Source: Multifamily Executive

Mission Capital Managing Director Jordan Ray discusses the state of Apartment Finance.

Experts: Financing Will Be Ample

Next Year

Multifamily executives are bullish about the future, with the apartment industry awash in cash at the midpoint of an expanding cycle.

By: Joe Bousquin

Illustration: Anna Parini

It’s pretty nice to have Kevin Finkel’s job right now. As executive vice president at Philadelphia-based Resource Real Estate, as well as chief operating officer for the company’s Opportunity REIT funds, there are a lot of people trying to get his attention. And almost all of them have fistfuls of cash.

“There’s more money than you could ever imagine looking for real estate assets right now,” Finkel says. “On both the equity and debt sides of the equation, for people who have money to get out, this is an incredibly competitive environment. When you go out to finance a project, there’s almost more interest than you can deal with.”
The biggest problem in Finkel’s job at the moment is a very good one to have: He has to wade through a sea of proposals just to be choosy about whose money he takes.
Within the apartment industry, he’s not alone. Transaction volume in the second quarter of 2014 increased 40 percent year over year, according to New York– based real estate research firm Real Capital Analytics (RCA). And that’s following on the bumper crop of 2013, a year that saw a new record in multifamily lending, at $172.5 billion, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
All across apartment land, other finance-minded professionals are reporting similar throngs of financiers lining up at their doors.
“There’s just so much capital out there, from a variety of different sources, chasing every available deal,” says Michael Ochstein, founder of Price Realty in Dallas, an owner and operator of 5,500 units.

Jordan Ray, managing director of the debt and equity finance group at New York–based Mission Capital Advisors, sums up the embarrassment of riches succinctly: “We are very, very busy right now.”
Suffice it to say, if you’re looking for funding, whether debt or equity, you shouldn’t be too hard-pressed to find it going into 2015. Finance executives interviewed for this article were uniformly optimistic about current conditions as well as what lies ahead for next year. They also proffered unique insights into multifamily’s topography of dwindling cap rates, compressed yields, and loosening lending terms.
The picture that emerges is one in which secondary markets are taking on increased importance, Class A projects are no longer the only belles at multifamily’s ball, and value-add is still your best bet, if you do it right. Perhaps most important, though, is the view that everything in multifamily’s universe should continue moving ahead swimmingly—as long as rents continue to stay high.

Cap Rates Have Become More Transparent

One of the conundrums in today’s multifamily universe is the ever-shrinking cap

rate. For apartments overall, cap rates at the midpoint of 2014 were hovering around 6 percent, according to RCA. They were considerably lower for mid- and high-rises, registering in just the high 4s. Five years ago, cap rates for apartments overall were above 7 percent.


The trend, fueled in large part by the flood of cash that has driven up prices, raises the question of whether cap rates can continue to drop. Most observers respond with a qualified yes.
“Can cap rates go lower? Maybe not in New York City—they’re pretty low [there] already,” says Zachary Bornstein, managing director of capital markets at New York–based Olshan Properties, an owner and manager of 19,000 units. “But in a smaller market where you can get a 5 percent yield and rental increases should still be fairly dramatic? I don’t see why anyone wouldn’t be willing to pay a lower cap rate in that case.”
Bornstein’s response highlights a marked difference from past cycles: Executives aren’t voicing a lot of concern over today’s low cap rates and the potential for them to continue to compress. Their reasons are threefold: The first is the still-

