May 18, 2024
Jamison may default on $88M loan tied to Equitable Plaza in Koreatown – Robert Khodadadian

Jamison may default on $88M loan tied to Equitable Plaza in Koreatown – Robert Khodadadian

Jamison Properties may be preparing to default on an $87.5 million loan tied to a 34-story office tower in Koreatown.

The Koreatown-based investor had the commercial mortgage-backed securities sent to special servicing because of an imminent maturity default linked to Equitable Plaza at 3435 Wilshire Boulevard, the Commercial Observer reported, citing a report from Trepp.

The unidentified special servicer reported that Jamison told the lender it wouldn’t be able to pay off the loan at its expected maturity date in June. The building’s loan makes up 15 percent of a CMBS conduit deal named COMM 2014-USB3, according to Trepp.

The 688,300-square-foot Equitable Plaza, also known as The Equitable Trust Building, is the 39th tallest building in Los Angeles. The Modernist tower, built in 1969 of precast limestone, concrete and glass, was renovated in 1993. 

The building had an appraised value of $150.5 million at the time of the loan’s 2014 securitization, according to Trepp.

Dr. David Lee, founder of Jamison Properties, is the building’s principal owner, and is listed as its primary contact, according to Loopnet

Occupancy at Equitable Plaza fell from 67 percent in 2021 to 57 percent last year, while debt service coverage dropped from 1.68 to 1.12, according to Trepp. Any number less than 1.0 indicates the property isn’t making enough revenue to meet its mortgage payments.

The building’s top tenants, Commonwealth Business Bank and Wilshire Business Center, plan to vacate the building once their leases expire in November and December.

Jamison Properties did not respond to requests for comment from the Observer.

Jamison, one of the largest multifamily landlords in Los Angeles, is the most prominent and active developer in Koreatown. For the past decade, the firm led by Lee’s daughter Jaime Lee, has converted much of its portfolio of underperforming offices into apartments.

In December, Jamison Properties’ loan on a 157,400-square-foot office complex in Encino was sent to special servicing after the landlord disclosed it needed time to figure out a way to refinance it, The Real Deal reported.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Jamison’s loan on Encino office complex lands in special servicin

Los Angeles

Jamison plans office-to-home conversions on LA’s Wilshire Boulevard

Los Angeles

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

The post Jamison may default on $88M loan tied to Equitable Plaza in Koreatown appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Special Servicin

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Madison Realty proposes 24-story apartment tower in Santa Monica – Robert Khodadadian

Madison Realty proposes 24-story apartment tower in Santa Monica – Robert Khodadadian

Madison Realty Capital wants to build a 24-story apartment building in Santa Monica on an approved site once filed as a builder’s remedy project.

The New York-based private equity firm pitched a plan in a meeting with local residents to build the 264-unit highrise at 601 Colorado Boulevard, the Santa Monica Daily Press and Urbanize Los Angeles reported.The project would necessitate bulldozing a commercial building.

If built at Colorado and 6th Street, the 260-foot building would be the tallest in Santa Monica, and three times the height of the Santa Monica Pier Ferris wheel.

Plans for the project call for a 24-story building containing 264 studio, one- and two-bedroom apartments, including 40 set aside as affordable housing, above 4,200 square feet of ground-floor shops, a fitness center, and a two-level underground garage for 103 cars.

The project, designed by Ottinger Architects, would feature floor-to-ceiling windows with rows of exterior balconies and a rooftop deck, according to a rendering.

There have been some very significant changes to both local zoning regulations as well as state housing laws that have allowed greater densities, greater heights, greater square footages for projects that are proposing greater amounts of affordable housing,” Dave Rand, a land use attorney, told residents.  

“This project is utilizing the full extent of recent amendments to the state density bonus law to achieve effectively a doubling of the density that would otherwise be allowed under the underlying zoning regulations.”

Madison Realty acquired the site in January from NMS Properties, renamed WS Communities by owner Neil Shekhter, who signed over deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure on 28 apartment buildings and development sites to unburden itself of $1.1 billion in unpaid debt, according to The Real Deal.

Lender Madison Realty took 20 WSC properties, including 601 Colorado. 

The half-acre site was one of nine builder’s remedy projects that Santa Monica agreed to process as part of a settlement agreement with WS Communities a year ago this month. 

Builder’s remedy, a legal loophole in state housing law, allows developers to bypass zoning rules in cities that haven’t certified their state housing plans, providing they contain at least 20 percent affordable units.

While this may be the first highrise Santa Monica has seen in decades, it’s not expected to be the last. Applications for other buildings up to 18 stories in height are also under consideration by the city, according to Urbanize.

Madison Realty Capital also took over portions of the NMS portfolio outside of Santa Monica, including a recently finished apartment tower at 6401 Wilshire Boulevard in Beverly Grove. Madison has filed plans to subdivide apartments there to boost the total number of rental units.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Shekhter’s WS Communities loses half its portfolio to lenders after $1.1B in defaults

Los Angeles

Bye builder’s remedy: Santa Monica approves settlement with WSC 

Los Angeles

Neil Shekhter’s WS Communities looks to sell a third of its LA apartments

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  Uncategorized 

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Mezzanine lender Monarch takes stake in AECOM, Combined’s Pendry WeHo project – Robert Khodadadian

Mezzanine lender Monarch takes stake in AECOM, Combined’s Pendry WeHo project – Robert Khodadadian

Monarch Alternative Capital has taken over ownership of the limited liability company that controls the Pendry West Hollywood, a $500 million condo and hotel projects on the Sunset Strip, from developers AECOM Capital and Combined Properties, The Real Deal has learned. 

Monarch Alternative Capital, which held a $165 million mezzanine loan on the 149-key and 40-condo Pendry, took over ownership earlier this year, according to business filings with the state of California and property records filed with Los Angeles County. The property sits at 8430 Sunset Boulevard. 

AECOM and Combined still own a stake in the property, according to an AECOM spokesperson.

In the case of default, mezzanine lenders can take control of properties by filing a Uniform Commercial Code foreclosure, or can convert their debt into an equity stake. While no foreclosure notice was filed, the ownership of the limited liability company that controls the Pendry West Hollywood changed, according to state filings. No deed has been recorded with the county, signaling a complete transfer of ownership.

Monarch scored a $225 million, three-year loan with extension options from Ares Commercial Real Estate Management in connection with the deal, according to loan documents. Neither Combined nor Monarch responded to requests for comment. 

AECOM and Combined had tried to refinance a $350 million senior loan provided by Credit Suisse, which was packaged into a commercial mortgage-backed securities deal in 2021.

The firms had struggled to pay off that CMBS loan, according to data from Morningstar and commentary from loan servicer KeyBank. At the end of September, the debt service coverage ratio on the senior loan was 0 — anything below 1 indicates that the property is not making enough to meet its debt payments.

One of the major issues facing AECOM and Combined was that their hotel was not unique enough. 

“Multiple hotel competitors within a few hundred feet of the subject property is hurting the property’s overall financial performance,” servicer KeyBank wrote in commentary cited by Morningstar earlier this year.

AECOM and Combined built the property in 2021, spending more than $500 million on the project. But by last year, they were quietly trying to sell the hotel, according to a source familiar with the matter, asking about $149 million. About 60 percent of the condos were sold as of February. 

This story has been corrected to reflect that no deed reflecting change of ownership has been filed, but that Monarch took over ownership of the limited liability company that controls the Pendry West Hollywood.

The post Mezzanine lender Monarch takes stake in AECOM, Combined’s Pendry WeHo project appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, mezzanine financing, Real Estate And Finance 

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Commercial brokerages trim payroll and diversify to stem losses – Robert Khodadadian

Commercial brokerages trim payroll and diversify to stem losses – Robert Khodadadian

Commercial real estate brokerages from coast to coast are cutting costs through layoffs and efficiency measures.

As higher interest rates lower the number of transactions and eat into profits, North America’s largest brokerages have cut spending this year through “precision cost trimming,” CoStar News reported, citing regulatory earnings calls.

Brokerages ranging from Calabasas-based Marcus & Millichap to its larger publicly traded rivals, CBRE, JLL, Cushman & Wakefield, Newmark and Toronto-based Colliers have announced cost-cutting initiatives.  

To shave a buck this year, the firms have trimmed staff as hopes dwindle that the Federal Reserve will significantly lower interest rates. The total number of layoffs was not disclosed.

Pressure to trim expenses in other ways is growing as big brokerages selectively invest in talent and acquisitions to earn money by providing management and consultative services while waiting for commercial sales to rebound.

There’s a lot of what I would call ‘quiet cutting’ going on right now,” Robert Shibuya, CEO of Dallas-based real estate advisory firm Mohr Partners, told CoStar. “I know that all of the big brokerages are still cutting because their people have been calling me for work.”

Marcus & Millichap’s decline in brokerage commissions from sales contributed to its fourth consecutive quarterly loss, even after the brokerage trimmed costs 5 percent from a year earlier to $69 million. 

CEO Hessam Nadji said market disruptions since the pandemic have upended sales and the recruiting and training of new brokers.

Investment property sales and financing fell early in the pandemic only to recover in 2021 and 2022, then dive last year as higher interest rates caused sales to dry up, Nadji said. That lower demand has resulted in higher turnover, especially for newer brokers, making it harder for the firm to expand its sales force.

The last three- to four-year period has provided nothing resembling a typical market environment, in which we train people, mentor people and they learn the fundamentals of brokerage,” Nadji said during the company’s most recent earnings call. “This market disruption is the primary reason that skill sets aren’t developing in a way that we’re used to seeing.”

Chicago-based JLL, the world’s second-largest brokerage, credited a recent revenue surge to benefits from cost cuts coupled with growth in leasing and “resilient” businesses such as workplace and property management.

The changes helped drive a $66.1 million profit in the first quarter, compared with a $9.2 million loss in the year-earlier period, CFO Karen Brennan said in an earnings call.

“As we strengthen our service and product offerings, we will selectively add people and capabilities, both organically and through very targeted” mergers and acquisitions, CEO Christian Ulbrich told investors. 

Cushman & Wakefield, which reported a 29 percent increase in earnings over the prior-year quarter by lowering expenses and higher leasing revenue, has delivered on its cost-savings plans, Morningstar analyst Suryansh Sharma said in an email.

“Keeping a rein on expenses is essential, given the current macroeconomic challenges,” Sharma told CoStar. He said Cushman management has projected that cost and efficiency initiatives will mostly offset an increase in inflation costs this year.

While brokerage layoffs probably won’t match levels of the past two years when the businesses shed hundreds of jobs, CBRE and other companies are likely to keep reducing their employee counts in certain areas to further cut corporate costs, Shibuya added.

Despite the layoffs, the five largest global real estate services firms ranked by revenue —  CBRE, JLL, Cushman & Wakefield, Colliers and Newmark — have added employees over the years by acquiring companies not as reliant on volume sales.

