May 6, 2024
Lincoln Property defaults on Newport Beach office loan – Robert Khodadadian

Lincoln Property defaults on Newport Beach office loan – Robert Khodadadian

When Lincoln Property Company bought 1500 Quail Street in Newport Beach in 2018, the company lauded the office building as a “trophy asset,” a “rare opportunity” and a property with “very stable cash flow.” 

Circumstances have changed. 

Lincoln Property defaulted on a $23.3 million loan tied to the 90,000-square-foot building last month, according to a notice of default filed with Orange County. The firm did not respond to a request for comment before publication. 

The Dallas-headquartered commercial landlord bought the building with an unnamed institutional investor in 2018, paying $32 million, according to property records and an announcement at the time. The firm used the loan from Capital One for the acquisition, and then extended the debt twice. 

Lincoln Property currently owes $20.9 million under the mortgage, according to the notice of default. Capital One can schedule a foreclosure on the building no earlier than June 26, in accordance with California law. 

At 1500 Quail Street, the building is 83 percent leased, down from 90 percent when Lincoln bought the property

Many Orange County office buildings have fallen victim to the same factors suppressing office demand — from both tenants and investors — across the country. Remote work has led to companies shrinking footprint and lenders have become hesitant to make loans on office buildings. Rising interest rates have also hurt borrowers with floating-rate loans, as their monthly mortgage payments have skyrocketed. 

Last month, Greenlaw and Walton Street lost an entirely empty, 350,000-square-foot building at 1 City Boulevard West in Orange, signing over the property to TPG Real Estate Finance Trust in a deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, after defaulting on a $64 million loan.

The post Lincoln Property defaults on Newport Beach office loan appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Default, Orange County 

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Amazon.com leases two 1M sf warehouses in the Inland Empire – Robert Khodadadian

Amazon.com leases two 1M sf warehouses in the Inland Empire – Robert Khodadadian

Amazon.com has inked deals for two distribution warehouses of 1 million square feet each in the Inland Empire, where vacancy has ticked up in the top industrial market in the nation.

The Seattle-based e-commerce giant last quarter leased one warehouse at 4000 South Hamner Avenue in Ontario and another at 6120 Clinker Drive in Jurupa Valley, the Commercial Observer reported, citing a report from Savills.

The owner of the new Amazon warehouse in Ontario is Dermody Properties, based in Reno. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

The property is not far from three other large Amazon distribution and fulfillment centers in one of the region’s densest warehousing submarkets near Ontario International Airport and Ontario Ranch.

The owners of the new warehouse at the Agua Mansa Commerce Park in Jurupa Valley are Newport Beach-based CT Realty and PGIM Real Estate, based in New Jersey. Terms of that deal were also not disclosed.

The two new Amazon leases were among the five tenant contracts signed for more than 1 million square feet in the first quarter in the Inland Empire, which has experienced a weakening market, according to the Observer.

The industrial vacancy in the IE rose 1 percent to 7.8 percent from the prior quarter, and increased 4.9 percent from the previous year.

Even with the large Amazon leases, leasing activity dropped by 500,000 square feet, according to Savills.

Available sublease space jumped by 33.3 percent to more than 20.3 million square feet — the highest amount on record. Vacancy is expected to continue to increase this year, the report said.

In January, Denmark-based Maersk leased a 1.2 million-square-foot distribution warehouse along the 15 Freeway at 8140 Caliente Road, in Hesperia, on the edge of the Inland Empire.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Maersk leases 1.2M sf distribution warehouse in the Inland Empire

Los Angeles

EQT Exeter spends $197M to buy Fontana warehouse from Manulife

Los Angeles

Fontana nixes trio of warehouses, citing truck traffic near schools

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  Uncategorized 

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Jamison clears hurdle for 23-story apartment towers in LA’s Koreatown – Robert Khodadadian

Jamison clears hurdle for 23-story apartment towers in LA’s Koreatown – Robert Khodadadian

Jamison Services has moved ahead with plans to build two 23-story apartment buildings in Koreatown.

The Koreatown-based developer led by Jaime Lee won approval from the Los Angeles Planning Commission to construct the dual highrises with 760 apartments at 3600 Wilshire Boulevard, Urbanize Los Angeles reported. They would replace a parking garage behind an office tower.

The project, proposed eight years ago, calls for two buildings containing 760 studio, one- and two-bedroom apartments on the north side of 7th Street, between Harvard Boulevard and Kingsley Drive. 

The buildings would contain 6,400 square feet of ground-floor shops, and parking for nearly 1,300 cars.

The side-by-side towers, designed by Chicago-based Perkins&Will, would each rise 269 feet, their floor-to-ceiling glass windows and doors covered by rows of external balconies, according to a rendering. 

Each building would have a rooftop pool, with a shared fitness center and a landscaped plaza with pools down below.

Construction would take two years, but a ground-breaking date was not disclosed.

The proposed apartments look like another Jamison Services project down the street at 3470 Wilshire Boulevard, where another parking garage behind an office tower would be replaced by residential highrises.

Jamison has also built a pair of apartment towers along the north side of the street at 3545 Wilshire, and is now building a hotel across Harvard Boulevard from the 3600 Wilshire site, according to Urbanize.

Jamison Services, founded in 2013, is a unit of Jamison Properties. It has amassed more than $3 billion worth of real estate, according to Lee’s LinkedIn page. It owns 5,500 apartments in Los Angeles, with 11,000 more in the pipeline.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Jamison plans twin buildings on Wilshire Boulevard

Jamison picks LA courthouse for next office-home conversion

Los Angeles

Jaime Lee is not your father’s real estate executive

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  Uncategorized 

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HED: Supreme Court rules builders can challenge California impact fees – Robert Khodadadian

HED: Supreme Court rules builders can challenge California impact fees – Robert Khodadadian

The U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that California developers and home builders may challenge impact fees imposed by cities and counties for roads, bridges and more.

The justices said the fees may be unconstitutional if builders and developers are forced to pay an unfair share of the cost of public projects, the Los Angeles Times reported.

In the landmark case, a 72-year-old retiree from Placerville, George Sheetz, took on El Dorado County over a $23,420 building fee, raising questions about the justification of “impact fees” imposed on new construction projects.

The outcome of the case could have major repercussions for local government budgets and housing markets, especially in the Golden State. 

But the justices didn’t set a rule for deciding when such fees become unfair and unconstitutional.

Developers contended that limiting California’s high fees for new construction would lead to more affordable housing. California state courts had blocked such claims.  

But the 9-0 Supreme Court decision opened the door for such challenges. The justices revived a constitutional claim brought by Sheetz, who put a manufactured home on a small lot and was told he would have to pay the $23,420 “traffic mitigation fee.”

Justices Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson said they joined the court’s opinion in Sheetz vs. El Dorado County because it was limited to allowing such challenges.

In a separate opinion, Justice Brett Kavanaugh said he saw merit to the “common government practice of imposing permit conditions, such as impact fees, on new development through reasonable formulas or schedules that assess the impact of classes of development rather than the impact of specific parcels of property.”

State and county attorneys made just that argument. They said it was fairer to impose a development fee on all the lots in an area.

But the justices nonetheless ruled that homeowners or developers may sue to challenge these fees as an unconstitutional taking of their private property

The Pacific Legal Foundation in Sacramento, which supported Sheetz, hailed the ruling as a significant victory for property rights.

The case will now go back to the California courts.

Attorney Paul Beard, who represented Sheetz, said the “fee must be set aside as an unconstitutional taking, because the county has failed to show — and cannot show — that the fee is sufficiently related and proportionate to the traffic impacts of Mr. Sheetz’s modest home.” 

The debate over development fees is especially relevant in California as local governments have increasingly relied on the charges to finance parks, streets, schools and other infrastructure and services in the decades after the passage of Proposition 13 in 1978 limited property tax revenues, according to the Times.

The fees have come under scrutiny as developers and others have blamed them for driving up the cost of housing and for wide disparities between cities.

A 2018 study by UC Berkeley’s Terner Center for Housing Innovation found that fees for new single-family homes in California range from $21,000 to $157,000 per home, accounting for 6 to 18 percent of the price of a typical home, depending on the location.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Supreme Court deliberates question of California impact fees

San Francisco

Fees must shrink if SF wants new housing, developers say

Los Angeles

Rising housing development costs bad news for LA’s housing crunch: report

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  Uncategorized 

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Decron sells Ventura County multifamily to AEW for $133M – Robert Khodadadian

Decron sells Ventura County multifamily to AEW for $133M – Robert Khodadadian

Decron Properties has sold an apartment complex in the Ventura County city of Moorpark for $133 million, as it continues offloading some of its Greater Los Angeles assets. 

AEW Capital Management bought the 376-unit complex, named Ranch at Moorpark at 51 Majestic Court, according to an announcement from Decron on Thursday. The deal came to about $354,000 per unit

It’s unclear how AEW financed the acquisition and the deed has not yet been recorded with the county. The firm did not respond to a request for comment. 

Decron, which is based in Los Angeles, bought the property for $84 million in 2013, according to property records, or about $224,500 per unit. The firm renovated every apartment, plus common areas, and expanded parking. 

Over the last six months, Decron has worked to sell off assets in and around Los Angeles, with plans to take those proceeds and put them to work in other markets. 

