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Local firm plans to expand Thousand Oaks retail plaza after $18M purchase

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DH Holdings founder David Horenstein and Conejo Gateway

DH Holdings founder David Horenstein and Conejo Gateway

A Century City-based development firm that specializes in retail centers has found its latest project in Thousand Oaks.

DH Holdings paid $18 million to acquire the Conejo Gateway, where it’s planning on expanding the 43,200-square-foot plaza to potentially include a grocery store and day care center. Commercial brokerage JLL, which brokered the deal, announced the sale Thursday.

The seller of the complex at 701 Wendy Drive was Wendy-Veto LLC. The LLC traces back to Don Kinder, owner of Woodland Hills-based Toibb Enterprises.

Conejo Gateway is fully leased to tenants including Dollar Tree, O’Reilly Auto Parts and Anytime Fitness.

Tom Lagos and Patrick Toomey of JLL represented the seller. DH Holdings, led by founder David Horenstein, represented itself.

In March, another retail plaza in the suburban Thousand Oaks sold for $14.4 million. Anchored by an Office Depot, the 33,700-square-foot complex sold to Agora Realty & Management. It was 96 percent occupied at the time.


These are the pricey properties linked to Ponzi-schemer Robert Shapiro

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Robert Shapiro and a few of the properties (Credit: iStock)

Robert Shapiro and a few of the properties (Credit: iStock)

It was 2016 and Robert Shapiro was at the peak of his home buying and developing binge.

That September, the CEO of Sherman Oaks, California-based Woodbridge Group of Companies spent $90 million to acquire the historic Owlwood Estate. The deal for the 12,200-square-foot mansion with sunken tennis court, guardhouses and two separate guest houses was the second-most expensive sale in Los Angeles County at the time. As the crown jewel in his company’s portfolio, that Holmby Hills mansion was among many properties that Woodbridge had been buying up with what seemed like a treasure chest full of cash.

“The Owlwood Estate has been the unchallenged symbol of uber-luxury since being built during the Great Depression, and we will keep it that way for another 80 years,” Shapiro said in a statement at the time.

Three years later the mansion is still standing but Woodbridge is not. And Shapiro’s treasure chest now looks like it contained only fool’s gold.

Owlwood is back on the market, now asking $115 million, down from the $180 million Woodbridge was seeking not long after acquiring it. In late 2017, the government began investigating Shapiro for orchestrating a $1.3 billion Ponzi scheme. Shapiro was later accused of using his many shell companies to bilk more than 9,000 investors, dangling purported real estate investments as the lure.

A federal judge has since appointed a new CEO to liquidate Woodbridge’s numerous properties and assets, in order to pay back investors who were defrauded.

On Wednesday, Shapiro pleaded guilty to charges in federal court, admitting he “misappropriated” between $25 million and $95 million to fund his extravagant lifestyle, which included Picasso paintings, 14-karat white gold earrings, private planes and, oddly, a 1969 Mercury convertible.

Many of the investors – about 700 of them – were retirees based in Florida who poured $114 million into Woodbridge, a firm that was previously headquartered in Boca Raton, Florida. In exchange for the guilty plea, 61-year-old Shapiro will avoid trial but could still face up to 25 years in prison.

Mansions and empty land
During the firm’s five-year run, Woodbridge acquired a number of luxury properties in L.A. While some — like Owlwood Estate — were historic homes, others were simply empty plots of land that Woodbridge promised to build into mansions.

Since the Securities and Exchange Commission sued Shapiro in December 2017, many Woodbridge-owned properties have hit the market. While some sales have already been approved in bankruptcy court — which is required since Woodbridge filed Chapter 11 two years ago — others are still listed.

Woodbridge, using over 100 Shapiro Property LLCs, purchased nearly 200 properties in and around Aspen, Colorado, and Los Angeles for $675 million, according to the complaint. The company also paid over $12 million in transaction-based commissions to 20 sales agents in Florida.

Here’s a rundown of some of the more notable homes the disgraced developer has owned.

Carla House | Los Angeles

Home on Carla Ridge and Former Woodbridge Group CEO Robert Shapiro

Home on Carla Ridge and Former Woodbridge Group CEO Robert Shapiro

A Trousdale Estates mansion, one of the few built by Woodbridge Group of Companies, hit the market in July for $46 million. The property, known as the Carla House, spans 20,000 square feet and includes seven bedrooms, an elevator, 80-foot swimming pool and movie theater. Designed by architect Noah Walker, it also features expansive decks overlooking the Hollywood Hills. Tomer Fridman and Sally Forster Jones of Compass have the listing. The property traded hands in February to an entity known as “Woodbridge Wind-Down Entity,” managed by Fredrick Chin, the court-appointed administrator of the properties.

1 Electra Court | Hollywood Hills

1 Electra Court (Credit: Hilton&Hyland)

1 Electra Court (Credit: Hilton&Hyland)

Billionaire Frank Binder paid $29.5 million for the 4.5-acre Hollywood Hills megamansion in December. It was among the assets owned by Woodbridge Group that would be sold via bankruptcy court.

The property was built in 1990, and includes two swimming pools and rooftop lawns. It changed hands a few times before businessman Eddy Aslanian bought it for $4.4 million in 2002. He sold the estate and several acres of hillside land for $30 million to Megan Ellison, who flipped the property, which was more than 9 acres then, to Woodbridge Group in 2017 for almost $36 million. Woodbridge subsequently sold some of the land the following for $12 million, shrinking the property to 4.5 acres.

1118 Tower Road | Beverly Hills

1118 Tower Road (Credit: Realtor)

1118 Tower Road (Credit: Realtor)

A bankruptcy court approved the sale of a Spanish Colonial home at 1118 Tower Road for $7.3 million in January. Barrie Clapham bought the house for $650,000 less than what it was listed for on Redfin.  The five-bedroom house was built in 1926 and includes 5,900 square feet of space, a pool and spa. Jon Grauman with the Agency had the listing for the deal, which is in escrow.

711 Walden Drive | Beverly Hills

711 Walden Drive (Credit: Redfin)

711 Walden Drive (Credit: Redfin)

The bankruptcy court also approved the $13.8 million sale of the five-bedroom, 8,200-square-foot mansion at 711 Walden Drive to Nathalie and Bernard A. Khalili. The seller was Riley Creek Investments LLC, a Delaware-based entity tied to Woodbridge that filed for bankruptcy in 2017.

Woodbridge Road home | Palm Beach

145 Woodbridge Road (Credit: Realtor)

145 Woodbridge Road (Credit: Realtor)

Perpro Systems International Inc., a company linked to Shapiro, paid $492,500 for the house at 145 Woodbridge Road in Palm Beach in 1993. The British Virgin Islands company sold it to another Shapiro entity, Coverdale Realty Corp., in 2003 for $1.73 million. Shapiro sold it for good in 2004 for nearly $1.7 million. The three-bedroom, roughly 3,000-square-foot home is near the ocean and was built in 1951.

Skygarden | Holmby Hills

10721 Stradella Court in Holmby Hills (Credit: Zillow)

10721 Stradella Court in Holmby Hills (Credit: Zillow)

Woodbridge paid $14.6 million to acquire a 1-acre plot of dirt at 10721 Stradella Court in Holmby Hills in February 2016, later tapping SAOTA to design renderings for a 15,000-square-foot spec home, named “Skygarden.” Two months later, Woodbridge and now-shuttered Mercer Vine brokerage marketed the property for $100 million. Buyers could also buy just the dirt, complete with design plans, for nearly $20 million. In February, the property was transferred to “Woodbridge Wind-Down Entity.”

