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Linkpoint sells Chase-occupied building in booming Miami River District

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1400-1404 Northwest 17th Avenue and Alex Sanchez

Linkpoint Properties sold a Miami River District building that could be ripe for redevelopment, as investors continue to target the area for new projects.

Investment firm Inversiones Sion LL paid $7.9 million for the 11,577 square-foot building with a parking lot. The property is on 1.67 acres, and is located at 1400-1404 Northwest 17th Avenue in Miami. Built in 1975, the building is occupied by a JPMorgan Chase Bank branch. Linkpoint sold the property through its Linkpoint Miami River LLC.

Inversiones’ principal, David Rodriguez, lives in Spain, according to Alfonso Jaramillo with Fortune International Realty, who represented the seller. Alexandra Escudero, also with Fortune International Realty, represented the buyer.

Rodriguez plans to keep the property until Chase’s lease expires in June 2021, and then look at options, including leasing the building, redeveloping it as a retail or mixed-use project, or selling the land, Jaramillo said. It’s close to the mixed-use River Landing, which is currently under construction.

Linkpoint Properties, a Miami-based real estate investment and management firm, led by Alex Sanchez, Camilo Niño and Ricardo Uribe, purchased the property in July 2017 for $5.5 million.

The firm, which is the real estate acquisition arm of joint venture partners Linkvest Capital LLC and Cornerpoint Partners LLC, launched an acquisition program in 2017. It is backed by nearly $100 million in funds, mostly from Latin American family offices. Recent acquisitions include a McDonald’s and Tire Kingdom in Hialeah and a United Rentals property in Pompano Beach.

The Miami River District is booming, with new restaurants, apartments, condominiums and mixed-use projects in the works. Among them, developers Andy Hellinger, a principal at Urban X Group and Coralee Penabad are building the $425 million River Landing, which will have apartments, retail and office space.

Mast Capital is planning Miami River Walk, a 6.3-acre apartment complex with 688 units.

KAR Properties plans to build the condominium project One River Point, and the Chetrit Group, JDS Development Group and Ari Pearl have proposed a $1 billion mixed-use project.


Opendoor’s valuation hits $3.8B with latest funding round

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Opendoor CEO Eric Wu (Credit: Resolute Ventures and iStock)

The iBuyer startup Opendoor has raised $300 million, bringing its valuation up to $3.8 billion.

The latest funding round was led by General Atlantic, a previous investor, and companies including Hawk Equity, SoftBank, Fifth Wall Ventures and GGV Capital took part as well, according to TechCrunch. The firm has now raised $1.3 billion in equity and has about $3 billion in debt financing to buy in properties.

Outside agents did land a victory against Opendoor recently when the company took the “Buy It Now” button off of its website and app in the wake of complaints from Realtors.

Opendoor will use its latest round of funding on product development and expansion. The firm wants to keep increasing the accuracy of its pricing and reduce the time it takes to convince people to pull the trigger on either buying or selling a house.

The firm previously landed $400 million from SoftBank in September.

Opendoor co-founder Eric Wu told TechCrunch that the company plans to remain completely focused on private home buying for now, rather than moving into areas like cars, loans and commercial real estate.

“These capabilities lend themselves well to rental/residential income,” he said, “but that is currently not on our roadmap.” [TechCrunch] – Eddie Small

Fisher Brothers scion buys Palm Beach home

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Arnold Fisher and 226 Kenlyn Road (Credit: Redfin)

Arnold Fisher, a senior partner at the New York real estate firm Fisher Brothers, bought a home in Palm Beach for $7.15 million.

Fisher purchased the 4,592-square-foot house at 226 Kenlyn Road for $1,557 per square foot, records show. He bought the home from ShadowCorp Holdings, which is managed by John Grand.

The four-bedroom, five-and-a-half bathroom house was built in 2013. Some of its features include a saltwater pool, a wood paneled library and two fireplaces. Grand bought the house in 2013 for $4.1 million from Malasky Homes, a West Palm Beach-based homebuilder.

Founded in 1915 by Martin Fisher, Fisher Brothers became one of the largest and most well-known real estate companies in New York City.

Arnold Fisher became a senior partner and oversaw the construction of a number of office buildings in Midtown Manhattan, including 299 Park Avenue, 605 Third Avenue, 1345 Avenue of the Americas, Park Avenue Plaza, Imperial House and 50 Sutton Place South. Now 84 years old, he has stepped away from the day to day responsibilities but is still active in the company’s decisions, according to a 2013 Wall Street Journal report. In 2015, Forbes estimated the Fisher family had a net worth of $1.6 billion.

Palm Beach is one of the wealthiest towns in South Florida with the most expensive residential real estate properties.

Earlier this month, Trump’s planned ambassador to Ireland Brian Burns sold his 6404-square-foot house at 217 Via Tortuga in Palm Beach for $8.8 million.

In February, Malasky Homes sold a 5,769-square-foot house at 608 Island Drive for $15.5 million.

This AI-based real estate startup just raised $45M

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OJO Labs CEO John Berkowitz (Credit: BHGRE)

OJO Labs — which has developed an artificial intelligence-based assistant for the homebuying process — just raised $45 million in a Series C funding round.

