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Meet the next generation of home buyers: millennials

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Styled living room. (Credit all: Pixabay)

Millennials are officially home-buying age and, with the cash to back up their aspirations, they’re expecting to be swept off their feet.

So how to reach this new cohort of buyers who were responsible for more than a third of American home purchases between July 2015 and June 2016? Well, a great Instagram account is a good start, but it won’t seal the deal.

“Millennials need to see themselves living there,” New York broker Dolly Lenz told Mansion Global. “They’re more about an experience than anything else.”

These experiences could range from a showing featuring catering by a local coffeehouse or restaurant, an impromptu fashion show or a salon-style get-together populated by groups of presumably smart and cultured potential buyers.

“We try to bring together an interesting group of people, so that even if they don’t buy in this development, we’re in contact with them afterwards,” explained Ziegert Bank and Real Estate Consulting’s Dorothea Metasch.

Brokers should also be ready to get quizzed.

“Millennials ask amazing questions,” Kuper Sotheby’s International Realty’s Brennan Stravlo told Mansion Global. “They want to know everything about a property before they make a decision.”

But perhaps the best way to attract and win over millennial buyers is hiring millennials to make the sale, because as one broker, who is himself a millennial, said, “we understand their fears, their concerns and their must-haves.”

[Mansion Global]Erin Hudson


New Palm Beach mansion listed for $61.5M

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1900 South Ocean Boulevard in Palm Beach (Credit” Andy Frame and Sothebys International Realty)

A new mansion in Palm Beach was listed for $61.5 million, the fourth-highest asking price among all properties listed for sale in the exclusive barrier-island enclave.

Located in a section of Palm Beach called Billionaires Row, the ocean-to-lake house at 1900 South Ocean Boulevard has 200 feet of oceanfront directly across the boulevard and 180 feet of lakefront on the west side of the property.

Construction of the three-level house is nearly complete as the “finishing touches” are applied, according to John P. Dewing of Sotheby’s International Realty, who shares the $61.5 million listing with another Sotheby’s agent, Morgan B. Atkins.

The listing states that the three-story house has 21,305 square feet of air-conditioned space. Its features include a library, a lounge and bar, and a fireplace-equipped family room that leads to a loggia and terrace overlooking the Lake Worth Lagoon.

The house has a guest wing with three bedrooms. The property also comes with a freestanding guest house.

Suzanne Frisbie, president of the Palm Beach Board of Realtors, told the Palm Beach Daily News that the asking price for the never-occupied house is competitive because it is under $3,000 per square foot of air-conditioned space.

Frisbie, an agent of Corcoran Group, also told the newspaper that the house is one of only 19 ocean-to-lake properties in Palm Beach.

Keith Frankel and his wife, Tammy, built the house. They briefly listed it for sale in 2014 with a pre-construction asking price of $65 million.

Frankel, president and CEO of New Jersey-based vitamin manufacturer VitaQuest International, bought the South Ocean Boulevard property in 2007 for $15.9 million. [Palm Beach Daily News] – Mike Seemuth

Lawyer says Florida Bar dismissed ethics complaint linked to Naples property sale

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Naples City Councilman Sam Saad (Credit: Tallahassee Democrat)

Real estate attorney Sam Saad, a member of the Naples City Council, said the Florida Bar dismissed an allegation that he acted unethically by voting in favor of a development that involved one of his clients.

In May 2016, Saad voted in favor of a proposal to build a gas station and convenience store in River Park, a Naples neighborhood with a mostly African-American population.

Though many residents of River Park opposed the development, the Naples City Council approved it in a 4-3 vote.

Vincent Keyes, president of the NAACP chapter in Collier County, filed an ethics complaint against Saad with the Florida Bar.

Keyes alleged that Saad violated a Florida Bar rule that prohibits lawyers from acting in their own self-interest as public officials.

The Naples Daily News has reported on Saad’s business relationships with New York-based Axonic Capital Group, which sold the River Park property to convenience-store chain 7-Eleven.

The Daily News reported that Saad did legal work for Axonic before and after the sale and had entered real estate development partnerships with Axonic manager Matt Pikus, who earned a $24,000 commission on the River Park property sale to 7-Eleven.

A spokeswoman for the Florida Bar told the newspaper on Saturday she was unable to confirm that the Bar dismissed the ethics complaint against Saad because details of the case weren’t immediately available.

A nine-member state ethics panel earlier dismissed a separate ethics complaint against Saad after determining he was unaware before his vote on the River Park property that the sale would generate a $24,000 commission for Pikus.

Naples City Councilwoman Linda Penniman filed the ethics complaint against Saad in March of last year. [Naples Daily News] – Mike Seemuth

Private Bahamian island with colorful past asks $20M

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Whale Cay, Bahamas (Credit: Business Insider)

A private island in the Bahamas with a colorful past has been listed for sale with an asking price of $20 million.

