,000
increase in director fees;
|
·
|
$437,000
in increased corporate compensation expense related to the
granting of 844,255 options that are vesting over a 24 month
period;
|
·
|
$413,000
of compensation for our Chief Operating Officer appointed in February
2007;
|
·
|
$840,000
of legal and professional fees associated principally with our real estate
acquisition and investment activities;
and
|
·
|
$342,000
related to our newly adopted Supplemental Executive Retirement
Plan.
|
·
|
our
net interest expense increased by $1.6 million primarily related to a
higher outstanding loan balances in 2007 compared to
2006;
|
·
|
our
other expense decreased by $1.5 million primarily due to lower
mark-to-market charges relating to an option liability held by Sutton Hill
Capital LLC to acquire a 25% non-managing membership interest in our
Cinemas 1, 2 & 3 property which option they exercised in July
2007;
|
·
|
our
minority interest expense increased by $331,000 compared to 2006 due to an
improvement in cinema admission sales particularly in our Australia, joint
venture cinemas and an increased activity in Landplan Property
Partners;
|
·
|
the
recording of a deferred gain on the sale of a discontinued operation upon
the fulfillment of our commitment of $1.9 million associated with a
previously sold property;
|
·
|
income
tax expense decreased by $232,000 primarily related less tax expense
incurred for our equity earnings from our investment in 205-209 East 57th Street
Associates, LLC;
|
·
|
equity
earnings from unconsolidated joint ventures and entities decreased by $7.0
million primarily due to lower earnings from our investment in 205-209 East 57th Street
Associates, LLC, that has completed most of the development of a
residential condominium complex in midtown Manhattan, called Place
57. The joint venture closed on the sale of 59
condominiums during 2006, resulting in gross sales of $117.7 million and
equity earnings from unconsolidated joint ventures and entities to us of
$8.3 million compared to eight condominiums during the year ended December
31, 2007 resulting in gross sales of $25.4 million and net equity earnings
from this unconsolidated joint venture of $1.3 million. All of
the residential condominiums have been sold and only the retail
condominium is still available for sale;
and
|
·
|
in
addition to the aforementioned equity earnings, we recorded a gain on sale
of an unconsolidated joint venture of $3.4 million (NZ$5.4 million) during
2006 which was not repeated in 2007, from the sale of our 50% interest in
the cinemas at Whangaparaoa, Takapuna and Mission Bay, New
Zealand.
|
·
|
$1.1
million from an additional bonus accrual for our Chief Executive Officer’s
new employment contract in 2005 not reoccurring in 2006;
and
|
·
|
$565,000
decrease in Australia legal fees in part related to fewer fees for our
Whitehorse lawsuit.
|
·
|
our
net interest expense increased by $2.1 million primarily related to a
higher outstanding loan balance in Australia and due to the effective
completion of construction of our Newmarket Shopping Centre in early 2006
which decreased the amount of interest being capitalized. This
interest increase was offset by a decrease in interest expense related to
the mark-to-market adjustment of our interest rate swaps compared to the
adjustment in 2005;
|
·
|
our
other expense increased by $2.0 million primarily due to a $1.6 million
mark-to-market charge relating to an option liability held by Sutton Hill
Capital LLC to acquire a 25% non-managing membership interest in our
Cinemas 1, 2 & 3 property;
|
·
|
our
minority interest expense increased by $93,000 compared to 2005 due to an
improvement in cinema admission sales particularly in our Australia
cinemas;
|
·
|
income
tax expense increased by $1.1 million primarily related to the tax expense
incurred for our equity earnings from our investment in 205-209 East 57th Street
Associates, LLC;
|
·
|
equity
earnings from unconsolidated joint ventures and entities increased by $8.2
million primarily from our investment in 205-209 East 57th Street
Associates, LLC, that has been developing a residential condominium
complex in midtown Manhattan, called Place
57. The joint venture closed on the sale of 59
condominiums during 2006, resulting in gross sales of $117.7 million and
equity earnings from unconsolidated joint ventures and entities to us of
$8.3 million; and
|
·
|
in
addition to the aforementioned equity earnings, we recorded a gain on sale
of an unconsolidated joint venture of $3.4 million (NZ$5.4 million), from
the sale of our 50% interest in the cinemas at Whangaparaoa, Takapuna and
Mission Bay, New Zealand.
|
·
|
the
amount of taxable income in particular
jurisdictions;
|
·
|
the
tax rates in particular
jurisdictions;
|
·
|
tax
treaties between jurisdictions;
|
·
|
the
extent to which income is repatriated;
and
|
·
|
future
changes in law.
|
|
·
|
working
capital requirements;
|
|
·
|
capital
expenditures including the acquisition, holding and development of real
property assets; and
|
|
·
|
debt
servicing requirements.
|
|
·
|
increased
cinema operational cash flow primarily from our Australia
operations;
|
|
·
|
increased
real estate operational cash flow predominately from our Australia
operations. This increase can be particularly attributed to our
Newmarket shopping center in Brisbane, Australia; offset
by
|
|
·
|
a
decrease in distributions from unconsolidated joint ventures and entities
of $1.8 million was predominately related to lower distributions from our
Place 57 joint venture.
|
|
·
|
cash
distributions from our investments in unconsolidated joint ventures and
entities of $6.6 million, including $5.9 million received as a return on
investment on our $3.0 million investment in Place
57;
|
|
·
|
increased
cinema operational cash flow from our Australia operations due primarily
to increased cinema admissions and improved operational costs;
and
|
|
·
|
improved
cash flow from our U.S. cinemas during 2006 resulting from the sale of our
formerly underperforming Puerto Rico operations in June
2005.
|
|
·
|
$15.7
million to purchase marketable
securities;
|
|
·
|
$22.6
million to purchase real estate assets
including
|
|
o
|
$20.1
million for real estate purchases in New
Zealand,
|
|
o
|
$100,000
for the purchase of the Cinemas 1, 2, & 3
building,
|
|
o
|
$2.0
million acquisition deposit for our acquisition of Consolidated Cinemas,
and
|
|
o
|
$493,000
for the purchase of the ground lease of our Tower Cinema in Sacramento,
California;
|
|
·
|
$2.8
million in property enhancements to our existing
properties;
|
|
·
|
$19.0
million in development costs associated with our properties under
development; and
|
|
·
|
$1.5
million in our investment in Reading International Trust I securities (the
issuer of our Trust Preferred
Securities);
|
|
·
|
$19.9
million in cash provided by the sale of marketable
securities;
|
|
·
|
981,000
decrease in restricted cash related to settled claims by our credit card
companies; and
|
|
·
|
$2.4
million in distributions from our investment in joint
ventures.
|
|
·
|
$8.1
million in acquisitions including:
|
|
o
|
$939,000
in cash used to purchase the Queenstown Cinema in New
Zealand,
|
|
o
|
$2.6
million in cash used to purchase the 50% share that we did not already own
of the Palms cinema located in Christchurch, New
Zealand,
|
|
o
|
$1.8
million for the Australia Indooroopilly property,
and
|
|
o
|
$2.5
million for the adjacent parcel to our Moonee Ponds
property;
|
|
·
|
$8.3
million in cash used to complete the Newmarket property and for property
enhancements to our Australia, New Zealand and U.S.
properties;
|
|
·
|
$2.7
million in cash used to invest in unconsolidated joint ventures and
entities including $1.8 million paid for Malulani Investments, Ltd. stock
and $876,000 additional cash invested in Rialto Cinemas used to pay off
their bank debt;
|
|
·
|
$844,000
increase in restricted cash related to potential claims by our credit card
companies; and
|
|
·
|
$8.1
million in cash used to purchase marketable
securities.
|
|
·
|
$4.6
million cash received from the sale of our interest the cinemas at
Whangaparaoa, Takapuna and Mission Bay, New
Zealand.
|
|
·
|
$12.6
million in net proceeds from the sales of our Glendale office building and
Puerto Rico operations;
|
|
·
|
$1.0
million cash provided by a decrease in restricted cash;
and
|
|
·
|
$515,000
in cash proceeds from the sale of certain surplus properties used in
connection with our historic railroad
activities;
|
|
·
|
$13.7
million paid for acquisitions including $11.8 million for the acquisition
of the fee interest lessor’s ground lease interest and lessee’s ground
lease interest of the Cinemas 1, 2 & 3 property in New York City and
$2.0 million (AUS$2.6 million) paid for our new Melbourne
office building;
|
|
·
|
$6.5
million primarily paid to invest in or add capital to our unconsolidated
joint ventures and entities including $4.8 million (NZ$6.9
million) to purchase 100% of the stock of Rialto Entertainment, $694,000
(NZ$1.0 million) to purchase a 1/3 interest in Rialto Distribution, and
$719,000 paid as additional capital contributions with respect to our
joint venture investment in Place
57;
|
|
·
|
$30.5
million in purchases of equipment and development of
property. In Australia, $28.4 million related primarily to the
construction work on our Newmarket development in a suburb of Brisbane and
the fit-out of our 8-screen Adelaide cinema which opened on October 20,
2005. $2.1 million in purchases of equipment primarily related
to the renovation of our U.S. and New Zealand cinemas;
and
|
|
·
|
$376,000
paid to purchase certain marketable
securities.
|
|
·
|
$49.9
million of net proceeds from our new Trust Preferred
Securities;
|
|
·
|
$14.4
million of net proceeds from our new Euro-Hypo
loan;
|
|
·
|
$3.1
million of proceeds from our margin account on marketable securities;
and
|
|
·
|
$27.9
million of additional borrowing on our Australia and New Zealand credit
facilities;
|
|
·
|
$57.6
million of cash used to retire bank indebtedness which primarily includes
$34.4 million (NZ$50.0 million) to pay off our New Zealand term debt, $5.8
million (AUS$7.4 million) to retire a portion of our bank indebtedness in
Australia, $3.1 million to pay off our margin account on marketable
securities, $12.1 million (NZ$15.7 million) to pay down our New Zealand
Westpac line of credit in August 2007, and $1.7 million for the final
balloon payment on the Royal George Theater Term Loan;
and
|
|
·
|
$3.9
million in distributions to minority
interests.
|
|
·
|
$19.1
million of net borrowings which includes $11.8 million from our existing
Australian Corporate Credit Facility and $7.3 million of net proceeds from
a renegotiated mortgage on our Union Square Property;
and
|
|
·
|
$3.0
million of a deposit received from Sutton Hill Capital, LLC for the option
to purchase a 25% non-managing membership interest in the limited
liability company that owns the Cinemas 1, 2 &
3;
|
|
·
|
$6.2
million of cash used to pay down long-term debt which was primarily
related to the payoff of $3.2 million on the mortgage on our Union Square
Property as part of a renegotiation of the loan; the payoff of our
Movieland purchase note payable of approximately $512,000; the payoff of
the Palms – Christchurch Cinema bank debt of approximately $1.9 million;
and on the pay down of our Australian Corporate Credit Facility by
$280,000;
|
|
·
|
$791,000
of cash used to repurchase the Class A Nonvoting Common Stock (these
shares were previously issued to the Movieland sellers who exercised their
put option during 2006 to sell back to us the shares they had received in
partial consideration for the sale of the Movieland cinemas);
and
|
|
·
|
$1.2
million in distributions to minority
interests.
|
|
·
|
borrowings
from our Australian Corporate Credit Facility of approximately $9.2
million (AUS$11.9 million) and our Newmarket Construction Loan of $22.5
million (AUS$29.6 million)
|
|
·
|
on
June 28, 2007, Sutton Hill Properties LLC (“SHP”), one of our consolidated
subsidiaries, entered into a $15.0 million loan that is secured by SHP’s
interest in the Cinemas 1, 2, & 3 land and building. SHP is
owned 75% by Reading and 25% by Sutton Hill Capital, LLC (“SHC”), a joint
venture indirectly wholly owned by Mr. James J. Cotter, our Chairman and
Chief Executive Officer, and Mr. Michael
Forman.
|
|
·
|
in
February 5, 2007, we issued $51.5 million in Trust Preferred Securities
through our wholly owned trust subsidiary. This transaction
closed on February 5, 2007 and we used the funds principally to payoff our
bank indebtedness in New Zealand by $34.4 million (AUS$50.0 million) and
to pay down our indebtedness in Australia by $5.8 million (AUS$7.4
million).
|
|
·
|
on
December 15, 2006, our New Zealand Corporate Credit Facility with the
Westpac Banking Corporation was increased from $35.2 million (NZ$50.0
million) to $42.3 million (NZ$60.0 million) and the facility’s related
principal payments were deferred to begin until February
2009.
|
|
·
|
on
December 4, 2006, we renegotiated our loan agreement with a financial
institution secured by our Union Square Theatre in Manhattan from a $3.2
million loan to a $7.5 million
loan.
|
|
·
|
the
development of our currently held for development
projects;
|
|
·
|
the
acquisition of additional cinemas and/or real estate properties currently
under consideration; and
|
|
·
|
the
possible further investments in
securities.
|
|
·
|
to
defer construction of projects currently slated for land presently owned
by us;
|
|
·
|
to
take on joint venture partners with respect to such development projects;
and/or
|
|
·
|
to
sell assets.
|
2008
|
2009
|
2010
|
2011
|
2012
|
Thereafter
|
|||||||||||||||||||
Long-term
debt
|
$ | 395 | $ | 88,470 | $ | 7,257 | $ | 176 | $ | 15,132 | $ | 218 | ||||||||||||
Long-term
debt to related parties
|
5,000 | -- | 9,000 | -- | -- | -- | ||||||||||||||||||
Subordinated
notes
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 51,547 | ||||||||||||||||||
Pension
liability
|
5 | 10 | 15 | 20 | 25 | 2,370 | ||||||||||||||||||
Lease
obligations
|
11,675 | 11,699 | 11,495 | 10,827 | 8,528 | 61,613 | ||||||||||||||||||
Interest
on long-term debt
|
13,880 | 6,940 | 6,400 | 5,619 | 5,114 | 66,083 | ||||||||||||||||||
Total
|
$ | 30,955 | $ | 107,119 | $ | 34,167 | $ | 16,642 | $ | 28,799 | $ | 181,831 |
|
·
|
with
respect to our cinema operations:
|
|
o
|
the
number and attractiveness to movie goers of the films released in future
periods;
|
|
o
|
the
amount of money spent by film distributors to promote their motion
pictures;
|
|
o
|
the
licensing fees and terms required by film distributors from motion picture
exhibitors in order to exhibit their
films;
|
|
o
|
the
comparative attractiveness of motion pictures as a source of entertainment
and willingness and/or ability of consumers (i) to spend their dollars on
entertainment and (ii) to spend their entertainment dollars on movies in
an outside the home environment;
|
|
o
|
the
extent to which we encounter competition from other cinema exhibitors,
from other sources of outside of the home entertainment, and from inside
the home entertainment options, such as “home theaters” and competitive
film product distribution technology such as, by way of example, cable,
satellite broadcast, DVD and VHS rentals and sales, and so called “movies
on demand;” and
|
|
o
|
the
extent to and the efficiency with which, we are able to integrate
acquisitions of cinema circuits with our existing
operations.