The Austin-based company will use the money to expand and speed up its product development, the company said in a statement. Investors in the funding round include LiveOak Venture Partners, Realogy Holdings, Royal Bank of Canada and Northwestern Mutual Future Ventures.

OJO has a virtual assistant that seeks to help homebuyers and sellers through the home search and transaction process. The platform includes mobile messaging and a variety of web tools — including assistance with picking a neighborhood and financial guidance. Once a consumer is ready to start the process, OJO matches them with an agent.

So far, the product has been available in 12 U.S. markets and Toronto — and is now being rolled out nationwide. OJO has offices in Austin, Minneapolis-St. Paul and St. Lucia, with plans to expand its teams in each location. Specifically, the company hopes to grow its data science, engineering, product and design operations.

The company raised $20.5 million in a Series B round last year. Realogy, RBC and Northwestern Mutual Future Ventures participated in that round as well.

AI has had a growing presence among real estate startups and even traditional brokerages like Keller Williams.

The week in luxury: A map of Miami-Dade’s priciest condo sales

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Condo sales jumped last week with a number of units selling above $1 million.

The number of closings totaled 193, for a total of $96 million traded, up from the previous week’s 100 closings for $32 million. Condos last week sold for an average price of about $498,000 or $338 per square foot.

The most expensive condo trade was the $8.75 million sale of a combined unit at Il Villaggio in Miami Beach. Jose Bastón, husband to “Desperate Housewives” actress Eva Longoria, sold his unit to Quebec developer Zave Aberman and his wife, Celia. Barbera Estela of One Sotheby’s represented both sides of the deal. It sold for more than $2,200 per foot.

The second priciest sale was at St. Regis Bal Harbour. Units 703S/705S sold for $7.43 million, or over $1,500 per foot, after 203 days on the market. Scott Gerow represented the seller, and the buyer’s agent was Jelena Grady.

Here’s a breakdown of the top 10 sales from March 10 to March 16. Click on the map for more information:

Most expensive
Il Villaggio #1104/5 | 38 days on market | $8.75M | $2,206 psf | Listing and buyer’s agent: Barbara Estela

Least expensive
South Pointe Towers #604 | 601 days on market | $1.3M | $701 psf | Listing agent: Michelle Canals | Buyer’s agent: Colin Feuling

Most days on market
South Pointe Towers #604 | 601 days on market | $1.3M | $701 psf | Listing agent: Michelle Canals | Buyer’s agent: Colin Feuling

Fewest days on market
Il Villaggio #1104/5 | 38 days on market | $8.75M | $2,206 psf | Listing agent: Barbara Estela

Andrea Greenberg’s ex-boyfriend dies in apparent suicide

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Alejandro Aparicio and Andrea Greenberg (Credit: Facebook)

UPDATED, March 20, 4:13 p.m.: Alejandro Aparicio, the ex-boyfriend of the real estate marketing executive Andrea Greenberg who was charged with stealing from her estate, died on Sunday in an apparent suicide. Aparicio rammed his motorcycle head-on into an 18-wheel truck in the Everglades, sources told The Real Deal.

The Miami-Dade Medical Examiner confirmed Aparicio’s death, but spokesperson Martha Diaz said the case is under investigation and she could not release any information.

Late Sunday afternoon, Aparicio, 59, posted a note on Facebook apparently addressed to the late Greenberg, the Miami Herald reported.

“I can’t bear any longer the never-ending yearning to feel the warmth of your skin, the smell of your neck, the sparkle in your gaze, your sweet smile, the joy of your laughter, the flawless beauty of your face looking down on me,” he wrote. He then got on the road.

Greenberg died Oct. 9, 2017, from an opioid overdose involving fentanyl, the Miami-Dade Medical Examiner ruled. Aparicio, who was with Greenberg for 17 years, found her unresponsive body in their home and called 911. Eleven days later, on Oct. 20, Aparicio submitted her purported last will and testament, according to the Miami Police arrest affidavit. The document would have given him control of Greenberg’s assets, including her home in the Morningside neighborhood of Miami, at the time valued at $600,000.

Miami Police launched an investigation last February based on suspicions about the circumstances surrounding Greenberg’s overdose. That probe was prompted by her sister, Valerie Greenberg, and several work associates.

Last month, authorities charged Aparicio with grand theft, organized fraud and forgery for allegedly submitting a forged will, which would have made him the sole beneficiary and executor of Greenberg’s $1 million estate.

“Alejandro poisoned my sister,” Valerie Greenberg said in a statement. “He had hundreds and hundreds of thousands of dollars of personal debt, and he thought that was his way out.  He filed a fraudulent will that would have left him everything, and he got caught. He started taking her money three hours after she died, and got caught. He obviously knew the evidence against him was piling up and he did not want to go to prison for murder.”

“He chose this way out,” Greenberg added. “What he did to Andrea was horrific. Another death does not change that.  But at least now my family and I can focus on remembering Andrea.”

Fed Reserve holds rates steady amid weakening housing market

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Jerome Powell (Credit: Getty Images)

The Federal Reserve said it will hold rates steady and signaled it would likely not raise rates for the rest of the year amid worries over economic growth.

In a statement, the Fed stressed again that it will remain patient in making future rate changes. The decision marked a change from the past few years. The Fed increased rates four times in 2018 and and nine times overall since December 2015.