healthy 2x spread between cap rates and 10-year Treasuries, which means investing in multifamily, which offers small perceived risk, gives you significantly more return than “zero-risk” Treasury bonds. The second reason can be traced to the evolution of multifamily as a whole.
“If you’re looking at cap rates today versus 20 years ago, as an absolute number, they’re significantly lower,” says Pete Vilim, co-founder of Chicago-based Waterton Residential, which owns 19,000 units. “But I think what’s important is the difference in what that cap rate is telling you today—you can be a lot more confident that it’s realistic on a once-you-own-it basis.”
In other words, while a 4.8 percent yield on a high-rise might seem low historically, it’s also probably going to track more accurately than it has in the past. Vilim attributes that to the higher level of institutionalized operations, which have evolved dramatically over the past two decades. The use of technology, particularly revenue management and cost management platforms, has also helped the trend.
“Cap rates have compressed because you’re much more sure about what your next 12 months will look like,” Vilim says. “It’s not that they’re lower; it’s that they’re more transparent.”
The third reason execs aren’t overly bothered by falling cap rates is multifamily’s algebra: Because cap rates are a derivative of net operating income, which is

heavily influenced by the rents charged at a property, a low rate today won’t necessarily be low tomorrow.
“Even at low ‘going-in’ rates, properties in markets that experience rent growth can produce superior results down the road,” says Barbara J. Gaffen, co-CEO of Northbrook, Ill.–based Prime Property Investors, which holds 3,000 units. “That’s why cap rates will remain compressed on quality assets located in high-growth markets.”

Lessons From Single-Family’s Woes

Of course, that optimism hinges on demographics, in which 80 million

Millennials who either can’t or don’t want to buy homes will compete for a limited supply of apartments. But it’s also worth noting that the same math that makes low cap rates look good today also depends on rents continuing to rise. After all, the bubble on the single-family side kept expanding just fine, as long as prices kept going up.

This “trending” of rents is an area of concern that apartment finance pros are keeping an eye on.
“The biggest question on the horizon I see, at least for us, is affordability,” says Price Realty’s Ochstein. “We’ve seen tremendous ability to raise rents the past couple years and still feel there is room for more, but, at some point, there will be push-back.”

Another harbinger of the single-family debacle—looser lending terms—is also starting to crop up in apartment finance today.
“It’s not that lenders are becoming intoxicated,” says Finkel. “But they might be getting a little tipsy.” He points to the emergence of five- and 10-year interest-only loans in the marketplace. “It’s not fun being a multifamily lender today—it’s hard
to make money. I think if you surveyed lenders about the best terms they’ve offered in the last six weeks—and could get an honest answer—you’d be shocked.”
With those caveats, though, these observers see ample access to capital in
2015. While equity has flooded the market, debt remains more attractive, given today’s low interest rates and the fact that investors want higher returns, sometimes to the tune of 10 percentage points higher.

Beware of Taking Too Much Debt

Yet, with the view that the cycle is moving toward its midpoint, apartment finance pros express caution about how much debt one should take on, and for how long. Waterton’s Vilim, for example, says his firm doesn’t go any higher than a 65 percent loan-to-value ratio, and given the recessions of 2000–2001 and 2009–
2010, it would be prudent to keep a close eye on deals that will mature around
2020.

“If we’re midcycle, deals with a three- to five-year horizon should be OK, and those with a 10-year time frame should be OK,” Vilim says. “The person who could get hurt is the seven- to 10-year buyer with a mature fund that is due to be liquidated in 2020.”
Also, watch those fixed-rate loans, which often have hefty penalties for early exits. “One of the lessons from the last cycle is that a lot of people put on fixed- rate CMBS debt, which really handcuffs you when you want to sell your property before your maturity date,” says Finkel. “A lot of people have gains in properties they’d like to take advantage of in this very strong sales market, but can’t. They’re tied up in fixed-rate CMBS debt. The cost to get that loan taken off is high.”
In fact, it was those very types of loans, taken out in 2006 and 2007, that may lead to more properties coming onto the market in 2015, in the sweet spot of where many are seeing yield right now: value-add. While some developers can still make returns pencil out on new construction today, many have been hamstrung by rising land, material, and labor costs over the past three years. Those developers are selling what they’ve finished for a profit, but buying the lot next door to that finished property is often proving cost-prohibitive now. With acquisitions commanding low cap rates, that means value-add has been—and should continue to be in 2015—the place many investors go.