|
|
·
|
with
respect to our real estate development and operation
activities:
|
|
o
|
the
rental rates and capitalization rates applicable to the markets in which
we operate and the quality of properties that we
own;
|
|
o
|
the
extent to which we can obtain on a timely basis the various land use
approvals and entitlements needed to develop our
properties;
|
|
o
|
the
risks and uncertainties associated with real estate
development;
|
|
o
|
the
availability and cost of labor and
materials;
|
|
o
|
competition
for development sites and tenants;
|
|
o
|
environmental
remediation issues; and
|
|
o
|
the
extent to which our cinemas can continue to serve as an anchor tenant who
will, in turn, be influenced by the same factors as will influence
generally the results of our cinema
operations.
|
|
·
|
with
respect to our operations generally as an international company involved
in both the development and operation of cinemas and the development and
operation of real estate; and previously engaged for many years in the
railroad business in the United
States:
|
|
o
|
our
ongoing access to borrowed funds and capital and the interest that must be
paid on that debt and the returns that must be paid on such
capital;
|
|
o
|
the
relative values of the currency used in the countries in which we
operate;
|
|
o
|
changes
in government regulation, including by way of example, the costs resulting
from the implementation of the requirements of
Sarbanes-Oxley;
|
|
o
|
our
labor relations and costs of labor (including future government
requirements with respect to pension liabilities, disability insurance and
health coverage, and vacations and
leave);
|
|
o
|
our
exposure from time to time to legal claims and to uninsurable risks such
as those related to our historic railroad operations, including potential
environmental claims and health related claims relating to alleged
exposure to asbestos or other substances now or in the future recognized
as being possible causes of cancer or other health related
problems;
|
|
o
|
changes
in future effective tax rates and the results of currently ongoing and
future potential audits by taxing authorities having jurisdiction over our
various companies; and
|
|
o
|
changes
in applicable accounting policies and
practices.
|
|
·
|
it
is based on a single point in time.
|
|
·
|
it
does not include the effects of other complex market reactions that would
arise from the changes modeled.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
ASSETS
|
||||||||
Current
Assets:
|
||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents
|
$ | 20,782 | $ | 11,008 | ||||
Receivables
|
5,671 | 6,612 | ||||||
Inventory
|
654 | 606 | ||||||
Investment
in marketable securities
|
4,533 | 8,436 | ||||||
Restricted
cash
|
59 | 1,040 | ||||||
Prepaid
and other current assets
|
3,800 | 2,589 | ||||||
Total
current assets
|
35,499 | 30,291 | ||||||
Land
held for sale
|
1,984 | -- | ||||||
Property
held for development
|
11,068 | 1,598 | ||||||
Property
under development
|
66,787 | 38,876 | ||||||
Property
& equipment, net
|
178,174 | 170,667 | ||||||
Investment
in unconsolidated joint ventures and entities
|
15,480 | 19,067 | ||||||
Investment
in Reading International Trust I
|
1,547 | -- | ||||||
Goodwill
|
19,100 | 17,919 | ||||||
Intangible
assets, net
|
8,448 | 7,954 | ||||||
Other
assets
|
7,984 | 2,859 | ||||||
Total
assets
|
$ | 346,071 | $ | 289,231 | ||||
LIABILITIES
AND STOCKHOLDERS' EQUITY
|
||||||||
Current
Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Accounts
payable and accrued liabilities
|
$ | 12,331 | $ | 13,539 | ||||
Film
rent payable
|
3,275 | 4,642 | ||||||
Notes
payable – current portion
|
395 | 2,237 | ||||||
Note
payable to related party – current portion
|
5,000 | 5,000 | ||||||
Taxes
payable
|
4,770 | 9,128 | ||||||
Deferred
current revenue
|
3,214 | 2,565 | ||||||
Other
current liabilities
|
169 | 177 | ||||||
Total
current liabilities
|
29,154 | 37,288 | ||||||
Notes
payable – long-term portion
|
111,253 | 113,975 | ||||||
Notes
payable to related party – long-term portion
|
9,000 | 9,000 | ||||||
Subordinated
debt
|
51,547 | -- | ||||||
Noncurrent
tax liabilities
|
5,418 | -- | ||||||
Deferred
non-current revenue
|
566 | 528 | ||||||
Other
liabilities
|
14,936 | 18,178 | ||||||
Total
liabilities
|
221,874 | 178,969 | ||||||
Commitments
and contingencies (Note 19)
|
||||||||
Minority
interest in consolidated affiliates
|
2,835 | 2,603 | ||||||
Stockholders’
equity:
|
||||||||
Class
A Nonvoting Common Stock, par value $0.01, 100,000,000 shares authorized,
35,564,339 issued and 20,987,115 outstanding at December 31, 2007 and
35,558,089 issued and 20,980,865 outstanding at December 31,
2006
|
216 | 216 | ||||||
Class
B Voting Common Stock, par value $0.01, 20,000,000 shares authorized and
1,495,490 issued and outstanding at December 31, 2007 and at December 31,
2006
|
15 | 15 | ||||||
Nonvoting
Preferred Stock, par value $0.01, 12,000 shares authorized and no
outstanding shares at December 31, 2007 and 2006
|
-- | -- | ||||||
Additional
paid-in capital
|
131,930 | 128,399 | ||||||
Accumulated
deficit
|
(52,670 | ) | (50,058 | ) | ||||
Treasury
shares
|
(4,306 | ) | (4,306 | ) | ||||
Accumulated
other comprehensive income
|
46,177 | 33,393 | ||||||
Total
stockholders’ equity
|
121,362 | 107,659 | ||||||
Total
liabilities and stockholders’ equity
|
$ | 346,071 | $ | 289,231 |
Year Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Operating
revenue
|
||||||||||||
Cinema
|
$ | 103,467 | $ | 94,048 | $ | 86,760 | ||||||
Real estate
|
15,768 | 12,077 | 11,345 | |||||||||
Total operating
revenue
|
119,235 | 106,125 | 98,105 | |||||||||
Operating
expense
|
||||||||||||
Cinema
|
77,756 | 70,142 | 67,487 | |||||||||
Real estate
|
8,324 | 7,365 | 7,359 | |||||||||
Depreciation and
amortization
|
11,921 | 13,212 | 12,384 | |||||||||
General and
administrative
|
16,085 | 12,991 | 17,247 | |||||||||
Total operating
expense
|
114,086 | 103,710 | 104,477 | |||||||||
Operating
income (loss)
|
5,149 | 2,415 | (6,372 | ) | ||||||||
Non-operating
income (expense)
|
||||||||||||
Interest income
|
798 | 308 | 209 | |||||||||
Interest expense
|
(8,961 | ) | (6,916 | ) | (4,682 | ) | ||||||
Net loss on sale of
assets
|
(185 | ) | (45 | ) | (32 | ) | ||||||
Other income
(expense)
|
(320 | ) | (1,953 | ) | 51 | |||||||
Loss
before minority interest, discontinued operations, income tax
expense and equity earnings of
unconsolidated joint ventures and entities
|
(3,519 | ) | (6,191 | ) | (10,826 | ) | ||||||
Minority
interest
|
(1,003 | ) | (672 | ) | (579 | ) | ||||||
Loss
from continuing operations
|
(4,522 | ) | (6,863 | ) | (11,405 | ) | ||||||
Discontinued
operations:
|
||||||||||||
Gain on disposal of business
operations
|
1,912 | -- | 13,610 | |||||||||
Loss from discontinued operations,
net of tax
|
-- | -- | (1,379 | ) | ||||||||
Income
(loss) before income tax expense and equity earnings of unconsolidated
joint ventures and entities
|
(2,610 | ) | (6,863 | ) | 826 | |||||||
Income
tax expense
|
(2,038 | ) | (2,270 | ) | (1,209 | ) | ||||||
Loss
before equity earnings of unconsolidated joint ventures and
entities
|
(4,648 | ) | (9,133 | ) | (383 | ) | ||||||
Equity
earnings of unconsolidated joint ventures and entities
|
2,545 | 9,547 | 1,372 | |||||||||
Gain
on sale of unconsolidated joint venture
|
-- | 3,442 | -- | |||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | (2,103 | ) | $ | 3,856 | $ | 989 | |||||
Earnings
(loss) per common share – basic:
|
||||||||||||
Earnings
(loss) from continuing operations
|
$ | (0.18 | ) | $ | 0.17 | $ | (0.51 | ) | ||||
Earnings
from discontinued operations, net
|
0.09 | -- | 0.55 | |||||||||
Basic
earnings (loss) per share
|
$ | (0.09 | ) | $ | 0.17 | $ | 0.04 | |||||
Weighted
average number of shares outstanding – basic
|
22,478,145 | 22,425,941 | 22,249,967 | |||||||||
Earnings
(loss) per common share – diluted:
|
||||||||||||
Earnings
(loss) from continuing operations
|
$ | (0.18 | ) | $ | 0.17 | $ | (0.51 | ) | ||||
Earnings
from discontinued operations, net
|
0.09 | -- | 0.55 | |||||||||
Diluted
earnings (loss) per share
|
$ | (0.09 | ) | $ | 0.17 | $ | 0.04 | |||||
Weighted
average number of shares outstanding – diluted
|
22,478,145 | 22,674,818 | 22,249,967 |
Common
Stock
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Class
A Shares
|
Class
A Par Value
|
Class
B Shares
|
Class
B
Par
Value
|
Additional
Paid-In
Capital
|
Treasury
Stock
|
Accumulated
Deficit
|
Accumulated
Other Comprehensive Income/(Loss)
|
Total
Stockholders’
Equity
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
At
January 1, 2005
|
20,453 | $ | 205 | 1,545 | $ | 15 | $ | 124,307 | $ | -- | $ | (54,903 | ) | $ | 32,386 | $ | 102,010 | |||||||||||||||||||
Net
income
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 989 | -- | 989 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other
comprehensive income:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cumulative
foreign exchange rate adjustment
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | (3,822 | ) | (3,822 | ) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unrealized
gain on securities
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 11 | 11 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
comprehensive loss
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | (2,822 | ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Class
B common stock received from stockholder in exchange for Class A common
stock
|
50 | -- | (50 | ) | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Class
A common stock issued for stock options exercised in exchange for cash or
treasury shares
|
487 | 10 | -- | -- | 3,721 | (3,515 | ) | -- | -- | 216 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
At
December 31, 2005
|
20,990 | 215 | 1,495 | 15 | $ | 128,028 | (3,515 | ) | (53,914 | ) | 28,575 | 99,404 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net
income
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 3,856 | -- | 3,856 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other
comprehensive income:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cumulative
foreign exchange rate adjustment
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 4,928 | 4,928 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unrealized
loss on securities
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | (110 | ) | (110 | ) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
comprehensive income
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 8,674 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stock
option and restricted stock compensation expense
|
16 | -- | -- | -- | 284 | -- | -- | -- | 284 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Class
A common stock received upon exercise of put option
|
(99 | ) | -- | -- | -- | -- | (791 | ) | -- | -- | (791 | ) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Class
A common stock issued for stock options exercised
|
74 | 1 | -- | -- | 87 | - | -- | -- | 88 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
At
December 31, 2006
|
20,981 | 216 | 1,495 | 15 | $ | 128,399 | (4,306 | ) | (50,058 | ) | 33,393 | 107,659 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Net
loss
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | (2,103 | ) | -- | (2,103 | ) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Other
comprehensive income:
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Cumulative
foreign exchange rate adjustment
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 14,731 | 14,731 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Accrued
pension service costs
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | (2,063 | ) | (2,063 | ) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Unrealized
gain on securities
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 116 | 116 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Total
comprehensive income
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | 10,681 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stock
option and restricted stock compensation expense
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | 994 | -- | -- | -- | 994 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Adjustment
to accumulated deficit for adoption of FIN 48
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | -- | -- | (509 | ) | -- | (509 | ) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Exercise
of Sutton Hill Properties option
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | 2,512 | -- | -- | -- | 2,512 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Class
A common stock issued for stock options exercised
|
6 | -- | -- | -- | 25 | - | -- | -- | 25 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
At
December 31, 2007
|
20,987 | $ | 216 | 1,495 | $ | 15 | $ | 131,930 | $ | (4,306 | ) | $ | (52,670 | ) | $ | 46,177 | $ | 121,362 |
Year Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Operating
Activities
|
||||||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | (2,103 | ) | $ | 3,856 | $ | 989 | |||||
Adjustments
to reconcile net income( loss) to net cash provided by operating
activities:
|
||||||||||||
Realized
(gain) loss on foreign currency translation
|
(131 | ) | 38 | (417 | ) | |||||||
Equity
earnings of unconsolidated joint ventures and entities
|
(2,545 | ) | (9,547 | ) | (1,372 | ) | ||||||
Distributions
of earnings from unconsolidated joint ventures and
entities
|
4,619 | 6,647 | 855 | |||||||||
Gain
on the sale of unconsolidated joint venture
|
-- | (3,442 | ) | -- | ||||||||
Gain
on sale of Puerto Rico
|
-- | -- | (1,597 | ) | ||||||||
Gain
on sale of Glendale Building
|
(1,912 | ) | -- | (12,013 | ) | |||||||
Gain
on sale of marketable securities
|
(773 | ) | -- | -- | ||||||||
Actuarial
gain on pension plan
|
385 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Loss
provision on marketable securities
|
779 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Loss
provision on impairment of asset
|
89 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Loss
on extinguishment of debt
|
99 | 167 | -- | |||||||||
Loss
on sale of assets, net
|
185 | 45 | 32 | |||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
11,921 | 13,212 | 12,384 | |||||||||
Amortization
of prior service costs related to pension plan
|
253 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Stock
based compensation expense
|
994 | 284 | -- | |||||||||
Minority
interest
|
1,003 | 672 | 579 | |||||||||
Changes
in assets and liabilities:
|
||||||||||||
(Increase) decrease in
receivables
|
1,377 | (556 | ) | 1,559 | ||||||||
(Increase) decrease in prepaid
and other assets
|
(1,753 | ) | (1,914 | ) | 797 | |||||||
Increase in payable and accrued
liabilities
|
307 | 1,108 | 748 | |||||||||
Increase (decrease) in film rent
payable
|
(1,631 | ) | (103 | ) | 549 | |||||||
Increase (decrease) in deferred
revenues and other liabilities
|
2,121 | 1,442 | (506 | ) | ||||||||
Net
cash provided by operating activities
|
13,284 | 11,909 | 2,587 | |||||||||
Investing
Activities
|
||||||||||||
Proceeds from sale of
unconsolidated joint venture
|
-- | 4,573 | -- | |||||||||
Proceeds from sale of Puerto
Rico
|
-- | -- | 2,335 | |||||||||
Proceeds from sale of Glendale
Building
|
-- | -- | 10,300 | |||||||||
Acquisitions of real estate and
leasehold interests
|
(20,633 | ) | (8,087 | ) | (13,693 | ) | ||||||
Acquisition
deposit
|
(2,000 | ) | -- | -- | ||||||||
Purchases of and additions to
property and equipment
|
(21,781 | ) | (8,302 | ) | (30,461 | ) | ||||||
Investment in Reading
International Trust I
|
(1,547 | ) | -- | -- | ||||||||
Distributions of investment in
unconsolidated joint ventures and entities
|
2,445 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Investment in unconsolidated
joint ventures and entities
|
-- | (2,676 | ) | (6,468 | ) | |||||||
(Increase) decrease in
restricted cash
|
981 | (844 | ) | 1,011 | ||||||||
Purchases of marketable
securities
|
(15,651 | ) | (8,109 | ) | (376 | ) | ||||||
Sale of marketable
securities
|
19,900 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Proceeds from disposal of
assets, net
|
-- | -- | 515 | |||||||||
Net
cash used in investing activities
|
(38,286 | ) | (23,445 | ) | (36,837 | ) | ||||||
Financing
Activities
|
||||||||||||
Repayment of long-term
borrowings
|
(57,560 | ) | (6,242 | ) | (513 | ) | ||||||
Proceeds from
borrowings
|
97,632 | 19,274 | 31,666 | |||||||||
Capitalized borrowing
costs
|
(2,334 | ) | (223 | ) | -- | |||||||
Option deposit
received
|
-- | 3,000 | -- | |||||||||
Proceeds from exercise of stock
options
|
25 | 88 | 161 | |||||||||
Repurchase of Class A Nonvoting
Common Stock
|
-- | (791 | ) | -- | ||||||||
Proceeds from contributions to
minority interest
|
50 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Minority interest
distributions
|
(3,870 | ) | (1,167 | ) | (944 | ) | ||||||
Net
cash provided by financing activities
|
33,943 | 13,939 | 30,370 | |||||||||
Effect
of exchange rate on cash
|
833 | 57 | 136 | |||||||||
Increase
(decrease) in cash and cash equivalents
|
9,774 | 2,460 | (3,744 | ) | ||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents at beginning of year
|
11,008 | 8,548 | 12,292 | |||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents at end of year
|
$ | 20,782 | $ | 11,008 | $ | 8,548 | ||||||
Supplemental
Disclosures
|
||||||||||||
Cash paid during the period
for:
|
||||||||||||
Interest
on borrowings
|
$ | 12,389 | $ | 8,731 | $ | 6,188 | ||||||
Income
taxes
|
$ | 282 | $ | 585 | $ | 328 | ||||||
Non-Cash
Transactions
|
||||||||||||
Increase
in cost basis of Cinemas 1, 2, & 3 related to the purchase price
adjustment of the call option liability to a related party
|
(2,100 | ) | 1,087 | -- | ||||||||
Debt
issued to purchase Cinemas 1, 2, 3 (Note 8)
|
-- | -- | 9,000 | |||||||||
Deposit
applied to Cinemas 1, 2, 3 (Note 8)
|
-- | -- | 800 | |||||||||
Property
addition from purchase option asset (Note 8)
|
-- | -- | 1,337 | |||||||||
Buyer
assumption of note payable on Glendale Building (Note 9)
|
-- | -- | (10,103 | ) | ||||||||
Common
stock issued for note receivable (Note 21)
|
-- | -- | 55 | |||||||||
Treasury
shares received (Note 21)
|
-- | -- | (3,515 | ) | ||||||||
Stock
options exercised in exchange for treasury shares received (Note
21)
|
-- | -- | 3,515 | |||||||||
Adjustment to retained earnings
related to adoption of FIN 48 (Note 10)
|
509 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Decrease in deposit payable and
increase in minority interest liability related to the exercise of the
Cinemas 1, 2 & 3 call option by a related party (Note
15)
|
(3,000 | ) | -- | -- | ||||||||
Decrease in call option liability
and increase in additional paid in capital related to the exercise of the
Cinemas 1, 2 & 3 call option by a related party (Note
15)
|
(2,512 | ) | -- | -- | ||||||||
Accrued
addition to property and equipment
|
385 | -- | -- |
|
·
|
the
development, ownership and operation of multiplex cinemas in the United
States, Australia, and New Zealand;
and
|
|
·
|
the
development, ownership, and operation of retail and commercial real estate
in Australia, New Zealand, and the United States, including
entertainment-themed retail centers (“ETRC”) in Australia and New Zealand
and live theater assets in Manhattan and Chicago in the United
States.
