Showing posts with label Tishman. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tishman. Show all posts

Monday, January 21, 2013

Linkage for the Lazy


Ladies and gents, enjoy the link-fest below:
  1. Goldman Sells $750M in Junior Loans on Hawaiian Portfolio - Deal Journal
    1. Abu Dhabi Inv., Canada Pension Plan Inv. Board, and Athene Annuity & Life (owned by Apollo) were the buyers.
  2. Sony Selling U.S. Headquarters Building for $1.1B - Reuters 
    1. Apparently, this is one of the rare times that Sony has been able to make money in the past few years. I really dig  The Brooklyn Investor's arguments as to why Sony is stuck.
  3. BRE Properties Is Possibly In Play - WSJ Developments
  4. Lennar Expanding into Apartments - Bloomberg
    1. Lennar has been doing a lot of things right over the past few years.  
  5. Toll Brothers Playing Follow the Leader - WSJ 
    1. How cute. "Suburban Builder Sees Growth in City Living; 'Tired of Mowing the Lawn.'"
  6. Tishman Speyer in the News, And It's Not Bad This Time - WSJ
    1. Apparently they have learned their lesson.  Less leverage equals less pain in a downturn.
      1. For the uneducated, The CRE Review has been chronicling the Stuy Town Saga for quite some time now.
Yes, the single-family rental rating drama is still playing out and I'll comment on that soon.  In addition to CBS spinning off it's billboards into a REIT and a write-up on RLJ Lodging.

Until then, enjoy the holiday.

*Hat-tip to reader 'Carte Tranche' for the link on Sony's US headquarters*

~Jingle Male

Thursday, October 13, 2011

Colony Square and Midtown Plaza transferred to Special (LBUBS 2006-C7 - $181mm combined)

Both Tishman-owned Atlanta GA office loans were slated to mature this month. Colony Square has a 0.81x DSCR and Midtown Plaza has a 0.54x DSCR (NCF DSCRs as of 1Q 11).

h/t Fitch and Barclays

Thursday, December 16, 2010

353 N. Clark trades at $320 psf

From Globe St.:

Tishman Speyer has completed the acquisition of 353 N. Clark for $385 million, about $35 million less than it cost seller Mesirow Financial to build the tower that was finished in October 2009. Mesirow had owed roughly $374 million from construction loans that were coming due.
...

Tishman is making inroads into investing in Chicago, already owning One North Franklin, 161 N. Clark, 10 & 30 South Wacker, the Civic Opera Building and 30 N LaSalle. The company is the largest owner in the city of Class A buildings, said Casey Wold, senior managing director with the company. “This property is a great addition to our world-class office portfolio and the acquisition demonstrates our confidence in the Chicago market,” he said in a statement Wednesday.

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

CMBS In the News

The WSJ reports on 3 CMBS stories:

Notes the loan is going into a multi-sponsor deal slated for the 2nd quarter.
The owner of the Keystone Summit Corporate Park, private-equity firm Keystone Property Group, recently refinanced the building for $53.5 million, including a $41.5 million first mortgage from Deutsche Bank AG and a $12 million junior loan from Pembrook Capital. What makes this deal stand out is the plan Deutsche Bank has for the first mortgage.


First Ritz to ever default. Ever. Described by a former colleague as 45 minutes into the desert, the middle of nowhere.
The hotel's closure is the latest stumble for the Lake Las Vegas development, which was planned around a manmade lake roughly 15 miles east of the Las Vegas Strip. Developer Transcontinental Corp., led by Ron Boeddeker and Texas tycoons Sid Bass and Lee Bass, began developing the 3,600-acre project in the 1990s to include thousands of upscale homes, three golf courses, a small casino and two resorts. But Transcontinental defaulted on a $540 million loan from lenders led by Credit Suisse and sought Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection for the project last year..


Regarding the MBA default on their building, Petrie calls Kempner a dolt:
The worst part of buying "that stupid office building," Mr. Petrie says, was that it led to emergency cost-cutting that forced the MBA to dismiss some "wonderful people" on its staff. Mr. Kempner, who resigned in 2008, says the board approved the purchase unanimously. "It was not my decision," he says. An MBA spokeswoman declined to comment.