They include project management, investment management, technology and engineering services.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Commercial brokerages devise battle plans as profits plunge

CBRE profit plummets as i-sales revenue slumps

JLL eyes layoffs as profits tumble 59%

The post Commercial brokerages trim payroll and diversify to stem losses appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, commercial brokerages, Layoff

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BH Properties offers $10M to bankrupt Oceanwide Plaza to keep lights on – Robert Khodadadian

BH Properties offers $10M to bankrupt Oceanwide Plaza to keep lights on – Robert Khodadadian

BH Properties, the lending firm run by Steve Gozini, has offered a $10 million lifeline to Oceanwide Plaza to help the bankrupt project stay above water for the next few months.

China-based Oceanwide has requested the bankruptcy court overseeing its Chapter 11 reorganization approve $10 million in debtor-in-possession, or DIP, financing from BH Properties, according to a court filing last week. 

DIP financing allows a business to keep operations running as it navigates its bankruptcy filings. 

A group of contractors forced Oceanwide into bankruptcy in February, court records show, alleging Oceanwide owes about $400 million on the unfinished project in Downtown Los Angeles. Oceanwide has spent about $1.2 billion on the roughly 2 million-square-foot condo, office and residential project at 1101 South Flower Street, though it has sat idle since 2019. The structure has since gone viral, after people scaled the tower and graffitied almost every floor. 

But Oceanwide doesn’t need money to pay creditors. It needs money to keep the lights on for the time being — $7.3 million in the next 13 weeks, to pay for security, financial advisors and legal services, according to a court filing. 

BH Properties offered the one-year loan to Oceanwide as a revolver, meaning the firm can tap the financing in tranches or all at once, according to the filing. Oceanwide had reached out to 20 prospective lenders, according to court filings, though only two provided term sheets.

BH Properties did not respond to a request for comment. 

Oceanwide will pay a minimum interest rate of about 8.5 percent, according to a financing term sheet filed with the court. But the borrower won’t pay interest until the loan matures, or if it defaults. In the case of a default, Oceanwide will have to pay 18 percent in interest on the loan. 

The property is also officially up for sale, with Colliers and Hilco Real Estate hired as marketing brokers. If a sale goes through, BH Properties will be paid using those proceeds. 

If Oceanwide is not able to obtain the $10 million loan, it “would not have sufficient available sources of working capital and would be unable to administer its estate, pay its operating expenses or maintain its assets,” Oceanwide said in a court filing. 

It also needs DIP financing to pay for general liability insurance, which Oceanwide only bought in March. 

The bankruptcy court still needs to approve the financing

BH Properties has been focused on handing out DIP financing, mezzanine loans and receivership financing since 2020, when it formed a $200 million distressed real estate fund. 

Last year, the firm teamed up with L.A.-based Hankey Capital to lend $75 million to Joel Schreiber’s Waterbridge Capital on its acquisition of the 40-story Union Bank Plaza in Downtown Los Angeles. BH Properties held a more junior position on that loan. 

The post BH Properties offers $10M to bankrupt Oceanwide Plaza to keep lights on appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, bankruptcy. Breaking, Breaking News, Lawsuit

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“Oversupply bubble” deflates industrial rents for the Inland Empire – Robert Khodadadian

“Oversupply bubble” deflates industrial rents for the Inland Empire – Robert Khodadadian

A growing number of empty warehouses across the Inland Empire has pushed properties owned by Sun Life Financial and other investors into a valuation slump.

The Toronto-based insurer and asset manager said the value of its U.S. real estate holdings fell 15 percent in the first quarter to $1.3 billion from a year earlier, Bloomberg reported, citing an earnings call. Mark-to-market valuations were down 6.7 percent from the previous period.

The primary reason: falling rents in the Inland Empire, a key hub for big-box and e-commerce logistics, according to Randy Brown, Sun Life’s chief investment officer. 

“We had seen outsized gains there in prior quarters. This quarter, we had a cap-rate and yield decompression, which we expect, but also a drop in the achievable rents,” Brown told investors on the call.

There had been very strong development completions and extensive growth in that specific area throughout the pandemic — which led to an oversupply bubble that’s putting downward pressure on rents.”

While vacancy rates for industrial properties across greater Los Angeles have been on the rise, Brown said that Sun Life’s properties in the IE were fully occupied, with strong tenants in extended leases. The extent of its IE holdings was not disclosed.

San Francisco-based Prologis, a major owner of warehouses in the U.S., lowered its earnings guidance this year as the landlord faces lower average occupancies, according to Bloomberg. The leasing slowdown was highest in Southern California and the Inland Empire, Chief Financial Officer Tim Arndt said on an earnings call last month.

As of January last year, some 4,000 warehouses took up 1 billion square feet of the Inland Empire, with another 170 million square feet in the pipeline, according to CalMatters. 

Industrywide, the first quarter ushered in the sixth consecutive three-month period of declining net absorption, at 27.9 million square feet absorbed nationally, according to JLL

Industrial vacancy also rose to 6.1 because of lower tenant demand and a rise in warehouse construction, with higher than average completions. 

By Savills’ estimate, the national vacancy rate is 6.7 percent, with some top industrial markets posting double-digit vacancies, including Savannah, Georgia, at 12.1 percent, Phoenix at 11.8 percent and Dallas-Fort Worth at 10.8 percent.

Industrial vacancy in the IE rose 1 percent to 7.8 percent in the first quarter, from the previous three months, and increased 4.9 percent year over year, according to Savills, while leasing activity dropped by 500,000 square feet.

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 Savills report said.

Rents for industrial real estate across Southern California have plunged for the first time since the Great Recession, according to CoStar Analytics.  At the same time, IE tenants shed more than 2 million square feet of warehouse space.

Discounted sublease space has dragged rents down as it floods the market, accounting for 21 percent of total availability across Los Angeles, Orange County and the IE combined. Typical subleases rent for 25 percent less than directly available space.

A couple of years ago, industrial vacancy in L.A. and OC was under 2 percent. Since then, industrial vacancy has grown to more than 5 percent in L.A., and 4 percent in OC.

But in Riverside and San Bernardino counties, which make up the IE, industrial vacancy reached nearly 7 percent, according to CoStar, which blamed a combination of heavy supply growth and occupancy loss, with typical asking rents falling 4 percent.

Amazon.com, considered a “first mover” in industrial real estate, could help push the nation out of its post-pandemic warehouse slump.

The Seattle-based e-commerce behemoth, among the nation’s biggest occupiers of warehouses, has restarted expansion of its logistics footprint, suggesting gains could be ahead for the industrial market.

Last month, Amazon leased two distribution warehouses of 1 million square feet each in the Inland Empire.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

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

Amazon.com could lead nation out of warehouse doldrums

Amazon.com could lead nation out of warehouse doldrums

The post “Oversupply bubble” deflates industrial rents for the Inland Empire appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Industrial Market 

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Developer proposes five-story apartment building in Beverly Hills – Robert Khodadadian

Developer proposes five-story apartment building in Beverly Hills – Robert Khodadadian

The owner behind 232 Doheny LLC is looking to construct a five-story, nine-unit multifamily building in Beverly Hills, according to an application filed with the city and reviewed by TRD.

The developer is also requesting a density bonus as part of its proposal for the site at 232 South Doheny Drive in Beverly Hills. Architect Jamsheed Sobhan and landscape architecture firm Stout Design Build are attached to the project.

Fred Ghalchi, the owner of Beverly Hills-based M&G Civil Engineering & Land Surveying, is listed as one of the owners of the site on property records. Fred Ghalchi, David Ghalchi, Minoo Forouzan, Alon Ofir and Natasha Ofir purchased the site for $2.2 million in March 2022, property records show.

According to the project filing, 15 percent of the proposed building will be allocated to very low-income housing, which will constitute a one-bedroom apartment.

This project and other recent proposed development would mark a shift in Beverly Hills’ historic reluctance to permit multifamily projects.

“Beverly Hills has blocked homes for everyone except high-income people for decades,” said Leora Tanjuatco Ross, California director at YIMBY Action. “Because of new teeth in Housing Element law as well as consequences like the builder’s remedy, this housing element cycle is the first time they’re being held accountable for allowing homes for people other than the most wealthy.”

With nine units, the 232 Doheny proposal is relatively modest compared to other builder’s remedy projects. For example, developer Leo Pustilnikov has proposed a 12-story building with 65 apartments at 246 Maple Drive in Beverly Hills. He also has filed plans for a 19-story, 165-unit building with a 73-room hotel at 125-129 South Linden Drive in the affluent city.

The post Developer proposes five-story apartment building in Beverly Hills appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Multifamily 

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JPI buys site for 272 apartments at Long Beach mall redevelopment – Robert Khodadadian

JPI buys site for 272 apartments at Long Beach mall redevelopment – Robert Khodadadian

JPI has bought an approved site for 272 apartments at the redeveloped City Place mall in Long Beach.

The Texas-based developer bought 1.6 acres at Mosaic, the project that will replace the vacant City Place Long Beach shopping center at 151 East 5th Street, Urbanize Los Angeles reported.

The sellers were Mosaic owners Turnbridge Equities, based in New York; Waterford Property, based in Newport Beach; and Beverly Hills-based Monument Square Investment Group. Terms of the deal were not disclosed.

In January, the consortium won approval to build three, eight-story apartment buildings with 900 apartments, including 54 affordable units for very low-income households, plus 38,000 square feet of shops and restaurants at the 14-acre Mosaic site.

They acquired the beleaguered shopping center in March last year through the sale of a $63 million loan.

JPI acquired a site approved for 272 apartments at the southwestern corner of Long Beach Boulevard and East Fifth Street.

The eight-story project, to be called Jefferson Long Beach, includes 16 affordable units and 19,000 square feet of ground-floor restaurants and shops. Longbeachize reports that JPI is expected to break ground this year.

Brokers Kevin Shannon, Ken White, Chris Benton, Anthony Muhlstein and Gabe Munson of Newmark represented the sellers in the deal.

The trio of real estate investors will keep the rest of the mall, designed by Downtown Los Angeles-based MVE + Partners, and approved for another 628 homes. 

One parcel on the southwest corner of Long Beach Boulevard and East Sixth Street would contain a 269-unit apartment complex. Another parcel to the south would feature a 359-unit complex. 

Mosaic, which will have 150,000 square feet of additional shops and restaurants, announced new tenants, including Broken Spirits Distillery and Restaurant, Sake Secret and Coffee Station Cafe.

Irving-based JPI, founded in 1989, was acquired in October by a U.S. unit of Tokyo-based Sumitomo Forestry for $215 million.

In 2020, JPI proposed replacing the former Long Beach City Hall, a 14-story Brutalist landmark dating to the 1970s, with more than 580 homes, according to Urbanize. The firm now plans housing developments next to Metro stops in Monrovia and Inglewood.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Dallas

Sumitomo deal for big DFW developer pegged at $215M

Los Angeles

Consortium OK’d for 900-unit revamp of CityPlace Long Beach 

Los Angeles

Ownership trio takes over beleaguered shopping center in Long Beach

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  Uncategorized, mosAic 

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Douglas Elliman wants to sublease 11K sf at Beverly Hills office – Robert Khodadadian

Douglas Elliman wants to sublease 11K sf at Beverly Hills office – Robert Khodadadian

Douglas Elliman wants to sublease about 10,800 square feet of its office in Beverly Hills in an effort to consolidate its operations there. 

