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Front Yard Residential picks up 325 rental homes in Broward

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Some homes part of portfolio deal in Broward County

Front Yard Residential Corp. just picked up 325 single-family rental homes throughout Broward County for $25.4 million.

The deal is part of its $485 million acquisition of property manager HavenBrook and the 3,236 homes nationwide under its management, and expands Front Yard’s portfolio to 15,000 homes.

Front Yard, based in Christiansted, St. Croix, financed the deal with a $508.7 million loan from Berkadia Commercial Mortgage, which also covers some industrial properties, according to a release issued by the company.

In 2014, Front Yard (formerly known as Altisource Residential) was involved in an investigation by the New York Department of Financial Services in regard to its relationship with Ocwen Financial and an alleged scheme to secure servicing rights and foreclose on homeowners. Ultimately, Ocwen’s founder, William Erbey, was forced to resign from his position and was fined $150 million.

Front Yard, a real estate investment trust, joins a number of other REITs that are turning their focus to the multifamily and rental home markets, at a time when more Americans are steering away from home ownership and into renting.

In March, private equity firm Electra America launched a $300 million fund focused on multifamily investment. And just last month, New York-based Cerberus Capital Management bought 200 rental homes in Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties for $47 million.

Front Yard has also previously completed deals with Amherst Holdings, which paid $25.7 million for a portfolio of single-family rental homes in Broward and Palm Beach counties in January. In 2016, Front Yard bought a portfolio of 4,262 single-family rental properties from Amherst for about $652.3 million.


Howard Lorber and real estate pals to raise money for Trump at Hamptons manse

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Howard Lorber, Donald Trump, and Howard Lorber’s House in Southampton (Credit: Getty Images and Google Maps)

President Trump will head to his friend Howard Lorber‘s sprawling Southhampton residence on Friday for a re-election fundraiser, and more New York real estate moguls will follow him.

Lorber, whose Vector Group owns Manhattan-based brokerage Douglas Elliman and development firm New Valley, will host a luncheon for the Trump Victory fund, a joint fundraising committee of the Republican Party and the Trump campaign.

According to a person familiar with the fundraiser who spoke to The Real Deal on the condition of anonymity, joining Lorber and Trump for the occasion will be developer Steve Witkoff and commercial property investor Stanley Chera. Chera and his wife Freida have given $514,000 to the fund to date, while Witkoff has donated $294,400, Federal Election Commission records show.

Lorber has personally donated at least $235,000 to the committee since 2016.

Another top donor to the fund, Red Apple Group CEO John Castmatidis, told TRD he would be missing the event but would send his two adult children, Andrea Catsimatidis and John Catsimatidis, Jr. in his place. Catsimatidis, whose family has given at least $200,000 to the joint committee since the 2016 election, said he assumed that many other real estate donors would be present. John Jr. made his own donation to the fund in 2017.

Other real estate investors who have given six-figure sums to Trump Victory include Tom Barrack, Steve Roth, Richard Lefrak, Peter Kalikow and Joseph Cayre. New York, Los Angeles and South Florida real estate businessmen accounted for roughly 20 percent of the fund’s donation haul in 2017, TRD reported earlier this year.

While the joint fund serves to rally support for the president, campaign finance rules dictate that most of the funds go not directly to the Trump campaign but to the Republican Party, a portion of which can then be spent on other candidates nationwide.

A representative for Lorber declined to comment. The Friday luncheon was first reported by Bloomberg.

A drone program for real estate — here’s how it could save lives

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(Credit: iStock)

In 2016, falls resulted in 384 of 991 construction worker deaths in the United States, according to federal government figures. But some entrepreneurs are proposing a new tool for construction inspections that could lower the number of worker fatalities: drones.

The New York Times reported that the drones are being put to work on construction projects worldwide, safely taking care of quality-control and inspection jobs in place of human workers. The trend coincides with a rise in drone sales, which increased 33 percent year-over-year in 2017, according to market research firm NPD Group.

Mike Winn, CEO of San Francisco company DroneDeploy, told the Times drones are now taking care of roof measurements needed for solar panel installations, a job that use to require a person precariously stretching out a tape measure while trying to stay balanced on the top of a home or building. And John Murphy Jr., a contractor on the 58-story Paramount Miami Worldcenter condominium project in Miami, said use of drones means fewer workers are dangerously going out on the side of buildings on platforms hanging from cables.

“We’re definitely limiting the exposure to workers,” Murphy told the Times.

Not everyone is sure drones can solve all of real estate’s dangers and inefficiencies, however. Drones used by property insurers in South Florida have led to heaps of improper repair estimates, creating a massive backlog of reopened claims. [NYT] — Will Parker

 

Raise the ceilings? Tech companies are forcing developers to redesign traditional warehouse spaces

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L to R: Panelists Erin Byers, David Blount, Stephanie Rodriguez, Adam Vaisman and panel moderator Maria Juncadella

E-commerce tenants are forcing industrial developers to build warehouses with interior ceilings taller than 30 feet and larger parking lots to accommodate idle tractor trailers and delivery vehicles, according to a panel of experts.

“Everybody is now looking at 36-foot-clearance heights,” said Stephanie Rodriguez, Duke Realty’s vice president of leasing. “Multi-story warehouses are the new buzz.”