Granada Pointe Complex | San Fernando Valley

Robert Shapiro and the Granada Pointe complex at 11541 Blucher Boulevard

Robert Shapiro and the Granada Pointe complex at 11541 Blucher Boulevard

In April 2018, Woodbridge sold a 52-unit apartment complex, dubbed Granada Pointe, for $21.5 million. The buyer of the 2011-built building at 11541 Blucher Avenue was Adil A. Barakat Family Trust. One of the many LLCs tied to Woodbridge had purchased the property a year prior for $19.5 million.

LA retail market in Q2 clawed back from an abysmal Q1, report shows

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Petra Durnin, CBRE’s director of research for the Pacific southwest, and the Whole Foods grocery store that opened at the Vineyards at Porter Ranch (Credit: CBRE)

Petra Durnin, CBRE’s director of research for the Pacific southwest, and the Whole Foods grocery store that opened at the Vineyards at Porter Ranch (Credit: CBRE)

For the Los Angeles retail market, the first quarter was a nightmare. Big box store closures accounted for an overall drop in rented space, which amounted to 323,000 square feet.

But the second quarter saw a recovery, according to a new CBRE’s Greater L.A. retail report. The report showed that the local retail market would end 2019 with overall lease gains if the pace of the second quarter kept up. Leading the way were fitness centers and food stores, which took new leases.

From April through June, a little over 206,000 square feet of new space was added. The opening of Shappell Liberty Investment Properties’ $150 million mixed-use project Vineyards in Porter Ranch accounted for much of that newly completed space.

Around 1.5 million square feet of retail space is now under construction in the city, and half is expected to be delivered by the end of the year. A third of that is being built in Downtown L.A., where developers are building mixed-use properties as well as renovating older spaces.

In addition to fitness centers and food stores, other big leases for the second quarter included furniture, fashion, and entertainment, according to the report. Regal Cinemas, Whole Foods, and fitness chain Equinox signed some of those larger leases.

Overall average asking lease rates in L.A. were up 16.1 percent quarter-over-quarter to $2.89 per square foot, thanks in part to new vacancies on the pricey Westside. That’s where retail space is more expensive to lease than anywhere else in the region. Those vacancies mean average asking rates jumped from $4.91 per square foot in the first quarter to $7.53 per square foot.

But much of the retail industry is still in a tailspin. In February, Payless ShoeSource was one of the largest retailers to enter bankruptcy and shutter its stores. But a host of other retailers continue to feel the heat, most recently Barney’s New York, which filed for bankruptcy this week. The famous retailer has a store in Beverly Hills.

Inside Stephen Ross’ massive empire of gyms, condos, coffee and more

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Related CEO Stephen Ross (Credit: Getty Images, Wikipedia, Facebook, and Twitter)

Related CEO Stephen Ross (Credit: Getty Images, Wikipedia, Facebook, and Twitter)

The backlash over hosting a Trump fundraiser has been swift for developer Stephen Ross.

Within 24 hours of word getting out, Equinox members and SoulCycle devotees have threatened to boycott both brands, which are owned by Ross’ Related Companies. (In San Francisco, some staged a protest.) Miami Dolphins receiver Kenny Stills publicly criticized the team owner for agreeing to host the event at his Hamptons home. And in a joint statement, the CEOs of Equinox and SoulCycle tried to distance themselves from the fracas and Ross himself.

“We believe in tolerance and equality, and will always stay true to those values,” they said. “Mr. Ross is a passive investor and is not involved in the management of either business.”

Not only is Ross the owner of those brands, but the real estate billionaire’s investments reach far wider.

The 79-year-old developer — worth an estimated $7.7 billion, according to Forbes — founded Related in 1972 with a focus on affordable housing. Today, his empire has $50 billion in assets owned or under development, including the 28-acre mega-development Hudson Yards. The company’s investment arm, Related Fund Management, has raised $5 billion to date. Ross also owns a minority stake in Jorge Pérez’s Related Group. And in 2012, he co-founded RSE Ventures, a venture capital firm that describes itself as “part investor” and “part incubator” that’s backed 17 startups to date. Through Vayner/RSE, a partnership between Gary Vaynerchuck, Vayner Media and RSE, Ross has supported dozens more.

Ross released a statement Wednesday night describing himself as an “outspoken champion of racial equality, inclusion, diversity, public education and environmental sustainability.”

“I have known Donald Trump for 40 years, and while we agree on some issues, we strongly disagree on many others and I have never been bashful about expressing my opinions,” he said. “I started my business with nothing and a reason for my engagement with our leaders is my deep concern for creating jobs and growing our country’s economy.”

Business backlash
Fallout over the fundraiser is still threatening to take a toll on Ross’ many businesses — including luxury condos.

Related is actively marketing apartments at 70 Vestry Street and at Hudson Yards, as well as 520 West 28th, where a penthouse is asking $48.75 million. The optics of the fundraiser, which is at Ross’ Hamptons home, are “very, very bad for business,” said one brokerage source, who said a client who recently inked a deal at Hudson Yards is now having second thoughts.

In West Palm Beach, the developer owns CityPlace, which it recently rebranded as Rosemary Square. The mixed-use property is currently undergoing a $550 million redevelopment. Last year, Related secured approval for a 21-story apartment building on the site of a former Macy’s building at CityPlace.

Ross also owns the Miami Dolphins’ Hard Rock Stadium, which in addition to now hosting the annual Miami Open tennis tournament will be home to the Super Bowl in 2020.

Kenny Stills, a wide receiver for the Dolphins, criticized Ross’ decision to host a fundraiser for Trump.

Christina Tosi, founder of Milk Bar, also went on the offensive. “Milk Bar is in no way affiliated with the Trump fundraiser,” she wrote in a letter posted to the company’s website. “Stephen Ross is one of many investors in our company, all of whom come from different perspectives.”

Yoga, catering and rental cars
Outside of development, Related itself has spawned subsidiaries, including some through Equinox, which in addition to SoulCycle owns Pure Yoga, Blink Fitness and Rumble. Over the past seven years, Related also took a stake in Danny Meyer’s Union Square Events and CORE Real Estate, a boutique residential brokerage that handles Related’s resales. In 2017, Related bought an $80 million stake in Ladder Capital, one of the Trump Organization’s biggest lenders; a year later, it attempted a takeover bid, but was rejected.

In recent weeks, Related also invested in an airport car rental company called Conrac Solutions, and it acquired Pioneer Railcorp, owner of short-line railroads, in partnership with Brookhaven Rail Partners and Stephen Capital Partners. Earlier this summer, it said it would partner with Uber to build a skyport for Uber Air vehicles.

Neither is Ross’ first foray into transportation.

Until last year, Related also owned Citi Bike through a subsidiary called Bikeshare Holdings LLC. In 2014, Bikeshare acquired Motivate (formerly Alta Bicycle Share), which operated Citi Bike. Motivate was acquired by Lyft for a reported $250 million in 2018. This year, RSE Ventures, the fund co-founded by Ross, bet $1 million on a drone racing league.

The Detroit native is also among the biggest donors to the University of Michigan, where he earned an accounting degree in 1962. To date, Ross has committed $378 million to the university, according to reports, including a $100 million gift to the business school, which was named after him in 2004.

In 2018, a Detroit Free Press investigation cast a shadow over those gifts after it found the University of Michigan has invested in the companies of its donors, including more than $140 million in five funds through Related Fund Management. Ross and a group of partners also ended up in court after claiming a $33 million charitable tax deduction, which the IRS called a “tax avoidance scheme.”

New ventures
In all, Ross has knit a web of more than 30 companies with overlapping interests in sports, entertainment, hospitality and technology — both through Related and its subsidiaries, as well as through investments from RSE.

To date, RSE has backed 17 companies, according to Crunchbase.