The brokerage has tapped its commercial branch to list two floors at 150 South El Camino Drive for sublease, according to social media posts from Douglas Elliman Commercial agent Jason Froehlich. 

The company is looking for about $5 a square foot a month, or about $54,000 a month, for the two-floor space. 

“Owing to underutilized area in our Beverly Hills office, we are consolidating our operations exclusively to the third floor of 150 El Camino Drive, giving us one cohesive space to collaborate with our colleagues and agents,” a representative for Douglas Elliman said in a statement. 

Kennedy Wilson owns the roughly 60,000-square-foot building, records show. 

The office has served as the headquarters for Douglas Elliman California and previously housed 300 agents, according to the firm’s website. 

Douglas Elliman has worked to reduce its office space since 2020 when the pandemic hit. It was still working to reduce office space last year in an effort to cut costs. However, according to financial filings, Douglas Elliman has not dramatically reduced expenses. It spent $125 million on general and administrative expenses in 2023, down from $131 million in 2022.

The average monthly asking rent during the first quarters for a Beverly Hills office was $5.20 per square foot, according to a report from brokerage CBRE. For Class A offices, the number increased to $5.45 per square foot.

The post Douglas Elliman wants to sublease 11K sf at Beverly Hills office appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Brokerages, LA Office Market, Subleasing 

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Leo Pustilnikov proposes studio-only multifamily in Beverly Hills – Robert Khodadadian

Leo Pustilnikov proposes studio-only multifamily in Beverly Hills – Robert Khodadadian

Hamilton Drive LLC and SDLP Holdings LLC, entities owned by Leo Pustilnikov, have filed an application to build an eight-story, 90-unit multifamily building in the heart of Beverly Hills, according to the plans reviewed by TRD.

This marks the sixth pending case relying on builder’s remedy in Beverly Hills for Pustilnikov, a developer who has become one of the most public advocates for the provision in an effort to get building approvals in jurisdictions resistant to new development.

The latest project, located at 214-216 South Hamilton Drive in what is already a desirable, walkable part of Beverly Hills, would be close to the new Metro D Line extension once it is completed.

Notably, the proposal for the building consists entirely of 90 studio apartments, including 18 affordable housing units.

Builder’s remedy is a legal loophole that becomes available if cities don’t have a state-approved plan to build more housing by the state-mandated deadline. Under builder’s remedy, housing projects that meet affordability criteria are automatically approved for development.

Beverly Hills muffed its deadline in October 2022, allowing Pustilnikov to file multiple builder’s remedy applications, which can be updated later. The Department of Housing and Community Development certified the City of Beverly Hills’ housing plan on May 1, closing the window for new builder’s remedy projects. 

“Now that Beverly Hills is certified, it should consider how to deal with those [applications] that were timely submitted,” Pustilnikov told TRD.

The city allocated 3,000 housing units in the plan, with about 1,600 for very low or low income residents.

While the city has expressed support for affordable housing in principle, the outcome of Pustilnikov’s project will be a good indicator of its commitment in practice. The city has 30 days to respond to the application.

“Leo’s six projects collectively offer the city a lot of affordable housing, and the hope is that they’re going to be interested in seeing more affordable housing since they’ve committed to the state to achieve some pretty ambitious RHNA [Regional Housing Needs Assessment] numbers,” said Dave Rand, an attorney at Rand Paster Nelson who advises Pustilnikov on the Hamilton Drive project. “Thus far they’ve been pretty uninterested in processing these projects.”

While some developers would be inclined to sit out the battles with the city to get their projects built or pursue development elsewhere, Pustilnikov has a long-term conviction when it comes to Beverly Hills — as the Hamilton Drive application shows.

“Because it is so exclusive and desirable, it makes it a very attractive place to invest,” Rand said. “There are cities that most developers would determine are not worth fighting for. Beverly Hills is worth fighting for.”

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Couple sues LA for right to demolish Marilyn Monroe’s former home – Robert Khodadadian

Couple sues LA for right to demolish Marilyn Monroe’s former home – Robert Khodadadian

UPDATED MAY 9 at 1:30 p.m.:

A Los Angeles lawsuit entangles a television producer, a city with deep pockets and a Brentwood home once owned by Marilyn Monroe, whose life ended in a back bedroom.

Real estate heiress Brinah Milstein Bank of the Milstein Properties family in New York and her husband, reality TV producer Roy Bank, have sued the City of Los Angeles for their alleged right to bulldoze a Spanish hacienda-style home at 12305 5th Helena Drive, Business Insider reported.

The Banks bought the first and last home owned by the Hollywood siren in July for $8.35 million. They bought the house next door, a 6,000-square-foot dwelling at 12306 6th Helena Drive, in 2016 for $8.2 million.

But their plans to raze the 2,900-square-foot Monroe home to make room to expand their house next door created an international outcry — and an order by the city to temporarily stave off the wrecking ball.

Days after reports surfaced that the century-old home faced demolition, the Los Angeles City Council in September rushed through a motion to consider designating the property a historic cultural monument, a move that would invalidate the demolition permits.

The City Council will vote on whether to declare the house a historic cultural monument by mid-June.

In a written statement to The Real Deal, Milstein and Bank’s attorney Peter Sheridan alleged the city “engaged in an illegal and unconstitutional conspiracy” involving government officials and tour operators and violated the law “with regards to the quasi-judicial process required for evaluation of alleged historic cultural monuments.”

Monroe bought the one-story, four-bedroom home in early 1962 for $77,500 — or roughly $790,000 in 2023 dollars — after her divorce from playwright Arthur Miller. Less than six months later, the 36-year-old actress was found dead from a drug overdose in her bedroom.

Its front step tiles read “Cursum Perficio” — Latin for “my journey ends here.”

The Banks contend the house has been “substantially altered” since Monroe’s death, according to their complaint.

There is not a single piece of the house that includes any physical evidence that Ms. Monroe ever spent a day at the house, not a piece of furniture, not a paint chip, not a carpet, nothing,” the lawsuit states.

The Banks claim they were issued a demolition permit from the city, which was initially “held” for 30 days to allow for objections. 

No objections were raised and permits were subsequently issued, they say, which led to them incurring more than $30,000 in expenses before receiving an actual notice of a “stay” invoked by the city.

Their lawsuit also alleges that the city’s push for the designation violated its own codes, which has deprived the plaintiffs of their “vested rights as owners of real propertyand has caused them “irreparable harm.”

Liz Waytkus, the U.S. executive director of the conservation nonprofit Docomomo, told Dezeen last month that the demolition highlighted a “systemic” problem in the area.

The land has become more valuable than the house, and even if people understand the value of such a home, location and land value often trump architectural significance,” she said.

Correction: Previous story incorrectly identified Milstein and Bank.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Real estate heiress hatched plan to demolish Marilyn Monroe home 

Los Angeles

Marilyn Monroe’s only home in LA faces demolition

Los Angeles

LA City Council saves Marilyn Monroe house from wrecking ball

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  Uncategorized, Celebrity Real Estate 

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Weingart Center pays $27M for Cheviot Hills assisted living facility – Robert Khodadadian

Weingart Center pays $27M for Cheviot Hills assisted living facility – Robert Khodadadian

Housing nonprofit Weingart Center has closed a $27.3 million acquisition of a 76-unit assisted living facility in Cheviot Hills, with plans to turn the site into a homeless shelter, The Real Deal has learned. 

The property, at 3340 Shelby Drive, is known as the Terraza of Cheviot Hills. The facility contains a three-story structure that spans 38,200 square feet. Weingart completed the deal on April 12, according to a deed filed in Los Angeles County’s Recorder’s Office. 

The seller is a Sacramento-based entity called Palms Affordable Housing. The limited partnership, managed by David Cardena, flipped the site after just months of ownership, records indicate. The company bought the asset in December from Florida firm Bridge Investment Group.

According to a Los Angeles Housing Department report from last June, Weingart requested nearly $19.6 million in capital funding for the project. The financing will come through Project Homekey, a $1.4 billion state program that funds homeless housing conversions. Weingart plans to use the financing to renovate units and build amenities. The unit count for the complex will stay the same. 

The Los Angeles Housing Department recommended $20.5 million in match funding to cover cost increases for the project. 

Weingart Center, headquartered in L.A.’s Skid Row, provides supportive housing to the homeless. Former California State Senator Kevin Murray serves as CEO of the center. 

The nonprofit is converting another Project Homekey site in Baldwin Park. That property, located at 13921 Francisquito Avenue, housed a 108-key hotel called the Grand Park Inn. Weingart closed its $21.4 million acquisition of the property on April 2, property records show. The organization plans to convert the Francisquito Avenue property into a residential complex with 107 units. Weingart and Los Angeles County received $34.6 million in funding for the project.   

The state has funded 250 projects through the Homekey program, according to data from California’s Department of Housing and Community Development. The financing is expected to create a total of 15,319 homes.  

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Neil Shekhter’s WS Communities looks to sell a third of its LA apartments – Robert Khodadadian

Neil Shekhter’s WS Communities looks to sell a third of its LA apartments – Robert Khodadadian

Neil Shekhter’s WS Communities is looking to sell 11 apartment buildings in Santa Monica, months after losing about half its portfolio to lenders, The Real Deal has learned. 

WS Communities has tapped a JLL team led by Blake Rogers to market the 399-unit portfolio for sale, according to marketing materials obtained by TRD. No asking price has been disclosed and Rogers did not respond to a request for comment. Shekhter did not respond to a request for comment.

The portfolio represents more than a third of Shekhter’s current holdings, which now stands at about 1,100 units. In December, lenders Madison Realty Capital, Hankey Capital and Lightstone Capital took over almost 30 properties, totaling more than 870 units, through deeds-in-lieu of foreclosure, after Shekhter and his affiliated entities defaulted on hundreds of millions of dollars in debt. 

Last month, Shekhter also lost control of a 16-unit apartment complex in Sawtelle — 1743 Butler Avenue — to a receiver, court records show. Shekhter defaulted on a $6.2 million business loan from Bank of Southern California tied to the property, prompting the bank to file a lawsuit asking for a receivership. Bank of SoCal also foreclosed on another 24 units owned by Shekhter in March

The Santa Monica properties up for sale, which are mostly clustered around 6th Street and 7th Street in Downtown Santa Monica, are subject to affordable housing agreements with the City of Santa Monica, limiting how much the portfolio’s owner can increase rents. 

Shekhter has owned the majority of the buildings since the early 2000s, according to property records filed with Los Angeles County. 