Adam Vaisman, director of acquisition for Butters Construction & Development, David Blount, vice president of Foundry Commercial; and Erin Byers, vice president with Colliers International, affirmed Rodriguez’s view during a Crew Miami luncheon Wednesday that focused on how players in e-commerce are rapidly changing the way Class A warehouses are configured.

For instance, Butters and joint venture partner Bristol Group are about to open two new buildings at the Hillsboro Technology Center in Deerfield Beach that will provide tenants with up to 32 feet of clearance height, 55-foot column spacing, 180-foot wide truck courts, and a minimum of four docks per unit, Vaisman said. The buildings are designed to accommodate one large tenant or can be broken down to 15,000-square-foot units. The warehouses also feature ESFR sprinklers, high impact glass, motion activated T5 warehouse lighting and ample parking.

“Higher ceilings is definitely a trend that keeps evolving,” Butters said. “For some developments, we are recommending 36-feet clearance height. We built one at Beacon Lakes that ended up being leased by Amazon.”

Vaisman said tenants are also seeking a larger trailer parking footprint. “It is something we are now incorporating in our designs,” he said. “I know guys who are buying vacant lots just so they can build surface parking lots for trucks.”

Rodriguez said another trend involves e-commerce giants setting up fulfillment centers that require a substantial number of parking spaces for delivery drivers. “They are using Uber drivers to finish the delivery,” she said. “They need spaces for hundreds of cars. There is one in Midtown Miami where they had to expand [the property’s] parking lot.”

SoFla’s biggest multifamily deals in July

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South Florida’s biggest office sales in July

South Florida’s multifamily market continued to have another strong month in July. The growing demand for properties outside of South Florida’s major metros, like Lake Worth, is likely driven in part by South Florida’s lack of affordable housing, which has pushed renters outside of the urban cores.

The July investment sales figures were compiled from Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach County property records.

Park Colony Apartments – American Landmark and RSE Capital | $56M

American Landmark and RSE Capital’s $56 million purchase of an apartment complex in Hollywood marked the largest multifamily sale last month in the tri-county region.

The seller, Delavaco Group, kept a 20 percent stake in the Park Colony Apartments at 812 South Park Road. The 316-unit, nearly 13-acre property sold for about $177,000 per unit.

Ronald Meyerson with Cedano Realty Advisors and UrbaniZa Realty’s Ray Jourdain represented the buyer. The seller was represented by Dallas Wharton of Dalmar Real Estate Group.

American Landmark has made at least four acquisitions in South Florida in 2018. The joint venture plans to rename the community “The EnV.”

The Park Colony Apartments were built in 1987. The complex features up to three-bedroom apartments with rents averaging $1,450 a month, according to Jourdain. A Delavaco affiliate purchased the complex in 2013 for $41.5 million.

Casa Brera at Toscana Isles – RAIA Capital Management | $44.4M

Priderock Capital Partners sold a 206-unit apartment complex at 4725 Via Bari near Lake Worth to RAIA Capital Management for $44.4 million.

West Palm Beach-based Priderock sold the Casa Brera at Toscana Isles property for about $216,000 per unit, property records show.

Priderock paid $31.1 million, or about $151,000 per unit, for the 12.2-acre complex in 2015. It was built in 2013.

RAIA Capital Management’s portfolio includes about 3,000 Class A apartments in Alabama, Florida, Missouri, South Carolina and Tennessee, according to its website.

Oakwood Apartments – One Real Estate Investment | $25.6M

Naya USA Investment & Management sold an apartment complex in Lake Worth for twice what it paid for the property four years ago.

The Hollywood-based company sold the 160-unit, 200,000-square-foot development at 2425 Second North Avenue for $25.6 million, about two times the $12.9 million that Naya paid for the property in 2014. One Real Estate Investment, led by Jeronimo Hirschfeld, bought the complex, known as Oakwood Apartments.

One Real Estate paid about $160,000 per unit. The complex, built in 1993, is near Palm Beach College and is 96 percent occupied. The apartments are all four-bedrooms and each rent for about $1,500.

Tal Frydman, Yoav Yuhjtman, Nicholas Perrone of Berkadia represented the seller, according to a press release. Berkadia’s Brad Williamson and Jared Hill also arranged a $19.23 million seven-year, fixed-rate loan for the buyer to finance the deal.

One Real Estate has acquired a portfolio of more than 6,000 multifamily units in Texas and Florida. The company is planning to break ground on a 12-story mixed-use project at 2201 North Miami Avenue in Wynwood called Wynwood Square in the next few months.

Crystal Mansion – Prestige Cornerstone | $6.7M

Kina Investment sold a North Miami apartment complex called the Crystal Mansion to Prestige Cornerstone for $6.73 million.

Prestige Cornerstone bought the 66-unit, four-story complex at 12300 Northeast Fourth Avenue for $102,000 per unit. Kina Investments in 1984. It was originally constructed in 1971 and is right off of West Dixie Highway.

Kina Investment is tied to Ettore Nardi, according to property records.

RXR launches $500M fund targeting Trump tax plan’s “opportunity zones”

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A rendering of Downtown New Rochelle and Scott Rechler (Credit: RXR Realty and Getty Images)

Scott Rechler‘s RXR Realty has a half-billion plan to profit off the Trump tax cuts.

