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So, Skid Row may be getting that affordable housing tower after all

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President & CEO Kevin Murray and a rendering from Downtown LA Neighborhood Council

President & CEO Kevin Murray and a rendering from Downtown LA Neighborhood Council

Nonprofit developer Weingart Center is increasing the size of the affordable housing tower that would rise in the heart of Los Angeles’ homelessness crisis in Skid Row.

The 19-story, 298-unit San Pedro Tower planned at 600 San Pedro Street previously called for 17,000 square feet of office space. But now, Weingart Center is proposing to nearly triple the amount of office space — to 50,000 square feet — by replacing a parking lot near Sixth and San Pedro streets, Curbed reported.

The additional office area would be occupied by Inner City Law Center and Chrysalis, a nonprofit service provider for job training and placement.

San Diego-based Joseph Wong Design Associates designed the tower, which is expected to open in 2023, with four two-bedroom manager units, 3,200 square feet of retail, a rooftop deck and community gardens.

The 19-story tower is just one component of a master plan that L.A.-based Weingart Center has for the area. The firm is also developing the $138-million Weingart Towers at 555 South Crocker Street nearby, which survived appeals from neighbors. The combined projects developed with Chelsea Investment Corporation will add almost 700 units of supportive and affordable housing by 2025.

Another nonprofit, Coalition for Responsible Community Development, is also working in Skid Row. The firm recently filed plans to convert three buildings in on 5th Street into 95 units for extremely low-income households and 16,000 square feet of commercial space. [Curbed]Gregory Cornfield


Homebuilders’ outlook posts unexpected drop for first time this year

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(Credit: iStock)

(Credit: iStock)

Confidence among the country’s homebuilders took an unexpected dip in June amid concerns over rising costs and trade issues.

The National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index fell two points to 64 for the first drop in 2019, according to Bloomberg. A score above 50 shows that more developers perceive sales as good, rather than bad.

Lower mortgage rates have failed to boost confidence in the US housing market, as homes remain too expensive for most buyers.

“Despite lower mortgage rates, home prices remain somewhat high relative to incomes, which is particularly challenging for entry-level buyers,” NAHB Chief Economist Robert Dietz told Bloomberg. “Builders continue to grapple with excessive regulations, a shortage of lots and lack of skilled labor that are hurting affordability and depressing supply.”

A Bloomberg survey had initially predicted the housing sentiment index would rise from 66 to 67.

It stands in stark contrast to a promising start to the year for the industry. After mortgage rates dropped to 13-month lows, shares of home-building companies were on track for their best quarter in seven years. At the time, major homebuilders Beazer Homes USA, BZH, Lennar, KB Home and D.R. Horton all recorded share price increases of about 20 percent.

The recent figures suggest that the housing market is in fact not on the rise, as home-builders complained that increasing construction costs had contributed to higher property prices.

[Bloomberg] — David Jeans

S&P 500 real estate stocks haven’t been this high in a long time

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(Credit: iStock)

(Credit: iStock)

Real estate stocks are having a very good year.

As of Monday, a quarter of the 32 companies in the real estate sector on the S&P 500 were trading at their highest levels in at least the past year, according to the Wall Street Journal. The sector is the second-best performer for the year, behind only technology stocks.

Investors are particularly keen on companies betting big on e-commerce. Prologis and Duke Realty, both of which focus on warehouse space vital to companies like Amazon, are trading at their highest levels in years.

The importance of this space was highlighted last month when Blackstone Group landed a massive deal to spend $18.7 billion on a network of warehouses throughout the country.

The big draw overall is still real estate firms’ ability to make steady payments in a low-rate environment.

[WSJ] – Eddie Small

Onni Group lands massive acquisition loan for Wilshire Courtyard purchase

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Natixis CEO Francois Riahi, Onni Group President Rossano DeCotiis , and Wilshire Courtyard (Credit: BPCE and Michael Maltzan Architecture)

Natixis CEO Francois Riahi, Onni Group President Rossano DeCotiis, and Wilshire Courtyard (Credit: BPCE and Michael Maltzan Architecture)

Onni Group has secured a $550 million acquisition loan for its purchase of the 1 million-square-foot Wilshire Courtyard office campus.

Natixis provided the financing for the massive property on Miracle Mile, according to Commercial Observer.

Pending the deal closes at $630 million — as The Real Deal first reported in January of the agreed-upon price — it would surpass the most expensive commercial acquisition of 2018 in Los Angeles. Boston Properties’ $627.5 million purchase of the ground lease of Santa Monica Business Park ranked as the most expensive commercial deal in 2018.

Tishman Speyer had been looking to sell the 8.7-acre office campus since last September.

Located at 5750 and 5700 Wilshire Boulevard, the property includes two, six-story buildings separated by a courtyard. Tenants include holding company CJ America, advertising agency Initiative and Spanish publication Reporte Internacional. Vacancy has increased over the last several years there.

