Source: Commercial Observer

Sabal and Oak Tree landed $65 million in nonrecourse bridge financing from Citizens Bank on an 11-property portfolio. Mission Capital arranged the financing.

COMMERCIAL OBSERVER FINANCE

The Jnsldrr's Weekly Guide to the Commerciallfortpge Industry

Citizens Bank Lends

$65:1 to Sabal and Oak Tree forational Office Portfolio

Saba! Financial Group and Oak Tree

Capitai.Manqi!IDIInt lamlu

nonrecourse bridge finnncing from Citizens

Bank ou a 1.4million­

in strong markets,• Patrick Burns, the man· aging director for institutional real estate at Citizens, said through a spokeswoman. "Citizens is continuing to grow itscommercial rcalestatefinanccbusincssinkcymarkctswith experienced partners."

Proceeds of the financing will be used to­ ward capital improvements and leaseups on the properties,which arc in varying states of upkeep,said Draganiuk After purchasing the assets,Saba!came in with an ad:ivcasset man­

agement team and already did "a lot of heavy

Jo:XCLUb11E

quarofoot,ll-propertyof­

rn

lifting"in regards to renovations.

The loan from Citizens will provide Saba!

states, Commercial Observer Finance can first report.

A grou p of ucl.ll and l!quily bruhrs from

Mission Capitol negotitlted tho trnnsnction.which closed on J11. ly 20,ou behalf of the bor­ rowers. The team included Chad Coluccio, Alex Draganiuk anil Rugene Shevaldin.

The brokerage's relationshlp, it

OakTree a 'tually
lastseveral years the twofirms havejointlypur­
chased poolsofloans through Mission Capital. "Wedobusiness with [Saba! and Oak '!'reelon a lot of different levels, but I believe this wasour firstlargefinancing transaction where we rep­
resented them as a client,Coluccio told COF
over the phone.

Saba! and Oak Tree purchased a number of the assets that serve ucollateral for the Citizens loan through Mission Capital as well, some of which had defaulted loans or were realestate owned. The portfol:oinclud­ ed Beau Terre Office Park in Bentonville, Ark., Plnebrook Business Center I & II in Norristown, Penn., Financial Plaza in

Knoxville, Tenn.and Stamford Executive

Center in Stamford, Conn.

"This is a great deal with an excellent client and the portfolio features top office properties

and Oak Tree with the flexibility of being able to sell assets from the portfolio and pay down the loan rather than being tied down, said Coluccio,which was important to the borrow­ ers because some of the properties are closer to stabilization than others.

The properties have an overall blended

occupancy of 64.6percent,Draganiuk said.He noted that there was "a lot of cash flow going into this deal"and that the borrower was pro­ vided with a variety of financing options from lov.-er leverage bank deals, like the mortgage from Citizens, to debt up to SlOO million with a mezzanine piece.
AnothP.r positive nfthe ile:ll Wll that "[thP. lender] was willing to give the borrower a loan with relatively no minimum interest,• Draganiuk added "Some debt funds need at least12 to15to18monthsof minimum interest because they wantto makeacertain return,or guarantee they'll make a certain return, when underwritingassetsindifferentmarkets.They were really greatit's not always easy for peo­ ple tomanage .so many mnvingp:n1.:.

A representative from Saba!was not avail­ able for comment, and a representative for OakTreedidnotrespond toarequestforcom­ mentDanielleBaibi

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Source: Wall Street Journal

A $98 billion drop in bonds backed by loans makes it harder for businesses, shopping-mall owners and consumers to refinance the debt.

MARKETS

Slowdown in Shadow Lending

Tightens Credit on Main Street

A $98 billion drop in bonds backed by loans makes it harder for businesses, shopping-mall owners and consumers to refinance debt

Some shopping malls are feeling the squeeze of a slowdown in shadow banking. PHOTO: L.E. BASKOW/LAS VEGAS SUN/ASSOCIATED PRESS