The 711-acre island in the Berry Islands, Bahamas, called Whale Cay has seven miles of white-sand beaches on its 12-mile shoreline.

Whale Cay, accessible by water or air, has a 4,000-foot paved runway for aircraft.

The private island also comes with multiple structures built between the 1930s and 1970s and in need of repair. These include a main house, guest cottage, museum and laundry room, plus a dormitory for staff, several maintenance buildings, a seaplane hangar and a lighthouse.

A 2.5-mile natural waterway along the northern side of Whale Cay could be dredged for a marina development.

A brokerage firm called 7th Heaven Properties has the listing for Whale Cay.

In 1934, the island was purchased by Marion Barbara “Joe” Castairs, whose mother was an heiress to the Standard Oil fortune.

Castairs cross-dressed as a man and had affairs with famous actresses including Marlene Dietrich and Greta Garbo, according to Robert Cooper, director of 7th Heaven Properties. [Business Observer] – Mike Seemuth

Ikea founder, Ingvar Kamprad, dies at 91

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Ingvar Kamprad, left in 2010; Ikea store in Regensburg, Germany, right. (Credit left to right: Ministry of Enterprise, Energy and Communications of Sweden/Sandra Baqirjazi; High Contrast/Wikimedia Commons)

One of the richest men in the world and creator of a company whose furniture sits in the homes and offices of millions worldwide died yesterday in Smaland, Sweden.

At 17, Ingvar Kamprad founded Ikea as a mail-order business in 1943 with a basic idea: to sell low-cost minimalist furniture. Over about seven decades, he developed the idea into an empire of 350 stores, with $47.6 billion in sales and a personal net worth of $58.7 billion, making him the eighth richest person in the world, according to the New York Times.

The enduring concept of Ikea’s business — assemble furniture yourself, wander independently through self-service stores located on cheap land outside of major cities and a corporate culture of frugality is largely attributed to its founder’s ethos and behavior, though Kamprad’s life was more complicated than that simple picture he exuded publicly.

As the Times reports, Kamprad’s alcoholism, involvement in Sweden’s fascist movement and luxurious estates in Switzerland, France and Sweden give a glimpse of the man behind the cultivated image.

Though Kamprad officially retired in 1986, he continued leading the company in key decisions and visiting various stores. It was only in 2013 that he officially placed Ikea under the leadership of his son, Mathias Kamprad, with his other two sons occupying significant roles in the company. All three have since transitioned out of operational roles. [NYT]Erin Hudson

What can be saved? US cities debate how to prepare for extreme storms

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Back: 2011 photo from a North Dakota flood. (Credit: 3rd Combat Camera Squadron Staff Sgt. Shardia Jackson; illustration by Wikimedia Commons)

American cities are debating how to tackle the changing nature of storms, but the one thing everyone can agree on is that no one is prepared.

The most recent city to be shook by unexpected extreme weather was Boston. The city experienced an unprecedented tidal surge during a storm earlier this month, according the Wall Street Journal, with the flood waters permeating parts of the city that had never been thought of as flood risks. It’s one of several wake-up calls in coastal U.S. cities that’s prompting reflection on what to be done.

In the case of Boston, a geologist working for the city who estimated the cost of “storm-proofing” the Big Dig would be almost $200 million along with other related projects in neighborhoods that would run up bills of more than $400 million. But there’s disagreement on what plan to follow.

R.J. Lehmann from R Street Institute told the Journal that such projects should be selected carefully with acknowledgement that not every neighborhood can be saved from extreme weather.

“There will be places where the costs exceed the benefits. And where that happens, we might lose some communities,” he explained. Buyouts, to him, “are part of the future.”

Others say projects need to get underway now — even without certainty that they will fully address weather threats.

“We are either going to get it a little wrong, or a lot wrong,” said Carnegie Mellon University’s Constantine Samaras to the Journal.

Adding to various municipal crises, at the World Economic Forum in Davos this week CEO of AXA SA Thomas Buberl noted that insurers were also watching climate-related weather changes and said that there are some properties that may just not be insurable in the future. So much for flood insurance. [WSJ]Erin Hudson

NR Investments plans mixed-use projects for Miami’s Arts & Entertainment District

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Nir Shohani

Miami’s Arts and Entertainment District is getting two more NR Investments projects.

Just two blocks south of its Canvas luxury condo tower and its apartment building, Filling Station Lofts, the developer is proposing a two-tower, mixed-use project split into condos, a hotel and office space.

And just north of Canvas and Filling Station Lofts, NR Investments seeks to build a smaller development consisting of a 30-story, 225-unit residential tower with 8,000 square feet of retail and some office space.

Nir Shoshani, a principal of NR Investments, said the company has not set a definite timetable for the construction of either project. “I have no idea yet,” Shoshani said. “It is a tricky market out there. We are in the analysis phase of both projects. The idea is to start moving forward in late 2018 on one of the two.”

