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Realogy’s iBuying program expands after pausing in spring

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Realogy CEO Ryan Schneider (iStock)
Realogy CEO Ryan Schneider (iStock)

RealSure, an iBuying venture by Realogy, has expanded its coverage to five markets, restoring the reach it had before the pandemic.

The expansion follows the brief suspension of the program at the onset of the pandemic. It later relaunched in July, Inman reported.

The platform is now available in Orlando, Sarasota and Fort Meyers, Florida; Sacramento, California; and Chicago. Home sellers with a qualifying property must be working with brokers affiliated with Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate, Century 21, Coldwell Banker, ERA or Sotheby’s International Realty.

“This relaunch phase will now place RealSure back in all original markets, and well-positioned for growth in 2021,” said Coldwell Banker CEO M. Ryan Gorman by email. The brokerage is owned by Realogy.

Realogy launched the iBuying program in 2018. A year later, it partnered with Home Partners of America, which is backed by BlackRock and KKR. In March, the brokerage holding company announced its decision to suspend the program because of the brief market turmoil caused by the pandemic.

“With the volatility of the current market, we do not believe that RealSure can now provide the value the program was designed to deliver,” the company said at the time.

But as the housing market began to heat up, the company relaunched the iBuying venture and said it would formalize it via a joint venture with Home Partners of America. As TRD previously reported, through RealSure, Realogy agents can offer sellers an instant offer from Home Partners of America that is good for 45 days. During that time, however, the agent lists the home on the open market to try to beat that price.

[Inman] — Akiko Matsuda

The post Realogy’s iBuying program expands after pausing in spring appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.


Kathy Griffin sells Bel Air mansion for $14M

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Kathy Griffin and her Bel Air home (Getty, Douglas Elliman)
Kathy Griffin and her Bel Air home (Getty, Douglas Elliman)

Comedian Kathy Griffin is out of Bel Air after three and a half years.
Griffin sold her mansion in the tony nabe for $14 million, according to the Los Angeles Times. She had listed the property in September for $16 million and cut the ask to $14.8 million about a month later.

She paid $10.5 million for the roughly two-thirds-acre property in 2017, the same year she sold her Hollywood Hills home for $4.5 million.

The home is a contemporary take on the Mediterranean style popular in the area. It has arched doorways and exposed wood beams, but also large glass walls that open from the family room to the backyard.

It spans 13,400 square feet with eight bedrooms, 12 bathrooms, and the usual amenities for a home of its caliber, including a wine cellar, home theater and office.

The owner’s suite has a 1,100-square-foot private balcony that overlooks the backyard, where there’s a large swimming pool, patio area and outdoor lounge.

Josh and Matt Altman with Douglas Elliman had the listing, while David Kramer and Kevin Anderson with Hilton & Hyland represented the buyer. [LAT] — Dennis Lynch

The post Kathy Griffin sells Bel Air mansion for $14M appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

Opendoor valuation soars to $18B ahead of IPO

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Opendoor CEO Eric Wu and Chamath Palihapitiya (Getty)
Opendoor CEO Eric Wu and Chamath Palihapitiya (Getty)

Even before Opendoor’s official stock market debut on Dec. 21, the iBuyer’s valuation soared to nearly $18 billion as Wall Street investors cheered its merger with a special purpose acquisition company.

Shares of Chamath Palipatihiya’s blank-check company more than tripled Friday after it completed the merger with Opendoor. Previously, the company had an enterprise value of $5 billion when the deal was announced in September.

Opendoor’s stock was priced at $29 per share as of midday on Monday when it began trading on Nasdaq under the ticker symbol “OPEN.”
“We are just getting started,” CEO Eric Wu wrote in a blog post.


He acknowledged that Opendoor, like other startups, had its fair share of challenges and that its trajectory wasn’t a straight line. “As we look to this next chapter, we will continue to work hard when no one is looking,” he wrote.

The company, founded in 2014, uses an algorithm to buy and sell homes for a fee of between 6 and 8 percent. It is the leading iBuyer, or instant home buyer, in a hot — but nascent — slice of the residential market, accounting for just 0.5 percent of U.S. home sales last year.

Prior to the SPAC deal, Opendoor raised $1.3 billion from investors including SoftBank, Khosla Ventures, Lennar, General Atlantic and Access Technology Ventures.

But the company, which is not profitable, reported a net loss of $339 million last year. When the pandemic hit, it suspended home-buying. To stem its losses, Opendoor laid off 35 percent of its staff and sold off a large chunk of its inventory.

The deal with Palihapitiya’s special purpose acquisition company gave Opendoor $1 billion in cash, and the company plans to use that war chest to grow.

Opendoor has projected $10 billion in revenue by 2023, and it said by capturing 4 percent of the U.S. housing market, it can be a $50 billion company.

[contact-form-7]

The post Opendoor valuation soars to $18B ahead of IPO appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

French Montana drops $8.4M on Paul George’s Hidden Hills compound

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NBA star Paul George and the buyer of his house, French Montana. (Getty, Redfin)
NBA star Paul George and the buyer of his house, French Montana. (Getty, Redfin)
 

Kris Jenner and Khloe Kardashian have a new neighbor: French Montana.

The Grammy-nominated rapper, whose real name is Karim Karbouch, picked up NBA star Paul George’s Hidden Hills home for $8.4 million, according to Variety. George brought the 1.4-acre property to the market asking $9.5 million six months ago.

The house spans 16,000 square feet with seven bedrooms and nine bathrooms. It was built in 1989 for the family that sold it to George, who paid $7.4 million for the home in 2016.

Though the home may appear modest from the street, the rear is decked out with several patio areas and a large pool, while a basketball court sits on a lower section near a yard.

The property is on Ashley Ridge, where Karbouch will have several notable neighbors, including his ex-girlfriend Khloe Kardashian. She and her mother Kris Jenner bought neighboring homes there in the fall. Lori Loughlin and Mossimo Giannulli also bought a home there in August as they await sentencing for their role in a college admission scandal.

Shortly after being traded to the Clippers, George bought a Pacific Palisades home from former L.A. Clipper DeAndre Jordan last September. His new place is 6,000 square feet smaller than the Hidden Hills compound.

[Variety] — Dennis Lynch 

The post French Montana drops $8.4M on Paul George’s Hidden Hills compound appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

Stimulus deal includes major change to affordable housing financing

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Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell  (Getty; iStock)
Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell  (Getty; iStock)

The proposed $900 billion federal relief package hands affordable housing developers a key win in the form of changes to a popular financing program.

The bill includes reforms to the Low-Income Housing Tax Credit program, which has financed more than 3 million housing units since its inception in 1986. Lawmakers proposed a floor rate of 4 percent, divorcing the program from borrowing rates set by the Treasury Department. The new floor rate would apply to projects that receive tax credits after Dec. 31.

As a result, the credits will be worth more, and potentially become more attractive to corporate investors, who receive a reduction on federal income taxes for 10 years based on the rate. Developers, who sell the tax credits to raise equity on projects have long called for changes to the program and were hopeful that Congress would adopt the floor rate.

“It means in New York City that a lot of projects are going to be made feasible,” said Rick Gropper, principal at Camber Property Group. “We’re talking about millions of dollars in additional funding.”

With interest rates low, and state and local governments short on cash, the LIHTC change could free up subsidies for projects as developers are able to raise more equity through tax credit sales.

An analysis by accounting firm Novogradac estimates that the change could finance 126,000 affordable apartments nationally by 2029. In New York alone, the change could generate 23,000 apartments in the next decade, according to the New York Housing Conference.

“Establishing a floor on the LIHTC 4 percent credit will encourage investment in affordable housing during economic downturns and increase production by making more developments financially feasible,” Jolie Milstein, president and CEO of the New York State Association for Affordable Housing, said in a statement. “In the coming months, we need every level of government to build upon this positive step and enact smart policies that stimulate the long-term production of affordable housing and keep struggling renters in their homes right now.”

Congressional leaders announced Sunday night that they had reached a stimulus deal, which also includes $25 billion in rent relief and extends federal eviction protections through Jan. 31. Lawmakers are expected to vote on the measure Monday night.

[contact-form-7]

The post Stimulus deal includes major change to affordable housing financing appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

Ashford: Insolvency imminent without new financing

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Ashford Hospitality Trust CEO Douglas Kessler with the W Hotel in Atlanta. (LinkedIn, Marriott)
Ashford Hospitality Trust CEO Douglas Kessler with the W Hotel in Atlanta. (LinkedIn, Marriott)
 

Ashford Hospitality Trust is running on fumes, the real estate investment trust disclosed Monday.