The real estate developer is planning a fund set on investing in “opportunity zones,” a new feature of the tax code passed by Congress late last year that allows investors to defer or avoid capital gains taxes when they invest in designated under-invested areas.

Bloomberg reported RXR plans to raise the $500 million fund primarily through high net-worth individuals. According to an investor presentation cited by Bloomberg, RXR already has a few development projects in suburban locations like New Rochelle and Glen Cove that would be eligible for the tax benefit.

There are 8,700 eligible opportunity zones which were nominated by governors in all 50 states, Washington D.C. and overseas territories. The new tax benefit does not require housing built to be affordable to low-income residents.

While some have the cheered on the zones as way to bring more development to underserved communities, Bloomberg notes that others have questioned whether the new tax rules simply give developers more ways to dodge taxes for projects they would have built anyway. [Bloomberg] — Will Parker 

Traina Companies picks up piece of FATCity dev site

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Renderings of FATCity

A Traina Companies affiliate just paid $5 million for an office building in Fort Lauderdale that’s part of the 1.35-million-square-foot mixed-use project called FATCity.

Third Street Development, LLC, led by Joseph R. Traina Sr., paid about $260 per square foot for the 18,771-square-foot building at 330 North Andrews Avenue, bringing the company’s total investment on the southeast corner block of Pratt Avenue and North Andrews Avenue to at least $13.65 million. The building sits on a 24,300-square-foot lot.

Records show the company also secured $8.5 million in financing from Oklahoma Fidelity Bank, a family owned bank. The seller, Southern Boating & Yachting Inc., bought the property in 2000 for $1.5 million.

Earlier this month, Traina Companies merged at least four companies to form Third Street Development, which is led by Traina Sr. Third Street Development now controls three acres for its FATCity project on Andrews Avenue between Northeast Third and Fourth streets. It’s about two blocks away from All Aboard Florida’s Brightline station in Fort Lauderdale, just south of Flagler Village.

The developer secured approval last year to build two 30-story towers with 270,000 square feet of office space, retail and hospitality, 612 residential units and more than 1,300 parking spaces on the site.

In March, Traina Companies announced it’s looking to joint venture or sell the development site.

A spokesperson for the firm could not immediately be reached for comment.

Advenir drops $60M on apartment complex near FIU

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Vista Verde at Westchester, Rilea Group’s Alan Ojeda and Advenir’s Stephen Vecchitto

The Rilea Group sold an apartment complex near Florida International University to Advenir for $59.75 million.

Vista Verde at Westchester, a 302-unit complex at 10491 Southwest 14th Terrace, just east of the university, sold for about $198,000 per apartment. Cushman & Wakefield’s Robert Given, Troy Ballard, Zachary Sackley and James Quinn represented Rilea, according to a release.

The property was built in 1993 and is being marketed as a value-add complex. About 20 percent of the units have been updated, Cushman said. Rilea, which focuses on value-add commercial properties in South Florida, paid $2.2 million for the site in 1988, according to property records.

Rents range from about $1,200 a month for a studio apartment to $1,850 for a two-bedroom, two-bathroom, according to the complex’s website. Amenities include a pool, children’s pool, gym, playground and picnic areas.

It’s adjacent to a Publix-anchored shopping center that’s across the street from FIU.

Advenir, an Aventura-based investment company, recently secured an $80 million loan to renovate an apartment complex it purchased in Palm Beach Gardens for $97.25 million.

Rilea, led by Alan Ojeda, completed the Bond on Brickell about two years ago. The 44-story, 328-unit Brickell condo tower sold out for $183 million.


Federal agencies undertake largest mortgage fraud investigation since the financial crisis

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The Rochester Village Apartments, north of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

Federal officials are in the middle of one of the largest investigations into mortgage fraud since the financial crisis.

Investigators are looking into alleged fraud committed by a New York commercial investment company Morgan Management LLC, now named Grand Atlas Property Management. They are looking into whether or not income statements on its properties were falsified in order to secure larger loans, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Some of those loans were wrapped up into mortgage-backed securities, and about $1.5 billion in securities issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are backed exclusively by Morgan mortgages.

The investigation already led to the May indictment of four executives on fraud-conspiracy charges. Prosecutors allege those executives, which include a son and nephew of company founder Robert C. Morgan, were involved in $170 million in loans.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S. attorney in the Western District of New York and the Federal Housing Finance Agency’s Inspector General are involved in the investigation, according to the Journal.

On the ground, the alleged fraud involved dressing up apartments to look occupied. At an apartment complex in Pennsylvania, apartments were made to look lived-in by turning on radios and placing shoes on mats outside their doors when inspectors from lenders came around. The company secured a $45.8 million mortgage for that particular property. They also allegedly falsified rent rolls and inflated income from storage units the company owned.

Less than a decade after a massive financial crash fueled by risky mortgage-backed securities, investment in those financial instruments is picking up steam over the promise of strong returns. The Trump Administration is also looking to release Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from government control. If the government-sponsored entities were taken private, they would lose their federal charter, allowing other companies to repackage mortgages as securities. 

[WSJ] – Dennis Lynch 

Former Wall Street honcho buys condo at the Bristol in West Palm

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The Bristol

Former Wall Street honcho Donald C. Carter just bought a condo at the Bristol in West Palm Beach for $6.75 million, property records show.