They include companies like Prime Sport, a sports travel and event management company; Outstanding Foods, which creates plant-based food; and Omaze, which connects influencers and charities. In June 2018, RSE invested $20 million in Bluestone Lane, the Australian coffee chain. It bet $19.5 million on &pizza, a chain that started in Washington, D.C.

The common thread is obviously real estate.

Related’s Hudson Yards, for example, will house Equinox’s first hotel. Bluestone Lane is a tenant in the Hudson Yards Mall. Equinox and SoulCycle are both tenants at the Related Group’s SLS Brickell, a twin-tower, 690-unit luxury condo development in Miami. Pérez’s Related Group sold the commercial spaces leased to the fitness tenants to Related Companies last year for $12.2 million, financing the deal with a loan from Ladder Capital.

Restaurants backed by RSE (of which there are many) will have spots in Hudson Yards. And media company VaynerMedia and the public relations firm Derris — both backed by RSE — work with several other companies the fund has invested in.

In 2014, RSE also partnered with Gary Vaynerchuck to form Vayner RSE, a $25 million seed fund and incubator that lists a “family” of 79 startups on its website, including Snapchat; Pillow, a hospitality company that deals with rentals; and Pixel Press, an app that lets kids make video games on an iPad.

Ross is a master of “connecting the dots,” RSE co-founder Higgins told Eater last year.

Higgins, a former press secretary to Rudy Giuliani, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. But in 2016 he was among a group of Republicans who publicly stumped for Hillary Clinton and told USA Today he struggled to explain Trump’s rhetoric to his son. “I’m willing to set aside any views I might have about taxation or anything else,” he said, “because I think preservation of the republic is more important.”

See below for a list of Ross’ personal holdings, as well as holdings through Related and RSE (this list does not include 79 startups backed by Vayner/RSE):

  • &pizza (pizza chain)
  • Banza (nutritious food brand)
  • Bluestone Lane (Australian coffee chain)
  • Crossfield Digital (mobile app developer)
  • Derris (communications firm)
  • Dog City (doggy daycare)
  • Drone Racing League
  • Fanvision Entertainment (hardware and software for sporting events)
  • Fuku (fast casual chicken from Momofuku Group)
  • Hard Rock Stadium (sports venue)
  • International Champions Cup (soccer tournament)
  • June (smart appliances)
  • Krossover Intelligence (coaching tools; acquired by Stack Sports in 2017)
  • LOLA (feminine care products)
  • Miami Dolphins (football franchise)
  • Milk Bar (bakery)
  • Momofuku (Asian restaurant)
  • New Hudson Facades (architectural façades)
  • NextVR (virtual reality)
  • Omaze (platform to connect influencers and charities)
  • Outstanding Foods (plant-based foods)
  • Pocket Living (homes for first-time home-buyers)
  • Prime Sport (sports travel and event management)
  • Radiate (creator of two-minute video lessons; acquired by NYSE in 2018)
  • Relevent Sports Group (soccer events and media)
  • Resy (restaurant software)
  • Skout Cybersecurity (cloud-based analytics and cybersecurity)
  • Snark Park (exhibition space)
  • Starry (internet service provider)
  • Student Sports (event and grassroots marketing for student athletes)
  • Vayner Media (digital agency)

Healthy investment: Optimus Properties buys medical office tower near $500M hospital expansion

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 Optimus Properties, LLC cofounders Kamyar Shabani and K. Joseph Shabani and the building

Optimus Properties, LLC cofounders Kamyar Shabani and K. Joseph Shabani and the building

Investment firm Optimus Properties bought a 10-story medical office tower in the San Fernando Valley, scooping up a property next door to a $500 million hospital expansion.

Century City-based Optimus paid $22 million for the 85,000-square-foot property. Called Tarzana Tower, the building is located at 18321 Ventura Boulevard. Janet Neman of Kidder Matthews represented Optimus in the off-market deal. Optimus plans to reposition the property, Neman said.

The seller was entities operated by Shahram Ray Golbari, attorney Michael Vivoli, and Dr. Parham Minoo.

Providence Tarzana Medical Center, which is next door, partnered with Cedars Sinai Medical Center on a $540-million expansion and renovation that is scheduled to be complete by 2022.

Ventura Boulevard is one of the more active corridors in the Valley. Earlier this year, a retail landlord filed plans to convert a corner strip mall into an office complex about two blocks from Tarzana Tower. Next to that, TriStar Realty Group is planning a 97-unit assisted living and health club complex. Also nearby, another developer is planning a 114-unit multifamily project.

Elsewhere in Tarzana, A&M Capital Real Estate is set to redevelop a 4-acre industrial site into an upscale office campus with nearly 100,000 square feet of space.

All Falls Down: Kanye West’s “Star Wars”-themed affordable housing plan hits snag

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Kanye West (Credit: Getty Images)

Kanye West (Credit: Getty Images)

Rapper. Clothing designer. Entrepreneur. Donald Trump fan. And now, affordable housing developer?

The outspoken rapper’s plan for a community of dome-like houses for low-income residents modelled after the “Stars Wars” movies has hit a snag, according to TMZ.

Calabasas city officials have cited the Grammy-winning artist for building several dome structures, which he claims are temporary prototypes, without having received permits.

He’s now being forced to bring them into compliance by Sept. 15, or tear them down. West’s plan comes as California — and Los Angeles in particular — continues to grapple with a severe shortage of affordable homes and a growing homeless problem.

West has been working with a team to design the prefabricated shelters, inspired by Luke Skywalker’s childhood home, as affordable housing. His vision, he has said, is to create a community bridging the lower and upper classes.

West had four structures built on the 300 acres he owns in Calabasas, prompting neighbors to complain to the Department of Public Works about late-night construction. After two visits to the area, inspectors concluded that the project was not temporary, and required proper plans and building permits, according to reports.

He and his wife, Kim Kardashian are no strangers to that area. In early 2018, they poured $20 million into overhauling their Hidden Hills mansion nearby. And the year before that Kim Kardashian and her mother, Kris Jenner, bought a total of three condominiums at Avanti in Calabasas.

In addition to housing, Kanye West has also mentioned plans to open his own architecture firm.

“We’re starting a Yeezy architecture arm called Yeezy home,” he tweeted out in May. “We’re looking for architects and industrial designers who want to make the world better.”

A month later, he told TV personality Charlamagne Tha God he was “going to be one of the biggest real estate developers of all the time.” [TMZ] Natalie Hoberman

Calabasas takes issue with Kanye West’s affordable housing domes, new Korean American museum design revealed: 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 9 a.m. PT

 

Kanye West (Credit: Getty Images)

Kanye West (Credit: Getty Images)

Calabasas pushes back on Kanye West’s affordable housing prototypes. West has already built several prototypes of the “Star Wars”-inspired housing units in his backyard, but city officials say he never got the permits. The rapper and clothing designer has to bring the project into compliance by mid-September or tear the prototypes down. [TRD]

 

Optimus Properties, LLC cofounders Kamyar Shabani and K. Joseph Shabani and the building

Optimus Properties, LLC cofounders Kamyar Shabani and K. Joseph Shabani and the building

Optimus Properties picks up Tarzana medical office. The property, Tarzana Tower, totals 85,000 square feet. It will be repositioned, and is next door to the Providence Tarzana Medical Center, which is undergoing a $540 million expansion backed by Cedars Sinai Medical Center. [TRD]

 

Rendering of the Korean American National Museum (Credit: Morphosis)

Rendering of the Korean American National Museum (Credit: Morphosis)

Futuristic design for Korean American National Museum revealed. The prolific architecture firm Morphosis showed off its new design at an event to announce $4 million in state funding for the Vermont Avenue project. In June, museum officials scrapped plans to include 103 housing units on the property. [Curbed]

 

John Stamos buys equestrian estate in Hidden Hills. The former star of “Full House” paid $5.75 millon for the new abode, which spans 5,750 square feet. The 1.5-acre property also has a basketball court, playground, garden, and barn. [LAT]