“We’re looking at markets like San Diego, where we recently made a substantial acquisition, and places like Phoenix and Seattle where we already have created a significant portfolio,” Decron CEO David Nagel said in a statement. 

In December and January, Decron sold two properties in the city of L.A. and two more in Thousand Oaks for a combined $212 million, Nagel told TRD earlier this year. All in all, the company’s cashouts sum to a total $345 million over the last six months. 

In L.A., Nagel said Decron was particularly “disincentivized” to stay

“Once Measure ULA went through, it really disincentivized us to stay,” he said. “And what’s the next thing that’s going to happen that’s going to hurt us and prevent us from reinvesting in our properties as we would like to?” 

Read more

AEW Capital seeks $350M for Grand Central dev site

Los Angeles

AEW Capital trades Hollywood apartment complex for $48M 

Los Angeles

Decron cashes out of LA market by selling apartments for $212M 

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  Uncategorized, Investment Sales, LA Multifamily, Ventura County 

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HOA at Ocean Towers in Santa Monica stole $5.7M, prosecutors say – Robert Khodadadian

HOA at Ocean Towers in Santa Monica stole $5.7M, prosecutors say – Robert Khodadadian

Views from the 19-story twin Ocean Towers above the beach in Santa Monica are stellar. But a look into management at the 317-unit luxury co-op is as dark as a Hollywood film noir.

A decade-long saga of alleged fraud and manipulation has unfolded at the Ocean Towers condo complex at 201 Ocean Boulevard, the Los Angeles Times reported in a 4,300-word expose.

A web of deceit involves former figures within its homeowners association, including John Spahi, his son Omar, former HOA President Joseph Orlando, and his late wife, Dorothy.

Residents of Ocean Towers, built in 1971, had long harbored suspicions about John Spahi’s abuse of power within the HOA board. 

Allegations included manipulating board elections, draining HOA accounts for personal legal battles and orchestrating inside deals with valuable real estate

The scale of the alleged grift came to light when a grand jury indicted the Spahis and Orlandos on 119 charges, including grand theft, identity theft and money laundering, totaling $5.7 million in stolen funds, according to Los Angeles County prosecutors and the state Attorney General’s office.

The fraud allegedly involved billing the HOA for construction projects that were never completed by a company named Progressive, in the name of an unwitting owner.

Lawsuits and investigations revealed a complex scheme of financial maneuvering, including transferring units among relatives and partners and taking out massive loans without homeowner approval.

Ocean Towers residents faced intimidation tactics, lawsuits and eviction threats when challenging the Spahis and Orlandos. 

Despite initial resistance, some residents, led by Michael Reach and attorney Jeffrey Wittenberg, took legal action against the entrenched board. Eventually, a court-appointed receiver ousted the old guard, revealing the dire financial straits of Ocean Towers and the extent of the alleged embezzlement.

As the legal battles continue, the residents looks toward recovery under new management. 

However, the repercussions of the fraud may linger, with residents burdened by high HOA fees and debt incurred during the Spahi era. 

Meanwhile, John Spahi awaits trial at an unscheduled date, while facing scrutiny from residents who question how he has evaded accountability for years of alleged misconduct.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Florida HOA manager accused of $25K grift

Long Island attorney accused of stealing $700K from real estate clients

“Embarrassed” Tavistock founder Joe Lewis avoids prison time

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  Uncategorized, embezzlement 

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Stockdale sues Mark Weinstein’s MJW over Santa Monica hotel ground lease – Robert Khodadadian

Stockdale sues Mark Weinstein’s MJW over Santa Monica hotel ground lease – Robert Khodadadian

Stockdale Capital Partners has started a legal battle over the value of the ground beneath the Le Merigot hotel, just steps away from the ocean in Santa Monica.

The investment firm, which owns the leasehold interest in the property, is suing MJW Investments, which owns the ground under the property, for allegedly artificially driving up the value of Le Merigot in order to charge higher rents to Stockdale, according to Los Angeles Superior Court filings. 

Stockdale acquired the lease in the 175-key hotel, located at 1740 Ocean Avenue, in 2021. The firm paid around $75 million and did not seek financing to do so, TRD reported at the time.  

The lease which Stockdale acquired dates back to 1987, according to the lawsuit. Under the agreement, the leaseholder would pay a fixed rate for 23 years. Starting in 2010, the rent would reset every five years, based on a fair market value appraisal. 

In 2020, the rent was scheduled to be reset. 

Instead of hiring an “independent appraiser,” Stockdale alleges MJW “knowingly hired an appraiser it had used before in order to orchestrate an inflated value of the property,” according to Stockdale’s complaint. 

MJW, a West L.A.-based investment firm run by Mark Weinstein, did not respond to a request for comment. The company has bought more than a $1 billion worth of real estate, according to its website, and developed more, including the 800,000-square-foot redevelopment of Santee Village in L.A.’s Fashion District. 

MJW allegedly gave the appraiser a commissioned plan for 88 condo units on the site of Le Merigot, even though zoning regulations at the time did not allow for the plan. 

MJW “nonetheless told the appraisers to value the property as if this use were legally permitted — when in actuality it was not,” according to the complaint. 

Stockdale claims because the valuation involved a hypothetical development, the land under the hotel was appraised at $62.2 million in November 2020, up from $35.9 million in 2019. Stockdale also did not respond to a request for comment.

Under the lease, Stockdale has to pay either 9 percent of the fair market value of the land or the annual base rental for the prior lease year, whichever is greater. 

“This enormous increase occurred at the height of the COVID pandemic when real estate valuations were plummeting globally, and is antithetical to what a ‘willing,’ ‘prudent’ and

‘knowledgeable’ buyer would have paid for the property in 2020,” according to the complaint. 

Stockdale has asked the court “declare that the 2020 appraisal process is null and void,” and that MJW pay back any excess rent once a new fair market value appraisal is conducted. 

The post Stockdale sues Mark Weinstein’s MJW over Santa Monica hotel ground lease appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, LA Hotel Market, Lawsuit

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LA to consider ban for criminal checks on housing applications – Robert Khodadadian

LA to consider ban for criminal checks on housing applications – Robert Khodadadian

The Los Angeles City Council will consider whether to bar landlords from snooping into potential renters’ criminal past and using their records to deny them housing.

The council voted 11-0 to reactivate a motion seeking to establish a “fair chance” housing ordinance that would prohibit property owners from asking about an applicant’s criminal history, then acting on it, Fox11 Los Angeles and City News Service reported.

Council President Paul Krekorian and Councilman Curren Price recused themselves, while Councilwomen Katy Yaroslavsky and Monica Rodriguez were absent.

The motion will head to the council’s Housing and Homelessness Committee for consideration.

The proposed ordinance would “prohibit landlords from, at any time or by any means, whether direct or indirect, inquire about an applicant’s criminal history or requiring an applicant to disclose criminal history” when an applicant is applying for an apartment or other type of housing.

The proposed city law would also prevent landlords from using such information to deny an applicant. Prospective renters would have a “private right of action,” with a landlord facing fines for discriminating  based on a tenant’s record.

Such cities as Oakland and Berkeley have already enacted similar housing laws. The ordinances have detailed exceptions for when the law shouldn’t apply — such as when a person applies to rent owner-occupied units or shared living arrangements.

The fair chance motion was originally introduced by Councilmembers Nithya Raman, Marqueece Harris-Dawson and Mike Bonin. It’s not clear why it stalled.

They said that Angelenos with past criminal histories often face insurmountable barriers to housing and are routinely screened out when applying to rent housing because of criminal background checks.

“We must follow the lead of cities like Oakland, Berkeley and Seattle and prohibit the use of criminal background checks when evaluating rental applications for housing,” the motion states.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Criminal history bill overhauled after defeat by landlords

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  Uncategorized, criminal records, fair chance housing, Legislation 

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Beverly Hills brokers make sense of NAR settlement – Robert Khodadadian

Beverly Hills brokers make sense of NAR settlement – Robert Khodadadian

A home nestled high up in the zigzags of sprawling Beverly Hills estates played backdrop last week for some of the area’s top agents to debate, hypothesize and agonize over the latest seismic developments around residential real estate

Broker Zach Goldsmith of The Agency Beverly Hills was the host of the panel featuring luxury residential brokers Josh Flagg, Branden and Rayni Williams, and Aaron Kirman, which evolved into an agitated, and at times unruly, discussion on the impact of National Association of Realtors settlement on the business of being a broker

Held at the home of Andrew Shanfeld, who runs real estate investment firm Carolwood, the event attracted around 40 people. The familiar faces in the front row included Parker Beatty, an agent at Compass, along with Farrah Britanny and Ben Belack, both brokers at The Agency and cast members of the Netflix series “Buying Beverly Hills.” 

The event came days after NAR agreed to settle antitrust lawsuits over broker commissions in a deal that will cost the organization $418 million in damages to resolve claims from home sellers — and some key rule changes that open buyer brokers’ earnings up to negotiation. 

“How are we going to get paid?”

To paraphrase Leo Tolstoy, happy brokers are all alike, but every unhappy broker is unhappy in their own way. 

The rule changes as specified in the settlement agreement breaks open what was previously an assumed cost for sellers to compensate buyer brokers. 

The event hit on much of the uncertainty around what the rules, slated to take effect in July, will mean in practice for day-to-day operations like signing the buyer’s contracts, hosting open houses and other logistics to turn a profit in a new environment.

