Thanks for reading and stopping by. With the launch of my new Compliance Building blog, I have stopped blogging here.
Image by Hashc0de under Creative Commons.
The Commercial Real Estate Finance Law Blog, with notes on real estate law and the real estate business from a Massachusetts lawyer
Monday, February 23, 2009
Saturday, February 14, 2009
Compliance Building
With my move from Goodwin Procter to be Chief Compliance Officer at a real estate company, I have been using a blog to keep my notes. I have just open up this blog to the public. You can see what I have been up to at Compliance Building.
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Disclaimers
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Disclaimers
Friday, February 6, 2009
Clash of the Utopias - The Story of Stuyvesant Town
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The purchase price was high. According to the story, the rent flow from the property was less than the debt payments. The new owners would need to kick-out illegal rent-stabilized tenants. They would need to raise rents.
Since the time of the acquisition, the real estate market has changed. The story points out that they had to decrease rents and offer incentives to get vacant units rented.
I believe most of the key people and investors in the transaction knew this was a long term deal that would not result in a quick flip for cash. A complex this big does not move quickly. But, it is hard to resist a tract of land this big in the middle of Manhattan. There were lots of bidders who wanted the project.
The story spends a big chunk of space talking about the Speyer family and their family business.
The comments to the story are biting and largely critical of the new owners and their stewardship of the complex.
[For full disclosure, my former firm represented parties in the transaction and played a significant role in the acquisition, financing and other items mentioned in the story. I had no active role. BlackRock/Tishman Acquires Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village for $5.4 Billion. Deal of the Year. Fund Formation of the year.]
Disclaimers
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