“In 2015, you’re going to start seeing the unwinding of what I would call the legacy-era investments,” Vilim says. “All of us who bought from 2006 to 2008 were stuck in those deals because of the recession, and many of us had 10-year debt that starts to mature next year. I think you’ll see a significant disgorgement of product that was bought in the peak of 2006 to 2008, [and] it’s probably ready for its next face-lift.”

Secondary Opportunities

While coastal urban markets have been multifamily’s darlings in recent years, the competition for deals there, as well as dramatic increases in rents, has begun to make other markets attractive.

“The projects happening right now are all very similar to each other: high-end urban that targets the top 25 percent of highly educated renters,” says Finkel. “I’d be a little nervous about taking on too many of those deals. Apartment rental growth rates are slowest in Class A and highest at Class B and C. That’s where I see the opportunity, providing apartments for everybody who’s not in that top 25 percent.”
Indeed, according to RCA, markets such as San Diego; Philadelphia; Portland, Ore.; Baltimore; and Nashville, Tenn., had significant gains in the first half of
2014 as investors searched for attractive returns relative to primary markets.
In particular, Finkel likes targeting properties that were the fruit of another boom time for multifamily—the 1980s.
“There were so many apartments built in the 1980s, some of them extremely well located, that are renting for $800 to $900 today, and most of them haven’t seen a lot of improvements,” Finkel says. “If you can find those and do a significant upgrade to charge $1,200 to $1,300 in rent—the sweet spot for the median
income of $52,000 in this country—I think you’ve got a real opportunity.”

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Source: RE Business Online

Mission Capital Advisors has arranged $148.5 million in non-recourse construction financing for the development of Queens Plaza South, a rental apartment building in Long Island City, Queens.

Mission Capital Advisors Arranges

$148.5M Loan for Queens Plaza

South Development

POSTED ON NOVEMBER 4, 2014 BY AMY

WORKS IN LOANS, MULTIFAMILY, NEW YORK, NORTHEAST

The 44-story apartment building will feature 391 residential units, 165 parking spots and 20,000 square feet of retail space. (Credit: SLCE Architects)

NEW YORK CITY — Mission Capital Advisors has arranged $148.5 million in
non-recourse construction financing for the development of Queens Plaza South, a rental apartment building in Long Island City, Queens. The 44-story property
will feature 391 apartment units, 165 parking spaces and 20,000 square feet of

retail space. On-site amenities will include a rooftop pool, fitness center, lounge and children’s playroom. Mission Capital represented the sponsor, a joint venture between Property Markets Group, Karman Hakim and New Valley LLC, in arranging the financing with Deutsche Bank. The loan represented 70 percent of the total capitalization for the project. NorthStar Finance provided a $40.3 million mezzanine loan bringing the total financing to $188.7 million or 90 percent of the total project capitalization. Jason Cohen, Ari Hirt, Steve Buchwald and Jamie Matheny of Mission Capital represented the sponsor.

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Source: Globe Street

The 44-story Queens Plaza South project got a major infusion of capital. The ownership of the planned rental apartment tower in Long Island City, Queens has secured $148.45 million in non-recourse construction financing for the venture.

Queens Plaza South Lands $148M in

Financing

By John Jordan | Northeast

A rendering of Queens Plaza South in Long Island City, Queens

NEW YORK CITY—The 44-story Queens Plaza Southproject got a major infusion of capital. The ownership of the planned rental apartment tower in Long Island City, Queens has secured $148.45 million in non-recourse construction financing for the venture.
The funding was announced by Mission Capital Advisors, which arranged the construction financing for the joint venture between Property Markets

Group, Kamran Hakimand New Valley, LLC with Deutsche Bank. Deutsche Bank’s loan represented 70% of the total capitalization for the project. NorthStar Realty Finance, the first mortgage land lender, provided a $40.25 million mezzanine loan, by subordinating their existing loan to the new first mortgage loan of Deutsche Bank, bringing the total financing to $188.7 million, or 90% of the total project capitalization, Mission Capital officials say.