The waterfront building at 1100 South Flagler Drive is being developed by Al Adelson and Gene Golub of Chicago-based Golub. Records show Carter, listed as a trustee of the Donald C. Carter 2014 Trust, bought unit 904.

He joins Arthur Loring, the former general counsel at Fidelity, at the 25-story, 69-unit luxury condo tower. Loring, his wife Vicki, and philanthropist Sydell Miller, are among the 20 percent of buyers who purchased raw units at the Bristol. The tower is expected to be completed by February of next year.

Units at the luxury condo building range from 3,600 square feet to 14,000 square feet, and are priced from about $5 million to more than $40 million. Douglas Elliman is handling sales and marketing. Construction crews topped off the Bristol in January. It broke ground in 2016 and its developers financed construction with a $206 million loan from the Blackstone Group last year.

Carter founded the the proxy solicitation firm the Carter Organization, which he sold for nearly $100 million in 1987 to VPI Group, a British public relations firm. In 1990, he resigned as CEO amid an investigation into the business. At the time, New York state prosecutors alleged Carter over-billed clients and charged personal expenses to the company. In its heyday, the Carter Organization helped foster a generation of corporate raiders like billionaire Carl Icahn, according to the New York Times.

In 1998, a New York state judge tossed Carter’s conviction, according to a Wall Street Journal report, saying prosecutors had concealed information that could’ve helped Carter’s defense. The firm is now defunct.

Carter is no stranger to Palm Beach County. In 2016, he sold his waterfront compound at 6 Lagomar Road in Palm Beach for $12.5 million.

Here’s how much resi agents are really making in the US

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A person putting change into a piggy bank (Credit: iStock)

Even with soaring home prices, agents across America are making less money.

Amid rising prices and a housing supply shortage, agents and brokers made fewer deals and took home less money, according to a National Association of Realtors survey published by Inman. Median gross income for agents, according to NAR, fell 6 percent to $39,800 last year.

Meanwhile, median brokerage sales volume dipped to $1.8 million from $1.9 million in 2016, despite record-high home prices, the report said.

“Limited inventory continues to plague many housing markets in the United States. For the fifth year in a row, the difficulty finding the right property has surpassed the difficulty in obtaining mortgage financing as the most cited reason limiting potential clients,” Inman said, citing NAR’s report.

But the numbers varied by job type, experience and working hours. Most Realtors were sales agents specializing in residential brokerage. Median gross income for sales agents fell 12.8 percent to $29,440 in 2017.

Of those included in the report, 35 percent were compensated under a fixed commission split, under 100 percent. A quarter of agents had a graduated commission split, which increases with productivity — and 14 percent had a capped commission split, which rises to 100 percent after a predetermined threshold, the report said. [Inman] — Meenal Vamburkar

Metronomic launches mixed-use project on Grand Avenue in Coconut Grove

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Renderings of Metronomic Place and developer Ricky Trinidad

Metronomic plans to build a mixed-use office, retail and hotel project on Grand Avenue, marking another example of development pushing west in Coconut Grove.

The firm, led by Ricky Trinidad, paid $4.1 million for the 13,000-square-foot site at 3280 Grand Avenue in June, property records show. It’s planning to build Metronomic Place, a five-story building with about 5,000 square feet of Class A office space, 3,200 square feet of ground floor retail space, and a 44-key boutique hotel, according to a press release.

Metronomic is expected to break ground on the project in Sept. 14 and complete it by the fall of next year, Trinidad said.

LG 2 LLC, led by general contractor Bruno Carnesella, sold the property to Metronomic. The corner lot, which houses a car wash, has been on and off the market since at least 2015.

The developer will move its headquarters to the new building, taking more than half of the office space, said Trinidad, who also lives in the Grove.

The building is being designed by CLAD Architecture and Design with interiors by One Design Build, and will feature a “green” rooftop with a pool and garden. The hotel rooms will range from 500 square feet to 600 square feet and feature terraces and kitchenettes.

Metronomic has more than 10 new developments in Coconut Grove, including single-family homes.

Compass takes on Atlanta in march toward national market share

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Robert Reffkin (Credit: iStock)

Compass is taking a bite out of the Peach State.

The New York-based brokerage announced Thursday that it’s launching an office in Atlanta — the latest city it’s encountered in its march toward national market share.

In a statement, Compass said it hired 13 full-time employees in Atlanta, where it will open additional offices in Buckhead and Midtown. So far, Compass has recruited two well-known agents: Jim Getzinger, who sold $70 million in 2017, and Jere Metcalf, whose team closed $37 million in sales over the past 12 months. Both were previously associated with Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s International Realty.

Compass, which was founded in 2012, is valued at $2.2 billion following Softbank’s $450 million investment last year. The venture capital-backed firm has since accelerated its plan to attain 20 percent market share in 20 U.S. cities by 2020.

The brokerage currently has more than 90 offices in 16 cities with 4,500 agents to date. By the end of the year, it is targeting another three cities. It’s also planning to add 30 offices in existing markets.

Earlier this week, Compass announced a merger with Seattle-based Avenue Properties, whose 100 agents did $1 billion in sales last year, according to local news reports. In July, Compass acquired Paragon, a 225-agent firm in San Francisco with $2.3 billion in 2017 sales. Compass plans to draw on Paragon’s experience to grow its commercial brokerage division, which it launched with two hires in New York earlier this month. The firm brought on former Eastern Consolidated brokers Adelaide Polsinelli and Ronda Rogovin in New York.