Nine of the buildings are backed by a $127.6 million senior loan from Ready Capital, which was securitized into a collateralized loan obligation for investors, records show. WS Communities also got more than $13 million in preferred equity for the portfolio, according to data from Real Estate Capital. 

About 60 percent of the units are subject to California rent control laws, which limit landlords from increasing rents more than the Consumer Price Index plus 5 percent. 

And about 20 percent are subject to Santa Monica’s rent control rules, which allows for a 2.8 percent increase or 75 percent of the CPI, whichever is less. 

But the portfolio will be sold with a new regulatory agreement under California’s welfare exemption, which lowers property taxes for landlords that rent units to people with incomes at or below 80 percent of the area median income. 

JLL said the portfolio will benefit from a minimum property tax reduction of 50 percent. No property tax exemption is guaranteed until the regulatory agreement is signed. 

The portfolio’s occupancy has flip-flopped over the last five years — in 2019, occupancy was 92 percent and dropped to 86 percent in 2020. By 2022, it recovered to 97 percent, but dropped to 91 percent in 2023

The dip in occupancy in 2023 was because of evictions, according to the marketing materials. After Los Angeles County ended the three-year eviction moratorium in March 2023, which prevented landlords from evicting tenants affected financially during the pandemic, landlords were able to evict tenants who fell behind on rent. 

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Oceanwide puts graffiti-covered towers up for sale in DTLA – Robert Khodadadian

Oceanwide puts graffiti-covered towers up for sale in DTLA – Robert Khodadadian

Name your price for three partially built skyscrapers slathered with graffiti in Downtown Los Angeles.

China-based Oceanwide Holdings, which sank $1.2 billion to develop Oceanwide Plaza before abandoning it to the whims of taggers, has put the complex up for sale at Figueroa, Flower, 11th and 12th streets, Bloomberg reported.

The asking price for the 49- and 40-story eyesores that cast L.A. under an international spotlight for Downtown blight was not disclosed.

Colliers and Hilco Real Estate have been hired to sell the property, subject to bankruptcy court approval, according to a statement. Lenders and other creditors need around $400 million to recoup their money.

“We are determined to run a disciplined and orderly process to identify the right developer to finish the project in time for the 2028 Summer Olympics,” Mark Tarczynski of Colliers said.

Oceanwide broke ground in 2015 on what was foreseen as a $900 million hotel and condominium complex in the heart of Los Angeles, turning Downtown from “an in-and-out destination to a place to dwell,” according to its architect.

But in early 2019 the development stalled, leaving in the lurch a 2 million-square-foot hotel, condo and retail complex without roofs. Estimated costs to complete the abandoned project grew to $2.3 billion.

China Oceanwide had poured $3.5 billion into projects in Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York and Hawaii, none completed.

Then the pandemic and a shift to remote work hammered commercial values in Downtown L.A., which grew worse with higher borrowing costs. The city’s third tallest office building sold in December for nearly half its 2014 price.

In January, intrepid graffiti artists then scaled the abandoned Oceanwide towers, leaving their mark and a $3.8 million bill to taxpayers to secure and clean the project site. Some intruders parachuted off a tower.

In February, contractors on the project, led by Lendlease, filed an involuntary bankruptcy petition against the limited liability company for Oceanwide Plaza. 

The project now has debtor-in-possession financing for payroll, security, repairs to comply with the city order and to assist in a sale process, according to Sharon Weiss, lead counsel for the debtor with Bryan Cave Leighton Paisner.

“I think this is a good opportunity for this building to come back alive, and to show how a bankruptcy case can fix a lot of problems,” Weiss told Bloomberg.

Oceanwide Holdings owes creditors nearly $400 million, including $180 million to EB-5 visa investors, $175 million to construction contractors, $18 million for back taxes to L.A. County and money to repay the city for security, Weiss said.

An April appraisal by Colliers submitted in the bankruptcy court estimated the as-is market value at nearly $434 million. The brokerage projected a cost of $865 million to complete the project, now 60 percent complete.

The appraisal report also noted “two serious buyers with pricing negotiated at $850 [million]” in its current condition, numbers attributed to Ken Choi, an attorney for Oceanwide. The names of the buyers are confidential, the appraisal said. Choi didn’t respond to requests for comment.

“We did not place any weight on these offers,” the appraisers, Jay Kwong and Brian Tankersley, wrote in their report.

Completing Oceanwide Plaza and selling its condominiums would be an uphill challenge for any prospective buyer, according to Alexander Shing, CEO of Cottonwood Group.

Read more

Los Angeles

Contractors aim to push Oceanwide into bankruptcy

Los Angeles

Oceanwide negotiating forbearance on lapsed EB-5 loan tied to LA project

Apartments in downtown Los Angeles are 9.8 percent vacant, the highest of any submarket in the region, according to CoStar Group. Asking rents fell 1.5 percent in the 12 months through March, while the average sale price per unit dropped to $520,000, down 20 percent from early 2022.

More than 500 “outsized condos is no longer the right product for this market cycle,” Shing told Bloomberg in an email. “It would be challenging for someone to get the necessary financing, in this environment, to complete the construction and project in a profitable manner.”

— Dana Bartholomew

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Clarion Partners sells Playa Vista apartments at slight discount – Robert Khodadadian

Clarion Partners sells Playa Vista apartments at slight discount – Robert Khodadadian

Clarion Partners has sold an apartment complex in Playa Vista for $122 million, a price that technically amounted to a discount after the city took its 5.5 percent tax on the sale under Measure ULA, The Real Deal has learned. 

San Francisco-based DivcoWest bought the 214-unit Reveal Playa Vista, located at 5710 East Crescent Park, according to property records filed with Los Angeles County. The deal came out to about $570,000 per unit

Clarion bought the property for $117.5 million, or roughly $549,000 per unit, in 2018, records show. 

Things have changed in Los Angeles since then. The city now has a 5.5 percent transfer tax on all commercial sales of more than $10 million.

Clarion had to pay the city almost $7.3 million under the tax, according to the deed for the property. Taking that off the top, the sale yielded about $114.7 million for Clarion. The company did not respond to a request for comment.

Monthly rents at Reveal Playa Vista range from about $3,500 for a one-bedroom to about $5,000 for a two-bedroom, according to online listings for the apartment complex. 

The median rent for a one-bedroom unit across the market from Westchester to Playa del Rey, where Playa Vista is located, was $2,830 last month, down about 8 percent over the last year, according to Zumper. 

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  Uncategorized, Investment Sales, LA Multifamily 

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Pace of real estate hiring slows across Southern California – Robert Khodadadian

Pace of real estate hiring slows across Southern California – Robert Khodadadian

Sluggish home sales and construction in the wake of higher interest rates have pumped the brakes on Southern California real estate hiring.

Property-linked companies have cut their seasonal hiring pace by more than a third in March for Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties, the Orange County Register reported, citing state employment figures.

Property-linked employment was 755,900 in March, up 2,200 jobs from February, a gain of 0.3 percent — but 36 percent off the normal seasonal pace. Before the pandemic, between 2015 and 2019, an average 3,460 jobs were added each March.

In the past year, local real estate work grew by 7,400 jobs — 46 percent fewer than the typical 13,800 jobs added each year since 2010, according to the Register.

The number of current real estate positions is 26,800 jobs below the recent employment peak in July 2022. Many people who work in the real estate industry are self-employed and aren’t tracked by government job counts.

Across the four counties in Southern California, the real estate share of total employment was 9.5 percent in March, and 11 percent of all new jobs since 2010, the end of the Great Recession.

At the same time, employment in all other sectors was 7.19 million workers in March, up 25,600 jobs in a month. Over 12 months, non-real estate jobs rose 1 percent to 69,500, the same growth rate as real estate.

Over the past 12 months, local jobs in specialist trade construction rose 2.9 percent to 248,800; jobs in building, civil engineering and construction rose 1.7 percent to 121,400 workers; jobs in lending fell 4.3 percent to 88,200; jobs in real estate services rose 0.1 percent to 138,200; jobs in building supplies fell 1.6 percent to 50,700 jobs; and jobs in building services rose 2.7 percent to 108,600, according to the Register.

At the same time, jobs in real estate fell 0.2 percent to 371,200 in Los Angeles County, while jobs in March rose 300 for the month, versus an average 1,100 hires.

Real estate jobs in the past year rose 1.09 percent to 213,700 in Orange County, while jobs in March were up 800 for the month, versus an average 500 hires.

Year-over-year real estate jobs in the Inland Empire rose 3.3 percent to 180,900, while jobs in March were up 1,100 for the month, versus an average 1,800 hires.

The sluggish growth in real estate jobs comes after a spike in hiring last fall, mostly in home construction, when local jobs hit a post-Great Recession high of 805,200.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Real estate jobs grow 2.1% across Southern California in October

Los Angeles

SoCal loses 4,600 real estate jobs last month during sluggish market

Los Angeles

Real estate hiring in Southern California shows strength in May

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Estate of late financier Robert Day lists in Bel-Air for $150M – Robert Khodadadian

Estate of late financier Robert Day lists in Bel-Air for $150M – Robert Khodadadian

The widow of the late oil heir and businessman Robert Day has put their 18,800-square-foot Gilded Age-style estate in Bel-Air on the market for $150 million.

Marlyn Day has listed the 3.3-acre gated compound known as Villa dei Fiori, or Villa of Flowers, at 729 Bel Air Road, the Wall Street Journal reported.

Robert Day, founder of Trust Company of the West and grandson of Superior Oil founder William Myron Keck, bought the house in 1995 for $7.4 million, then renovated and expanded it. He died in September.

If sold for its asking price, the Palladian-style villa would be one of the most expensive homes to change hands in the U.S.

The nine-bedroom, 20-bathroom estate includes a 15,000-square-foot mansion, built in 1972, and two guesthouses.

The white two-story home, capped by an orange Italian-tile roof, has views of Downtown Los Angeles, the Pacific Ocean and the San Gabriel Mountains, according to listing agents Linda May and Drew Fenton of Carolwood Estates. 

It also served as a regal gathering spot for dinners, fundraisers and such guests as former President George W. Bush and former presidential adviser Henry Kissinger, according to Marlyn Day. 

The mansion has a two-story entry rotunda lit by a skylight and chandelier. 

A formal living room has wood-carved doorways, an ornamental plaster ceiling and an antique gold-leaf mantelpiece. A library has an 18th-century chandelier dangling from a similarly intricate ceiling. 

A formal dining room that opens to the outdoors has a coffered ceiling with a porcelain chandelier and walls lined with 18th-century French wallpaper. 

The home has a large covered terrace with an outdoor dining area, plus a home office, a wine cellar, screening room with a fireplace and a lounge with a built-in bar.

Outside, the home is surrounded by manicured gardens, including a rose garden, small lake and waterfall. The grounds contain a croquet lawn, an orchid hot house, an indoor plant nursery and an Argentine padel court, where Robert Day would host mixed doubles.

After buying the property, Day added the padel court, viewing platform and guesthouses.

