Regions
DEAL OF THE DAY: 19-Unit Rental Property Sold for $2.85M
By Anuradha Kher, Online News EditorCanoga Park, Calif.–Charles Dunn, a partner company of GVA Worldwide, recently arranged the sale of the 19-unit apartment building located at 7037 Alabama Ave. in Canoga Park, Calif., for 2.85 million.Paul A. Kenworthy, managing director of the investment services group in the west Los Angeles office of Charles Dunn, represented the buyer, Saswata Sen, and the seller, Khougaz Trust.The 17,324-sq.-ft. building is 100 percent occupied.“This transaction had tremendous upside for the buyer, nearly 20 percent,” says Kenworthy. “The apartments are not rent controlled.”
Integra Realty, Altus Group Merge
By Anuradha Kher, Online News Editor New York–Integra Realty Resources recently entered into a non-binding letter of intent to have certain assets acquired by Altus Group Income Fund for the purposes of merging the two companies. A 30-year-old company, Integra has over 800 employees in 55 offices across the U.S.“This merger with Altus will increase the capabilities and service offerings of Integra in the United States,” says Jeffrey Rogers (pictured), president and COO of Integra.Altus Group Income Fund is a multidisciplinary provider of independent real estate consulting and professional advisory services worldwide. With a staff of over 1,100, Altus has…
Homebuilder Stocks Lose Value
New York–The housing slump cut 67 percent from homebuilders’ market value in the New York-based Standard & Poor’s 500 Index, changing the companies into small-cap stocks, Bloomberg reported Tuesday.S&P 500 home developers have an overall market value of $16 billion–a reduction from $49.2 billion in January 2006, which was their peak.The nation’s largest builder by sales, Centex Corp., is estimated to be worth $2.62 billion–just a quarter of the size of the largest Russell 2000 Index company. As the high housing inventory caused companies to cut prices, the second largest builder, D.R. Horton Inc., and Lennar Corp., the third largest,…
U.S. Home Prices Drop in February
New York–Home prices fell further in February, indicating the housing slump hasn’t bottomed out yet, the Detroit Free Press reported Tuesday.The S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price index 10-city composite found that prices fell by 13.6 percent. In the 20-city composite, home prices dropped by 12.7 percent.Las Vegas and Miami posted the biggest declines–22.7 and 21.7 percent. Both cities showed some of the fastest price appreciation and growth from 2004 to 2005.Los Angeles home prices fell 19.4 percent; Phoenix prices declined 20.8 percent. San Diego prices plummeted 19.2 percent.
Will Issues in Dubai Scare Off Foreign Property Investors?
Dubai, United Arab Emirates–Dubai’s recent legal issues and property scandals could hurt foreign investor interest in its rising real estate market, The Wall Street Journal reports.Persian Gulf states, the former Soviet Union, India and Iran have invested in the area; but earlier this month, the CEO of one of Dubai’s largest publicly traded developers was placed in jail. Another situation involving two disputes between European and U.S. investors have prompted questions about local regulatory and legal standards.The group of seven, semiautonomous emirates was the first Arab Gulf state to allow foreign ownership of property. An estimated $1.2 trillion worth of…
Countrywide Loses $893 Million in First Quarter
Calabasas, Calif.–Countrywide Financial said Tuesday it had lost $893 million in the first quarter due to the U.S. housing slump, the Financial Times said.Provision for credit losses on its residential loan investments rose from $158 million last year to $1.5 billion.Currently being acquired by the Bank of America, Calabasas, Calif.-based Countrywide–which was heavily involved in the subprime market–posted a profit of $434 million in the first quarter of 2007.Bank of America expects to complete its $4 billion takeover of the lender in the third quarter and has said Countrywide will at that point no longer offer subprime loans to high-risk…
Automated Parking Software at Condo/Rental Project Scans, Calculates, Directs
By Anuradha Kher, Online News EditorNorwalk, Conn.–POKO Partners LLC recently received design approval from the Norwalk Redevelopment Agency for phase one of Wall Street Place, located between Wall and Isaacs Streets and West Avenue in Norwalk, Conn.The first phase of Wall Street Place, expected to be complete in spring 2010, includes a fully automated parking facility, which will provide 212 parking spaces housed in two levels below grade, in addition to 23 conventional surface parking spaces.Residents at Wall Street Place will have the option of buying a space for long term parking. Parking in the automated lot will cost the…
Affordable Housing for Seniors Opens in Rocky Mount, N.C.
By Erika Schnitzer, Associate EditorRocky Mount, N.C.–United Property Management LLC, a Raleigh, N.C.-based management company of affordable housing, has opened Rollinwood Manor, a 64-unit affordable housing development for adults 55 and older who earn 60 percent or less of the area’s median income.The $5.8 million project was financed with $5.2 million in low-income housing tax credit equity investment from Enterprise Community Investments Inc., a $2.3 million construction loan from Mountain 1st Bank & Trust and $986,361 in funding from the North Carolina Housing Finance Agency.”Rollinwood Manor creates much needed investment in safe and affordable housing for seniors in eastern Rocky…
Condos in 9,000-Sq.-Ft. Infill Development Start Selling
By Anuradha Kher, Online News EditorWilmington, N.C.–New York Hatters, Plantation Building Corp’s eighth and most recent project in Wilmington, N.C. is now complete. The three-story condominium project, located at 105 Grace St. in downtown Wilmington, features nine residential units and 1,600 sq. ft. of commercial space.The property is an infill development that used to be a dry cleaning and hat shop in the 1920s. The founder of that business immigrated to the U.S. and first landed in New York so he named the building New York Dry Cleaners and Hatters, from which the new development gets its name. The old…
Reduced Eurozone Mortgage Lending Prompts Housing Market Concern
Frankfurt–Mortgage lending in the eurozone is increasing at the slowest rate on record–and, as a result, housing markets are waning, according to the Financial Times. Home purchase lending increased at an annual rate of only 6.1 percent in March–the weakest rate since at least 2000 and a drop from February’s 6.6 percent pace, the Frankfurt-based European Central Bank said Friday. Home prices have declined in Spain and Ireland; on the other hand, Germany–Europe’s largest economy–avoided much of the global property boom. The eurozone’s future could hinge on France–its second largest economy–where prices have risen in recent years. Home price inflation…

