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Hudson Pacific adds another 500K sf of leases in Q2; pushes into new markets

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Victor Coleman and Bentall Centre in Vancouver

Victor Coleman and Bentall Centre in Vancouver

Hudson Pacific Properties added 500,000 square feet of leases in the second quarter on top of the 1 million square feet from the first three months of the year, as the real estate investment trust pushed into new and existing markets.

Overall, the Los Angeles-based REIT reported increased revenue from April through June, attributing it to higher rental rates and occupancy across its studios.

Revenue rose 12.3 percent to $196.7 million, the company reported on Wednesday. Funds from operations — the key metric for REITS — totaled $75.5 million. That’s up 5.5 percent from the first quarter of 2018.

Net income was down, however, to $9.8 million. That’s a 39 percent dip from the $16.2 million reported over the same period last year.

During the earnings call Wednesday, CEO Victor Coleman said he expects the REIT will secure entitlements by mid-2020 for the 515,000-square-foot expansion at the historic Sunset Gower Studios in Hollywood. Similar to other Hudson Pacific developments, he said, Coleman expects that to be pre-leased. “Our leasing team has a lot of interest in that,” he added. In December 2017, the company filed plans to demolish 160,600 square feet of existing buildings at the 16-acre campus at 6050 W. Sunset Boulevard, while adding 628,000 square feet of production space.

For Hudson Pacific, most of its leasing activity in the second quarter — roughly 80 percent — has come from its Bay Area assets. Google was among the 79 leases that Hudson Pacific executed. The technology giant inked a deal for 41,350 square feet at the Ferry Building in San Francisco. Hudson Pacific acquired the building in fall 2018.

Currently, about 89 percent of its 1 million square feet of development projects in L.A. is pre-leased to tenants like Google and Netflix.

The company added about 1 million square feet to its development pipeline with two new projects in Vancouver and Seattle. In Seattle, it paid more than $16 million of the $86 million purchase price to develop a new office complex dubbed Washington 1000. And in Vancouver, Hudson Pacific closed on the massive Bentall Centre on June 5. It’s planning on building another office tower at the 1.5 million-square-foot complex.

The final purchase price for the Bentall Centre remains unknown, but the joint venture deal with Blackstone Property Partners is expected to be among the biggest so far this year in the Vancouver market.


Real estate entrepreneur turned YouTube star dies at 38

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Grant Thompson, creator of popular YouTube channel 'The King of Random' (Credit: Instagram)

Grant Thompson, creator of popular YouTube channel ‘The King of Random’ (Credit: Instagram)

Inspired by the fall of the housing industry during the recession, real estate investor Grant Thompson built a career on YouTube trying to explain how the world works.

Thompson, “The King of Random,” died in a paragliding accident in Utah at age 38, according to the New York Times.

Thompson had created the YouTube channel “The King of Random,” which amassed more than 11 million followers. He created videos about how to make things and about science, including videos such as “How to Make LEGO Gummy Candy!,” which amassed over 34 million views.

Prior to achieving celebrity status as a YouTube star, Thompson worked as an airline pilot for 11 years, according to the Times. He then went into the real estate business and bought and sold houses.

“Then I just started tinkering and learning about how the world works, which was inspired kind of by the idea of the Great Recession from the housing collapse,” Thompson said, according to the New York Times. “I was learning about things. I started making videos on YouTube showing people what I was tinkering with and what I was coming up with.”

As Thompson became more popular, he closed down his real estate business, quit flying and just produced videos. [New York Times] — Keith Larsen

Rising Realty’s Park Calabasas campus scores new tenant and big lease

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 Rising’s Park Calabasas campus, Republic Indemnity President Allen Goodwin and Rising Realty CEO Chris Rising (Credit: Jeff Newton)

Rising’s Park Calabasas campus, Republic Indemnity President Allen Goodwin and Rising Realty CEO Chris Rising (Credit: Jeff Newton)

Rising Realty’s newest tenant at its sprawling Park Calabasas office campus is worker’s compensation servicer Republic Indemnity.

The Great American Insurance Group affiliate signed a 50,000-square-foot lease at the 20-acre complex at 4500 Park Granada in Calabasas, Rising announced Wednesday. The new space will serve as the Cincinnati-based company’s Southern California Division office, currently in Encino.

Chris Rising’s Downtown-based firm bought the 20-acre campus from Bank of America for $38 million in 2013, according to property records, and gave the 1980s complex the creative office treatment. Bank of America was the sole tenant during its ownership.

Tenants to sign post-renovation include beauty company Coty and the IWG-owned co-working outfit Spaces. Spaces leased 17,000 square feet last May along with four others as part of a push across L.A. County.

CBRE’s Matthew Heyn repped Rising in the deal, while Wayne Hach and Greg Frankovich of Newmark Knight Frank repped Republic Indemnity. Rising would not disclose the total dollar figure or length of the lease.

Rising, who The Real Deal featured in the Closing last year, took over the firm from his father Nelson Rising in January. The new CEO said at the time that the firm planned to invest $300 million in commercial space outside of L.A. County over the next two to three years.

The Calabasas campus is one of the larger office properties in the wealthy suburban city otherwise dominated by gated neighborhoods. Calabasas has a median household income of around $114,000, nearly twice that of L.A. County.

It’s not the city’s only large office property, though. Around the same time Rising was talking about investing outside L.A., Kilroy Realty sold the similarly sized Calabasas Park Centre for $78.2 million, a few months after listing it for $84 million. The buyer was a joint venture of Related Fund Management and Cruzan.

Still, Calabasas’ wealthy and famous residents put Calabasas in the headlines far more than office deals there. Notable residents include members of the Kardashian family — some own multiple properties there — and musician Drake.

Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes dish on their plans for LA — and NYC

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Eklund and Gomes

Frederik Eklund and John Gomes

The rumor mill has been working overtime when it comes to Fredrik Eklund’s recent move to Los Angeles.

Is he over the crazy pace of New York life? Is he Douglas Elliman’s not-so-secret weapon for growth in California?

Season 8 of “Million Dollar Listing New York,” which debuts tonight, promises to reveal some of the pushes and pulls behind Eklund’s transition to West Coast life. But the most significant conversations about the decision — and the big-picture plan for the fast-expanding Eklund-Gomes team — won’t happen on Bravo.

That’s because Eklund’s longtime business partner and team co-founder, John Gomes, goes to all lengths to avoid the cameras. So much so that he and Eklund-Gomes CEO Julia Spillman even joke that they have their own show, “Million Dollar Missing.”

The two brokers recently sat down with The Real Deal in their new Flatiron office to speak frankly about what Eklund’s move means for them, their team and their business.

“It’s part of a plan that’s been in the works for years,” Eklund said. “L.A. is having a moment right now … The scene is changing rapidly and so much wealth is concentrating there.”

For Gomes, the expansion is part of a volume game and scaling up. “The truth is, for all of us in the future, to make the kind of money we’re making today, we’re simply gonna have to do more,” he said, noting that both he and Eklund are strong believers in being on the ground in-person to build up their business. The two already split their time between offices in three cities, including Miami.

With Eklund’s new home base on the West Coast, he’ll be playing a bigger role in L.A., he said. But he plans to spend at least four days in the Big Apple every two weeks.

And while you probably won’t see the following conversation on “Million Dollar Listing” anytime soon, Eklund confirmed that this isn’t the last time you’ll see him on TV.

“There is def more Fredrik to watch on Bravo after this season,” he wrote in an email to TRD after the interview. Whether that means on MDLNY or MDLLA, or something different altogether, remains to be seen.

This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.

You both spend a lot of time in L.A. How did you decide who would move and why it was Fredrik?

Eklund: We talked about it, and even joked about it, like maybe we both go for a while. But it just turned out that I took on the role to go — maybe forever, maybe for a while, or maybe for a few years. We’ll see. It’s a big personal decision because of my kids and my husband having to relocate. But we felt like it was the right decision doing it now.