“How are we going to prove our worth as buyer’s agents?” asked Kirman. “I see that much like listing agents, when we go to list a house, we have to prove our worth. It’s going to be the same with buyers now — it’s not going to be a free-for-all.“

Most who spoke at the event projected the fallout from the NAR settlement would be profound, but disagreed about what the new rules will mean for their operations, how to adjust their business models and long-term impacts on the industry. 

The federal government is going to want buyers to have representation. It’s a good thing, there’s no way around that,” Kirman noted. “The question becomes, how are we going to get paid?”

The answer: buyer-broker agreements, according to Kirman. 

“This is going to be the new system,” Kirman said. “We didn’t have buyer-broker agreements that were used very often; soon they are going to be used very often — the buyers are going to need to have an advocate on their side.”

Kirman is already working to implement the agreement at his firm. But beyond agreeing that brokers are likely on the edge of contending with a new reality to conduct daily business, some questions remained about the new logistics involved in working with brokers. 

“I’m confused about the buyer’s contract. I think it’s super fucked,” said Sharona Alperin, an agent at Sotheby’s International Realty specializing in Beverly Hills. She added it was “just kind of fucking degrading to ask from your buyers.”

A wave of change crashing on residential real estate 

Branden Williams described the NAR settlement as a part of a profound existential threat to the real estate industry, alongside the Measure ULA transfer taxes, demographic shifts, inflation and corporations fleeing California.  

“Now everybody’s getting squeezed every which way: Attorneys have always thought we made too much money, business managers — they’re pissed,” he said. 

At one point, he compared the new plight of the real estate brokers to what happened to stockbrokers’ compensation with the arrival of electronic trading platforms like E-Trade. His list of complaints wasn’t limited to the NAR settlement; it also included the increasing minimum wage and inevitable arrival of robots.

Some brokers agreed with many of his concerns, even the most seemingly alarmist parts of his forecast. 

On the other end of the spectrum was Flagg, who said he did not anticipate dramatic changes to his business and doesn’t planning on lowering his commission fees.

The changes to some of the longest-held practices in the industry come amid a challenging few years for the residential market for brokers across the country. Logistics and new agreements aside, one resounding takeaway is the shifts, on top of already tight market conditions, will likely spell more competition for the industry. 

The fittest will survive and do great, and a lot of people will probably be eliminated from the business,” Kirman said.

Read more

“Everything changes now”: Here’s what NAR’s $418M settlement means for broker commissions 

San Francisco

Sales commissions to shrink after NAR ruling, agency heads say

The winners and losers in NAR’s historic settlement 

The post Beverly Hills brokers make sense of NAR settlement appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Beverly Hills, NAR, Residential 

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State Farm targets wealthy areas of LA for policy non-renewals – Robert Khodadadian

State Farm targets wealthy areas of LA for policy non-renewals – Robert Khodadadian

A flood of non-renewal notices for home insurance policies from State Farm will hit upscale neighborhoods from Calabasas to Bel-Air, while leaving others relatively unscathed.

Illinois-based State Farm General Insurance has released new details of its non-renewals announced last month for 30,000 property insurance and 42,000 commercial apartment policies across the state, KTLA5 reported, citing a new filing with the state.

The numbers suggest the insurance giant has taken aim at several high-priced ZIP Codes in Los Angeles, while sparing others.

State Farm, the state’s largest insurer in 2022, said the move would impact 2 percent of its total policies in California and was made to ensure “long-term sustainability.” 

The 42,000 apartment non-renewals represent a complete withdrawal from the commercial apartment market in California. The other 30,000 non-renewals would impact homeowners, rental dwellings and other property insurance policies, according to State Farm.

The new filing with the California Department of Insurance shows where the nonrenewals will be concentrated, with State Farm saying it wouldn’t renew policies “that present the most substantial wildfire or fire following earthquake hazards, or that are in areas of significant concentration.”

In areas such as the Hollywood Hills, Rolling Hills Estates and Duarte, less than 1 percent of policies won’t be renewed.

But in other areas, more than half of policyholders would be impacted.

In Brentwood’s 90049, State Farm won’t renew policies for 61.5 percent of its 2,114 policyholders, according to the filing. In Bel-Air’s 90077, the non-renewed policies rise to 67.4 percent, with Pacific Palisades’ 90272 hitting 69.4 percent, or 1,626 policyholders.

In Beverly Hills’ 90210, 46.1 percent of policyholders won’t be renewed, comparable to 46.9 percent of Malibu’s 90265.

San Fernando Valley communities were also impacted, including 60.4 percent of State Farm policyholders in Calabasas, 50.4 percent of those in Tarzana, and 40.1 percent in Encino, according to the filing.

Customers affected by the decision will retain coverage until their current contract is up. The company said those impacted will be notified between July 3 and Aug. 20.

“This decision was not made lightly and only after careful analysis of State Farm General’s financial health, which continues to be impacted by inflation, catastrophe exposure, reinsurance costs and the limitations of working within decades-old insurance regulations,”  the company said in a statement.

“State Farm General takes seriously our responsibility to maintain adequate claims-paying capacity for our customers and to comply with applicable financial solvency laws. It is necessary to take these actions now,” the company said.

The company also said it will continue working with the Department of Insurance, Gov. Gavin Newsom and other policymakers as they pursue reforms “to establish an environment in which insurance rates are better aligned with risk.”

In February, the state’s Department of Insurance announced proposals to reform California’s insurance regulations. The new proposal would allow insurance companies to switch from using historical data to catastrophe modeling, meaning companies would calculate projections of future risk when raising rates and pass on the cost of reinsurance to consumers.

The new changes are expected to take effect at the end of the year. 

Last year, State Farm announced it would stop accepting new insurance applications for all business and personal property in California. Since then, other insurance companies, including Allstate, have announced similar changes.

This comes as California’s property insurer of last resort told lawmakers that it’s financially unprepared to cover the costs of a major catastrophe in the state. The plan now faces $311 billion in potential losses, up from $50 billion six years ago, California FAIR Plan President Victoria Roach said in a state legislative hearing.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

State Farm will not renew 72K property policies in California

Los Angeles

Agents gauge State Farm’s exit from home insurance market

Los Angeles

Fire insurance in California to come at higher cost to homeowners

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Despite developer doubts, LA mayor wants to make ED1 permanent – Robert Khodadadian

Despite developer doubts, LA mayor wants to make ED1 permanent – Robert Khodadadian

In spite of developers’ concerns about the feasibility of Executive Directive 1, a program designed to speed up affordable housing construction, Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass is looking to make the order permanent. 

The L.A. City Planning Department is referring ED1 to two city council committees — the Planning and Land Use Management (PLUM) Committee and the Housing and Homelessness Committee — to set the policy in stone, according to the mayor’s office. If the committees approve the directive, it will be sent to the full city council for a final sign-off.

Bass first issued ED1 over a year ago, ordering the city to trim approval processes for affordable housing projects to 60 days and exempt the projects from lengthy environmental reviews. 

Some developers have been hesitant to take advantage of the program, arguing the math on these projects still doesn’t pencil.

The projects that exist are taking pretty aggressive stances on the rents they’ll achieve,” Jared Goldstein, an executive at Canfield Development in Sherman Oaks, said at a conference in February. “The rents that they’re inputting in their financial models are often the maximum Section 8 rents. That rent is greater than what the unit would lease for, in many cases, even as a market-rate unit with no restrictions.”

There is currently no set expiration date for the ordinance issued in December 2022. 

“Projects are being approved in a matter of weeks instead of six to nine months,” Clara Karger, the mayor’s press secretary, told TRD in an email. 

More than 14,000 units of affordable housing are proposed using ED1 and the city said it has seen an 85 percent increase in the annual number of affordable housing units proposed, according to the mayor’s office. 

But none of those projects have been built and developers have expressed concerns about how many of these projects will materialize.

“When you actually underwrite them with real numbers, then these things don’t pencil,” Adrian Berger, who runs acquisitions at Cypress Equity Investments, said at the same event in February.

This story has been corrected to reflect that L.A. City Planning Department referred ED1 to two city council committees.

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  Uncategorized, Affordable Housing, Development, Policy 

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Douglas Elliman to market Fairmont Residences for lease at Century Plaza – Robert Khodadadian

Douglas Elliman to market Fairmont Residences for lease at Century Plaza – Robert Khodadadian

Douglas Elliman has been tapped to market for lease the Fairmont Residences at the Reuben Brothers’ Century Plaza development in Century City. 

The 50 hotel-branded apartments will only be available for lease, with minimum stays of six months, according to an announcement from Century Plaza’s owners, the Reuben Brothers, and Douglas Elliman Development Marketing on Tuesday. 

Rents at the Fairmont are between $10,000 and $50,000 a month and renters will have access to the adjacent hotel’s amenities, plus a residents-only lounge, fitness center and wine storage room. 

The Reuben brothers, David and Simon, took over the Century Plaza project through foreclosure last year, acquiring the hotel, retail properties and a handful of condo units for about $1 billion, after the developer, Michael Rosenfeld, defaulted on senior and mezzanine loans. 

The apartments are located in the same building as the hotel, though residents have a private elevator. 

While Los Angeles has a handful of hotel-branded condos for sale, such as Michael Shvo’s Mandarin Oriental Residences in Beverly Hills, it’s rare for these buildings to only offer leases. 