Qatari owner of St. Regis Bal Harbour scores $132M refi

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St. Regis Bal Harbour and Tarek M. El Sayed

Al Rayyan Tourism Investment Company just closed on a $132 million refinancing of the St. Regis Bal Harbour Resort.

The Qatari owner secured the floating-rate loan from Mack Real Estate. The four-year deal has a one-year extension, according to a press release. HFF arranged the financing.

ARTIC paid $213 million for the St. Regis, at 9703 Collins Avenue, in 2014, a deal that broke down to more than $1 million per room. The 27-story luxury hotel includes 192 rooms and 24 condo-hotel units. It features a spa, two pools, a gym, business center, 11,200 square feet of meeting space and a 7,800-square-foot ballroom, and a handful of restaurants.

Qatar’s ruling Al Thani family controls ARTIC subsidiary Al Faisal Holdings. The firm also refinanced the 689-key Manhattan at Times Square hotel for $290 million and the 172-key St. Regis in Washington, D.C. for $81 million, bringing the total refinancing to $503 million, including the St. Regis.

In South Florida, the Qatari company also owns the W Miami, formerly known as the Viceroy Miami at 485 Brickell Avenue.  – Katherine Kallergis

Frozen credit files can delay process of applying for a mortgage

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Nearly a year after the catastrophic Equifax hack exposed 147 million Americans’ personal and financial data to cybercriminals, consumers are about to get a break — something especially useful for home buyers and owners.

Starting Sept. 21, credit-file “security” freezes will no longer cost you money. For years, you had to pay fees that varied from state to state to enact freezes — which nail down your credit files, rendering them inaccessible not only to crooks but just about everybody else unless you unfreeze them. In the wake of the Equifax debacle, consumers spent an estimated $1.4 billion on freeze fees, according to researchers.

Congressional legislation earlier this year removed that cost barrier and set some new guidelines for the credit bureaus and consumers, thereby opening the door to much wider use of the tool. This should be good news for home buyers and owners since, on average, they tend to have greater assets and larger numbers of credit accounts to protect than others.

But there’s a real estate-related issue here that hasn’t gotten a lot of attention: Heavier use of credit freezes could create more complications and delays when people with frozen files apply for mortgages. Some lenders say dealing with applicants who keep their files in deep freezes — and want to keep them frozen during as much of the mortgage process as possible — can be challenging.

“It’s a big problem” if consumers don’t understand what lenders, loan processors and investors need in terms of access to their credit files from the application stage through closing, says Joe Metzler, senior loan officer for Mortgages Unlimited in West St. Paul, Minnesota. When Metzler tells applicants that he needs them to unfreeze their credit files “at least a couple of times” during the process, sometimes they “freak out about it,” he says. And when they don’t lift their freezes in a timely manner, their loan closings may be postponed.

John Meussner, executive loan officer for Mason-McDuffie Mortgage Corp. in San Ramon, California, says that when a credit file is frozen, “it does lead to some procedural headaches. Applicants should know that if they have their credit frozen, they will need to act quickly in [contacting] the credit bureaus … and that the failure to act quickly could lead to delays in their loan processing.”

The biggest issue, says Andrew Marquis, senior loan officer at Guaranteed Rate in Lexington, Massachusetts: Home buyers freeze their files and then “for whatever reason, they don’t know how to lift it.”

Here’s a quick overview of how the changes coming Sept. 21 might affect mortgage transactions: For consumers, the law spells out how the freeze/unfreeze procedures are supposed to work. To initiate a freeze, you’ll need to contact each of the three national credit bureaus — Equifax, Experian and TransUnion — specifying how long it should stay in effect. If you contact the bureaus by telephone or email, they’ll each have up to one business day to place the freeze. If you make your request by mail, they’ll have three business days to comply.

You’ll be assigned a PIN number for use whenever you want to unfreeze your file or later re-freeze it. Say you apply for a mortgage or pre-qualification letter to buy a home. Your loan officer will need you to unfreeze your files at the three bureaus in order to pull your credit reports and scores. Once that’s done, you can opt to leave the files unfrozen or immediately re-freeze them by contacting each of the credit bureaus.

You’ll need to unfreeze your files at least once more during the process: Within several days of your scheduled closing, your lender will do what’s called an LQI (Loan Quality Initiative) credit pull to make sure there have been no changes in your report, including inquiries, new accounts, balances or alerts.

In some cases, if your loan officer is a broker for a third-party investor, that investor’s underwriters may want to see a fresh credit report at some point during the loan process, necessitating a third request to unfreeze your files, according to Steve Stamets of The Mortgage Link Inc., in Rockville, Maryland. It can all get complicated, especially when there are co-borrowers or married couples seeking the loan, each with their own file freezes.

Bottom line: If you opt for free freezes and plan to get a mortgage, play it smart: Be ready to unfreeze your credit files at least twice during the process, or simply unfreeze for the duration.


South Florida’s biggest office sales in July

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South Florida’s biggest office sales in July

Broward County’s office market was hotter than its sister counties to the north and south.

Four out of South Florida’s five biggest sales occurred in Broward – likely due to the limited supply of office properties.