The 391-unit project will also include 165 parking spaces and 20,000 square feet of retail space. Amenities will include panoramic views of New York City, a rooftop pool, fitness center, lounge, and children’s playroom.

Mission Capital’s Jason Cohen, Ari Hirt, Steve Buchwald and Jamie

Matheny represented the borrower. Earlier this year, the same team arranged a

$95-million non-recourse construction loan for 10 Sullivan St. in New York City on behalf of PMG.
“Mission leveraged its depth of relationships to secure the most efficient source of capital for the non-recourse financing. We received a significant amount of interest from lenders, who were impressed with the strength of the sponsor and the quality of the project,” says Mission Capital’s Hirt.
“Queens Plaza South is anticipated to be one of the premier development projects in Long Island City, and an important step in the continuing development of this neighborhood as one of the most desirable and fastest growing residential communities in New York City,” says Kevin Maloney, founding principal of PMG. The Queens Plaza South financing brings Mission Capital to approximately $770 million in construction financing arranged so far this year. With an additional $250 million signed up with lenders scheduled to close in 2014, the firm will exceed $1 billion in construction financing transactions.

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The Debt & Equity Finance Group arranged $148.45 million in non-recourse construction financing for the development of Queens Plaza South, a 391-unit luxury rental apartment building in Long Island City, Queens.

Media Contact: Shlomo Morgulis Beckerman

smorgulis@beckermanpr.com
201-465-8007

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Mission Capital Advisors Arranges $148.45 Million in Non-Recourse Financing for

Development of Queens Plaza South in Long Island City

Construction Financing for Luxury Multifamily Property Brings Mission Capital to $1 Billion in

Development Financing in 2014

New York, NY (November 3, 2014) — Mission Capital Advisors, a leading national real estate capital markets solutions firm, today announced that its Debt & Equity Finance Group arranged $148.45 million in non-recourse construction financing for the development of Queens Plaza South, a 391-unit luxury rental apartment building in Long Island City, Queens.

Mission Capital represented the sponsor, a joint venture between Property Markets Group (PMG), Kamran Hakim and New Valley, LLC, in arranging the construction financing with Deutsche Bank. Deutsche Bank’s loan represented 70% of the total capitalization for the project. NorthStar Realty Finance, the first mortgage land lender, provided a $40.25 million mezzanine loan, by subordinating their existing loan to the new first mortgage loan of Deutsche Bank, bringing the total financing to $188.7 million, or 90% of the total project capitalization.
Mission Capital’s Jason Cohen, Ari Hirt, Steve Buchwald and Jamie Matheny represented the Sponsor. Earlier this year, the same team arranged a $95-million non-recourse construction loan for 10 Sullivan Street in New York City on behalf of PMG.
“PMG once again selected Mission as its exclusive advisor. It’s indicative of our commitment to building long-term relationships with our clients,” said Cohen.
The Queens Plaza South financing brings Mission Capital to nearly $770 million in construction financing arranged year-to-date. With an additional $250 million signed up with lenders scheduled to close in 2014, Mission Capital’s development financing for 2014 will exceed $1 billion, further cementing the company as one of the pre-eminent real estate capital markets solutions firms in the nation.
“Mission leveraged its depth of relationships to secure the most efficient source of capital for the non- recourse financing. We received a significant amount of interest from lenders, who were impressed with the strength of the sponsor and the quality of the project,” said Hirt.
“Queens Plaza South is anticipated to be one of the premier development projects in Long Island City, and an important step in the continuing development of this neighborhood as one of the most desirable and fastest growing residential communities in New York City,” said Kevin Maloney, founding principal of PMG.
The 44-story project is ideally located one block from the Queens Plaza subway station with access to the
7, N, and Q subway lines, and just minutes to Grand Central Station in Midtown Manhattan via Metro
North. The property will also include 165 parking spaces and 20,000 square feet of retail space. Amenities
will include panoramic views of New York City, a rooftop pool, fitness center, lounge, and children’s playroom.