 

DTLA Flower Market redevelopment clears a hurdle. The collective that owns the market wants to replace part of the 4-acre property with a 15-story mixed-use tower with 323 residential units. Around 128,000 square feet of the tower would be split between office and market space. Another 39,000 square feet is set for event space and other commercial uses. The project now goes to the Los Angeles City Council’s planning committee. [Urbanize]

 

Related CEO Stephen Ross (Credit: Getty Images, Wikipedia, Facebook, and Twitter)

Stephen Ross’ empire is far bigger than Equinox and SoulCycle. Personally and through companies including Related Companies, RSE and Vayner Media, the billionaire has invested in more than 30 businesses. Ross is already facing business backlash after it was learned that he will host a fundraiser for Donald Trump at his Hampton’s home. [TRD]

 

There are now 17 people charged in connection with the 1MDB scandal. The fallout from the notorious money-laundering scheme has extended to a Goldman Sachs executive and a former executive, among others. Jho Low, the mastermind behind the scheme, was accused of diverting money from the $6.5 billion Malaysian fund to buy properties in New York and California. His properties are now being listed for sale as part of a forfeiture suit, while he remains at large. [NYT]

 

Zillow shares fell after its second-quarter earnings report. The listing giant’s shares fell 16 percent after changes to the way it serves ads alarmed investors. Zillow has shifted from conventional real estate ads to ads that target home-flipping. The company’s New York City listings platform, StreetEasy, caused caused two years ago when it released its Premier Agent ad program. [Bloomberg]

 

FROM THE CITY’S RECORDS:

A developer filed plans to demolish several single-family dwellings in Rancho Park and build a 43-unit apartment building, setting aside five units for extremely low-income residents. [LADCP] 

 

Compiled by Dennis Lynch

“Rich people are going to get richer anyway”: HUD Secretary Ben Carson dismisses concerns that Opportunity Zones will only benefit rich people

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Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development Ben Carson (Credit: Getty Images and iStock)

Ben Carson is well aware of the complaints directed at federal Opportunity Zones, and how the tax incentive program meant to boost struggling communities may only end up benefiting rich investors and developers.

On Friday, Carson, the Secretary of the Department of Housing and Urban Development, offered his frank assessment of that belief.

“Some people have complained, and said, ‘This is just a mechanism for rich people to get richer,’” he said during a morning talk at the Marriott Hotel in Brooklyn. “Um, news flash, rich people are going to get richer anyway.”

Ben Carson

Ben Carson

Carson’s comments, delivered during a keynote speech at the Opportunity Zones Expo, drew scattered chuckles from the audience of investors and real estate industry players. “Can you believe he just said that?” one person in the audience said.

The program, which HUD partly oversees, has designated more than 8,000 census tracts across the U.S. as “distressed.” Investors who develop in those Opportunity Zones can defer federal taxes on capital gains until Dec. 31, 2026. Investors can reduce that tax payment by as much as 15 percent and pay no taxes on possible profits from an Opportunity Zone fund if they hold onto the investment for 10 years. The initiative was part of the 2017 tax overhaul, and by mid-2018 began to catch on with investors.

In March, Carson said HUD will give preference to developers and investors who build affordable housing in Opportunity Zones when it comes to awarding certain grants.

Still, the program has faced criticism for benefiting wealthy investors who are planning projects in neighborhoods not considered distressed, and will instead provide a large return on investment.

In Baltimore, officials there were found to have redrawn an Opportunity Zone to include a development led by Under Armour chief executive Kevin Plank, who had lobbied state officials for the change.

In Chicago, a similar situation emerged after an area that did not meet city guidelines for an Opportunity Zone was later added to include a $2 billion project to redevelop a former hospital, after state officials intervened.

And in New York, Amazon was eligible to offset millions of dollars of capital gains taxes in its failed bid to open a headquarters in Long Island City, where much of the high-rise neighborhood is an Opportunity Zone.

Carson is currently touring the country to promote Opportunity Zones, and on Friday announced updates to the program’s rules.

Developers who redevelop mixed-use buildings in Opportunity Zones will now be eligible to receive Section 220 mortgage insurance for projects that derive up to 30 percent of gross income from commercial space. Previously, that had been limited to 15 percent.

“This will hopefully incentivize private investment, which will spur grocery stores, so we won’t have these food deserts,” Carson said, referring to neighborhoods with a lack of supermarkets.

The Federal Housing Administration is also expected to unveil a new set of incentives for Opportunity Zones, he said, which will lower mortgage and application fees for loans the agency issues.

Carson also promoted the Trump administration’s vision for the program, saying the president intends to “foster the ingenuity of the private sector.”

“There’s no lack of innovation or entrepreneurship in this nation. What gets in the way is the regulations and zoning restrictions,” Carson told the crowd. “That’s what we are working together for.”


Real estate bigwigs on their minimum wage days

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From left: John Catsimatidis, Darcy Stacom and Brad Hargreaves (Illustration by Paul Kisselev)

It’s hard to forget a first job, whether it was scooping ice cream, waiting tables or selling knives door-to-door.

But it’s funny to think that the CEOs, developers and top industry brokers — who these days have hundreds of employees under their purview and salaries that put them in the uppermost stratosphere of earners — once made minimum wage.

Last year, The Real Deal brought you the first edition of this annual series, in which bigwigs like Harry Macklowe, Don Peebles and MaryAnne Gilmartin talked about shoveling snow, pumping gas and flipping burgers at McDonald’s, respectively.

This summer we went back for more, talking to six more industry power players to find out how they got their start and what they learned from their first foray into the workforce.

Darcy Stacom
Chair and head of New York City Capital Markets at CBRE

When CBRE’s Darcy Stacom was 15 years old, her parents called her into the living room of their Greenwich, Connecticut, home and told her to take a look around.

“I’m thinking, ‘Someday, this will be mine,’” she said, “and they go, ‘We just want you to know we plan on spending every dime, so we’re sending you to work in New York City this summer.’”

So, her mother and father, Matthew Stacom — the late veteran broker who played a key role in the making of the Sears Tower in Chicago — got her a job at her father’s firm Cushman & Wakefield. She worked in the mailroom in the summer of 1976 before her sophomore year of high school and in the market research department the following year, Stacom said.

“I was expecting to spend the summer at the country club with all my friends,” she noted. “Instead, I ended up commuting [by train].”

Stacom, who is now 59 and likely rakes in millions per year as one of the city’s top investment sales brokers, said she started out earning a rate that amounted to about $13,000 a year at the time.

She reported to a middle-aged female manager in Cushman’s market research department. And her responsibilities, such as updating building surveys, would sometimes increase in the afternoons due to her boss’ curious habit of occasionally slumping over after lunch, Stacom recalled.

“This woman was fantastic, but she was not quite with it in the afternoon,” she said. “I came to realize that her endless glasses of water were vodka.” 

Stacom also volunteered at Greenwich Hospital as a candy striper, a gig that eventually landed her on the front page of the Greenwich Times thanks to the many hours she put in. But that was the only non-real estate gig she ever held. Stacom attended Lehigh University, worked at Cushman every summer through college and started there full-time one week after graduating. (Her parents, of course, never actually spent all of their money.)

“I really saw all of the functions that went on behind brokerages and became very respectful of the people in the mailroom or on the reception desk or the switchboard or in market research,” she said. “They were the ones that were paid the least, but in many ways, really made things stick or let them fall apart.”

John Catsimatidis
Founder and CEO of Red Apple Group

Greece-born billionaire John Catsimatidis has dabbled in everything from real estate to radio to politics, but he’s still arguably best known as the head of the New York City grocery store chain Gristedes.