I'm not even going to do an outake of this FT story - the reporter did a poor job writing this up - but maybe this is of interest to someone because it has opinions based on a survey of how various markets will perform (including CDOs and CMBS).

Also in the FT, the Beltway Battle, discusses the attempted takeout by Brookfield for CarrAmerica's DC properties, that Tishman has defaulted on. I initially thought the article was talking about the CarrAmerica portfolios in BALL 2006-BIX1 and CGCMT 2006-FL2, but the addresses listed in the article do not match up.

Thursday, January 28, 2010

Bureau of Misinformation

Someone took a reasonably accurate article from the WSJ and turned it into this diatribe.

First off, homeowner's turning in their keys versus CRE owners turning in their keys.
A) CRE owners do not turn in their keys because they are cash flowing every month but are underwater. Instead, they turn them in because they lost tenants (or never had them) and cannot afford to pay the mortgage. Complain about pro forma underwriting all you want, right here.

Apparently, you're comparing this to a situation where a homeowner is underwater, can still afford the payments, but walks away from a legal contract - likely with recourse to the borrower (unlike the CRE loan). If I, personally, had made the loan to this guy, I'd drill his knees. If, however, he lost his job, had a mortgage that he never could afford in the first place, well, then, he should turn in his keys just like the horrible CMBS borrower you describe.

B) Further, the CRE borrower in a CMBS deal, signed a non-recourse loan doc - the lender agreed that the borrower could turn in the keys with no credit impact. The poor pitiful homeowner signed an agreement saying they would be held liable if they stopped payments. Bad stuff happens to everyone, but you should feel bad when you go back on your word, even if you feel like it was a bit beyond your control. Bring back debtor prisons and stop writing non-recourse CRE loans.

Second, how did Lehman enter into the story? Ok - Derivatives - where did that come into play?

After blaming CMBS repeatedly, the author does admit to not understanding the structure of CMBS deals, but then he keeps doing it in the follow-up comments.

Fannie and Freddie - they always bought most of the Multifamily collateral of deals. This shouldn't be surprising - maybe unknown, but not surprising. The surprising part is that a transitional loan like this was dropped into the Group 2. Still, I don't see them losing money related to the A1A, even on WBCMT 2007-C30.

Speyer not paying the price (author + commenters)? The poor tenants are the only ones to suffer (commenter)? Let's use the authors numbers (which do not necessarily reflect the truth or current investment sizes). The equity owners are losing $224 million dollars. That is not a big deal? They lost 100% of their investment - I've never lost 100% of any investment, and I've never lost any amount of money with a million after it. Seems like a big deal. Tishman Speyer overpaid for Archstone and numerous property investments, are extremely overlevered... Yeah, I think they're pretty big losers here.

Pension plans losing money - oh, the horror. Don't blame Tishman or Blackrock for this, blame the portfolio manager at the pension for investing in mezzanine loans on a property, in a deal that was hard to make work when they were marketing it. I don't have a crystal ball, and I make a lot of mistakes, but I did not buy any related paper to this deal back when it was originally done (I have bought some over the last 12 months, though, at pretty steep discounts - the see saw is broken).

My favorite part is that the google ad that popped up right above the comments was a freecreditreport.com ad that quoted "A Bad Credit Score is 600 or Below". I think the official ranking of 600 below is "Shitty", and "Bad" starts somewhere north of 600. It had a little pile of gold if your credit score is 699 - really? Nothing wrong with a 699 credit score, but the pile of gold probably should be a pile of plastic to more accurately reflect your typical American with a 699 credit score.

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

When the Levee Breaks - Tishman



Bloomberg reported
Aug. 26 (Bloomberg) -- Tishman Speyer Office Fund, an Australian-based fund that invests in U.S. property, renegotiated terms on a revolving credit facility after the value of its real estate fell 33.5 percent.
...
The fund, whose 18 U.S. office properties lost a third of their value in the 12 months through June, “is walking a fine line on the liquidity front,” according to a report by JPMorgan Chase & Co. Sydney-based analysts Michael Scott, Rob Stanton and Richard Jones. They rate the Australian-traded shares “neutral.”

just 8% more and the levee breaks...
The new loan covenants would allow for another 7.7 percent decline in the fund asset values, which is ”not a large buffer in today’s environment,” the analysts wrote.