While there was a lot of activity in Broward, none of the deals surpassed $20 million. The Green Companies made the largest purchase of the month in Plantation, a market that’s had one of the lowest vacancy rates in the county for Class A office space at 5.57 percent in the first quarter of this year, according to Avison Young.

The July investment sales figures were compiled from Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach County property records.

Southpointe – The Green Companies | $18.5M

The Green Companies paid $18.5 million for a nearly 80,000-square-foot Class A office building in Plantation.

Boston-based TA Realty sold the four-story building called Southpointe at 7901 Southwest Sixth Court for $232 per square foot. 

The Southpointe building was 98 percent leased at the time, according to a press release. Avison Young’s David Duckworth, John Crotty, Michael Fay, Greg Martin and Brian de la Fé represented TA Realty.

TA Realty purchased the building in 2007 for $16.25 million.

The Green Companies is a Miami-based, family owned real estate business. Its portfolio includes the Dadeland Centre offices in Miami.

299 Alhambra Circle – URBIN | $12.5M

A co-working space operator called URBIN bought an office building in Coral Gables for $12.5 million.

URBIN bought the 52,719-square-foot office building at 299 Alhambra Circle for about $237 per square foot.

The five-story office building was sold by Coral Gables Financial Center, managed by Shawn Khosravi, who also is an investor in URBIN.

URBIN has raised $23 million from investors including Location Ventures and Jonathan Vilma, a former University of Miami football player who played for the New Orleans Saints and the New York Jets, according to the South Florida Business Journal. Other investors include Vivian Bonet, Luis Estrada, Carlos Lopez and Daniel Motha. URBIN reportedly plans to raise another $50 million by the end of 2018.

Randstad Building – Spectrum Investors | $11.5M

Spectrum Investors bought an office building in Fort Lauderdale that houses the staffing firm Randstad Associates for $11.53 million.

The Hillsboro Beach-based company purchased the 136,155-square foot building at 2050 Spectrum Boulevard from a subsidiary of Randstad for $85 per square foot. The building was built in 1990 on a 266,646-square-foot lot right off Commercial Boulevard.

Randstad is a professional staffing firm that employs 5,500 people in North America. Spectrum Investors is managed by Sheldon Gross.

Hollywood Medical Office Building – AW Property | $11.5M

Miami-based AW Property Co. paid $11.5 million for a medical office building in Hollywood.

SF Partners sold the 58,000-square foot, five-story facility at 3700 Washington Street for about $200 per foot. The Hollywood Medical Office Building, developed in 1975, is on Memorial Regional Hospital South’s campus.

Cushman & Wakefield represented SF Partners. The property last sold in 2015 for $8.3 million. 

Tenants include Oncology Associates of South Florida, Pinnacle Healthcare System, and Reyes & Reyes MD. The building was 84 percent occupied at the time of the sale.

2880 West Cypress Creek – Rita and Donald Young | $4.2M

Rita and Donald Young bought an office building in Fort Lauderdale from BRN Development LLC for $4.23 million.

The Youngs purchased the 15,854-square-foot office building at 2880 West Cypress Creek Road for $267 per square foot. It was built in 2004, according to LoopNet. BRN Development, which lists its manager as Brennan Smith, bought the property in January 2017 for $2.1 million.

Rita and Donald Young are based in Jupiter, according to property records.

Rename and relaunch: Here’s how brokers hide stale listings and price cuts

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(Credit: iStock)

UPDATED, Aug. 16, 12:40 p.m.: In 2011, with the condominium market booming, Greg Altshuler’s Colonnade Group scooped up 403 Greenwich Street with plans to redevelop the former warehouse into high-end condos.

But by the summer of 2017, when the building was complete, the luxury sector was teetering toward a slowdown. In October of that year, Residence A — a three-bedroom pad asking $3.8 million — hit the market. It sat there for the next 235 days.

Then in May, a new listing agent hit reboot: The apartment was re-listed for $3.69 million as the building’s “Garden” apartment and went into contract 18 days later. The lengthy listing history of “Residence A” was still online — if you knew where to find it.

Real estate has never been more transparent — but amid a market slowdown, buyers are acutely aware that some units are sitting on the shelf. And as they pass over anything that’s not “new” to the market, some agents are looking for ways to make their listings seem fresh.

Changing apartment numbers to make a listing appear new is “an old trick,” said Olshan Realty’s Donna Olshan, who tracks the luxury market.

Lately, though, looking new requires some finesse. During the last week of July, Olshan said properties asking $4 million-plus spent an average of 536 days on the market.

That kind of tortured marketing time is giving agents added incentive to circumvent online portals with granular detail about each unit.

Brown Harris Stevens’ Lisa Lippman, for example, has used several iterations to describe one of her listings at 160 West 86th Street.

In January, she listed “Unit 3” for $7.395 million. After cutting the price to $6.9 million in April, Lippman re-named the apartment unit “3A” last month, according to RealPlus.

“When we switched it, people started calling,” said Lippman, who played around with the unit number not just to avoid looking stale. Without a letter after the number three, she said, buyers did not realize the apartment is a full-floor condo.

“Of course it’s somewhat disingenuous, but in the end, I don’t think you’re really fooling anybody,” she said.

Spilling out into public view

Such subtle changes, though, can make it difficult to trace a unit’s listing history.