The Miami City Commission last week voted in favor of requests made by NR Investments to increase bonuses to the floor areas of both proposed projects from 30 percent to 40 percent above what is permitted. Iris Escarra, NR Investments’ attorney, told commissioners that the developer is not increasing the number of units and the height even though the zoning change would allow up to 573 units and up to 60 stories.

For the first project, NR Investments brought in architect Carlos Zapata to design a 45-story tower with 457 condos, an 11-story hotel with 150 rooms and 30,000 square feet of office space, according to documents submitted to the city commission. The hotel would act as a buffer between the taller residential tower and a historical firehouse. The development would rise on a 1.14-acre site on Northeast 14th Street between North Miami Avenue and Northeast Miami Court.

The second project is on a 24,700-square-foot site consisting of two lots at 70 and 90 Northeast 17th Street and a third property at 1642 Northeast First Avenue. The rezoning would allow a building with maximum square footage of 370,500 and 283 units. However, NR Investments is only seeking 225 units.

Escarra told commissioners that the developer would set aside 10 percent of the units for workforce housing if NR Investments decides the project will be all condos. If NR Investments makes it a rental building, the set aside would be 14 percent.

NR Investments would seek to offer buyers Fannie Mae financing for the 14th Street project or the 17th Street development if the company decides to do condos there, Shoshani said. In 2016, the firm was approved for Fannie Mae financing on its Canvas project. Shoshani said NR Investments is running bi-weekly seminars on Fannie Mae for potential qualifying buyers.

“We believe the market is ready for the next step after the last three to four years were mostly about investors,” he said. “We are very optimistic. Banks are slowly, but surely, starting to lend to the end user. The young generation of professionals can save their rent money and with a little bit of a down payment, they can get back to purchasing homes.”

Arquitectonica’s first commercial building to get the wrecking ball

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Arquitectonica’s Bernardo Fort-Brescia and Babylon Apartments (Credit: Google and Oceana Residences)

After recently losing its short-lived landmark status, an eye-catching building on Brickell Bay Drive, designed by Arquitectonica, may be demolished.

In a 4-1 vote, Miami commissioners moved to overturn the Babylon Apartments’ protected architectural landmark status, according to the Miami Herald. It was granted landmark status last year by the city’s historic preservation board, but the building’s owner appealed the decision, stating the 34-year-old, vacant building is in too poor of condition to maintain.

Francisco “Paco” Martinez Celorio has been wanting to tear down the building for years, according to the Miami Herald. He applied for a permit to demolish the six-story, ziggurat-inspired building in 2016 and is reapplying again, the Miami Herald reported.

Celorio’s attorney Jeffrey Bercow told the publication he and his client are fans of Arquitectonica’s work, “but not every work of a master deserves to be designated.”

Babylon Apartments, at 240 Southeast 14th Street, was Arquitectonica’s first commercial project. Preservationists say the building served as a template for other Arquitectonica buildings in Miami’s Brickell area, including the Atlantis, the high-rise with a square hole made famous by the television series Miami Vice.

Arquitectonica has designed projects in cities all over the world, including buildings in Paris and Shanghai. [Miami Herald]Amanda Rabines


Movers & Shakers: Avison Young taps SVP for Miami office & more

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Rosendo Caveiro and Sean Schiefler (Credit: Avison Young and Engel & Völkers Florida, MaxPixel)

After 13 years, Rosendo Caveiro jumped from Cushman & Wakefield to Avison Young. Caveiro, a former senior director of capital markets and multifamily, joined Avison Young’s Miami office as a senior vice president. He’ll lead the brokerage’s multifamily investment sales throughout Florida.

Engel & Völkers Florida brought on Sean Schiefler as senior vice president of business development. The brokerage plans to open at least six new locations this quarter, according to a release. Schiefler was previously with Realogy’s Better Homes and Gardens Real Estate division, and before that with Wyndham Hotel Group, where he focused on site selection for new hotel construction and rebranding and renovation of older hotels.

Fort Partners tapped Elliman’s Richard Goihman of the Goihman Group as the new executive vice president of sales for Four Seasons Private Residences Fort Lauderdale. Goihman is part of the Gold Coast Team representing the development in Miami, Fort Lauderdale and Palm Beach.

Christopher Adeleke, a former top producer at Cervera Real Estate, joined Douglas Elliman to work on sales of 1 Hotel & Homes South Beach. He was previously a sales agent for Le Parc at Brickell and The Bond on Brickell.

David Carrion-Levy left One Sotheby’s International Realty to join Compass. Carrion-Levy is partnering with Compass’ Ben Moss, also previously of One Sotheby’s.

Friends of The Underline hired Amy Rosenberg as chief development officer, focusing on private fundraising and development of the linear park and trail. Rosenberg was previously director of annual giving at National YoungArts Foundation.

Carlton Fields hired land use attorney Aaron C. Dunlap. Dunlop, a former assistant attorney for the village of Wellington, is joining the law firm’s West Palm Beach office.