SERENA NG

July 4, 2016 8:48 p.m. ET

America’s shadow banking system slowed sharply through the end of June, with the value of
bonds backed by personal, corporate and real-estate loans falling $98 billion from the first half of
2015.
That drop, which excludes bonds from state-backed issuers like Fannie Mae, represents a 37% decline from a year earlier, according to industry newsletter Asset-Backed Alert, and is making it harder for businesses, shopping-mall owners and consumers to refinance their debt.
The pullback was triggered by the investor flight from riskier types of bonds around the New Year and persisted even as broader market conditions improved. One contributing factor is a regulation that will require producers to hold some of the securities they create, a requirement that makes the business less profitable and has slowed the packaging of new loans into bonds. Another is uncertainty raised by Britain’s vote to leave the European Union.
The resulting drop-off in issuance is roughly equal to the volume of loans that Fifth Third Bancorp, one of the country’s largest regional banks, has on its balance sheet, according to data provider SNL Financial. It represents another weight on an economy already notable for weak business investment.
The drop-off is particularly acute in the market for commercial mortgage-backed securities. At
$31 billion so far this year, CMBS issuance is down nearly 44% from the same period in 2015. Thousands of real-estate owners who tapped the market during the boom years of 2006 and 2007 need to refinance their maturing debts this year and next. Many will have to find alternative sources of funds, said Paul Fitzsimmons, head of CMBS research at Kroll Bond Rating Agency.
Anthony D’Agostino recently struggled to refinance the loan he and three other doctors used to pay for the building that houses their private medical practices in Naples, Fla. They built the two- story, Spanish-style building with palm trees outside in 2006 with a $4.8 million loan that
became part of a commercial mortgage-backed security.
As the loan on the Banyan Professional Center neared maturity this spring, Dr. D’Agostino said a local bank he contacted offered steep terms including a 20% down payment, and gave a low appraisal for the building, which limited how much the bank would lend.
“It was ridiculous,” Dr. D’Agostino said. “We had never been late with payments, and our
building is fully occupied. It should have been a no-brainer.”
A month after the previous loan came due, he found a new loan from a regional bank with more reasonable terms. By then, the servicer on his earlier loan was threatening legal action over the delayed repayment. “It was a difficult process,” he said.
Owners of more than 400 commercial properties—including hotels, apartment buildings and warehouses—whose loans came due between January and May this year didn’t pay off by their maturity dates, according to data from Trepp LLC, which tracks loans in commercial mortgage- backed securities.
About a quarter of those loans ended up paying off afterward in full or with losses to bondholders. The rest are still being worked out. Through mid-June, some $4.5 billion in CMBS loans were transferred to special servicers that specialize in debt workouts, according to Fitch Ratings, which called it an “an accelerated pace” that is likely to continue.
“It’s absolutely taking more time to line up financing,” said Ari Hirt, a managing director at
Mission Capital Advisors, which arranges real-estate debt and equity financing.
The securitization market has long been a mainstay of the U.S. financial system, including how it helps provide financing to less creditworthy borrowers who can’t easily get loans from banks. By pooling dozens, hundreds or even thousands of loans into vehicles that issue bonds to investors, banks and other lenders can boost the volume of loans they make beyond what they can store on their own books. Investors, meanwhile, can pick from bonds with different risk profiles, comforted that properly structured instruments should pay in full even if some underlying loans default.
During the 2007 housing downturn, the concept backfired when scores of bonds backed by subprime home loans plunged in value as housing prices fell and mortgage defaults surged. Banks and investors suffered billions of dollars in losses from these products, which were at the heart of the financial crisis. Bonds backed by corporate loans, commercial mortgages and auto loans, by contrast, largely performed within expectations, and the market for those assets have rebounded since the crisis.
There are currently more than $10 trillion in outstanding securities backed by U.S. consumer, business and other loans, according to the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association. About $7 trillion are backed by government-affiliated agencies such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The remainder consists of collateralized loan obligations, commercial mortgage-backed securities and other bonds underpinned by outstanding credit-card debt, auto loans and esoteric assets like solar-panel leases and vacation timeshares. Last year, $452 billion of these nonagency bonds were issued in the U.S., and $168 billion in such securities have been issued in the year to date, according to Asset-Backed Alert.
Slowdowns in the market quickly filter through to borrowers. GK Development Inc., the owner of a shopping center in Lufkin, Texas, whose anchor tenants include T.J. Maxx, J.C. Penney and Sears, had $26.5 million in debt that came due in March. GK President Garo Kholamian said the company worked for several months to refinance it with a new 10-year loan from New York- based lender Greystone & Co.
But amid turmoil early this year in the CMBS market, where Greystone would have sold the loan, the lender backed out. Mr. Kholamian said he spent several weeks scrambling to find an alternative, ultimately taking out a five-year loan from a small Texas bank that will keep the loan on its books.
Rob Russell, head of CMBS production at Greystone, said the firm declined the transaction because of uncertainty around the future of the traditional malls as more shoppers move online.
Big companies are feeling the squeeze as well. Issuance of collateralized loan obligations, which are securities backed by loans to companies that lack investment-grade credit ratings, has slumped 54% from last year to $26 billion, though volume has picked up since April. Close to
$100 billion in CLOs were issued last year.
CLOs have in the past bought around two-thirds of leveraged loans that are sold to investors, but the drop in issuance has pulled CLO participation down to 50%. A dozen companies that launched sales of new leveraged loans this year ended up reducing their size, according to S&P Global Market Intelligence LCD.
“It’s definitely reduced the flow of money to companies,” said Hiram Hamilton, global head of
structured credit at Alcentra, a money manager owned by Bank of New York Mellon Corp.

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Mission Capital Advisors, a leading national real estate capital markets solutions firm, today announced that its Asset Sales Group has been named the exclusive sales agent for Arlington Town Square, a 136,585-square-foot, high-end, mixed-use retail and office REO property located at 21 South Evergreen Avenue in Arlington Heights, Illinois.