|
|
·
|
33.3%
undivided interest in the unincorporated joint venture that owns the Mt.
Gravatt cinema in a suburb of Brisbane, Australia;
|
|
·
|
our
50% undivided interest in the unincorporated joint venture that owns a
cinema in the greater Auckland area of New Zealand;
|
|
·
|
our
25% undivided interest in the unincorporated joint venture that owns
205-209 East 57th
Street Associates, LLC (Place 57) a limited
liability company formed to redevelop our former cinema site at 205 East
57th
Street in Manhattan;
|
|
·
|
our
33.3% undivided interest in Rialto Distribution, an unincorporated joint
venture engaged in the business of distributing art film in New Zealand
and Australia; and
|
|
·
|
our
50% undivided interest in the unincorporated joint venture that owns
Rialto Cinemas.
|
Building
and improvements
|
15-40
years
|
Leasehold
improvement
|
Shorter
of the life of the lease or useful life of the
improvement
|
Theater
equipment
|
7
years
|
Furniture
and fixtures
|
5 –
10 years
|
Non-Vested
Restricted Stock
|
Weighted
Average Fair Value at Grant Date
|
|||||||
Outstanding
– January 1, 2005
|
-- | $ | -- | |||||
Granted
|
32,094 | 250 | ||||||
Outstanding
– December 31, 2005
|
32,094 | 250 | ||||||
Granted
|
30,266 | 250 | ||||||
Vested
|
(16,047 | ) | (188 | ) | ||||
Outstanding
– December 31, 2006
|
46,313 | 312 | ||||||
Granted
|
46,623 | 450 | ||||||
Vested
|
(31,180 | ) | (238 | ) | ||||
Outstanding
– December 31, 2007
|
61,756 | $ | 524 |
2007
|
2006
|
|
Stock
option exercise price
|
$8.35
– $10.30
|
$
8.10
|
Risk-free
interest rate
|
4.636
– 4.824%
|
4.22%
|
Expected
dividend yield
|
--
|
--
|
Expected
option life
|
9.60
– 9.96 yrs
|
5.97
yrs
|
Expected
volatility
|
33.64
– 45.47%
|
34.70%
|
Weighted
average fair value
|
$
4.42 – $4.82
|
$
4.33
|
Common Stock Options
Outstanding
|
Weighted Average Exercise
Price of Options
Outstanding
|
Common Stock Exercisable
Options
|
Weighted Average
Price of Exercisable
Options
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Class
A
|
Class
B
|
Class
A
|
Class
B
|
Class
A
|
Class
B
|
Class
A
|
Class
B
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Outstanding-
January 1, 2005
|
1,488,200 | 185,100 | $ | 4.19 | $ | 9.90 | 1,377,700 | 185,100 | $ | 4.80 | $ | 9.90 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Granted
|
7,500 | -- | $ | 7.86 | $ | -- | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Exercised
|
(974,600 | ) | -- | $ | 3.78 | $ | -- | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Outstanding-December
31, 2005
|
521,100 | 185,100 | $ | 5.00 | $ | 9.90 | 474,600 | 185,100 | $ | 5.04 | $ | 9.90 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Granted
|
20,000 | -- | $ | 8.10 | $ | -- | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Exercised
|
(27,000 | ) | -- | $ | 3.22 | $ | -- | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Outstanding-December
31, 2006
|
514,100 | 185,100 | $ | 5.21 | $ | 9.90 | 488,475 | 185,100 | $ | 5.06 | $ | 9.90 | ||||||||||||||||||||
Granted
|
151,250 | 150,000 | $ | 9.37 | $ | 10.24 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Exercised
|
(6,250 | ) | -- | $ | 4.01 | $ | -- | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Expired
|
(81,250 | ) | (150,000 | ) | $ | 10.25 | $ | 10.24 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Outstanding-December
31, 2007
|
577,850 | 185,100 | $ | 5.60 | $ | 9.90 | 477,850 | 35,100 | $ | 4.72 | $ | 8.47 |
Pro
forma net income (loss):
|
2005
|
|||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | 989 | ||
Add:
Stock-based compensation costs included in reported net
loss
|
-- | |||
Deduct:
Stock-based compensation costs under SFAS 123
|
83 | |||
Proforma
net income (loss)
|
$ | 906 | ||
Pro
forma basic net earnings (loss) per common share:
|
||||
Pro
forma net earnings (loss) per common share-basic and
diluted
|
$ | 0.04 | ||
Reported
net earnings (loss) per common share-basic and diluted
|
$ | 0.04 |
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Income
(loss) from continuing operations
|
$ | (4,015 | ) | $ | 3,856 | $ | (11,242 | ) | ||||
Income
from discontinued operations
|
1,912 | -- | 12,231 | |||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
(2,103 | ) | 3,856 | 989 | ||||||||
Weighted
average shares of common stock – basic
|
22,478,145 | 22,425,941 | 22,249,967 | |||||||||
Weighted
average shares of common stock – diluted
|
22,478,145 | 22,674,818 | 22,249,967 | |||||||||
Earnings
(loss) per share:
|
||||||||||||
Earnings (loss) from continuing
operations – basic and diluted
|
$ | (0.18 | ) | $ | 0.17 | $ | (0.51 | ) | ||||
Earnings (loss) from
discontinued operations – basic and diluted
|
$ | 0.09 | $ | -- | $ | 0.55 | ||||||
Earnings (loss) per share –
basic and diluted
|
$ | (0.09 | ) | $ | 0.17 | $ | 0.04 |
December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
Prepaid
and other current assets
|
||||||||
Prepaid
expenses
|
$ | 569 | $ | 1,214 | ||||
Prepaid taxes
|
602 | 552 | ||||||
Deposits
|
2,097 | 534 | ||||||
Other
|
532 | 289 | ||||||
Total prepaid and other current
assets
|
$ | 3,800 | $ | 2,589 | ||||
Other
non-current assets
|
||||||||
Other non-cinema and non-rental
real estate assets
|
$ | 1,270 | $ | 1,270 | ||||
Deferred financing costs,
net
|
2,805 | 898 | ||||||
Interest rate
swap
|
526 | 206 | ||||||
Other
receivables
|
1,648 | -- | ||||||
Pre-acquisition
costs
|
948 | -- | ||||||
Other
|
787 | 485 | ||||||
Total non-current
assets
|
$ | 7,984 | $ | 2,859 |
December 31,
|
||||||||
Property
Under Development
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||
Land
|
$ | 36,994 | $ | 30,296 | ||||
Construction-in-progress
(including capitalized interest)
|
29,793 | 8,580 | ||||||
Property
Under Development
|
$ | 66,787 | $ | 38,876 |
December 31,
|
||||||||
Property
and Equipment
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||
Land
|
$ | 58,757 | $ | 56,830 | ||||
Building
and improvements
|
112,818 | 99,285 | ||||||
Leasehold
interests
|
12,430 | 11,138 | ||||||
Construction-in-progress
|
1,318 | 425 | ||||||
Fixtures
and equipment
|
64,648 | 58,164 | ||||||
Total cost
|
249,971 | 225,842 | ||||||
Less
accumulated depreciation
|
(71,797 | ) | (55,175 | ) | ||||
Property
and equipment, net
|
$ | 178,174 | $ | 170,667 |
Palms
Cinema
|
||||
Assets
|
||||
Accounts
receivable
|
$ | 31 | ||
Inventory
|
11 | |||
Other
assets
|
8 | |||
Property
and equipment
|
1,430 | |||
Goodwill
|
2,310 | |||
Total assets
|
3,790 | |||
Liabilities
|
||||
Accounts
payable and accrued liabilities
|
178 | |||
Note
payable
|
987 | |||
Other
liabilities
|
12 | |||
Total
liabilities
|
1,177 | |||
Total
net assets
|
$ | 2,613 |
2005
|
||||
Revenue
|
$ | 1,103 | ||
Operating
expense
|
355 | |||
Depreciation
& amortization expense
|
51 | |||
General
& administrative expense
|
-- | |||
Operating
income
|
697 | |||
Interest
income
|
2 | |||
Interest
expense
|
312 | |||
Income
from discontinued operations before gain on sale
|
387 | |||
Gain
on sale
|
12,013 | |||
Total
income from discontinued operations
|
$ | 12,400 |
2005
|
||||
Revenue
|
$ | 4,575 | ||
Operating
expense
|
5,752 | |||
Depreciation
& amortization expense
|
206 | |||
General
& administrative expense
|
383 | |||
Loss
from discontinued operations before gain on sale
|
(1,766 | ) | ||
Gain
on sale
|
1,597 | |||
Total
loss from discontinued operations
|
$ | (169 | ) |
2007
|
Cinema
|
Real
Estate
|
Total
|
|||||||||
Balance
as of January 1, 2007
|
$ | 12,713 | $ | 5,206 | $ | 17,919 | ||||||
Foreign
currency translation adjustment
|
1,114 | 67 | 1,181 | |||||||||
Balance
at December 31, 2007
|
$ | 13,827 | $ | 5,273 | $ | 19,100 |
2006
|
Cinema
|
Real
Estate
|
Total
|
|||||||||
Balance
as of January 1, 2006
|
$ | 9,489 | $ | 5,164 | $ | 14,653 | ||||||
Goodwill
acquired during 2006
|
2,849 | -- | 2,849 | |||||||||
Foreign
currency translation adjustment
|
375 | 42 | 417 | |||||||||
Balance
at December 31, 2006
|
$ | 12,713 | $ | 5,206 | $ | 17,919 |
As
of December 31, 2007
|
Beneficial
Lease
|
Option
Fee
|
Other
Intangibles
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Gross
carrying amount
|
$ | 12,295 | $ | 2,773 | $ | 238 | $ | 15,306 | ||||||||
Less:
Accumulated amortization
|
4,311 | 2,521 | 26 | 6,858 | ||||||||||||
Total, net
|
$ | 7,984 | $ | 252 | $ | 212 | $ | 8,448 |
As
of December 31, 2006
|
Beneficial
Lease
|
Option
Fee
|
Other
Intangibles
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Gross
carrying amount
|
$ | 10,984 | $ | 2,773 | $ | 219 | $ | 13,976 | ||||||||
Less:
Accumulated amortization
|
3,577 | 2,426 | 19 | 6,022 | ||||||||||||
Total, net
|
$ | 7,407 | $ | 347 | $ | 200 | $ | 7,954 |
Year
Ending December 31,
|
||||
2008
|
$ | 1,057 | ||
2009
|
1,057 | |||
2010
|
1,025 | |||
2011
|
962 | |||
2012
|
770 | |||
Thereafter
|
3,577 | |||
Total
future amortization expense
|
$ | 8,448 |
December 31,
|
||||||||||||
Interest
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||
Malulani
Investments
|
18.4 | % | $ | 1,800 | $ | 1,800 | ||||||
Rialto
Distribution
|
33.3 | % | 1,029 | 782 | ||||||||
Rialto
Cinemas
|
50.0 | % | 5,717 | 5,608 | ||||||||
205-209
East 57th
Street Associates, LLC
|
25.0 | % | 1,059 | 5,557 | ||||||||
Mt.