Last month, The Hollywood Reporter and its sister publication, Billboard, said they would exit Wilshire Courtyard for a different location. Another notable move from the property came last fall, when Coffee Bean & Tea Leaf left its Wilshire Courtyard headquarters of three years.

Onni has been an active and large investor in L.A. over the last several years, most notably in Downtown.

The Canadian firm recently secured City Council approval to build a 700-unit tower at 1000 South Hill Street, which will be one of the tallest towers in the city once completed. [CO]Natalie Hoberman

MAP: Everywhere Google owns property in America

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Google now feels guilty.

After the Mountain View-based company and its peers in Silicon Valley helped to create a shortage of affordable housing, Google is pledging to spend $1 billion on creating more housing in the Bay Area.

In a blog post, Google CEO Sundar Pichai said $750 million of that will be repurposing Google’s own land, currently marked as commercial or office space, as residential housing and the rest is an investment fund “so that we can provide incentives to enable developers to build at least 5,000 affordable housing units across the market.”

Google and its parent company, Alphabet, own a lot of space in Silicon Valley. In 2004, the company built a corporate headquarters in Mountain View that is now up to 3.1 million square feet.

Google’s large footprint

But as The Real Deal has reported previously, Alphabet owns a lot of property—and not just in the Bay Area.

As of March 2018, Alphabet’s global real-estate assets had an estimated value of $14.5 billion, according to Real Capital Analytics — roughly 30 percent of which is concentrated in its two New York City buildings, its $1.77 billion deal for 111 Eighth Avenue from 2010 and the $2.4 billion buy of 75 Ninth Avenue from last year.

Google has 74,000 employees worldwide as well as more than 70 offices and 15 data centers in 50 countries, according to the company.

Earlier this year, Microsoft pledged $500 million to build affordable homes and homeless services in the Seattle area.

Ventus scores approval for controversial Fig mixed-project

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Tracey Raszewski and Ventus Group President Scott Gale

Tracey Raszewski and Ventus Group President Scott Gale

Ventus Group has gotten final approval for its $455 million mixed-use mega complex, a planned development that had drawn strong opposition from community groups. The City Council unanimously approved plans for the development.

The Fig will be a group of seven-story buildings with a 298-room hotel, 200 units of student housing, 200 rental units, and 96,500 square feet of mixed commercial space. The apartments will have 82 rental set aside as affordable. Architects Orange designed the project.

Irvine-based Ventus faced stiff opposition from neighbors because of the size of The Fig and because 32 rent-controlled units on Flower Drive would be demolished.

The Fig will rise on a 4.4-acre site on the 3900 block of Figueroa Street, across from Expo Park near the University of Southern California and the school’s $700 million mixed-use USC Village development completed in 2017.

Ventus first proposed the project in 2016, but it took until this February for the City Planning Commission to approve it.

In May, Ventus pulled the trigger on the land needed, paying $17.8 million for eight parcels.

The developer is seeking tax breaks from the city for the construction. Groundbreaking hasn’t yet been set.

Ventus at first wanted to include a 21-story tower, but scrapped that plan in the fall of 2017.

Community groups filed two city appeals. The Council rejected one and another appellant dropped a challenge last month, all but assuring its final approval.

Agents go the extra mile to ensure privacy for not-so-famous rich clients

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Agents are protecting their clients privacy (Credit: iStock)

Agents are protecting their clients privacy (Credit: iStock)

Sleep masks. Fake names. Art dealer personas.

Those are just some of the gimmicks being used in the world of high-end real estate as more wealthy home buyers seek greater privacy while they search for their next property.

While it’s commonplace to see celebrities buying homes under LLCs or through business managers, agents are increasingly having to take extreme precautions for not-so-famous folks who want to disguise their identity for other reasons, the Wall Street Journal reported.

In one case, a client asked Miami Beach agent Florian Jouin to call them a different name during showings. Another agent offered a story of a well-known actress refusing to leave the house during open house events, choosing instead to monitor the agent and passersby from a monitor in a hidden room off the master closet.

And in one extreme case, a wealthy client demanded Compass agent Cindy Scholz fly out to Hong Kong before he would agree to work with her. Once she arrived, the client requested that she pretend to be an art adviser to his entourage. The New York-based agent also recalls a time when a rich client asked to keep the transactions quiet because he didn’t want his family knowing what his assets were.

Social media and the rise of online listing platforms have contributed to the growing paranoia, agents say. With hardly anything kept private anymore, deep-pocketed home buyers and sellers feel they need to take extreme measures to ensure privacy. [WSJ] — Natalie Hoberman

Jamison nabs construction loan on another big resi project

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From left: Comerica Bank CEO Curtis Farmer, Jamie Lee and 2842 West James Wood Boulevard (Credit: LinkedIn and Google Maps)

From left: Comerica Bank CEO Curtis Farmer, Jamie Lee and 2842 West James Wood Boulevard (Credit: LinkedIn and Google Maps)

Three days after scoring city approval for its 193-unit development, Jamison secured a $48 million construction loan on the to build the project, The Real Deal has learned.