The supermarket portion of Red Apple Group spans about 350,000 square feet and generates slightly less than $300 million in revenue per year, making up about 2 percent of Red Apple Group’s overall business, according to Catsimatidis.

So it’s fitting that the 70-year-old mogul got his start at a supermarket called the Red Apple on 137th Street and Broadway in 1966.

“I just finished Brooklyn Tech High School,” Catsimatidis said. “I went home and sat on the couch, ready to watch television all summer until college.”

But his mother had other ideas and went to the local grocery store, less than three blocks from their home, to get him a summer job that paid $1.10 per hour. Instead of watching television, Catsimatidis  said, he spent the season — about 10 hours per day and seven days per week — packing yogurts  and making sure all the beers were cold.

He went to New York University that fall to study engineering but dropped out during his senior year to buy and run his first grocery store building  — a property on Grand Concourse in the Bronx that he said he purchased for about $400,000. That move eventually led to Catsimatidis acquiring Gristedes from 7-Eleven’s parent company, the Southland Corporation, in 1986.

“I was making $1 million a year at the age of 23,” he said. “Then I started buying real estate.”

Young Woo
Founder and principal of Youngwoo & Associates

Before launching his eponymous development firm in 1979 and spearheading about 55 residential and commercial projects across the city, Young Woo milked cows.

“Our family actually immigrated from Korea to Paraguay [in 1965], and we couldn’t stay in Paraguay, so we moved to Argentina,” Woo recalled. “The first job we got was working at a dairy farm and milking the cows.”

He was 12 years old when he held down that first job on that Argentinian farm. 

The 66-year old developer said he appreciated working on a farm at such a young age and got a kick out of competing with other workers to see who could get the most milk.

But Woo wasn’t a big fan of the 2 a.m. wakeup calls, which were necessary to make sure the milk was ready to deliver to a cheese factory before 7 a.m. And he said the cows needed to be milked every day to make sure they would be able to consistently produce.

His family spent more than two years on the farm; Woo ultimately ended up in New York and landed in the real estate industry thanks to his background in architecture.

Although Youngwoo & Associates is now best known for big projects like its 22-story mixed-use development at 2420 Amsterdam Avenue in Washington Heights, DeKalb Market in Downtown Brooklyn and a $500 million Opportunity Zone fund, the firm —  which is currently developing more than $1 billion worth of construction — also still owns farmland in Paraguay and a winery in Argentina.

For Woo, getting to know the animals back when he was milking cows was one of the most fascinating parts of the job.

“Cows are like humans. You can tell their personalities by looking at their faces, and you know some of them are the bad guys or good guys,” he said. “It’s amazing how each cow has a different personality.”

From left: Pam Liebman, Young Woo and Benjamin Brafman (Illustration by Paul Kisselev)

Pam Liebman
President and CEO of the Corcoran Group

Corcoran’s CEO, Pam Liebman, learned at an early age to stand up for herself in the workplace.

The Staten Island native got her first job while she was a student at Curtis High School, working at her local swim club over the summer.

Liebman, who recalled being a good student and president of the student body at the time, said she mainly took the job because she was bored and wanted to work. She doesn’t remember what she earned but said it was “considered good pay” at the time.

The 57-year old — whose firm closed $4.53 billion in Manhattan sales in 2018 and had 1,320 agents in the borough as of January — recalled one day when her boss tried to get her to stay on lifeguarding duty for one more shift after she had just finished working a double.

“They were totally favoring the guys because this other guy was supposed to do the next shift on the chair, and I think [my boss] just wanted to hang with him or something,” she said. “He said, ‘Pam, why don’t you do another shift?’ I said, ‘Why don’t you go to hell?’”

So she quit on the spot and got a job at a nearby club for the rest of the summer.

Liebman said she worked about four lifeguarding gigs before taking a job as a camp counselor when she was at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

But she turned out to be less effective at managing seventh-grade campers than managing residential agents, noting that she almost got fired for being too hands-off.

“I think I was ignoring the kids too much and not supervising them,” she said, “because at some point, I was just like, ‘I don’t really care. Do whatever you want to do. Just say I didn’t know about it.’”

But right after graduating college, in 1984, she joined Corcoran, and she hasn’t looked back.

Benjamin Brafman
Founder of Brafman & Associates

Benjamin Brafman has had a long career as one of the country’s most prominent criminal defense attorneys, representing celebrities such as Sean Combs and Michael Jackson and real estate execs like Charlie Kushner and Steve Croman.

The 70-year-old lawyer started his own defense practice in 1980 and estimates he has since worked on at least 1,500 cases, with a success rate of about 80 percent. Brafman represented Kushner 15 years ago in his trial for witness tampering and tax evasion. In 2017 he represented Croman, who spent eight months in jail after pleading guilty to charges of tax fraud and mortgage fraud.

But prior to passing the bar, and even graduating high school, Brafman worked as an assistant to a group of waiters and busboys at a hotel in Rockaway Beach called the Baders. He was 12 years old and would walk from his home in Arverne, a few blocks away, to help them set up the tables and meal stations for about 10 hours each day in the summer.

“I wasn’t officially working for the hotel,” Brafman said. “I was actually working for a couple of the waiters who I had befriended and who liked me, and I think they paid me 50 cents a meal. And I’ve been working ever since.”

Brafman said he had a “very winding” path to his career as a lawyer — one that also included stints mowing lawns, tutoring and selling Monkees concert T-shirts.

And he still has fond memories of his first gig at the Rockaway Beach hotel. “The waiters were cool guys, and it was fun,” he said. “It wasn’t hard work.”

Brad Hargreaves
Founder and CEO of Common

Brad Hargreaves runs one of the city’s first and most active co-living companies, with 30 properties (some renovated buildings, some ground-up) in New York, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Chicago, Seattle and Washington, D.C.

Hargreaves, 33, studied molecular biology at Yale University, and his first job in college was a far cry from his efforts to shake up the rental space. He joined a Connecticut-based startup called 454 Life Sciences, where he sold genome sequencers — used to automate the process of reading DNA strings — mainly to Asian buyers. The startup was acquired by another company and shuttered in 2013.

“I was the intern, and therefore the lowest man on the totem pole, so I had to be up at 3 a.m. selling genome sequencers to Japanese scientists,” Hargreaves said.

The sequencers were mainly used to better understand serious diseases like cancer by examining the underlying genetic causes. And the main accounts at the time were large government organizations and universities, along with a few agriculture and pharmaceutical companies, he noted.

That internship soon turned into a part-time job, and Hargreaves stayed with 454 Life for about nine months overall. At the time, the sequencers were selling for about $50,000 apiece, which he estimated was more than he earned during his entire time with the company.

“It was fun to sell them,” he said. “But you had to have real expertise on these things and what they could do, so it was a good mix of very technical knowledge and sales. You’re still going for the close.”

Though he liked the work, Hargreaves decided to try his hand at entrepreneurship and went on to launch Common in 2015. Prior to that he co-founded an education startup called General Assembly, and he said seeing employees, students and teachers struggle to find decent affordable housing options helped spark the idea for Common.

The co-living company, which now serves 800-plus members, has landed $65 million in venture funding to date.

“I went into college wanting to start a biotechnology company,” Hargreaves said. “I realized about halfway through college that the thing I actually liked [most] was starting companies.”

Development bloom: SoCal Flower Market mixed-use project in DTLA clears hurdle

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 Los Angeles City Planning Commission President Samantha Millman and a rendering of the Flower Market project (credit: Brooks + Scarpa and Twitter)

Los Angeles City Planning Commission President Samantha Millman and a rendering of the Flower Market project (credit: Brooks + Scarpa and Twitter)

A proposed 323-unit apartment building in Downtown Los Angeles at that the Southern California Flower Market passed a key hurdle this week.