Gomes: Like everything else Fredrik and I do, it was an organic choice. As his best friend, I always had this feeling that he should spend some time in California. I just feel like, for many different reasons, he’s supposed to be there.

Eklund: A lot of people are asking questions. To me, it’s not that dramatic. I feel like I’ve been bi-coastal for the last year. Instead of going to L.A. every other week, I’m gonna go to New York every other week.

How does L.A. fit into your plan for the Eklund-Gomes Team?

Gomes: We’ve been waiting for the right time. I remember the down market in 2008 and 2009. We took advantage of that time to reshape our business. It’s no different now. It’s a down market and we are implementing the plan that we always had to expand.

Eklund: We want to do what we did here in New York in California. We’re very long-term there. We want to build a name for ourselves as the go-to team for new development, and I want to be able to front that.

Gomes: There’s a huge opportunity. When we started to look at the buildings there and the way people treat them, we were shocked. I know I personally was. Just looking at the renderings, the way that all the marketing collateral is done, and the sales galleries are put together, we just thought there was a tremendous opportunity to add a lot of value to that for developers.

Can you elaborate on how you’re going to bring those same methods that have served you well in New York to the L.A. market?

Gomes: Things in New York happen like this [snaps]. In L.A., it’s a little bit slower. You can take the New York agent out of New York, but you can’t take New York out of the agent. I have been working in the industry for almost 15 years at quite a fast pace so it will be hard to slow that down wherever I work.

Eklund: I’m going to be there the most, so I’m not going to go there and say I’m going to do it better. Some of [this] is covered on the show — there’s been some commotion, you’ll see. I have a lot to learn and a lot of people to meet. We’re going to contribute a lot and we’re going to do really well, but it doesn’t need to be at anybody’s expense [among competitors].

Gomes: What I will say is that we didn’t spend all this time and energy and money to go and expand to these markets to not be relevant within them.

The L.A. market includes a lot of high-end single-family homes. “Going vertical” in L.A. is not really close to what it would mean in NYC. How are you going to tackle that?

Eklund: It’s something I’m currently figuring out. I am forging really amazing relationships with some of the biggest agents [and] I feel really confident that we’re gonna break into the ultra-luxury there. Anything that’s incredible and is in the new development arena in California I’m going to go after.

You recently announced that your first exclusive project in L.A. will be Townscape Partners’ condo and townhouse development 8899 Beverly and Fredrik will be the director of sales. How did that fit into your move?

Eklund: Douglas Elliman had won it, and John and I fell in love with it. We went after a lot of big people within the company and tried to convince them that we were the right people for that project. There were many meetings where we got to know [the developer], and the more I learned, the more I wanted this building. They needed to get to know me as well. Every broker knows of this project and it’s such an important one — a decade in the making.

Is this expansion coming from both of you, or is this something that Elliman is saying you should do?

Eklund: John said it the best: If we [had] known how difficult the expansion would be, we probably wouldn’t have done it. Like you can say that you have a team in Miami and you have a team in L.A., but what does that really mean for your agents? What does that mean for the seller when you’re not fully there? What made it more difficult is that as it happened, cosmically, we had twins at the same time. Literally, in the same month.

I was meaning to bring that up. Was that planned?

Gomes: Everyone thought that was the end of Eklund-Gomes! Oh god, those two? Twins? Two sets of twins?

Eklund: Two weeks after we had our twins we were back at work. That’s when we sat down with [Douglas Elliman’s chairman] Howard Lorber. That was the beginning of December 2017 and we said, “We have a great plan. We don’t know what we’re doing. But, trust us, become more of a business partner with us.” We showed him what we’re thinking and that it was right for us.

Gomes: We were really nervous going in, honestly, and we made this pitch and he asked us, “Will this make you guys happy?” We looked at each other and we said, “Yeah.” And he said, “Well that will make me happy.” And he greenlighted the whole thing. He believes in us, and that was reassuring.

Eklund: I think it [was] a good time in the company because they were about to buy the company they did in California and their presence in Miami is huge.

Gomes: That was all part of it. We never would have gone to California and Miami if Douglas Elliman didn’t exist in those two markets.

John, do you ever feel overshadowed by Fredrik’s larger-than-life TV persona and will you start playing a bigger part in running the New York office now?

Gomes: He is so damn good on television and I just have no interest. One thing I will tell you that can be a little challenging and frustrating for me sometimes is that, because of the show, people on the outside think the Eklund-Gomes Team is really the Fredrik Eklund Team. And yes, they do sometimes overlook the Gomes. People are saying “Oh, what’s gonna happen with your business now that Fredrik is gone?” It’s like, “Well, by the way, Fredrik has been bicoastal for the past 12 to 14 months anyway.”

Eklund: I think John is very good at picking up the pieces and really keeping things afloat. I have no patience and [I can] come up with a plan. But then, you know, you have to keep everything together. Over the years that’s been very important. But actually, you ask a hard question. I don’t think anyone is going to work less or more than we did, but it’s exciting to see [John], that you’re gonna have to take more of a lead here. And with the agents it’s already happening.

Gomes: We just signed an amazing project, a prime Greenwich Village condo. And [Fredrik] actually wasn’t there to pitch. So I met with the developers. We’re very transparent. None of our developers are worried. Fredrik is still going to be very much involved. If anything, [he’s] more so involved because he feels a little bit disconnected. So he wants to make sure that he has his hands in the pot, so to speak.

What are your goals for L.A.? This time in a year, what are you hoping your numbers look like?

Eklund: I want to take a low key, humble approach, and I don’t want to be held to numbers.

Charted: How real estate stocks have performed so far this year

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(Credit: iStock)

(Credit: iStock)

On Wednesday, the Fed announced it would lower interest rates for the first time since 2008.

The announcement, which experts predict could make real-estate deals more profitable, followed a strong year to date for stocks in the sector. By mid June, a quarter of the 32 real-estate companies on the S&P 500 were reportedly trading at their highest levels in the past year. In July, after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell hinted at a possible cut, there was another uptick.

“Interest rates have come down and that’s kind of helped the whole sector, except it hasn’t really helped some of the brokers like Realogy and RE/MAX because home sales are still kind of flat but you’ve got this secular challenge with this influx of private capital that’s increased competition for agents,” said Jason Deleeuw, a senior research analyst at Piper Jaffray.

Sheila McGrath, a research analyst at Evercore, said real estate investment trusts had been pretty much keeping up with the broader market. “I think the improving interest rate outlook has helped sentiment towards the sector,” she said, adding that the mall sector had lagged overall, while the industrial sector had been strong.

Boston Properties, a REIT focused on office space, had a share price of $132.29 on July 29, which exceeded expectations, according to Sandler O’Neill analyst Alexander Goldfarb. It started the year with a stock price of $112.55.

On the residential side, Zillow’s stock has been climbing throughout the year, closing out at $49.16 on July 29, up from $31.43 on January 1. Realogy, whose tumbling stock price has been well documented, rallied in July following the announcement it was partnering with Amazon on a new lead generation program named “TurnKey.” But Matthew Bouley, a senior equity research analyst at Barclays who covers Realogy, said the announcement didn’t change the serious, underlying challenges facing the business.

“You’re going to need to see Realogy prove itself — and some of these new initiatives prove themselves — over at least a couple of quarters before you get investor sentiment back on your side,” he said.

In the commercial space, JLL’s stock performed well following an earnings boost in the first quarter, closing out July with a stock price of $142.8, TRD’s analysis showed.

Take a look below to see how the top real estate stocks have fared so far in 2019.

Owners/Investors

Brokerages

Technology

LA Councilman David Ryu wants less power for developers and for himself

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LA Councilman David Ryu (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

LA Councilman David Ryu (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

Last month, Councilman David Ryu introduced two bills — with fellow Councilman Mike Bonin — that both could help and hurt real estate developers in Los Angeles. The 44-year-old councilman who took office in 2015 proposed a measure that creates an incentives package to encourage developers to build middle-income housing. It’s similar to existing incentives packages for low-income housing. The other bill would increase tenant relocation fees for developers who evict rent-regulated tenants under the state’s Ellis Act, which allows landlords to deregulate units.