Media Contact: Shlomo Morgulis Beckerman

smorgulis@beckermanpr.com
201-465-8007

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Mission Capital Advisors Marketing Arlington Town Square On Behalf of a CMBS Special Servicer

National Advisory Firm Seeks Buyer for Well-Located, High-End, Mixed-Use Retail and Office Center in Arlington Heights

ARLINGTON HEIGHTS, Ill. (May 23, 2016) – Mission Capital Advisors, a leading national real estate capital markets solutions firm, today announced that its Asset Sales Group has been named the exclusive sales agent for Arlington Town Square, a 136,585-square-foot, high-end, mixed-use retail and office REO property located at 21 South Evergreen Avenue in Arlington Heights, Illinois.

Managing Director Will Sledge, Vice President Adam Grant and Analyst Don Pavlov of Mission Capital Advisors will procure a buyer on behalf of the owner, a CMBS Special Servicer. The property is comprised of 32 retail shops, a six-plex movie theater, and eight office spaces.
“Since taking ownership via foreclosure, the Special Servicer, along with the property management team at Edgemark Commercial Real Estate Services, have done an excellent job adding value, stabilizing the property and bringing quality national and local tenants that will increase its allure to potential buyers,” said Sledge. “Arlington Town Square is now an enviable, cash-flowing asset in one of Chicago’s most vibrant northern suburbs, and we expect to receive interest from investors ranging from local retail owners to national REITs.”
Situated on a 3.63-acre site, the 84-percent occupied property boasts retailers including Ann Taylor Lofts, Joseph A. Bank, Panera Bread, Sports Clips and Starbucks. The mixed-use center is adjacent to a high-rise condo development.
With its downtown Arlington Heights location, Arlington Town Square is proximate to Route 14, providing easy access to Chicago. The property lies at the center of a transit-oriented, pedestrian-friendly downtown, with access to Downtown Chicago via the Metra as well as a wide range of shopping, dining, and entertainment options.
A national real estate capital markets solutions firm, Mission Capital is extremely active in arranging investment sales, loan sales and debt and equity financing on properties across the country.

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, Florida, Texas, California and 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 $65 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: Commercial Observer

Q&A with Mission Capital Principal David Tobin.

April 14, 2016

Q+A

David Tobin

Principal of Mission Capital

Commercial Observer Finance: How did you get into real estate?

Mr. Tobin: I majored in medieval and renaissance English literature, which has nothing to do with real estate. Coming out of school I spent a winter in Colorado with a buddy working in Aspen and quickly real- ized I didn’t want to be a ski bum—as much as I love skiing, it’s my passion—and I want- ed to actually make money. I had had a lit- tle carpentry and house-painting business in college and I had studied architecture as a minor that I didn’t finish, so I was very much interested in real estate. [A friend of a friend] worked at a bank called Dime Savings Bank [of Williamsburgh]. He alert- ed me to an interview opportunity and I went and I really didn’t know anything about real estate—I had taken a real estate salesperson’s class. We spent five minutes talking about real estate, but the woman in- terviewing me was a literature buff and so we spent the rest of the interview talking about Mario Vargas Llosa and Charles Bukowski and all sorts of weird literature stuff. I had three or four other rounds of in- terviews, but English literature helped me get my first job.

How has Mission Capital progressed since it was founded in 2002?

We keep expanding and growing. The team has gotten bigger and bigger. One of the interesting results of the [last] credit crisis and the sort of declining relevance of investment banks and big banking prin- cipal investments is that we get a shot at amazing talent—kids that [may have ended up] at an investment bank and stuck in a black hole of 18-hour days, with no ability to move up because [those firms] are down- sizing. We get better and better talent ei- ther coming out of college or coming out of banks who are just disillusioned with that lifestyle and that career prospect. We have an office in Newport Beach, Calif., and we’ve had kids in New York that say New York’s nice, can’t afford it, it’s too oppres- sive. We’ve had people move out there.

What challenges have met you along the way?

One of the biggest issues across all of our businesses is compliance and IT security.

David Tobin.

We were ahead of that because we have con- tracts with the government. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation was sort of a leader in pushing all that stuff back in 2007 and 2008. Some of our bigger clients were into it back then and now it’s everybody. To work for a bank, whether you’re selling real estate assets or loan portfolios or doing valuation or consulting, you have to have a very deep audit, dive and IT security process. At first I hated it because it was just oppressive to have to go through that stuff and change your systems and add security, but it’s become a huge issue with banking with the explosion of the inter- net and data breaches and data thefts. It keeps out everybody that can’t comply with those things. It actually has been a great way to bat- tle against larger firms and win out over small firms that haven’t made those investments.
We were growing from 2002 to 2006, we were setting up a great team as we started, and then when the credit crisis hit we were per- fectly positioned. We started getting contracts with the FDIC; we had a business of valuing assets and had a great business of selling as- sets. All during the downturn, we were in the perfect business and then in 2009 we added a debt and equity team from Ackman-Ziff— Jordan Ray and Jason Cohen—and that team is now 25 people strong around the country. They did $1.75 billion or $1.8 billion of loans—75 dif- ferent transactions—some really cool stuff like the Soho House in Chicago and the Freehand Hotel in Miami.