Douglas Elliman has already done a “whisper friends-and-family campaign,” but is opening up leasing to the public this week, according to Cory Weiss at the brokerage, who is marketing the residences. 

“We’re seeing a lot of executives interested,” Weiss said, referring to high office rents and low vacancy for offices in Century City.

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Measure ULA challenge lands in federal appeals court – Robert Khodadadian

Measure ULA challenge lands in federal appeals court – Robert Khodadadian

Measure ULA is getting another day in court. 

Newcastle Courtyards, a group that has fought the measure over the last year, appealed a federal court ruling that dismissed a lawsuit seeking to abolish the City of Los Angeles’ tiered transfer taxes on commercial and residential sales above $5 million. 

The group filed a brief last week with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, asking the court to review and overturn the dismissal. 

In a paradigmatic case of class warfare and tyranny of the majority against the minority, on November 8, 2022, voters in the ULA Initiative, were misled by its sponsors,” Newcastle Courtyards said in its brief. 

Measure ULA was misrepresented to voters, Newcastle Courtyards argued to the Ninth Circuit, as taxes that only mansions would be subject to and real estate “millionaires and billionaires” would have to pay. The taxes add 4 percent on sales $5 million and over and 5.5 percent on sales $10 million and over. 

The imposition of the ‘tax’ on gross sales prices (rather than net profits) of real properties sold within Los Angeles furtively targeted all types of real estate — not just ‘mansions’ — including ‘mom and pop’ apartment buildings, the stores of small neighborhood merchants and even parking lots,” the group said in its brief. 

“This levy disregarded the financial circumstances of sellers, whether they were not billionaires or even millionaires, were financially strained, selling under distressed circumstances, selling at a loss, and/or lacked sufficient equity to even be able to pay the exorbitant ULA tax,” the brief added. 

Measure ULA, which went into effect a year ago, has been widely criticized by real estate industry players for freezing sales and disincentivizing investment in the city. After the so-called “mansion tax” went into effect, Newcastle Courtyards filed its lawsuit against the city, alongside the Howard Jarvis Taxpayers Association, which sued the city in state court. 

The city originally estimated the taxes would generate $900 million annually, all of which would be placed into a special fund for affordable housing development and other revenue for tenants. 

However, a year into the measure and the city has collected $181.6 million in revenues from the program — and nothing has been spent on development yet, according to data from the city controller.

The federal court that dismissed Newcastle’s case ruled that because ULA was a tax, it did not have the power to rule on it. Under federal law, lower federal courts cannot rule on state tax measures. 

Newcastle, however, is arguing Measure ULA is not a tax that goes towards the general fund of the city. 

It is a special fund for a special program,” Newcastle said in its brief. “The city has gotten along without this fund for over a hundred years and can continue to do so.”

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  Uncategorized, Breaking, Breaking News, Measure ULA 

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Alon Abady pays $17M for Beverly Hills home, puts it on rental market – Robert Khodadadian

Alon Abady pays $17M for Beverly Hills home, puts it on rental market – Robert Khodadadian

It took Alon Abady two days to try to recoup his investment after buying a Paul McLean-designed mansion in Beverly Hills for $17 million.

Within 48 hours of purchasing the 11,200-square-foot mansion at 1357 Laurel Way, the co-managing partner of locally based Waterfall Bridge Capital put it on the rental market for $125,000 a month, according to the Robb Report.

Abady, who sold several top-priced houses in the market during the last year including one to Justin Bieber, bought the five-bedroom, nine-bathroom home on March 25, for $1,514 per square foot, according to Zillow.

The sellers were conservationists Dan and Susan Gottlieb, who bought the contemporary hillside home in 2019 for $18 million, or $1,604 per square foot.

Almost immediately, Abady hoisted it onto the rental market.

The three-story, split-level house, completed in 2019, is clad in glass and stone, its interior sheathed in travertine and wood. A bridge entryway overlooks a lounge flanked by a living wall and pool surrounding a tree sculpture.

Highlights include a wet bar and game room, tiered movie theater, fitness studio with a sauna and a six-car garage. 

A formal living room has a linear fireplace, bar and walls of glass. A family room and dining area connect to a gourmet kitchen with dual islands and top appliances.

There’s also a glass-lined master bedroom with a fireside sitting area, walk-in closet and luxe bath with an oval soaking tub and large glass-encased shower. The bedroom and balcony have views overlooking Los Angeles and the Pacific Ocean.

The half-acre grounds include an infinity-edge pool with a spa and a sunken fire pit.

The listing was held by brokers Ernie Carswell of Douglas Elliman and Lea Porter of The Beverly Hills Estates. Brokers Branden Williams and Rayni Williams of Beverly Hills Estates represented the buyer. Rayni Williams now serves as the rental listing agent.

Last year, Abady flipped Simon Cowell’s former mansion at 717 North Palm for $33.6 million, in one of the priciest deals south of Sunset Boulevard. Abady paid $25 million for the property in 2020.

Abady also sold a Coachella Valley estate in The Madison Club to Justin Bieber and his wife Hailey for $16.6 million, according to Robb. Abady paid $6.3 million in 2019.  

In January, a limited liability company managed by Abady sold a 10,000-square-foot mansion at 910 North Alpine Drive in Beverly Hills for $24 million, or $2,315 per square foot, according to The Real Deal.

In March of last year, Abady bought a 250,000-square-foot, vacant office building in Pico-Robertson for around $35 million, or $140 a square foot, just days before the City of L.A.’s new transfer tax went into effect, TRD reported.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Sale for nearly $34M marks priciest this year in Beverly Hills Flats

Los Angeles

Alon Abady trades Beverly Hills mansion for $24M

Los Angeles

Alon Abady buys 250K sf vacant building from Blackstone-led venture

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Joshua Tree’s housing boom is drying up – Robert Khodadadian

Joshua Tree’s housing boom is drying up – Robert Khodadadian

Joshua Tree’s housing market during its pandemic surge looked like an investment oasis, but instead it may have been a mirage.

The market in the California desert has dried up after exploding four years ago, the Wall Street Journal reported. Those who bought homes in recent years — which are typically modest, despite some architectural marvels — are facing a difficult dilemma if they choose to sell.

Joshua Tree home values jumped significantly during peak Covid. In July 2020, the typical value in the area was $217,007, according to the Zillow Home Value Index. Two years later, that number had more than doubled to $467,348. But as of February this year, the typical home value fell to $385,941.

Approximately 40 percent of the market’s 199 listed homes have seen price reductions, Bryan Wynwood, a local agent told WSJ. Buyers are also grappling with increased interest and mortgage rates from the height of the pandemic, which is having an impact on markets across the nation.

Wynwood did, however, admit that the price boom was unsustainable

During the height of the pandemic, homes were often sold in under two weeks. But in February, those that did sell were on the market for a median of 106 days, according to Redfin.

One factor impacting Joshua Tree’s housing market is its popularity as a tourist destination. In 2021, more than 3 million people visited the area, according to the National Park Service. The trickle effect has increased demandand supply — of short-term rentals, which have nearly doubled in four years, upping competition and dragging down long-term rents.

Investors who bet on long-term rentals are not making as much money as expected, so buyers are thinking twice about the potential payoff they can deliver in the future. According to one source WSJ spoke with, sales may instead be driven by investors looking at short-term rental assets.

Holden Walter-Warner

Read more

Los Angeles

Why Joshua Tree’s $18M house remains “invisible” to buyers

Los Angeles

Movers: Tyler Stanaland exits Oppenheim to return with family firm

Los Angeles

Governor signs law protecting Joshua trees, imposing developer fees

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  Uncategorized, Home Sales, Housing Market, Joshua Tree, Luxury Real Estate, short-term rentals 

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Hackman Capital revises vision for Television City in L.A.’s Fairfax – Robert Khodadadian

Hackman Capital revises vision for Television City in L.A.’s Fairfax – Robert Khodadadian

Hackman Capital Partners has scaled back plans for its $1.25 billion redevelopment of Television City in L.A.’s Fairfax District.

The Culver City-based property investor was expected to file revised plans to update the 25-acre landmark production complex once known as CBS Television City at 7800 Beverly Boulevard, the Los Angeles Times reported.

The $1.25 billion plan had called for more than 1 million square feet of new soundstages — doubling the number to 15  from eight — plus 700,000 square feet of offices and production facilities.

With the revised plan, Hackman Capital has whittled down the project to add a combined 980,000 square feet to Television City after hiring a new design architect, Foster + Partners, and getting feedback from city officials, stakeholders and residents. 

The firm is also responding to a downturn in the office market after a pandemic shift to remote work. Revised plans now call for eliminating a 15-story, 150,000-square foot office tower on the west side of the lot, as well as lowering the heights of some buildings.

Hackman Capital bought the CBS studio, founded in 1952 next to the Original Farmers Market, in 2019 for $750 million. CBS is now its major tenant.

Three years ago, the firm led by Michael Hackman filed plans to redevelop and renovate the studio lot at Fairfax Avenue and Beverly Boulevard, home for such shows as “All in the Family,” “Sonny and Cher” and “American Idol.”

The new proposal calls for combining old and new space to create 700,000 square feet of offices to support production, plus another 550,000 square feet of offices for rent to entertainment and media firms, company officials told the Times.