The City Planning Commission voted in favor of the plan by the market’s owners, according to Urbanize. The vote sends the project to the City Council for final approval.

Under the proposal, a 15-story mixed-use tower with 323 residential units would be constructed after an existing 185,000-square-foot building is razed. The residential building at 7th Street and Maple Avenue would include 32 units set aside for moderate-income households.

The new tower would also include 168,633 square feet of office and wholesale market space, with a portion for retail, according to Urbanize.

Brooks + Scarpa’s design for the mixed-use building includes terraced decks and ground-level pedestrian walkways, according to Urbanize. It plans to use a mix of materials for the facade, including glass, metal, and possibly concrete.

A 206,500-square-foot building on the 3.8-acre property at 755 Wall Street would remain. The project is planned in phases to allow the active market to operate.

The market is owned by a group of families. Many are related to the vendors who founded the market in 1909, according to Curbed. They proposed the redevelopment in 2016, although the project has changed significantly since then. At the time, a representative for the owners said rising rents and aging facilities prompted a redevelopment.

The owners of the neighboring Los Angeles Flower Market filed one appeal to stop the project, and the labor union coalition, CREEDLA, filed another. Both were denied. [Urbanize]Dennis Lynch

An affordable housing developer eyes South LA industrial site for 127 resi units

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From left: Thomas L. Safran and President of Thomas Safran & Associates Andrew David Gross with the project site

From left: Thomas L. Safran and President of Thomas Safran & Associates Andrew David Gross with the project site

An affordable housing firm is hoping to transform an industrial facility in South Los Angeles into a residential development for low-income households while the city is desperate for more units.

Thomas Safran & Associates filed plans to construct 127 total units at a 3.3-acre property at 4020 S. Compton Avenue, south of Downtown L.A., Urbanize reported. The project requires a general plan amendment and zone change and will include an unspecified number of affordable housing units.

Thomas Safran & Associates did not return The Real Deal’s request for comment. The project applicant is Parkview Affordable Housing LP, which is tied to Thomas Safran.

The property site is next to Thomas Jefferson High School and Ross Snyder Recreation Center, about a half mile from the Metro Vernon Station.

Last year, Thomas Safran filed plans to build a 98-unit project for seniors and families in Venice, and the firm was selected by the Department of Veterans Affairs to build 900 units of housing for veterans at the Veteran Administration’s West Los Angeles Campus. The firm is also working on another development with affordable housing units in Hollywood.

Affordable developers have been proposing more projects in South L.A., as the housing crisis continues. In June, the Coalition for Responsible Community Development filed plans to build two mixed-use affordable housing complexes in South L.A., shortly after if broke ground on another project one block south of that. [Urbanize] Gregory Cornfield

It’s baaack: Statewide rent control measure gathers momentum

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AIDS Healthcare Foundation’s Michael Weinstein and the California State Capitol building

AIDS Healthcare Foundation’s Michael Weinstein and the California State Capitol building

The debate over statewide rent control has been simmering for nearly a year, ever since voters soundly rejected ballot Proposition 10 last November. The reaction to that defeat was swift, in a state with a severe shortage of affordable housing. Soon, cities and municipalities across California began enacting temporary rent control measures — including rent hike freezes.

Now, the issue has barreled back to the forefront in the form of another proposed statewide ballot measure, and lawmakers are now involved. The organizations behind the Rental Affordability Act have gathered nearly 200,000 signatures statewide, enough to compel the lawmakers to hold hearings on the proposal.

Gov. Gavin Newsom boosted the effort for new statewide rent control measures earlier this week when he called a separate proposal in the state Assembly “long overdue.”

Real estate interests have lined up to fight various rent control proposals. A 2020 ballot measure would face significant opposition from landlords and other investors, who spent more than $100 million to fight Prop 10 last year.

The Rental Affordability Act — pushed by Housing is a Human Right and AIDS Healthcare Foundation — would allow for any residential property built as recently as 2005 to qualify for rent control.

Currently, the state’s Costa-Hawkins Rental Housing Act restricts rent control only to properties built before 1995. It also freezes existing rent control laws, including Los Angeles’ 1978 measure, meaning that no units built after 1978 can be put under rent control in the city.

The new bill would also allow local governments to limit rent increases for tenants who move into vacated rent controlled units and cap rent hikes at 15 percent over the next three years.
The AIDS Healthcare Group was a leading party behind a failed effort to repeal Costa-Hawkins last year through the Proposition 10 ballot measure.

Organizers have so far collected around 195,000 signatures in support of the measure since the campaign started in April. They need roughly 428,000 more to put the Rental Affordability Act on the 2020 ballot.

The goal is to collect around 1 million signatures total, according to a press release. That is enough to put the question on the ballot as a constitutional amendment, which would make it harder to overturn in the future.

Despite Prop 10’s defeat, there is a clear appetite for stronger rent control laws in L.A.

Numerous jurisdictions in the L.A. area have tightened renter protections since Prop 10 was defeated, including L.A. County, Glendale, and Beverly Hills. Inglewood and Long Beach are mulling their own measures.

Here’s how much it will cost you to sell your home on an iBuying site

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Gary Keller of Keller Williams (Credit: iStock and Wikipedia)

Gary Keller of Keller Williams (Credit: iStock and Wikipedia)

Real estate companies from Zillow Group to Keller Williams have jumped on the nascent iBuying craze. But what’s the cost to home sellers who sell their homes with these services?

An extra 13 to 15 percent.

That’s according to a new study from data firm Collateral Analytics, which aimed to put a price tag on the cost of using iBuying platforms, which allow buyers to purchase homes instantly online, Inman reported.

However, if selling a home with an iBuying company may tack on extra fees compared to traditional brokerages, among other costs, the service may be worth it. “For some sellers, needing to move or requiring quick extraction of equity, this is certainly worthwhile, but what percentage of the market will want this service remains to be seen,” the study concluded.

Demand for the service is a question playing out in real time, as traditional brokerages like Keller Williams work to launch their own iBuying platforms in an effort to cash in on the craze, pioneered by startup Opendoor.

In the second quarter, Zillow’s revenues ballooned 84 percent to almost $600 million, thanks in part to the launch last year of its iBuying program, Zillow Offers. But the new product also had a cost for Zillow, which saw its losses come in at $72 million in the second quarter, versus $3 million in 2018.

Instant homebuying also has some risks, the study found. These include vacant properties becoming more susceptible to break-ins and the portals’ valuation models overvaluing properties owned by more informed sellers. [Inman] — Mary Diduch 

Real estate stocks rally despite trade war worries

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Zillow CEO Rich Barton (Credit: iStock and JD Lasica via Flickr)

Zillow CEO Rich Barton (Credit: iStock and JD Lasica via Flickr)

Real estate stocks have performed well this week despite wider market volatility, fueled by an escalating trade war, which last week led the S&P 500 to its worst week of 2019.

At the close of market on Friday, The Real Deal reviewed the stock prices of 28 major real estate companies. From opening bell on Monday 17 were up, with mostly small percentage drops for the other 11.

Of the 28 stocks, troubled brokerage giant Realogy had the biggest uptick — reporting an increase of 23 percent for a closing share price of $5.92 at the end of Friday.

Zillow, meanwhile, led the decline. The listings company was down 18 percent from $48.09 at the beginning of the week. Its stock price dropped following the release of its second-quarter earnings Wednesday. While the company’s revenues increased by 84 percent to $599.6 million, its losses had also gone up — totalling roughly $72 million compared to just $3 million last year.

“Timing issues for the Premier Agent revenues was one of the key reasons for today along with the inventory adjustment in the Homes business, although the move the Flex significantly expands the potential total available market for Premier Agent potentially over time,” said Brad Berning, an analyst with Craig-Hallum Capital Group, in an email Wednesday.