It said in its minutes that economic growth has slowed from the fourth quarter of 2018, citing weaker household spending and fixed business investment. Fed officials further indicated that it would only raise rates one time in 2020.

One indicator of this economic slow down has been the housing market. In January, existing home sales dropped to 4.95 million, the lowest number since November 2015, according to a recent report from the National Association of Realtors. Inventory, meanwhile, seems to keep rising. A new report by Re/Max showed that housing inventory rose 5.8 percent in February for the fifth consecutive month.

Now, 11 out of 17 Federal Reserve officials said they did not project rates to increase this year. This means that the Fed’s benchmark rate will likely stay between 2.25 and 2.5 percent for the rest of the year. In December, just two officials expected the Fed to hold rates steady in 2019.

Fed officials are now expecting the economy to cool down more than previous projections.

As a result, the Federal Reserve also announced that it would take a step back on its previous plans to downsize its huge portfolio of government-backed securities.

The Fed has a $4 trillion asset portfolio of securities that it purchased during the financial crisis in order to boost the economy. It’s been trying to reduce that portfolio for two years as the economy has improved by letting notes mature. It now said it will stop the runoff in September as the economy is slowing down.

Facebook revisits housing ad policy as part of discrimination settlement

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Facebook to remove targeting for housing ads (Credit: iStock)

In a blow to some real estate advertisers, Facebook has announced that it will no longer allow housing ads to target users by ZIP code, and will also impose a 15-mile minimum radius for geographic ad targeting.

The decision comes as part of a settlement of five discrimination lawsuits filed by the National Fair Housing Alliance, the Communications Workers of America and others plaintiffs, which will also include just under $5 million in payments, the Wall Street Journal reported. Targeting by age and gender will also be disabled, and the same restrictions will apply to job and lending ads.

“There is a long history of discrimination in the areas of housing, employment and credit, and this harmful behavior should not happen through Facebook ads,” Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg said in a blog post published Tuesday afternoon.

This is second major shakeup of the Facebook advertising landscape in recent months.

Last year, amid increased scrutiny of its data protection practices, Facebook announced that it would be shutting down a feature that allowed advertisers to target users using third-party data directly through the platform. Among other things, this removed the ability for advertisers to target categories such as “Current Renter”, “Current Homeowner” and “First time homebuyer.” Those changes took effect in August.

As was the case with that change, larger organizations with their own data operations will be less affected, as Facebook continues to allow advertisers to target ads using their own data.

“This is a big blow for brokers and brokerages who don’t have access to custom targeting tools to inform their ad buys on Facebook and Instagram,” said Josh Cook, president of Maiden+John, a data-driven real estate marketing firm. “For a broker with a listing in Brooklyn, a 15-mile radius minimum to target their open house means they’ll reach most of New York City versus the real potential buyers closer to the listing.”

(The entire island of Manhattan is about 13.4 miles long. )

Cook says that the changes don’t come as a complete surprise, as Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg had indicated his openness to such changes in Congressional testimony last year.

Facebook is also building a tool that will let people search all of its housing ads in the U.S., and has provided the National Fair Housing Alliance with ad credits to publicize fair housing rights on the platform. [WSJ]Kevin Sun


Inside the other Arkansas bank that’s lending gobs of money to South Florida RE

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Johnny Allison’s Home BancShares is quickly becoming one of the most prominent lenders in the South Florida market.

Big real estate lenders often find themselves allaying investor concerns about a faltering market. But perhaps no one’s ever done it quite like Johnny Allison.

“The reality was [as] if Peter Pan can no longer fly, Minnie Mouse left Mickey for Goofy, …  with Frankenstein piloting to take over the banking industry,” Allison, the founder and chairman of Home BancShares, said on the firm’s most recent earnings call in January. “Nevertheless, we sent Batman, Superman and Nancy Pelosi to save the day, and they built a wall around the airport and saved us all.”

 Somewhere in that rant was a message: Despite the doomsdayers, Home BancShares, a lender with significant exposure to South Florida’s real estate market, is in good shape. With just $15 billion in assets, it has become one of the top 20 real estate lenders in the region, with more than $219 million in local commercial real estate loans in 2018, according to an analysis by The Real Deal.

Operating under the name Centennial Bank, its commercial real estate transactions made up more than 58 percent of the bank’s total loans in 2018. The bank hasn’t shied away from complex, ground-up projects for everyone from property and storage mogul Moishe Mana to Brooklyn-based development powerhouses Spencer Equity and Rabsky Group. Centennial’s increased activity while other lenders retreat draws natural comparisons to another Arkansas institution, Bank OZK (formerly Bank of the Ozarks), the most active condo-construction lender of this cycle.

“Home BancShares sees what the returns are at Ozarks, and they said they want to do that too,” said Jeffrey Miller, a veteran banking analyst at FocusPoint Research. “They have done it on a more granular level; it hasn’t come to the mainstream.”

 But with the company continuing to acquire regional banks and Allison’s gung-ho approach to the lending business, that’s about to change.

Appetite for risk — and other banks

Like Bank OZK, Centennial is betting big well outside its home state of Arkansas, with a focus on major real estate markets like Miami and New York City.

 Take Moishe Mana’s trade hub in Wynwood. Mana is looking to build a complex of over 10 million square feet with the stated goal of facilitating trade between the Americas and Asia.

