ReportWire

Tag: LA multifamily market

  • Fogel Real Estate Plans Resi, Retail in Venice Beach

    Fogel Real Estate Plans Resi, Retail in Venice Beach

    [ad_1]

    Fogel Real Estate, run by Steven Fogel, is planning to build a 36-unit apartment building, spanning 36,700 square feet, in Venice, according to a filing with the Los Angeles Planning Commission on April 16. 

    The plans for 825 South Hampton Drive include a 3,400-square-foot, ground-floor retail section with a cafe and three levels of below-ground parking with 60 spaces.

    The limited liability company, SJF Venice, which filed the plans, lists Steven and Kelly Fogel as managers, according to state business records. 

    Steven Fogel is the co-founder and chairman of Westwood Financial, a Los Angeles-based firm that owns and operates 127 shopping centers across the U.S, according to a company website.

    His daughter Kelly Fogel, a Los Angeles-based photographer, declined to comment on the plans.

    The firm bought the roughly half-acre site for $15 million in 2022, according to property records filed with L.A. County. The land sits on the intersection of Hampton Drive and Abbot Kinney Boulevard, a popular shopping strip in Venice. 

    The purchase came after an entity tied to Fogel Real Estate defaulted on a loan from Columbia Pacific Advisors tied to the property next door, 812 South Main Street, records show. Columbia Pacific foreclosed on that 30,000-square-foot piece of land for $2.3 million in 2021. 

    Fogel Real Estate’s plans rework earlier designs for the site that included eight live-work condos, three levels of subterranean parking and 9,000 square feet of commercial space on the ground level, TRD reported in 2017. Fogel previously leased the property, before it bought the site, records show. It’s unclear why Fogel pulled the 2017 plans and has refiled. 

    Venice continues to be a desirable neighborhood, despite a “continuing decline in occupancy” and “subdued” renter demand, according to recent data compiled by Mathews Real Estate Investment Services.

    Rents in Venice Beach dropped 0.8 percent between March 2023 and last month, according to the report, but is still “one of the three most expensive” neighborhoods in Los Angeles for renters, with asking rents averaging $3,290 a month. 
    Other developers that have filed plans in Venice over the last couple of years include Amadora Heights and Wiseman Residential.

    [ad_2]

    Daria Solovieva

    Source link

  • Bank of SoCal Lists Santa Monica Apartments for Sale

    Bank of SoCal Lists Santa Monica Apartments for Sale

    [ad_1]

    Bank of Southern California has listed three apartment complexes in Santa Monica for sale — properties formerly owned by developer Neil Shekhter, The Real Deal has learned. 

    NMS Properties’ Neil Shekhter

    The bank foreclosed on the three buildings at 1038 10th Street, 1007 Lincoln Boulevard and 1516 Stanford Street in February, L.A. County records show, after Shekhter defaulted on almost $16 million in loans tied to the properties. 

    At a public auction, Bank of Southern California foreclosed with a credit bid of $9.5 million, coming out to about $394,000 per unit.

    Now the bank is asking $10.8 million for the three buildings, which together total 24 units, according to listings on LoopNet for the property. At that price point of $450,000 per unit, Bank of Southern California could recoup some of its loss that came from Shekhter’s unpaid debt. A team led by JLL’s Luc Whitlock is marketing the portfolio for sale. 

    Shekhter paid about $10.6 million for the three buildings between 2015 and 2016, property records show.

    The buildings can be bought individually or as one portfolio, according to the LoopNet listing. Almost half of the units will be vacant at the time of sale. 

    The properties could be bought by owner-occupiers — someone who could occupy one of the units and rent out the rest, according to JLL’s marketing materials. 

    Shekhter and his firm, WS Communities, had refinanced the three properties in September 2022, using a business loan from Bank of Southern California, court records show. 

    Shekhter’s sons Adam, Alexander and Alan Shekhter, each signed unlimited personal guarantees with recourse, meaning if the properties could not pay back the loan, the brothers would be personally liable for paying it back, according to court documents. 

    Bank of Southern California had sued Shekhter’s sons over the defaulted loans, claiming the three “failed and refused, and continue to fail and refuse, to pay the sums due and owing to plaintiff, in breach of said guaranty,” court records show.

    [ad_2]

    Isabella Farr

    Source link

  • Helio Group Buys Culver City Apartments for $68M

    Helio Group Buys Culver City Apartments for $68M

    [ad_1]

    Helio Group, an investment firm run by Simon Lazar and Sam Mostadim, have bought an apartment complex in Culver City for $67.7 million, according to property records.