The Dallas-based owner of upscale lodging assets, one of the nation’s largest REITs specializing in hotels, said it might be forced to seek bankruptcy protection early next year unless it gets new financing.

Ashford is seeking approximately $200 million initially and is prepared to hand over 20 percent of company equity to secure the debt, according to paperwork it filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission. The company said it was “engaged in a process regarding a potential financing” but did not specify what entity might issue it.

Shares of its stock fell just over 6 percent today. Ashford listed $3.8 billion in assets at the end of September, down nearly $1 billion from last year.

The company also said Monday it would issue approximately $40 million worth of new shares, pending approval from its shareholders. Ashford warned that failure to approve the stock issuance could throw the company into bankruptcy or liquidation, resulting in “zero recovery for common shareholders.

Earlier this month Ashford said it had entered a purchase agreement with Lincoln Park Capital for up to $40 million in equity.

In September Ashford sold its 310-key hotel at 60 West 37th Street in Manhattan to Magna Hospitality Group for $115 million, a 41 percent discount on the $195 million it paid for the Embassy Suites site 18 months prior, according to property records.

Ashford has burned through nearly $230 million in cash during the past 12 months as the pandemic devastated the hospitality industry, whose leaders have praised the new $900 billion stimulus package agreed to by House and Senate leaders Sunday.

“In these most challenging times for hotels in our nation’s history, we appreciate the bipartisanship displayed by congressional leadership and members across the country,” said Cecil Staton, president of the hotel owners association AAHOA.

Approximately $284 billion of the stimulus bill is expected to be for forgivable PPP loans.

Ashford returned $38 million in PPP loans earlier this year after public pressure mounted against it and two other lodging companies connected to Texas hotelier Monty Bennett, following revelations that some small businesses had been shut out of the loan program.

Now in a more dire financial position, the company may be more inclined to accept federal aid, especially if it cannot secure financing in private debt markets. An Ashford representative said the company had no comment.

[contact-form-7]

The post Ashford: Insolvency imminent without new financing appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

Bye-bye, Brutalism: Trump order emphasizes classical style for federal buildings

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President Donald Trump with the J. Edgar Hoover Building and the United States Capitol (Getty; iStock)
President Donald Trump with the J. Edgar Hoover Building and the United States Capitol (Getty; iStock)dan

In the waning days of his administration, President Donald Trump is focusing his attention on pressing matters: ensuring that any new government buildings in the nation’s capital are “beautiful.”

The president has signed an executive order, “Promoting Beautiful Federal Civic Architecture,” that recommends federal buildings in Washington, D.C. be designed in a variety of traditional architectural styles — Neoclassical, Georgian, Greek Revival and Gothic among them, according to WAMU.

It would also establish a Council on Improving Federal Civic Architecture, which would be tasked with ensuring that government buildings in D.C. are “beautiful and reflective of the dignity, enterprise, vigor, and stability of the American system of self-government.”

So buildings like the Capitol, perhaps the most famous Neoclassical structure in the city, would be in. The work of Modernist architects like Charles Murphy, who designed the FBI’s J. Edgar Hoover Building, or Marcel Breuer, the architect behind HUD’s Robert C. Weaver Building, would be out.

The order does not specifically forbid architects from designing or submitting building plans that are more modernist in style, according to Bloomberg CityLab, but it would require soliciting input from the public and those who will work in a federal building before a design is chosen.

Trump’s distaste for Brutalist architecture is well-documented: He previously said the FBI headquarters is “one of the ugliest buildings in the city.” But his apparent penchant for classical architecture is not. His buildings in New York City, including Trump Tower on Fifth Avenue and Trump World Tower, are firmly modernist in style, although that’s less about aesthetics and more about maximizing views from the apartments within — and thus, profits.

And when he was building his eponymous Fifth Avenue skyscraper in the 1980s, Trump infamously demolished the old Bonwit Teller department store, designed by the same firm who built Grand Central Terminal. He failed to fulfill his promise to donate two Art Deco friezes that once adorned its facade to the Metropolitan Museum of Art. The reason? The adornments were “without artistic merit,” the Trump Organization claimed.

[WAMU, CityLab] — Amy Plitt

[contact-form-7]

The post Bye-bye, Brutalism: Trump order emphasizes classical style for federal buildings appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

Nest Seekers falsely claims exclusivity on Miami listings, feeds bad information to Zillow and Realtor.com

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Johnny Mansilla (Nest Seekers, Realtor, Zillow)
Johnny Mansilla (Nest Seekers, Realtor, Zillow)

Nest Seekers International has been falsely claiming exclusivity on a number of listings in Miami, and in some cases feeding that information to Zillow and Realtor.com, an investigation by The Real Deal reveals.

The New York-based brokerage, led by founder and CEO Eddie Shapiro, has a number of listings on its website that are labeled “exclusive,” which state that “This is a Nest Seekers Exclusive Listing.” However, in many cases, the listings belong to another brokerage, have already been sold, or have not been listed by the developer.

The Nest Seekers information is sometimes also posted on Zillow.com, Realtor.com and other websites for the public to see. That means potential buyers are presented with the wrong contact information for a listing and oftentimes price.

“These people are creating a presence by misleading the public, pretending to be exclusive listing agents on listings that are not theirs, and somehow have a superseding feed agreement with Zillow and Realtor and other listings sites,” Miami real estate broker Cyril Bijaoui, who discovered the alleged fraud, told TRD.

Nest Seekers started to remove the exclusive labels and listings from its website on Monday, after TRD reached out to the firm.

Nest Seekers president Eddie Shapiro referred TRD to Johnny Mansilla, who leads the Miami-based Mansilla Team of more than 20 agents, and said he does not have control over public listing websites. Mansilla said Nest Seekers “prides” itself on having “integrity and transparency,” and that any listings on the Nest Seekers website were from the Multiple Listing Service or else Nest Seekers had the exclusive at a certain point.

On a second call, Mansilla deferred responsibility to Nest Seekers.

“I don’t own the website. I am just a broker. I don’t represent the company,” he said. “You shouldn’t be talking to me, you should be talking to the marketing department.”

Some of the listings appear to be made up or are for new development condos. With new development, one brokerage will often have the exclusive sales and marketing and may only list some or the units on the MLS.

The penthouse at Regalia, a luxury condo tower in Sunny Isles Beach, is listed for $32 million on Realtor.com and Zillow with Mansilla of Nest Seekers. But Mark Pordes confirmed he and Adam Kaufman have the exclusive sales and marketing for the two developer units that remain at Regalia. And, Pordes said, the penthouse is on the market for $29.5 million, a recently reduced price that includes an Iguana yacht.

Historically, websites such as Zillow get listing information from multiple listing services around the country, but they will also pull from individual brokerages if the information is more accurate than the MLS, experts say.

“What Nest Seekers is doing, the most polite thing I could say is it’s unethical,” said Steve Murray, president of Real Trends, a real estate research and publishing firm.

Instead of using information from the Southeast Florida MLS, Zillow and Realtor have pulled information for specific listings from Nest Seekers, calling into question the verification process.

A spokesperson for Realtor.com said that the company accepts data feeds from the MLS, as well as brokers, and confirmed that Nest Seekers provides a broker feed to Realtor.com. The spokesperson said the listings shared by TRD to Realtor.com match what is on the Nest Seekers site.

“Any discrepancies between broker and MLS data are addressed between those respective parties,” according to the spokesperson. Zillow did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Ring the alarm

Last Sunday, Westside Estate Agency broker Bijaoui received a call from an agent to verify whether he was the listing agent for 970 South Shore Drive, a waterfront home in Miami Beach, Bijaoui said. The agent had a buyer interested in viewing the property, but the listing agent in the MLS didn’t match what was posted on Zillow. Bijaoui, the true listing agent, had been replaced with Nest Seekers agent Marjorie Galeano on Zillow.

In fact, Galeano appeared as the listing agent since Oct. 27, which means for a month and a half, any broker or buyer looking on Zillow or Realtor would have contacted Galeano, not Bijaoui.

Aston Martin Residences listings, as seen on Nest Seekers and Zillow
Aston Martin Residences listings, as seen on Nest Seekers and Zillow

According to text messages between Bijaoui and Galeano, provided to TRD by Bijaoui, Galeano said that “by no means am I doing anything illegal.” She attempted to blame Bijaoui for selecting the “OK to advertise” option in the MLS. She said she and her broker use a platform that “syncs [ads] globally” on 97 websites, the screenshots show.