About Mission Capital Advisors

Founded in 2002, Mission Capital Advisors, LLC is a leading national, diversified real estate capital markets solutions firm with offices in New York City, Florida, Texas, California and Mobile, Alabama. The firm delivers value to its clients through an integrated platform of advisory and transaction management services across commercial and residential loan sales; debt, mezzanine and JV equity placement; and loan portfolio valuation. Since its inception, Mission Capital has advised a variety of leading financial institutions and real estate investors on more than $45 billion of loan sale and financing transactions, as well as in excess of $14 billion of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac transactions, positioning the firm strongly to provide unmatched loan portfolio valuation services for both commercial and residential assets. Mission Capital’s seasoned team of industry-leading professionals is committed to achieving clients’ business objectives while maintaining the highest levels of integrity and trust. For more information, visit www.www.missioncap.com.

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Source: CityBizList

Mission Capital’s Debt & Equity Finance Group arranged $148.45 million in non-recourse construction financing for the development of Queens Plaza South, a 391-unit luxury rental apartment building in Long Island City, Queens.

Mission Capital Advisors Arranges

$148.45 Million in Non-Recourse Financing for Development of Queens Plaza South in Long Island City

11/3/14

Construction Financing for Luxury Multifamily Property Brings Mission

Capital to $1 Billion in Development Financing in 2014

Mission Capital Advisors, a leading national real estate capital markets solutions firm, today announced that its Debt & Equity Finance Group arranged

$148.45 million in non-recourse construction financing for the development of Queens Plaza South, a
391-unit luxury rental apartment building in Long Island City, Queens.
Mission Capital represented the sponsor, a joint venture between Property Markets Group (PMG), Kamran Hakim and New Valley, LLC, in
arranging the construction financing with Deutsche Bank. Deutsche Bank’s loan represented 70% of the total capitalization for the project. NorthStar Realty Finance, the first mortgage land lender, provided a $40.25 million mezzanine loan, by subordinating their existing loan to the new first mortgage loan of Deutsche Bank,bringing the total financing to $188.7 million, or 90% of the total project capitalization.

Mission Capital’s Jason Cohen, Ari Hirt, Steve Buchwald and Jamie Matheny represented the Sponsor. Earlier this year, the same team arranged a $95-million non-recourse construction loan for 10 Sullivan Street in New York City on behalf of PMG.
“PMG once again selected Mission as its exclusive advisor. It’s indicative of our commitment to building long-term relationships with our clients,” said Cohen.
The Queens Plaza South financing brings Mission Capital to nearly $770 million in construction financing arranged year-to-date. With an additional $250 million signed up with lenders scheduled to close in 2014, Mission Capital’s development financing for 2014 will exceed $1 billion, further cementing the company as one of the pre-eminent real estate capital markets solutions firms in the nation.
“Mission leveraged its depth of relationships to secure the most efficient source of capital for the non-recourse financing. We received a significant amount of interest from lenders, who were impressed with the strength of the sponsor and the quality of the project,” said Hirt.
“Queens Plaza South is anticipated to be one of the premier development projects in Long Island City, and an important step in the continuing development of this neighborhood as one of the most desirable and fastest growing residential communities in New York City,” said Kevin Maloney, founding principal of PMG.
The 44-story project is ideally located one block from the Queens Plaza subway station with access to the 7, N, and Q subway lines, and just minutes to Grand Central Station in Midtown Manhattan via Metro North. The property will also include 165 parking spaces and 20,000 square feet of retail space. Amenities will include panoramic views of New York City, a rooftop pool, fitness center, lounge, and children’s playroom.