City officials approved the Transit-Oriented Communities proposal on May 28, according to documents from the Department of City Planning.

Three days later, Comerica Bank provided the financing, records show.

The planned mixed-use project will rise at 2842 West James Wood Boulevard. It will have 193 residential units — 20 will be set aside as affordable — and 19,500 square feet of commercial space. The 168,400-square-foot project will span six stories.

Jamison filed plans to build the development in January 2018. The company had taken over the project from developer Young Kim and Archeon International Group, which proposed building a multifamily complex with 224 units.

It was not known how much Jamison paid for the land.

A spokesperson for the firm did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Jamison is among a handful of prolific developers that are changing the landscape of Koreatown. The multifamily and office developer recently filed plans to build a five-story apartment building outside its home turf. The multifamily project in Sawtelle would include 100 units, nine set aside as affordable.


Broadcast production firm inks big lease at Prologis industrial center

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Prologis CEO Hamid Moghadam, NEP’s chief strategy officer Carrie Galvin, and the building

Prologis CEO Hamid Moghadam, NEP’s chief strategy officer Carrie Galvin, and the building

Heading into summer, demand for industrial property in Los Angeles remains hot.

Prologis, one of the largest industrial landlords in the county, has signed a production firm to occupy a 108,200-square-foot distribution center in Van Nuys.

It marks the fourth major industrial deal for the San Francisco-based real estate investment trust in the past month, after having already scored two other Van Nuys leases and a big tenant in the Inland Empire.

Pittsburgh-based NEP Group will occupy the Van Nuys distribution site at 7850 Ruffner Avenue. It features 10 loading docks, a gated yard, and is located near the Van Nuys Airport.

NEP provides outsourced services for major events. The rapid increase of streaming and production services has more than doubled annual demand in the L.A. region for industrial space for film and television series, according to a recent report by CBRE, which represented Prologis in the transaction. More than 1.7 million square feet of production space was leased in 2018, compared to 780,000 square feet in 2011.

San Francisco-based Prologis also recently secured two leases totaling totaling 255,400 square feet at other properties in Van Nuys, and signed a baby products company to a 10-year lease at a 450,000-square-foot warehouse in the Inland Empire, the industrial capital of the country.

Other recent industrial deals in L.A. include Rexford Industrial’s $118.1-million purchase of the 29-acre San Fernando Business Center in April, and a five-year lease CenterPoint Properties secured at its last-mile warehouse in Harbor Gateway North.

Bankrupt Ditech looks to sell most of its mortgage business

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Thomas F. Marano, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and President of Ditech Holding Corporation

Thomas F. Marano, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer and President of Ditech Holding Corporation

The bankrupt nonbank lender Ditech Holding Corp. is looking to sell much of its mortgage business.

New York-based New Residential Investment Corp. made a bid in U.S. Bankruptcy Court to buy all of the forward assets of Ditech Financial, while Washington, D.C.-based Mortgage Assets Management made a bid to buy all of the assets and stock of the company’s reverse mortgage business.

Port Washington, Pennsylvania-based Ditech has been in serious financial trouble since 2017 when the company, then known as Walter Investment Management, filed for bankruptcy. It was able to emerge from bankruptcy — only to file for bankruptcy again in April.

New Residential is looking to purchase Ditech Financial’s forward Fannie Mae, Ginnie Mae and non-agency mortgage servicing rights. In total, the mortgages have an unpaid principal balance of about $63 billion as of March 31, according to a release.

Both of the bids are stalking horse bids, meaning that other companies have until July 8 to submit higher bids to the bankruptcy court to buy the assets.

The price of New Residential Investment Corp.’s offer has not yet been determined, according to the company. The final purchase price will be determined at the close of the deal, based on the tangible book value of the related assets, according to the release.

New Residential said if the bid goes through, it has agreed to take over Ditech’s office space and plans to make employment offers to a number of Ditech employees. Mortgage Assets Management has not disclosed what it plans to do with Ditech’s reverse mortgage business.

Supersize this: Hollywood Hills homeowner plans massive expansion

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Matthew Lichtenberg and the Hollywood Hills property (Credit: Google Maps)

Matthew Lichtenberg and the Hollywood Hills property (Credit: Google Maps)

The owner of a 1,500-square-foot Hollywood Hills home wants to supersize it with an assemblage of three properties.

Plans for the addition calls for a home that would be 11,000 square feet, more than seven times the size of the current one, according to a filing with the Department of City Planning. The home is located at Lulu Glen Drive and Woodstock Road.