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Mission Global, a mortgage services due diligence business and affiliate of Mission Capital Advisors, today announced that Aaron Scott Taylor has joined the firm as compliance officer.

Media Contact: Amanda Ferraro Beckerman

aferraro@beckermanpr.com
201-649-1186

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Mission Global Continues Rapid Growth with Hiring of

Aaron Scott Taylor as Compliance Officer

Well-Regarded Compliance Professional Brings Valuable Experience to New Position

DENVER, Colo. (April 6, 2016) — Mission Global, a mortgage services due diligence business and affiliate of Mission Capital Advisors, today announced that Aaron Scott Taylor has joined the firm as compliance officer. Taylor will report to A. Dennis Zehnle, chief operating officer of Mission Global, and will be responsible for advising the company’s management and staff on new and changing regulatory risks.

In his new role, Taylor will provide insight on all consumer state and federal laws and regulations governing real estate lending.
“Mission Global is a single-source solution for institutional lenders and regulatory compliance is one of the vital services we provide to the industry,” said Dennis Zehnle, executive vice president of Mission Global. “Aaron is an excellent fit for this role, and we’re confident that he will deliver immediate value to our client base.”
In addition to closely tracking consumer laws and regulations, Taylor will work closely with the firm’s various business units to implement new proprietary systems and software in response to required changes of law related to due diligence processes. He will also serve as Mission Global’s industry liaison, working with outside counsel and other industry groups such as the Mortgage Bankers Association and SFIG.
Prior to joining Mission Global, Taylor held similar positions at Clayton Holdings and Promontory Financial Group, where he consistently tracked new rules and policies applying to the mortgage industry, such as the Dodd Frank Act and other prominent regulatory matters.
“This is an exciting opportunity that will allow me to utilize my previous compliance experience to aid the impressive group of clients that are serviced by Mission Global’s seasoned group of industry professionals,” said Taylor. “I look forward to settling into this new role, and I’m eager to make an immediate impact on Mission Global’s operations.”
Taylor earned his Juris Doctorate from The John Marshall Law School in Chicago, IL and a Bachelor of Arts in Sociology from The University of North Carolina at Wilmington. Taylor also holds a specialty in Elder Law, a Mediation certification, and has studied at universities in Argentina, Australia, Denmark, England, Germany and Scotland.

About Mission Global, LLC

Mission Global, LLC has been formed to unite the capabilities of Mission Capital mortgage services business with the extensive due diligence services and experience of Global Financial Review, to create a single source solution for investors. Mission Global services will now include data integrity review, collateral document review and cure, curative title work, agency delivery and trade support, due diligence and securitization support, regulatory compliance, origination support, re-underwriting, and forensic reviews. For more information, visit www.missionglobal.com.

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Mission Capital Advisors and its subsidiary Mission Global, a mortgage services due diligence business, announced the hiring of William Horning as a director with the residential mortgage group.

Media Contact: Amanda Ferraro Beckerman

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

DRAFT FOR REVIEW

Mission Capital Advisors and Subsidiary Mission Global Hire William Horning As Director of Mortgage Operation

Mortgage Industry Professional Brings More Than 16 Years of Experience

in all Facets of Residential Whole Loan Finance

NEW YORK (Feb. 25, 2016) — Mission Capital Advisors, a leading national real estate capital markets solutions firm, and its subsidiary Mission Global, a mortgage services due diligence business, today announced the hiring of William Horning as a director with the residential mortgage group.

With nearly two decades of experience in residential whole loan finance, Horning will assume a senior role in both Mission Capital Advisors’ residential whole loan trading operation and Mission Global’s due diligence and mortgage services operation.

“As we continue to expand our offerings, Bill is the perfect fit from both a loan trading and mortgage services standpoint,” said Ray Ralph, managing director of operations with Mission Capital Advisors. “We were immediately impressed with Bill’s breadth of experience and long history in whole loan finance and we’re confident he will offer our clients the high level of service that has become synonymous with the Mission name.”

With extensive experience in residential whole loan transaction management, Horning looks forward to making an immediate impact on Mission’s mortgage services and loan trading business. “Mission’s collaborative culture and stellar reputation are initially what attracted me to this position,” said Horning. “I am thrilled to join Mission Capital and Mission Global, and be a part of the team.”

Prior to joining Mission Capital Advisors, Horning served as a vice president with Morgan Stanley, handling contract finance duties and conduit implementation for the firm’s residential mortgage trading desk. Horning worked previously in similar capacities as an associate director with Five Mile Capital Partners and a director with UBS. In addition, Horning served as a vice president with American Mortgage Consultants, managing multiple due diligence processes for both seasoned loans and new origination/conduit residential loan platforms. He started his career at Lehman Brothers working in residential mortgage servicing and operations.