    Greystar sold the 135-unit property, named the Cobalt Apartments, located at 10601 Washington Boulevard, records show. Marcus & Millichap’s Institutional Property Advisors brokered and announced the deal earlier this month, but declined to disclose a price. 

    The deal came out to about $502,000 per unit. No loan was recorded in connection with Helio’s purchase, according to records. 

    The sale was subject to the City of Los Angeles’ Measure ULA tax, which came out to $3.7 million on the deal, according to the deed. 

    Greystar bought the complex for $23.4 million in 2014, or about $173,000 per unit, using a loan from JPMorgan Chase Bank. 

    The building is right across the street from where Helio plans to build a 184-unit complex — the firm bought a former Globecast building for the development last year. 

    Rents at Cobalt range from $3,095 for a one-bedroom, 555-square-foot unit to $4,595 for a two-bedroom, 1,105-square-foot unit, according to online listings for the property. 

    The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Culver City is $2,395 a month, according to Zumper, down 11 percent from February last year. 

    The sale is in line with recent multifamily sales in the city of Los Angeles. Last month, FPA Multifamily bought three buildings from Neil Shekhter’s WS Communities for about $429,000 per unit.

    [ad_2]

    Isabella Farr

    Source link

  • City of LA Looks to Spur Development of Larger apartments

    City of LA Looks to Spur Development of Larger apartments

    [ad_1]

    Developers in Los Angeles may get bonuses for building three- and -four-bedroom apartments.

    Los Angeles City Council President Paul Krekorian has filed a motion to create a new density bonus incentive to promote the construction of large family units in new apartment buildings, Urbanize Los Angeles reported.

    The motion calls for the Planning Department to create a density bonus program to exempt the square footage of third, fourth and fifth bedrooms, as well as third and fourth bathrooms, from floor area calculations of large family apartments.

    The program would also allow developers to add an additional story of height beyond current zoning restrictions, and take advantage of bonuses for developments of mostly large family units.

    And it would require a 99-year covenant ensuring that the apartments would maintain the same unit mix and be set aside for households earning no more than 120 percent of the area median income.

    The problem, Krekorian says, is a lack of larger apartments, which makes it difficult for larger families to find appropriate and affordable rental housing. Some 17 percent of the city’s renter households live in overcrowded flats.

    He says encouraging the development of larger apartments would help the city adapt to changes brought about by a broad shift to remote work during the pandemic. 

    At the same time, larger residential units can more easily accommodate multi-generational households.

    “Fully a third of the households in the City of Los Angeles are comprised of four or more people, yet only 14 percent of the renter-occupied housing stock encompasses three- or four-bedroom units,” his motion reads. 

    “Newly constructed rental units tend to be much smaller, and a majority are studios or one-bedroom units,” the motion added. 

    The motion also clarifies that the large family unit bonus would be in addition to existing incentives through the density bonus and Transit Oriented Communities guidelines.

    The motion comes when the city of L.A. is under pressure to add 255,000 new homes by 2029. 

    As part of that effort, city planning officials are rolling out a citywide adaptive reuse ordinance, expanding upon a program which allowed for the conversion of dozens of older Downtown office buildings into homes.

    L.A. County, a pioneer of single-family housing sprawl, has more overpacked homes than anywhere in the U.S.

    For three decades, the county has led the nation in overcrowding, with 11 percent of homes now having more than one occupant per room, the Los Angeles Times reported in an expose in October 2022. More than 370,000 families in L.A. County live in overcrowded conditions.

    — Dana Bartholomew

    Read more

    [ad_2]

    TRD Staff

    Source link

  • LA Apartment Owners Feel Rising Debt Distress

    LA Apartment Owners Feel Rising Debt Distress

    [ad_1]

    MacFarlane Partners’ Landon Taylor and GH Palmer Associates’ Geoff Palmer with 427 West 5th Street (MacFarlane Partners, Getty, Google Maps)

    UPDATED, Feb. 2, 2024, 12:13 p.m.: When MacFarlane Partners finished Park Fifth, a 347-unit apartment tower in Downtown Los Angeles, the developer expected the property to be almost fully occupied, with enough income from the building to pay debt service almost two times over by 2022. 

    Based on that underwriting, Starwood gave MacFarlane a $105 million, floating-rate senior loan, according to data from Morningstar. 

    Then the Federal Reserve stepped in, hiking rates seven times over the course of 2022. 

    Because of this, the floating-rate caveat on MacFarlane’s loan has caused the developer pain. 

    At the end of September, MacFarlane was only making about 70 percent of the amount needed to cover monthly debt payments on the loan. 