It would dwarf the neighboring Wohlstetter House, a historic 75-year-old home designed by architect Josef Van der Kar, as well as many others in the neighborhood.

The applicant is talent agent Matthew Lichtenberg, the owner of Brentwood-based Level Four Business Management. It is unclear whether he is acting on behalf of a client or owns the property himself. Lichtenberg did not immediately provide a comment on the filing.

The increasing number of homeowners are looking to greatly expand their existing homes throughout L.A.’s tony hillside neighborhoods, prompting pushback from neighbors and elected officials.

In 2017, the city passed an ordinance to limit the size of mansions in Bel Air, but other areas continue to see steadily increasing development.

Lichtenberg is a trustee of the Julfest Trust, which owns the three properties. Two of them have single-family homes. The third is an acre-large parcel that appears to have a garden and yard. That parcel also borders Laurel Canyon Boulevard.

Most of Lichtenberg’s clients are celebrity comedians, including Larry David, Will Ferrell, and Lewis Black, according to Variety.

Property records show that Lichtenberg purchased the home to be expanded on behalf of the trust in 2017, paying $1.4 million to a trust associated with actress Anne Yarborough Graves, who died six months earlier.

Litchenberg and Graves signed a purchase option agreement in 2013 that allowed Litchenberg to purchase the property from the trust after her death. Lichtenberg and the Julfest Trust has owned a neighboring home at 2825 Woodstock Road since at least 2006, when it took out a mortgage on the property.

In nondisclosure states, Zestimate and hearsay are hurting home buyers and sellers

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In nondisclosure states, “your nosy neighbor can’t go to Zillow and find out what you sold your house for.”

In nondisclosure states, “your nosy neighbor can’t go to Zillow and find out what you sold your house for.”

In states like California and New York, agents and prospective home buyers can easily find out if they are overpaying for a home by searching through public records to find out what the home next door sold for.

But that luxury isn’t available everywhere, and in states like Texas where such disclosures are prohibited, it appears to be causing more harm than good.

There are about a dozen nondisclosure states in the country, the Wall Street Journal reported. Rather than relying on hard facts, agents, homeowners and even tax appraisers have to rely on other agents and content aggregators like Zillow for an estimate of a home’s value. And as found in a study by the Federal Reserve last year, neither humans nor computer programs are all that great a estimating prices — half of the automated-valuation estimates and 40 percent by humans landed within 10 percent of an actual selling price.

In addition to causing uncertainty among buyers, the lack of information has caused major tax disparities in nondisclosure states. Studies found dramatically exaggerated tax appraisals in such states wherein some homeowners are paying large sums in taxes for lower-priced homes.

The real estate lobby has been fighting efforts to bring more price transparency, arguing it would diminish the job of a real estate agent and hurt consumer privacy. Still, realtors who have worked in states where sales information is available claim it allows them to do their job better and maintain a fair real estate market. [WSJ] — Natalie Hoberman

Mitsui Fudosan’s 438-unit tower project advances past appeals

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John Westerfield is CEO of MFA and a rendering 8th & Fig (Credit: DLANC)

John Westerfield is CEO of MFA and a rendering 8th & Fig (Credit: DLANC)

Mitsui Fudosan America has cleared a major hurdle in its path to building a 438-unit residential tower tower in Downtown Los Angeles.

Despite appeals, the firm received the green light from the city planning and land use committee for the project the 8th & Fig project.

The development, which still requires City Council approval, would rise to 41 stories at 732 S. Figueroa Street. The project building would be a total of 425,000 square feet, including 7,500 square feet of commercial space.

Of the 438 residential units, only 22 units — about 5 percent — will be set aside for affordable housing.

The proposal had faced appeals from carpenter unions, which alleged the environmental report Fudosan submitted was inadequate.

Earlier this year, the city’s planning commission denied appeals against 8th & Fig from the Southwest Regional Council of Carpenters and from Coalition for Responsible Equitable Economic Development, which was demanding what it called fair wages.

Labor unions have become more active in challenging developments in Los Angeles recently. At the start of the year, Icon Co. accused unions of racketeering and extortion for allegedly pressuring companies to only hire union labor.

The 8th & Fig tower was scaled back by about 12 percent in October. Mitsui Fudosan America — whose parent company is Japanese developer Mitsui Fudosan — has owned the site for more than 30 years. It must pay a Public Benefit Payment of $4.3 million for the project, which was expected to be complete in 2022.

Facebook is launching its own financial marketplace. Will the real estate industry sign on?

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Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

Facebook’s long-awaited crypto-anchored financial marketplace may emerge as a game-changer for real estate when it debuts next year. The platform, powered by blockchain, could allow tenants to send the rent with a click of a button, and buyers and sellers to complete multi-million-dollar transactions in real-time.