Ryu’s district — which includes Sherman Oaks, the Hollywood Hills and Los Feliz — is an economically diverse slice of the city. It is undergoing significant change driven in large part by numerous real estate projects that have gone up over the last few years and that are now in the works.

Ryu has made a name for himself by pushing for government transparency, particularly when it comes to campaign finance reform, and is adamant about the need to bring developers and locals together early in the development process. He says that has reduced conflict and led to better projects in his district.

Ryu also sponsors a proposal to ban developers and their associates from contributing to an elected officials’ future campaigns when the developer has a project under consideration in their district. The City Attorney is drawing up a draft ordinance that is expected to go to the Council this fall. He first introduced the measure — with Bonin and several other members — in early 2017. It has taken on greater urgency now amid continuing scrutiny of real estate’s role in city politics, and follows last fall’s FBI raid of City Council Jose Huizar amid pay-to-play allegations.

Ryu spoke with The Real Deal about his latest real estate-related initiatives, his role as a community mediator, and why he wants to reduce his and his colleagues’ power.

Can you explain why you want to create development incentives for middle-income and workforce housing?

We want to give developers more options…Overall, we’re going to meet and exceed our housing numbers, but we are exceedingly low in low-income affordable housing, and almost non-existent in moderate-income. We have not incentivized for that. That’s where government needs to step in. I am starting from scratch. I don’t want to tell you, this is what I want us to do for moderate income. This is an opportunity for reinventing planning.

What sort of incentives are you exploring?

We’re meeting with different business communities during this [City Council] recess to talk about the variations that could be, whether it’s even a voucher system, which would be completely different from what we’re talking about. But I’m open to all options. Maybe we use the linkage fees we collect to incentivize or augment projects, or again, is it a traditional density bonus? Is it something to do with parking? Everything should be on the table.

Developers say that government regulations and other requirements drive up costs and that luxury housing is all that pencils out. Is the Council exploring ways to reduce development costs so middle-income housing can be built without incentives?

For most developers, there are two important factors — one, time is money. Two, they want a set of parameters that is consistent. If you come to the city of L.A. and you try to build something or do something, you want a set of guidelines. You want to be assured, once I give you those guidelines, whether you could fit in that box or not. If you can’t fit in that box, you move on. You also have to be assured that when the next person comes and try to do the same thing, the city of L.A., or the councilmember, gives them the same exact parameters.

You’re talking about predictability in the development process.

Yes, certainty. It does not help [developers] when communities or folks are just suing them not to win but to delay them long enough to bankrupt them or make them give up. This is not helping anyone. What can we do as the city of L.A.? I get it. There’s so much red tape and so much bureaucracy. Even with the city of L.A., our own city tries to build housing for homeless, we get mired. We’re not above the law ourselves. We have to follow the same rules that a developer has to follow. We get stuck in our own bureaucracy, which is embarrassing. We need to figure out these systemic issues, including a lack of staff and lack of knowledge transfer.

Can you explain the reasoning behind your proposal to bar developers with business in front of the Council from donating to the campaigns of relevant elected officials?

The trust between the voters and residents, Angelenos, and City Hall, is almost non-existent. The relationship between neighborhoods and developers are antagonistic. How do you fix that? The number one concern is the perception — real or false — that every politician is in special interests or this particular developer’s pockets. That is not true. Let’s break that off. So we’re not going to take any money.

Lobbyists have told The Real Deal that a ban would just steer money toward independent expenditure groups that can donate as much money to a candidate as they want, as opposed to the $800 personal limit that your ordinance would ban. That appears to be a serious issue.

Agreed. And we can’t control that, its federal. But what we can control is [campaign contributions] and behested payments. I’m lowering that threshold from $5,000 to $1,000 [for maximum behested payments] now, and saying if you have a project before the city council, before me, where I’m going to vote on, then I can’t behest — I can’t ask you to donate to the YMCA or some other outside group.

Can you talk about some of the limitations you feel as an elected official, addressing issues like affordable housing and homelessness? Voters get frustrated. They feel there’s inaction.

I believe in preventive care, being proactive than reactive. Unfortunately, many times, the only time we could get anything done is when we’re reactive — when it hits breaking point levels. I’ve been working on this for over a decade and we’ve been trying to warn everybody, ‘this is coming, this is coming.’ But no one wanted to do anything. At least now this is the first time where all the local jurisdictions, in particular the city, the county, and the state, are partnering to try to tackle this head on.

There’s a lot of development in your district [Hollywood, Studio City, Los Feliz]. How do you keep a handle on all the projects that are being developed?

I always ask developers to go and talk to the community. Approach them as soon as possible. Get their feedback, get their input. That way we can save a lot of people a long time and a lot of headaches. And as a matter of fact, it works. People say “no, there’s obstinate, they won’t move, they won’t budge.” Not necessarily true.

That’s where the job of the elected official is. I try to bring the two parties together. Guess what happens? Almost all the new projects in my district, zero lawsuits. Pretty much majority of the community supports it and they get a lot of changes that they like.

That touches on another question I want to ask you. What is one thing you’d say to the developers who read The Real Deal?

I’ve been saying I want to work on planning reform…The one thing, if I could only do one thing, it’s having community input early. Getting them involved early. I don’t just mean having a meeting for the sake of a meeting, or sending out letters. No. I mean truly engaging.

What else would you like to change while you’re in office?

I truly believe a portion of planning reform is going to have to be basically reducing my power. Reducing discretion. Too much discretion. When I came into office, spot zoning was hated. However, if I spot zone something and made it into a park or a community center, the neighborhoods would be applauding me up and down the street.

So spot zoning is not the problem. The person who’s doing the spot zoning is the problem. Too much discretion, again, is based on relationships, not the merits of the project.

Move over Mountain of Beverly Hills, Scott Gillen is listing “The Malibu Series” for $500M

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Scott Gillen

From left: The Case House, Scott Gillen, and The New Castle

UPDATED, Aug. 1, 1:51 p.m.: Scott Gillen has spent the past few years developing uber-luxury homes in Malibu, most of them on spec. Now, Gillen is putting 13 of those properties together, listing them as a single collection, dubbed “The Malibu Series.”

Asking price for the lot? Half a billion dollars. Or, an average of around $38 million per home.

It seems an odd time to list so many ultra high-end homes as a single portfolio, when the luxury market in Los Angeles is already softening amid a large supply and the effects of that spec home development. A second-quarter report by Elliman last month also showed that in fire-damaged Malibu, sales fell more than 50 percent, to 29 homes.

“The Malibu Series” portfolio includes his crown jewel, the New Castle, itself a spec mansion that hit the market back in 2015 for $60 million. The 15,000-square-foot home features a 400-foot driveway, a teak library-like wine room and a humidified cigar room.

The collection also features properties in two guard-gated communities, as well as three single-family homes, in different stages of construction.

Gillen and his firm, Unvarnished, are the force behind all of the properties. While properties like New Castle are already on the market, the $500 million portfolio reflects the first time the 13 properties are marketed as a collection. Tracy Tutor of Douglas Elliman has the listing. Gillen did not comment on the collection, which included extensive marketing materials. A spokesperson for Elliman said the properties could still be sold individually.

If purchased at asking, the Malibu Series collection would represent the priciest residential sale ever in Los Angeles County. The title of most expensive individual home ever sold in the county goes to the Spelling Manor in Beverly Hills. That record was set last month, when Petra Ecclestone sold the iconic mansion for $120 million.

Still on the market is the troubled 157-acre Mountain of Beverly Hills development site — reduced from $1 billion to $650 million — which Gillen was believed to offered to buy for $400 million. Spec home developer Nile Niami’s $500 million off-market Bel Air mansion he is calling “The One” is still for sale.

At the top of the list is the New Castle, which had been listed as high as $85 million and is now on the market for $75 million. The home sits on a former Scottish-style castle, and also features a butterfly sanctuary.