A representative for Zillow declined to comment on the stock price, instead directing TRD to a portion of the company’s quarterly shareholder letter, which states: “We understand this is a sizable shift from the ‘search and find’ nature of Zillow 1.0, but we are more confident than ever that evolving to a transaction-driven company is the right direction for our customers, the industry, the company, and our shareholders.”

The intensifying trade war between the United States and Donald Trump reached a boiling point earlier this year, when Chinese President Xi Jinping increased tariffs on $60 billion of U.S. goods in retaliation for President Trump’s decision to raise tariffs on $200 billion in Chinese products from 10 percent to 25 percent.

Despite the rising stock prices, the real estate industry is not immune to the unrest as the costs of building materials increase, and a creeping sense of unpredictability complicates new-development plans.

How slow can you go? Statewide homebuilders tap brakes on new projects amid rising costs

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Scott Laurie, chief executive of Olson Co. and Christopher Thornberg, founding partner of Beacon Economics

Scott Laurie, chief executive of Olson Co. and Christopher Thornberg, founding partner of Beacon Economics

With rising construction costs and slowing sales, California homebuilders are tapping the brakes on new projects.

The trend is a step backward on what experts say is required to help the state ease its housing crisis, the Los Angeles Times reported. Homebuilders were approved for 51,178 new homes during the first half of this year, a 20-percent drop compared to the same period last year.

In Los Angeles and Orange County, total permits dropped 25 percent. Single-family permits fell 18.5 percent, and multifamily permits dropped 28.6 percent.

The rate has California set for the most significant decline since the recession. Christopher Thornberg, founding partner of Beacon Economics, told the Times, “We are going in exactly the wrong direction.”

Real estate experts and developers said the slowdown is caused by how difficult it has become to make money building homes, as prices and rents continue to soften throughout the state.

Builders said costs are rising for land, government fees, and tariffs on products. Costs for labor and materials have jumped throughout the state while home prices have stayed flat for many areas, according to John Burns Real Estate Consulting.

Scott Laurie, chief executive of Olson Co., said last year the firm walked away from a project in Orange County, sacrificing more $1 million in deposit money because of rising construction costs. [LAT] — Gregory Cornfield


This week in celeb real estate: Howard Hughes’ former Beverly Hills home hits auction block, Brie Larson takes a loss…and more

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Kanye West (left), Bri Larson and her home (top), and Home on Haynes Avenue and Howard Hughes (bottom) (Credit; Getty Images, Britannica and iStock)

Clockwise from left: Kanye West, Brie Larson and her home (top), and Howard Hughes (Credit; Getty Images, Britannica and iStock)

Los Angeles homes linked to two Oscar-winning actresses and an Oscar-winning director made the news this week. Brie Larson — Laurel Canyon — and Reese Witherspoon — Zuma Beach — both sold their houses. In Encino, the former home of director Ron Howard hit the market. The Beverly Hills home that once belonged to tycoon and Hollywood producer and director Howard Hughes was set to be auctioned off. And a Kanye West creation, the “Star Wars”-themed affordable housing domes rising in Calabasas, ran into trouble when city officials found the rapper had not secured permits for his project.

Oscar-winning actress Brie Larson took a slight loss after selling her place in Laurel Canyon. Variety reported that the actress sold the recently upgraded 2,900-square-foot residence for $2.17 million, after she purchased it in 2016 for $2.25 million. The Mid-Century style bungalow was completed in the 1950s. It includes three bedrooms and three bathrooms. Larson was represented by Tori Horowitz with Compass, and the unnamed buyer was represented by Marissa Faith with Deasy Penner Podley.

Another Oscar winner, Reese Witherspoon, paid $6.25 million for a farmhouse-style property in Zuma Beach. The two-acre property includes a guesthouse over about two acres.

In Encino, a home that was designed by Robert Byrn and previously owned by Oscar-winner Ron Howard hit the market for $3.7 million. Howard purchased the home during the “Happy Days” era in 1979, and sold it seven years later for $808,000. The property includes the two-story home with 5,900 square feet of space and a guest house. In total, there are five bedrooms and seven bathrooms. Joshua and Matthew Altman of Douglas Elliman are the brokers for the listing.

In Beverly Hills, a home tied to the late — and eccentric — tycoon Howard Hughes is set to be auctioned off after some price cuts. It was most recently listed at $10.9 million, but after lingering for two years on the market, the 4,600-square-foot home on Haynes Avenue is headed for auction. It’s the latest example of the slowdown in Los Angeles’ luxury market. The home was designed by architect Samuel Wacht. The four-bedroom, five bathroom property includes a swimming pool, jacuzzi, gym and sunken living room area.

A home in Los Feliz where the Charles Manson “family” murdered the owners of a grocery chain, Leno LaBianca and his wife Rosemary, sold for almost $2 million. The buyer was Zak Bagansa, the host of “Ghost Adventures.”

John Stamos — aka “Uncle Jesse,” paid $5.75 million for a new equestrian estate in the Hidden Hills. The former “Full House” star’s new home spans 5,750 square feet over a 1.5-acre property. The estate also includes a basketball court, playground, garden, and barn.

Here’s everything you need to know about Opportunity Zones

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There are nearly 9,000 communities designated as Opportunity Zones across the U.S. (Courtesy of Enterprise Community Partners) | Click to view interactive

1. What is the Opportunity Zones program and where does it target?

Enacted late last year as part of the federal tax overhaul, the Opportunity Zones program provides tax incentives to developers who invest in historically distressed neighborhoods throughout the U.S. There are 8,700 communities that have been designated as Opportunity Zones.

In New York City, there are 306; Los Angeles County has 274; Chicago Cook County, 181; and Miami-Dade County has 67. Created by Republican Sen. Tim Scott of South Carolina and Democratic Sen. Cory Booker of New Jersey, it is intended to spur investment in places institutional money might otherwise overlook. That development in turn, would help the communities and businesses.

2. How would a developer benefit?

By far, the biggest advantage is that it allows investors or developers to defer — and possibly forgo — paying capital gains taxes, or taxes resulting from the sale of certain types of assets. Banks and lenders will also be more likely to now invest in these projects and areas because of the incentives. One unique attribute is that the program also encourages new construction, providing the biggest tax break to investors who keep their money in these zones for at least 10 years.

 Opportunity Zones maps: New York | Miami | Los Angeles | Chicago

Developers who already have projects planned in these newly carved-out zones also stand to benefit enormously, experts say. In some cases, massive projects such as the LeFrak and Soffers’ $4 billion project in North Miami, called SoleMia, just happen to fall in the Opportunity Zones and could potentially qualify for this government program. A controversial planned mega-project in South Los Angeles dubbed The Reef also falls into a designated Opportunity Zone. The development, proposed by Ara Tavitan, would span 1.66 million square feet and include 1,444 condominium and apartments units, 152,000 square feet of retail space and 72,000 square feet of signage.

3. What kind of projects will we start seeing and who can invest?

That’s tough to say. The guidelines are written very broadly so almost any type of project can qualify, albeit with a few exceptions: private or commercial golf courses, massage parlors, along with tanning salons and gambling facilities would not be permitted, to name a few. Experts say multifamily properties, warehouses and self-storage facilities might make the most sense, because the program encourages investors to hold properties for at least 10 years.

4. What are these $500M Opportunity Zone funds recently launched?

It is important to note that investors can’t put money directly into a specific project or business in these zones. Instead, they have to invest in what are called Qualified Opportunity Funds. Those requires 90 percent of the investment remain in designated areas, either via properties or businesses.

Big money is digging Opportunity Zones. Arlington, Virginia-based hedge fund EJF Capital as well as the New York-based real estate company RXR Realty have both launched funds seeking to raise at least $500 million. RXR already has a few development projects in New York locations like New Rochelle and Glen Cove, which would be eligible for the tax benefit, according to an investor presentation cited by Bloomberg.