But the real estate industry is notoriously slow to embrace tech, and Facebook’s announcement follows years of experiments with niche digital currencies, notably Bitcoin, an online currency that fluctuates like a speed diet.

“Landlords barely accept Bitcoin, now we are giving Facebook even more of our data?” said Zach Aarons, whose firm Metaprop invests in real estate technology companies. “I don’t think the real estate industry should be embracing that.”

Using its own cryptocurrency, known as Libra, Facebook’s financial system will be backed by national currencies, rather than the method used by Bitcoin, which can change drastically and is premised on a scarcity model. Facebook has already signed on dozens of partners, including Mastercard, Visa, Uber, Spotify, Paypal, Andreessen Horowitz and eBay, according to reports. Some of the partners paid at least $10 million to join the platform, trade publication The Block reported.

“If they’re doing actual currency, it’s awesome,” said Ben Shaoul, a developer, and the head of Magnum Real Estate who was among the first advocates of using Bitcoin in the real estate industry. He compared Facebook to a “real warm body,” or a company that people trust.

The popularity of online cryptocurrencies, including Bitcoin, has seeped into real estate transactions in recent years, though no one would argue they’re common. Shaoul, last year launched sales at his 81-unit property at 62 Avenue B in Alphabet City, and accepted Bitcoin as a form of payment.

Smaller transactions have also occurred. A brownstone mansion at 416 West 51st Street was listed last year for $12 million, a sum payable by Bitcoin. At another site on the Upper East Side, seller Claudio Guazzoni de Zanett listed his property $30 million. Potential buyers also had the option to pay $45 million in Bitcoin, a price hike he attributed to the volatility of the online currency.

It remains to be seen if Facebook’s new system — whereby a user essentially “buys” libra, which is backed by “real assets” — could launch with more traction. Attorney Shahriar Sedgh, of Manhattan-based firm Sedgh & Zuckerman, who has advised clients on the use of cryptocurrencies, said that the new financial system could be embraced by the industry if it remains tied to government-backed currencies.

“As long as [Facebook] could maintain the volatility of it, it could be a good alternative to using the dollar to pay for a standard lease or real estate transaction,” he said.

For some landlords, Facebook’s latest venture is a wait-and-see exercise.

“Landlords are usually slow adapters of technology,” David Schwartz, whose firm Slate Property Group owns multifamily buildings across the city and also develops condominiums. “You don’t want to be one of the first ones to do it.”

Goodman Group expands industrial portfolio with $130M purchase: sources

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Anthony Rozic, CEO of Goodman North America, and the property (Credit: Google Maps)

Anthony Rozic, CEO of Goodman North America, and the property (Credit: Google Maps)

Industrial developer Goodman Group paid supermarket chain Ralph’s Grocer Co. about $130 million for a sprawling manufacturing facility in Atwater Village, The Real Deal has learned. Sources said the deal closed May 30.

The property spans about 37 acres on San Fernando Road near Colorado Street. Ralph’s, the grocery store, built the warehouse facility in the late 1980s. At the time, it was one of the largest automated warehouses in the country, the Los Angeles Times previously reported.

Goodman declined to comment. A representative for Ralph’s did not respond to requests for comment.

The Australia-based industrial developer has been an active investor in Southern California recently, fueling the hot industrial real estate market. It recently completed a renovation of the Goodman Industrial Center Anaheim, a two-building campus spanning 143,250 square feet. Last month, the firm also signed a 300,000-square-foot lease with Japanese food supplier Mutual Trading at its under-construction 1.2 million-square-foot facility in El Monte.

While demand for industrial properties in L.A. County remains high, industrial activity has been the strongest in the Inland Empire. In April, Exeter Property Group bought an 806,300-square-foot building in San Bernardino for nearly $98 million. The deal was one among many pricey trades that have catapulted the Inland Empire to the top spot in the country for logistics facilities.


Indian hotel startup to launch in NYC, LA with $300M US investment

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OYO Hotels CEO Ritesh Agarwal and OYO Townhouse in Dallas, Texas (Credit: OYO Hotels and Getty Images)

OYO Hotels CEO Ritesh Agarwal and OYO Townhouse in Dallas, Texas (Credit: OYO Hotels and Getty Images)

The Indian startup company OYO Hotels & Homes plans to invest $300 million in the United States over the next few years, the company announced on Wednesday.

The firm currently has more than 50 hotels across 10 states and 35 cities, including Miami, Dallas and Atlanta. Its new investment will introduce it to cities like New York, Los Angeles and San Francisco. The money will also focus on issues like infrastructure development, talent and building competency.

OYO’s financial backers include the SoftBank Vision Fund and Airbnb, which made an investment rumored to be between $150 million and $200 million earlier this year. Marriott too invested in the company as part of its entrance into the home-sharing market. It has raised more than $1.5 billion from investors overall.