Robert and I had a significant lifestyle in this remarkable home together. We entertained constantly and we were the hub for many things going on in our city,” Marlyn Day said in a statement. “With his absence, I feel compelled to embark on a new chapter, desiring to shift my lifestyle and pass on this magnificent estate for its next illustrious owner’s chapter.”

Read more

Los Angeles

Billionaire heiress Taylor Thomson sells Bel-Air estate for $27M

Los Angeles

Chinese billionaire buys Rick Hilton’s Bel-Air mansion at discount

Los Angeles

Karen Winnick lops $55M off price of Casa Encantada in Bel-Air

The Day property is located near the Hotel Bel-Air and across the street from the Chartwell estate, which in 2019 sold to Lachlan Murdoch for $150 million.

Nine-figure deals have surged during the last few years in L.A., New York and Palm Beach, according to the WSJ. As of early this year, at least 24 homes have sold for $100 million or more since 2020, more than the total number of nine-figure sales during the previous decade.

— Dana Bartholomew

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Mohamed Hadid settles suit against Zach Vella over Beverly Crest site – Robert Khodadadian

Mohamed Hadid settles suit against Zach Vella over Beverly Crest site – Robert Khodadadian

Mohamed Hadid has settled a lawsuit against developer Zach Vella in relation to a partially built Beverly Crest mansion that was once listed for sale at $250 million. 

In September 2022, Hadid, through an entity called Treetop Development, sued Vella’s Skylark Capital for perpetrating a “loan-to-own scheme” on 9650 Cedarbrook Drive, a planned 78,000-square-foot home that’s reportedly the largest-ever permitted residential development in Los Angeles. Beverly Crest is a section of L.A. overlooking Beverly Hills.

The dispute related to a $92.8 million mortgage on the mansion property. In a complaint filed in California’s Central District bankruptcy court, Hadid claimed that Vella only provided a $29 million chunk of the promised figure. “This in turn led to the construction project not being timely completed and Treetop unable to timely pay the subcontractors performing the work,” the complaint states. 

On April 23, Hadid filed a motion asking a judge to approve the settlement, court records show. Treetop agreed to the deal with Skylark Capital’s servicer, Skylark (UK) Servicing LLC. 

The parties have now reached an agreement that consensually addresses their various disputes, will facilitate a sale and potential plan process, and maximize the value of the debtor’s property which will serve to benefit the debtor’s estate and all of its creditors,” the court filing reads.  

 Under the terms of the agreement, Hadid will sell the property on an “as is where is” basis with the possibility that Skylark itself will lodge a bid for the 37-acre site. 

The deal sets Skylark’s secured claim at $40 million. The figure is much lower than the $63 million that Vella claimed at the time the lawsuit was filed. The agreement also extends the maturity date and increases the debtor-in-possession financing on the property to $16.6 million. 

In its motion, Hadid’s counsel said that the embattled developer may not be able to afford a long legal fight. 

The costs of discovery, expert testimony and trial would be very costly and time intensive, and would likely involve multiple trial days. Additionally, the debtor may not have the resources to fully pursue a final judgment against the Skylark parties,” the court filing states. 

A possible wrinkle in the deal is the intervention of the City of Los Angeles. In January, Hadid sued the city for canceling the building permits for the site. The court issued an order that reinstated the building permits for the site. In an objection to the settlement, the city claimed that the settlement should not be approved because it would give Hadid more resources to sue taxpayers. 

The settlement funds further litigation over the issue and also enables the expansion of litigation into other areas that seek damages against city taxpayers. Even if the settlement would lead to payment in full to all creditors, the settlement does nothing but drive the parties further into two camps: the City of Los Angeles versus virtually everyone else,” the city’s filing reads.  

The city has since appealed the decision, with hearings set for May 6 and May 10, court records show. Hadid could not be reached for comment. 

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  Uncategorized, Beverly Crest, Mohamed Hadid 

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Hudson Pacific posts $52M loss as office causes pain in portfolio – Robert Khodadadian

Hudson Pacific posts $52M loss as office causes pain in portfolio – Robert Khodadadian

Hudson Pacific Properties is feeling the burn of withering office markets. 

The Los Angeles-based real estate investment trust lost $52 million in the first quarter, up 160 percent from its $20.4 million loss reported in the same period last year, according to an earnings release on Wednesday. 

The reason: Hudson Pacific harvests less and less revenue from its office properties. 

Vacancy “remains stubbornly high as many existing tenants continue to downsize,” CEO Victor Coleman said on a call Thursday discussing the firm’s quarterly earnings. 

The company reeled in $175 million in revenues from its office portfolio from January through March, down roughly 15 percent from the first quarter of 2023, financial filings show. 

Its office portfolio was 78 percent occupied on average in the first three months of this year, down from 85 percent a year prior. 

Hudson Pacific is looking to sell three office buildings totaling around 900,000 square feet, or roughly 8 percent of its office portfolio, Coleman said on the call. The firm did not identify which buildings it was looking to shed. 

The San Francisco Bay Area is causing the most pain for the company in terms of vacancy — its portfolio there was 74 percent leased on average in the first quarter. 

The leasing is uneven, too. One building, Skyport Plaza in North San Jose, was 6 percent occupied, while others including 3400 Hillview Avenue, were 100 percent leased.

On some buildings, Hudson Pacific is still bullish. At 1455 Market Street, where the firm just signed the City of San Francisco to a 157,000-square-foot lease, the firm paid $43.5 million for a 45 percent interest in the building, the firm said on Wednesday. 

Over the past few years, Hudson Pacific has relied on its movie studio portfolio to boost revenues, given the uncertainty around the office sector. 

But, with two sweeping strikes that hit the entertainment industry, Hudson Pacific is in recovery mode on those assets, too. 

Revenues from its studio portfolio — about 10 percent of all its holdings — have shrunk 15 percent over the last year, financial filings show. In November, the firm was expecting a “tremendous upswing” when filming resumed, but hasn’t seen it yet. 

The film and television industry has recovered far more slowly than anticipated,” Coleman said, though he remained hopeful. “There is no question that high-quality, original content will remain essential for the studios growing their subscriber bases and building valuable IP.”

Read more

Los Angeles

Hollywood strikes could cost Hudson Pacific Properties $100M 

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  Uncategorized, Earnings, LA Office Market, SF Office Market, Studio Real Estate 

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Shangri-La files for Chapter 11 on four motel-to-home conversions – Robert Khodadadian

Shangri-La files for Chapter 11 on four motel-to-home conversions – Robert Khodadadian

Shangri-La Industries, the troubled developer of motel-to-housing conversions for homeless residents, has declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy on four projects in California.

The Los Angeles-based firm, accused of fraud by the state in connection to its state-funded conversions, filed for bankruptcy protection on former motel projects in Redlands, Thousand Oaks, Salinas and San Ysidro, the Los Angeles Daily News reported.

The court filing affects the former Good Nite Inn in Redlands, the former Quality Inn & Suites in Thousand Oaks and the former Sanborn Inn in Salinas, each funded by the state’s Project Homekey program.

It also affects a former Travelodge in San Ysidro, which was funded under the state Community Care Expansion program, according to Brian Sun, the attorney representing Shangri-La. 

City officials couldn’t say how it might impact their respective Homekey projects.

Gov. Gavin Newsom launched Project Homekey in June 2020 to provide shelter for homeless residents during the pandemic. The state has allocated more than $3 billion to cities and counties to buy motels, hotels and vacant apartment buildings for permanent homeless housing.

Since 2020, the state Department of Housing and Community Development has provided Shangri-La Industries more than $121 million in Homekey funds to convert motels up and down the state into permanent supportive housing for the homeless.

Then the developer defaulted on loans tied to seven properties, and owed about $41 million in delinquent debt as of Dec. 1, The Real Deal reported. In separate court cases, lenders had sued Shangri-La and asked the court for receiverships, an alternative to bankruptcy. 

In January, Shangri-La Industries lost control of six out of seven former motels for Project Homekey sites to court-appointed receivers in Salinas, King City, San Bernardino and Redlands.

After TRD reported on the defaults, the state opened an investigation into Shangri-La and found the firm had violated its operating agreements tied to six of the properties. In January, state Attorney General Rob Bonta filed a lawsuit against the firm, claiming the developer breached state contracts and alleging fraud. 

A Southern California News Group investigation last year also found that lenders and contractors doing business with Shangri-Li said they weren’t paid for completed work at the former Good Nite Inn in Redlands, now Step Up in Redlands, and the former All Star Lodge in San Bernardino, now Step Up in San Bernardino.

Dozens of mechanic’s liens totaling millions of dollars have been filed over the past year at recorders’ offices in San Bernardino, Ventura and Monterey counties, the sites of Shangri-La projects for Homekey. The firm’s failure to pay resulted in more than a dozen lawsuits.

Last month, the Redlands City Council terminated its Homekey agreement with Shangri-La as the state housing regulators accused the developer of misappropriating $114 million in Homekey funds.

Sun, the attorney for the developer, said the bankruptcy filings are part of the developer’s plan to restructure and finish its commitments on the various Homekey projects.

In a lawsuit in March, Shangri-La Industries accused its former chief financial officer, Cody Holmes, of embezzling millions of dollars in company money so he and his former girlfriend could live high on the hog, placing the developer’s state-funded projects in jeopardy, including those listed in its Chapter 11 filing.

Andy Meyers, CEO of the embattled company he co-founded with the late Hollywood producer Steve Bing, has blamed the state for the firm’s delinquencies, saying that lenders triggered defaults because government officials failed to sign regulatory agreements for the various conversion deals.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Shangri-La accuses former CFO of embezzling $40M intended for homeless housing

Los Angeles

LA’s Shangri-La Industries loses Project Homekey sites to receivers

Los Angeles

California state sues Shangri-La alleging fraud after Project Homekey defaults

The post Shangri-La files for Chapter 11 on four motel-to-home conversions appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Fraud, mechanics liens, Project Homekey 

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WeWork negotiates to keep Long Beach, South Coast Plaza locations – Robert Khodadadian

WeWork negotiates to keep Long Beach, South Coast Plaza locations – Robert Khodadadian

WeWork has agreed to keep two more locations in Southern California — one in Long Beach and another at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. 

The coworking firm, which is currently making its way through bankruptcy, has filed motions to keep its leases at 100 West Broadway, a building owned by Redwood Urban, and CJ Segerstrom’s Park Tower at South Coast Plaza, according to court records. 

WeWork leased two floors totaling 33,000 square feet at 100 West Broadway in 2016, according to reports at the time. When Redwood Urban bought the building for $60.5 million in 2018, one of the hooks was that WeWork held a long-term lease there. 

WeWork will pay $307,400 to keep its Long Beach lease, a maneuver known as a lease cure, court records show. Redwood Urban agreed to reduce its rent, extend WeWork’s term and require a reduced guaranty — cash that will go towards paying the landlord if WeWork defaults on the lease.