Gravatt
|
33.3 | % | 5,159 | 4,713 | ||||||||
Berkeley
Cinema – Group
|
50.0 | % | -- | -- | ||||||||
Berkeley
Cinemas – Palms & Botany
|
50.0 | % | 716 | 607 | ||||||||
Total
|
$ | 15,480 | $ | 19,067 |
December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Rialto
Distribution
|
$ | 250 | $ | 25 | $ | 50 | ||||||
Rialto
Cinemas
|
(101) | (169 | ) | -- | ||||||||
205-209
East 57th
Street Associates, LLC
|
1,329 | 8,277 | (56 | ) | ||||||||
Mt.
Gravatt
|
793 | 648 | 501 | |||||||||
Berkeley
Cinema – Group
|
-- | 322 | 383 | |||||||||
Berkeley
Cinemas – Palms & Botany
|
274 | 444 | 494 | |||||||||
Total
|
$ | 2,545 | $ | 9,547 | $ | 1,372 |
December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
Current
assets
|
$ | 2,306 | $ | 4,456 | ||||
Non
current assets
|
3,126 | 18,488 | ||||||
Current
liabilities
|
857 | 2,187 | ||||||
Non
current liabilities
|
320 | -- | ||||||
Members’
equity
|
4,255 | 20,757 |
December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Total
revenue
|
$ | 25,673 | $ | 117,708 | $ | -- | ||||||
Net
income
|
6,805 | 33,106 | (500 | ) |
December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
Current
assets
|
$ | 1,458 | $ | 1,195 | ||||
Non
current assets
|
3,421 | 3,228 | ||||||
Current
liabilities
|
825 | 550 | ||||||
Noncurrent
liabilities
|
49 | 40 | ||||||
Members’
equity
|
4,005 | 3,833 |
December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Total
revenue
|
$ | 10,603 | $ | 9,078 | $ | 8,739 | ||||||
Net
income
|
2,381 | 1,946 | 1,505 |
December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Total
revenue
|
$ | -- | $ | 3,440 | $ | 5,292 | ||||||
Net
income
|
-- | 644 | 765 |
December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
Current
assets
|
$ | 11,005 | $ | 10,153 | ||||
Non
current assets
|
15,034 | 30,573 | ||||||
Current
liabilities
|
6,289 | 5,004 | ||||||
Non
current liabilities
|
3,550 | 4,109 | ||||||
Member’s
equity
|
16,200 | 31,613 |
December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Total
revenue
|
$ | 53,440 | $ | 135,675 | $ | 34,156 | ||||||
Net
income
|
10,247 | 35,697 | 4,484 |
December 31,
|
December 31,
|
||||||||||||||||
Name
of Note Payable
|
2007
Interest
Rate
|
2006
Interest
Rate
|
Maturity
Date
|
2007
Balance
|
2006
Balance
|
||||||||||||
Australian
Corporate Credit Facility
|
7.75 | % | 7.33 | % |
January
1, 2009
|
$ | 85,772 | $ | 70,516 | ||||||||
Australian
Shopping Center Loans
|
-- | -- |
2007-2013
|
1,066 | 1,147 | ||||||||||||
Euro-Hypo
Loan
|
6.73 | % | -- |
July
1, 2012
|
15,000 | -- | |||||||||||
New
Zealand Corporate Credit Facility
|
10.10 | % | 9.15 | % |
November
23, 2010
|
2,488 | 35,230 | ||||||||||
Trust
Preferred Securities
|
9.22 | % | -- |
April
30, 2027
|
51,547 | -- | |||||||||||
US
Royal George Theatre Term Loan
|
-- | 7.86 | % |
November
29, 2007
|
-- | 1,819 | |||||||||||
US
Sutton Hill Capital Note 1 – Related Party
|
9.91 | % | 9.69 | % |
July
28, 2008
|
5,000 | 5,000 | ||||||||||
US
Sutton Hill Capital Note 2 – Related Party
|
8.25 | % | 8.25 | % |
December
31, 2010
|
9,000 | 9,000 | ||||||||||
US
Union Square Theatre Term Loan
|
6.26 | % | 6.26 | % |
January
1, 2010
|
7,322 | 7,500 | ||||||||||
Total Notes
Payable
|
$ | 177,195 | $ | 130,212 |
Year
Ending December 31,
|
||||
2008
|
$ | 5,395 | ||
2009
|
88,470 | |||
2010
|
16,257 | |||
2011
|
176 | |||
2012
|
15,132 | |||
Thereafter
|
51,765 | |||
Total
future principal loan payments
|
$ | 177,195 |
Type of Instrument
|
Notional Amount
|
Pay Fixed Rate
|
Receive Variable Rate
|
Maturity Date
|
|||||||||
Interest
rate swap
|
$ | 15,138,000 | 6.4400 | % | 6.9350 | % |
January
1, 2009
|
||||||
Interest
rate swap
|
$ | 23,322,000 | 6.6800 | % | 6.9350 | % |
January
1, 2009
|
||||||
Interest
rate swap
|
$ | 10,685,000 | 5.5800 | % | 6.9350 | % |
January
1, 2009
|
||||||
Interest
rate swap
|
$ | 3,072,000 | 6.3600 | % | 6.9350 | % |
January
1, 2009
|
||||||
Interest
rate swap
|
$ | 3,072,000 | 6.9600 | % | 6.9350 | % |
January
1, 2009
|
||||||
Interest
rate swap
|
$ | 2,457,000 | 7.0000 | % | 6.9350 | % |
January
1, 2009
|
||||||
Interest
rate swap
|
$ | 1,220,000 | 7.1900 | % | 6.9350 | % |
January
1, 2009
|
||||||
Interest
rate swap
|
$ | 2,466,000 | 7.5900 | % | n/a |
January
1, 2009
|
Year Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
United
States
|
$ | 737 | $ | (4,460 | ) | $ | (1,863 | ) | ||||
Foreign
|
(3,347 | ) | (2,403 | ) | 2,689 | |||||||
Income
(loss) before income tax expense and equity earnings of unconsolidated
joint ventures and entities
|
$ | (2,610 | ) | $ | (6,863 | ) | $ | 826 | ||||
Equity earnings and gain on
sale of unconsolidated subsidiary:
|
||||||||||||
United
States
|
1,328 | 8,277 | (56 | ) | ||||||||
Foreign
|
1,217 | 4,712 | 1,428 | |||||||||
Income
(loss) before income tax expense
|
$ | (65 | ) | $ | 6,126 | $ | 2,198 |
Year Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Current
income tax expense
|
||||||||||||
Federal
|
$ | 510 | $ | 688 | $ | 444 | ||||||
State
|
511 | 409 | 186 | |||||||||
Foreign
|
1,017 | 1,173 | 579 | |||||||||
Total
|
2,038 | 2,270 | 1,209 | |||||||||
Deferred
income tax expense
|
||||||||||||
Federal
|
-- | -- | -- | |||||||||
State
|
-- | -- | -- | |||||||||
Foreign
|
-- | -- | -- | |||||||||
Total
|
-- | -- | -- | |||||||||
Total
income tax expense
|
$ | 2,038 | $ | 2,270 | $ | 1,209 |
December 31,
|
||||||||
Components
of Deferred Tax Assets and Liabilities
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||
Deferred
Tax Assets:
|
||||||||
Net
operating loss carry forwards
|
$ | 43,215 | $ | 46,573 | ||||
Impairment
reserves
|
1,142 | 1,060 | ||||||
Alternative
minimum tax carry forwards
|
3,714 | 3,624 | ||||||
Installment
sale of cinema property
|
5,070 | 5,070 | ||||||
Other
|
10,477 | 6,781 | ||||||
Total Deferred Tax
Assets
|
63,618 | 63,108 | ||||||
Deferred
Tax Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Acquired
and option properties
|
6,408 | 6,890 | ||||||
Net
deferred tax assets before valuation allowance
|
57,210 | 56,218 | ||||||
Valuation
allowance
|
(57,210 | ) | (56,218 | ) | ||||
Net
deferred tax asset
|
$ | -- | $ | -- |
Expiration
Date
|
Amount
|
|||
2018
|
$ | 4 | ||
2019
|
1,320 | |||
2021
|
2,718 | |||
2022
|
1,636 | |||
2025
|
28,345 | |||
Total
net operating loss carryforwards
|
$ | 34,023 |
|
·
|
approximately
$3.7 million in alternative minimum tax credit
carryforwards;
|
|
·
|
approximately
$54.6 million in Australian loss carry forwards;
and
|
|
·
|
approximately
$1.2 million in New Zealand loss
carryforwards.
|
Year Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Expected
tax provision (benefit)
|
$ | (23 | ) | $ | 2,149 | $ | 769 | |||||
Reduction
(increase) in taxes resulting from:
|
||||||||||||
Change in valuation
allowance
|
992 | (2,366 | ) | (596 | ) | |||||||
Foreign tax
provision
|
1,017 | 1,173 | 579 | |||||||||
Tax effect of foreign tax rates
on current income
|
(60 | ) | 425 | 740 | ||||||||
State and local tax
provision
|
511 | 409 | 186 | |||||||||
Other items
|
(399 | ) | 480 | (469 | ) | |||||||
Actual
tax provision
|
$ | 2,038 | $ | 2,270 | $ | 1,209 |
Year Ended December 31,
2007
|
||||
Unrecognized
tax benefits – beginning balance
|
$ | 10,857 | ||
Gross
increases – prior period tax provisions
|
47 | |||
Gross
decreases – prior period tax positions
|
-- | |||
Gross
increases – current period tax positions
|
513 | |||
Settlements
|
-- | |||
Statute
of limitations lapse
|
-- | |||
Unrecognized
tax benefits – ending balance
|
$ | 11,417 |
Before
Application of FIN 48 on January 1, 2007
|
FIN
48 Adjustments as of January 1, 2007
|
After
Application of FIN 48 on January 1, 2007
|
||||||||||
Current
tax liabilities
|
$ | 9,128 | $ | (4,000 | ) | $ | 5,128 | |||||
Noncurrent
tax liabilities
|
$ | -- | $ | 4,509 | $ | 4,509 | ||||||
Accumulated
deficit
|
$ | (50,058 | ) | $ | (509 | ) | $ | (50,567 | ) |
December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
Current
liabilities
|
||||||||
Security deposit
payable
|
$ | 168 | $ | 177 | ||||
Other
|
1 | -- | ||||||
Other current
liabilities
|
$ | 169 | $ | 177 | ||||
Other
liabilities
|
||||||||
Foreign withholding
taxes
|
$ | 5,480 | $ | 5,212 | ||||
Straight-line rent
liability
|
3,783 | 3,693 | ||||||
Option
liability
|
-- | 3,681 | ||||||
Environmental
reserve
|
1,656 | 1,656 | ||||||
Accrued pension
|
2,626 | -- | ||||||
Option deposit
|
-- | 3,000 | ||||||
Other
|
1,391 | 936 | ||||||
Other
liabilities
|
$ | 14,936 | $ | 18,178 |
Book Value
|
Fair Value
|
|||||||||||||||
Financial
Instrument
|
2007
|
2006
|
2007
|
2006
|
||||||||||||
Cash
|
$ | 20,782 | $ | 11,008 | $ | 20,782 | $ | 11,008 | ||||||||
Accounts
receivable
|
$ | 5,671 | $ | 6,612 | $ | 5,671 | $ | 6,612 | ||||||||
Investment
in marketable securities
|
$ | 4,533 | $ | 8,436 | $ | 4,533 | $ | 8,436 | ||||||||
Restricted
cash
|
$ | 59 | $ | 1,040 | $ | 59 | $ | 1,040 | ||||||||
Accounts
and film rent payable
|
$ | 15,606 | $ | 18,181 | $ | 15,606 | $ | 18,181 | ||||||||
Notes
payable
|
$ | 111,648 | $ | 116,212 | $ | 112,344 | $ | 116,471 | ||||||||
Notes
payable to related party
|
$ | 14,000 | $ | 14,000 | $ | 13,942 | $ | 13,862 | ||||||||
Subordinated
debt
|
$ | 51,547 | $ | -- | $ | 45,356 | $ | -- | ||||||||
Interest
rate swaps asset
|
$ | 526 | $ | 206 | $ | 526 | $ | 206 |
Minimum
Lease Payments
|
||||
2008
|
$ | 11,675 | ||
2009
|
11,699 | |||
2010
|
11,495 | |||
2011
|
10,827 | |||
2012
|
8,528 | |||
Thereafter
|
61,613 | |||
Total
minimum lease payments
|
$ | 115,837 |
Change
in Benefit Obligation
|
For
the year ending December 31, 2007
|
|||
Benefit
obligation at March 1, 2007
|
$ | 2,701 | ||
Service
cost
|
-- | |||
Interest
cost
|
129 | |||
Actuarial
gain
|
(385 | ) | ||
Benefit
obligation at December 31, 2007
|
2,445 | |||
Plan
assets
|
-- | |||
Funded
status at December 31, 2007
|
$ | (2,445 | ) |
At
December 31, 2007
|
||||
Noncurrent
assets
|
$ | -- | ||
Current
liabilities
|
5 | |||
Noncurrent
liabilities
|
2,440 |
At
December 31, 2007
|
||||
Unamortized
actuarial gain
|
$ | (385 | ) | |
Prior
service costs
|
2,448 | |||
Accumulated
other comprehensive loss
|
2,063 |
Net
periodic benefit cost
|
From
March 1, 2007 to December 31, 2007
|
|||
Service
cost
|
$ | -- | ||
Interest
cost
|
129 | |||
Expected
return on plan assets
|
-- | |||
Amortization
of prior service costs
|
253 | |||
Amortization
of net (gain) loss
|
-- | |||
Net
periodic benefit cost
|
$ | 382 | ||
Other
changes in plan assets and benefit obligations recognized in other
comprehensive income
|
||||
Net
gain
|
$ | (385 | ) | |
Prior
service cost
|
-- | |||
Amortization
of prior service cost
|
(253 | ) | ||
Amortization
of net gain (loss)
|
-- | |||
Total
recognized in other comprehensive income
|
$ | (638 | ) | |
Total
recognized in net periodic benefit cost and other comprehensive