In Bijaoui’s response, he wrote that “claiming exclusive status when [it’s] not exclusive is fraud.” Nest Seekers and Zillow allegedly fixed their respective listings, and within days Bijaoui received an offer from a buyer. Bijaoui said he only received interest in the property once Zillow corrected the listing.

In doing so, Zillow reset the clock, wiping out the days on market. Former Miami Realtor Kevin Tomlinson filed a complaint against The Jills agents Jill Hertzberg and Jill Eber in 2015 over their alleged manipulation of specific fields in MLS, including days on market. He was ultimately convicted of trying to extort $800,000 from the Jills.

“Zillow controls the market,” Bijaoui said, noting that the MLS is “becoming irrelevant.” He plans to file a complaint with the Florida Real Estate Commission.

In some cases, the falsely listed properties have already been sold. A penthouse at Arte by Antonio Citterio in Surfside, currently listed for $40 million on the Nest Seekers website, sold last week for $33 million, and Nest Seekers was not involved in the deal. Douglas Elliman, which is handling sales on behalf of the developer, was the listing brokerage. Elliman also has the exclusive on a penthouse at The Ritz-Carlton Residences, Miami Beach, that Nest Seekers claimed as exclusive, asking about $20.3 million.

A spokesperson for Elliman said both are exclusive to Elliman, and “there is no co-exclusive listing with any other brokerage.”

A two-bedroom, 3,104-square-foot unit at the Estates at Acqualina is listed on Realtor.com for $3.85 million with Rob Fuller of Nest Seekers. But the developer, the Trump Group, always handles sales in-house, led by Michael Goldstein. Nest Seekers has claimed exclusivity on a number of Acqualina units.

Penthouses and units at Aston Martin Residences are also listed on Nest Seekers website as “exclusive” with Nest Seekers agents. Cervera Real Estate is the true listing brokerage for all units inside the building, which is under construction, a Cervera spokesperson confirmed.

The same is true of units listed at Turnberry Ocean Club. A spokesperson confirmed all listings are handled in house.

Though the majority of the Miami-area listings on Nest Seekers’ website are of condos, some are for single-family homes. Nest Seekers claims it has the exclusive on 5709 La Gorce Drive in Miami Beach, which the brokerage has on the market for $4.7 million with Nest Seekers agent Daniel Dadi.

According to the MLS, the La Gorce house sold Sept. 8. Jeri Jenkins of Coldwell Banker represented the seller, and Darin Tansey of Douglas Elliman brought the buyer. It sold for $4 million.

9400 Old Cutler Lane listings, as seen on Nest Seekers and Realtor
9400 Old Cutler Lane listings, as seen on Nest Seekers and Realtor

“It appears that these brokers are misrepresenting the truth in an effort to fraudulently drive traffic to their business,” said Josh Migdal, a partner at Miami-based law firm Mark Migdal & Hayden. “This ultimately could result in losses to the appropriate brokers and losses to the buyer and seller who could pay additional commissions and/or improper prices for the home.”

Wild Wild West

Nest Seekers entered the South Florida market in 2007, but has yet to gain a major foothold in Miami. To some on the outside, it seems that Nest Seekers is attempting to inflate its market share in Miami.

The false listings are under the names of Mansilla and other agents in South Florida. Mansilla, alone, has 164 listings in Miami, according to his profile page on Nest Seekers. At the top of the list is the $13 million listing of 165 North Hibiscus Drive in Miami Beach. Dora Puig of Luxe Living Realty is the true listing agent.

Chris Zoller, an agent who sits on the Miami Association of Realtors board of directors, said that the MLS is the most accurate source of information for buyers. Zoller compared the public listings sites like Zillow.com and Realtor.com to the “Wild, Wild West” and said listings agents should be diligent about protecting their listings.

Brokers were alarmed to hear that Nest Seekers has been claiming exclusivity and sharing listings without permission, and planned to contact the brokerage immediately. Zoller said it was “robbery.”

“It is unfortunate that sometimes an unscrupulous player can slip under the radar and lay claim to something that is not true,” Zoller said. “We [South Florida] are the capital of fraud. We seem to allow more fraud than most other parts of the nation, and it’s really scary.”

[contact-form-7]

The post Nest Seekers falsely claims exclusivity on Miami listings, feeds bad information to Zillow and Realtor.com appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.


The 10 priciest Hamptons homes sales of 2020

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Ken Griffin and 650 Meadow Lane (left) and 15 West Dune Lane (Photos via Google Maps; Compass; Citadel)
Ken Griffin and 650 Meadow Lane (left) and 15 West Dune Lane (Photos via Google Maps; Compass; Citadel)

UPDATED Dec. 21, 2020, 6:40 pm: It’s no secret that Hamptons buyers went ham this year.

Wealthy New Yorkers fled the city in droves, flooding into surrounding suburbs and vacation destinations and setting those housing markets on fire. Sprawling oceanfront homes in the Hamptons were an immediate target of the influx of deep-pocketed buyers willing to pay sky-high prices for an isolated oasis.

The most 10 expensive deals this year came to a total of $450.55 million, up 48 percent from the $303.5 million for the top 10 in 2019. The Real Deal’s analysis of deals in the Hamptons through Dec. 15 relied on data from Redfin and OneKey and confirmation from Saunders & Associates and Compass.

To illustrate the difference a pandemic makes: The top home sale last year was $39 million by natural gas billionaire Michael S. Smith in an off-market deal. In 2020, the priciest was a stunning $84.4 million sale to real estate-hungry billionaire Ken Griffin, who last year bought the most expensive home in the U.S. for $238 million in Manhattan’s 220 Central Park South.

Here is more on that sale and the rest of the Hamptons’ 10 priciest of the past year:

1. 650 Meadow Lane | $84.4 million

Billionaire Ken Griffin went into contract to buy Calvin Klein’s Southampton compound in February just as the pandemic was beginning. The 7-acre property includes a modern-style home that Klein built from the ground up and was said to be “all about the views.”

2. 15 West Dune Lane | $67 million

The 3.4-acre East Hampton estate includes two mansions boasting a combined 14,000 square feet and 14 bedrooms. When the unknown buyer went into contract in September the price tag was $70 million. The compound includes a waterfront pool and frontage along Wiborg Beach.

3. 26 & 32 Windmill Lane | $45 million

The former beachfront getaway of the late Union Pacific chairman James H. Evans sold in April. The property spans 6.7 acres and comprises two lots. The main house is 5,500 square feet, though the undisclosed buyer may view it as a teardown as zoning now would allow a home up to 12,500 square feet, according to the Wall Street Journal.

4. 1050 Meadow Lane | $40.9 million

The 3.4-acre estate in Southampton Village sold at the end of January, according to 27 East. The property features 535 feet of ocean frontage, a heated outdoor pool, a chef’s kitchen and an elevator that goes to all three floors of the 9,000-square-foot home. Built in 2003, the not-so-humble abode has six bedrooms and a private dock.

5. 1400 Meadow Lane | $39.5 million

The nine-bedroom home in Southampton sits on a roughly three-acre lot. The oceanfront house sprawls over 11,000 square feet and was built in 2018. The home has a 2,870-square-foot marble terrace, a tennis court and infinity pool overlooking the ocean, according to the listing.

6. 24 and 28 Gin Lane | $38 million

The two parcels formerly owned by a Woolworth heiress traded in February. The property’s main house spans 7,300 square feet with 12 bedrooms, with a nearby carriage house and a protected beachfront, according to the listing, which marketed the property as a “development opportunity.” The unknown buyer could build a home up to 15,000 square feet and add a pool and tennis court.

7. 1116 Meadow Lane | $36 million

Just down the road, the eight-bedroom residence on this nearly three-acre estate spans 12,800 square feet. The two-level home was built in 2012 with an open floor plan, according to its listing. The estate has an oceanside pool and a multitude of terraces and decks.

8. 27 Drew Lane | $35.75 million

Designed by architecture firm COOKFOX, the 13,600-square-foot mansion on the East End of Long Island sits near a smaller residence for a caretaker, a yoga pavilion and lap pool. The home was built in 2007, according to the architect.

9. 317 Murray Place | $35 million

The Southampton mansion styled like a French chateau, complete with imported stone, is part of the Murray Compound with 200 feet of beach frontage and a 2.8-acre lot. The 9,200-square-foot home has an elevator and wine cellar. The property includes a heated pool and room for the new owner to build a tennis court, according to the listing. It was initially marketed in conjunction with a second home that had made up late financier John F. Sullivan’s six-acre compound. The second home, previously listed for $35 million, was not on the market at the time of the sale, according to the Wall Street Journal.