That’s the case with Unit 41B, a two-bedroom condo at One57 that was first listed for $7.75 million in January 2017. In January of this year, the seller cut the price to $7.495 million, only to pull the listing in April, according to StreetEasy.

Later that month, however, Douglas Elliman’s Janice Chang and Tim Hsu re-listed Unit 41BH for $7.495 million. (Chang and Hsu did not respond to a request for comment.)

One of the industry’s better-known examples of a renamed listing involves an Upper East Side townhouse that was on and off the market from 2011 to 2015.

For most of that time, Brown Harris Stevens’ Paula Del Nunzio represented the sellers of 162 East 71st Street, who asked between $12.2 million and $14.8 million at various points from 2011 to 2014, according to StreetEasy.

In May 2015, however, the seller swapped Del Nunzio for Elliman’s Fredrik Eklund and John Gomes, who listed 162A East 71st for $13.5 million — effectively erasing the long and winding listing history of No. 162. The property sold for $13 million within three months. Neither Del Nunzio nor Eklund and Gomes responded to a request for comment.

162(A) East 71st Street listings

But those examples are tame compared to the story that’s gripped South Florida real estate circles, where a broker was found guilty in June of extorting rivals Jill Hertzberg and Jill Eber — better known as “The Jills.” Kevin Tomlinson, himself a successful broker, discovered that someone on the Jills’ team had manipulated the local MLS to hide the fact that their listings had been on the market for longer than six months. He demanded $800,000 to keep quiet, but the Jills went to the police and recorded his phone calls. A jury recently found Tomlinson guilty on two felony counts, and he is now awaiting sentencing.

That case, though — coupled with the struggle between brokers and portals to control listings data — has thrust the practice of massaging listing information into the public domain.

Last year in New York, several major brokerage firms became locked in a standoff with StreetEasy after the portal — citing concerns over data accuracy — decided not to accept the Real Estate Board of New York’s newly syndicated listing feed (RLS).

Even unintentional errors are the scourge of third party listing portals like StreetEasy and the REBNY RLS, the latter of which can impose fines on agents caught misleading buyers.

For its part, StreetEasy uses a set of algorithms that scan listing entries and catches anomalies. If the company’s support staff deems something to be inaccurate, the listing can be taken down. “Data integrity and accuracy is of the utmost importance at StreetEasy,” a spokesperson said. “If someone were to flag any information across our site or apps as suspicious, we investigate immediately.”

It’s unclear how many listings in New York City are “gamed,” but a cursory look online confirms that some agents are employing a variety of tactics to manipulate the way listings appear online (even if they’re not deleting or hiding information a la the Jills’ team.)

Take, for example, a Chelsea townhouse that hit the market last year asking $7.85 million.

According to StreetEasy, the property at 332 West 20th Street was listed in February 2017, but was pulled off the market a few days later. In April 2018, the identical house — this time called 344 West 20th — was listed for sale on Leslie J. Garfield’s website. (The unit was marked “in contract” in July.)

At 11 North Moore, a penthouse asking $22.5 million appeared on StreetEasy twice — as PHE and as Unit 9. As of July 26, PHE was under contract while Unit 9 remained an active listing.

Listing agent Tamir Shemesh of Douglas Elliman said he created two separate listings — one depicting the unit configured as a four bedroom and one as a five bedroom — so that buyers could easily navigate online search fields. He said it was an error that only PHE was marked in contract, though he said he would consider leaving Unit 9 marked as an active listing “to make sure we have a back-up” option if the buyer backs out. On Aug. 8, Unit 9 was pulled from StreetEasy and on Aug. 14 PHE was listed as being sold, though the sale has not yet hit city records.

If it’s new to you…

If brokers can make a listing look fresh, many will jump at the chance, and with good reason.

During the second quarter of 2018, the number of sales dropped 24.9 percent year-over-year to 10,819, according to appraisal firm Miller Samuel. Meanwhile, inventory was up 6.5 percent (to 19,753 active listings). Compared to this time last year, the absorption rate — how long it would take to sell out all active listings — ballooned 41 percent to 5.5 months.

In the case of 403 Greenwich, listing broker Stephen Ferrara of Compass copped to re-naming the ground-floor unit and said he “firmly” believed it should have been called a garden apartment all along.

403 Greenwich Street listings

“One of the special features of this exceptional apartment is that it has a private garden,” he wrote in an email. “Changing the unit number was a great way for us to reposition the residence.”

Of course, calculated misrepresentations are “completely unacceptable” under both New York state and REBNY rules, said Neil Garfinkel, the association’s general counsel. “Advertising has to be honest and truthful,” he said. “You can’t mislead the consumer.”

It’s less clear who’s to “blame” if there’s a technical (or accidental) reason for a unit change.

CORE’s Adrian Noriega, for example, said he wasn’t responsible for renaming the top unit at 15 West 20 Street as “Penthouse” from “PH10/11.” Instead, he said CORE switched its back-end listings platform this year (swapping out Realplus for Perchwell). With that change, some listings had to be re-entered and did not appear the exact same way.

“It ended up working to our advantage because it showed as a new listing,” said Noriega, who took over the listing from Douglas Elliman in April.

Noriega said he would never have made the change himself, though he also believes that no intelligent person spending more than $5 million is so easily deceived. “You can easily click on a listing and recognize that they’re the same unit,” he said. “You’re not tricking anybody.”