“As a full-scale hotel chain, we strive to bring real value to both owners and guests,” OYO founder and CEO Ritesh Agarwal said in a statement, “and we’re convinced there is unlimited potential for rapid growth in our newest home market, the United States.”

Here are LA County’s top 5 commercial sales of May

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A collage of the top commercial sales

A collage of the top commercial sales

An 80-year-old Venice post office that was to be transformed into Joel Silver’s production headquarters has new owners who would rather convert it into an office.

At $22 million, the property was Los Angeles County’s top commercial sale of May, records show. Combined, investors spent $94.2 million on the five priciest deals, far higher than the $45.8 million spent in April.

The top five deals — they include two fitness centers — are spread from Venice to Downtown L.A. Two of the properties are located in federally designated Opportunity Zones, which provide tax incentives to long-term investors.

The Real Deal compiled its list based off property records on PropertyShark.

1601 S. Main Street — Allied Commercial Exporters Limited | $22 million

A production company led by film producer Joel Silver and Hal Sadoff has sold an 80-year-old post office in Venice to London-based Allied Commercial Exporters. The property is located in an Opportunity Zone, and the new owners plan to convert it into an office building. It was previously planned as the headquarters of Silver’s movie production and financing company. Silver purchased the site in 2012 and started renovations, but ran into problems completing the project. The Louis Simon-designed post office was completed in 1939 and built as part of President Roosevelt’s New Deal.

1950 Foothill Boulevard — Realty Income | $20.9 million

Realty Income purchased a 14-screen movie house in the city of La Verne in a leaseback deal with Cineworld Group and Edwards Theatres Inc. The deal for the Edwards La Verne 12 theater at 1950 Foothill Boulevard was for $20.9 million. The theater includes 412,000 square feet, and is part of the Edwards Theatres chain. Last month, Cineworld announced it would sell 17 multiscreen theaters for $287 million and lease them back.

1530 W. West Covina Parkway — Ya Yung Yeh and Cheng Tsung Yeh | $20.7 million

Capital Square 1031, which specializes in 1031 exchanges, sold a West Covina property that is fully leased by a 24 Hour Fitness. The building at 1530 West Covina Parkway spans 37,500 square feet. Two individuals, Ya Yung Yeh and Cheng Tsung Yeh, purchased the property for $20.7 million.

17351 Gale Avenue — Robert and Kimberly Yu | $16 million

City of Industry sold a commercial site at 17351 Gale Avenue to individuals Robert and Kimberly Yu for $16 million, records show. An 80,500-square-foot store was previously on the site, which spans four acres. City of Industry has benefited from the strong demand for industrial properties.

400 W. Pico Boulevard — Masoud Omrani | $14.5 million

The owners of a fitness center on Pico Boulevard in Downtown L.A. have sold the property for $14.5 million. The sellers were various private trusts, and the buyer was an individual, Masoud Omrani. The Hardcore Fitness Bootcamp Spans some 8,220 feet, and the building qualifies as a warehouse. It was built 110 years ago and was altered in 1976. It is also located in an Opportunity Zone.

Elliman’s CTO Jeffrey Hummel is out

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Jeffrey Hummel (Credit: LinkedIn)

Jeffrey Hummel (Credit: LinkedIn)

At a time when brokerages are upping their tech game, Douglas Elliman is out a chief technology officer.

After nearly four years at the residential brokerage, Jeffrey Hummel left his post in May. His departure comes at a time when firms are looking to invest in tech as a means of attracting and retaining talent.

He’s now working as chief information officer of New Jersey-based GrayHair Software, which services the postal industry.

When reached by phone Wednesday evening, Hummel described it as a “lateral move” and said he decided to leave the brokerage because of an “unbelievable offer,” which included equity in GrayHair.

During Hummel’s tenure at Elliman, he said he oversaw about 25 projects a year which ranged in size and utility from enhancing cyber security to migrating to cloud-based systems and creating “a Genius bar” for agents. Last year, the brokerage launched an intranet platform known as “Douglas,” which includes an app store that provides agents with free use of corporate apps or discounted third-party apps.

The firm in 2017 began working on an “Elliman-branded and StreetEasy-powered” platform for agents to input listings. The platform, called “Listing Tools,” was supposed to launch in 2018 and be adopted by other brokerages as part of a wider push from Zillow Group’s New York listings portal StreetEasy for agents to manually enter listings.

As The Real Deal reported in February, the Corcoran Group opted out of Listing Tools. Brown Harris Stevens and Compass instead asked StreetEasy reinstate their automatic listings feed in order to avoid using the new service, or StreetEasy’s alternative program, Agent Spotlight. (BHS told TRD at the time that StreetEasy denied its request.) Stribling & Associates and Warburg Realty also later confirmed they would not be using the Elliman-StreetEasy platform. It has not yet launched.

