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PE firm bets on curtain wall maker behind One Vanderbilt, Central Park Tower

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 04:00 PM PDT

Despite the ongoing uncertainty surrounding office space demand, a Connecticut-based private equity firm is betting on a company that specializes in cladding massive commercial towers. Atlas Holdings announced Wednesday that it acquired Italy-based Permasteelisa Group from Tokyo-based Lixil Group. Permasteelisa, which designs, manufactures and installs building curtain walls, has worked with some of New York City’s biggest developers — most recently completing the glazed aluminum exterior of SL Green Realty’s One Vanderbilt. The company is

Rent law challenge dismissed; battle may go to higher court

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 03:30 PM PDT

A judge ruled that the government has the power to make laws that hurt real estate values, in a decision that dismissed challenges to last year’s rent reforms and paves the way for the fight to head to a higher court. In a decision filed Wednesday in New York’s Eastern District Court, Judge Eric Komitee wrote that legal precedence supports the government’s right to pass rent regulations — even if those regulations lead to a

Oceanwide Center sale in San Francisco delayed 3 more months

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 02:00 PM PDT

Stop me if you’ve heard this one before: Chinese developer Oceanwide Holdings has pushed back the deadline for the sale of its flagship San Francisco mixed-use project by three months, citing coronavirus-related delays. Due diligence for the sale of Oceanwide Center was to be completed by today, Sept. 30, under the developer’s prior agreement with buyer Hony Capital. But the parties have consented to postpone that deadline to Dec. 31, Oceanwide disclosed Tuesday on the

JPMorgan wants to invest $700M building rentals in Sun Belt states

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 01:30 PM PDT

Wall Street landlords aren’t going anywhere — except maybe down South. The asset management arm of JPMorgan Chase wants to raise a $700 million fund focused on developing single-family and multifamily rental properties in Sun Belt cities, Bloomberg reported, citing an investor presentation. The financial giant is in talks with investors who may be overexposed to investments in gateway markets such as New York City and San Francisco. The fund would target developments in Atlanta;

Real estate crowdfunding guru Grant Cardone misled investors, lawsuit charges

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 11:30 AM PDT

Real estate crowdfunding guru Grant Cardone is facing allegations that he’s misled thousands of investors across the country by falsely promising them annual returns of at least 15 percent and other incentives that never materialized. Fresh off their acquisition of a waterfront Fort Lauderdale apartment complex, Cardone and his Aventura, Florida-based firm Cardone Capital were accused of violating federal securities laws in a suit filed in federal court in Los Angeles earlier this month. The

Biden and Harris’ income tax filings shine light on their real estate holdings

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 10:45 AM PDT

Joe Biden and Kamala Harris lost the ability to deduct tens of thousands of dollars in real estate taxes from their federal income taxes last year as a result of President Donald Trump’s 2017 tax code overhaul. The Democratic presidential nominee and his running mate released their personal income taxes Tuesday evening, just ahead of the first debate between Biden and Trump, who has refused to release his taxes. On Sunday, the New York Times

ACLU accuses Missouri courts of violating federal eviction ban

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 10:15 AM PDT

The American Civil Liberties Union filed a federal lawsuit on behalf of Kansas City, Missouri, tenants, alleging that courts in that state violated the federal eviction ban. The lawsuit, filed Wednesday morning in the U.S. District Court of Missouri’s Western Division, alleges that courts in Jackson County have ignored the Centers for Disease Control’s directive that bans taking actions to remove eligible tenants from their homes. Kansas City landlords have continued to file evictions for

Mallspats: Unibail-Rodamco sues LA County over retail closures

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 10:00 AM PDT

Well, that escalated fast. Two weeks after sending a letter urging Los Angeles County to reopen its indoor malls, Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield filed a federal lawsuit on Monday over the months-long shutdown. In a 46-page lawsuit that features 13 named plaintiffs and seeks class action status, the French-based mall operator called the county “perverse” in keeping malls closed “without offering a single valid, science, or health-based reason for their actions.” “The county and its officials have overtly

EDC’s $58M in Times Square rent mostly sunk into ferries

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 09:30 AM PDT

The Economic Development Corporation used to send the city coffers tens of millions of dollars in rent revenue from its Times Square real estate holdings. Now EDC spends almost all of it to operate the NYC Ferry system, The City reported. The city’s West 42nd Street properties brought in nearly $58 million in rent last year, slightly more than the $53 million a year EDC shells out to prop up ferry operations. That excludes the