Benworth Capital, a lender focusing on alternative short-term, first-position residential and commercial mortgages, named Jose Monte as the company’s vice president. Before joining Bentworth, he was previously a senior vice president of commercial lending at Sunstate Bank.

UK investment banker buys oceanfront Manalapan home

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1245 Lands End Road (Credit: Realtor.com)

Just a couple of months after landing a new job at the UK investment bank Barclays, Michael Lublinsky bought a new waterfront home in Manalapan.

Property records show Lublinsky paid $5.5 million for a recently built 7,240-square-foot house at 1245 Lands End Road. The trade breaks down to about $760 per square foot.

The seller is a company led by Howard Werner. Records show Werner bought the 15,250-square-foot property in 2014 for $1.94 million. The five-bedroom, six-bathroom home was built in 2016, records show.

Lublinsky formerly headed the Jersey-based hedge fund Brevan Howard. He started his new position at Barclays in November and will oversee the bank’s macro trading in UK, according to published reports. Before Brevan Howard, Lublinsky headed Royal Bank of Scotland’s global trading department.

His new home hit the market for about $6.5 million with the Fite Group’s Jack Elkins in 2014, according to Realtor.com. After more than three years on and off the market with a series of asking prices, the home sold at a 15 percent discount off its original asking price.

Steven Presson with The Corcoran Group had the most recent listing, according to online marketing material. Michelle Cutler of Miami Beach-based Concierge Real Estate Service brought the buyer.

In December, hedge fund manager William Powers paid $13.5 million for an oceanfront lot about eight miles north of Lublinsky’s new home. Nearby, a vacant oceanfront property at 1460 South Ocean Boulevard sold last year for $12.45 million, or about $210 per square foot, to a company managed by Nigerian business executive Onajite Okoloko.

Foreign investors pour money into Miami, LA and Manhattan luxury homes

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A mansion in Beverly Hills, the Livingston House at 12 East 96th Street in Manhattan, and the Terra Veritatis Home in Miami Beach (Credit: Wikimedia Commons, PixHere)

Foreign buyers dropped $7.5 billion on homes in the U.S. costing over $1 million, with a major chunk of those purchases in Miami, Los Angeles, and Manhattan, according to a new report. The report, which calculated purchases between March 2016 and March 2017, saw a nearly three-quarter jump in total foreign investment in U.S. luxury real estate from the 12 months prior.

Luxury brokerages Beauchamp Estates and Leslie J Garfield & Co., compiled the data.

Almost 40 percent of the purchases were done in those three cities, with Miami accounting for one quarter of the total. Los Angeles was next highest at 9 percent, and Manhattan was third with 3 percent.

The price-per-square-foot between the three cities was lowest in Miami, but foreign investors dominated the South Florida market. There, 80 percent of luxury Miami real estate is owned by foreign buyers, compared to 20 and 27 percent in Los Angeles and Manhattan, respectively.

In Miami, where 95 percent of those properties were bought with cash, many of those buyers came from South America. For homes costing $3 million and over, three quarters in Miami are owned by foreign buyers who paid cash.

Beauchamp Estates expects Miami to see a 40 percent growth in ultra-high net worth individuals through 2026 to 1,050 total, while New York and LA will grow by 30 percent each, to 8,541 and 4,095.

In LA, buyers seem to get more house for their buck. The average luxury home purchased was 11,211 square feet. That is smaller than Miami, but on average, the properties in LA came with two and half acres of land. Miami luxury homes, meanwhile, had less than 1 acre. Manhattan apartments had 4,276 square feet of outdoor space.

The most popular neighborhoods in New York were the Upper East Side, Greenwich Village and Tribeca. In LA, Beverly Hills and Malibu topped the list. In Miami, Miami Beach, Palm Beach and North Bay Road were the most attractive.  [Realty Biz] – Dennis Lynch 

Top 10 US malls haven’t gotten the memo that malls are dying

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Sawgrass Mills (Credit: Ruth Hara via Flickr)

The traditional American shopping mall may not be the retail powerhouse it once was, but the best properties in the sector are still delivering for tenants and landlords across the country.

The 10 most valuable malls owned by REITs — which includes Sawgrass Mills in Sunrise — are generating between $960 and $1,450 in sales per square foot, and are worth billions, research firm Boenning & Scattergood told CNBC.

The top 10 malls in the U.S. include four locations in the Northeast. Two are in New York state, one is in New Jersey, and another is in Pennsylvania. The Ala Moana Center in Honolulu tops the list. The 55-year-old open-air mall brings in $1,450 per-square-foot and is worth $5.7 billion. General Growth Properties the Ala Moana Center, along with two more in the top 10.

But those are clearly outliers, in a sector that has been decimated by the likes of Amazon and other ecommerce retailers. Industry experts say 25 percent of U.S. malls will likely shutter in the next five years, or about “300 out of 1,100” that now exist, according to a recent report in CNN Money.