The plan still calls for raising the number of Television City stages to at least 15, from eight, along with production support facilities. To make room for the planned additions, surface parking lots would be turned into parking garages for 4,930 cars.

Two stages built in the 1990s on the east side of the lot would be bulldozed as part of a planned reconfiguration of the site. 

The four original stages built by CBS in 1952 would be preserved along with other historical design elements created by Los Angeles architect William Pereira, who also designed the futuristic Theme Building at LAX and the Transamerica Pyramid in San Francisco.

At the same time, plans for Television City call for a new commissary and more than 4 acres for production base camps. Streets would be improved for passersby, with wider sidewalks. 

On Fairfax Avenue, a fenced parking lot would be replaced by ground-floor shops and restaurants of 20,000 square feet or less for the public, with offices above accessible from inside the lot. 

If approved, the revised project is expected to be completed by 2028.

Hackman Capital is trying to make Television City feel more friendly to the neighborhood, while retaining the security and exclusivity of a closed studio campus for celebrities and others who make movies and TV shows, according to the Times.

Landlords can also charge premium rents for offices on movie lots because they are close to the action for independent production companies.

To mitigate concerns over traffic, Hackman Capital said the new plan will cut the number of estimated daily car trips to Television City by 5,000 to 8,700. A “mobility hub” would be moved to Fairfax and 1st Street to serve public transit, shuttle buses, rideshares and dropoffs.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Hackman unveils massive plan to redevelop CBS Television City

Los Angeles

Hackman Capital closes $750M purchase of CBS’ Television City campus

Los Angeles

Neighborhood council OKs Hackman’s TV City Project

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  Uncategorized, Entertainment studios, Soundstages 

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FTC deal with Opendoor could mean money for California home sellers – Robert Khodadadian

FTC deal with Opendoor could mean money for California home sellers – Robert Khodadadian

Homeowners who sold their properties to Opendoor Labs could get money from a settlement with the Federal Trade Commission over deceptive marketing tactics, the agency announced April 3.

The nearly 2,500 people who sold to Opendoor in California could qualify for a median refund of $1,553 because the company “tricked them into thinking that they could make more money selling their home to Opendoor than on the open market,” the Orange County Register reported.

Opendoor’s marketing pitch was that homeowners could save money in the selling process by foregoing the expenses of fixing, listing and showing their home, instead selling it directly to Opendoor on the company’s app. The owner would receive a cash offer after the company’s algorithm determined the home’s value.

But the FTC found a majority of sellers would have been better off marketing their homes the regular way. 

“Most people who sold to Opendoor made thousands of dollars less than they would have made selling their homes using the traditional process, and many paid more in costs than what sellers typically pay,” the FTC said in a statement.

Opendoor was one of the so-called iBuyer companies that plied the California market before and during the pandemic. In March 2019, Opendoor, RedfinNow, Offerpad and Zillow Offers were active in the market.

In the spring of 2021, those four companies paid a total $512 million to buy 789 houses in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties, according to a Zillow study cited by the Register.

In the settlement with Opendoor, the company is prohibited from making deceptive or unsubstantiated claims to consumers. Also, the FTC will spend $4 million from the settlement to compensate 2,472 buyers in California. The California distribution comes eight months after the FTC and Opendoor agreed to a settlement.

— Joel Russell

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  Uncategorized, Headquarters 

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TA Partners files for bankruptcy on 452-unit Playa Vista project – Robert Khodadadian

TA Partners files for bankruptcy on 452-unit Playa Vista project – Robert Khodadadian

TA Partners has filed for bankruptcy on a development site where it once planned a 452-unit residential complex in Playa Vista, The Real Deal has learned.

The filing extends a period of distress for the firm, which last year allegedly defaulted on nearly $200 million in loans tied to two apartment projects in Irvine.

The bankruptcy paperwork, which was filed April 3, relates to 6055 West Center Drive, a site where TA Partners proposed to build a 15-story apartment complex totaling nearly 400,000 square feet. The previous owner of the site, Equity Residential, planned to build a 545-unit residential property called the Altitude at Howard Hughes Center, according to a previous report from Urbanize LA.    

In 2019, TA Partners abandoned its plans for the 452-unit apartment complex, asking the City of Los Angeles to refund the fees it paid for building permits. “We have elected to change the project,” Raymond Thimens, TA Partners’ construction director, said in an email, city records show.  

The site enjoys a strategic position next to the 405 Freeway at the Howard Hughes Parkway exit near Los Angeles International Airport, or LAX.

According to the bankruptcy filing, the West Center Drive property has an assessed value of $124 million. TA Partners declared $27.8 million in claims against the asset, the largest piece of which is a $27.5 million lien from Hankey Capital. 

TA Partners, headed by Johnny Lu, once estimated the value of its portfolio at $2 billion. It has a total of nine current projects in Los Angeles, according to its website. 

In October, Mack Real Estate claimed that the firm defaulted on two loans totaling $197 million. The mortgages are backed by 18831 Von Karman Avenue and 17422 Derian Avenue, two Irvine sites where TA Partners planned to build a total of 658 units. The debt was part of a $262.5 million debt package that was set to mature in 2027.

TA Partners could not be reached for comment. 

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Lincoln Property secures $65M refinance of West LA office campus – Robert Khodadadian

Lincoln Property secures $65M refinance of West LA office campus – Robert Khodadadian

Lincoln Property has landed a $65 million loan to refinance a six-building office and retail campus in Ladera Heights.

An affiliate of the Dallas-based investor secured the five-year, fixed-rate loan from Deutsche Bank for the 583,600-square-foot Wateridge campus at 5035-5150 Goldleaf Circle, in the unincorporated area in West Los Angeles, the Commercial Observer reported.

The 21-acre property, built from 1989 to 2005, stands at La Cienega Boulevard and West Slauson Avenue, between Baldwin Hills and Culver City.

The mixed-use campus has three office buildings and is 80 percent leased to such tenants as the Kaiser Health Foundation, the County of Los Angeles and Providence Health. It includes a medical office, a 24 Hour Fitness gym and a strip retail center.

The Lincoln Property affiliate bought the office campus in 2016 for $100 million, or $171 per square foot, according to the Observer, citing property records.

Brokers Todd Sugimoto, Mark Wintner and Chad Morgan of JLL helped Lincoln Property secure the refinancing package.

Lincoln Property, founded in 1965 as a developer of luxury family homes, now has more than 35 global offices and more than $20 billion in residential and commercial assets under management, according to its website, with projects worth another $20 billion in the pipeline.

In August, LPC West, the West Coast arm of Lincoln Property, filed plans to build a 309-unit apartment complex at 5700 Hannum Avenue in Fox Hills, in Culver City.

In the past decade, LPC West has been active in developing Culver City. In early 2021, LPC and Downtown L.A.-based Clarion Partners built a 128,000-square-foot office complex at 8777 Washington Boulevard, which they pre-leased to Apple.

Later that year, LPC and Clarion announced a four-story, 150,000-square-foot complex spanning 3817, 3835 and 3855 Watseka Avenue, in Downtown.

LPC and Broad Street Principal Investments then built the 280,000-square-foot Entrada office complex west of the 405 Freeway at 6163 Centinela Avenue.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

LPC West eyes more than 300 apartments in Culver City

Dallas

Lincoln Property Co snags 4 acres for mixed-use vision in Uptown 

Dallas

Lincoln has two new CEOs, touts “major investment” 

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  Uncategorized, Refinancing loan 

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LA housing agency pays $43M to buy 120 apartments in South LA – Robert Khodadadian

LA housing agency pays $43M to buy 120 apartments in South LA – Robert Khodadadian

A Los Angeles housing agency has paid $43.4 million to buy a 120-unit apartment complex in South L.A.

The Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles purchased the three-story building at 349 South La Fayette Place, in Rampart Village, the Commercial Observer reported. The seller was California Landmark Group, based in West Los Angeles.

The deal works out to $361,667 per unit.

HACLA said it will set aside 90 units as affordable to families earning at or below 80 percent of the area median income. The building, built in 1971, has a pool and a policy that allows birds, cats, dogs, fish and lizards, according to Apartment List.

The state-chartered agency acquired the 91,000-square-foot building with financing that included $23.4 million from City National Bank and $19.5 million of federal community development block grant.

Because the deal involved a public agency buyer, the sale was exempt from the Measure ULA transfer tax.

Kitty Wallace and Kalli Knight of Colliers brokered the apartment sale.

Asking rents for apartments across Los Angeles County hit at an all-time high of $2,183 in the first quarter, according to the Observer, citing figures from NAI Capital.

Investment sales have stalled, however, with nearly 60 percent fewer apartment buildings traded in the first three months of the year, compared to year ago.

HACLA is the largest owner of affordable housing in Los Angeles, with more than 11,000 units, according to the agency. Since 2020, it has purchased more than 2,000 units for nearly $900 million, or roughly $450,000 per unit.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Avanath and public agency pay $220M for Baldwin Village apartments

Los Angeles housing authority hit by ransomware attack

Los Angeles

California Landmark to replace Woodland Hills offices with 111 homes

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  Uncategorized, Public Housin

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Brookfield’s Beaudry DTLA rents units with “exceptional” perks – Robert Khodadadian

Brookfield’s Beaudry DTLA rents units with “exceptional” perks – Robert Khodadadian

After topping out in April 2022, Brookfield Properties’ Beaudry DTLA apartment tower was hailed as the post-pandemic recovery story for Downtown Los Angeles.