income
|
$ | (256 | ) |
At
December 31, 2007
|
||||
Discount
rate
|
6.25 | % | ||
Rate
of compensation increase
|
3.50 | % |
At
December 31, 2007
|
||||
Discount
rate
|
6.25 | % | ||
Expected
long-term return on plan assets
|
0.00 | % | ||
Rate
of compensation increase
|
3.50 | % |
Pension
Payments
|
||||
2008
|
$ | 5 | ||
2009
|
10 | |||
2010
|
15 | |||
2011
|
20 | |||
2012
|
25 | |||
Thereafter
|
2,370 | |||
Total
pension payments
|
$ | 2,445 |
|
·
|
50%
of membership interest in AFC by a subsidiary of National Auto Credit,
Inc. (“NAC”)
|
|
·
|
25%
minority interest in Australian Country Cinemas by 21st
Century Pty, Ltd
|
|
·
|
33%
minority interest in the Elsternwick joint venture by Champion Pictures
Pty Ltd
|
|
·
|
15% to
27.5% minority interest in the Landplan Property Partners, Ltd by Landplan
Property Group, Ltd
|
|
·
|
25%
minority interest in the Sutton Hill Properties, LLC owned by Sutton Hill
Capital, LLC
|
|
·
|
20%
minority interest in Big 4 Farming LLC by Cecelia Packing
Corporation
|
December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
AFC
|
$ | 2,256 | $ | 2,264 | ||||
Australian
Country Cinemas
|
232 | 174 | ||||||
Elsternwick
unincorporated joint venture
|
109 | 151 | ||||||
Landplan
Property Partners
|
237 | 13 | ||||||
Other
|
1 | 1 | ||||||
Total
minority interest
|
$ | 2,835 | $ | 2,603 |
December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
AFC
|
$ | 742 | $ | 624 | $ | 730 | ||||||
Australian
Country Cinemas
|
112 | 50 | 10 | |||||||||
Elsternwick
unincorporated joint venture
|
21 | (17 | ) | (161 | ) | |||||||
Landplan
Property Partners
|
214 | 14 | -- | |||||||||
Sutton
Hill Properties
|
(86 | ) | -- | -- | ||||||||
Other
|
-- | 1 | -- | |||||||||
Total
minority interest
|
$ | 1,003 | $ | 672 | $ | 579 |
Year
Ended December 31, 2007
|
Cinema
|
Real
Estate
|
Intersegment
Eliminations
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Revenue
|
$ | 103,467 | $ | 21,887 | $ | (6,119 | ) | $ | 119,235 | |||||||
Operating
expense
|
83,875 | 8,324 | (6,119 | ) | 86,080 | |||||||||||
Depreciation
& amortization
|
6,942 | 4,418 | -- | 11,360 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
3,195 | 831 | -- | 4,026 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income
|
$ | 9,455 | $ | 8,314 | $ | -- | $ | 17,769 | ||||||||
Year
Ended December 31, 2006
|
Cinema
|
Real
Estate
|
Intersegment
Eliminations
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Revenue
|
$ | 94,048 | $ | 17,285 | $ | (5,208 | ) | $ | 106,125 | |||||||
Operating
expense
|
75,350 | 7,365 | (5,208 | ) | 77,507 | |||||||||||
Depreciation
& amortization
|
8,648 | 4,080 | -- | 12,728 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
3,658 | 782 | -- | 4,440 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income
|
$ | 6,392 | $ | 5,058 | $ | -- | $ | 11,450 | ||||||||
Year
Ended December 31, 2005
|
Cinema
|
Real
Estate
|
Intersegment
Eliminations
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Revenue
|
$ | 86,760 | $ | 16,523 | $ | (5,178 | ) | $ | 98,105 | |||||||
Operating
expense
|
72,665 | 7,359 | (5,178 | ) | 74,846 | |||||||||||
Depreciation
& amortization
|
8,323 | 3,674 | -- | 11,997 | ||||||||||||
General
& administrative expense
|
6,802 | 328 | -- | 7,130 | ||||||||||||
Segment
operating income (loss)
|
$ | (1,030 | ) | $ | 5,162 | $ | -- | $ | 4,132 |
Reconciliation
to net income (loss):
|
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
|||||||||
Total
segment operating income
|
$ | 17,769 | $ | 11,450 | $ | 4,132 | ||||||
Non-segment:
|
||||||||||||
Depreciation and amortization
expense
|
561 | 484 | 387 | |||||||||
General and administrative
expense
|
12,059 | 8,551 | 10,117 | |||||||||
Operating
income (loss)
|
5,149 | 2,415 | (6,372 | ) | ||||||||
Interest expense,
net
|
(8,163 | ) | (6,608 | ) | (4,473 | ) | ||||||
Other income
(expense)
|
(505 | ) | (1,998 | ) | 19 | |||||||
Minority
interest
|
(1,003 | ) | (672 | ) | (579 | ) | ||||||
Gain on disposal of discontinued
operations
|
1,912 | -- | 13,610 | 1 | ||||||||
Loss from discontinued
operations
|
-- | -- | (1,379 | ) | ||||||||
Income tax
expense
|
(2,038 | ) | (2,270 | ) | (1,209 | ) | ||||||
Equity earnings of
unconsolidated joint ventures and entities
|
2,545 | 9,547 | 1,372 | |||||||||
Gain on sale of unconsolidated
joint venture
|
-- | 3,442 | -- | |||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | (2,103 | ) | $ | 3,856 | $ | 989 | |||||
Segment
assets
|
$ | 315,582 | $ | 264,963 | ||||||||
Corporate
assets
|
30,489 | 24,268 | ||||||||||
Total
Assets
|
$ | 346,071 | $ | 289,231 | ||||||||
Segment
capital expenditures
|
$ | 42,244 | $ | 16,168 | $ | 51,649 | ||||||
Corporate
capital expenditures
|
170 | 221 | 2,305 | |||||||||
Total
capital expenditures
|
$ | 42,414 | $ | 16,389 | $ | 53,954 |
December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
Australia
|
$ | 90,956 | $ | 86,317 | ||||
New
Zealand
|
44,030 | 38,772 | ||||||
United
States
|
43,188 | 45,578 | ||||||
Total
property and equipment
|
$ | 178,174 | $ | 170,667 |
December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Australia
|
$ | 63,657 | $ | 53,434 | $ | 47,181 | ||||||
New
Zealand
|
24,371 | 21,230 | 20,179 | |||||||||
United
States
|
31,207 | 31,461 | 30,745 | |||||||||
Total
Revenues
|
$ | 119,235 | $ | 106,125 | $ | 98,105 |
First
|
Second
|
Third
|
Fourth
|
|||||||||||||
2007
|
Quarter
|
Quarter
|
Quarter
|
Quarter
|
||||||||||||
Revenue
|
$ | 27,975 | $ | 30,139 | $ | 32,559 | $ | 28,562 | ||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | (646 | ) | $ | 1,634 | $ | 870 | $ | (3,961 | ) | ||||||
Basic
earnings (loss) per share
|
$ | (0.03 | ) | $ | 0.07 | $ | 0.04 | $ | (0.17 | ) | ||||||
Diluted
earnings (loss) per share
|
$ | (0.03 | ) | $ | 0.07 | $ | 0.04 | $ | (0.17 | ) | ||||||
2006
|
||||||||||||||||
Revenue
|
$ | 25,230 | $ | 27,247 | $ | 24,319 | $ | 29,329 | ||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | (3,147 | ) | $ | (234 | ) | $ | 6,093 | $ | 1,144 | ||||||
Basic
earnings (loss) per share
|
$ | (0.14 | ) | $ | (0.01 | ) | $ | 0.27 | $ | 0.05 | ||||||
Diluted
earnings (loss) per share
|
$ | (0.14 | ) | $ | (0.01 | ) | $ | 0.27 | $ | 0.05 |
Years Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
|
||||||||||
Net
unrealized gains/(losses) on investments
|
||||||||||||
Reclassification of realized
gain on available for sale investments included in net income
(loss)
|
$ | (773 | ) | $ | -- | $ | -- | |||||
Unrealized gain/(loss) on
available for sale investments
|
889 | (110 | ) | 11 | ||||||||
Net unrealized gains/(losses)
on investments
|
116 | (110 | ) | 11 | ||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
(2,103 | ) | 3,856 | 989 | ||||||||
Cumulative
foreign currency adjustment
|
14,731 | 4,928 | (3,822 | ) | ||||||||
Accrued
pension service costs
|
(2,063 | ) | -- | -- | ||||||||
Comprehensive
income (loss)
|
$ | 10,681 | $ | 8,674 | $ | (2,822 | ) |
Year
Ending December 31,
|
||||
2008
|
$ | 7,354 | ||
2009
|
6,023 | |||
2010
|
5,481 | |||
2011
|
4,908 | |||
2012
|
3,961 | |||
Thereafter
|
30,967 | |||
Total future minimum rental
income
|
$ | 58,694 |
Description
|
Balance
at beginning of year
|
Additions
charged to costs and expenses
|
Deductions
|
Balance
at end of year
|
||||||||||||
Allowance
for doubtful accounts
|
||||||||||||||||
Year-ended December 31, 2007 –
Allowance for doubtful accounts
|
$ | 473 | $ | 62 | $ | 153 | $ | 382 | ||||||||
Year-ended December 31, 2006 –
Allowance for doubtful accounts
|
$ | 416 | $ | 247 | $ | 190 | $ | 473 | ||||||||
Year-ended December 31, 2005 –
Allowance for doubtful accounts
|
$ | 319 | $ | 183 | $ | 86 | $ | 416 | ||||||||
Tax
valuation allowance
|
||||||||||||||||
Year-ended December 31, 2007 –
Tax valuation allowance
|
$ | 56,218 | $ | 992 | $ | -- | $ | 57,210 | ||||||||
Year-ended December 31, 2006 –
Tax valuation allowance
|
$ | 58,584 | $ | -- | $ | 2,366 | $ | 56,218 | ||||||||
Year-ended December 31, 2005 –
Tax valuation allowance
|
$ | 59,180 | $ | -- | $ | 596 | $ | 58,584 | ||||||||
Non-current
tax liability for the year ended December 31, 2007
|
$ | 4,509 | $ | 908 | $ | -- | $ | 5,417 | ||||||||
Description
|
Page
|
2. Financial Statement Schedules for the years
ended December 31, 2007, 2006 and 2005
|
|
Page
|
|
(b) Exhibits
Required by Item 601 of Regulation S-K
|
|
See
Item (a)3. above.
|
|
(c) Financial
Statement Schedule
|
|
See
Item (a)2. above.
|
December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
ASSETS
|
||||||||
Real
Estate:
|
||||||||
Land
|
$ | 780 | $ | 5,230 | ||||
Construction
and development costs
|
1,641 | 12,950 | ||||||
Residential
manager’s apartment (net of depreciation)
|
659 | -- | ||||||
Negotiable
certificates – real estate tax abatements
|
46 | 308 | ||||||
Total
real estate
|
3,126 | 18,488 | ||||||
Other
Assets:
|
||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents
|
1,933 | 4,449 | ||||||
Security
deposits
|
8 | 7 | ||||||
Prepaid
income taxes
|
347 | -- | ||||||
Other
assets
|
18 | -- | ||||||
Total
other assets
|
2,306 | 4,456 | ||||||
Total
assets
|
$ | 5,432 | $ | 22,944 | ||||
LIABILITIES
AND MEMBERS' EQUITY
|
||||||||
Liabilities:
|
||||||||
Accounts
payable and accrued liabilities
|
$ | 440 | $ | 340 | ||||
Due
to affiliate
|
417 | 236 | ||||||
Deferred
rent
|
320 | -- | ||||||
Income
taxes payable
|
-- | 860 | ||||||
Retainage
payable
|
-- | 751 | ||||||
Total liabilities
|
1,177 | 2,187 | ||||||
Commitments
and Contingencies (Note 12)
|
||||||||
Members’
Equity
|
4,255 | 20,757 | ||||||
Total
Liabilities And Members’ Equity
|
$ | 5,432 | $ | 22,944 |
Years Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
(Unaudited)
|
||||||||||
Revenue:
|
||||||||||||
Sales
– condominium units
|
$ | 25,401 | $ | 117,329 | $ | -- | ||||||
Contract
termination income
|
-- | 239 | -- | |||||||||
Dividends
and interest
|
168 | 140 | -- | |||||||||
Rental
income
|
104 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Total revenue
|
25,673 | 117,708 | -- | |||||||||
Expenses:
|
||||||||||||
Costs
of sales of condominium units
|
16,987 | 75,382 | -- | |||||||||
Selling
costs
|
1,369 | 6,523 | -- | |||||||||
Marketing
and advertising
|
184 | 740 | 500 | |||||||||
Sponsor
common charges
|
70 | 421 | -- | |||||||||
Utilities
|
9 | 90 | -- | |||||||||
Contributions
|
- | 6 | -- | |||||||||
Depreciation
|
21 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Miscellaneous
|
46 | 5 | -- | |||||||||
New
York City unincorporated business tax
|
182 | 1,435 | -- | |||||||||
Total expenses
|
18,868 | 84,602 | 500 | |||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | 6,805 | $ | 33,106 | $ | (500 | ) |
PGA
Clarett 1, LLC
|
PGA
Clarett 2, LLC
|
PGA
Clarett 3, LLC
|
PGA
Clarett 4, LP
|
Clarett
Partners, LLC
|
CC
Sutton Manager, LLC
|
Citadel
Cinemas, Inc.