Simon Property Group, the country’s largest mall owner, leads the pack with five in the top 10. Those include Sawgrass Mills in Sunrise, which is the second most valuable mall in the country. Sawgrass Mills brings in $1,149 per-square-foot and worth a total of $4.1 billion.

The others on Simon’s list are: Roosevelt Field Mall in Garden City, New York; the King of Prussia Mall in King of Prussia, Pennsylvania, the Forum Shops at Caesars in Las Vegas; and the Woodbury Commons Premium Outlets in Central Valley, New York. [CNBC] – Dennis Lynch 

Kickoff time: David Beckham and partners officially launch Miami MLS franchise

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The launch event for David Beckham and his partners’ Major League Soccer franchise (Credit: Katherine Kallergis, GettyImages)

He’s gone up against the toughest bruisers and tactical minds in world soccer. But even for David Beckham, bringing Major League Soccer to Miami was a monumental challenge.

Soccer fans drowned out the sounds of Gloria Estefan’s “Conga” at the Adrienne Arsht Cente Monday as they prepared for the official launch of the franchise, brought to the city by Beckham and his partners – Marcelo Claure, Jorge and Jose Mas, and Simon Fuller. The group was joined onstage at the Knight Concert Hall by Miami-Dade County Mayor Carlos Gimenez and Miami Mayor Francis Suarez.

“The thing that I know and the thing that I tell my children is that things get difficult sometimes,” Beckham said. “The one thing in four years that’s kept me going is you guys,” he added, in a nod to the horde of fans.

After going through multiple sites, including failed bids at PortMiami, in downtown Miami and Little Havana, the investment group is focused on making Overtown work, Beckham told WPLG. In June, the county approved the $9 million land sale of 3 acres in Overtown, part of an assemblage that also includes six privately owned acres the group paid $19 million for in 2016.

But the venture nearly fell apart about two months ago, Claure, the CEO of Sprint, said at the press conference. MLS owners were also reportedly critical of the discounted $25 million expansion fee that Beckham and his partners are paying.

“About 60 days ago, we were done. We were not going to do this,” he said, crediting the MasTec brothers Jorge and Jose Mas with being the missing link the franchise needed to move forward.

The 25,000-square-foot, $200 million stadium will be built on a nine-acre development site between Northwest Sixth and Eighth streets, north of the Miami River in Overtown. Three sites in Overtown were also pitched to Amazon for its second headquarters. Miami was announced as a finalist for the $5 billion development last week.

Trump is suing Palm Beach County’s property appraiser for the fifth straight year

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Donald Trump and Trump National Golf Club in Jupiter (Credit: Trump National Jupiter, Wikimedia Commons)

President Trump is once again suing the Palm Beach County property appraiser, claiming that the appraised value of Trump National Golf Club is an overestimate.

The lawsuit, filed in December, marks the fifth consecutive year that Trump fights the county’s appraised value, according to the Palm Beach Post. Property appraiser Dorothy Jacks set the value of the Jupiter golf club at $19.7 million, a figure that Trump says is inflated by about $5 million. That’s despite listing the property’s value at “over $50 million” in his financial disclosures for 2016 and 2017, the Palm Beach Post reported.

Last year, the golf club was appraised at $18.4 million, resulting in a $383,171 tax bill. Trump responded to this year’s appraised value with a $296,595 check, less than the $398,315 tab he owes.

Since Trump won the election in 2016, the Trump Organization has doubled the membership fee at Mar-a-Lago to $200,000, a move that has ethics watchdogs on alert. [Palm Beach Post] – Amanda Rabines

Will 2018 be the “year of the deal”?

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80 Park Avenue

It looks like 2018 might be the year of the deal.

Many people know that eight is a lucky number in Chinese culture because when spoken in Cantonese it sounds like the word for “prosperity.” And it turns out 18 might carry the same good fortune.

When spoken aloud, the number sounds like the phrase “I want to be wealthy,” which could make 2018 a lucky year for real estate deals — and some brokers have already seen that in action.

Corcoran Group agent Janet Wang told the Wall Street Journal that five of her clients decided to get serious about buying when 2018 rolled around. “‘Ok, this year we’re really going to look,’” they told Wang, without specifying a reason.

One Beijing-based buyer put off closing on a New York City home in the $5 million range so they could purchase it in the new year instead, said Carrie Law, chief executive of Chinese international real estate website Juwai.com. “There may have been other factors at play, but that’s the reason they gave us,” Law said.

Lucky numbers don’t only dictate when some Chinese buyers will buy, but where. An address or price or with eight is ideal, while addresses with the number four — which sounds like “death” — are avoided.

A condo building at 80 Park Avenue is particularly popular with Chinese buyers, not only because of its address, but because it’s near 38th Street, which in Cantonese sounds like “create wealth,” according to Geovanna Lim, president of Park Avenue International Partners.