About Mission Capital Advisors

Founded in 2002, Mission Capital Advisors, LLC is a leading national, diversified real estate capital markets solutions firm with offices in New York City, Florida, Texas, California and Mobile, Alabama. The firm delivers value to its clients through an integrated platform of advisory and transaction management services across commercial and residential loan sales; debt, mezzanine and JV equity placement; and loan portfolio valuation. Since its inception, Mission Capital has advised a variety of leading financial institutions and real estate investors on
more than $45 billion of loan sale and financing transactions, as well as in excess of $14 billion of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac transactions, positioning the firm strongly to provide unmatched loan portfolio valuation services for both commercial and residential assets. Mission Capital’s seasoned team of industry-

leading professionals is committed to achieving clients’ business objectives while maintaining the highest levels of integrity and trust. For more information,
visit www.www.missioncap.com.

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Source: RE Business Online

Northwind Group is acquiring 66 Pearl Street for $30 million, $21 million of which comes from a loan arranged by Mission Capital.

Mission Capital Secures $21M in

Financing for Acquisition of 66 Pearl

Street

NOVEMBER 3, 2014

BY AMY WORKS

Northwind Group is acquiring 66 Pearl Street for $30 million, $21 million of which comes from a loan arranged by Mission Capital Advisors.

NEW YORK CITY — Mission Capital Advisors’ Debt & Equity Finance Group has arranged $21 million in first mortgage financing on behalf of Northwind Group for the acquisition of 66 Pearl Street in New York City. Northwind Group is purchasing the six-story, mixed-use residential property located in New York City’s Financial District for $30 million. The 43,546-square-foot building features
42 residential units, with 6,485 square feet of ground-floor retail. Jonathan More,

Ari Hirt, Steve Buchwald and David Behmoaras represented the sponsor, Northwind Group, in arranging the financing with Sterling National Bank.

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Source: Wall Street Journal

Queens Plaza South, a 391-unit luxury rental tower in Long Island City being developed by a venture of Property Markets Group, Kamran Hakim and New Valley LLC. The venture, which has been advised by Mission Capital Advisors, has obtained $188.6 million in financing.

What’s the Deal: News Digest

A Roundup of Commercial Property News From

Across the Tri-State Region

November 2nd, 2014

Lenders Love Rentals

In another sign that New York’s apartment rental market is booming, lenders are becoming increasingly willing to make riskier loans to developers.
Take the case of Queens Plaza South, a 391-unit luxury rental tower in Long Island City being developed by a venture of Property Markets Group, Kamran Hakim and New Valley LLC. The venture, which has been advised by Mission Capital Advisors, has obtained $188.6 million in financing.
In the early days of the recovery, developers were lucky to borrow 60% of what it would cost to buy land and build an apartment tower. The financing for Queens Plaza South is equal to about 90% of the cost.
“For good projects, there’s a lot of money available,” said Ari Hirt, of Mission.
As part of the financing
package, Deutsche Bank is providing a senior loan of about $148.4 million, which was arranged by Mission Capital. NorthStar Realty Finance is making a more junior $40.2 million “mezzanine” loan, according to Mission.
Kevin Maloney, principal of Property
Markets Group, said the 44-story

project one block from the Queens Plaza subway station is expected to be completed in about 20 months. Rents likely will be in the mid-$50-a-square-foot range, he said.
Mr. Maloney said the developers were able to borrow so much partly because the value of land in Long Island City has risen sharply since they purchased it. “The bank took that into consideration,” he said. “They feel a lot more comfortable.”
—Peter Grant
http://m.wsj.com/articles/whats-­‐the-­‐deal-­‐news-­‐digest-­‐1414979654?mobile=y

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The Debt & Equity Finance Group has secured a $20 million non-recourse first mortgage loan from a New York-based debt fund on behalf of Summit Hospitality Group Ltd.