Gillen is also including the “Case Residences,” his largest project to date, which includes “five fucking spectacular mid-century modern homes,” he told The Real Deal in an interview last year. Those homes, on a 24-acre spread overlooking the ocean, are priced between $50 million and $100 million. One of the homes was reportedly in escrow for $40 million in March. Construction is underway and expected to wrap in 2020.

Another community included in the portfolio are “The Who Homes,” a gated enclave that features four houses priced at $16.5 million each. Two of the houses in that community have sold and another one is under contract, according to a representative who is marketing the Malibu Series.

The $500 million portfolio also includes a 7,000-square-foot pad on Malibu Road and 5,000-square-foot home in Point Dume for $25 million each, as well as a 1.5-acre property in Paradise Cove Beach. There is no asking price on the Paradise Cove property, which is being remodeled.

Trouble in the land of OZK: Why NYC’s most important construction lender may be on shaky ground

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Bank OZK CEO and Chair George Gleason (Illustration by Chris Koehler)

Bank OZK CEO and Chair George Gleason (Illustration by Chris Koehler)

As Bank of the Ozarks’ private jet lifted off from Little Rock, Arkansas, Dan Thomas geared up for another day of dealmaking. As vice chair of the bank, he oversaw one of the country’s largest construction lending operations and had become a financial messiah for major condo developers in New York, Los Angeles and Miami.

Seated shoulder to shoulder with him that morning was his boss, George Gleason. Over 14 years, the duo had built a unique lending operation that transformed the bank from a regional minnow into a national powerhouse that beat out JPMorgan and Wells Fargo in development deals. But as the Washington, D.C.-bound jet hit cruising altitude, Gleason gave Thomas an ultimatum: Step back as the bank’s lead dealmaker or lose $5 million in accrued compensation.

Miles above Texas, Thomas quit. “The plane turned around and we landed in Dallas,” he recalled in an interview with The Real Deal. “That was my last moment at Bank of the Ozarks.”

The July 2017 episode, which hasn’t previously been reported, coincided with the end of a decade of steep profits and rapid growth at the lender, which rebranded last year as Bank OZK. Its shares dropped 12 percent right after Thomas — who was seen as the driving force behind the bank’s real estate lending — left and have fallen further as the bank has struggled to maintain growth.

Gleason promised investors he would step into the void left by Thomas, but current and former employees say this hasn’t panned out. And as the bank’s deals get bigger and more complex it closed about $1.37 billion in New York construction lending over the past year with developers such as Tishman Speyer, Extell Development and Lightstone Group the real estate lending group has been hit by infighting and allegations of sexual misconduct and age discrimination.

Meanwhile, the environment in which the bank is doing its deals has changed. Congress has slashed stress-testing regulations on midsized lenders, and Bank OZK itself has taken an innovative approach to avoiding scrutiny: It engineered a change to Arkansas banking laws, allowing it to stop reporting to the Securities and Exchange Commission and answer to what experts believe is a far more lax regulator.

“Banks don’t willy-nilly switch regulators,” said Ken Thomas, a veteran banking consultant and longtime lecturer at the Wharton School. “This is a red flag.”

The looser regulatory environment, taken together with the tumult inside the lending group and increased competition for fewer deals, could potentially lead the bank to make riskier deals. Gleason, however, is adamant that won’t happen. He said that the bank is now seeing less opportunity for construction lending in New York City because of a drop in new projects and more gung-ho rivals.

“Lenders in certain markets are very aggressive on price,” he said on the company’s July 19 earnings call. “We’ve been just clear without exception that we are not going to sacrifice our credit standards.” 

Small bank, big checks

Gleason was just 25 years old when he purchased the Little Rock-based Bank of the Ozarks in 1979, putting down $10,000 in cash and taking a $3.6 million loan. He took the lender public in 1997 and in 2003 was introduced to Thomas, an accountant and real estate attorney, whom he hired to lead a new Dallas-based lending operation known as the Real Estate Specialties Group.

Together, they crafted an aggressive real estate lending strategy around two core principles: The bank would always be the sole secured lender, ensuring it would be the first to be repaid. And the development team would have to cough up at least 50 percent of equity in a given deal before the bank made a loan, guaranteeing serious skin in the game.

To fuel this lending, Gleason figured he could build deposits by acquiring other community banks, envisioning a whole new business model for banking. Since the financial crisis, Bank OZK has acquired more than a dozen community banks in Florida, Arkansas, Texas and Georgia.

Emboldened by these acquisitions, the bank entered New York City in 2013, and by the end of 2014 its construction loan volume doubled to $1.5 billion. By 2017, with a mere $20 billion in assets, it became the alpha dog in its niche large, nonrecourse construction loans for ground-up projects often beating out the likes of JPMorgan and Wells Fargo, which together manage over $4 trillion in assets. It became the largest construction lender in L.A. County, the largest condo construction lender in Miami-Dade County and the third-largest construction lender in New York.

And it revved up just as developers saw other crucial sources of money, such as debt raised through the EB-5 visa program and Chinese institutional capital, fading away. Thomas landed on the Commercial Observer’s list of the top figures in real estate finance, and capital markets broker Simon Ziff told Bloomberg he considered Gleason “one of the most important real estate bankers in America today.”

Ask me no questions

But all that growth and attention — the press dubbed Gleason “the Wizard of Ozarks” — came with some unwanted scrutiny.

In September 2011, auditors from the SEC asked questions about the bank’s accounting methods. In 2014, the agency raised concerns about its real estate lending, asking why its provisions for loans that could go into default jumped from 168 percent in 2008 to 492 percent in 2013. And in 2016, the SEC directed the bank to explain its underwriting process and how it tracked its real estate projects.

Others began to raise questions. Carson Block, founder of Muddy Waters Research and a prominent short-seller who exposed fraudulent Chinese companies, said in 2016 that Bank OZK’s high concentration of construction loans was susceptible to a downturn, and that to sustain itself it would need to keep buying more banks. In shorting its stock, he said the bank had an “ass-backward business model.”

Faced with mounting pressure, Bank OZK pulled off a regulatory sleight of hand that got the SEC off its back.

At the time, the bank had a holding company, a corporate structure used by major U.S. banks that requires them to report to the SEC and be regulated by the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and a state bank regulator.

But by shedding its holding company, Bank OZK would only be overseen by two regulators — the FDIC and the Arkansas State Bank Department — and would no longer have to answer to the Federal Reserve and the SEC.

The FDIC, which monitors the risk to a bank’s customers, would become the bank’s new primary regulator. But experts believe it has less rigid auditing standards and requires less risk disclosure than the SEC.

The SEC “clearly flagged some concerns it had,” said Thomas Hazen, a securities professor at the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. “As an investor, this clearly makes [Bank OZK] a much more risky proposition than an SEC-regulated bank.”

As the plan came together, Gleason faced a hurdle: At the time, the state of Arkansas required banks to keep their holding companies. So in February 2017, the bank lobbied the legislature to introduce a bill that it said would “modernize” Arkansas banking laws, state filings show. The proposed bill included a clause that allowed for the removal of holding companies.

“We weren’t using our holding company, and we saw no reason to keep it,” Helen Brown, the bank’s corporate finance general counsel, told legal trade publication Modern Counsel.

Weeks later, an emergency clause pushed the bill forward to do just that. To complete the regulator swap, the final step amounted to a mere technicality: persuade the state Bank Department’s board, which is chaired by industry leaders, to approve the change. The bank shed its holding company — thus removing oversight by the SEC and Federal Reserve — in June.

Bank OZK’s tactic amounted to “regulatory shopping,” said Jeff C. Gerrish, a former FDIC attorney who is now a consultant and attorney to community banks across the country.

But Gleason characterized the move differently: “If you own a lake house but you never go there,” he later said in an interview with S&P Global, “and you’re paying taxes and insurance and maintenance on it every year but you don’t use it, it’s not much fun.” (The bank’s chief administrative officer, Tim Hicks, said the bank would not quantify the cost savings from the move.)