At Park Tower, a 335,500-square-foot building at 695 Town Center Drive in Costa Mesa, WeWork leased about 38,000 square feet and opened its location in 2019, according to a marketing brochure for the space. 

At that location, WeWork has agreed to pay $383,000 to keep the lease and share some profits with landlord CJ Segerstrom, court records show. CJ Segerstrom, in return, agreed to reduce rent and WeWork’s guaranty on the lease. 

WeWork has been working to determine which leases across the country it wants to keep, and which it wants to shed. 

The firm recently rejected leases in Houston, Texas, and San Jose, according to bankruptcy records. 

Last month, WeWork said it came to an agreement to exit bankruptcy, thanks to $337 million in funding from Yardi Systems and $112 million from existing bondholders. The deal will allow WeWork to skirt being sold to its co-founder and former CEO Adam Neumann, who had emerged as a potential buyer. 

The post WeWork negotiates to keep Long Beach, South Coast Plaza locations appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Bankruptcy, LA Office Market, Leasin

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Millennium Partners scuttles $1B plan for highrises in Hollywood – Robert Khodadadian

Millennium Partners scuttles $1B plan for highrises in Hollywood – Robert Khodadadian

Millennium Partners has killed a $1 billion plan to build highrises around the Capitol Records Building in Hollywood, a decade after active earthquake faults were found under the site.

The New York-based investor withdrew its requests for approvals for the four-building Hollywood Center project on parking lots next to Capitol Records and the Pantages Theatre along Vineland Avenue, north of Hollywood Boulevard, Urbanize Los Angeles reported.

The L.A. Planning Department has terminated each entitlement request, ending the development.

Plans for the 4.5-acre Hollywood Center, proposed in 2012, called for two office and residential towers of 35 and 45 stories, which would have become the tallest in Tinseltown. They would be flanked by two 11-story buildings, with underground parking.

The project was to contain 1,005 homes, including 133 set aside as affordable housing for “extremely-low-income” and “very-low-income” seniors in the two smaller buildings.

Millennium bought the parcels of parking lots in 2006 from Capitol Records for an undisclosed price.

But the 1.3-million-square-foot development, once known as the Millennium Project, hit a couple of serious snags.

The first resulted from active earthquake faults found beneath the development site by California Geological Survey, which raised questions about the safety of the project. Consultants hired by the developer said the faults didn’t run below the site.

The second came after a judge halted the project because an environmental impact report failed to note the state seismic research that “strongly suggest” an active strand of the fault crosses the project site.

Philip Aarons, founding partner of Millennium Partners, didn’t reveal the firm’s plans for the failed project site’s future.

“Sixteen years ago, we spearheaded the effort to save the world-renowned Capitol Records Building by getting this iconic structure declared a City of Los Angeles historic-cultural monument so that future generations could continue to appreciate its timeless beauty,” Aarons said in a statement. 

“Over the last several years we have worked to preserve this architectural treasure by completing a full seismic upgrade of the structure so that the building can return to its critical role within the music industry,” he said. “While we have made the decision for now not to move ahead with our vision to build housing on the surrounding surface parking lots, we remain committed to working to make the Hollywood community a better place to live and work.”

The developer had also faced criticism over its 58-story “leaning” and sinking tower in San Francisco. Last summer, the condominium highrise stood 1 inch straighter after a $100 million fix.

While Millennium Partners may have stepped away from the star-crossed site near Hollywood and Vine, it hasn’t left the neighborhood, according to Urbanize. In late 2022, the developer won approval to build a 15-story office tower at 6450 Sunset Boulevard.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Shaken, not stirred: Inside Millennium’s battles at Hollywood Center

Los Angeles

$1B Hollywood Center will have 1,000 residential units, according to new plans

San Francisco

Leaning Millennium Tower of SF completes $100M engineering fix

The post Millennium Partners scuttles $1B plan for highrises in Hollywood appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Earthquake fault 

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Macerich posts $127M quarterly loss, looks to sell or exit properties – Robert Khodadadian

Macerich posts $127M quarterly loss, looks to sell or exit properties – Robert Khodadadian

Mall owner Macerich is on the ropes, and may have to sell or surrender properties to tackle its debt.

The Santa Monica-based real estate investment trust, owner of 47 million square feet strip and indoor malls across the U.S., posted a net loss of $126.7 million in the first quarter, more than double its loss of $58.7 million during the same period last year, Bisnow reported, citing a quarterly earnings report.

During the quarter, Macerich’s funds from operations fell to $74.6 million, from $95.9 million a year ago.

The REIT partly blamed the decline on the bankruptcy of Express, an apparel retailer that plans to close more than 100 of its 530 stores.

The 60-year-old Macerich withdrew its prior earnings guidance, citing a plan under new leadership to reduce its debt.

Former CEO Thomas O’Hern retired March 1, with former Spirit Realty Capital CEO Jackson Hsieh taking the helm.

“We have already started to execute on that plan, including property sales, potentially returning assets to lenders and buying out joint venture interests on certain assets,” Macerich said in a statement.

Early this month, Macerich defaulted on a $300 million loan tied to the 527,000-square-foot Santa Monica Place outdoor mall at 395 Santa Monica Place.

The firm has also reworked multiple loans this year, including a $155 refinance of its Danbury Fair Mall in Connecticut, while closing a three-year extension of the $85 million loan on the Fashion Outlets of Niagara Falls in New York, according to Bisnow.

Macerich is also closing an extension on a $151 million on The Oaks, in Thousand Oaks, and is refinancing a $256 million loan on Chandler Fashion Center in Arizona, which matures in July.

The company beat expectations for revenue, reporting $208.8 million, up from an expected $203.5 million, but down from $214.9 million in the first quarter last year. Expenses rose to $232.1 million, up from $192.9 million in the prior quarter and $216.9 million the year before.

Macerich has signed more than 1 million square feet of leases so far this year, a 14 percent increase from the same time last year. And last year was a record year for leasing at the company, with 4.2 million square feet of deals signed.

Occupancy across Macerich shopping centers was 93.4 percent, up from 92.2 percent a year ago. Rents for re-leased space was up 14 percent.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Macerich faces “imminent” default on $300M Santa Monica Place loan

Macerich withdraws plans for 10-story office tower at Phoenix mall

Los Angeles

Macerich reports 3,600% profit jump in Q4 while “running out of anchor space”

The post Macerich posts $127M quarterly loss, looks to sell or exit properties appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized 

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Grandview Partners to sell LA portfolio of “suite-living” projects – Robert Khodadadian

Grandview Partners to sell LA portfolio of “suite-living” projects – Robert Khodadadian

Grandview Partners is se lling a portfolio of four “suite-living” apartment projects in Mar Vista, Westchester and East Hollywood, according to an offering memorandum compiled by their brokers at Kidder Mathews.

The not-yet-constructed projects include 107 suites, 538 beds and 176 parking spaces, according to the marketing materials, which did not disclose an asking price. Kidder Mathews describes the projects as “newly constructed suite-living apartment buildings that are also focused on housing members of communities that share a common vision and mission.”

The memorandum cites Los Angeles Room & Board, a nonprofit that provides transitional housing for community college students and recently bought two L.A. suite-based properties, as an example of how the portfolio’s co-living design could function.

Sites for the developments are located at 4339 Berryman Avenue and 4367 Berryman Avenue in Mar Vista, 8833 Reading Avenue in Westchester and 626 Wilton Place in East Hollywood. Three of the projects are due to be completed in the fourth quarter of this year, with the East Hollywood property slated for the first quarter of 2025.

Units range from one bedroom up to six bedrooms, in keeping with the suite concept. 

The first site, located at 4339 Berryman, was bought for $6 million in September 2021, according to property records. In 2022, Connecticut-based Grandview Partners secured a loan for $21.9 million from East West Bank for the development.

The second property at 4367 Berryman Avenue was purchased for $5.38 million in September 2021. The same owner, Grandview Partners, scored a $17.8 million loan in 2022 from East West Bank for the site, maturing in 2025.

No information was listed on PropertyShark for the 8833 Reading Avenue site, but a LoopNet entry called it a third-acre multifamily property.

The final site, listed at 632 Wilton Place, was bought by a Connecticut buyer in 2022 for $6.6 million. The LLC associated with this property shares an address with Grandview Partners in Greenwich.

Christopher Giordano, George Crawford and Phil Taggart at Kidder Mathews hold the listing and did not respond to a request for comment. Owner Grandview Partners also did not respond to a request for comment.

The post Grandview Partners to sell LA portfolio of “suite-living” projects appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Multifamily 

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Santa Monica’s reputation makeover – Robert Khodadadian

Santa Monica’s reputation makeover – Robert Khodadadian

When Megan Watson, who runs development in Los Angeles for Grubb Properties, started planning an apartment project in Santa Monica, she prepared for a challenging road ahead. The city had a history of giving developers a hard time.

Grubb first applied for a 60-unit building at 700 Santa Monica Boulevard in August 2022 and resubmitted its application for 99 units in July, after the city of Santa Monica signaled that it was making changes — it wanted to start taking developers’ concerns and zoning issues seriously and get more housing built. 

In eight months, Grubb got the green light to build an eight-story building with 89 market-rate apartments and 10 affordable units.

“This was probably our fastest entitlement that we experienced in the state,” Watson said. Eight months would have been a speedy timeframe for any California city, she added. Approvals sometimes take up to two years if there are appeals involved.

But it wasn’t just the city’s speed that impressed Watson — it was how Santa Monica was now talking about building housing. She sat in on a number of City Council meetings, where planners and council members “recognized that the best way” to meet state housing goals was to allow for density. 

What Watson experienced turned out to be a wholesale shift in how Santa Monica approaches new development. In February, a month before Grubb scored its approval, Gov. Gavin Newsom designated Santa Monica a “pro-housing community,” citing the city’s efforts and progress made through an affordable housing program. 

Grubb’s approval appeared to indicate that the designation meant something real, an important change at a time when politicians and developers around the country are aching for opportunities to build and wondering how to change local hearts and minds around new projects.

This may be a surprise to anyone who has been trying to build in the city of Santa Monica over the last few decades, as shown by baffled reactions to the pro-housing designation on social media.

In 2016, for instance, voters were presented with a ballot measure that would have required citywide votes to construct buildings taller than two stories. A sizable minority — 44 percent — of voters were in support, though the measure failed to pass.

“Santa Monica has been well-known as a place that is not friendly to housing development or really any kind of new development,” said Adam Deermount, a West Coast-based portfolio manager at lender Nikols Mortgage Fund. “It tends to be very NIMBY-dominated.”

“If you were to ask a group of 100 developers familiar with development in Southern California to name three development-friendly cities in Southern California, I don’t think any of them would mention Santa Monica,” he added.

The shift to encouraging housing development did not come out of nowhere. 

“If you were to ask a group of 100 developers familiar with development in Southern California to name three development-friendly cities in Southern California, I don’t think any of them would mention Santa Monica.”
Adam Deermount, Nikols Mortgage Fund

The city had to learn the hard way: After failing to get a state-approved housing plan together by October 2022, it faced a deluge of builder’s remedy projects, which threatened to add more than 4,000 units to the city’s housing stock. Builder’s remedy serves essentially as a penalty for cities that do not get state-mandated housing plans in order by a certain deadline. 