Eighteen also plays a special role in the Jewish community, since the Hebrew word for the number, “chai,” also means life. Eastern Consolidated’s Adelaide Polsinelli pointed out its significance at the REBNY gala earlier this month. “It’s a lucky number in the Jewish faith, so 2018 has to be a good year,” she said.

Chinese numerology has ripple effects for non-Chinese buyers, too. In British Columbia, where 80 to 90 percent of condo sales are to Chinese buyers, no one wants purchase a unit with an unlucky address because it will make it harder to sell later on, said Calgary-based broker Peter Ng.

Coco Tan, a broker in Silicon Valley, was skeptical about the connection. She said that if there was a bump in real estate sales at the beginning of 2018, it was more likely because buyers were waiting to see the final tax reform bill.

Law of Juwai.com, however, predicts that August will be a busy for Chinese buyers, particularly the eighth of the month. After all, in Cantonese, the date sounds like “prosperity prosperity I want to be wealthy.” [WSJ] — Chava Gourarie


Developer of 321 at Water’s Edge nabs construction loan

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Rendering of 321 at Water’s Edge (Credit: SobelCo)

SobelCo just closed on a $26 million construction loan for 321 at Water’s Edge in Fort Lauderdale.

Goldman Sachs is providing the financing, according to a press release. The developer broke ground on the 11-story, 23-unit building earlier this month with a projected completion date of early 2019.

Douglas Elliman took over sales of the boutique waterfront condo project at 321 North Birch Road last year from Engel & Völkers. Buyers are required to put 20 percent down, followed by 10 percent about four months later.

A representative from SobelCo, led by Chairman Samuel Sobel and President Jeffrey Sobel, could not be immediately reached for a sales update.

Prices start at $1.95 million and units will range from 2,600 square feet to more than 3,800 square feet. Condos will include smart home features, designer kitchens, furnishings and bedroom suites. Owners will also have a five-year membership to the private dining club at the Pillars Club nearby.

Records show the developer paid $10 million for the 27,400-square-foot site in May 2015 and announced the project, then called Oceana Fort Lauderdale, months later. It opened a sales center for 321 at Water’s Edge in 2016.

The building will also feature a private wine club and lounge, a sky terrace with a lounge and summer kitchen, pool, Jacuzzi and bar, a 2,400-square-foot gym with ocean views and electric car charging stations.

The Israeli debt game is getting crowded. Here’s a look inside the battle to win US business

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From left: Larry Silverstein, Adam Neumann,Gary Barnett, Azi Mandel and Tel Aviv (Credit: Getty Images)

In 2014, Adam Mermelstein and Azi Mandel caught wind of a novel way to score cheap financing: they could issue millions of dollars worth of bonds on the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange at far better rates than they would get from stateside lenders.

“It’s made out to seem like a walk in the park,” said Mandel, co-founder of New York-based Treetop Development with Mermelstein. “You open the treasure chest and money comes pouring out.”

The partners decided to go for it, and dropped several million to cover the exhaustive process in 2015. Their holdings were audited and rated, the company was incorporated and approved, and the offer was tendered. But the results were disappointing, so Mandel and Mermelstein walked away empty-handed.

Much has changed since then.

Even three years ago, U.S. developers raising capital in Israel was something of a novelty. Scrappy mavericks and two-man shops willing to shepherd them through a long and hair-raising process while convincing a skeptical Israeli market stood to reap outsized rewards. But as the Americans have become a familiar presence in the market, Israel’s more established financial firms are trying to muscle their business away from the pioneers. And as they do, a high-stakes game of musical chairs among Israel’s financial talent is unfolding.

Newbies

The four largest underwriting firms in Israel — Discount Capital, Leader Capital Markets, Poalim IBI and Leumi Partners — have taken a more aggressive role in the Israeli bond business in the last year. Most are subsidiaries of or affiliated with Israel’s largest banks, an advantage not lost on their clients and potential clients.

“Today, there is not a single underwriting firm in Israel, or self-respecting consultant that isn’t out traveling in the United States” scouting for potential candidates, said Yossi Levi, co-founder of Infin, a firm that specializes in bringing foreign companies to the Israeli stock exchange.

“There are busses now from Israel,” said Boaz Gilad, co-founder of Brookland Capital, an early adopter of the financing model.

The firms have all managed bond deals for American companies in recent months with more in the pipeline. Leader reeled in Larry Silverstein’s Silverstein Properties, Poalim IBI and Leumi netted Barry Sternlicht’s Starwood Capital, and Discount is working with an American giant — $20 billion co-everything-company WeWork.

The early players still have a foothold, of course, with deal flow from existing clients and a track record to lure new ones. Earlier this month, Moinian Group raised close to $175 million in bonds at the lowest rate awarded a U.S. company in Israel, guided by Ori Eisenberg of Barzell Global, who brought both Moinian and Gary Barnett’s Extell Development to Tel Aviv in 2015.