The imposing, 64-story tower at 960 West 7th Street with 785 units has become a notable feature of L.A.’s skyline and one of the city’s tallest buildings. It also completed Brookfield Properties’ Downtown portfolio, which the firm has built up for years, and stands out as its only residential tower in the market.

Still, the luxury apartment complex appears to have resorted to unusual concessions in an effort to lure tenants. 

A year after opening, the building is just over 70 percent leased. Registering for a recent weekend viewing of Beaudry prompted an email with a list of running discounts, including eight weeks of free rent, a $500 Apple gift card and three months of free valet services at the upscale complex. Another promotion offered a cash discount of $1,000 to $2,500 depending on the size of the unit if the prospect secured an apartment during the event.

Concessions have become typical across Downtown L.A. luxury apartment towers, according to agents familiar with Downtown and multifamily investment sales brokers. 

Rahim Amidi’s 376-unit TENTEN Downtown is offering up to 10 weeks free rent; Northland’s 685-unit THEA at Metropolis is offering up to eight weeks free rent; and Mitsui Fudosan’s 438-unit Figueroa Eight tower is offering up to 10 weeks free rent, according to Neema Ahadian, a multifamily broker at Marcus & Millichap. 

Ahadian noted Beaudry’s concession offering tenants three months of free valet parking could be an “advantage” and “help lure tenants there faster than comparable buildings nearby.”

About 13 percent of luxury residential units in Downtown Los Angeles are currently vacant, according to Ahadian, compared to a 17 percent vacancy rate in the second quarter of last year.

“Still not ideal but progressing towards normal rates for core L.A.,” he said. 

Before the pandemic, vacancy rates stood at between 5 and 6 percent. 

Even so, Brookfield’s concessions “sound pretty exceptional, even in this climate,” said Tyler Neale, a broker with Sotheby’s International Realty. 

Amenities, amenities, amenities

Even as other multifamily owners push financial concessions, Brookfield, which filed plans at the site in 2017, tries to go further. 

The Beaudry’s long list of amenities are quintessentially L.A. — monthly outdoor puppy yoga sessions, a recent tea tasting that attracted “over 200 tenants,” and free weekly grocery delivery, among other more traditional perks like a pool, a coworking space and a golf simulator.

Scott Gonzalez, a leasing agent who works for Brookfield Properties and a tenant at Beaudry, said the apartment building’s offerings are not limited to free eight weeks on any of the apartments with the 16-month lease or longer.

“We do offer additional promotions even if you don’t do a 16-month lease, so if you choose to do a 12-month, we offer one month,” he told TRD last month. 

Monthly rents at the Beaudry start from $2,605 for a 514-square-foot studio apartment, according to the building’s website. At the higher end, three-bedroom, 1,734-square-foot apartments range from $11,865 to $12,050. These appear to be the most popular, with only six currently available.

In total, about 238 units of the building’s 785, or 30 percent, are available, according to the building’s website.

A USC student from China who lives at the Beaudry said amenities were the main draw for moving into the luxury highrise from another DTLA apartment tower, but noted there were still a few glitches left to iron out given the building was still new. 

Car-free lifestyle

And the idea behind the building seems to be an antithesis to a typical L.A. lifestyle centered around driving.

The development was supposed to “appeal to those who want the option to live without a car and across the street from the train, or even down the street from their office,” Bea Hsu, a former development executive at Brookfield, said at the project’s topping out ceremony in 2022. 

But that hypothesis is now being tested at Brookfield’s Beaudry and other luxury high-rise apartments as safety and lack of downtown attractions continue to have an impact on rentals.

Brookfield’s effort to lease up Beaudry also comes as many of its office towers have landed in receivership, after Brookfield defaulted on more than $1 billion in debt tied to three DTLA buildings

“Downtown L.A. itself is unlike any downtown in America or the world — usually downtown is the hub where you want to be, but not downtown L.A.,” said George Azzi, a broker at Marcus & Millichap. “Aside from the stadium and the convention center, if you have something happening there, why else would you go to Downtown L.A.?”

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  Uncategorized, Apartment Buildings, Luxury, Residential 

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REDA Residential buys Fox Hills Plaza in Culver City for $49M – Robert Khodadadian

REDA Residential buys Fox Hills Plaza in Culver City for $49M – Robert Khodadadian

REDA Residential and an undisclosed investor have bought a 68,000-square-foot shopping center in Culver City for $49 million, with plans to redevelop it for homes.

The unit of Newport Beach-based Real Estate Development Associates and the family office investor purchased Fox Hills Plaza at 6201-6229 Bristol Parkway, the Los Angeles Business Journal reported.

The deal works out to $721 per square foot, or $7 million per acre. The shopping center, built in 1973, is near the 405 Freeway, across from Westfield Culver City Mall.

The seller of the 7-acre property was Beverly Hills-based Bristol Parkway Propco, led by Henry Shahery, which bought the shopping center in 2022 for $56 million, or $824 per square foot and $8 million per acre. The former owner intended to redevelop the site.

REDA Residential also plans to redevelop the shopping center, potentially bringing “hundreds of residential units” to the property, according to the Business Journal.

Specific plans for its redevelopment were not disclosed. If a project is approved, REDA could break ground as early as next year.

Broker Eric Mandell of Ally Commercial Real Estate represented the buyer. The seller was represented by Laurie Lustig-Bower of CBRE Group.

In late 2022, Real Estate Development Associates filed plans to build a 2.9 million-square-foot distribution warehouse campus in Ontario, on 130 acres near Chino Airport in the Inland Empire.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

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Real Estate Development Associates eyes 2.9M sf warehouse hub in IE

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Edge Principal Advisors defaults on $39M loan tied to Culver City office

Los Angeles

LPC West eyes more than 300 apartments in Culver City

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LA development lender Hankey draws new interest with Trump loan – Robert Khodadadian

LA development lender Hankey draws new interest with Trump loan – Robert Khodadadian

 Part-time real estate financier and full-time auto-loan billionaire Don Hankey is collecting a different sort of interest since his $175 million loan to Donald Trump became public.

Hankey posted the appeals bond — terms were not disclosed — on April 1 through his Knight Speciality Insurance Company in Los Angeles for the former president’s pending legal judgment in New York. In the days since, Hankey profiles have appeared on CBS News, Bloomberg and the Los Angeles Times.

According to Forbes, Hankey is worth $7.4 billion, more than Trump. The two men have never spoken in person or by phone, but Hankey said he has voted for Trump, Bloomberg reported.

He clarified that politics didn’t affect his decision to post the bond. “This is a business deal and this is what we do,” Hankey said. 

For the bond, Hankey said the former president’s legal team provided 100 percent cash for collateral after an initial offer of 20 percent cash and 80 percent investment-grade bonds.

Trump told Bloomberg he reached out to 30 companies that would not accept real estate as collateral, stipulating only cash, in his search for financing.

The One (Getty)

Hankey made his fortune in subprime auto loans and hard-money lending, but he has engaged in development financing, often in distress situations. For example, Hankey Capital made loans totaling about $100 million on the Bel-Air megamansion called The One. The 100,000-square-foot home ended in bankruptcy, a $126 million auction sale and multiple lawsuits. Hankey said his company has received much of what it is owed, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Last month, Hankey provided $250 million for a Beverly Grove multifamily development from Madison Realty Capital. Hankey also provided money to Westside developer Neil Shekhter, who gave 28 properties back to lenders in January by signing deed-in-lieu of foreclosure. Hankey took possession of six properties.

According to the Los Angeles Times, the Trump transaction is Hankey’s first appeal bond. He didn’t disclose the price, usually a percentage of the principal, but said the margin “was very small” because the amount was large and he perceived little risk. 

“We had the collateral so we gave him a good rate,” Hankey said.

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  Uncategorized, Hankey, Trump 

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Office availability in greater LA market hits record 28%  – Robert Khodadadian

Office availability in greater LA market hits record 28%  – Robert Khodadadian

Despite an uptick in office leasing across greater Los Angeles, office availability has hit an all-time high, with landlords facing a sharp decline in office property values.

Office availability rose 0.9 percent to 27.6 percent in the first quarter from the previous period, according to the Commercial Observer, citing a report from Savills. Available sublease space increased to 10.8 million square feet.

“This (availability rate) is another historical high as office space demand has remained below pre-pandemic levels due to hybrid workplace strategies, as well as office-using employment growth that turned negative over the last year,” Savills said.

At the same time, office leasing across metro L.A. rose 45 percent to 3.2 million square feet between January and March, and 13 percent more year-over-year.

But the surge in leasing was mostly due to lease expirations and renewals, according to Savills. Five of the top 10 lease deals were renewals, two were relocation deals, and two were for new locations.

The big tech and media companies that once bolstered L.A.’s office market are now rapidly cutting their office spending and shrinking their footprints nationwide. Last week, Amazon.com said it planned to save $1.3 billion by shedding offices and ending leases early, according to the Observer.

The overall average asking rent for offices in greater L.A. rose to $3.94 per square foot per month last quarter, and was up 2.9 percent from a year ago, according to Savills.