Jason Rapert, the Republican state senator who sponsored the bill, said in an interview that “Mr. Gleason has been regarded as one of the most intelligent men in the banking business in the country.”

“I’ve heard nothing but good things about Mr. Gleason,” Rapert added, “and the way he does business.”

The tussle

While Gleason was the poster child for the bank’s meteoric rise — his home, a 19th-century French-style mansion on a 105-acre property complete with a private chapel and fountains, is one of the largest in the state — Thomas, the head of the real estate lending group, shied away from publicity. Instead, he established himself as the point person for institutional landlords and developers, including Starwood Capital, JDS Development Group and Square Mile Capital. He was paid $4.7 million in 2016, behind only Gleason, who made $6.2 million.

“Basically, [Thomas] is the guy who made [Bank OZK] who they are today,” said JDS chief Michael Stern, who has borrowed from the bank for multiple projects, including 9 DeKalb Avenue, Brooklyn’s future tallest tower.

But in mid-2017, around the time the bank dropped the SEC, Gleason increasingly pushed for meetings with Thomas’ clients and told him to take a backseat, according to Thomas, who added that when he refused, Gleason told him not to attend board meetings, even though Thomas was vice chair. And in multiple phone calls, he said, Gleason threatened to withhold some $5 million in accrued benefits, including stock options, owed to him if he didn’t fall in line.

“The way I could protect that money is if I chose to take a different role: to discuss with my clients that I was tired and burnt out and to actually make introductions of those clients to George during my remaining tenure with the bank,” Thomas said. “And that obviously was not acceptable.”

“While you hate to lose any important, high-performing individual from your company, the fact of the matter is, we got a very deep team there,” Gleason said when Thomas’ exit was announced. “I don’t expect it to have a significant impact on our volume.” He did not comment publicly on the reason for Thomas’ departure, but according to one analyst, Gleason did indicate that Thomas was “burned out.”

Bank OZK rebuts Thomas’ account. “Many of the statements you attribute to Mr. Thomas are inaccurate or untrue,” it said in a statement to TRD. “Mr. Thomas voluntarily resigned.”

With the rainmaker gone, Gleason told investors he would spend 75 percent of his time overseeing the team in Dallas and keep the real estate deals flowing. But three current and former employees disputed this in interviews, including one who said Gleason “probably shows up once a month, for two to three days at a time.”

Gleason’s absence isn’t the only issue dogging the lending group. Current and former executives are facing allegations of sexual misconduct and age discrimination, according to an ongoing lawsuit in U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas. The plaintiff, Anna Carrillo, who led the loan closing division, claims she was fired in October 2017 days after complaining that a junior paralegal in the department was underperforming. That paralegal, Carrillo alleges, was being protected because she was engaged in an inappropriate sexual relationship with another executive in the group, Wes Hardin. The bank has denied all allegations in the suit.

Carrillo, who is 54 and oversaw the closing of over 250 transactions, claimed that while the company framed her termination in October 2017 as part of a “restructuring,” many of her duties were assigned to the paralegal, who is in her 20s. (See sidebar for more on the complaint.)

Fault lines

Last year, the bank underwent a multimillion-dollar rebranding as Bank OZK, a move it said would free it from “the limitations of a name tied to a specific geographic region.” But with its new name and under the new leadership at the real estate lending group, the bank has struggled to keep up its rapid growth.

Between the second quarter of 2015 and the second quarter of 2017, construction lending at the bank grew 180 percent to $5.5 billion. But in the second quarter of 2019, construction lending totaled $6.6 billion, just a 20 percent increase over a two-year period.

Gleason has said this is in part because there are fewer deals available and more competition from debt funds and other alternative lenders.

“Our lenders are doing a very good job of generating positive loan growth in a crazy, competitive environment,” Gleason said on the July 19 earnings call. “Our new originations in New York are not as large as they were a year ago — there’s less new product being created.”

But current and former employees in the bank’s real estate group said that part of this drop is due to a decline in big-ticket business with the largest players, including Brookfield Property Partners, Blackstone Group and Starwood. Those firms did not return a request for comment.

Bank OZK’s slowing growth comes amid a drop in activity in its primary markets. In Miami, the bank’s second-largest market, there were only four groundbreakings for condo projects in 2018 amid an estimated six-year oversupply of luxury condos, according to the consulting firm Condo Vultures.

A slump in the real estate market would impact Bank OZK more than most of its rivals because commercial real estate loans represent more than three-quarters of its loan portfolio, according to its 2018 annual report. The bank could face pressure to finance more questionable deals.

“Construction lending is a high-risk business; it tends to do well when the economy is doing well and tends to be painful during a recession,” said Raj Singh, the CEO of BankUnited, which has branches in New York and South Florida. “If there is a bump in the road, [Bank OZK] will feel it.”

But believers in the bank say concerns about its health are unfounded. Stern noted that the bank provided only 38 percent of the total $135 million loan at his 9 DeKalb Avenue, a leverage point that would shield it from default.

“There is a perception that they take more risk than they do,” he said. “That’s a complete misunderstanding. You are looking at their financial health in a vacuum.”

Even so, Bank OZK last year wrote off two loans made a decade ago by a total of $46 million, prompting its stock price to drop 24 percent. Another loan in California could be written off in the future. And this year in Manhattan, it was forced to reduce a $108 million loan to Xinyuan Real Estate by $20 million after the Chinese developer dismantled its local team, hit multiple delays on the project and brought on another firm to oversee its developments.

Those disclosures have come in the two years since the bank stopped filing annual reports to the SEC. And under its new primary federal regulator, the FDIC, the bank has acknowledged that its construction lending activity relative to its capital levels far exceeds the agency’s guidelines.

Hicks, Bank OZK’s chief administrative officer, said the bank has processes in place to keep that lending in check.

“We’ve been above the guidelines for 12 years,” he said. “And as I mentioned before, they are guidelines.”

—Ashley McHugh-Chiappone contributed research.


“Negative surprises”: Vornado execs talk retail struggles on Q2 earnings call

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Vornado chairman and CEO Steven Roth, and 608 Fifth Avenue (Credit: Getty Images)

Vornado chairman and CEO Steven Roth, and 608 Fifth Avenue (Credit: Getty Images)

As the retail apocalypse claims another victim, Vornado Realty Trust may be looking to offload one of its retail properties — or convert another one to offices.

Fast-fashion brand Topshop closed all U.S. stores in June, and Vornado was the landlord at both of its New York locations. This put a dent in the firm’s second quarter earnings, and was a topic that came up early and often in Tuesday morning’s earnings call.

“Overall, the retail market continues to be challenging, with leasing velocity slow, and assets prone to negative surprises, a la Topshop,” Vornado president Michael Franco said in a prepared statement at the start of the call.

Although rent for the two locations was paid through the end of June, accounting methodology — specifically, the “straight-lining” of rent over the duration of a lease — means that the Topshop closures had a negative impact on the firm’s earnings for the past quarter.

Overall, the New York-based real estate investment trust reported adjusted earnings of $42.6 million or $0.22 per share for the second quarter, down from $0.36 per share for the same period the year before.

At one of the former Topshop locations, the landmarked Swiss Center at 608 Fifth Avenue, Vornado may end up abandoning the property altogether. The ground lease on that property, which is owned by the Korein family and expires in 2033, includes a cancellation option, Franco noted. Vornado took over the ground lease from Aby Rosen’s RFR Holding in 2013.

Vornado CEO Steven Roth further clarified the firm’s position during the Q&A segment. “First of all, we have not said that we are abandoning the ground lease. That may come; It’s an option that we have in the future,” he said, noting that the economics of the property were “a push, to slightly underwater.”

“The likelihood is that this is not something that we want to spend our energy and time on,” Roth concluded.

The other former Topshop, at 478 Broadway, may have a brighter outlook. “This is great space, which we will re-lease in the ordinary course,” Franco said. “We may convert some of the upper floors to office, given the attractiveness of this bullseye location in Soho to creative types.”