“Everyone wants a piece of the cake,” said Ziv Adato, head of investment firm Marom Capital and former analyst at Ayalim Mutual Funds.

The stakes

Even smallish U.S. companies are whales by Israeli standards. Bringing them to market can represent a hefty meal for the whole food chain, including brokers, consultants, lawyers and underwriters. U.S. companies can raise hundreds of millions of dollars, rather than shekels, and Israeli institutions charge them higher interest rates and higher fees than they do domestic companies, said Adato.

Where Israeli companies rarely pay more than 1 percent of the money raised, Americans pay many multiples of that. Jeff Sutton paid $10 million in expenses, or roughly 4 percent of the $240 million he raised in February, according to the shelf prospectus filed on the TASE. Los Angeles-based Hertz Investment Group paid more than $11 million to raise $160 million in November, close to 7 percent of the total. (“The underwriters’ gold mine,” ran the headline in Israeli news outlet Calcalist, which often reports on the deal fees.)

“It’s the holy grail,” an investment bank executive said of the bond deals. “It’s more worth it to land one New York company, than 10 Israeli ones.”

And the Americans are amenable. In 2017 alone, American companies raised $2.5 billion on the Israeli bond market, a 127 percent increase from $1.1 billion in 2016, according to figures from Poalim IBI. Last year, 12.5 percent of all bonds issued in Israel went to American companies. That includes both first-timers like Sutton’s Wharton Properties and Israeli road show veterans like the Lightstone Group, Joel Gluck’s Spencer Equity and Yoel Goldman, whose firm All Year Management raised more than $500 million across five deals in 2017 alone. In all, 29 U.S. companies have raised $6.5 billion in Tel Aviv since 2014, according to Poalim IBI.

For stateside developers, it means more lenders gunning for their business. Some Israeli financial firms work with U.S. firms, like Meridian Capital Partners or Ackman-Ziff, while others have boots on the ground in New York, Miami and other major markets. Others, like Discount Bank, even have offices here.

“I can’t even count how many people have come to me asking about taking us back to the market,” said Treetop’s Mandel.

While the dealmakers are widening their nets, pitching firms outside of real estate and outside New York, there are some prizes that everyone wants. “Everyone’s competing for the big players,” said one Israeli investment bank executive, name-dropping several notable New York developers. Silverstein, the executive said, met with every underwriting firm before finally choosing Leader.

Turf wars

Rafi Lipa and Gal Amit, who teamed up in 2008 to create Victory Consulting, were among the first companies that focused on getting U.S. firms to issue debt on the Israeli market. By 2017, they had brought 12 U.S. companies through the process, raising several billion shekel, and convincing the likes of Sutton, Lightstone and Brookland to seek bonds.

That book of business gave them heft in Israel’s underwriting sector.

Lipa and Amit did the consulting for their clients, while partner Poalim IBI did the underwriting and distribution. But in August, Victory split to form its own underwriting firm, and poached Poalim IBI’s CEO to run it — a move that revealed just how much Poalim IBI relied on their business.

Within days, Poalim IBI’s shares fell by 40 percent after it became clear that over 60 percent of the company’s revenue in 2017 had come from Victory’s clients, and 48 percent the year before. (By this point, most of the bond issuances were from the same clients who’d already undertaken the costly and tedious work of going public.)

When Poalim IBI’s CEO Erez Goldschmidt left to join Lipa and Amit, he brought his team to start the new venture, called Orion. It left a big void at Poalim IBI, which set off a chain reaction in the nation’s finance sector. Poalim IBI responded by poaching Ofer Greenbaum and Shai Nevo, the top executives from rival firm Leumi Partners, a division of Leumi Bank.

Clients have been shifting alliances too, sometimes as a result of the executive shakeup. Moinian, who worked with Eisenberg and the Leumi team, moved with them to Poalim IBI, while David Marx’s Marx Development Group switched from Victory to Discount.

“You can say that it’s the American business that caused the commotion in Israel’s underwriting sector,” said Adato.

What’s next?

Ronen Geles, a former executive at real estate firm Gazit Globe, was hired by Discount in 2016 to beef up the firm’s international activity. In his estimation, it’s not a zero-sum game, and the sector has room to grow.

“Everyone’s left New York,” he said. “Now, they’re looking all over the States. There’s space enough for everyone.”

But according to some, the search for more business could lead to looser underwriting standards, even as the market gets more sophisticated. Of the first 20 companies to come to the market in Tel Aviv, only two were rated below an A-. Of the 10 new companies that came to market in 2017, six were rated in the triple Bs.

If you ask InFin’s Levi, this is only the beginning. Since the process of taking a company to market takes roughly six to nine months, observers won’t see the full extent of the competition — or of the fallout — until those deals start to close. “When so many mushrooms pop up after the rain, there are bound to be failures,” Levi said.

“Every time someone else did a deal, he would go into mourning,” Victory’s Lipa said of his partner Amit.