10. 55 Coopers Neck Lane | $34 million

The 11-bedroom mansion was built this year on a 4.5-acre estate. The Southampton Village home spans 12,400 square feet and includes a gym, home theater, pool and tennis courts, according to its listing.

Honorable mention | 91 Fowler Street | $33 million

The 13,000-square-foot mansion includes eight bedrooms, four fireplaces, double-height living areas and a roof deck overlooking the ocean. The newly-built home faces Phillips Ponds. The 3.2-acre property has a heated infinity pool, spa building and tennis court. It was last asking $42.9 million before going into contract, according to 27 East.

[contact-form-7]

The post The 10 priciest Hamptons homes sales of 2020 appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

Latest blow to businesses: Covid restrictions likely to extend through holiday season

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(Getty)
(Getty)

California is expected to extend Covid restrictions and its stay-at-home order through the holiday season, a blow to already hobbled businesses.

The Southern California and San Joaquin Valley regions are technically eligible for lifting restrictions starting next week. Gov. Gavin Newsom said it’s unlikely restrictions will be lifted in those regions because intensive care bed capacity has been falling, according to the Los Angeles Times.

“It’s very likely, based on those current trends, that we’ll need to extend that stay-at-home order,” he said.

The order kicks in when ICU bed capacity falls below 15 percent. It’s been in effect since early December. Most of the state has been subject to the order.

Most retail businesses are limited to 20 percent of indoor capacity, while some businesses must close altogether, including hair and nail salons.

Supermarkets in L.A. County are dealing with an increase in Covid cases over the last several weeks. County officials say there are outbreaks at 490 businesses compared to 173 a month ago.

The pandemic is the worst it’s ever been in the state. More than 2,700 people have died of Covid-19 in the last two weeks — 12 percent of the state’s 22,600 total deaths. [LAT] — Dennis Lynch 

The post Latest blow to businesses: Covid restrictions likely to extend through holiday season appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

Here are LA’s biggest office leases of 2020

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3800 W Alameda Avenue and 2300 W Empire Avenue, both in Burbank. (LPC West, The Burbank Portfolio)
3800 W Alameda Avenue and 2300 W Empire Avenue, both in Burbank. (LPC West, The Burbank Portfolio)
 

If you just looked at the biggest deals, Los Angeles’ office leasing market would seem to have done just fine in 2020.

The five largest office leases inked in the county totalled nearly 950,000 square feet, an increase from last year’s top-five total of 730,000 square feet.

The largest deal of all, as well as the largest new deal, both went to entertainment giants in Burbank’s Media District. Disney renewed 425,000 square feet and Netflix inked a new 171,000 square feet lease. An advertising agency, an engineering firm and a government agency filled out the rest of the top five.

Nonetheless, the big picture for the region’s office market has been grim. New leasing volume in the third quarter was 18 percent lower than the quarter before, and down 61 percent year-over-year, according to a recent Savills report.

About 20 percent of Los Angeles’ total office space is now available for lease, an eight-year high, according to the report. The amount of sublease space increased by 50 percent since the start of the pandemic, to 7.1 million square feet.

Among submarkets, Burbank was a notable outlier with an availability rate of just 6 percent at the end of the third quarter. Other major submarkets, like Downtown and Santa Monica, had availability rates slightly above the countywide average.

TAMI (technology, advertising, media, and information) tenants accounted for 60 percent of leasing activity in the third quarter, and about half of all leasing volume came from new deals and the other half from renewals and extensions.

This list of the five biggest leases in L.A. in 2020 is based on TRD analysis of brokerage data as provided by Newmark Knight France and CBRE, along with news and market reports.

1. 3800 W Alameda Avenue, Burbank | The Walt Disney Company | 425K sf

The Walt Disney Company renewed its 425,000-square-foot lease at 3800 W Alameda Avenue in November. According to ratings documents, Disney’s lease at the building was set to expire next year. The space serves as the world headquarters for Radio Disney and the broadcasting base for the Disney Channel, as well as a backup for East Coast operations including ESPN.

3800 Alameda is part of a portfolio of Burbank office buildings in which Blackstone acquired a majority stake in 2017. Santa Monica-based Worthe Real Estate Group retains a minority stake in the buildings and manages them. Within the same portfolio, Disney’s film production arm Walt Disney Pictures occupies another 150,000 square feet at the Media Studios complex.

2. 2525 Colorado Avenue, Santa Monica | Rubin Postaer & Associates | 187K sf

Advertising and marketing agency Rubin Postaer & Associates renewed the 186,894-square-foot lease for its headquarters at the Colorado Center in Santa Monica in January. The lease was originally set to expire in 2025 and now extends through 2033, according to Trepp.

The six-building, 1.2 million-square-foot office complex is owned by Boston Properties and TIAA. Boston Properties acquired Blackstone’s 50-percent stake in the property for $511 million in 2016, marking the office REIT’s first acquisition in Los Angeles.

Savills represented the tenant in the transaction, while LA Realty Partners and Cornerstone Real Estate brokered the deal for the landlord.

3. 2300 W Empire Avenue, Burbank | Netflix | 171K sf

In the biggest new lease of 2020, Netflix inked a 171,000-square-foot deal in September for its first dedicated animation studio at Burbank Empire Center’s 2300 W Empire Avenue.

The property is owned by the real estate investment arm of New York Life and managed by Lincoln Property Company. The streaming giant’s new space includes the entire first floor and spaces on three other floors of the seven-story, 351,300-square-foot building.

CBRE, which represented New York Life in the deal, says the building is now fully leased. New York Life Real Estate Investors bought the property in 2017.

4. 8500 Balboa Boulevard, Northridge | Harman International | 164K sf

Engineering firm Harman International renewed its 163,921-square-foot lease at 8500 Balboa Boulevard in Northridge in October. The company, which has been at the building for 30 years, was acquired by Samsung in 2016 and now functions as an independent subsidiary of Samsung Electronics. Harman’s products include “connected car technology” and audio electronics.

Savills represented the tenant in the deal, while CBRE represented landlords Shubin Nadal Realty Investors and DRA Advisors, who acquired the 900,000-square-foot office, industrial and retail property in 2014. Facebook also has a 80,000-square-foot office at the building.

5. 233 S Beaudry Avenue, Downtown | Los Angeles Department of Water and Power | 132K sf

The Los Angeles Department of Water and Power, the nation’s largest municipal utility, inked a long-term lease for 132,000 square feet at 233 South Beaudry Avenue in Downtown Los Angeles in May. The cost of the 10-year lease, which was approved by City Council, is $72.5 million, and the department has planned an extensive buildout for the property.

The building is owned by Michael Delijani, son of the late L.A. real estate investor Ezat Delijani. Delijani’s Delson Investment Company owns multiple commercial and residential properties downtown, including one nearby at 136 South Beaudry Avenue.

[contact-form-7]

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Existing home sales fall for the first time in 5 months

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There were 6.69 million homes sold in November, seasonally adjusted, a 2.5 percent drop from 6.85 million in October, according to NAR. (iStock)
There were 6.69 million homes sold in November, seasonally adjusted, a 2.5 percent drop from 6.85 million in October, according to NAR. (iStock)

Homebuyers took a step back last month, as the number of homes on the market reached a new low.

There were 6.69 million homes sold in November, seasonally adjusted, a 2.5 percent drop from 6.85 million in October, according to the National Association of Realtors’ monthly report.

Every region saw a decline or flat sales figures last month compared to October — though the number of sales are still up significantly year over year. Nationwide, November’s sales were up nearly 26 percent from a year ago.

Inventory also continued to tighten, hitting a record low for the second consecutive month. Total housing inventory was 1.28 million units, down 9.9 percent from October’s record low of 1.42 million. November’s inventory is down 22 percent from a year ago, when there were 1.64 million units on the market. At the current sales pace, last month’s inventory will be sold in 2.3 months.

Despite the low supply, prices slipped with the wane in demand from buyers. The median sales price was $310,800 in November, down from $313,000 in October. But the price was up about 15 percent compared to the median of $271,300 a year earlier.

Lawrence Yun, NAR’s chief economist, said November’s report was “a marginal step back,” and maintained his view that the housing market would continue to perform well into 2021.

“Sales for all of 2020 are already on pace to surpass last year’s levels,” he said in a statement.

But there are some economists who question how much longer the housing market’s record year can continue. They argue that lower-income households are being left behind as lenders tighten their criteria for borrowers and job loss related to the pandemic continues.