“We’ve taken the initiative to create the platform for the new chapter of Miami,” Mana told the Miami Herald in late 2017. “I know it sounds very, very ambitious. It sounds almost arrogant. But somebody needs to do it. Somebody needs to start it.”

But when Mana finally scored financing for the project — which many say is unrealistic — his lender wasn’t one of the national heavyweights. Instead, it was Centennial that coughed up a $20.1 million mortgage. So far, though, few of Mana’s projects have gotten off the ground, and in interviews with the media, Mana has been opaque about when these projects are going to be completed. Centennial did not respond to questions about when it is going to get paid back. A representative for Mana did not return comment.

Centennial also partnered with LV Lending on a $51 million construction loan to Robert Suris’ Estate Investments Group for its 306-unit Soleste Alameda apartment project in West Miami and loaned $17 million to the Hilton hotel in Pompano Beach.

Allison has always maintained that the bank operates in a disciplined manner, and that the narrative of being reckless that’s thrust upon it is an unfair one.

“We’re a very disciplined lender,” he said on the earnings call. “We don’t push a ROE [return on equity]. We don’t force loans. We don’t force deals. I don’t think anybody gives a damn.”

But according to regulators, the bank might be a bit too zealous.

Its commercial real estate lending relative to its capital levels — a widely used barometer for risk — was 370 percent in 2018. Regulators warn against exceeding 300 percent.

Centennial also has a serious appetite for South Florida banks. In September 2017, it acquired Pompano Beach-based Stonegate Bank — one of the largest banks in the region, with $3.1 billion in assets, whose major loans included a $26 million loan to Jason Halpern’s Three Hundred Collins boutique condo project in Miami Beach. That project has recently been engulfed in litigation over allegations that Halpern’s firm, JMH Development, failed to “meet its financial obligations.” In October, a judge ordered JMH to turn over its remaining interest to its silent partner.

Centennial has also acquired a few smaller community banks in the region, including Broward Bank of Commerce and Fort Lauderdale-based Landmark Bank.

Investors are increasingly skittish about community banks’ real estate exposure, as many signs point to a slowdown in prime markets, particularly in the luxury condo sector. There’s also increasing talk of a broader economic downturn.

“Nobody wants to talk about the recession, but it’s going to happen,” said Kenneth Thomas, a Miami-based banking analyst. “A recession’s greatest impact is going to be on CRE, and the banks that don’t have the strongest underwriting [on CRE].”

Centennial’s focus in the region, said Southeast Florida Division President David Druey, “has always been long-term and smart, organic growth in the real estate arena. We recognize constantly changing market dynamics, such as the recent softening of the spec home and ultraluxury sectors, and remain nimble to seeking opportunities that properly balance our lending portfolio and meet our structure.”

The duck hunter

A short, garrulous 72-year-old with a flowing silver mane, penchant for white suits and red pocket squares that match the colors of his beloved Arkansas State University Red Wolves, Allison looks like a character straight out of “Dallas.”

He’s also got a made-for-TV personality. “Johnny is one of the very few people who has — this term is overused by people — charisma,” former Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe told the American Banker in 2013. “It is a trite word, but he has a real magnetism.”

A former mobile home entrepreneur, Allison started Home BancShares as First State Bank, growing it to become one of the most powerful financial institutions in Arkansas. The bank went public in 2006 on the Nasdaq stock exchange under the ticker HOMB, and as of press time was trading at around $19 per share.

By all accounts and metrics, the bank has performed exceptionally well at a time when community banks are struggling to compete with the likes of Wells Fargo, Bank of America and JPMorgan Chase.

Home BancShares has been profitable for 31 straight quarters. Its net income in 2018 more than doubled year over year to $305 million. For the second straight year, it was ranked by Forbes as the country’s best bank.

That track record has been personally lucrative for Allison, who ranks as one of the highest-paid community bank CEOs in the country. His total 2018 compensation totaled $4.7 million, according to the company’s most recent proxy statement. Included in his compensation package is $7,000 that Allison uses to pay his pilot for personal trips  on an airplane Allison owns.

Though Randy Sims assumed the CEO mantle in 2009, Allison continues to be a key architect of the bank’s strategy. He insists on conducting the earnings calls, in which analysts and investors can be treated to references ranging from the killing of Osama Bin Laden to stories about his friend Vince who had one too many whiskeys. In 2013, he told the American Banker he still personally vets every loan over $1 million.

“Not that I’m any genius,” he told the publication. “I just want to know who I’m doing business with. Look them in the eye.”

New York, New York

Centennial’s growth in South Florida and New York City has largely stemmed from the bank’s aggressive acquisition strategy. Since 2010 it has acquired 17 banks, according to its annual filing.

Allison previously said the bank is the largest acquirer of failed banks in the state of Florida.

“Their opportunity at home is so limited for deposits, a lot of them [community banks in Arkansas] have to go chase cash somewhere else,” said Christopher Whalen, an investment banker who runs Whalen Global Advisors.

The bank’s riskiest move, however, came in 2015, when it made its foray into what is largely regarded as the most competitive real estate market in the country: New York City.