    It’s not just the syndicators in the Sun Belt, or rent-stabilized owners in New York City and San Francisco. MacFarlane is one of many landlords in Los Angeles that are struggling to make debt payments, in light of rising interest rates and property expenses.

    Since November, about $580 million in commercial mortgage-backed securities debt tied to apartment buildings in the city of L.A. has been watchlisted for having low debt service coverage ratios, according to data from ratings agency Morningstar Credit. 

    The watchlisted debt makes up about 10 percent of all securitized loans tied to apartment buildings in the city of L.A. 

    Only one securitized loan tied to an L.A. multifamily building is currently delinquent and none have entered special servicing. However, a number of lenders have already taken over multifamily projects or sued over delinquent loans. 

    MacFarlane’s loan from Starwood, about $46 million of which was packaged into a commercial loan obligation securities pool, has been on servicer watchlists since 2022.

    MacFarlane is not delinquent on the loan and not in default, according to Morningstar. The property is currently 90 percent occupied, according to a representative for MacFarlane.

    Starwood did not respond to a request for comment before publication.

    It’s not just rising debt costs. At Park Fifth, located at 427 West 5th Street in Los Angeles, property taxes, insurance, payroll and utility costs have all increased, according to servicer notes cited by Morningstar, compared to the borrower’s projections in 2019. 

    Chasing delinquencies 

    A DSCR, or debt-service coverage ratio, is used to determine whether the properties are reeling in enough income to cover monthly debt payments — a metric less than 1 means the property is not making enough to pay off debt. 

    Though some lenders have been prone to granting extensions on troubled loans, or coming to workouts to forgive low DSCRs, others have shown less mercy. 

    In mid-January, Ladder Capital served Beverly Hills-based Greenbridge Investment Partners with a notice of default, records show. 

    Greenbridge, which got its footing buying up distressed properties, owed $13.1 million under loans tied to three properties in L.A. — 13001 Vanowen Street in North Hollywood, 21133 Saticoy Street in Canoga Park and 15042 Dickens Street in Sherman Oaks. 

    All three properties were built between the 1950s and 60s, meaning all are subject to rent control under the City of L.A.’s Rent Stabilization Ordinance. 

    Because of this, Greenbridge was not allowed to raise rents on the properties from 2020 through Feb. 1 of this year. 

    Starting on Feb. 1, landlords on rent stabilized units in the city can hike rents by 4 percent. 

    Days after the default notice, Ladder filed a lawsuit against Greenbridge’s LLCs that own the properties, asking the court to appoint a receiver to manage the apartment complexes, usually an alternative to foreclosure. Greenbridge did not respond to a request for comment.

    In December, Neil Shekhter, once the most prominent apartment owner on the Westside, lost about half of his portfolio. Three lenders — Madison Realty Capital, Hankey Capital and Lightstone Capital — took over 28 multifamily buildings and development sites through deeds in lieu of foreclosure. 

    Many of Shekhter’s loans were floating rate — when rates started to rise, so did his monthly debt payments. 

    Eviction issue

    When Geoff Palmer scored a $156 million loan on his 632-unit Medici complex in Downtown L.A., he had one large protection. The 10-year loan was fixed-rate and bought by Freddie Mac. 

    In 2022, when the Federal Reserve hiked rates, Palmer’s debt payments stayed unchanged at about $530,000 a month, according to Morningstar data. 

    Yet, the DSCR on the loan still fell to 0.98 in September, meaning income was a few thousand  dollars short of what was needed to service the debt. 

    The culprit, according to the loan’s servicer, was evictions. 

    “We had very high evictions which hurt occupancy numbers last year,” Palmer’s GH Palmer Associates told Wells Fargo, the servicer on the loan, according to Morningstar. “Higher than normal repair and maintenance on those units and legal expenses taking the tenants to court for judgment.” 

    The number of eviction notices soared 44 percent from February to March last year, and a further 38 percent from March to April, according to data from the L.A. City Controller’s Office. 

    After three years of L.A.’s city eviction moratorium, landlords were allowed to resume evictions in March 2023 for tenants that fell behind on rent, as long as the owed amount was higher than fair market rent, as defined by the U.S. Housing and Urban Development Department. 

    Palmer’s loan on Medici was not the only one of his loans that suffered dips in cash flows because of evictions. 

    On a $128.1 million loan tied to The Orsini, a 566-unit complex at 550 North Figueroa Street owned by Palmer, the servicer noted eviction expenses had soared in 2022, leading the DSCR on the loan to dip. 

    [ad_2]

    Isabella Farr

    Source link