There are also signs that buyer demand is waning. NAR’s index tracking pending homes sales, which is seen as a leading indicator for future sales of existing homes, has declined for the past two months.

Yun acknowledged that rising prices as a result of the past year’s surge in demand has pushed homeownership out of reach for some buyers, particularly first-time buyers who can’t rely on the sale of a previous home to finance a down payment.

But, citing the $892 billion stimulus package Congress passed Monday, distribution of the vaccine and “very strong demand for homeownership,” Yun maintained that “robust growth is forthcoming for 2021.”

[contact-form-7]

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Danny Elfman, Bridget Fonda sell Hancock Park home for $9M

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Danny Elfman and Bridget Fonda with 114 Fremont Place (Getty, The Williams Estates)
Danny Elfman and Bridget Fonda with 114 Fremont Place (Getty, The Williams Estates)

Composer Danny Elfman and actress Bridget Fonda have sold one of two Hancock Park homes they listed in October.

The couple sold the larger of the two properties for $8.8 million, according to the Los Angeles Times. The homes were listed for a combined $14.6 million.

The smaller property is still on the market for $4.9 million. Elfman and Fonda used it as a guest home, according to the report.

The home that sold totals about 8,400 square feet on three-quarters of an acre. There are six bedrooms and eight bathrooms. The property includes a gym, dining patio and pool.

The sale is the priciest in the Central Los Angeles neighborhood in the last month, according to sales data available via Redfin.

The home is part of the Fremont Place gated community. Boxing great Muhammad Ali once lived in the neighborhood. His former home hit the market in early 2019 for $17 million. [LAT] — Dennis Lynch

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A long road ahead for office landlords

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Manhattan’s Paramount Group received an unsolicited takeover bid early last month for about two-thirds of what the company was worth prior to Covid.

Just a few weeks later, the real estate investment trust’s board unanimously rejected the offer from activist investor Bow Street, noting that its offer was “inadequate and significantly undervalues” the office landlord run by Albert Behler.

The hedge fund’s bid, however, was in line with Paramount’s stock price, which plunged at the onset of the pandemic and has hovered at just under $10 a share since. And the REIT, which has a market cap of about $2 billion, may still be on the table for a higher offer.

“Our board and management team remain open-minded,” Behler wrote in a letter to Bow Street’s managing partners.

It’s a tense reality for the pandemic-battered landlord whose trophy office buildings in Manhattan and San Francisco remain mostly empty as the vast majority of employees continue to work remotely.

Meanwhile, Paramount isn’t the only office landlord in hot water.

Vornado Realty Trust recently unveiled plans to reduce compensation and shed 70 jobs to lower its annual overhead costs by more than $35 million. Empire State Realty Trust, likewise, announced plans to lay off six employees and furlough another 156 as part of the firm’s cost-cutting measures, after reporting a net loss for the second consecutive quarter.

“We need to get through a very difficult point now,” Anthony Malkin, Empire State Realty’s chairman and CEO, said in an interview. “I’m highly confident. I’m also a realist. … We probably won’t see the bottom until the first quarter of 2022.”

Paramount declined to comment for this story. Vornado did not respond to requests for comment.

The availability of office space in the biggest markets around the country hit new highs in recent months, as a growing number of tenants look to weather the pandemic and economic fallout by subleasing space. At the same time, struggling hotels and retail assets are being converted into new offices, adding to a potential oversupply in major cities like New York, Chicago, Los Angeles and San Francisco. 

Manhattan’s office availability rate was at more than 13 percent last month, the highest level since 2003, with Midtown and Midtown South setting historic records of 14.4 percent and 12.8 percent respectively, according to Colliers International.

“It is significant to acknowledge it,” said Franklin Wallach, Colliers’ senior managing director of New York research. “But of course, we are in very unique times right now with Covid-19.”

The availability of office space in Chicago’s central business district, meanwhile, rose to a rate of more than 22 percent at the end of the third quarter, according to CBRE. In Los Angeles County, the availability rate was at roughly 21 percent as of early December, a recent report from Avison Young found.

And market conditions could get worse before they improve.

Many workers who finally returned to their offices this fall have retreated again, facing a resurgence of Covid infection rates. Industry experts say the latest vaccine news offers a dim light at the end of the tunnel, but a long road to recovery is still ahead.

The WFH reckoning

In an effort to lead by example, SL Green Realty CEO Marc Holliday, who lives in Scarsdale, has been commuting by train since March.

During SL Green’s third quarter earnings call, Holliday lamented the low physical occupancy rate of his firm’s office portfolio.

“We’re still … right around the city average of probably 15 percent to 20 percent back to office work,” he said. “That means 80 percent, 85 percent of the people that work in office buildings are still home, and that’s frustrating.” 

SL Green declined to comment.

During recent earnings calls, executives of other office landlords acknowledged that while most tenants have been keeping up with rent payments, the majority have also kept their workers remote. Building owners maintain that they’re creating safe office environments, in an effort to lure back workers, but the recent surge of Covid cases is once again sending people home.

And one contender in New York City’s 2021 mayoral race has added to the list of grievances. “We owe it to our kids to do everything we can to keep schools safe and open,” the city’s comptroller, Scott Stringer, tweeted in mid-November. “Shut down office buildings.”

Nearly nine months into the pandemic, the physical occupancy rate of offices in the country’s top 10 metro markets remains at an average of about 25 percent, according to Kastle Systems, which aggregates data from its swipe card door access system.

Countless office buildings around the U.S. have remained almost completely deserted since the beginning of the pandemic, and the return rates among office workers in San Francisco, New York and Chicago, were among the lowest as of Dec. 2, at 12.8 percent, 14.3 percent and 16.6 percent, respectively. Los Angeles fared better than average at 31.7 percent.

For landlords, physical occupancy matters, said Alex Goldfarb, a senior REIT analyst at Piper Sandler. Similar to Malkin, he predicted that office leasing in major markets like New York will begin to normalize in 2022.

“You really need all the employees to come back to work,” Goldfarb said. “Then employers feel better about how they’re going to handle things and they’ll be able to make growth decisions on leasing.”

Peter Brindley, Paramount’s executive vice president of leasing, has argued the same point.

“One of the things that we subscribe to entirely is that physical occupancy will generate new leasing activity,” he said during the REIT’s third quarter earnings call in late October.

Pandemic pressures

Compared to hospitality and retail, the office sector has appeared more insulated from the pandemic.

But when dealing with office tenants that are nearing the end of their leases, landlords have had to maneuver carefully. The number of short-term lease extensions has rapidly increased during the pandemic as both property owners and tenants avoid making decisions that could prove to be too concrete in the year ahead, according to industry sources.

At the same time, space available for sublease continues to flood major cities around the country.

As of Nov. 30, Manhattan’s available sublease space was more than 24 percent of the market’s total availability, at about 17.3 million square feet, signaling a “glut” of inventory on the near horizon, Colliers’ Wallach noted.

In Chicago’s central business district, the amount of sublease space on the market has surpassed 5.3 million square feet, the highest on record and about 15 percent of total availability, according to Cushman & Wakefield. And the amount of available sublease space in Los Angeles County in early December was 7.6 million square feet, about 17 percent of total availability, according to Avison Young. That’s also the highest on record, exceeding the 6.5 million square feet in sublease inventory in 2009.

Office landlords have faced a “lot of downward pressure” on pricing as they contend with the “enormous amount of subtlet office available,” said Manus Clancy, senior managing director of the financial data firm Trepp.

In turn, the amount of free months of rent — typically offered by landlords at the beginning of a new lease — has spiked by 30 percent nationwide since the pandemic hit, according to a recent report co-authored by Trepp and CompStak.

Some building owners have also boosted their tenant improvement allowances, said Jonathan Larsen, a commercial broker with Avison Young based in Los Angeles.

Office landlords would prefer to give out more concessions as long as they can maintain their asking face rent because “they are focused on preserving the value of their property,” said Artree Maharajh, Avison Young’s research manager for Los Angeles County.

Local landlords are holding out hope that the market will begin to recover once enough people get vaccinated, Maharajh said. “They’re not trying to do the deals any lower than they need to because, at some point, they’re going to need to sell the building,” he said.

But the far-reaching impacts of Covid could make a full recovery tricky, as tech firms continue to lead the charge on remote working as a way to cut costs and give workers a greater sense of flexibility. Software giant Salesforce, for example, recently told analysts that it plans to consolidate and sublease some of its office space as more people work from home.

On top of that, some owners of struggling hospitality and retail properties are adding more supply to an already saturated market.