Meanwhile, more retail troubles are already on the horizon. “I will also point out Forever 21 has hired restructuring advisors, and is working with mall owners to provide rent relief to help stabilize the company,” Franco said, noting that the company will likely participate in rent relief “in some small measure” at the retailer’s 1540 Broadway location.

Meanwhile, Vornado has chosen not to renew Forever 21’s lease in 4 Union Square, instead leasing part of its space to Whole Foods in a 70,000-square-foot, 20-year renewal deal. A third Forever 21 location, at 435 Seventh Avenue, just opened recently.

All in all, Vornado’s retail occupancy declined from 97.1 percent to 94.7 percent over the course of the quarter, all due to Topshop and the abortive attempt to revive the Four Seasons restaurant at 280 Park .

LA could soon require affordable units in all resi projects

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Councilman Gil Cedillo and LA City Hall

Councilman Gil Cedillo and LA City Hall

As the years-long affordability crisis advances, Los Angeles officials are considering a policy that would require affordable housing components in every new multifamily project.

City Council will consider recommendations next week for “inclusionary zoning” requirements to establish “a fair share distribution of affordable housing” in all community plans, Curbed reported. It would help officials target the areas that have fallen short on affordable housing.

Councilman Gil Cedillo, who represents areas like Westlake, MacArthur Park, Pico Union and Chinatown, initiated the request and said, “Certain parts of the city should not be responsible for meeting the entire city’s affordable housing goals.”

California Housing Partnership estimated this year that the county needs about 517,000 more homes for very low- and extremely low-income levels to meet current demand. The city has fallen short on affordable housing construction, as just about 10 percent of the units permitted since 2014 have been designated as such.

These policies could give new bonuses to builders, but they happen to be the biggest opponents. Developers argue such requirements will drive costs up enough to dissuade them from building. Last year, development firm Jade Enterprises said an inclusionary mandate in Central City West would make its 369-unit project “completely unviable.”

Hundreds of cities and neighborhoods have adopted inclusionary zoning policies before. From 1991 to 2009, Westlake established an inclusionary zoning in its community plan, which required all multifamily developers to make 15 percent of its units affordable. It was also recently reinstated in a draft plan. [Curbed]Gregory Cornfield

Saudis backed Colony Capital’s digital infrastructure deal, says report

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Tom Barrack and Donald Trump (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

Colony Capital reportedly partnered up with a sovereign wealth fund from Saudi Arabia as it sought to invest in digital infrastructure after the 2016 presidential election.

The investment firm’s founder and CEO, Thomas Barrack, is a longtime friend and supporter of President Donald Trump, having served on his transition team, as well as an advocate of strengthening relations between the kingdom and the U.S.

Following the 2016 election, Bloomberg reports that Colony partnered with another firm, Boca Raton-based Digital Bridge Holdings, on a $4 billion digital infrastructure fund called Digital Colony Partners. Colony brought in the Public Investment Fund of Saudi Arabia (PIF), according to Bloomberg, which cited sources familiar with the matter.

The total investment from the Riyadh-based fund, which comes amid increased scrutiny of the kingdom’s human rights record, has not been revealed. Bloomberg, citing one person familiar with the deal, reported that the Saudis ultimately invested nine figures. An adviser to Barrack declined the outlet’s request for comment about the nature of Colony’s partnership with the PIF.

Last week, Colony announced a $325 million deal to acquire Digital Bridge, a digital infrastructure investment firm. Colony is now reportedly in talks with the PIF about partnering up on the purchase of a minority stake in Burbank, California-based film and television studio Legendary Entertainment.

The Real Deal reported last week that Barrack will step down as CEO in 2021 as a result of Colony’s acquisition of Digital Bridge, whose chairman, Marc Ganzi, will succeed him.

In November, Barrack ousted former Colony CEO Richard Saltzman as the Los Angeles-based firm’s stock price fell following its merger with NorthStar Asset Management.

[Bloomberg] Sylvia Varnham O’Regan

Property values in Inglewood jump 26%, “anti-rent gouging” bill could drastically expand rent control: Daily Digest

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Every day, The Real Deal rounds up Los Angeles’ biggest real estate news. We update this page at 9 a.m., 12:30 p.m., and 4 p.m. PT. Please send any tips or deals to tips@therealdeal.com

This page was last updated at 4 p.m. PT.

Inglewood homes go up, up, up. Property values in fast-changing Inglewood increased nearly 26 percent in the last year —  more than anywhere else in the county — according to 2019 property tax assessment roll. The hike in Inglewood is largely due to some of the massive projects being built there, such as the Chargers and Rams new stadium and Clippers arena. [KHTS

 

“Anti-rent gouging” could expand rent control to as many as 1.2 million homes. New research by UC Berkeley reveals Assembly Bill 1482 could drastically expand rent control in the county. Out of the 1.2 million homes that would qualify under the bill, roughly 374,000 units are in the city of L.A. [Curbed]

 

Scott Gillen wants $500M for 13 Malibu spec homes. Gillen’s development firm, Unvarnished, is looking to part with a baker’s dozen properties scattered around the wealthy seaside enclave. “The Malibu Series” includes the New Castle spec mansion and five under-construction mansions spread across a 24-acre property. [TRD]

 

LA Councilman David Ryu (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

LA Councilman David Ryu (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

L.A. Councilman David Ryu talks development. The Council’s youngest member talked about his proposal to ban developers and associates from donating to elected officials and why he wants to reduce his and his colleagues’ power. [TRD]

 

Saudis backed Colony Capital’s digital infrastructure deal, according to a new report. Colony Capital, led by Trump-ally Thomas Barrack, reportedly partnered up with a sovereign wealth fund from Saudi Arabia as it sought to invest in digital infrastructure after the 2016 presidential election, according to Bloomberg. [TRD]

 

Jimmy Stewart’s former Brentwood home (Credit: Sotheby’s International Realty)

Jimmy Stewart’s former Brentwood home (Credit: Sotheby’s International Realty)

Jimmy Stewart’s Brentwood bachelor pad sold for $8.3 million. It was the first time the half-acre property and its 4,600-square-foot home traded in 60 years. The ranch home appears to have changed little since his time living there, and could be a development opportunity for the buyer. [Town and Country]

 

L.A. is explores mandatory inclusionary zoning citywide. That would require developers to include affordable units in residential projects regardless of location. Councilmember Gil Cedillo instructed the city planning department to explore the issue to ensure “certain parts of the city [are not] responsible for meeting the entire city’s affordable housing goals.” [Curbed]

 

 A.J. Khair’s planned hotel at 544 S. Pacific Avenue

A.J. Khair’s planned hotel at 544 S. Pacific Avenue

A hotel developer in San Pedro is not happy. A.J Khair Development and Construction submitted plans last year for an 80-room hotel on 6th Street and Pacific Avenue, but an L.A. zoning administrator in April knocked that down to 67 rooms. The developer is appealing, claiming the 80-room project is appropriate and has support from local elected officials. [Urbanize]

 

It’s been a good year for real estate stocks. Real estate firms saw highs on the stock market in June and July — in anticipation of the Federal Reserve’s interest rate cut. TRD analyzed how some of the top public landlords, brokerages and more performed on the market so far this year. [TRD]

 

Elliman’s Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes

Elliman’s Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes

Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes dish on their plans for L.A. — and New York City. Ahead of tonight’s debut of Season 8 of “Million Dollar Listing New York,” star brokers Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes sat down with The Real Deal for an exclusive interview about what Eklund’s move to Los Angeles means for them, their team and their business. [TRD]

 

New York City’s most important construction lender may be on shaky ground. Bank OZK has handed out money to the city’s top developers for years. But there’s drama behind the scenes, including infighting and allegations of sexual misconduct and age discrimination. [TRD]

Compiled by Dennis Lynch

Historic Hollywood building in Opportunity Zone becomes latest repositioning target

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Hillview Hollywood, Jesse Lasky , Samuel Goldwyn , Adolfo Suaya (Credit: Wikipedia and Getty Images)

Hillview Hollywood, Jesse Lasky , Samuel Goldwyn , Adolfo Suaya (Credit: Wikipedia and Getty Images)

It’s a story that includes movie moguls, a gruesome murder and, now, Opportunity Zones.

