The Real Deal New York

Posts Tagged ‘lefrak city’

  • Possible Stuy Town investors have baggage

    February 05, 2010 05:23PM

    Richard Lefrak’s organization is a possible contender for Stuy Town

    Tishman Speyer Properties and BlackRock Realty were pilloried for aggressively pushing out tenants and running afoul of the city’s J-51 tax abatement rules. But some of the firms that are being mentioned as possible replacements as owners or managers at Stuyvesant Town and Peter Cooper Village — such as developers LeFrak Organization and Rose Associates, and real estate firm Stonehenge Partners — come with their own skeletons in the closet. The New York City real estate world is bracing for a struggle among titans for management or ownership of the 11,200-unit housing complex on Manhattan’s East Side following the announcement  last month that the owners would cede control. Potential parties must negotiate with special servicer CWCapital Asset Management, the majority of which is owned by Canadian institutional fund Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec. The special servicer represents the interests of the bondholders of the securitized loans on Stuyvesant Town. Other firms being bandied about as possible investors or investors are WL Ross & Co., Centerbridge Partners, Related Companies, WinnCompanies and Prudential Douglas Elliman, according to media reports. The thorny city tax abatement program known as J-51 that contributed to the forfeiture of Stuy Town and Peter Cooper Village has dogged one of the leading contenders for the site, LeFrak. [more]

  • Dry powder piles up

    October 26, 2009 09:51AM

    From the October issue: New York City is at a peculiar crossroads. For months, investors have
    marshaled unprecedented amounts of capital, salivating at the prospect
    of snapping up distressed properties. “We’re fortunate this cycle to
    have the most dry powder in our
    history,” Blackstone Group president Tony James said last month at the
    Barclays Capital Global Financial Services Conference, which was held
    in Manhattan. The firm has about $28 billion in unspent capital, he
    said. About $12 billion of that is earmarked for real estate. “We’re
    just beginning what will be the best period in decades for private
    investing,” he said. Dan Fasulo, a managing director at Real Capital
    Analytics, estimated
    that $50 billion has been raised and is ready to be deployed into
    distressed real estate. Paradoxically, investors have found very little
    worth buying so far, in large part because banks continue to hold
    troubled loans on their books, hoping conditions will improve. [more]