Horning holds a Bachelor of Arts in Business and Economics from Muhlenberg College.

About Mission Global, LLC

Mission Global, LLC has been formed to unite the capabilities of Mission Capital mortgage services business with the extensive due diligence services and experience of Global Financial Review, to create a single source solution for investors. Mission Global services will now include data integrity review,
collateral document review and cure, curative title work, agency delivery and trade support, due diligence and securitization support, regulatory compliance, origination support, re-­‐underwriting, and forensic reviews. For more information, visit www.missionglobal.com.

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 $65 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: Real Estate Finance & Investment

Mission Capital’s Ari Hirt discusses Brooklyn’s growing office market.

Breakfast briefing: Brooklyn’s office market

sees demand soar

February 15, 2016
By Elizabeth Blosfield

Now considered one of the largest office markets in the country, Brooklyn has
carved out its own ecosystem apart from Manhattan as more people are drawn to
the vibrancy of its live, work, play environment, according to panelists at Real Estate
Finance & Investment’s latest breakfast briefing, held at the Lamb’s Club in New York. As more people flock to the borough, office product is in high demand, but Brooklyn’s market still presents some challenges for development, panelists agreed.

“Over the years, Manhattan has become sort of homogeneous, and
people don’t see the same vibrancy there as they do in Brooklyn,” said Tyler Wilkins, partner at Quinlan Development Group. “As more people move to Brooklyn, there is more pent up demand for new office product, but the question is how many of these projects
will actually come to fruition,” added Richard Warshauer, senior managing
director at Colliers International.

This is because it can be more difficult for developers to secure financing for office
developments in Brooklyn than in Manhattan. “When looking for financing, one earlier challenge for Brooklyn office owners is proving market rents in a submarket that is experiencing such explosive growth. There can be a substantial difference between last year’s and this year’s rents. That challenge has started to subside since there is now more viable data out there – and rents have also started to plateau,” Wilkins said.

Brooklyn’s rapid growth began with the private sector getting priced out of Manhattan, stated Paul Selver, co-chair of the land use department at Kramer Levin Naftalis & Frankel. “That generated growth in Brooklyn, and that growth became internalized and accelerated as more businesses moved out of Manhattan, establishing Brooklyn as a full-service community with its own unique blend of
housing, jobs, shopping and entertainment,” he said.


This period of rapid growth can make conducting due diligence and valuation for properties difficult, added David Heiden, principal at W Financial, explaining that the firm recently ran into challenges with two industrial-to-flex office conversion deals located on the
border of Bushwick and Ridgewood. “People are getting priced out of
Manhattan and expanding to the boroughs at a rapid rate,” he stated. “The rapid growth has made it difficult to find comparables, so we had to go outside of the location to find other comps for the project and adjust them downward.”
Another stumbling block that office developers are running into is that much of the available space for development is located in manufacturing zones, particularly near the popular waterfront. “You can’t build a 20-story office tower in a manufacturing zone, and it has really changed everyone’s thinking regarding waterfront development,” Warshauer said. “People are being very careful about the structures they are putting there. The lack of comps is also making development difficult, because not everyone wants to be a pioneer. Building a one-million-square foot office park in Red Hook is a chancy venture at this time.”
Transportation, particularly near the waterfront, is also something to take into consideration for office development, especially given recent speculation that challenges with the L train could lead to a closure for a period of time going forward, added Warshauer. “Nothing is official yet, but people are definitely scared,” Wilkins said. “The future of the L train will have an immediate impact on places like Williamsburg.”
Despite these challenges, Brooklyn’s market presents many attractive opportunities for office development due to robust job growth, economic incentives and lower office rents. “Office tenants can shave off twenty dollars per square foot in rent, so there are tons of reasons why it makes sense to be here,” Wilkins stated.
With this in mind, Mission Capital is advocating that developers and investors think more about up and coming areas throughout Brooklyn and nearby areas in Queens, such as Bushwick and Ridgewood, as they become more popular among tenants due to lower rents, said Ari Hirt, managing director of the debt and equity finance group at Mission Capital.
“We have been using the comps to get people to look at the lack of alternatives for renting office space in established places like Dumbo and Williamsburg, where rents are around $70 per square foot,” he said. “In Bushwick, tenants are renting in the
$40s per square foot. Brooklyn is where everyone wants to be now. Tech workers are saying, ‘Why commute to Manhattan when I can work here where I live?’ People who live in Brooklyn want to stay in Brooklyn to work, so we need to create office space for those people.”

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Source: Bisnow

Mission Capital Advisors Managing Director Ari Hirt on Capital Markets.

3 TOP EXECS TELL US WHAT'S IN THEIR CRYSTAL BALLS FOR 2016

January 8, 2016 By Scott Klocksin

Mission Capital Advisors Managing Director Ari Hirt On Capital Markets

2016 will be another strong year for New York real estate. There is a tremendous amount of capital available to invest, and New York is still viewed as one of the most attractive and safest markets in the world due to high barriers to entry, the stable and growing population, increased tourism, and its position as the financial capital
of the US.