It purchased a pool of national commercial real estate loans worth about $289 million from an affiliate of private investment firm J.C. Flowers & Co. The loans were originated by Doral Bank, the Puerto Rican bank that collapsed in 2015 amid allegations of fraud (In 2011, a top executive brought in to clean up the bank was killed in a drive-by shooting in San Juan.)

The New York office that managed those loans became known as Centennial CFG. Led by former Doral Bank executives, the division is headed by Christopher Poulton and operates almost as a separate entity within Centennial, lending to large real estate projects throughout the country.

One of its deals is a $65 million construction loan for Rabsky Group and Spencer Equity’s eight-building Broadway Triangle residential and retail development in South Williamsburg. The project will have more than 1,100 units of housing, with nearly 300 affordable units, and 65,000 square feet of retail space.

The CFG unit operates quite like the Real Estate Specialties Group, a Dallas-based entity within Bank OZK that makes big construction loans while the rest of Bank OZK acts more like a regular community bank.

“Loans derived from the New York loan production office are traditionally determined by their larger size and scope of the deal,” said Centennial’s Druey. “Loans originated by the South Florida region specifically focus on community banking relationships.”

Since the CFG unit was established, the bank has made a big push into construction lending. In South Florida, its construction lending grew from just $20 million in 2015 to more than $137 million in 2018. Overall, the bank increased its total commercial real estate lending in South Florida to $219 million from $96 million during that same time.

The New York office was even responsible for the bank’s largest construction loan in South Florida, $80 million in 2016 to Property Markets Group’s 32-story, 464-unit X Miami apartment project in downtown Miami. PMG paid off the loan in September, after it scored a $106 million financing package from Pacific Western Bank and restructured Square Mile Capital’s preferred-equity position in the deal.

Damn the dissenters

Allison himself has noted the skepticism about its New York office. “We opened an operation in New York,” he said during the January earnings call. “Regulators, analysts and just about everyone continues to question that. Even today, our New York office simply continues year after year to make more profit than any other region.”

The concerns stem from both the type of loans made and the bank’s national ambitions.

Unlike Bank OZK, who makes much larger condo-construction loans often upwards of $100 million, many of Centennial’s commercial real estate loans are between $20 million and $80 million and go to a variety of asset classes including multifamily, condos, and commercial projects. For example, in 2017, Centennial provided $88 million to strip club owner Robert Gans to refinance his 14-building portfolio in New York City. Late last year, Centennial provided a non-recourse loan to the Jay Group for a mixed-use project in Harlem, according to the Commercial Observer. Non-recourse loans are generally viewed as riskier since a lender cannot go after the collateral of the borrower if there is a default. And the bank has begun ramping up in Los Angeles and Dallas.

“When you see loan production offices in areas outside of banks core competencies and headquarters, those tend to be pretty risky, those tend to be the ones that result in a bank going down,” said Bill Cormany, a federal bank regulator with the FDIC, speaking generally and not specifically about Centennial.

“You can’t be a master of all markets,” said Thomas. “You got a bank that is so spread out — that becomes a red flag.”

Allison, however, says the bank’s loans are all backed by significant equity. And in 2018, Centennial’s New York office reported no write offs. On the earnings call, he made his opinion about those with opinions on his bank clear.

“Thank you all, all our supporters, who’ve been with us for many years,” he said. “And to hell with the naysayers.” 

Zillow ups iBuyer competition with pilot program for self-guided home tours

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Zillow’s new “Tour It Now” feature gives homebuyers the ability to tour a property without an appointment or agent.

Zillow is testing the waters of self-guided home tours with its new program, Tour it Now.

The company is piloting the “iBuyer” program through its app for a “handful of homes in the Phoenix metro,” Zillow told Inman. The app allows potential homebuyers to access homes for sale without an appointment or agent. The app, which is only available for properties Zillow owns, gives users directions to the home and unlocks the door when they arrive.

There are some built-in safeguards: The homes have sensors that capture still images and detect movement when there shouldn’t be any, according to Zillow. In cases where such movement is detected, Tour it Now is disabled and the property is “flagged for investigation by the local Zillow team.”

“We realize that buyers are looking for the ability to visit and tour homes on their own timeline,” a spokesperson for Zillow said. “And ‘Tour it Now’ will allow them to do just that.” [Inman]Kathryn Brenzel

Gloria and Emilio Estefan chop ask of Star Island guest home to $32M

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Emilio and Gloria Estefan with 1 Star Island Drive (Credit: Getty Images and Realtor)

Gloria and Emilio Estefan are giving the sale of their Star Island guest home another try.

The Estefans are relisting the 1.34-acre property at 1 Star Island Drive in Miami Beach for $32 million, a 20 percent reduction in price from when it first hit the market in 2015 for $40 million.

The waterfront estate, with a five-bedroom main house and a three-bedroom villa, is now on the market with Stephanie Bienstock of HB Roswell Realty and Liz Lopez of RelatedISG International Realty, according to the Wall Street Journal. The Jills of Coldwell Banker had the listing in 2015.

Emilio Estefan said he bought the property for his mother, who later died, and then planned for his children to move in. Records show it last sold in November 1993 for $1.84 million.

Estefan also told the Wall Street Journal he hired architect Carlos Ott to design plans for the waterfront lot.

The Grammy Award-winning couple live nearby on the island.