When asked about the status of the platform Hummel said “that’s all up to the business. We built what they wanted.”

In a statement, a spokesperson for Elliman said “while we decline comment in connection to our communications plan, especially in relation to any one specific product, Douglas Elliman will be launching a series of new technology tools for agents beginning this summer and throughout the third and fourth quarters.”

The spokesperson described Hummel as “an integral part” of the brokerage’s executive leadership team who was responsible for “successfully launching several key initiatives.”

Search and develop: Interactive map details LA’s 14K publicly-owned properties

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L.A. Controller Ron Galperin and a screenshot of Property Panel

L.A. Controller Ron Galperin and a screenshot of Property Panel 

Los Angeles, which has a severe housing shortage, also has thousands of city-owned properties.

Hoping to potentially spur development, L.A. Controller Ron Galperin has released “Property Panel,” an online, interactive map of properties in the city. The list includes those owned by various public entities, including the City of Los Angeles, the county, the state and the Metropolitan Transportation Authority.

Galperin’s office said the total came out to 14,000 properties totaling nearly 60,000 acres. The site can be viewed at lacontroller.org.

The city owns just over half of the total properties — 7,500 — but has struggled to efficiently identify and develop those locations. The issue has received more attention amid a mounting housing crisis as officials search for public properties suitable for affordable housing and temporary homeless shelters.

In a statement Wednesday that accompanied the release of the map, Galperin called the properties “underutilized and vacant.” They have, he added, the potential to be “affordable, workforce, and senior housing, or economic and business development projects.”

The searchable site, he said, “get governments to think more strategically” about the existing properties.

Why nonbank lenders trounced traditional banks in home lending in South Florida

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(Credit: iStock)

(Credit: iStock)

Something about this moment seems all too familiar. Prior to the financial crisis, small mortgage companies were lending to thousands of homeowners throughout the country with the backing of credit lines from the largest banks. Now, more than a decade later, nonbank lenders are once again ramping up their mortgage lending in the U.S. and South Florida with credit lines from America’s largest financial institutions.

These nonbank lenders such as Quicken Loans, Freedom Mortgage and loanDepot claim they aren’t making risky loans, but are instead filling a void by offering home mortgages in just a few days instead of the weeks that it would take banks to issue such loans.  

At the same time, local banks have also pulled back from originating residential mortgages. Take for example South Florida’s largest bank, Miami Lakes-based BankUnited, which announced in 2016 that it would no longer originate residential mortgages. Other banks across the country, including HomeStreet Bank in Seattle, are backing away from the mortgage business. Doral-based U.S. Century Bank said in 2018 that it would “outsource” its residential lending to a third-party provider.

Raj Singh, the current CEO of BankUnited, said residential mortgages are a low-margin business that is very competitive. Profits are highly dependent on interest rates.

“I think it’s tough for regional banks with residential lending… at best you will break even,” he said.

In South Florida, nonbank lenders now take up a majority of the market share of mortgages in South Florida between $250,000 and $500,000, according to research from The Real Deal.

The five largest nonbank lenders provided nearly $2.9 billion in residential mortgages in South Florida between May 1, 2018, and April 30, 2019. Meanwhile, the five banks that issued the highest dollar volume in mortgages provided just $1.47 billion during this same time period, according to TRD’s research.

To rank the biggest nonbank mortgage lenders in South Florida, TRD analyzed Broward, Miami-Dade and Palm Beach mortgages issued between May 1, 2018, and April 30, 2019. The data only included loans exceeding $235,000, which was the median loan amount for one-to-four family dwellings (excluding manufactured housing) in 2017, according to Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data maintained by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau.

While some say nonbanks are filling a need to low-income and moderate-income borrowers, critics wonder whether these new entities are taking on too much risk and could run into liquidity issues if the economy were to head into a recession, leaving the government to clean up the mess.

“One of the things that saved the mortgage market during the financial crisis was… there were large banks to pay fines,” said Edward Pinto, a co-director of Housing Markets and Finance at the conservative think tank AEI. “The nonbanks just don’t have those type of assets”

The rise of the nonbank

Nonbank lenders rose to prominence after the financial crisis, when the largest banks such as JPMorgan and Bank of America were dealing with the ramifications from their pre-crisis lending.

“There was a major pullback from major banks in mortgage lending. A lot of it is due to the fact that there was a huge amount of litigation and settlements,” said Pinto.

Banks that were still making these loans were especially reluctant to issue FHA loans to low-income borrowers. In Miami, many of the local banks became more focused on making higher margin loans to high-net-worth individuals, despite being required under the Community Reinvestment Act to lend to the community.

In one case, regulators found Miami-based Helm Bank to have made no home mortgage loans to low-income and moderate-income borrowers in 2014, 2015 and 2016, according to the FDIC.