|
Total
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||
Members
equity – January 1, 2005 (Unaudited)
|
1,341 | 1,306 | 139 | 1,131 | 65 | 2,546 | 2,177 | 8,705 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Member
contributions
|
323 | 432 | 387 | 153 | 22 | 842 | 719 | 2,878 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Assignment
of interest
|
115 | -- | (325 | ) | 210 | -- | -- | -- | -- | |||||||||||||||||||||||
Net
loss
|
(72 | ) | (75 | ) | (23 | ) | (55 | ) | (4 | ) | (146 | ) | (125 | ) | (500 | ) | ||||||||||||||||
Members
equity – December 31, 2005 (Unaudited)
|
1,707 | 1,663 | 178 | 1,439 | 83 | 3,242 | 2,771 | 11,083 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Member
distributions
|
(2,813 | ) | (2,739 | ) | (293 | ) | (2,372 | ) | (2,503 | ) | (6,854 | ) | (5,858 | ) | (23,432 | ) | ||||||||||||||||
Net
income
|
1,355 | 1,319 | 141 | 1,143 | 11,188 | 9,684 | 8,276 | 33,106 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Members
equity – December 31, 2006 (Audited)
|
$ | 249 | $ | 243 | $ | 26 | $ | 210 | $ | 8,768 | $ | 6,072 | $ | 5,189 | $ | 20,757 | ||||||||||||||||
Member
distributions
|
(280 | ) | (272 | ) | (29 | ) | (236 | ) | (9,846 | ) | (6,817 | ) | (5,827 | ) | (23,307 | ) | ||||||||||||||||
Net
income
|
82 | 79 | 8 | 69 | 2,875 | 1,990 | 1,702 | 6,805 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||
Members
equity – December 31, 2007 (Audited)
|
$ | 51 | $ | 50 | $ | 5 | $ | 43 | $ | 1,797 | $ | 1,245 | $ | 1,064 | $ | 4,255 |
Year Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
(Unaudited)
|
||||||||||
Cash
Flows from Operating Activities
|
||||||||||||
Net
income (loss)
|
$ | 6,805 | $ | 33,106 | $ | (500 | ) | |||||
Adjustments
to reconcile net income to net cash provided by operating
activities:
|
||||||||||||
Costs
of sales of condominium units
|
16,987 | 75,382 | -- | |||||||||
Amortization
of deferred rent
|
(103 | ) | -- | -- | ||||||||
Depreciation
|
21 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Changes
in assets and liabilities:
|
||||||||||||
Acquisition of
land
|
-- | -- | (2,160 | ) | ||||||||
Additions to land, construction
and development costs
|
(1,223 | ) | (19,689 | ) | (38,446 | ) | ||||||
Inclusionary air
rights
|
-- | -- | (2,500 | ) | ||||||||
Acquisition of negotiable
certificates
|
-- | (643 | ) | (863 | ) | |||||||
Increase in prepaid
taxes
|
(347 | ) | -- | -- | ||||||||
Increase in other
assets
|
(17 | ) | -- | -- | ||||||||
Decrease (increase) in security
deposits
|
-- | 58 | (36 | ) | ||||||||
Increase (decrease) in accounts
payable and accrued expenses
|
100 | (2,734 | ) | 1,932 | ||||||||
(Decrease) increase in income
taxes payable
|
(860 | ) | 860 | -- | ||||||||
(Decrease) increase in retainage
payable
|
(751 | ) | (953 | ) | 1,675 | |||||||
Increase in due to
affiliates
|
179 | 263 | -- | |||||||||
Net
cash provided by (used in) operating activities
|
20,791 | 85,650 | (40,898 | ) | ||||||||
Cash
Flows from Financing Activities
|
||||||||||||
Proceeds from construction
loan
|
-- | 19,224 | 38,130 | |||||||||
Repayment of construction
loan
|
-- | (77,156 | ) | -- | ||||||||
Payment of mortgage loan
payable
|
-- | -- | -- | |||||||||
(Payments) proceeds from loan
payable Clarett Capital
|
-- | -- | (1 | ) | ||||||||
Member
distributions
|
(23,307 | ) | (23,432 | ) | -- | |||||||
Member
contributions
|
-- | -- | 2,877 | |||||||||
Net
cash (used in) provided by financing activities
|
(23,307 | ) | (81,364 | ) | 41,006 | |||||||
Net
(decrease) increase in cash and cash equivalents
|
(2,516 | ) | 4,286 | 108 | ||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents – beginning of year
|
4,449 | 163 | 55 | |||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents – end of year
|
$ | 1,933 | $ | 4,449 | $ | 163 | ||||||
Supplemental
disclosure of cash flow information:
|
||||||||||||
Cash paid during the year
for:
|
||||||||||||
Interest
which was capitalized
|
$ | -- | $ | 4,244 | $ | 1,163 | ||||||
Income
taxes
|
$ | 1,390 | $ | 575 | $ | -- |
(h)
|
Depreciation
|
Year Ended December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
Direct
purchase cost
|
$ | 15,339 | $ | 15,339 | ||||
Air
rights
|
6,925 | 6,910 | ||||||
Mortgage
recording tax
|
1,953 | 1,953 | ||||||
Brokerage
fees
|
500 | 500 | ||||||
Demolition
costs
|
600 | 600 | ||||||
Title
insurance
|
256 | 256 | ||||||
Total
land
|
25,573 | 25,558 | ||||||
Less:
costs allocated to condominium units sold
|
24,611 | 20,328 | ||||||
Less:
cost allocated to residential manager’s apartment
|
182 | -- | ||||||
Net
land value
|
$ | 780 | $ | 5,230 |
Year Ended December 31,
|
||||||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
2005
(Unaudited)
|
||||||||||
Hard
costs
|
$ | 49,426 | $ | 48,355 | $ | 34,597 | ||||||
Soft
costs
|
18,588 | 18,451 | 12,570 | |||||||||
Total
construction and development costs
|
68,014 | 66,806 | 47,167 | |||||||||
Less
: costs allocated to condominium units sold
|
65,887 | 53,856 | 47,167 | |||||||||
Less: cost
allocated to residential manager’s apartment
|
486 | -- | -- | |||||||||
Net
construction and development costs
|
$ | 1,641 | $ | 12,950 | $ | 47,167 |
Year Ended December 31,
|
||||||||
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
421a
certificates
|
$ | 1,203 | $ | 1,203 | ||||
Preliminary
certificate of eligibility fee
|
303 | 303 | ||||||
Total
negotiable certificates
|
1,506 | 1,506 | ||||||
Less
: costs allocated to condominium units sold
|
1,449 | 1,198 | ||||||
Less: cost
allocated to residential manager’s apartment
|
11 | -- | ||||||
Net
negotiable certificates
|
$ | 46 | $ | 308 |
Land
|
$ | 183 | ||
Hard
and soft construction costs
|
486 | |||
Negotiable
certificates
|
11 | |||
680 | ||||
Less:
accumulated depreciation
|
(21 | ) | ||
Total
cost
|
$ | 659 |
2007
|
2006
|
|||||||
Broker
fees
|
$ | 755 | $ | 3,720 | ||||
Commissions
|
614 | 2,783 | ||||||
Title
recording
|
-- | 20 | ||||||
Total
selling costs
|
$ | 1,369 | $ | 6,523 |
In
AUS$
|
Note
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
2005
(unaudited)
|
||||||||||||
Revenue
from rendering services
|
7 | $ | 9,095,218 | $ | 8,777,374 | $ | 8,423,526 | |||||||||
Revenue
from sale of concession
|
3,546,654 | 3,269,303 | 3,037,909 | |||||||||||||
Total
Revenue
|
$ | 12,641,872 | $ | 12,046,677 | $ | 11,461,435 | ||||||||||
Cost
of concession
|
(893,473 | ) | (814,500 | ) | (756,512 | ) | ||||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization expenses
|
10 | (653,342 | ) | (722,828 | ) | (774,111 | ) | |||||||||
Personnel
expenses
|
8 | (1,839,730 | ) | (1,684,754 | ) | (1,632,351 | ) | |||||||||
Film
expenses
|
(3,549,246 | ) | (3,390,265 | ) | (3,322,293 | ) | ||||||||||
Occupancy
expenses
|
(1,248,608 | ) | (1,280,726 | ) | (1,307,976 | ) | ||||||||||
House
expenses
|
(973,931 | ) | (796,373 | ) | (856,203 | ) | ||||||||||
Advertising
and marketing costs
|
(285,455 | ) | (283,183 | ) | (315,601 | ) | ||||||||||
Management
fees
|
(223,043 | ) | (216,396 | ) | (214,405 | ) | ||||||||||
Repairs
and maintenance expense
|
(167,877 | ) | (246,676 | ) | (209,708 | ) | ||||||||||
Results
for operating activities
|
$ | 2,807,167 | $ | 2,610,976 | $ | 2,072,275 | ||||||||||
Finance
income
|
44,340 | 50,874 | 23,390 | |||||||||||||
Finance
expense
|
-- | (82,494 | ) | (112,168 | ) | |||||||||||
Net
finance income(expense)
|
9 | $ | 44,340 | $ | (31,620 | ) | $ | (88,778 | ) | |||||||
Profit
for the period
|
$ | 2,851,507 | $ | 2,579,356 | $ | 1,983,497 |
In
AUS$
|
Reading
Exhibition Pty Ltd
|
Village
Roadshow Exhibition Pty Ltd
|
Birch
Carroll & Coyle Limited
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Members’
Equity – January 1, 2005 (unaudited)
|
$ | 629,608 | $ | 629,608 | $ | 629,609 | $ | 1,888,825 | ||||||||
Member
distributions
|
(130,000 | ) | (130,000 | ) | (130,000 | ) | (390,000 | ) | ||||||||
Net
profit
|
661,166 | 661,166 | 661,165 | 1,983,497 | ||||||||||||
Members’
Equity – December 31, 2005 (Unaudited)
|
$ | 1,160,774 | $ | 1,160,774 | $ | 1,160,774 | $ | 3,482,322 | ||||||||
Member
distributions
|
(400,000 | ) | (400,000 | ) | (400,000 | ) | (1,200,000 | ) | ||||||||
Net
profit
|
859,785 | 859,785 | 859,786 | 2,579,356 | ||||||||||||
Members’
Equity – December 31, 2006 (Unaudited)
|
$ | 1,620,559 | $ | 1,620,559 | $ | 1,620,560 | $ | 4,861,678 | ||||||||
Member
distributions
|
(1,050,000 | ) | (1,050,000 | ) | (1,050,000 | ) | (3,150,000 | ) | ||||||||
Net
profit
|
950,502 | 950,502 | 950,503 | 2,851,507 | ||||||||||||
Members’
Equity – December 31, 2007
|
$ | 1,521,061 | $ | 1,521,061 | $ | 1,521,063 | $ | 4,563,185 |
In
AUS$
|
Note
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
|||||||||
ASSETS
|
||||||||||||
Current
Assets
|
||||||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents
|
13 | $ | 1,474,386 | $ | 1,300,373 | |||||||
Trade
receivables
|
12 | 97,597 | 65,918 | |||||||||
Inventories
|
11 | 88,317 | 108,637 | |||||||||
Other
assets
|
12 | 534 | 40,727 | |||||||||
Total
current assets
|
$ | 1,660,834 | $ | 1,515,655 | ||||||||
Property,
plant and equipment
|
10 | 3,897,870 | 4,094,675 | |||||||||
Total
non-current assets
|
$ | 3,897,870 | $ | 4,094,675 | ||||||||
Total
assets
|
$ | 5,558,704 | $ | 5,610,330 | ||||||||
Current
Liabilities
|
||||||||||||
Payables
|
15 | 794,733 | 531,836 | |||||||||
Employee
benefits
|
14 | 67,745 | 68,667 | |||||||||
Deferred
revenue
|
16 | 77,645 | 97,056 | |||||||||
Total
current liabilities
|
$ | 940,123 | $ | 697,559 | ||||||||
Employee
benefits
|
14 | 55,396 | 51,093 | |||||||||
Total
non-current liabilities
|
$ | 55,396 | $ | 51,093 | ||||||||
Total
liabilities
|
$ | 995,519 | $ | 748,652 | ||||||||
Net
assets
|
$ | 4,563,185 | $ | 4,861,678 | ||||||||
Equity
|
||||||||||||
Contributed
equity
|
202,593 | 202,593 | ||||||||||
Retained
earnings
|
4,360,592 | 4,659,085 | ||||||||||
Total
equity
|
$ | 4,563,185 | $ | 4,861,678 |
In
AUS$
|
Note
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
2005
(unaudited)
|
||||||||||||
Cash
flows from operating activities
|
||||||||||||||||
Cash
receipts from customers
|
$ | 12,617,843 | $ | 12,184,040 | $ | 11,530,420 | ||||||||||
Cash
paid to suppliers and employees
|
(8,881,633 | ) | (9,195,814 | ) | (9,041,416 | ) | ||||||||||
Cash
generated from operations
|
$ | 3,736,210 | $ | 2,988,226 | $ | 2,489,004 | ||||||||||
Interest
received
|
9 | 44,340 | 50,874 | 23,390 | ||||||||||||
Interest
paid
|
9 | -- | (82,494 | ) | (112,168 | ) | ||||||||||
Net
cash from operating activities
|
20 | $ | 3,780,550 | $ | 2,956,606 | $ | 2,400,226 | |||||||||
Cash
flows from investing activities
|
||||||||||||||||
Acquisition
of property, plant and equipment
|
10 | (456,537 | ) | (170,042 | ) | (756,402 | ) | |||||||||
Net
cash from investing activities
|
$ | (456,537 | ) | $ | (170,042 | ) | $ | (756,402 | ) | |||||||
Cash
flows from financing activities
|
||||||||||||||||
Distributions
to Joint Venturers
|
(3,150,000 | ) | (1,200,000 | ) | (390,000 | ) | ||||||||||
Payment
of finance lease liability
|
-- | (1,416,281 | ) | (859,384 | ) | |||||||||||
Net
cash from financing activities
|
$ | (3,150,000 | ) | $ | (2,616,281 | ) | $ | (1,249,384 | ) | |||||||
Net
increase in cash and cash equivalents
|
174,013 | 170,283 | 394,440 | |||||||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents at 1 January
|
1,300,373 | 1,130,090 | 735,650 | |||||||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents at December 31
|
13 | $ | 1,474,386 | $ | 1,300,373 | $ | 1,130,090 |
(b)
|
Basis
of Measurement
|
(c)
|
Functional
and Presentation Currency
|
(d)
|
Use
of Estimates and Judgments
|
Leasehold
improvements
|
Shorter
of estimated useful life and term of lease
|
Plant and
equipment
|
5.0%
to 33.3%
|
Leased
plant and equipment
|
5.0%
to 20.0%
|
(m)
|
Film
Expense
|
(n)
|
New
Standards and Interpretations Not Yet
Adopted
|
·
|
Revised
AASB 101 Presentation of
Financial Statements (September 2007) introduces as a financial
statement (formerly “primary” statement) the “statement of comprehensive
income”. The revised standard does not change the recognition,
measurement or disclosure of transactions and events that are required by
other AASBs. The revised AASB 101 will become mandatory for the
Joint Venture’s December 31, 2009 financial statements. The
Joint Venture has not yet determined the potential effect of the revised
standard on the Joint Venture’s
disclosures.
|
·
|
Revised
AASB 123 Borrowing Costs
removes the option to expense borrowing costs and requires that an
entity capitalise borrowing costs directly attributable to the
acquisition, construction or production of a qualifying asset as part of
the cost of that asset. The revised AASB 123 will become
mandatory for the Joint Venture’s December 31, 2009 financial statements
and will constitute a change in accounting policy for the Joint
Venture. In accordance with the transitional provisions the
Joint Venture will apply the revised AASB 123 to qualifying assets for
which capitalisation of borrowing costs commences on or after the
effective date.
|
·
|
AI
13 Customer Loyalty
Programmes addresses the accounting by entities that operate, or
otherwise participate in, customer loyalty programmes for their
customers. It relates to customer loyalty programmes
under which the customer can redeem credits for awards such as free or
discounted goods or services. AI 13, which becomes mandatory
for the Joint Venture’s December 31, 2009 financial statements, is not
expected to have any impact on the financial
report.
|
·
|
credit
risk
|
·
|
liquidity
risk
|
·
|
market
risk.