Major hotel chains like Marriott and Hilton and boutique brands like the Wythe Hotel in Brooklyn are now promoting their hotel rooms as makeshift offices. Meanwhile, a 377,000-square-foot retail space on Manhattan’s Far West Side has been marketed for office use since this summer. That includes 190,000 square feet formerly occupied by the Neiman Marcus department store at 20 Hudson Yards. 

Facebook, which inked a lease for 1.5 million feet of space in the megadevelopment last year, was said to be interested in the space. But a spokesperson for Facebook told The Real Deal this month that it’s not considering the space.

Related Companies and Oxford Properties, the co-developers of Hudson Yards, did not respond to requests for comment.

“You’ve seen almost 650,000 square feet of former retail or hotel space come back to the market as offices because this has affected so many other asset types,” said Colliers’ Wallach.

The issue, he added, is that it “puts more supply pressure” on Manhattan’s 526 million square feet of existing office space.

The conversion crunch

The Real Estate Board of New York — whose members include some of the largest office landlords — recently proposed that the city and state allow developers to more easily convert offices into apartments. Across the five boroughs, REBNY has identified 210 million square feet of office space that could be converted into apartments. 

In past recessions, converting vacant offices into residential units successfully transformed Lower Manhattan into a lively mixed-use neighborhood.

But office-to-residential conversions seem unlikely in this downturn, argued Carl Weisbrod, who led the neighborhood’s redevelopment effort in the 1990s and again after 9/11 as the founding president of the Alliance for Downtown New York.

“I think what we’re going through here is more of a cyclical issue than a structural issue,” Weisbrod said.

He added that while some Manhattan office buildings (and hotels) may be ripe for redevelopment, necessary government incentives won’t be available as the city struggles to balance its pandemic-ravaged budget.

“The incentives, if they’re offered, should really be offered only for affordable housing,” Weisbrod said.

Concerns over a fiscal crisis are also mounting in Chicago.

Facing a $1.2 billion deficit in fiscal 2021, Mayor Lori Lightfoot proposed a $94 million property tax hike to balance her budget plan, which was narrowly approved late last month. At the same time, Cook County is going through a reassessment of its real estate values.

Commercial property owners have been sitting on the sidelines as the real impacts won’t be seen until the middle of next year, said Laura Dietzel, a senior real estate analyst with the accounting services firm RSM US.

“Certainly, the state and local tax picture is going to be very important,” for the office sector’s recovery, she said. “Not just in Chicago but on the national level.”

Roads to recovery 

The general consensus throughout the commercial real estate industry is that once vaccines are widely distributed, the office sector will finally be on track to rebound.

Until then, however, the sector’s overall availability rate could further increase as more office space is likely to come on the market for subleasing, said Nicole LaRusso, CBRE’s director of research and analysis.

“Our expectation is that until tenants — occupiers — recall their workers to the office, we will not likely to see occupiers making commitments to take on more space,” she said. “And we don’t think they’re going to recall workers to the office until people feel that commuting and being in the office together is safe.”

As the downturn continues into next year, landlords will be required to adopt even more, said David Falk, Newmark’s president for the New York tri-state region.

“With all the tenants cutting back and shrinking, there will be adjustments to the economics, to the rents, and more free rent and more tenant improvement allowances,” he said. “Landlords will probably have to spend more money to entice tenants to move to their buildings.”

Industrious CEO Jamie Hodari, who has been partnering with building owners to create more flexible office space, said smart landlords are trying to take advantage of the “work from anywhere” trend.

On the tenant side, Jack McKinney Jr., a commercial broker with Cushman & Wakefield in Chicago, said employers “will be looking to ‘ammenitize’ in a way that encourages people to come back to the office.”

Whatever it takes, having employees return to the office is key for a business to grow, Empire State Realty’s Malkin argued.

“The fact that people have been able to accomplish certain tasks from home does not mean they’ve been able to start new businesses, acquire new customers — they’ve just been able to maintain,” he said.

“It’s very clear that people cannot build teams, [build work] culture, share ideas without being with each other.” 

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City for sale: Shekhter looks to unload mega-portfolio in Santa Monica

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NMS Properties' Neil Shekhter and renderings of 1325 6th Street, 1437 6th Street, 1430 Lincoln Blvd. and 1318 Lincoln Blvd. in Santa Monica (Kevin Scanlon, WSC)
NMS Properties’ Neil Shekhter and renderings of 1325 6th Street, 1437 6th Street, 1430 Lincoln Blvd. and 1318 Lincoln Blvd. in Santa Monica (Kevin Scanlon, WSC)

In what looks to be the largest development portfolio offering in Santa Monica in a generation, WSC Communities will put 23 mostly entitled mixed-use sites on the market next month, The Real Deal has learned.

Marketing the land after the city of Santa Monica already greenlighted over 2,100 apartments on the sites is a stunning turn for WSC, which is controlled by the family of prominent Westside landlord Neil Shekhter. The company spent years assembling the parcels and securing entitlements, in a seaside city that even by Southern California standards is notoriously difficult to develop in.

The portfolio, according to materials seen by TRD, offers over 1 million square feet of net residential rental space, and over 150,000 square feet of commercial space. All but two of the projects are fully entitled. If a single buyer were to purchase the portfolio, the price would likely set a new record for a recent L.A. development deal. Daydream Apartments’ $405 million purchase of a 575-unit complex in DTLA was the city’s largest multifamily deal of 2019.

Any buyer taking control over the portfolio would be in a position to become one of the Westside’s biggest landlords, but would be betting on getting the construction loans that other multifamily developers have been hard-pressed to find during the pandemic.

“There have been too many ‘ifs’ for banks to give construction financing,” said Paul Julian, a multifamily developer at Advanced Real Estate, who is selling entitled land of his own in Orange County.

Shekhter declined to comment, but a source at WSC (formerly known as WS) confirmed challenges in landing construction financing.

A Walker & Dunlop team of Blake Rogers, Javier Rivera, Alexandra Caniglia and Hunter Combs is handling the sale. Rogers sent out a teaser Tuesday morning prompting buyers to explore “The Santa Monica Collection: A 2,113 Unit Generational Development Opportunity in Downtown Santa Monica.”

The promotion does not provide a listing price, and WSC did not disclose even a ballpark price. Rogers declined to comment.

The properties in question are the 21 Santa Monica properties marked as “Future Projects” on WSC’s website, plus two unidentified sites yet to go through the city approval process.

Most of the sites lie on the thoroughfares of downtown Santa Monica including Colorado, Wilshire, and Lincoln boulevards, a few blocks from the ocean.

Some, like 1430 Lincoln Boulevard, have been winding their way through the planning process for years. A WSC-affiliated entity purchased one of the Lincoln Boulevard parcels in 2012 for $2.5 million, according to PropertyShark (A WSC source said the overall purchase price for the site was north of $10 million). The city later approved a five-story apartment building with 100 units for the land.

Other parcels were purchased in the past year including 501 Broadway, which a WSC entity bought in September 2019 for $13.9 million, per PropertyShark. Santa Monica officials have approved an eight-story building with 94 units on the Broadway land. In March, WSC received a $157 million bridge loan for 10 of the projects.

A new owner would be able to build as per the entitlements WSC has already secured, though any major deviation from those plans would need city approval, a source familiar with Santa Monica’s planning process said.

The portfolio is set to hit the market at a time when L.A. County multifamily deals have plummeted. There have been just $6.1 billion in total L.A. metro multifamily deals in 2020, according to Savills, down from $13.2 billion last year.

Still, the existing multifamily market may bear little relation to the deal proposed by Shekhter. The entire city of Santa Monica has just under 37,000 rental units, meaning a single buyer could become a major city landlord in just one deal.

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New renderings show Geoff Palmer’s 1K-unit DTLA apartment project

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Geoff Palmer and a rendering of the project (Getty)
Geoff Palmer and a rendering of the project (Getty)

New renderings released for Geoff Palmer’s massive apartment project in Downtown Los Angeles show a development with a similar aesthetic to many of his other projects in the area.

The 1,150-unit Ferrante development is part of Palmer’s “Renaissance Collection,” and a new leasing brochure for the retail space fills out details, according to Urbanize. The complex will include 21,000 square feet of ground-floor retail space.

The project is slated for a 10-acre property at Temple Street and Beaudry Avenue.

That’s similar in scope to his ill-fated Da Vinci project, which was burned by an arsonist in 2014. Palmer has been criticized for constructing his apartment projects — which include balconies — too close to highways.

Like the other Renaissance buildings, the Ferrante is a wood-frame structure built around a large courtyard. Palmer has likened his other projects in the style as “fortresses.” The courtyard has a raised platform for the pool.