Goldman Sachs and PNC Financial Services Group are also exploring ways to take advantage of the Opportunity Zones program. It is unclear exactly where these funds will invest because they likely won’t deploy capital until further guidance from the government, which is expected in the coming months.

5. Are there potential downsides for developers?

There is still a lot of uncertainty around this program, but the big question seems to be whether this tax break will be enough to encourage development. Projects in low-income areas can be challenging, and if the underlying economics aren’t there, how much is a capital gains tax break really going to help? That’s likely the question that all developers are facing. But others say these tax breaks make real estate at a time of rising interest rates. Plus, sophisticated investors like Goldman Sachs are already pouring money into developments in low-income areas, so large institutional money might not be taking that big of a risk with these projects.

6. Where do we go from here?

There are still a lot questions, and everyone is waiting on more guidance from the federal government. It was expected to come out around Labor Day. The IRS and the U.S. Treasury Department now says these rules will be released in the coming months, along with more detail on which projects will qualify. When that happens, more Opportunity Funds, or investment vehicles for Opportunity Zone projects, will likely start popping up. Likewise, developers should start proposing new projects, especially in areas where there is already development taking place. No large-scale project has yet to take advantage of program, but some developers say they’re interested in setting up Opportunity Funds, and Richard LeFrak is considering changing some of the project mix of his planned SoLe Mia development in South Florida because of the initiative.

Ed Sheeran builds a village, Notre Dame restoration halted: Global property

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From left: London, Shanghai and Paris

From left: London, Shanghai and Paris

Every week, The Real Deal rounds up the biggest real estate news from around the globe.

United Kingdom

Political upheaval is just no good for business — at least not for Savills. The U.K.’s largest publicly traded real estate broker is taking a financial hit amid uncertainty over Brexit and massive street protests in Hong Kong. Its profits plunged to £9.9 million ($12 million) in the first half of the year, down 50 percent from the same period last year. [Bloomberg]

Neighboring a professional football club is the golden goal for property owners. Research shows that London took all 10 best-performing residential real estate markets, all in areas near professional soccer stadiums. The best-performing “football postcode” is near West Ham United’s pitch in Stratford, where property values have risen nearly 850 percent in the last 20 years and now average £440,474 ($532,000). [Homes and Property]

Ed Sheeran is doing more than “Thinking Out Loud” when it comes to Sheeranville. He recently won approval to build a new “party area” on his estate in his hometown, Framlingham, Suffolk. He plans to build a pizza oven, two barbecue grills and a bar area next to his pub. Sheeran has been building a veritable “Castle on the Hill” after first purchasing a farmhouse and an adjacent 16th century home in 2012. Since then, he’s bought four homes from neighbors, including one who moved away after Sheeran proposed to build a chapel. [The Daily Mail]

France

Notre Dame Cathedral restoration has come to a halt. Paris officials suspended work on the fire-damaged landmark after an inspection showed risk of lead poisoning. The roof was made of more than 1,300 lead tiles, and its huge spire was constructed with 250 tons of lead. [WSJ]

Jerusalem

Israel deployed some 900 soldiers to demolish Palestinian buildings. Israel previously has demolished Palestinian homes in connection with military conflicts, but its demolition of 13 apartment buildings in the Wadi al-Hummus in Occupied Palestinian Territory was the largest in the absence of a war. [The Nation]

Ireland

As housing crisis deepens, Dublin rents become some of the highest in the world. Nationwide, rents increased about 14 percent in the last two years and could rise another 17 percent over the next three years. Average monthly rent for a midrange two-bedroom was $2,018, 23 percent more than in 2014, placing the Irish capital in the top 10 most expensive cities, just behind Boston and London. [NYT]

British Columbia

You can can new construction, but you can’t can cannabis. The Agricultural Land Reserve implemented rules to hinder new builds dedicated to cannabis production. Weed farmers, however, came up with a high concept: Convert buildings dedicated to things like peppers and tomatoes to cannabis and construct new homes for the vegetables. Accordingly, Greenhouse space in the Canadian province increased 18 percent last year to 1,200 acres. [Vancouver Sun]

Australia

A political hat-trick might have ended a two-year decline in Australian home prices. Home values in Sydney increased the last two months after falling 15 percent from peak level in July 2017. Up-ticks also came to Brisbane, Darwin, Hobart and Melbourne markets. This rebound could be in thanks to the central bank’s multiple interest rate cuts, relaxing mortgage stress tests and re-election of Scott Morrison’s government. [Bloomberg]

Singapore

Singapore wants to better protect investors in bonds and real estate. The regulatory arm of the Singapore Exchange, SGXRegCo., will study how to improve bond-issue disclosures and to ensure property valuations meet professional standards. The initiative is a response to multiple defaults in recent years by bond issuers in Singapore. [Bloomberg]

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.

“MDL’s” Madison Hildebrand latest victim of celeb-targeting scam, LA developers compete using more luxury amenities: Daily digest

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Madison Hildebrand

“MDL’s” Madison Hildebrand is the latest victim of an online scam. A phony contract scam has been targeting celebrities, and just took the “Million Dollar Listings” Los Angeles star and Compass agent for $300,000. Hildebrand signed what he thought was a legitimate deal to speak at an event in Dubai, but also had to wire money first. [CBS]

 

Downtown’s Hoxton hotel almost ready for its closeup. Rooms at the British brand’s first L.A. outpost will start at $179 per night. The hotel has a total of 174 rooms. British developer Ennismore bought the property — then a vacant office building — in 2015 for $30 million and has been renovating it since. [Curbed]

 

A Little Tokyo community organization launches real estate fund. The Little Tokyo Community Impact Fund was founded over concerns about the closure of long-standing stores in the neighborhood amid gentrification. The fund will invest in local properties to support what it calls heritage-based businesses in the neighborhood. [Rafu Shimpo]

 

L.A. developers step up competition for tenants with luxury amenities. Hankey Investment Company has added custom cabanas that cost as much as a car to its 2-acre amenities deck at Downtown L.A.’s Circa condo tower. Meanwhile, Cusumano Real Estate Group’s Talaria at Burbank has a 34-seat theater. Residents can have staff deliver groceries from the ground-floor Whole Foods to their refrigerators. [LAT]

 

Colony Capital’s losses widen. Tom Barrack’s Downtown L.A.-based firm posted a $442 million loss in the second quarter, more than six times its loss over the same period in 2018. Colony plans to sell a multibillion-dollar portfolio of 450 industrial properties by the end of the year to raise money. [LABJ]

 

Joe Farrell, Donald Trump, and Stephen Ross (Credit: Getty Images)

Joe Farrell, Donald Trump, and Stephen Ross (Credit: Getty Images)

Here are the real estate bigwigs who went to Trump’s fundraisers in the Hamptons this weekend. President Trump held two fundraisers on the famed vacation spot this weekend: one at developer Joe Farrell’s home in Bridgehampton and another hosted by Related Companies chair Stephen Ross, which had prompted a massive backlash against Equinox and SoulCycle. Guests at the fundraisers from the world of real estate included Neal Sroka, Vornado’s Steve Roth, Richard LeFrak, Cantor Fitzgerald’s Howard Lutnick, Steve Witkoff and Andrea Catsimatidis. [NYP]

 

Lower mortgage rates probably aren’t enough to speed up the slow housing market. The low rates might provide the market with a modest increase, but the main problem is still expensive home prices and the lack of options for starter homes in several markets, according to the Wall Street Journal. Average 30-year mortgage rates fell to 3.6 percent last week, their lowest level since November 2016, and they have been dropping throughout most of the year. [WSJ]

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