On the other hand, we can also expect to see some conservatism on the part of banks and other lenders for ground-up construction due to supply concerns. However, newer non-bank lenders entering the market could fill that gap. Limited availability of ground-up construction financing will keep supply in check.

New York City should see an increase in the number of refinances of 2006 vintage CMBS deals. Interest rates and loan spreads have widened due to recent FOMC actions and anticipated actions later in 2016; however, rates are still relatively low historically. Deals that were on the cusp for refinance could be stressed with the uptick in rates. However, the plethora of mezz/sub-debt capital out there should bridge the gap for most deals.

Download icon PDF File 732.84 KB Download
Source: Western Real Estate Business

AJ Capital has created a new hotel chain that caters specifically to the college and university markets.

AN EDUCATION IN HOSPITALITY

AJ Capital has created a new hotel chain that caters speci cally to the college and university markets.

By Nellie Day

here are many reasons people stay at hotels: vacations, business meetings, visiting family and friends. The latter category is usually associated with holiday get-togethers where loved ones want to be close, but due to time, space or patience con- straints, many out-of-towners don’t want to be that close. There are plenty of other reasons why family choose WR FRQJUHJDWH DURXQG VSHFLÀF XQL- versities as well: college visits, help- ing their children move into a dorm, graduations, alumni gatherings and reunions, weekend quality bonding
time and sporting events.
It is this market that AJ Capital be- lieves is underserved. So the Chicago- EDVHG ÀUP GLG VRPHWKLQJ DERXW WKDW.

,W FUHDWHG WKH QDWLRQ·V ÀUVW KRWHO EUDQG that caters exclusively to college- and university-anchored markets.
“In most markets, the hospitality RHULQJV DUH GRPLQDWHG E FRRNLH- cutter, limited-service hotels, often lo- cated on the outskirts of town,” says Ben Gottlieb, AJ Capital’s vice presi- dent of acquisitions. “When visiting D XQLYHUVLW, D KRWHO LV RIWHQ WKH ÀUVW and last place that one sees in a given town. We saw an underserved niche and capitalized on a tremendous op- portunity to improve this sector by curating a hospitality experience wor- thy of these unique communities.”
And, thus, the Graduate Hotel chain was born. The chain, which launched in 2014, now has 1,355 keys in nine university-anchored markets across the country. AJ Capital’s most recent acquisition is the 144-room Hotel Du- rant in Berkeley, Calif., which it pur- chased for an undisclosed sum this past September.

Photo credit: Christian Horan Photography

AJ Capital converted the Twin Palms Hotel into the Graduate Tempe hotel

in September 2014. The hotel sits across from the Arizona State University campus in Tempe, Ariz.

GUESTS LOVE AMENITIES: THE SHIFT IN DEMAND FROM SELECT-SERVICE TO FULL-SERVICE HOTELS

While certain companies like AJ Capital explore niches within the hospitality market, others point to overarching trends that may impact the general types of products delivered out West.

The hospitality market has made a true comeback over the past several years as a result of the improving post- recession economy. Business trips are more common, and families and couples are once again traveling for pleasure. To keep up with the increased demand, the hospitality construction and development sectors have responded, add- ing various properties, many of which are select-service hotels in strategic locations.
While this rapid growth has positioned the hospitality sector well, there are signs the market is imminently chang- ing — and that the strategy behind hospitality construction and development must, and will, change with it. The improvements in the economy have driven increased demand for beds and amenities. That same economic upturn has also boosted land and construction prices, ultimately increasing the cost of hotel development. While there is still demand for additional hotel rooms in some markets, others are showing signs of saturation. Hospitality profession- als will need to address both the increased cost of construction and market saturation – and provide a truly unique product — if they are to succeed and compete in the changing marketplace.
Today’s hospitality economy is driven by the consumers’ desire to have a lifestyle experience at a property, while
Like its other Graduate Hotel con- versions, AJ Capital plans to reposi- tion, rebrand and renovate the prop- erty to make it more reminiscent of the community it calls home. Gott- lieb is quick to note, however, that the renovations are not meant to make the property look like a dormitory or frat house.