Media Contact: Amanda Ferraro Beckerman

aferraro@beckermanpr.com
201-­‐649-­‐1186

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Mission Capital Advisors Arranges $20 Million Non-­‐Recourse First Mortgage Loan for Three North Carolina Marriott Branded Hotels

Latest Deal Reflective of Mission Capital’s Ability to Secure Attractive Financing for Hotel Portfolios

Raleigh, NC (November 20, 2014) — Mission Capital Advisors, a leading national real estate capital markets solutions firm, today announced that its Debt & Equity Finance Group has secured a $20 million non-­‐recourse first mortgage loan from a New York-­‐based debt fund on behalf of Summit Hospitality Group Ltd. (Summit) to refinance three Marriott branded hotels located in Raleigh, Charlotte and Cary, North Carolina.

The Mission Capital team of Tom Hall, Jamie Matheny, Ari Hirt and Steven Buchwald represented Summit on an exclusive basis to refinance the three-­‐hotel, 305-­‐key portfolio.

“Summit’s proven track record as one of the premier Marriott franchise operators in North Carolina was instrumental in attracting potential lenders during this transaction,” said Hall. “By running a process and expanding Summit’s traditional list of capital providers, we were able to garner interest and multiple proposals with attractive terms from a variety of lenders including regional banks, mortgage REITs, debt funds and specialty finance companies. Our client benefited from what is an extremely competitive, aggressive and fluid market today.”

Added Hall: “During the marketing period, Mission was able to successfully highlight the superb sponsorship and management team of Summit in conjunction with the advantageous location of the hotels in the transaction. As the hospitality market continues to strengthen, this is yet another example of Mission Capital’s ability to identify attractive, creative non-­‐recourse financing that fit our clients’ needs and wants.”

All of the hotel properties have recently, or will soon be undergoing property improvements to upgrade guest rooms, lobbies, public spaces and guest corridors. The loan that Mission secured will provide a future funding component to complete the renovations.

Summit, which manages 18 hotels across North Carolina, remains an active player in the area’s hospitality industry. The group acquired the downtown Winston-­‐Salem Wingate last month and is in the process of converting it to a Fairfield Inn & Suites, opened the new Hyatt Place at Southpoint in August, and have plans to break ground on a nine-­‐story, downtown Raleigh Residence Inn in 2015.

Mission recently opened an office in Cary, NC with plans to continue to expand its Debt & Equity Finance
presence throughout North Carolina and the Southeast.

About Mission Capital Advisors

Founded in 2002, Mission Capital Advisors, LLC is a leading national, diversified real estate capital markets solutions firm with offices in New York City, Florida, Texas, California and Mobile, Al. The firm delivers value to its clients through an integrated platform of advisory and transaction management services across commercial and residential loan sales; debt, mezzanine and JV equity placement; and loan portfolio valuation. Since its inception, Mission Capital has advised a variety of leading financial institutions and real estate investors on more than $45 billion of loan sale and financing transactions, as
well as in excess of $14 billion of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac transactions, positioning the firm strongly to provide unmatched loan portfolio valuation services for both commercial and residential assets. Mission Capital’s seasoned team of industry-­‐leading professionals is committed to achieving clients’ business objectives while maintaining the highest levels of integrity and trust. For more information,
visit www.www.missioncap.com.

About Summit Hospitality Group, Ltd.

Summit Hospitality Group, Ltd., founded in 1988 by Doyle Parrish and Gene Singleton, is a full-­‐service hotel management, marketing, consulting and planning firm. SHG operates hotels and restaurants in Raleigh, Charlotte, Chapel Hill, Pinehurst, and Wilmington under management contracts, with revenue in excess of $60 million annually. SHG currently employs 675 people, owns and operates 18 properties totaling 2,047 keys and owns and/or operates three restaurants in North Carolina.
Summit is a proud leader in the hospitality industry for more than 25 years with a portfolio of the finest brands available including Residence Inn by Marriott, Courtyard by Marriott, TownePlace Suites by Marriott, Fairfield Inn & Suites by Marriott, Hilton Garden Inn, Hampton Inn & Suites, Homewood Suites, Fairfield Inn & Suites and Hyatt Place. For more information, visit www.summithospitality.com.

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