“Companies like Quicken stepped into the breach to become national lenders. They really weren’t scared to go down on credit scores,” said Ted Tozer, the former president of Ginnie Mae from 2010 to 2017. Tozer is currently a senior fellow at the  Center for Financial Markets at the Milken Institute.

Tozer called these nonbanks “one trick ponies” that were able to devote all of their resources and money to making the mortgage process more efficient. Detroit-based Quicken Loans — second in the ranking, with $848.2 million in mortgage loans issued — became one of the most well-known and successful nonbank lenders through its online platform called Rocket Mortgage, which claimed it could close on a mortgage in eight days.

The service has also been a huge boost of revenue to Quicken Loans’ parent company, Rock Ventures, which had more than $6 billion in sales in 2018, according to Forbes.

Alternative lenders accounted for almost half of mortgage originations in the U.S. in 2016, up from about 20 percent in 2007, according to the Brookings Institute.

In many ways, nonbanks provide consumers sometimes with access to better rates, according to Marc Halpern, who leads the Miami Beach-based mortgage brokerage Halpern & Associates, which does business across South Florida.

“My take on it is the nonbank lenders are really good for competition,” Halpern said.

During his tenure at Ginnie Mae, Tozer was beginning to notice that some of these new lenders that were filling this void were also taking on a lot of risk.

Many of these nonbank loans were guaranteed by Ginnie Mae, and Tozer worried about what would happen if the economy soured and borrowers started to fall behind on their loan payments.

These nonbanks will still have to service these loans, meaning that they would have to make interest payments on the loans until they go into foreclosure. Nonbanks don’t have access to the same government resources as banks, and if lenders pulled back on their financing, nonbanks could run out of cash to keep making loans.

“The issuers that we had to deal with, they weren’t insolvent, they ran out of cash,” Tozer said.

To observers of the financial markets, this may sound familiar. Investment banking powerhouse Bear Stearns collapsed in 2008 not from insolvency but because of a run on the bank. Bear Stearns investors started to pull their money out of the banks, and the bank ran out of cash before JPMorgan bought it for $2 a share.

Researchers from the Federal Reserve and the University of California Berkeley highlighted these points in an article for the Brookings Institute in 2018. Echoing Tozer, the report states that the issue could be liquidity strains if bank credit lines start pulling back financing.

“The typical non-bank has few resources with which to weather these shocks,” the report said. “Non-banks with servicing portfolios concentrated in Ginnie Mae pools are exposed to a higher risk of borrower default and higher potential losses in the event of such a default.”

Wary of warehouse lines

Singh, the CEO of BankUnited, said his bank is one of the banks providing the line of credit to nonbank lenders, which are referred to as warehouse lines.

Banks generally ask the nonbank lenders to provide the mortgage as collateral and then collect revenue after the mortgage is sold off.

Singh said the risks with these warehouse lines are twofold.

“One is operating risk, and day-to-day businesses,” said Singh. The other, he said, is looking at the quality of the underwriting.

Large banks could be exposed to large losses if a nonbank fails because these credit lines could be written down.

By the end of 2016, the largest bank holding companies had financed warehouse loans totaling $34 billion, up from $17 billion at the end of 2013, according to the Brookings Institute paper.

Josh Migdal, an attorney with Miami-based Mark Migdal & Hayden, said that these nonbanks are threatened when warehouse lenders re-price their lines of credit and borrower delinquency increases.

“To stave off insolvency, nonbanks will need to expedite the foreclosure process to stop the bleeding that will be caused by having to fund servicing advances while a loan is in default,” he said.

Since these nonbanks are the largest providers of these loans, a widespread collapse of this industry could be devastating to the housing market. If nonbanks stopped lending, it could create a domino effect where home buyers would not be able to get a loan.

“If that does happen, then mortgage bankers have to start hoarding cash, then they are not going to make new FHA or VA loans,” Tozer said.

While some are concerned about the rise of nonbanks, others aren’t so worried. Instead, they say that mortgage lenders — both bank and nonbank — are more conservative this time around. Lenders aren’t making the same no-money-down type of loans, and new rules require much more evidence around proof of income.

“You have to show the ability to repay… You have to show your W2 and tax returns,” said Halpern. “Post-2008, it is a requirement before [lenders] fund the loan to verify the tax returns.”

But if a recession arrives, borrowers buying homes at the end of the cycle would once again be hurt the worst, Pinto said. The issue is compounded by nonbank lenders, which are providing riskier loans than banks, which is allowing people to purchase homes that they ordinarily could not afford, he said. If borrowers start defaulting, it could quickly lead to major issues with nonbank lenders.

“Even with a small bank, you are not worried about them not being able to honor their obligations,” Pinto said. “You can’t say the same thing about nonbanks. They don’t have anywhere near that capital.”

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