“While Graduate is a brand, we pre- fer to look at it as a collection of locally centric boutique ho- tels,” he says. “By design, each Gradu- ate has a distinctly GLHUHQW DHVWKHWLF
feeling a connection to the community where the property is located. The hospitality sector will likely need to move away from the development of select-service properties and increase the number of full-service hotel properties if it plans to accommodate these demands. Full-service properties meet all of the integration, collaboration and lifestyle
– one that, through
subtle storytelling, pays homage to its

Gottlieb

needs of both business and leisure travelers in an enhanced capacity, providing everything all in one place.
)RU H[DPSOH, WKH 3DVpD +RWHO & 6SD, ZKLFK LV FXUUHQWO XQGHU FRQVWUXFWLRQ LQ +XQWLQJWRQ %HDFK, &DOLI., ZLOO RHU EXVLQHVV WUDYHOHUV WKH EHQHÀW DQG FRQYHQLHQFH RI KLJK-TXDOLW DPHQLWLHV, LQFOXGLQJ DPSOH PHHWLQJ VSDFH, XQLTXH RQ- site dining options and executive concierge services. As a result, these customers may never need to leave the prop- HUW RU WKH ORFDO FRPPXQLW, DQG WKH ZLOO VWLOO EH DEOH WR FRQGXFW WKHLU EXVLQHVV SURGXFWLYHO DQG HFLHQWO.
Leisure travelers are often looking for the same qualities as their business counterparts when choosing a property. This has led them to increasingly gravitate toward full-service options. Families and couples want to feel like part of WKH FRPPXQLW. 7KLV FDQ EH DFFRPSOLVKHG LQ D YDULHW RI ZDV, UDQJLQJ IURP LQFRUSRUDWLQJ ORFDO ÁDLU DQG FXOWXUH LQWR WKH GHVLJQ RI WKH SURSHUW WR KDYLQJ DPSOH DQG H[FLWLQJ DPHQLWLHV OLNH D KLJK-HQG SRRO, VSD RU ÀWQHVV FHQWHU ZKHUH guests can gather and experience the property together.
3URSHUWLHV WKDW SURYLGH H[SHULHQFHV DQG DPHQLWLHV WKDW FDQ EH VKDUHG E JXHVWV DQG QHDUE UHVLGHQWV DOVR RIWHQ ÀQG JUHDWHU VXFFHVV. )RU H[DPSOH, PDQ KRWHOV RHU KLJK-TXDOLW GLQLQJ RSWLRQV WKDW FUHDWH D FRPPXQLW H[SHULHQFH IRU their guests, nearby residents and visitors.
In addition to increased consumer expectations, geographic location plays a large role in the demand for full- service properties. Coastal areas like California and Florida, as well as major metropolitan areas such as Los Angeles and San Francisco, are primed for this type of growth due to their desirable locations and variety of attractions. On WKH RWKHU KDQG, PDQ VPDOOHU DQG VHFRQGDU PDUNHWV PD QRW KDYH WKH GHPDQG RU WUDF WR VXSSRUW WKH H[SHQVH RI a successful full-service venture.
,Q DUHDV ZKHUH LW FDQ EH HFRQRPLFDOO VXSSRUWHG, H[LVWLQJ IXOO-VHUYLFH KRWHOV ZLOO VHH DQ XSVZLQJ LQ WUDF, DQG QHZ full-service properties will likely compete well in the marketplace. For developers currently in the process of building D VHOHFW-VHUYLFH SURSHUW, LW ZLOO EH LPSRUWDQW WR FRQVLGHU ZKDW FDQ EH GRQH GLHUHQWO WR EULQJ KDQGSLFNHG, H[WHQGHG amenities to the property.
The key to creating a successful hospitality development over the next couple of years will involve understanding how to best incorporate full-service and lifestyle amenities into current and future projects. Successful ventures will truly understand customer desires and will build their properties to meet those demands.

— Bill Wilhelm, President, R.D. Olson Construction in Irvine, Calif.

host community. Think discrete ref-

erences to distinguished alumni as opposed to overt displays of school mascots and colors. Notice that we refer to these markets as ‘university- anchored’ instead of ‘college towns.’” In-house interior design teams VSHQG VLJQLÀFDQW WLPH LQ WKH FLWLHV where a new hotel will debut. They source vintage pieces, interview local

Above is an exterior rendering of the new Graduate Hotel in Berkeley, Calif. The rm purchased the 144-room Hotel Durant this past September.

24 • January 2016 • Western Real Estate Business www.REBusinessOnline.com


artists, and learn the history, culture and stories of the communi- ty. This allows them to capture the essence of the host campuses and cities through the design and amenities.
Gottlieb also believes in capitalizing on the already-established history of a well-known property when the opportunity arises.
“We’re certainly not opposed to new construction — having just completed a very successful ground-up development in Ox- ford, Miss. — but when presented with an existing structure that PHHWV RXU ORFDWLRQ, GHVLJQ DQG TXDOLW VSHFLÀFDWLRQV, ZH ORYH the challenge of a conversion,” he says. “The Hotel Durant was steeped in history and a venerable Berkeley institution. The ho-
7KH ÀUP UHFHLYHG
$31.5 million to ac- quire and reposition the Hotel Durant, which is the closest hotel to the Greek Theater and the
62,000-seat Califor- nia Memorial Stadi- um, where students and parents can

Ray

The entrance to the Hotel Durant in Berkeley, pre-conversion.