A historic apartment building known as Hillview Hollywood has hit the market, potentially paving the way for the fully leased, 53-unit property on Hollywood Boulevard to become a boutique hotel, office space or even a private members club.

The owner of the 63,370-square-foot building at 6533 Hollywood Boulevard is targeting around $25 million for the property, which includes 8,560 square feet of retail. The retail portion is currently leased to the Houston Hospitality brothers, who operate nightclubs Dirty Laundry and No Vacancy at the property.

Hillview falls in a designated Opportunity Zone, meaning buyers could receive a hefty tax benefit from their investment. Marketing materials from Cushman & Wakefield also mention that the property qualifies for repositioning “via the Ellis Act,” a controversial law that allows landlords to essentially evict tenants if they plan on removing their units from the rental market. Still, it’s possible any conversion could be challenged by tenants rights’ activists, which have been increasingly fighting evictions through lawsuits and lobbying.

Property records reveal the owner, Hillview Hollywood LLC, paid $16 million to CIM Group for the building in 2015. The LLC traces back to Adolfo Suaya, an Argentine-American restaurateur and hotelier.

Hillview’s history dates back to 1917, when movie moguls and brother-in-laws Jesse Lasky and Samuel Goldwyn built the complex for aspiring artists. Lasky was a key founder of Paramount Pictures at the time, while Goldwyn had founded Goldwyn Pictures, which eventually became Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, or MGM.

Rumor has it that residents from the silent era include Clara Bow, Stan Laurel, Viola Dana, Greta Garbo and Charlie Chaplin. Each room is named after a different Hollywood star.

Like many other historic buildings in Hollywood, Hillview has seen its fair share of scandal. In 2011, a resident murdered his 33-year-old fiancée in one of the hallways.

Kelli Snyder, Mike Condon Jr. and Erica Finck at Cushman have the listing.

Forget any slowdown: California’s commercial real estate experts predict expansion into 2022

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Tipton John, partner at AllenMatkins and Jerry Nickelsburg, director and senior economist of UCLA Anderson Forecast

Tipton John, partner at AllenMatkins and Jerry Nickelsburg, director and senior economist of UCLA Anderson Forecast

Commercial real estate experts and investors in California are preparing for a rebound but don’t expect it to come right away.

After polling a panel in the development and investment markets, law firm Allen Matkins and UCLA released a forecast for 2022 showing that the industry is gearing up for the next expansionary cycle. The survey was notably more optimistic than the last few years, even though construction activity is expected to slow down over the next 18 months.

The positive survey leapfrogs the prediction of a very weak economy through 2020 to one of faster growth thereafter. The survey indicated growth in office and industrial and some improvement in retail.

Industrial to remain red hot
The industrial market in California continues to be the hot spot for nonresidential commercial real estate development.

In spite of the trade dispute with China, the panels for Los Angeles and Orange County are looking at strong markets becoming even more lucrative by 2022. Industrial development hubs like the Inland Empire will continue to be so as the market in 2022 is predicted to be the same as today.

Last October, Ten-X Commercial predicted rents will rise by 16.7 percent and vacancies will tighten even more by 2022. Demand among potential tenants is strong enough that some landlords are choosing not to extend leases for smaller companies.

New age, new office
Previous surveys for office markets concluded that the peak had been reached, but the new survey shows a return to confidence for 2022.

After a predicted downturn in 2020, office space developers see a demand surge coming that will improve rental and occupancy rates. In Southern California, survey participants signaled in previous years that markets measured by occupancy and rental rates are going to improve marginally.

Several office projects will be completed or will start construction in Los Angeles by 2022, like Tribune Media Company’s 30-story tower that is set to include 534,000 square feet of office space, 107 condominiums and ground-floor retail.

Retail in an e-commerce world
Retail continues to be the weakest asset in commercial real estate, and general pessimism remains in Southern California. Though, it is not as uniform across panel members as in previous surveys. This is due to recently shrinking demand after the push for online shopping. Therefore, little new development has been occurring.

Could it…be any bigger? Matthew Perry lists palatial penthouse for $35M

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Matthew Perry and his penthouse (Credit: Getty Images)

Matthew Perry and his penthouse (Credit: Getty Images)

Matthew Perry is parting with his custom-designed penthouse in Century City, a spread that puts the iconic Manhattan apartment in “Friends” to shame.

The full-floor circular condo at The Century — a Related Companies project designed by Robert A.M. Stern — is on the market for $35 million, roughly 75 percent more than what the actor paid for it two years ago.

The luxury unit spans 9,300 square feet and includes floor-to-ceiling windows, four bedrooms and eight bathrooms. There’s also a screening room, and four massive terraces that boast expansive city views. Photos provided by Compass also show a home with furnishings that are heavy on the velvet.

The 42-story high-rise at 1 West Century Drive includes other amenities like a swimming pool, gym, movie theater, private wine storage and 24-hour concierge.

Perry bought the condo for $20 million in 2017. He tapped architect Scott Joyce and interior designer LM Pagano to then custom-design the interiors.

Greg Holcomb and Cassandra Peterson of Compass have the listing. Holcomb also represented Perry when he bought the unit.

Though best known for his role as Chandler Bing in “Friends,” Perry also playwrights. He also owns a beach home in Malibu.

The Los Angeles Times reported the listing.


iBuying pays off for Redfin, as revenue soars 39%

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Redfin's Glenn Kelman

Redfin’s Glenn Kelman

Demand for instant home-buying has started to pay dividends for Redfin.

The Seattle-based discount brokerage said second-quarter revenue rose 39 percent to $198 million, beating expectations. The company’s net loss widened to $12.6 million, compared to $3.2 million, thanks to a bump in marketing expenses as it poured money into national ads touting a slew of new ventures, including instant home-buying.

During the second quarter, Redfin Now — through which the company purchases homes directly from sellers — generated $39.9 million in revenue. That represents a 343.3 percent jump from $9 million in 2018’s second quarter, CEO Glenn Kelman said during an earnings call Thursday.

For the first five months of 2019, Redfin ran mass media ads in 22 markets — a cost of nearly $36 million, or triple what the company spent in 2018. “The ads have been effective at making homebuyers aware of Redfin,” Kelman said.

In a prepared statement, Kelman called the quarter a “turning point” for the company, which aims to be the first national brokerage to provide a “complete real estate solution.” Redfin plans to expand its mortgage business and Redfin Now, its instant home-buying service. Both services launched in 2017, and during an earnings call Thursday Kelman said each is in a “more aggressive phase of market expansion.”

Kelman also addressed Redfin’s new partnership with Opendoor, a VC-backed home buyer competes in some markets with Redfin’s own home-buying business. Earlier this month, Redfin and Opendoor said they would join forces to buy homes in Phoenix and Atlanta, where owners would be able to get an offer from Opendoor through Redfin’s website. Ultimately, owners could sell their home directly to Opendoor or list it publicly with Redfin for a 1.5 percent listing fee.

“The OpenDoor partnership is not a replacement for Redfin Now in any market,” said Kelman. “There’s too much demand for that business to let us outsource it to anyone else.”

Kelman said Redfin is expanding Redfin Now business “as fast as we can” but not as fast as he’d like. “What’s limiting this is how operationally intensive [the] business is,” he said.

Hollywood hotel developer Relevant Group is getting in the affordable housing game

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Richard Heyman and May Phutikanit with the project site (Credit: Google Maps and iStock)

Richard Heyman and May Phutikanit with the project site (Credit: Google Maps and iStock)

Relevant Group, which has been developing luxury hotels in Hollywood, is now in the affordable housing business.

The Hollywood-based firm filed plans to build a 100-percent affordable housing project in South Westlake, seeking a slew of city incentives in the process.

The proposed 150-unit building would rise at 1316-1328 West Linwood Avenue, records show. The plan calls for 142 units for low-income households and eight units for very low-income.