Palmer secured construction permits for the project in 2018 but has since cut the number of units down from 1,500 to 1,150.

The project will be developed in six phases and the first units are expected to open by mid-2021. [Urbanize] — Dennis Lynch 

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Apartment List’s latest capital raises brings valuation to $600M

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Apartment List co-founder John Kobs (Photo via John Kobs; iStock)
Apartment List co-founder John Kobs (Photo via John Kobs; iStock)

Rental platform Apartment List has raised $50 million in a funding round, doubling its prior valuation to $600 million.

Janus Henderson Investors led the latest round, and the new capital injection signals investors’ growing interest in rental platforms to compete with Craigslist and StreetEasy, Bloomberg News reported. Unlike its competitors, however, Apartment List only earns a fee when a property is rented.

The San Francisco-based startup has 5.5 million units listed and more than 30 million users. It plans to use the new funding to increase its sales initiatives and bring in renters to its platform. More than 175,000 renters used Apartment List to find new homes this year, the company claims. Many of these new homes were in growing cities like Houston, Dallas and Austin, as well as Denver, Phoenix, Minneapolis and Charlotte.

When it comes to sales, the residential listing space is largely dominated by Zillow, Redfin and Realtor.com. The rental listing space is more fragmented, but that could soon change. Zillow and Zumper are big players, and CoStar recently made a big bet on the sector through its $250 million purchase of HomeSnap.

Apartment List said a public listing is possible in the next two years and the company would consider a conventional initial public offering or a merger with a special purpose acquisition company, also known as a SPAC.

Its other backers include Allen & Co., Canaan Partners, Tenaya Capital and Quantum Partners LP, a fund managed by Soros Fund Management LLC.

[Bloomberg News] — Keith Larsen 

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What the new stimulus means for restaurants & indie movie theaters

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Photo illustration of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (Getty, iStock)
Photo illustration of Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell and Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (Getty, iStock)

As part of Congress’ $900 billion pandemic aid package approved Monday, $15 billion was dedicated for “live venues, independent movie theaters, and cultural institutions.”

The $325 billion in funding carved out for all small businesses represents the largest component of the package, more than the funds allocated to direct payment checks and unemployment benefits combined. That includes more than $284 billion for another round of forgivable Payment Protection Program loans.

(See the full bill 5,600-page here. Provisions for PPP and other small business support begin on page 2,042.)

While most PPP borrowers will be eligible for loans worth up to 2.5 times their average monthly payroll costs, hotels and restaurants (or “Sector 72” companies) will be able to borrow up to 3.5 months worth of average payroll costs, up to a maximum of $2 million.

Shuttered venue operators — including theaters, movie theaters and museums — will be eligible for grants worth six months of gross revenue in 2019, up to a maximum of $10 million. Publicly listed companies, those with more than 500 employees, or with operations in more than 10 states or more than 1 country, will not be eligible for such grants.

The revised PPP rules also expand the types of expenses that may be eligible for forgiveness. These now include property damage costs “related to property damage and vandalism or looting due to public disturbances that occurred during 2020.” The funds will include damage not covered by insurance or other forms of compensation.

Covered expenditures now also include operating or capital expenditures that allow a business — restaurants in particular — to comply with sanitation and social distancing requirements issued by government agencies. These include air ventilation or filtration systems, sneeze guards, expansion of outdoor business space, onsite or offsite health screening capability, and personal protective equipment.

As before, borrowers will need to spend at least 60 percent of PPP funds on payroll expenses to be eligible for full forgiveness.

The period over which this rule applies may be either eight or 24 weeks at the borrowers’ discretion, an option that was added as part of July’s Paycheck Protection Program Flexibility Act

The funds set aside for small businesses also include $20 billion for targeted Economic Injury Disaster Loan Grants. There are also dedicated set-asides for PPP lending through community-based lenders like Community Development Financial Institutions and Minority Depository Institutions.

About $525 billion in PPP funds were disbursed to 5.2 million firms through the first two rounds of PPP. About $134 billion in program funds remained unused when the Small Business Administration stopped accepting applications for the second round in August, which has been attributed to borrowers’ confusion and concerns about the program.

[contact-form-7]

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The nitty gritty on federal rent relief

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We read the details on federal rent relief so you don’t have to. (Getty)
We read the details on federal rent relief so you don’t have to. (Getty)
 

As the multifamily sector welcomed the inclusion of $25 billion in rental assistance in the federal relief package, it rushed to decipher the 5,000-page bill.

Here are some key details.

The funds will be meted out by eligible states and localities, which are tasked with designing means-tested programs along the federal guidelines.

But the funds themselves, from the U.S. Treasury Department, may take a month to arrive. That means renters and landlords should not expect a check until late January at the earliest.

The rent relief will be apportioned not only to states, but to cities with populations greater than 500,000, based on their share of the overall U.S. population. That means more populous states like New York, Florida and California will get a bigger slice — $1.3 billion, $1.4 billion and $2.6 billion, respectively — of the $25 billion rent-relief pie.

But New York will end up shortchanged because tenants make up such a high percentage of its population. About two-thirds of New York City dwellings are rentals, roughly twice the U.S. average.

As a result, California will get twice as much rent relief as New York despite having only about 38 percent more tenants: 18 million to New York’s 13 million.

Rental payments have stayed remarkably steady during the pandemic, but it’s unknown how long rents can keep flowing. Federal unemployment benefits in the aid bill, up to $300 per week, will help, especially if tenants continue to prioritize paying the rent over other expenses.

“It’s something,” Robert Gilman, who co-chairs the real estate group at public accounting firm Anchin, said of the rental relief. “But my concern in general is that people have gone months without extra money.”

The relief may not arrive soon enough for some landlords, especially as the deadline for paying property taxes draws near. Gilman said that while property owners had set aside money to make property tax payments in July, some were expecting additional aid in the form of tax breaks, and may have entered into forbearance agreements with no requirement to escrow property taxes. Those tax breaks didn’t materialize — and with Congress failing to help states and cities balance their budgets, tax hikes may be on the horizon.

Distributing the rent relief money efficiently may also prove to be a challenge for states.

New York has struggled to pay out a previous allocation of $100 million in rent aid, and declined most applications for relief. After the state provided $40 million in rent vouchers, it slightly expanded the program two weeks before the federal government would have taken the remaining $60 million back. The deadline to use the new funding is September 2021, and states now have more time to use the initial federal funding from the March CARES Act.

The bill urges state and local governments to target the aid to those who need it the most. The program, in general, should provide relief only to households making less than 80 percent of the area median income or that can demonstrate housing instability or risk of homelessness. Renters can do this by showing an eviction notice or past-due utility bill, or by documenting unhealthful or unsafe living conditions.

Programs should prioritize aid for those who make less than 50 percent of area median income and have been unemployed for three months or more upon applying, the bill says.

The program is meant to pay down mounting rent debt, which could be as much as $70 billion nationwide, rather than to subsidize future rents. The funds can be used to pay up to 12 months of rental arrears, and up to three months of future rent. States can provide more aid, as long as they have the funds to do so, and have renters apply for it separately. If they do so, renters will need to re-document their income eligibility every three months.

Landlords also need not worry about tenants using rent aid for other expenses. The checks will be made out directly to property owners, unless they prefer otherwise. Property owners can also apply for the funds on behalf of tenants — as long as tenants are aware of the aid application and sign it.

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The post The nitty gritty on federal rent relief appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

Kushner eyes return to normalcy. Good luck.

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Jared Kushner (left); Charles Kushner (right); and Laurent Morali

When Kushner Companies paid $1.8 billion for 666 Fifth Avenue, a dated office tower that Brookfield’s Ric Clark once described as a “dinosaur,” it was supposed to cement Jared Kushner’s rise.

The Kushner family, much like the Trumps, had been on the periphery of New York’s real estate elite, eclipsed by big names like Stephen Ross and Gary Barnett.

The firm that Jared’s father, Charles Kushner, founded in the mid-1980s had stronger ties to New Jersey, where it often pooled money from investors for apartment building acquisitions, before officially moving to New York. And Charles, having been released from federal prison in 2006, hoped the trophy deal would redeem him in the eyes of the real estate world.

But during his ascent in New York, and later Washington, D.C., Jared has faced nonstop questions about 666 Fifth Avenue — a fiasco for Kushner from the start — and whether Brookfield Property Partners’ $1.28 billion investment in the tower was part of a quid pro quo for a U.S. foreign policy decision.