In fact, he intentionally played up how long the penthouse had been on the market to show that the current price of $1,500 a foot is a steal. (And also to show how much the price may appreciate in a few years.) “There’s a lot of potential with this unit,” he said.

Take me to the ball game: Elon Musk wants to build Loop system to Dodger Stadium

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Elon Musk and Dodger Stadium (Credit: Wikimedia Commons, Getty Images)

Between online feuds with rappers and heroic cave divers — and potentially illegal tweets about taking Tesla private — Elon Musk hasn’t exactly been batting .1000 lately.

His Boring Company is stepping up to the plate however, revealing big plans on Wednesday to build a Loop rapid transit system between Dodger Stadium and Metro Red Line stations in Los Feliz, East Hollywood, or Rampart Village.

The so-called “Dugout Loop” is meant to reduce vehicle traffic in the area by providing an alternate transit option to the home of the Los Angeles Dodgers. A ride would cost around $1 and take about four minutes each way, according to the Boring Company.

As with other proposed Loop projects, passengers would be transported at speeds up to 150 miles an hour in autonomous electric “skates” — cars that can carry up to 16 passengers.

The Dugout Loop would terminate near one of three Metro Red Line Stations — Vermont/Sunset, Vermont/Santa Monica, or Vermont/Beverly — and would have an initial capacity of 1,400 people per event at Dodger Stadium. Schedules would be based around events on those days, running before and after.

The Loop could be a boon for developers along the route. Besides bringing people to areas around the Red Line to get to the stadium, the system would likely draw curious tourists and locals looking to get a look or take a ride on the futuristic mass transit system. Los Feliz and East Hollywood have seen significant residential and commercial development in recent years.

There’s at least one Angeleno excited about it: Mayor Eric Garcetti.

“Always exciting to see innovative ideas like the proposed Dugout Loop…” Garcetti said in a tweet Wednesday.

The Boring Company did not specify when it plans to start work on the project. It is currently undertaking environmental studies under the California Environmental Quality Act and plans a public scoping meeting on the project at Dodger Stadium at the end of August.

Dugout Loop is part of a larger network of Loop tunnels the Boring Company wants to build across Los Angeles, in an endeavor that for now, at least, is expected to be privately funded. For now, Musk’s company is starting with a 2.7-mile long proof-of-concept tunnel on the Westside.

The company got a thumbs-up from the City of L.A.’s Board of Building and Safety Commissioners to move ahead with the project in April.

Zoopla founder buys oceanfront Palm Beach home next door to his for $11M

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Alex Chesterman and 888 South Ocean Boulevard

The founder of a U.K. property listings website just found himself another oceanfront home in Palm Beach, this time picking up his neighbor’s property for $10.75 million.

Alex Chesterman, founder and CEO of Zoopla’s parent company, ZPG Plc., bought the 2,300-square-foot house at 888 South Ocean Boulevard, nearly a year after spending $8.75 million on the neighboring home at 880 South Ocean Boulevard.

In addition to Zoopla, uSwitch, PrimeLocation and Hometrack operate under the ZPG umbrella. In October, the company purchased the financial services comparison website Money.co.uk for 140 million euros.

The Palm Beach property hit the market in 2016 for $13.5 million with listing agent Lawrence Moens. In April, the price increased to $13.8 million, according to Realtor.com. Dana Koch of Corcoran represented the buyer in both deals.

The sellers, Mary Theresa Khawly and Roosey Khawly, paid $2.9 million for the home in 2001, records show. The four-bedroom house was built in 1951 and features an oceanfront cabana and pool.

About a mile south, billionaire hedge funder Ken Griffin has assembled the largest residential estate site on the island, now spanning about 17 acres.

New Yorkers are flocking to Florida to buy rental homes

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North Carolina homes (Credit: iStock)

With apartment prices in the Big Apple near all-time highs, a growing number of New Yorkers are looking outside the five boroughs for investment properties.

The Carolinas, Georgia and Texas are among the 10 most popular destinations for New York City residents buying single-family rental homes, according to a new survey by rental-home investment platform Roofstock.

Florida tops the ranking, accounting for 35.41 percent of all out-of-state single-family rental home purchases by New Yorkers between 2013 and 2018, ahead of Pennsylvania with 11.54 percent and New Jersey with 10.59 percent.

North Carolina and South Carolina round out the top five with 4.99 and 3.44 percent, respectively. California accounted for just 2.96 percent of purchases, but the state is soaring in popularity with investments growing by 15 percent per year, according to Roofstock.

Roofstock’s co-founder Rich Ford said states like the Carolinas, Georgia and Texas appeal to New York investors because they are cheaper.

“You can find many homes in the $100,000 to $150,000 price range, so with financing, you can purchase a home with an equity check of between $25,000 and $50,000,” he said. “Equally important, the yields are much more attractive in these markets than they are in the New York area, where cap rates can be at half the level you can achieve in Georgia, Texas and the Carolinas.”

Roofstock said its study is based on property records and buying patterns on its platform, which matches investors with single-family rental homes.

Nevada, Arizona and Texas are the three most popular states among California investors. Tennessee, Michigan and Ohio made the state’s top 10 and are soaring in popularity, with investor interest growing at more than 20 percent per year.

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