Landlords eye taking cut of retailers’ online sales as rent

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 09:00 AM PDT

Landlords are familiar with percentage rent — taking a portion of retail tenants’ in-store sales — but now, some are thinking of bringing online sales into the mix. As shopping habits shift towards the digital, some property owners think demanding a portion of online sales is not only fair but might be necessary. However, with little precedent set, it may be difficult, according to the Wall Street Journal. The increased interest comes as Covid causes

Bloomberg construction director pleads guilty to tax fraud

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 08:15 AM PDT

Bribes are taxable income, as a former Bloomberg construction director was reminded when he pleaded guilty to tax fraud yesterday. Anthony Guzzone, who worked as director of global construction at Bloomberg from 2010 to 2017, took part in a scheme to receive bribes from subcontractors in exchange for promising them construction contracts and subcontracts on Bloomberg projects, Crain’s reported. On Tuesday he admitted to evading taxes on more than $1.45 million in bribes. “Bribery and

Prodigy Network’s AKA Wall Street hotel closes permanently

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 07:30 AM PDT

AKA Wall Street, an extended-stay hotel once marketed by crowdfunding platform Prodigy Network as a promising investment opportunity, has closed its doors for good. The hotel at 84 William Street shut on Aug. 24, according to a notice filed this week with the Department of Labor. A total of 31 employees are affected. The closure marks another step in the slow unraveling of Prodigy, which has been marred by months of financial problems and lawsuits

Sotheby’s gets $483M loan for its UES headquarters

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 06:45 AM PDT

Sotheby’s auction house is getting new financing on its home. Barclays just closed on a $483 million, five-year, floating-rate loan for Sotheby’s headquarters, 1334 York Avenue on the Upper East Side, according to Commercial Observer. The 10-story 506,000-square-foot building has housed Sotheby’s since 1980. The financing retires previous debt on the asset, including a $252 million BNP Paribas loan from October 2019. The building has seen some redevelopment since, including a February 2019 $55 million

Here’s what tenants are paying at Florida’s largest mall

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 06:15 AM PDT

Aventura Mall has stood out as a success story in a mall landscape battered by competition from e-commerce and shifting consumer preferences. The 37-year-old mall — the largest in Florida — was recently ranked as the second most-visited shopping center in the country with more than 28 million annual visitors, including a notable concentration of foreign shoppers from South America, Mexico and Europe. The pandemic has complicated things, of course. The mall shut down during

Common names Alicia Glen to board

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 05:45 AM PDT

Fresh off a $50 million funding round, co-living startup Common has named former New York City housing czar Alicia Glen to its board of directors. The move comes as the company, an early evangelist of shared housing for millennials, looks to increase its footprint in affordable and workforce housing. “It’s probably the fastest-growing segment of Common today,” said CEO Brad Hargreaves. Given the frequency of Common’s work with local governments, he said the company was

“25% is a starting point”: Indoor dining returns to NYC today

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 05:00 AM PDT

IGC Hospitality, which runs the Refinery Rooftop in Midtown and Bungalow Rockaway in Queens, had 14 restaurants open before the pandemic. Now it has four, two of which are on Long Island. Even though a limited version of indoor dining will begin Wednesday in New York City, the restaurant group has no plans to reopen its remaining 10 establishments. “Twenty-five percent isn’t sufficient enough to relaunch,” said managing partner Terence Tubridy. “We’re being choked to

After Industry City, is Ulurp dead?

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 04:30 AM PDT

When the owners of Industry City embarked on the seven-month rezoning process, they lacked what developers treasure most: certainty. Those who enter New York City’s Uniform Land Use Review Procedure, or Ulurp, typically do so confident that their project will ultimately be approved: They have received the blessing of the mayor and at least a positive sign from the local City Council member, the gatekeeper for land-use decisions. But Industry City’s owners, promising to invest

Mortgage applications drop despite posting annual growth

Posted: 30 Sep 2020 04:00 AM PDT

Mortgage applications fell last week, mostly due to a decline in homeowners seeking refinancing. The Mortgage Bankers Association’s weekly refinance index dropped 7 percent seasonally adjusted for the week ending Sept. 25. The metric tracks the volume of refinancing applications filed each week across the country. Joel Kan, MBA’s head of industry forecasting, attributed the drop to lenders “working through operational challenges, ultimately limiting the number of applications they are able to accept,” he said