Their neighbor, Lennar Corp. chairman Stuart Miller, is planning a number of luxury homes on Star Island. The Miller family recently sold the mansion at 23 Star Island Drive for $25 million. [WSJ] – Katherine Kallergis

Here are South Florida’s top 5 retail sales from February

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From top left, clockwise: Pointe at Wellington Green, Whitworth Farms, 983 Washington Avenue, Minotti building in the Miami Design District, Upland Building Miami Beach

Pointe at Wellington Green – Stair Property Management | $43 M

A Colorado partnership sold the Pointe at Wellington Green shopping center for $43 million.

The Centre at Wellington Green Ltd. sold the 21-acre property at 10100 Forest Hill Boulevard to the Pointe at Wellington LLC, a company led by Plantation investor Daryl Stair of Stair Property Management.

The seller is controlled by Alan Cogen of Boulder, Colorado. The partnership paid $7.75 million for the property in 2002.

The 107,368-square-foot shopping center, is 96 percent leased, anchored by LA Fitness. Other tenants include Saito’s Japanese Steak House, Sports Clips, Five Guys, Jamba Juice, Olive Garden, Don Ramon Cuban Cuisine and Franco’s Italian Restaurant.

Whitworth Farms – Juster Development Company | $19.4M

A joint venture between MMG Equity Partners and Global Fund sold a Publix-anchored shopping center in Boynton Beach to Juster Development Company.

Whitworth Farms, at 12425 Hagen Ranch Road, sold for $19.35 million. Dennis Carson of CBRE was the listing agent for the property, which sold at 96.1 percent leased.

The MMG joint venture paid $11.2 million for Whitworth Farms in March 2013, records show.

CVS-anchored building on Washington Avenue – KLNB | $18.3 M

Commercial real estate firm KLNB paid $18.3 million to buy a CVS-anchored building on Washington Avenue in Miami Beach, two years after it hit the market.

KLNB bought the two-story,12,443-square-foot building at 983 Washington Avenue for $1,470 per square foot, records show. Club Invest Group LLC, which is managed by Eugenio Marrapodi, sold the property to the Washington, D.C.-based company.

Architect Kobi Karp designed the rebuild of the former office building to deliver it to CVS in 2017. CVS has a lease extending to 2035. The property was originally built in 1936.

The site hit the market for $21.4 million in February 2017, meaning it sold for 14 percent less than its initial listing price.

Minotti building in the Miami Design District – DDC Group | $15.5 M

The Safra family sold the Minotti building in the Miami Design District to DDC Group, led by Nader Hakakian and his son Daniel Hakakian.

Property records show 3817 NE 2nd Owner LLC, an affiliate of New York-based J. Safra Real Estate, sold the 9,770-square-foot building at 3801 Northeast Second Avenue to JJ 3801 Realty LLC, which is controlled by Hakakian, for $15.5 million. The price equates to $1,586 per square foot.

Minotti, a high-end Italian furniture factory, has its showroom at the building, which was originally built in 1924 on a nearly 13,000-square-foot lot.

Upland building Miami Beach – Leopold Friedman | $15M

Crescent Heights sold a commercial building in South Beach, home to the Upland restaurant, to a nursing home owner for $15 million.

Leopold Friedman, who owns the Bronx nursing home Citadel Rehabilitation and Nursing Center in Kingsbridge, acquired the four-story, 32,000-square-foot building at 49 Collins Avenue. It hit the market in 2017.

The deal, which breaks down to under $500 per square foot, includes the 7,500-square-foot upscale restaurant and a 180-space parking garage. The property sits on a 13,000-square-foot lot next to the Related Group’s One Ocean, about a block away from Joe’s Stone Crab.

Realogy launches new AI assistant and social media ad “engine” tool

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Realogy CEO Ryan Schneider with an Amazon Alexa (Credit: Pexels)

“Hey, Agent X, schedule an open house.”

Realogy has debuted a new set of technology tools for agents, including a voice-activated artificial intelligence assistant called “Agent X” that will run through Amazon’s Alexa platform, and a “Social Ad Engine” designed in collaboration with Facebook, according to reporting from Inman.

“We’re going to shape the future of the real estate industry we’ve chosen to be a part of,” Realogy’s CEO Ryan Schneider told employees and agents at the company’s RGX conference in Las Vegas on Wednesday.

Sue Yannaccone, Realogy’s regional vice president, said that agents will be able to use Agent X to retrieve market data, schedule calendar events and access coaching tools, according to Inman. The “Social Ad Engine,” will allow agents to create ads on Facebook and Instagram.

Realogy is an investor in AI startup OJO Labs, which has developed a virtual assistant for the homebuying process. OJO just raised $45 million in a Series C round.

The Agent X announcement follows a year of falling profits for Realogy, the parent company of brokerages like the Corcoran Group, Sotheby’s International Realty, Coldwell Banker and Century 21.

Rival franchise brokerage Keller Williams said that in 2018, over 27,000 live referrals were sent through its virtual assistant “Kelle,” representing $8.3 billion in sales volume. [Inman] – Decca Muldowney

Mortgage giant Freddie Mac names new CEO amid privatization talks

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David Brickman (Credit: Freddie Mac)

Freddie Mac has promoted its president, David Brickman, to CEO, marking the company’s fourth leader since the financial crisis.