Landlord concessions were also still at historic highs, but Savills expects more landlords will drop their asking rents this year as they get more aggressive at “chasing occupancy.”

Property owners are now girding for significant declines in office property values, with major losses during office building sales.

Late last month, Brookfield Properties cut a deal to sell its 1 million-square-foot 777 South Figueroa Tower in Downtown Los Angeles for $145 million — about half of the remaining debt on the property

The deal with South Korea-based Consus Asset Management works out to $145 per square foot, in line with other Downtown office trades over the past year.

Two other Brookfield-owned buildings Downtown, the Gas Company Tower and EY Plaza, are both in court-appointed receiverships, and headed to foreclosure sale.

This doesn’t bode well for the future of L.A.’s office market. For investors waiting until the price of office buildings in Los Angeles drops to bedrock, the time is now. 

The long-awaited reset in office building valuations in the Los Angeles office market is only starting as recent distressed sales at low valuations have become increasingly common,” Savills concluded. “For those office properties in a weaker financial position or in a less-desired location, expect fundamentals to continue to deteriorate.

“As a result, 2024 will be the year that more owners decide to sell their properties at a loss or realize that they need to convert or redevelop their properties to non-office use.”

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Brookfield sells 777 Tower in DTLA for 50% below outstanding debt 

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Good news/bad news: LA’s office market finds bottom 

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Carolwood buys DTLA’s AON Center for $148M

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Arnel pays $1.2M to settle allegations of keeping tenant deposits – Robert Khodadadian

Arnel pays $1.2M to settle allegations of keeping tenant deposits – Robert Khodadadian

Arnel Management has agreed to pay nearly $1.2 million to settle a state charge that it illegally withheld security deposits from apartment tenants, the state attorney general announced.

The Costa Mesa-based company led by Kevin Hauber paid the settlement nearly eight years after the Los Angeles Times revealed the landlord had deducted hundreds of dollars for unneeded cleaning and repairs when tenants left their units spotless, the Times reported.

The settlement marks the second for Arnel, a unit of Arnel & Affiliates, which settled allegations it illegally withheld security deposits in 2001. 

As part of the settlement, Arnel must pay $1.15 million, with $650,000 going to legal aid organizations in Orange and Los Angeles counties. The attorney general’s office also said Arnel would be “subject to more stringent injunctive terms to deter future misconduct.”

“For many renters, especially those from lower-income backgrounds, affording a security deposit entails a great deal of sacrifice,” Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement. “We are holding Arnel accountable.”

Neither Arnel nor its attorney responded to requests for comment from the Times. 

The firm has 18 apartment complexes in OC and one in Los Angeles County. 

According to state law, landlords can’t withhold a deposit to clean an apartment left in the same condition as when a tenant moved in, or to pay for fixing ordinary wear and tear.

Arnel charged for unneeded cleaning and repairs and treated part of its tenant’s security deposit as nonrefundable — no matter the condition of the apartment, according to the attorney general.

Arnel faced similar allegations in 2001, when OC prosecutors filed a consumer-protection lawsuit against the company with the hope of obtaining refunds for wronged tenants. But then-District Attorney Tony Rackauckas ordered that the lawsuit be withdrawn so officials could seek an out-of-court settlement with the firm.

Rackauckas, who had accepted campaign cash from Arnel, was widely criticized for taking a personal role in his office’s investigation.

In 2016, Arnel, owned by billionaire political power broker George Argyros, was the fifth-largest landlord in Orange County, according to the Times.

It’s unclear what Argyros’ current role is with Arnel. Stephanie Argyros Gehl, a Newport Beach-based Realtor and president of Arnel Estates, serves on its board of directors, according to state business records.

The 2001 settlement allowed Argyros to become ambassador to Spain; his appointment had stalled during the controversy.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Argyros family firm sells Santa Ana site for $51M

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Buchanan Street Partners buys 354-unit resi in McKinney

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Here are the SoCal real estate players that made the Forbes 400

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EQT Exeter spends $197M to buy Fontana warehouse from Manulife – Robert Khodadadian

EQT Exeter spends $197M to buy Fontana warehouse from Manulife – Robert Khodadadian

EQT Exeter has bought a warehouse in the Inland Empire city of Fontana for $197 million. 

Manulife Investment Management sold the 819,000-square-foot industrial property, according to an announcement from JLL, which brokered the deal, on Tuesday. The deal came out to $240 a square foot. 

Located at 13423 Santa Ana Avenue, the distribution center includes 30-foot clear heights. 

Manulife acquired the property in 2017 when it bought John Hancock Life Insurance Company, which built the warehouse in 2000, according to property records filed with San Bernardino County. 

In the second quarter of 2022, Weber Distribution renewed a lease for 335,000 square feet at the property, according to a report from Lee & Associates. 

HSN, also known as the Home Shopping Network, lists the property as an address for a distribution center, though lease information has not been publicly disclosed in records. HSN is owned by the Qurate Retail Group. 

Though industrial leasing has slowed down from a peak in 2021 — when vacancy rates across the Inland Empire dipped below 1 percent — investors are still pouring cash into the asset class. 

Last month, Rexford Industrial Realty bought 3 million square feet of industrial space — totaling 48 properties — in Southern California from Blackstone in a whopping $1 billion deal, adding almost 7 percent of square footage to its portfolio. 

That deal came out to around $332 a square foot on average. 

Also last month, Hillwood Investment Properties and CBRE Investment Management borrowed $756 million to build 6.6 million square feet of warehouses on the former NASCAR racetrack in Fontana.

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  Uncategorized, Inland Empire, Investment Sales 

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Kevin Sheehan returns to JLL to run brokerage’s LA office – Robert Khodadadian

Kevin Sheehan returns to JLL to run brokerage’s LA office – Robert Khodadadian

JLL has hired former associate Kevin Sheehan to run its Los Angeles office following the mystery exit last month of veteran dealmaker Tony Morales.

Sheehan, who had worked for North America Sekisui House, a residential developer based in Virginia, now serves as managing director for JLL Los Angeles, CoStar News reported, citing an announcement by JLL Capital Markets.

In his new role, Sheehan will focus on institutional multifamily investment sales, while serving on an advisory group led by Senior Managing Director Blake Rogers.

He replaces Morales, who mysteriously left the firm last month after working at JLL for nearly 16 years, negotiating lease deals as a tenant representative for such companies as DirectTV, Yahoo, Electronic Arts and Disney.

Sheehan, before returning to JLL, had overseen Southern California multifamily investments since 2022 for N.A. Sekisui, a unit of Japan-based Sekisui House, one of Japan’s largest homebuilders, according to his LinkedIn page. The firm’s southwest office is in Torrance.

He also worked a stint as director of multifamily capital markets with Walker & Dunlop in Los Angeles. He served as an associate at JLL Los Angeles between 2016 and 2020, after working at Morgan Stanley in wealth management and real estate planning in Chicago.

Sheehan’s return comes during a tumultuous period at JLL, officially known as Jones Lang LaSalle.

New York City dealmaker Bob Knakal left JLL in February, while Carl Muhlstein slipped out of JLL Los Angeles in December to start his own firm. 

The executive musical chairs extends to the commercial brokerage sector. In February, longtime New York broker Darcy Stacom left CBRE to launch her own firm. In March, Newmark fired Greg May, its western regional leader based in Irvine. He was replaced by Newmark’s L.A. Market Leader Nick DiPaolo.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Veteran LA office tenant rep Tony Morales leaves JLL

The Daily Dirt: Bob Knakal gets a glowing profile and a pink slip

JLL eyes layoffs as profits tumble 59%

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Christie’s hires away Sotheby’s SoCal manager Michael Williamson – Robert Khodadadian

Christie’s hires away Sotheby’s SoCal manager Michael Williamson – Robert Khodadadian

Sotheby’s International Realty has lost its regional manager for Southern California, Michael Williamson, to AKG Christie’s International Real Estate.

Williamson has joined AKG Christie’s as a broker and regional manager, according to an announcement from the brokerage. Williamson will support Jamie Duran, who joined Christie’s last month to help open seven offices for the firm across Southern California. 

Williamson joined Sotheby’s in 2018, according to his LinkedIn profile. Before that, he worked at John Aaroe Group, a brokerage that was acquired by Pacific Union, which was then bought by Compass. 

Christie’s, which entered the L.A. market by teaming up with star broker Aaron Kirman in November 2022, is planning to eventually open outposts in Newport Beach, Del Mar, Calabasas, Sherman Oaks, Montecito, Pasadena and Palm Springs. 

Williamson’s goal for 2024: “Attract quality salespeople to the brand,” he said in a statement. 

Kirman brokered $1.1 billion in on-market sales in 2023, ranking No. 1 on TRD’s Los Angeles residential agent list last year. 

Since Kirman jumped to join Christie’s from Compass, Christie’s has picked up a number of other top agents, including Cindy Ambuehl, ranked 16th on TRD’s 2022 list of top brokers in L.A. with $268 million in sales volume and Joe Babajian, a top L.A. agent in the 1990s and 2000s. 

“We’ve just begun,” Kirman said in February.

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  Uncategorized, Brokerage, Movers And Shakers 

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Former Santa Monica mayor campaigns to amend city’s transfer tax – Robert Khodadadian

Former Santa Monica mayor campaigns to amend city’s transfer tax – Robert Khodadadian

Pam O’Connor, the former mayor of Santa Monica, filed a proposal with the city on March 28 seeking to exclude multifamily properties from Measure GS, or the so-called mansion tax, according to a release last week. 