|
In
AUS$
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
2005
(unaudited)
|
|||||||||
Box
office revenue
|
$ | 8,473,778 | $ | 8,270,416 | $ | 7,996,406 | ||||||
Screen
advertising
|
223,462 | 163,456 | 201,869 | |||||||||
Other
cinema services
|
397,978 | 343,502 | 225,251 | |||||||||
Revenue
from rendering of services
|
$ | 9,095,218 | $ | 8,777,374 | $ | 8,423,526 |
In
AUS$
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
2005
(unaudited)
|
|||||||||
Wages
and salaries
|
$ | 1,790,110 | $ | 1,652,334 | $ | 1,583,118 | ||||||
Employee
annual leave
|
42,849 | 29,698 | 18,451 | |||||||||
Employee
long-service leave
|
6,771 | 2,722 | 30,782 | |||||||||
Total
personnel expenses
|
$ | 1,839,730 | $ | 1,684,754 | $ | 1,632,351 |
In
AUS$
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
2005
(unaudited)
|
|||||||||
Interest
income on bank balances:
|
$ | 44,340 | $ | 50,874 | $ | 23,390 | ||||||
Finance
income
|
$ | 44,340 | $ | 50,874 | $ | 23,390 | ||||||
Interest
expense on finance lease commitment
|
$ | -- | $ | (82,494 | ) | $ | (112,168 | ) | ||||
Finance
expense
|
$ | -- | $ | (82,494 | ) | $ | (112,168 | ) | ||||
Net
finance income and expense
|
$ | 44,340 | $ | (31,620 | ) | $ | (88,778 | ) |
In
AUS$
|
Plant
and Equipment
|
Leasehold
Improvements
|
Capital
WIP
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Cost
|
||||||||||||||||
Balance
at January 1, 2006 (unaudited)
|
$ | 8,187,337 | $ | 1,923,649 | $ | 499,713 | $ | 10,610,699 | ||||||||
Additions/(Transfers)
|
65,481 | 530,084 | (425,523 | ) | 170,042 | |||||||||||
Balance
at December 31, 2006 (unaudited)
|
$ | 8,252,818 | $ | 2,453,733 | $ | 74,190 | $ | 10,780,741 | ||||||||
Balance
at January 1, 2007
|
8,252,818 | 2,453,733 | 74,190 | 10,780,741 | ||||||||||||
Additions/(Transfers)
|
417,756 | 112,971 | (74,190 | ) | 456,537 | |||||||||||
Balance
at December 31, 2007
|
$ | 8,670,574 | $ | 2,566,704 | $ | -- | $ | 11,237,278 |
In
AUS$
|
Plant
and Equipment
|
Leasehold
Improvements
|
Capital
WIP
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Depreciation
|
||||||||||||||||
Balance
at January 1, 2006 (unaudited)
|
$ | (5,436,684 | ) | $ | (526,514 | ) | $ | -- | $ | (5,963,198 | ) | |||||
Depreciation
and amortization for the year
|
(630,523 | ) | (92,345 | ) | -- | (722,868 | ) | |||||||||
Balance
at December 31, 2006 (unaudited)
|
$ | (6,067,207 | ) | $ | (618,859 | ) | $ | -- | $ | (6,686,066 | ) | |||||
Balance
at January 1,2007
|
(6,067,207 | ) | (618,859 | ) | -- | (6,686,066 | ) | |||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization for the year
|
(570,525 | ) | (82,817 | ) | -- | (653,342 | ) | |||||||||
Balance
at December 31, 2007
|
$ | (6,637,732 | ) | $ | (701,676 | ) | $ | -- | $ | (7,339,408 | ) |
In
AUS$
|
Plant
and Equipment
|
Leasehold
Improvements
|
Capital
WIP
|
Total
|
||||||||||||
Carrying
amounts
|
||||||||||||||||
At
January 1, 2006 (unaudited)
|
$ | 2,750,653 | $ | 1,397,135 | $ | 499,713 | $ | 4,647,501 | ||||||||
At
December 31, 2006 (unaudited)
|
2,185,611 | 1,834,874 | 74,190 | 4,094,675 | ||||||||||||
At
January 1, 2007
|
2,185,611 | 1,834,874 | 74,190 | 4,094,675 | ||||||||||||
At
December 31, 2007
|
2,032,842 | 1,865,028 | -- | 3,897,870 |
In
AUS$
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
||||||
Concession
stores at cost
|
$ | 88,317 | $ | 108,637 | ||||
Carrying
amount of inventories
|
88,317 | 108,637 |
In
AUS$
|
Note
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
|||||||||
Trade
receivables
|
17 | $ | 97,597 | $ | 65,918 | |||||||
Prepayments
|
534 | 40,727 |
In
AUS$
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
||||||
Bank
balances
|
$ | 1,410,567 | $ | 1,150,894 | ||||
Cash
in transit
|
28,119 | 112,379 | ||||||
Cash
on hand
|
35,700 | 37,100 | ||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents in the statement of cash flows
|
$ | 1,474,386 | $ | 1,300,373 |
Current
|
||||||||
In
AUS$
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
||||||
Liability
for annual leave
|
$ | 49,355 | $ | 37,378 | ||||
Liability
for long-service leave
|
18,390 | 31,289 | ||||||
Total
employee benefits - current
|
$ | 67,745 | $ | 68,667 |
Non-current
|
||||||||
In
AUS$
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
||||||
Liability
for long-service leave
|
$ | 55,396 | $ | 51,093 | ||||
Total
employee benefits – non current
|
$ | 55,396 | $ | 51,093 |
In
AUS$
|
Note
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
|||||||||
Trade
payables
|
$ | 346,369 | $ | 212,591 | ||||||||
Other
creditors and accruals
|
448,364 | 319,245 | ||||||||||
Total
payables
|
17 | $ | 794,733 | $ | 531,836 |
In
AUS$
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
||||||
Deferred
revenue
|
$ | 77,645 | $ | 97,056 |
Carrying
Amount
|
||||||||||||
In
AUS$
|
Note
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
|||||||||
Trade
receivables
|
12 | $ | 97,597 | $ | 65,918 | |||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents
|
13 | 1,474,386 | 1,300,373 |
Carrying
amount
|
||||||||
In
AUS$
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
||||||
Screen
advertisers
|
$ | 50,145 | $ | 7,242 | ||||
Credit
card companies
|
23,204 | 39,492 | ||||||
Screen
hire
|
12,137 | -- | ||||||
Games,
machine and merchandising companies
|
12,111 | 19,184 | ||||||
Total
|
$ | 97,597 | $ | 65,918 |
Variable
rate instruments
|
Carrying
amount
|
|||||||
In
AUS$
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
||||||
Bank
Balances
|
$ | 1,410,567 | $ | 1,150,894 |
Profit
or loss
|
Equity
|
|||||||||||||||
Effect
In AUS$
|
1
percentage point
Increase
|
1
percentage point
Decrease
|
1
percentage point
Increase
|
1
percentage point
Decrease
|
||||||||||||
December
31, 2007
|
||||||||||||||||
Variable
rate instruments
|
$ | 6,804 | $ | (6,804 | ) | $ | 6,804 | $ | (6,804 | ) | ||||||
Cash
flow sensitivity
|
6,804 | (6,804 | ) | 6,804 | (6,804 | ) |
Profit
or loss
|
Equity
|
|||||||||||||||
Effect
In AUS$
|
1
percentage point
Increase
|
1
percentage point
Decrease
|
1
percentage point
Increase
|
1
percentage point
Decrease
|
||||||||||||
December
31, 2006 (unaudited)
|
||||||||||||||||
Variable
rate instruments
|
$ | 8,446 | $ | (8,446 | ) | $ | 8,446 | $ | (8,446 | ) | ||||||
Cash
flow sensitivity
|
8,446 | (8,446 | ) | 8,446 | (8,446 | ) |
December
31, 2007
|
December
31, 2006
(unaudited)
|
|||||||||||||||
In
AUS$
|
Carrying
amount
|
Fair
value
|
Carrying
amount
|
Fair
value
|
||||||||||||
Trade
receivables
|
$ | 97,597 | $ | 97,597 | $ | 65,918 | $ | 65,918 | ||||||||
Cash
and cash equivalents
|
1,474,386 | 1,474,386 | 1,300,373 | 1,300,373 | ||||||||||||
Finance
lease liabilities
|
-- | -- | -- | -- | ||||||||||||
Trade
payables
|
794,733 | 794,733 | 531,836 | 531,836 |
|
Non-cancellable
operating lease rentals are payable as
follows:
|
In
AUS$
|
December
31, 2007
|
December
31, 2006
(unaudited)
|
||||||
Less
than one year
|
$ | 993,096 | $ | 993,096 | ||||
Between
one and five years
|
3,792,384 | 3,792,384 | ||||||
More
than five years
|
5,958,576 | 6,951,672 | ||||||
Total
|
$ | 10,744,056 | $ | 11,737,152 |
In
AUS$
|
Note
|
2007
|
2006
(unaudited)
|
2005
(unaudited)
|
||||||||||||
Cash
flows from operating activities
|
||||||||||||||||
Profit
for the period
|
$ | 2,851,507 | $ | 2,579,356 | $ | 1,983,497 | ||||||||||
Adjustments
for:
|
||||||||||||||||
Depreciation
and amortization
|
10 | 653,342 | 722,828 | 774,111 | ||||||||||||
Operating
profit before changes in working capital
|
$ | 3,504,849 | $ | 3,302,184 | $ | 2,757,608 | ||||||||||
Change
in trade receivables
|
12 | (31,679 | ) | 105,744 | (19,793 | ) | ||||||||||
Change
in inventories
|
11 | 20,320 | (25,839 | ) | 1,776 | |||||||||||
Change
in other assets
|
12 | 40,193 | (40,727 | ) | 4,995 | |||||||||||
Change
in trade payables
|
15 | 262,897 | (372,760 | ) | (90,186 | ) | ||||||||||
Change
in employee benefits
|
14 | 3,381 | 2,547 | 32,861 | ||||||||||||
Change
in deferred revenue
|
16 | (19,411 | ) | (14,543 | ) | (287,035 | ) | |||||||||
Net
cash from operating activities
|
$ | 3,780,550 | $ | 2,956,606 | $ | 2,400,226 |
|
Entities
with joint control or significant influence over the Joint
Venture
|
3.1
|
Certificate
of Amendment of Restatement Articles of Incorporation of Citadel Holding
Corporation (filed as Exhibit 3.1 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form
10-K for the year ended December 31, 1999, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
3.2
|
Restated
By-laws of Citadel Holding Corporation, a Nevada corporation (filed as
Exhibit 3.2 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 1999, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
3.3
|
Certificate
of Amendment of Articles of Incorporation of Citadel Holding Corporation
(filed as Exhibit 3.3 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
year ended December 31, 2001).
|
3.4
|
Articles
of Merger of Craig Merger Sub, Inc. with and into Craig Corporation (filed
as Exhibit 3.4 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 2001).
|
3.5
|
Articles
of Merger of Reading Merger Sub, Inc. with and into Reading Entertainment,
Inc. (filed as Exhibit 3.5 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the year ended December 31, 2001).
|
3.6
|
Restated
By-laws of Reading International, Inc., a Nevada corporation (filed as
Exhibit 3.6 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2004, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
4.1
|
1999
Stock Option Plan of Reading International, Inc. as amended on December
31, 2001 (filed as Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s Registration Statement on
Form S-8 filed on January 21, 2004, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
4.2
|
Form
of Preferred Security Certificate evidencing the preferred securities of
Reading International Trust I (filed as Exhibit 4.1 to the Company’s
report on Form 8-K dated February 5, 2007, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
4.3
|
Form
of Common Security Certificate evidencing common securities of Reading
International Trust I (filed as Exhibit 4.2 to the Company’s report
on Form 8-K dated February 5, 2007, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
4.4
|
Form
of Reading International, Inc. Floating Rate Junior Subordinated Debt
Security due 2027 (filed as Exhibit 4.3 to the Company’s report on Form
8-K dated February 5, 2007, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.1
|
Tax
Disaffiliation Agreement, dated as of August 4, 1994, by and between
Citadel Holding Corporation and Fidelity Federal Bank (filed as Exhibit
10.27 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended
June 30, 1994, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.2
|
Standard
Office lease, dated as of July 15, 1994, by and between Citadel Realty,
Inc. and Fidelity Federal Bank (filed as Exhibit 10.42 to the Company’s
Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 1995, and
incorporated herein by reference).
|
10.3
|
First
Amendment to Standard Office Lease, dated May 15, 1995, by and between
Citadel Realty, Inc. and Fidelity Federal Bank (filed as Exhibit 10.43 to
the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March
31, 1995, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.4
|
Guaranty
of Payment dated May 15, 1995 by Citadel Holding Corporation in favor of
Fidelity Federal Bank (filed as Exhibit 10.47 to the Company’s Quarterly
Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31, 1995, and incorporated
herein by reference).
|
10.5
|
Exchange
Agreement dated September 4, 1996 among Citadel Holding Corporation,
Citadel Acquisition Corp., Inc. Craig Corporation, Craig Management, Inc.,
Reading Entertainment, Inc., Reading Company (filed as Exhibit 10.51 to
the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31,
1996 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.6
|
Asset
Put and Registration Rights Agreement dated October 15, 1996 among Citadel
Holding Corporation, Citadel Acquisition Corp., Inc., Reading
Entertainment, Inc., and Craig Corporation (filed as Exhibit 10.52 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1996
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.7
|
Articles
of Incorporation of Reading Entertainment, Inc., A Nevada Corporation
(filed as Exhibit 10.7 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the
year ended December 31, 1999, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.7a
|
Certificate
of Designation of the Series A Voting Cumulative Convertible preferred
stock of Reading Entertainment, Inc. (filed as Exhibit 10.7a to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1999,
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.8
|
Lease
between Citadel Realty, Inc., Lesser and Disney Enterprises, Inc., Lessee
dated October 1, 1996 (filed as Exhibit 10.54 to the Company’s Quarterly
Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September 30, 1996, and
incorporated herein by reference).
|
10.9
|
Second
Amendment to Standard Office Lease between Citadel Realty, Inc. and
Fidelity Federal Bank dated October 1, 1996 (filed as Exhibit 10.55 to the
Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended September
30, 1996, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.10
|
Citadel
1996 Non-employee Director Stock Option Plan (filed as Exhibit 10.57 to
the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31,
1996, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.11
|
Reading
Entertainment, Inc. Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December
31, 1997 (filed as Exhibit 10.58 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form
10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.12
|
Stock
Purchase Agreement dated as of April 11, 1997 by and between Citadel
Holding Corporation and Craig Corporation (filed as Exhibit 10.56 to the
Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the quarter ended March 31,
1997).
|
10.13
|
Secured
Promissory Note dated as of April 11, 1997 issued by Craig Corporation to
Citadel Holding Corporation in the principal amount of $1,998,000 (filed
as Exhibit 10.60 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
quarter ended March 31, 1997).
|
10.14
|
Agreement
for Purchase and Sale of Real Property between Prudential Insurance
Company of America and Big 4 Farming LLC dated August 29, 1997 (filed as
Exhibit 10.61 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
quarter ended September 30, 1997).
|
10.15
|
Second
Amendment to Agreement of Purchase and Sale between Prudential Insurance
Company of America and Big 4 Farming LLC dated November 5, 1997 (filed as
Exhibit 10.62 to the Company’s Quarterly Report on Form 10-Q for the
quarter ended September 30, 1997).