Brickman will take over in July, replacing Donald Layton, who has been CEO since 2012 and plans to retire, according to the Wall Street Journal.

Before he was named Freddie Mac’s president in September, Brickman was head of the government-sponsored enterprise’s multifamily lending.

He will lead the mortgage-finance giant at a time when discussion has been circling around whether Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae should be privatized.

Lawmakers have been trying and failing to overhaul Freddie and Fannie for more than 10 years.

Both agencies were brought under government conservatorship in 2008, during the financial crisis. They are regulated by the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which has control over much of their business decisions.

Officials in President Trump’s administration have made recent statements indicating they plan to take the companies out of conservatorship soon.

On Wednesday, the Federal Reserve indicated that it will likely not raise interest rates in 2019, holding a rate of 2.25 to 2.50 percent. This could lead to lower mortgage rates and more demand for Freddie Mac mortgages. [WSJ] Keith Larsen

Miami investor buys industrial site next to Florida Turnpike

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14121 to 14267 Southwest 119th Avenue

Investor Peter Greither sold an industrial property next to the Florida Turnpike in Miami to an affiliate of Rodan Property Management for $12.25 million.

Greither’s Greither Holdings LC sold the 5.8-acre property at 14121 to 14267 Southwest 119th Avenue. The buyer is Rodan X LLC, which is tied to Alireza Shadravan of Coconut Grove, according to Central Commercial Real Estate.

Enrique Jordan of Central Commercial Real Estate represented the seller, while Stephen Hendricks of Southeast Property Management brought the buyer.

The deal includes about 121,500 square feet of warehouse space just west of the Turnpike. The property is anchored by KD Nutra, an Omega-3 vitamin company under the KD Pharma Group umbrella.

Rents in the area for small bay industrial space average $12 per square foot, gross, Jordan said.

Records show the site last sold in 1995 for just under $1 million.

Rodan affiliates also own industrial properties farther west at the Rodan Industrial Center at 14160 Southwest 139th Court and in Hialeah.

Investors’ appetite for industrial warehouses remained strong in 2018, but a slowdown could be coming. According to the Commercial Industrial Association of South Florida’s annual industrial market report, the cost of land acquisitions and construction is becoming too expensive for developers to consider new projects, and the industrial boom is expected to take a hit this year as a result.


Private wealth manager buys Auberge condo in Fort Lauderdale

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Auberge Beach Residences & Spa

A wealth manager paid $9 million for a condo at Auberge Beach Residences & Spa in Fort Lauderdale.

Patrick Tinucci bought the 5,586-square-foot unit S2203 at 2200 North Ocean Boulevard for about $1,611 per square foot, records show. He purchased the four-bedroom six-bathroom unit from the newly completed condo tower’s development group.

Tinucci is part of RBC’s Wealth Management, Provence Wealth Management Group in a suburb of Minneapolis.

The Related Group, Fortune International Group and the Fairwinds Group developed Auberge. Other buyers include Florida Panthers owner Vincent Viola, Citrix CEO David Henshall, former Miami Dolphins quarterback Dan Marino and Jacob Trouba of the Winnipeg Jets. Last year, the son of Salmar Properties founder Sal Rusi paid $9.3 million for a penthouse in the north tower.

Auberge features a full-service salon, plunge pool, and indoor and outdoor cabanas.

Downtown Miami’s hotel pipeline could more than double existing supply: report

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A rendering of Waldorf Astoria in downtown Miami

Developers are banking on rising demand for hotels in Greater Downtown Miami, where the pipeline of new development includes more than 12,000 hotel rooms spread across 43 projects.

A new report from the Miami Downtown Development Authority found that the number of rooms planned – nearly 4,000 – and the number of rooms proposed – roughly 8,200 – would lead to more than doubling the existing supply of 8,121 rooms in Brickell, downtown Miami, the Arts & Entertainment District, Edgewater, Midtown, Overtown and Wynwood.

Roughly 400 rooms are under construction: a Hotel Indigo in Brickell with 230 rooms, and an AC Hotel by Marriot with 153 rooms in Edgewater.

The rise in hotel construction comes as those neighborhoods experience a boom in residential development, and as major mixed-use projects like Miami Worldcenter, Brightline’s MiamiCentral and phases of the Design District get completed.

It also comes amid growing competition from short-term rental companies like Airbnb.

After a few slow years, Miami’s hotel market is showing slight signs of recovering. The average daily rate for hotels in the region dropped in 2016 and 2017, but rose more than 6 percent last year to nearly $200 a night, according to data from STR.

Still, the question remans whether demand can keep up with supply.

Hotel occupancy in the greater Miami market fell in 2015 and 2016, but has been on the rise since 2017. Yet, the growth in occupancy slowed last year, from a 1.3 percent year-over-year increase in 2017 (up to 76.5 percent occupancy) to only 0.2 percent by the end of 2018, to 76.7 percent occupancy, the data shows.

Some hotel projects in the pipeline include the hotel components of condo-hotels, like YotelPad Miami and the Waldorf Astoria Hotels & Resorts, both in downtown Miami. Aria Development Group and AQARAT recently started construction of YotelPad, a 31-story tower with 215 condos and 250 Yotel “cabins,” or small hotel rooms, at 227 Northeast Second Street. The Waldorf project has not yet broken ground.