Measure GS, which came into effect last year, adds a 5 percent transfer tax on residential and commercial sales with a price of or above $8 million or more. 

This is the first step in a bid to put this proposal up for a vote in the November elections. After the city issues a summary, O’Connor’s team will have to collect signatures. Her representative was not aware of how many signatures would be required for the initiative to proceed.

“We’re still trying to determine that,” Adam Englander, a representative for O’Connor, told TRD.

“Not only will this amendment allow us to meet our state-mandated housing requirements, it will help keep rents lower and prevent displacement,” O’Connor, a planning consultant, said in a statement last week. “Sometimes, initiative measures have unintended consequences that must be fixed.”

She elaborated further that “most of the housing units subject to Measure GS are apartments and renters — not mansions” and called the “mansion tax” name misleading. 

Instead of alleviating the housing crisis, Measure GS has actually undercut the production of much-needed multifamily housing in the city and threatens the financial feasibility of such new development projects,” according to the same statement. 

Voters passed Measure GS through a ballot measure in November 2022 — the same month voters in the city of Los Angeles passed Measure ULA, a similar initiative that added a 4 percent transfer tax on all sales over $5 million and a 5.5 percent tax on all sales over $10 million.

If the effort is successful, it would likely encourage developers to take a new look at Santa Monica if they’ve previously shied away from the city due to the new measure.

The proposed initiative would remove the mansion tax from apartment buildings to stimulate market-rate and affordable housing production so that more people have a place to live and rents can come down,”said Chris Tourtellotte, who runs multifamily developer LaTerra Development, which has been based in Los Angeles for 15 years. “If the measure is approved, investors and developers will immediately look to build more apartments in Santa Monica.” 

O’Connor worked for Santa Monica’s city government for over two decades, including several stints as mayor, according to her LinkedIn page. Now she’s as a planning and policy consultant.

Earlier this year, Gov. Gavin Newsom designated Santa Monica as a “prohousing” city, a move that raised some eyebrows since Santa Monica was among the first cities where developers took advantage of the builder’s remedy provision. 

The post Former Santa Monica mayor campaigns to amend city’s transfer tax appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Elections, Legislature, Measure GS, Measure ULA, Santa Monica 

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Residential brokers dish on Measure ULA – Robert Khodadadian

Residential brokers dish on Measure ULA – Robert Khodadadian

Though Measure ULA has disproportionately affected the commercial industry, agents who sell the top 1 percent of real estate in the city of Los Angeles have also taken a hit

Some say their clients are now more focused on Beverly Hills or Malibu, neither of which has its own transfer taxes. A handful said buyers are coughing up the cash anyway. Others are hopeful that Measure ULA will be overturned through the November ballot measure. 

The Real Deal spoke to a number of top residential agents in the city of Los Angeles to get their thoughts on the transfer taxes and how they think the market has changed over the last year.  A

There’s always the three D’s — death, divorce and disparities.” 
Josh Flagg, Compass

Flagg, the star of “Million Dollar Listing L.A.” who recently jumped to Compass from Douglas Elliman, said some people are always going to need to sell.

“But, with that said, adding 5 percent onto the purchase price is never going to be a good situation for anybody,” he said. For the most part, Flagg said his clients understand. “It is what it is.” 

Flagg also noted that sellers can’t raise their prices to take ULA into account, given that demand and pricing overall have softened. 

It doesn’t mean houses went up another 5 percent just because of this ULA tax,” he said. “A lot of sellers might be adding it on top of it, but it’s silly to do that because you’re just adding 5 percent over the value of your house.”

“Unless they have to move, people are not keen on taking a large hit.” 
Stuart Vetterick, Hilton & Hyland

It’s hard to blame the huge drop in sales to just Measure ULA, Vetterick said. There’s also the huge rise in interest rates and the fact that presidential election years generally bring a slowdown in sales

But without a doubt, there are people who are “looking to buy in Los Angeles, but will not buy in the city of Los Angeles,” he said. 

People over the age of 70, long-term homeowners who see property as a “nest egg,” are the ones “losing the most,” Vetterick said. 

One set of his clients looking to sell have been in their house for 11 years and have taken out loans against the property over time, accumulating significant debt. The home is likely to sell for over $10 million, meaning the client will have to shell out at least $550,000 in cash including the tax. 

“That’s their retirement fund,” he said. 

“I’ve lost an immeasurable number of clients to other states.” 
Jason Oppenheim, The Oppenheim Group

A number of Oppenheim’s clients are “either hesitant or have decided definitively not to sell because of the tax,” he said. 

Oppenheim said more of his wealthy clients have left in California in the last two years than over the last 10, with many critical of increased taxation. 

“We’ve dug a 2-foot grave and are continuing to dig,”he said of Measure ULA, noting that the city has not reached its revenue estimates. “I’m not opposed to taxation philosophically. I’m opposed to inefficiency.”

Many of his clients are moving to Florida, Nevada, Arizona and Texas — or even Orange County. 

If more continue to leave, the city of L.A. is going to lose a significant chunk of its wealthy tax base, he said. 

“I’ve seen developers walk away from projects saying there’s not enough of a profit margin now.”
Carl Gambino, Compass

Much of Los Angeles’ luxury market is product from spec home developers — investors who build properties from scratch. If more developers walk away, citing Measure ULA, agents and buyers could be left with less product to market and purchase.

In the months leading up to Measure ULA coming into effect, Gambino said, he closed a number of large deals, including Mark Wahlberg’s $55 million sale of a home in Beverly Park. 

If Wahlberg, who then moved to Las Vegas, had sold two weeks later, he would have been on the hook for $3.025 million in city transfer taxes. 

Since then, “it’s definitely slowed down transactions in some capacity,” Gambino said, echoing other agents interviewed by TRD. “Some sellers have literally just decided they’re just not going to sell because of the tax, and some of them believe that it could be overturned.”

There was an overabundance of properties for lease.”
Sally Forster Jones, Compass

Can’t sell? Lease instead. 

Many with $5 million homes in 2023 decided not to sell but rather to try their luck at renting the property they otherwise might have sold

Rental prices came down in 2023 as the number of properties on the market went up, according to Forster Jones. 

“Clearly, the contributing factor was that the sellers did not want to sell or chose not to sell,” she said. “They decided instead they were going to put their homes up for lease.” 

Forster Jones also had many conversations with her clients about what listing prices would be at the $5 million mark — the trigger for the initial Measure ULA tax tier of 4 percent. 

The discussion was always, ‘Do we put it up for sale over $5 million?’” she said. “Selling property at $5,000,002, the seller was going to net less than if they had put the property up for sale at $4,999,000.” 

“ULA was a horrible measure. It was written terribly. It’s not a mansion tax, it’s a real estate tax. In a city that needs housing, it was the worst thing that anybody could have created.” 
Aaron Kirman, AKG | Christie’s International

Kirman, whose brokerage did $2 billion in sales volume last year, said anything between $20 million and $200 million was “very difficult to sell.” 

Sellers of $10 million-plus properties did not want to pay a 5.5 percent transfer tax, plus commissions, generally at another 5 percent, plus closing costs of 2 percent. 

“Sellers were looking at a 12 percent closing fee before they even got out of bed.” Kirman said. “And that was very difficult for people to stomach — it still is, by the way.”

Kirman echoed the same sentiment about spec home developers — the transfer taxes are cutting into profit margins, meaning developers will just stop building. 

“To be able to buy a piece of dirt anywhere in the city is running between $1.5 million and $3 million, sometimes $4 million to $7 million or more,” he said. “By the time you build and develop, you’re over the $5 million threshold, and developers are not going to run and build houses if it doesn’t make sense.”

However, in 2024, Kirman thinks things have started to settle. 

“We’ve seen a lot of high-end luxury buyers back down to the market, we’re seeing a lot of sales,” he said. “I’ve had more billionaires call me in the last three months than I had the whole of last year, an interesting indication of where we are.”

The margins have become slimmer and slimmer — now with [Measure ULA], in a lot of cases, it just won’t make sense to build a house anymore.” 
Santiago Arana, The Agency

From Arana’s vantage point, Measure ULA is leading to less spec home development, and eventually, less inventory. 

Arana, who is hoping ULA will be overturned with the passage of the Taxpayer Protection Act in November, said it’s hard to keep being an advocate for the city of Los Angeles. 

“I’m going to think twice if I want to reinvest that money, that I’m gonna put it here in Los Angeles,” he said. “I’m going to invest [in a state] that is more friendly, tax-wise, for entrepreneurs like me, who are trying to diversify as a real estate agent.” 

Arana also echoed Vetterick’s concerns about elderly people, noting they are a subset of the market more likely to be affected by a 4 percent or 5.5 percent transfer tax. 

“If I want to sell the house to use that equity to go and live comfortably in a retirement home, but I gotta pay four and a half percent on the setbacks of that,” Arana said, “that very well could be a substantial amount of the money that I was planning on using.” 

And by the way, my $5 million house is not going to be a mansion. In Los Angeles, with $5 million, it is not really a mansion,” he added.

— Daria Solovieva contributed reporting

The post Residential brokers dish on Measure ULA appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Measure ULA, Residential Real Estate 

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