RECENT LEASING ACTIVITY

AIRPORT DISTRICT

tel has excellent bones, an irreplaceable location and history that couldn’t be replicated in a new build. In this case, we see more value in continuing the stewardship of a local landmark than in constructing new.”

experience UC Berkeley home foot- ball games. Financing was arranged by Jordan Ray, Ari Hirt, Steven Bu- chwald and David Behmoar of Mis- sion Capital’s Debt & Equity Finance Group. Ray, a managing director with the group, says education is, ironical- ly, key to getting unique projects like a FROOHJH-DQFKRUHG KRWHO FRQYHUVLRQ R the ground.
“These types of deals are not neces- sarily easy for lenders to understand,” he says. “For this particular deal, we educated the market and, in particu- lar, the lender who closed, about the business plan and the demand for this kind of hotel.”
Ray also says these types of deals have been made a bit easier by the fact that AJ Capital now has nine Gradu- ate Hotels under its belt.
“It’s never easy, but once we have educated the market about a product DQG FUHDWHG D ÀHOG RI LQWHUHVWHG FDSLWDO VRXUFHV, ZH FDQ UH-DSSURDFK WKDW ÀHOG
on the next relevant deal,” he notes.

World Famous West Coast Customs, Walmart Superstore

MEDIA DISTRICT

Olive & Thyme (expansion),

Whole Foods Market (opening 2018)

DOWNTOWN BURBANK

European Wax Center, Five Guys Burgers and Fries, Gyu-Kaku Japanese BBQ, Steak n Shake,

Wood Ranch BBQ & Grill, Yard House,

MAGNOLIA PARK

Morphe Brushes, Slone Vintage, Unique Vintage (remodel), The Hangar Grille

NEW DEVELOPMENTS

• Springhill Suites Los Angeles Burbank/Downtown, opened summer 2015

• Tesla Motors Burbank opened October 2015

• Hilton Garden Inn to open summer 2016

• IKEA set to expand to 456,000 sq. ft., its largest

US store in spring 2017

• Nickelodeon expansion scheduled to open 2017

• Talaria at Burbank mixed-use project to include

Whole Foods Market, opening spring 2018

• First Street Village mix-use project with 13,765 sq. ft. of new retail space

DYNAMIC

“You need to make sure your deal works, that you have realistic expecta- tions and that you are keeping the cap- ital stack as uncomplicated as possible. Construction lenders are getting more DQG PRUH ÀFNOH LQ WKLV HQYLURQPHQW. The less brain damage, the better.”
Gottlieb notes food and beverage outlets have also become very im- portant within the properties, as they must both complement the other of- ferings that are walking distance to FDPSXV, EXW VWLOO RHU JXHVWV VRPH- thing unique.
“Hotel restaurants traditionally car- ry stigmas that we strive to reverse,” he says. “Instead of the ubiquitous self-serve pantry and continental EUHDNIDVW EXHW, *UDGXDWH +RWHOV IHD- ture vibrant, yet approachable res- taurants, bars and lounges that gar- QHU D VLJQLÀFDQW ORFDO IROORZLQJ. :H GRQ·W GR VWX ÀQH GLQLQJ RU ZKLWH tablecloths but instead feature out- lets where guests, students and local residents can visit multiple times per week. This is becoming more com- mon, but we use local purveyors and products whenever possible.”
AJ Capital is currently sourcing fu-

BURBANK

For more information:

818-238-5180 | econdev@burbankca.gov | www.econdev.burbankca.gov
ture Graduate Hotel sites and is “ac-
tively looking at all of the obvious West Coast markets,” according to Gottlieb. Other Western-based prop- erties include the Graduate Tempe hotel, which was converted from the Twin Palms Hotel in September 2014. The hotel sits across from the Arizona State University campus in Tempe.

26 • January 2016 • Western Real Estate Business www.REBusinessOnline.com

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Mission Capital has hired Terry Strongin as a director to its debt and equity finance group in the Palm Beach Gardens, FL office. Director Rob Beyer has also relocated to the FL office.

Mission Capital Beefs Up Southeast

Presence

Tuesday, 12 May 2015

Mission Capital Advisors has hired Terry Strongin, a 16-year industry veteran, as a director in its debt and equity finance group.
Strongin is based in the New York company's Palm Beach Gardens, Fla., office. He previously was founder and managing member of Equity 24 LLC, a West Palm Beach, Fla., investment operation. And before that he was director of capital markets lending at Bond Street Capital. He also had been with Ocwen Financial Corp. as vice president of commercial lending.
Joining Strongin, who will arrange debt and equity for clients, at Mission's Palm Beach Gardens office is Rob Beyer, who is relocating from the company's New York office. He joined Mission two years ago from Siegel Group, a Las Vegas investor, where he was general counsel. He previously was with Related Cos. and Carlton Group. The two will also structure sales transactions.
The additions to the Florida office are part of an effort by Mission to expand its capabilities in the southeastern United States, where it has arranged some $550 million of equity and financing since 2010.
David Tobin, president of Mission, said its expanded focus on the region is driven by its "strong economic activity and growth prospects." He added that the company would continue to add staff in the region.

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