The Miami market also has two major convention center hotels planned: an 800-key hotel next to the Miami Beach Convention Center and a 1,700 room hotel at Miami Worldcenter.

Jumbo mortgage slowdown forces banks to rethink focus on high-end customers

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Jumbo loans fell by 12 percent by dollar volume last year (Credit: Pixabay and Wikipedia)

It turns out bigger isn’t always better.

Jumbo loans — mortgages too large to be sold to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — fell by 12 percent by dollar volume last year, according to a new report from the Wall Street Journal. It’s a warning sign for banks that pivoted to cater to wealthy borrowers in the wake of the financial crisis.

In general, a jumbo is any loan above $484,350, but in more expensive parts of the country it is a loan above $726,525. They are most common in expensive cities. Last year in Manhattan, 61 percent of mortgages qualified as jumbo, per that year’s loan limits, the Journal found.

The jumbo market has been hit by headwinds. Refinancings have slowed, as has the general U.S. economy, according to the Journal. House prices, while still rising, are also cooling, and new tax laws have reduced incentives to buy larger homes.

Several banks did more than half their U.S. mortgage business in jumbo loans last year, including First Republic Bank, MUFG Union Bank, Toronto-Dominion Bank and Bank of America, according to Inside Mortgage Finance. [WSJ] – Decca Muldowney

 

Zom partnership plans mixed-use project on Ludlam Trail

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Rendering of Bird Road project

Zom Living, Scout Capital and Mattoni Group paid $36 million for a portion of the Ludlam Trail in Miami, where they plan to build a mixed-use project.

Florida East Coast Industries sold roughly 13 acres of land to the joint venture, which includes 6 miles of unused rail tracks and a 100-foot right of way where the tracks previously were, according to a release.

Zom and its partners plan to build 950 apartments and up to 35,000 square feet of retail space, with construction starting in the fourth quarter of this year. The project would be built in three phases, starting with more than 300 apartments and about one third of the retail space, Vince Signorello of Scout Capital said. Signorello left FECI, where he was CEO, about two years to start Scout Capital.

In January, the Miami-Dade County Commission approved zoning for commercial and residential developments at major intersections along the trail, the Miami Herald reported. FECI said at the time that it planned to launch a Bird Road complex first, where the county is also planning to begin building its own public park. The county had secured about 30 percent of the $100 million in funding it needs for the park, according to the Herald.

The property stretches from 48th Avenue to Bird Road (40th Street), and will connect to the public park. The joint venture will maintain the park area on its land and it will also be open to the public, Signorello said.

The Ludlam Trail runs from Miami International Airport south to Dadeland Station.

Zom, Scout Capital and Mattoni’s project will be completed within five years of groundbreaking, Signorello said. The retail “will skew towards food and beverage and those types of uses” but could also include home furnishings or design-type tenants, he said.

Hallandale Beach approves new workforce housing development

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Workforce Housing rendering, Hallandale Beach

Developer Urban Farmers plans to build a new workforce housing development in Hallandale Beach.

The Hallandale Beach City Commission on Wednesday approved the 200-unit project called Eighth Avenue Commons, at 200 Northwest 8th Avenue. The $42 million multifamily project was designed by Miami-based Kobi Karp Architecture and Architectural Farm, based in Hallandale Beach.

The six-story development, which has been in the works for several years, will have 170 workforce housing units, and 30 affordable housing units, including 10 senior housing units, and will take about 24 months to build. Urban Farmers, led by Terry Booty, has not asked the city for a subsidy, but it will receive a $2.45 million Broward County workforce housing grant.

The five-acre site, an empty lot that is mostly used for parking, was previously owned by the Hallandale Church of God. Urban Farmers entered into a joint venture with the church, according to Chikia Wright, project manager for Eighth Avenue Commons. The developer paid $100 for the site in 2016, records show.

Although the project received a mostly positive reception at the commission meeting, it was not without its detractors. One of the objections to Eighth Avenue Commons was its density: the project will locate 200 apartment units in what had been — until the city commission changed the zoning Wednesday night — a single-family neighborhood. Plus, in order to allow the number of apartments, the city is making available 92 flex units that would otherwise be reserved for the east side of the city, where density is considerably greater than on the west side. Without the flex units, the developer would only be able to build 108 units.

Commissioner Anabelle Lima-Taub expressed concerns about the project’s density at a time when the city doesn’t have “a fully-functioning fire department.” Because of a $9.5 million deficit in the city’s budget, there are no plans in the near future to hire more firemen, even though they are needed.

Lima-Taub also expressed concerns about gentrification in the area. Recently, she said, a house on the west side, which is a depressed area, sold for $800,000, a sign that gentrification has already begun.

Even Keven Klopp, director of development services for the city, acknowledged the development’s flaws. “This is a project that is challenging to support,” he said, because, among other things, the building will not have a garage (there will be surface parking on the first floor, instead) and it will have less open space and landscaping than is optimal. A rooftop garden will make up for part of the deficit in open space and green area, Wright said.

While features like a garage and more landscaping would be desirable, said Klopp, they would make the project more expensive, leading to higher rents and gentrification at a time when the county needs more affordable housing.

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