Ever since Jared was named a senior adviser to his father-in-law, President Donald Trump, political opponents have accused the Kushner family and associates of using the White House to further their business interests.

Four years in the Washington spotlight have included numerous inquiries into the firm’s business practices. The latest could be the most significant: a probe launched by congressional Democrats this month to determine whether Brookfield’s bailout of the beleaguered skyscraper in 2018 was linked to the lifting of a Saudi blockade of Qatar.

“Regarding 666, the fake narrative about Brookfield’s involvement being influenced by Qatar is too dumb to warrant a response or a comment,” Christopher Smith, Kushner’s general counsel, said in a statement.

The conclusion of Jared’s stint as White House senior adviser marks a transition that could mean less scrutiny for his family’s firm. Whether or not Jared returns to his father’s side after Jan. 20, 2021, the company is forging ahead on rental property investments in New York, New Jersey, South Florida, Memphis and smaller markets outside major metropolitan areas.

Laurent Morali, who took over from Jared as Kushner Companies’ president in the summer of 2016, told The Real Deal in an interview last month that the time to invest in an asset class is “when no one else wants to touch it” — which is true now of rent-stabilized buildings in New York City.

But as Kushner Companies shifts its focus back to buying and building apartments, the turmoil of the past four years may hamper the firm’s bid to refocus on the unglamorous but potentially lucrative world of multifamily investing.

“It just depends on how active Jared wants to stay in the political system,” said Marc Tropp, a senior managing director of the brokerage firm Eastern Union Funding. “If he wants to be a player in politics, he’s going to bring more scrutiny on the company.”

Bread and butter

While Kushner Companies has made headlines with 666 Fifth, most of its holdings are low-profile.

The company has found the most consistent success in buying older, garden-style apartments and urban rental properties where it can rehab units and raise rents — a tried-and-true real estate strategy.

But even that has brought controversy with city and state officials and tenant groups often accusing the company of foul play.

Kushner Companies’ multifamily assets are largely outside of the five boroughs with the majority still in New Jersey, though the firm declined to provide details of the full scope of its portfolio.

According to its website, the company owns 17,000 apartments in New York, New Jersey, Maryland, Virginia and Tennessee. The Kushner family controls another 2,100 units in the East Village, Greenwich Village, Soho, the West Village, Brooklyn Heights and Williamsburg, as well as Northern Liberties, in Philadelphia.

Kushner Companies’ relatively small footprint in the city could change, however. “Right now, it’s a great time to look at entering the New York City market, if you’re not [already] in the market,” Morali said. “I’d love to expand our presence there, no question.”

Morali explained that buyers and sellers are still struggling to price rent-stabilized multifamily assets in New York following a rent law overhaul last year. But opportunities might arise to score assets at a significant discount.

In the meantime, the firm is also looking to acquire more apartments in suburban areas seeing a pandemic-induced surge of interest from investors and renters.

Acquisitions outside of dense urban areas could draw less scrutiny from politicians and tenant watchdog groups. Aaron Carr’s Housing Rights Initiative, for instance, has been investigating Kushner Companies’ activities in New York City for years, producing a string of lawsuits alleging the company has illegally evicted tenants and inflated rents at its buildings.

But flying under the radar anywhere figures to be a challenge for Kushner Companies, especially with Jared’s father-in-law plotting to run for president again in 2024 if he cannot overturn the election results.

Even outside of New York City — a liberal stronghold where Democrats know certain investigations will appeal to voters — Kushner Companies has drawn scrutiny.

In October 2019, Maryland Attorney General Brian Frosh sued Westminster Management, the property management entity owned by Kushner Companies, for “unfair or deceptive” rental practices. (Jared Kushner received $1.65 million in income from Westminster in 2019, White House ethics filings show.)

The lawsuit came after a bombshell investigation by ProPublica into conditions at the apartments.

In an interview, Frosh told the Baltimore Sun that the landlord was “cheating tenants before, during and after their tenancy” and that there were hundreds of thousands of Consumer Protection Act violations. At the time, Morali called the charges “bogus.”

“Regarding the Maryland lawsuit, the case has been tried in court, and the final judgment rendered, which we look forward to, will speak for itself,” Kushner’s general counsel wrote in a statement.

In December, Kushner Companies listed 10 multifamily apartments in the Baltimore area for $800 million, a move that Morali said was unrelated to the Maryland charges but rather was prompted by the assets having reached their investment horizon.

Political punching bag

Three months before his re-election in 2018, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo launched an investigation of alleged tenant harassment by Kushner Companies at the 338-unit Austin Nichols House in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

That came a day after tenants at the building filed a $10 million lawsuit alleging the company drove rent-stabilized residents out of their homes with construction harassment — a common complaint of rent-stabilized tenants at the time. (Landlords’ incentive to create vacancies has since been significantly reduced by the new rent law.)

Announcing the investigation, state officials touted Cuomo’s “zero tolerance” for tenant harassment. At the time, a Kushner Companies spokesperson called the investigation baseless, saying the company was being targeted for political reasons.

666 Fifth Avenue

Asked this month about the investigation, Jonathan Sterne, a spokesperson for Cuomo, said he had no knowledge of it. He did not respond to subsequent inquiries on its status.

Kushner Companies has faced a stream of similar investigations and lawsuits in recent years — and its political opponents haven’t let up since Trump lost to Joe Biden.

On Dec. 9, Sen. Ron Wyden of Oregon and Rep. Joaquin Castro launched a probe into the 666 Fifth Avenue transaction, a deal which shocked the real estate world.

Kushner Companies purchased the office tower for $1.8 billion — a record high for a single office building in the U.S. — in 2007, taking out debt for all but $50 million. A decade later, the 1950s-era property was 30 percent empty and not producing enough income to cover the debt service.

Months before a $1.4 billion debt payment was due, Brookfield saved the Kushners from a financial catastrophe by buying the ground lease for $1.28 billion and prepaying nearly a century in rent.

A month before the deal closed, the Trump administration supported lifting diplomatic and economic restrictions on Qatar. The Persian Gulf country’s sovereign wealth fund was the second-largest shareholder in the Brookfield entity that financed the 666 Fifth Avenue deal.

“This sequence of events, especially the stunning reversal in U.S. policy towards Qatar, raises serious questions about what role Jared Kushner — and the financial interests of his family — may have played in influencing U.S. foreign policy regarding the blockade,” the lawmakers wrote.

Return of the Jared?

While Kushner Companies copes with controversies, inquiries and investigations, sources close to the firm expect it to seek a lower profile as it returns to its roots as a multifamily landlord.

But the success of that effort will depend on how much political blowback continues to plague Jared.

Several industry sources said they expect him to return to a larger role at the firm, from which he never completely divested. Jared and his father enjoy working together and think much alike, according to sources who know them.

The company’s reversion to multifamily is well timed. Outside of New York City, the asset class has become increasingly sought after during a turbulent period for its consistency and dependability. Renters, by and large, have continued to pay each month, even if by credit card, or by skimping on other expenses. That’s good news for landlords like Kushner, and investors have taken note.

Morali underscored the interest that investors from around the world have in multifamily assets, which many consider to be a port in the storm.

“The large global asset allocators that need to deploy money in real estate — they’re looking to deploy it into the safe haven that is multifamily,” he said, adding that low interest rates bolster returns for multifamily, creating a “double-whammy” effect.

In the upcoming years, “you’re going to see multifamily keeping its attractiveness compared to the other asset classes,” he predicted.

The company has also enjoyed attractive financing from Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored entity that securitizes mortgages, scoring an $800 million loan package with unusually good terms for its Maryland acquisition.

Likewise, major banks may not be deterred by Kushner Companies’ controversies. Although lenders are typically averse to reputational risk, some banks will continue to finance acquisitions as long as the deals pencil out. Kushner Companies knows that well, having had success getting loans after its patriarch went to prison.

But Trump’s controversial presidency has made the Kushner name a lightning rod and headaches a certainty. Asher Abehsera, who previously partnered with Kushner Companies, has faced community opposition to an investment although Kushner Companies is not involved, Business Insider reported this month.

It could be, though, that negative press starts to lose its effect post-Trump and becomes relatively inconsequential for the Kushners and those who do business with them. David Eyzenberg, president of New York City investment bank Eyzenberg and Company, said that any “initial chilling effect” stemming from the investigations will likely ease eventually.

One prominent multifamily player was inclined to agree.

“Kushner has really laid themselves on the table, for good and for bad,” said the landlord, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “They’ve had so many bad headlines, one more can’t hurt.”

The post Kushner eyes return to normalcy. Good luck. appeared first on The Real Deal Los Angeles.

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