|
10.16
|
Partnership
Agreement of Citadel Agricultural Partners No. 1 dated December 19, 1997
(filed as Exhibit 10.63 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the year ended December 31, 1997 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.17
|
Partnership
Agreement of Citadel Agricultural Partners No. 2 dated December 19, 1997
(filed as Exhibit 10.64 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the year ended December 31, 1997 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.18
|
Partnership
Agreement of Citadel Agricultural Partners No. 3 dated December 19, 1997
(filed as Exhibit 10.65 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the year ended December 31, 1997 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.19
|
Farm
Management Agreement dated December 26, 1997 between Citadel Agricultural
Partner No. 1 and Big 4 Farming LLC (filed as Exhibit 10.67 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.20
|
Farm
Management Agreement dated December 26, 1997 between Citadel Agricultural
Partner No. 2 and Big 4 Farming LLC (filed as Exhibit 10.68 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.21
|
Farm
Management Agreement dated December 26, 1997 between Citadel Agricultural
Partner No. 3 and Big 4 Farming LLC (filed as Exhibit 10.69 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.22
|
Line
of Credit Agreement dated December 29, 1997 between Citadel Holding
Corporation and Big 4 Ranch, Inc. (filed as Exhibit 10.70 to the Company’s
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997 and
incorporated herein by reference).
|
10.23
|
Management
Services Agreement dated December 26, 1997 between Big 4 Farming LLC and
Cecelia Packing (filed as Exhibit 10.71 to the Company’s Annual Report on
Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.24
|
Agricultural
Loan Agreement dated December 29, 1997 between Citadel Holding Corporation
and Citadel Agriculture Partner No. 1 (filed as Exhibit 10.72 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.25
|
Agricultural
Loan Agreement dated December 29, 1997 between Citadel Holding Corporation
and Citadel Agriculture Partner No. 2 (filed as Exhibit 10.73 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.26
|
Agricultural
Loan Agreement dated December 29, 1997 between Citadel Holding Corporation
and Citadel Agriculture Partner No. 3 (filed as Exhibit 10.74 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.27
|
Promissory
Note dated December 29, 1997 between Citadel Holding Corporation and
Citadel Agricultural Partners No. 1 (filed as Exhibit 10.75 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.28
|
Promissory
Note dated December 29, 1997 between Citadel Holding Corporation and
Citadel Agricultural Partners No. 2 (filed as Exhibit 10.76 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.29
|
Promissory
Note dated December 29, 1997 between Citadel Holding Corporation and
Citadel Agricultural Partners No. 3 (filed as Exhibit 10.77 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.30
|
Security
Agreement dated December 29, 1997 between Citadel Holding Corporation and
Citadel Agricultural Partnership No. 1 (filed as Exhibit 10.78 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.31
|
Security
Agreement dated December 29, 1997 between Citadel Holding Corporation and
Citadel Agricultural Partnership No. 2 (filed as Exhibit 10.79 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.32
|
Security
Agreement dated December 29, 1997 between Citadel Holding Corporation and
Citadel Agricultural Partnership No. 3 (filed as Exhibit 10.80 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.33
|
Administrative
Services Agreement between Citadel Holding Corporation and Big 4 Ranch,
Inc. dated December 29, 1997 (filed as Exhibit 10.81 to the Company’s
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1997 and
incorporated herein by reference).
|
10.34
|
Reading
Entertainment, Inc. Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December
31, 1998 (filed as Exhibit as 10.41 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form
10-K for the year ended December 31, 1998 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.35
|
Reading
Entertainment, Inc. Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December
31, 1999 (filed by Reading Entertainment Inc. as Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 1999 on April 14, 2000 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.36
|
Promissory
Note dated December 20, 1999 between Citadel Holding Corporation and
Nationwide Life Insurance 3 (filed as Exhibit 10.36 to the Company’s
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1999 and
incorporated herein by reference).
|
10.37*
|
Employment
Agreement between Citadel Holding Corporation and Andrzej Matyczynski
(filed as Exhibit 10.37 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for
the year ended December 31, 1999 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.38
|
Citadel
1999 Employee Stock Option Plan (filed as Exhibit 10.38 to the Company’s
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 1999 and
incorporated herein by reference).
|
10.39
|
Amendment
and Plan of Merger By and Among Citadel Holding Corporation and
Off-Broadway Theatres, Inc. (filed as Exhibit A to the Company’s Proxy
Statement and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.40
|
Amended
and Restated Lease Agreement dated as of July 28, 2000 as amended and
restated as of January 29, 2002 between Sutton Hill Capital, L.L.C. and
Citadel Cinemas, Inc. (filed as Exhibit 10.40 to the Company’s Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2002 and incorporated
herein by reference).
|
10.41
|
Amended
and Restated Citadel Standby Credit Facility dated as of July 28, 2000 as
amended and restated as of January 29, 2002 between Sutton Hill Capital,
L.L.C. and Reading International, Inc. (filed as Exhibit 10.40 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2002
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.42
|
Amended
and Restated Security Agreement dated as of July 28, 2000 as amended and
restated as of January 29, 2002 between Sutton Hill Capital, L.L.C. and
Reading International, Inc. (filed as Exhibit 10.40 to the Company’s
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2002 and
incorporated herein by reference).
|
10.43
|
Amended
and Restated Pledge Agreement dated as of July 28, 2000 as amended and
restated as of January 29, 2002 between Sutton Hill Capital, L.L.C. and
Reading International, Inc. (filed as Exhibit 10.40 to the Company’s
Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2002 and
incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.44
|
Amended
and Restated Intercreditor Agreement dated as of July 28, 2000 as amended
and restated as of January 29, 2002 between Sutton Hill Capital, L.L.C.
and Reading International, Inc. and Nationwide Theatres Corp. (filed as
Exhibit 10.40 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 2002 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.45
|
Guaranty
dated July 28, 2000 by Michael R. Forman and James J. Cotter in favor of
Citadel Cinemas, Inc. and Citadel Realty, Inc. (filed as Exhibit 10.40 to
the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31,
2002 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.46
|
Amended
and Restated Agreement with Respect to Fee Option dated as of July 28,
2000 as amended and restated as of January 29, 2002 between Sutton Hill
Capital, L.L.C. and Citadel Realty, Inc. (filed as Exhibit 10.40 to the
Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2002
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.47
|
Theater
Management Agreement between Liberty Theaters, Inc. and OBI LLC (filed as
Exhibit 10.40 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 2002 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.48*
|
Non-qualified
Stock Option Agreement between Reading International, Inc. and James J.
Cotter (filed as Exhibit 10.40 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K
for the year ended December 31, 2002 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.49
|
Omnibus
Agreement between Citadel Cinemas, Inc. and Sutton Hill Capital, LLC,
dated October 22, 2003 (filed on Quarterly Report Form 10-Q for the period
ended September 30, 2003 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.50
|
Pledge
Agreement between Citadel Cinemas, Inc. and Sutton Hill Capital, LLC,
dated October 22, 2003 (filed on Quarterly Report Form 10-Q for the period
ended September 30, 2003 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.51
|
Guarantee
of Lenders Obligation Under Standby Credit Agreement in favor of Sutton
Hill Capital, LLC, dated October 22, 2003 (filed on Quarterly Report Form
10-Q for the period ended September 30, 2003 and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.52*
|
Employment
agreement between Reading International, Inc. and Wayne D. Smith (filed as
exhibit 10.52 to the Company’s Annual Report on Form 10-K for the year
ended December 31, 2004, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.53
|
Contract
of Sale between Sutton Hill Capital L.L.C. and Sutton Hill Properties, LLC
dated as of September 19, 2005 (filed as exhibit 10.53 to the Company’s
report on Form 8-K filed on September 21, 2005, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.54
|
Installment
Sale Note dated as of September 19, 2005 (filed as exhibit 10.54 to the
Company’s report on Form 8-K filed on September 21, 2005, and incorporated
herein by reference).
|
10.55
|
Guaranty
by Reading International, Inc. dated as of September 1, 2005 (filed as
exhibit 10.55 to the Company’s report on Form 8-K filed on September 21,
2005, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.56
|
Assignment
and Assumption of Lease between Sutton Hill Capital L.L.C. and Sutton Hill
Properties, LLC dated as of September 19, 2005 (filed as exhibit 10.56 to
the Company’s report on Form 8-K filed on September 21, 2005, and
incorporated herein by reference).
|
10.57
|
License
and Option Agreement between Sutton Hill Properties, LLC and Sutton Hill
Capital L.L.C. dated as of September 19, 2005 (filed as exhibit 10.57 to
the Company’s report on Form 8-K filed on September 21, 2005, and
incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.58
|
Second
Amendment to Amended and Restated Master Operating Lease dated as of
September 1, 2005 (filed as exhibit 10.58 to the Company’s report on Form
8-K filed on September 21, 2005, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.59
|
Letter
from James J. Cotter dated August 11, 2005 regarding liens (filed as
exhibit 10.59 to the Company’s report on Form 8-K filed on September 21,
2005, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.60
|
Letter
amending effective date of transaction to September 19, 2005 (filed as
exhibit 10.60 to the Company’s report on Form 8-K filed on September 21,
2005, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.61
|
Promissory
Note by Citadel Cinemas, Inc. in favor of Sutton Hill Capital L.L.C. dated
September 14, 2004 (filed as exhibit 10.61 to the Company’s Annual Report
on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2005, and incorporated herein
by reference).
|
10.62
|
Guaranty
by Reading International, Inc. in favor of Sutton Hill Capital L.L.C.
dated September 14, 2004 (filed as exhibit 10.62 to the Company’s Annual
Report on Form 10-K for the year ended December 31, 2005, and incorporated
herein by reference).
|
10.63
|
Purchase
Agreement, dated February 5, 2007, among Reading International, Inc.,
Reading International Trust I, and Kodiak Warehouse JPM LLC (filed as
Exhibit 10.1 to the Company’s report on Form 8-K dated February 5, 2007,
and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.64
|
Amended
and Restated Declaration of Trust, dated February 5, 2007, among Reading
International Inc., as sponsor, the Administrators named therein, and
Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., as property trustee, and Wells Fargo Delaware
Trust Company as Delaware trustee (filed as Exhibit 10.2 to the Company’s
report on Form 8-K dated February 5, 2007, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.65
|
Indenture
among Reading International, Inc., Reading New Zealand Limited, and Wells
Fargo Bank, N.A., as indenture trustee (filed as Exhibit 10.4 to the
Company’s report on Form 8-K dated February 5, 2007, and incorporated
herein by reference).
|
10.66*
|
Employment
Agreement between Reading International, Inc. and John Hunter (filed as
Exhibit 10.66 to the Company’s report on Form 10-K for the year ended
December 31, 2006, and incorporated herein by
reference).
|
10.67
|
Asset
Purchase and Sale Agreement dated October 8, 2007 among Pacific Theatres
Exhibition Corp., Consolidated Amusement Theatres, Inc., a Hawaii
corporation, Michael Forman, Christopher Forman, Consolidated Amusement
Theatres, Inc., a Nevada corporation, and Reading International, Inc.
(filed herewith).
|
10.68
|
Real
Property Purchase and Sale Agreement dated October 8, 2007 between
Consolidated Amusement Theatres, Inc., a Hawaii corporation, and
Consolidated Amusement Theatres, Inc., a Nevada corporation (filed
herewith).
|
10.69
|
Leasehold
Purchase and Sale Agreement dated October 8, 2007 between Kenmore Rohnert,
LLC and Consolidated Amusement Theatres, Inc., a Nevada corporation (filed
herewith).
|
10.70
|
Amendment
No. 1 to Asset Purchase and Sale Agreement dated February 8, 2008 among
Pacific Theatres Exhibition Corp., Consolidated Amusement Theatres, Inc.,
a Hawaii corporation, Michael Forman, Christopher Forman, Consolidated
Amusement Theatres, Inc., a Nevada corporation, and Reading International,
Inc. (filed herewith).
|
10.71
|
Amendment
No. 2 to Asset Purchase and Sale Agreement dated February 14, 2008 among
Pacific Theatres Exhibition Corp., Consolidated Amusement Theatres, Inc.,
a Hawaii corporation, Michael Forman, Christopher Forman, Consolidated
Amusement Theatres, Inc., a Nevada corporation, and Reading International,
Inc. (filed herewith).
|
10.72
|
Credit
Agreement dated February 21, 2008 among Consolidated Amusement Theatres,
Inc., a Nevada corporation, General Electric Capital Corporation, and GE
Capital Markets, Inc. (filed
herewith).
|
10.73
|
Reading
Guaranty Agreement dated February 21, 2008 among Consolidated Amusement
Theatres, Inc., a Nevada corporation, General Electric Capital
Corporation, and GE Capital Markets, Inc. (filed
herewith).
|
10.74
|
Pledge
and Security Agreement dated February 22, 2008 by Reading Consolidated
Holdings, Inc. in favor of Nationwide Theatres Corp (filed
herewith).
|
10.75
|
Promissory
Note dated February 22, 2008 by Reading Consolidated Holdings, inc. in
favor of Nationwide Theatres Corp. (filed
herewith).
|
21
|
List
of Subsidiaries (filed herewith).
|
23.1
|
Consent
of Independent Auditors, Deloitte & Touche LLP (filed
herewith).
|
23.2
|
Consent
of Independent Auditors, Pricewaterhousecoopers LLP (filed
herewith).
|
23.3
|
Consent
of Independent Auditors, KPMG LLP (filed
herewith).
|
31.1
|
Certification
of Principal Executive Officer dated March 28, 2008 pursuant to Section
302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (filed
herewith).
|
31.2
|
Certification
of Principal Financial Officer dated March 28, 2008 pursuant to Section
302 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (filed
herewith).
|
32.1
|
Certification
of Principal Executive Officer dated March 28, 2008 pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
of 2002 (filed herewith).
|
32.2
|
Certification
of Principal Financial Officer dated March 28, 2008 pursuant to 18 U.S.C.
Section 1350, as adopted pursuant to Section 906 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act
of 2002 (filed herewith).
|
Date: March
28, 2008
|
By:
|
/s/
Andrzej Matyczynski
|
Andrzej
Matyczynski
|
||
Chief
Financial Officer and Treasurer
|
||
(Principal
Financial and Accounting Officer)
|
Signature
|
Title(s)
|
Date
|
/s/
James J. Cotter
|
Chairman
of the Board and Director and Chief Executive Officer
|
March
28, 2008
|
James
J. Cotter
|
||
/s/
Eric Barr
|
Director
|
March
28, 2008
|
Eric
Barr
|
||
/s/
James J. Cotter, Jr.
|
Director
|
March
28, 2008
|
James
J. Cotter, Jr.
|
||
/s/
Margaret Cotter
|
Director
|
March
28, 2008
|
Margaret
Cotter
|
||
/s/
William D. Gould
|
Director
|
March
28, 2008
|
William
D. Gould
|
||
/s/
Edward L. Kane
|
Director
|
March
28, 2008
|
Edward
L Kane
|
||
/s/
Gerard P. Laheney
|
Director
|
March
28, 2008
|
Gerard
P. Laheney
|
||
/s/
Alfred Villaseñor
|
Director
|
March
28, 2008
|
Alfred
Villaseñor
|