Relevant is seeking to streamline the entitlement process through a measure allows developers to build supportive housing by right. The firm is also seeking a density bonus, height increase, and reduction in the open space minimum.

Relevant purchased the properties through LLCs in June 2018 for a combined $9.44 million.

It is also has four hotel projects within a two-block radius in Hollywood.

The affordable project would be one mile from L.A. Live and the Los Angeles Convention Center, an area that has seen a flood of hotel developments with thousands of rooms in the pipeline. AEG, which owns the Staples Center, is working on a $500-million transformation of the Convention Center, and is also planning to build a 40-story hotel expansion with 850 new rooms at L.A. Live.

Lead-gen brokerage Elegran goes after Compass in new lawsuit

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Elegran CEO Michael Rossi, former Elegran and current Compass agent Zino Angelides, and Compass CEO Robert Reffkin (Credit: Michael Toolan, iStock)

Elegran CEO Michael Rossi, former Elegran and current Compass agent Zino Angelides, and Compass CEO Robert Reffkin (Credit: Michael Toolan, iStock)

UPDATED, Thursday, August 1, 5:39 p.m.: The long list of lawsuits against SoftBank-backed residential brokerage Compass now has one more entry. The latest legal challenge comes from a fellow “tech-centric” brokerage, New York-based Elegran Real Estate, whose executives were found this week to be behind a massive network of knockoff building websites.

The lawsuit, which Elegran filed on Wednesday against Compass and one of its agents, Zino Angelides, comes with a laundry list of allegations surrounding the circumstances of Angelides’ abrupt departure from Elegran in late June. Elegran claims that Angelides and three other Elegran agents took over $2 million worth of data on over 6,300 prospective clients on their way out the door.

Elegran CEO Michael Rossi stated in an affidavit that the lawsuit is necessary to protect the company from “ongoing efforts to steal Elegran’s business, licensed real estate salespersons, clients and prospective clients through wrongful means.”

According to the lawsuit, Angelides began recruiting other colleagues to Compass while he was still at Elegran. He and three other brokers “held meetings during May and June to discuss their move to Compass, several of which were held in Elegran’s offices, using Elegran’s resources, at times when these brokers were expected to be working on Elegran’s business,” Rossi says in his affidavit. The four brokers allegedly left the firm together on June 24 with no prior notice, and began working at Compass on the same day.

Compass shot back, accusing Elegran of turning to the courts because it can’t compete.

“Instead of building a better future for the real estate industry, our competitors are using the court system to stifle competition, but these efforts have been unsuccessful,” a company spokesperson told The Real Deal. “Compass will continue on its mission to meaningfully improve the real estate industry and help everyone find their place in the world.” The brokerage closed on a $370 million round of Series G funding earlier this week, valuing it at $6.4 billion. 

A “substantial portion” of the stolen lead data was purchased from Zillow and could have produced more than $10 million in business for the firm, Elegran alleges. As TRD recently reported, Elegran’s sprawling lead-generation pipeline also includes a network of more than 270 knockoff building websites, which the firm’s own executives first set up in 2012.

Elegran was also recently censured by the Real Estate Board of New York in connection to lead-generation sites that displayed another firm’s exclusive listings.

For roughly the past three years, Compass has required new hires to sign Silicon Valley-style contracts prohibiting the “taking, storing or use of any information from [the agent’s] previous firm.”

The lawsuit also accuses Compass of trying to divert $63,800 in commissions owed to Elegran, and of continuing to target other Elegran agents for solicitation using “trade secrets,” such as sales performance data, that Angelides had access to.

Finally, the suit accuses Angelides of disparaging Elegran and its business by “making false claims that Elegran is nearing insolvency and that agents should disassociate from Elegran because it may be unable to pay commissions due to them.”

“Elegran takes matters of poaching and theft of proprietary information very seriously and would not enter into litigation lightly,” a spokesperson for the firm said. “We look forward to a swift resolution and hope for a fair and satisfactory outcome.”

The action against Compass comes on the heels of an explosive suit brought by brokerage conglomerate Realogy last month, which also included allegations of improper agent poaching, data theft and disparagement.

Legal experts have pointed out that poaching-related allegations against Compass may turn out to be seriously misguided in an industry that runs on independent contractors — because “no poaching is illegal.”

This article was updated to include a statement from Elegran Real Estate.

LA’s latest “co”-craze: Here’s a look at the city’s expanding co-living companies

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By now, everyone knows about co-working, but what about co-living?

In Los Angeles’ pricey and shrinking housing market, finding an affordable place to live is tougher than ever.

Enter co-living companies, whose operators say is an answer to the unaffordability problem plaguing the region. Though widespread throughout the country, the firms have for the most part stayed under the radar. There is nothing close to a WeWork — now We Company — of co-living.

Typically, co-living residents live in small, private units and share amenities like a kitchen or living room with other individuals. It’s intended to be a more affordable option for renters, though with many priced at between $1,500 and $2,000 for a one-bedroom, it is debatable how truly affordable the units are. It’s definitely not as cheap as what the “vanlord” had been offering in Venice, though far less sketchy.

As more co-living firms open new locations across the city, they’re also becoming more specialized, focusing on wellness or a specific industry, as they seek to separate themselves from an expanding field.

Health-centric Haven in Venice offers breathwork and morning jogs for its residents. Another, Upstart, provides members with acting classes and access to recording studios.

While it varies, co-living firms will usually lease a single-family home or building, and then outfit the space so it can be rented out to members. Some companies, such as Starcity and Common, are also starting to delve into new construction.

There are approximately 107 million co-living rental beds across the nation, according to a May report from Cushman and Wakefield. More than 52 percent of that total was delivered in the past year.

The recent spike in co-living has drawn comparisons to co-working, a sector that has exploded in recent years and shares a similar business model.

But while the two share the appeal of flexible leases and provided activities, there are limits. Not everyone wants to live in a “pod”-style bedroom with strangers, and while demand seems to be surpassing supply, it’s unclear whether the niche market will take off in the way co-working has.

And of course, there is the cautionary tale. In New York, co-living startup Bedly abruptly closed its doors last week.

Amid Sears bankruptcy, Seritage posts $26M net loss in Q2

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Seritage CEO Benjamin Schall and a shuttered Sears location (Credit: iStock)

Seritage CEO Benjamin Schall and a shuttered Sears location (Credit: iStock)

As Sears works its way through bankruptcy proceedings, Seritage Growth Properties posted a nearly $26 million net loss in the second quarter, according to its earnings report.

That’s compared to a $10.6 million loss in the second quarter of 2018. For the first half of the year, its net loss totaled $36.8 million.

Seritage’s revenue also continued to fall, down 18 percent to $40.5 million from $49.3 million in the second quarter of 2018.

Seritage, the real estate investment trust formed in 2015 to invest in and revamp Sears-anchored real estate, also reported a nearly $22 million drop in net operating income in the second quarter compared to the same period of the previous year, to $14.6 million, according to its earnings report. For the first half of the year, Seritage generated $38.9 million in net operating income, a 47 percent drop from $73.3 million during the first six months of 2018.

The REIT attributed the drop in NOI to lower rents from its master lease with Sears, which had closed stores and filed for bankruptcy in October.

Since the REIT’s formation, over 26 million square feet of leased space — or more than $110 million of annual base rent — has been taken offline, Seritage said. The firm has since signed new non-Sears leases that total an annual base rent of $154.1 million across 8.9 million square feet of space, but most of these stores have not yet opened. They should begin to pay rent over the next two years, Seritage said.

In the second quarter, new leasing activity totaled 687,000 square feet, with an average rent of about $20 per square foot. Non-Sears tenants make up 90 percent of annual base rent, including signed leases. Overall, 52.4 percent of Seritage’s portfolio is leased, the company said.

In the midst of its bankruptcy proceedings, Sears in April filed a lawsuit against its former CEO, Eddie Lampert. The ailing retailer — which at one point was the largest in the U.S. — claimed Lampert made billions as the company fell into a “death spiral.”

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