It scared a lot of people into realizing that this wasn’t a game with no consequences,” Santa Monica City Council member Jesse Zwick said of the builder’s remedy projects. ”If the city continued to sort of thumb its nose at the state, there would be a real loss of local control over our zoning code.” 

Santa Monica has been making gradual progress, city data shows, though actual development has been uneven. Out of around 9,300 housing units proposed since 2010, about 3,000 have been approved.

The number of units built in Santa Monica shrank last year, though the proportion of affordable housing increased. 

In 2023, 331 units were completed, including 148 affordable units, compared to 539 total units a year before with 92 affordable units, according to city housing data.

And developers want to make their mark on the oceanfront city — for example, Tishman Speyer, the New York-based development giant, filed plans to build 620 units across three acres in Downtown Santa Monica in early 2022. Tweaking city code may make it easier for these players to do so. 

Moment of reckoning 

In 2021, the state tasked Santa Monica, like every other California city, with planning for new homes. For Santa Monica, that meant adding roughly 1,000 units a year by 2029 — which Zwick called “ambitious.”

With Santa Monica’s “reputation of being hostile to business interests in general, and perhaps those seeking to create more homes in particular,” this would be tough, Zwick said. 

There were also real penalties for cities that didn’t make adequate plans, Zwick added.

Santa Monica failed to get its housing plan approved by the state by October 2022, leaving it open to builder’s remedy projects. By May 2023, 16 had been filed

The city reacted fast. By streamlining certain housing approvals and incentivizing building housing on parking lots in residential zones, it got its housing plan approved by the state, closing the window for builder’s remedy projects. The City Council approved a more comprehensive rezoning that allowed taller mixed-use buildings along its commercial corridors. The approval process was no longer discretionary, but by right as long as the zoning allowed for it

There’s no discretionary process whereby people like me can either say yes or no, based on their own personal lives — and that provides a lot of certainty to [developers] hoping to operate and invest in Santa Monica,” Zwick said. “As a council member, I don’t want to be voting yes or no on individual projects.” 

It wasn’t just the builder’s remedy and state pressure fueling the City Council’s appetite for reform. A slump in tourism and the growth of e-commerce and working from home have all had a negative impact on Santa Monica’s budget, according to Zwick.

For the city, it’s become more important to win over businesses and investors and “make it easier on people seeking to put their money in Santa Monica,” he added. 

Rewarding intent

Housing advocates describe the pro-housing designation Santa Monica received as part of a high-level, forward-looking reward system for the cities complying with the state’s housing law. 

The program, which first appeared in California’s 2019 budget, allowed  the state’s Department of Housing and Community Development to label cities as “pro-housing” starting in July 2021, according to a report from the Terner Center for Housing Innovation at the University of California, Berkeley.

Alex Ramiller, who co-wrote the report, described the program as “a proverbial carrot — the state’s way of encouraging local jurisdictions to go out on their own and to do things that are good in terms of promoting housing production.”

It scared a lot of people into realizing that this wasn’t a game with no consequences.”

Santa Monica City Councilman Jesse Zwick on builder’s remedy

But because the program is so new, Ramiller and other Berkeley researchers found it difficult to quantify the impact of the pro-housing designation. Did the label actually mean the city had added more housing? 

The pro-housing designation program is more about intention and future housing production rather than about past or present production,” Ramiller said. “So it’s not intended to necessarily be a backwards-looking measure.”

While the designation does open doors to funding, for Santa Monica, the stamp of approval seems to be more about reputation. The city has only applied for $1 million in emergency rental assistance through the prohousing program, but is “continuing to monitor other available potential funding opportunities,” according to the city spokesperson.

“I’m encouraged by it,” said Sonja Trauss, who founded nonprofit Yes In My Backyard, which advocates for housing development. “Like any government program, it’s not perfect, but I think there’s a lot of potential there.”

Final hurdles

Santa Monica still has obstacles when it comes to proving it’s truly interested in building more housing. 

In November 2022, Santa Monica’s residents — notably not the City Council — voted for Measure GS, which provided for a 5 percent transfer tax on property sales of $8 million or more, with funds going to homelessness prevention, affordable housing and schools. 

The real estate industry argued that the tax has crippled sales and new development, in similar fashion to Measure ULA in the city of Los Angeles.

The mansion tax was not Santa Monica’s finest moment, from a housing production standpoint,” said Dave Rand, a land use attorney and partner at Rand Paster Nelson, who has worked on about 50 cases involving projects in the city. “But they have built a number of other things that are significant in the way of moving housing forward.”

An initiative to exclude multifamily sales from the tax could appear on Santa Monica ballots in November. 

Within city government itself, “you have decision-makers who are very pro-housing,” Rand said. 

Still, the city has more perceptions to change, Zwick said.

“I’ve talked to people from small contractors to big developers who tell me, ‘Oh, I did a project in Santa Monica once and I’ll never do one again,’” Zwick said. “I think that is changing in terms of the climate we’re creating. But there is still a matter of getting that message out.”

The post Santa Monica’s reputation makeover appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Affordable Housing, Builder’s Remedy, Development, Multifamily, Santa Monica 

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Chris Cortazzo on how he became the biggest broker in Malibu – Robert Khodadadian

Chris Cortazzo on how he became the biggest broker in Malibu – Robert Khodadadian

Driving down the Pacific Coast Highway in Malibu, it’s hard to miss Chris Cortazzo’s name. 

The Compass broker is on the majority of listings in the affluent beachside enclave, whether the homes are up for rent or sale. The median listing price for a home in Malibu was $6 million in March 2024, according to Realtor.com. 

“I’m the luckiest human to have such control of this market,” said Cortazzo, as he sat down at Soho House’s Malibu outpost on a Wednesday afternoon in April. 

Cortazzo has been working the Malibu market for nearly three decades, closing more than $8 billion in sales over the course of his career. 

He dresses the part, understated and beachy — a blue linen shirt and sunglasses — but still emblematic of the wealth that Malibu is home to. After lunch, he drove off in a Rolls- Royce SUV.

TRD chatted with Cortazzo about growing up in Malibu, selling his first home (to Richard Gere) and the frenzy of the 2020-2021 market.

Malibu has had a lot of ups and downs. In 2018, the Woolsey Fire burned down more than 1,600 homes across Malibu. Then the luxury market rebounded in a big way.

We got wiped out by that fire. I was running around everywhere, putting out fires for every needy family. I only lost one property in the fire. My ranch unfortunately burned down. Did you ever watch “Lord of the Rings”? It was like The Shire. The Chumash Indians lived there. I had 28 acres. 

I’m rebuilding that back again. In the process, I was able to buy 200 acres behind me, with my own waterfall. I own the whole valley. 

And then Covid hit.

I thought, “Oh, my god, here we go.” The whole western side of Malibu is gone. I can’t believe we’re getting hit again. And then it turned. Everyone discovered Malibu, and I sold over $1 billion that year. It was crazy. It was like 12-, 14-hour days. I had 20 to 24 escrows at a time, continuously. I was just closing, opening. I’m really organized. I’m so precise and very hands on. I talk to my clients all the time, I give feedback. Even though I might not be on an inspection, I know all the inspection reports. I’m very type A. 

You grew up in Malibu.

I had this fairy-tale life. I actually bought the home next door to my parents and said, “I will see you all every day.” My dad left his body over 16 years ago, but he was a firefighter. My backyard was the beach. I was then a beach lifeguard and then became a model in my early 20s. I traveled the world — I was in Europe for two years, Australia for two years. I got engaged with a beautiful Australian girl. A whole fairy tale. 

But then I made a seismic shift and went in a different direction. I met Herb Ritts. In 1992, he was the most famous photographer in the world. His best friend was Richard Gere, who was married to Cindy Crawford, and the four of us traveled the world. 

How did you get into real estate?

At the end of that relationship, I wanted my own identity and got my real estate license. My first sale was to Richard Gere, in Paradise Cove. It was a $5 million sale, which today is probably $100 million. My first listing was from my first massage client — I was also a massage therapist. He gave me an $8 million listing. Massive sale, massive listing, and I was 28. 

I can’t imagine it was easy.

In 2000, I had seven escrows in January. I thought, “This is my year, this is amazing.” Most people would probably do, Eat, Pray, Love, and say, “This is not my thing.” But I think so much in life is about attitude and how you can handle disappointment. 

A lot of your listings are rentals, which pick up in the summer. What has the luxury rental market been like over the past year?

Last year was challenging, because our weather was so choppy. But we’re seeing a lot more activity this year. After Covid, everyone wanted to go to Europe. But I think everyone got it out of their system and they want to come back. We’re getting really busy. Once people experience Malibu and what it has to offer, they always end up buying. It’s a one, two punch.

Are you still in the house you bought, the one next to your parents?

Well, I tore it down. It’s my office now. I love real estate. I own a lot of property around the world. I own nine properties in Malibu. I’ve really stretched myself financially on every purchase, but every purchase has turned out to be so amazing. I believe in the Malibu market, massively. 

Besides property, is there something you spend money on?

It used to be a CD. I didn’t have a lot of money 29 years ago. There’s not a day that goes by that I don’t buy an iced latte for $10 and just say I can’t believe I could afford it. I appreciate everything. I’m literally the same guy with my massage table. I haven’t changed. I feel poor every day. I’m not kidding you. I feel poor. I race out, gravel flying in the air out of my driveway to try to make money every day. I’m very humble. You never feel like you really have it.

The post Chris Cortazzo on how he became the biggest broker in Malibu appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Malibu, Malibu Real Estate, Residential Brokerage 

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Malibu agrees to get housing plan in order, but still vulnerable to builder’s remedy – Robert Khodadadian

Malibu agrees to get housing plan in order, but still vulnerable to builder’s remedy – Robert Khodadadian

The affluent coastal city of Malibu, known for celebrity beach homes and a challenging climate for new development, has agreed to get its housing plans in order. 

Malibu’s settlement with the state will “enable the city to reach compliance with the state’s Housing Element Law,” which requires California cities plan for the development of new housing through 2029, the California Department of Housing and Community Development (HCD), Governor Gavin Newsom and Attorney General Rob Bonta said in a statement.

But, until the state determines Malibu has “adopted a substantially compliant” housing plan, developers can still file projects under the provision of builder’s remedy.

Under the deal, the city agreed to adopt a housing plan by September 23, which would allow for development of 79 housing units, including 47 affordable and low-income housing units.

While the number of units mentioned in the settlement represents just about 1 percent of Malibu’s total housing units, according to U.S. Census data, experts say the move symbolizes the state is being more proactive in enforcing housing laws.