So Lipa shared what his mother said: “If you have competitors, it seems you’re doing something right.”

Beer baron David “Duke” Reyes spends $12M on Palm Beach home

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151 Chilean Avenue (Credit: Palm Beach County Property Appraiser)

Powerhouse beer distributor David “Duke” Reyes and his wife Pamela Perri just dropped $11.5 million on a recently built home in Palm Beach, property records show.

Reyes is the CEO of Reyes Beverage Group, the major beer distributing company responsible for doling out brands that include Corona, Molson-Coors, Heineken USA and Miller Brewing Company.

Records show he bought the two-story, 5120-square-foot home at 151 Chilean Avenue from Adrian Tauro, an investment adviser based out of Ontario, Canada. The deal breaks down to about $2,450 per square foot.

Reyes comes from a rich family legacy – his brothers Jude and Christopher Reyes run Reyes Holdings, the exclusive distributor for Coca-Cola in the greater Chicago area and Northwest Indiana and the biggest food distributor for McDonald’s. In 2015, the family netted $8.6 billion, according to Forbes.

Tauro paid $2.8 million for the 12,500-square-foot property in 2014, records show. The four-bedroom, four-bathroom home was built in 2016.

Reyes joins a number of beverage execs to call South Florida home, like Edward M. Brown, the president and CEO of the Patrón Spirits Company, and Stephen Levin, the founder of Gold Coast Beverage Distributor, the latter of which sold to Reyes in 2015. Peter Busch Orthwein, heir of Adolphus Busch , also owns a home in Palm Beach.

Kushner business partner tapped as US ambassador to Chile

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From left: Charlie Kushner, Andrew Gellert and 666 Fifth Avenue (Credit: Getty Images)

The Trump administration tapped the son of a close business partner of the Kushner family to become ambassador to Chile. Andrew Gellert, president of the Gellert Global Group, is the son of George Gellert, who owns a major stake in Kushner Companies and Vornado Realty Trust’s 666 Fifth Avenue.

The older Gellert has a close relationship with developer Charles Kushner, the father of senior White House advisor and former Kushner Companies CEO Jared Kushner, Bloomberg reported.  Apart from 666 Fifth, he was also involved in several of Kushner’s multifamily deals and co-guaranteed loans on Kushner-owned properties, according to Bloomberg.The two men both own a stake in Regal Bank, a New Jersey-based lender.

It is common for U.S. presidents to pick campaign donors as ambassadors, but picking business associates is rare, Bloomberg reported.

“Andy is a brilliant young man who has been instrumental in building a very successful family business,” Charles Kushner told Bloomberg via a spokesperson. “Our country is fortunate to have Andy serve in such an important ambassadorship.”

The younger Gellert knows Chile: the family company has exported dried fruit and nuts from the Latin American country. But he speaks only basic Spanish.

The Kushner family also has another connection to Chile: The home Jared and wife Ivanka Trump are renting in Washington, D.C. is owned by Andronico Luksic, a Chilean billionaire who owns mines and also has interests in the U.S.

Kushner Companies did not comment beyond what was in the Bloomberg report. Charles last week said he was not concerned about federal investigations into the family business. He also said 2017 was a record year in terms of transactions for the company.  [Bloomberg]Konrad Putzier 

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

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Condo sales dropped in Miami-Dade County last week.

The county recorded 101 sales for a total of $30.6 million, a big decline from the previous week’s $77.5 million sales volume for about 115 units. Condos last week sold for an average price of about $303,000, or nearly $275 per square foot.

The sale of the week was at Bal Harbour 101. Penthouse 2 traded hands for $3.6 million, or more than $1,000 per square foot. The four-bedroom, 3,300-square-foot unit sold after about three months on the market with Asher Ouazanan.

The second most expensive deal was at the Towers of Key Biscayne. Unit A1001 was on the market for 146 days with Maureen Jauregui before closing for $1.3 million, or about $760 per square foot.

Closing prices in the top 10 deals ranged from $610,000 to $3.6 million.

Here’s a breakdown of the top 10 sales from Jan. 21 to Jan. 27. Click on the map for more information:

 

Most expensive
Bal Harbour 101 #PH2, Bal Harbour | 101 days on market | $3.6M | $1,091 psf | Listing agent: Asher Ouazanan | Buyer’s agent: Asher Ouazanan

Least expensive
Courvoisier Courts #2302, Miami | 200 days on market | $610k | $467 psf | Listing agent: Riley Smith | Buyer’s agent: Andrea Fahel

Most days on market
Grand Bay Ritz-Carlton #212, Key Biscayne | 347 days on market | $732k | $862 psf | Listing agent: Alexandra Batista | Buyer’s agent: Monica Venegas

Fewest days on market
Roney Palace #1116, Miami Beach | 23 days on market | $730k | $760 psf | Listing agent: Paolo Coniglio | Buyer’s agent: Russell Brooke

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