“79 units isn’t going to solve the crisis, but the symbolism is tremendous,” said Dave Rand, a land use attorney at Rand Paster Nelson. “The symbolism is that no jurisdiction, no matter how wealthy, no matter how historically resistant to housing, no jurisdiction is immune from ous state housing laws.”

Malibu “may not deny certain low-, very low-, and moderate-income housing development projects based on the City’s current, outdated general plan and zoning code,” the state offices said in their statement. In other words, the city has to approve certain affordable projects, regardless of zoning. 

“Our housing laws are not optional; they apply to all cities and counties in California,” said Attorney General Rob Bonta in the statement. “When local jurisdictions like Malibu do their part and allow more homes to be constructed, all Californians benefit.”

Malibu, an exclusive enclave of around 11,000 residents, is the latest jurisdiction to face the wrath of the state in cracking down on housing compliance across the state, in an effort to meet their housing goals and address the ongoing housing crisis.  

Still, some housing advocates saw the settlement with Malibu as the state allowing the city to save its reputation and described it as a “bad actor” when it came to showing commitment to housing development over the years.

“If HCD and the attorney general want to let them walk back some of the nonsense and try to save some face, I understand that,” said Leora Tanjuatco Ross, a director at housing advocate and nonprofit YIMBY Action. 

While Gov. Newsom and the attorney general said the city worked with the state “in good faith” to figure out a way to come into compliance, after receiving a violation notice from the state, Tanjuatco Ross rebuked that notion. 

Malibu “struggling to allow less than 100 units of housing to be built has nothing to do with ‘good faith’,” Tanjuatco Ross said. 

While nobody expects citywide change overnight, Malibu’s decision to settle is a notable shift towards being more pro-housing development, according to observers of the city’s politics. Overcoming environmental constraints, transit issues and other challenges will be instrumental to enabling affordable housing in the city.

“Malibu has done literally nothing when it comes to the issue of producing housing or affordable housing,” Rand said, noting he’s already started bringing up the settlement with clients over the weekend.

It’s harder now for the city to turn around to an applicant with the right property and say ‘we’re not interested in anything here and we’re going to deny a project every step of the way’.”

The post Malibu agrees to get housing plan in order, but still vulnerable to builder’s remedy appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Affordable Housing 

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99 Cents closures to open 3.8M sf of retail opportunities in SoCal  – Robert Khodadadian

99 Cents closures to open 3.8M sf of retail opportunities in SoCal  – Robert Khodadadian

The pending closure of 99 Cents Only Stores will leave a 3.8 million-square-foot hole in Southern California. The good news for landlords: the gap may be easy to fill.

The Commerce-based discount chain, which filed for bankruptcy early this month and announced it would close all 371 stores, leaves  a legacy of opportunities for future tenants, Bisnow reported, citing local real estate brokers.

“Over the past five years, there’s just been a lack of overall quality box inventory in L.A. proper or infill Los Angeles,” CBRE Senior Vice President Jamie Brooks said. “99 [Cents Only], for all its challenges, controls some magnificent real estate.” 

99 Cents Only blamed financial trouble related to the pandemic, inflation and theft in announcing its liquidation and closure of its stores, including 164 across Southern California, according to Beta Agency. Other stores in Texas, Nevada and Arizona will also be closed.

Early reports indicated that 143 stores would close, and that an executive for Pic ‘N’ Save Bargains was recruiting investors hoping to buy and reopen the local 99 Cents outlets. It’s not clear if Mark Miller, CEO of Culver City-based Pic ‘N’ Save Bargains, has made headway on the deal.

99 Cents Only Stores was founded in 1982 by Dave Gold, who opened its first store in L.A.’s Ladera Heights, according to his 2013 obituary in the Los Angeles Times. Gold, who’d been working at a liquor store owned by his father, found that marking down surplus goods to 99 cents caused them to sell out “in no time.” 

99 Cents Only stores average 23,000 square feet, according to CoStar, putting them in a “junior box” retail category.

Vacancies are low for retail stores across the U.S. and the Southland, but are acutely low for stores of this size, Beta Agency partner Richard Rizika told Bisnow.

“Historically those leases were very competitively negotiated,” Rizika said. “There is an opportunity for a lot of the landlords to go ahead and increase rents if and when those leases were rejected by the bankruptcy court.”  

99 Cents Only Stores, now in bankruptcy, said it plans to have all its stores close by the end of May, a timeframe that many CRE professionals said seemed accelerated. 

The market may be ready to replace them. All the brokers that Bisnow spoke to said they expect the shuttered stores to be released soon.

Vacancy of retail stores across greater Los Angeles in the first three months of this year was 5.2 percent, according to JLL. The retail vacancy in Orange County was 4 percent, according to Kidder Mathews.

Though 99 Cents Only leases the vast majority of its stores, it owns 28 in California, including its store on Sunset Boulevard in Silverlake and another on Pico Boulevard in West L..A, CoStar reported. 

Barbara Armendariz, founder of SharpLine Commercial Partners, said that after 99 Cents Only Stores announced the bankruptcy, she had at least 40 calls from investors interested in possibly buying the stores. 

She also knows of at least a dozen retailers that are combing through the chain’s portfolio for opportunities

They’re going to get snatched up very quickly, or as easily as the bankruptcy court allows,” Armendariz, who worked with 99 Cents Only in Los Angeles and Orange counties and the Inland Empire for more than a decade, told Bisnow.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

Pic ‘N’ Save CEO wants to buy and revive 99 Cents stores in SoCal

Los Angeles

99 Cents Only Stores sells distribution facility in Commerce for $190M

Los Angeles

99 Cents Only Stores to relocate HQ to Tustin

The post 99 Cents closures to open 3.8M sf of retail opportunities in SoCal  appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized 

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Jade Enterprises puts mostly vacant LA office building up for sale – Robert Khodadadian

Jade Enterprises puts mostly vacant LA office building up for sale – Robert Khodadadian

Jade Enterprises has listed a mostly vacant office tower in Downtown Los Angeles for sale

The L.A.-based investment firm has put 660 South Figueroa Street, a 24-story, 284,500-square-foot tower, on the market, according to a LoopNet listing. A team led by Newmark’s Kevin Shannon is marketing the property for sale

No listing price was disclosed, though the deal would be a “significant” discount to what it could cost to replace the entire building — estimated to be more than $900 a square foot, or roughly $256 million. 

Jade bought the property for $80 million in 2014, or roughly $281 a square foot, records show. The firm used a $55.4 million loan from U.S. Bank for the acquisition and refinanced with a $51.5 million loan from Acore Capital. 

The balance of the loan has shrunk to $39 million. Jade is offering the buyer a deal to assume the loan, which matures in February 2027, with the acquisition.

Jade has spent $12 million over the last 10 years to renovate the building’s common areas and on tenant improvements, according to the listing. 

The property is currently 37 percent leased — and about 12 percent of that is set to expire before 2027. No leases are scheduled to expire this year. 

Offices in Downtown Los Angeles have been trading well below what Jade paid for the building in 2018, impacted by high interest rates and the City of L.A.’s transfer taxes, known as Measure ULA. 

Earlier this month, The Swig Company sold an office complex at 617 West 7th Street for $20.5 million, or $94 a square foot, marking one of the lowest deals on a square-foot basis for an office property in the Downtown market

The post Jade Enterprises puts mostly vacant LA office building up for sale appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Investment Sales, LA Office Market, Listin

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California Supreme Court to rule on anti-ULA ballot measure – Robert Khodadadian

California Supreme Court to rule on anti-ULA ballot measure – Robert Khodadadian

The California Supreme Court will take up the constitutionality of a November ballot measure that would kill the voter-approved “mansion tax,” or Measure ULA, in Los Angeles.

The state’s top court will hear arguments on May 8 regarding the constitutionality of the real estate transfer tax, plus dozens of other recently enacted special taxes, Bisnow reported. The court said it would issue a ruling by the end of June.

The court agreed to examine the measure after Gov. Gavin Newsom and the state legislature petitioned to strip the anti-Measure ULA measure from the ballot.

The measure, known as the Taxpayer Protection and Government Accountability Act, seeks to change the percentage of a voter majority that proposed special taxes need to become law.

Measure ULA, enacted a year ago, included a 4 percent tax on nearly all commercial and residential property sales or ownership transfers above $5 million, and a 5.5 percent levy on properties selling or transferring above $10 million. 

A failed court challenge has been appealed on grounds it had been misrepresented as a “mansion tax,” while the transfer taxes have mostly impacted commercial sales.

There’s a two-tiered system right now,” Matthew Hargrove, CEO of the California Business Properties Association, told Bisnow, describing the way the state can pass special taxes. 

The ballot measure that he and a coalition of supporters are backing aims to shut down that two-tiered system.

The system was made possible by a 2017 court decision on how cities can get special taxes approved. It essentially created two thresholds for approval — one allowing ballot measures proposed by citizen groups to pass with a simple majority, and another requiring government-proposed measures to pass with a two-thirds majority.  

Measure ULA was passed in November 2022 with with 57.8 percent voter approval.

“If the City of L.A. had put [Measure] ULA on the ballot, it would have required a two-thirds vote,” Hargrove said. “But because the City of L.A. did not do it, they deferred to community groups to do it, they got the benefit of that 50 percent vote threshold.” 

Hargrove and other measure backers say it restores the historical two-thirds requirement to pass special taxes. They also tout its transparency measures that require detailed ballot descriptions of how the money will be spent.

Closing the loophole would require making changes to the state constitution to clarify the voting threshold.

It would also require expanding the definition of a tax to include charges that state and local governments now classify as fees, according to the state Legislative Analyst’s Office. The measure could require them to be approved by two-thirds of California voters. 

Newsom, the legislature and the United to House LA coalition that supported Measure ULA, contend the new measure is unconstitutional. 

They argue the measure considered by the state Supreme Court seeks to restructure the state constitution, altering the fiscal powers of the legislative and executive branches and those of the voters well beyond the level of a constitutional amendment, Jonathan Jager, an attorney with Public Counsel who authored an amicus brief for United to House LA, told Bisnow.

The governor’s position, which the coalition agrees with, is that the Taxpayer Protection Act measure so fundamentally rewrites the state constitution … it’s a revision to the constitution,” Jager said. 

Unlike constitutional amendments, revisions to the state constitution can’t be proposed by citizens. They have to come from the legislature, Jager said. 

If approved, the new measure would go into effect retroactively, requiring such initiatives passed since Jan. 1, 2022, to return to voters and get the two-thirds majority approval in 2025. That would effectively kill Measure ULA, among about 40 tax initiatives that would be invalidated, Hargrove said

The League of California Cities counts more than 130 initiatives that would be overturned, a figure that Hargrove contested.

— Dana Bartholomew

Read more

Los Angeles

A year into Measure ULA, a stiff real estate market in the city

Los Angeles

Residential brokers dish on Measure ULA

Los Angeles

Measure ULA challenge lands in federal appeals court

The post California Supreme Court to rule on anti-ULA ballot measure appeared first on The Real Deal.

  Uncategorized, Measure ULA, special taxes 

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