The Real Deal New York

Posts Tagged ‘vantage properties’

  • Developer Vantage Properties has partnered with investment firm Angelo, Gordon & Co. in a $245 million, 2,200-apartment buy in Plainsboro, N.J., marking one of the biggest apartment sales ever in the tri-state area, according to the Wall Street Journal. The portfolio of rental units, located near Princeton, N.J., is being sold by insurer AIG, which bought up the properties from developer Kushner Companies in 2007. The deal comes amidst a bullish outlook for multi-family properties nationwide — with vacancy rates dropping and opportunities for new development limited, more investors have been pursuing existing rental apartment buys, experts say. [more]

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  • Ailing Anglo Irish Bank underwrote hundreds of millions of dollars in real estate debt in New York during
    the boom and is now unloading a $51.5 million mortgage secured by a package of apartment buildings
    in Upper Manhattan, owned by Vantage Properties.

    Anglo Irish, based in Dublin, is in financial distress after billions of dollars in global real estate loans went
    bad. Ireland’s central bank reported last month that the bank, which provided financing for projects
    such as the Apthorp and 225 Rector Street, is winding down operations. A
    representative of the New York office said the bank declined to comment.

    The Vantage Properties loan is being marketed by investment sales firm Massey Knakal Realty Services.
    Company CEO Robert Knakal declined to comment on the offering, but said in this week’s edition of
    Insights from The Real Deal that currently demand for note sales is higher than for actual properties (see
    video above).

    The Vantage loan was being offered for the face value of the unpaid balance of the loan. Marketing
    materials distributed earlier this month by Massey Knakal, and obtained by The Real Deal, said the note
    was performing as of November.

    The sale of the note highlights the wide variety of loans that are on the market and the complexity of
    selling them. Loan sales now make up an ever growing proportion of commercial transactions, yet the
    market remains shrouded in secrecy because note sales are rarely recorded in government records and
    both the lenders and borrowers often don’t want the offering made public because acknowledging a
    property is in distress can further reduce values.

    The 474-unit Vantage Properties note, secured by buildings such as 90 Ellwood Street in Fort George and
    248 Sherman Avenue in Inwood, has 414 rent-stabilized units and estimated annual gross revenue of
    $5.5 million, the marketing materials say.

    Neil Rubler, president and CEO of Vantage Properties, declined to comment via e-mail, but added
    that, “I also can’t comment on our interest in buying the note, as it’s our policy not to discuss acquisition
    efforts.”

    Massey Knakal is active in the Bronx as well, marketing two purchase options on notes for major
    properties there. The firm is offering an option to buy the $36.5 million note secured by two buildings
    with 490 units — Robert Fulton Terrace at 530-540 East 169th Street in Morrisania and Fordham
    Towers at 480 East 188th Street in Belmont. Those properties, purchased by a group of investors led by
    Mark Karasick in 2007, are
    being foreclosed on by special servicer LNR Partners.

    The other Bronx asset is a $35 million loan in foreclosure controlled by LNR, that is secured by 10
    buildings
    owned by Milbank Real Estate.

    The Milbank portfolio has attracted particular scrutiny from the city and housing advocates who believe
    the loan is too high for the 531-unit property, which has estimated gross revenues of $5.9 million for
    2010, the marketing materials say. The properties are plagued by housing code violations, with a total of
    4,372 in the 10 properties, city officials said.

    In fact, today Department of Housing Preservation and Development Commissioner Raphael Cestero
    announced subpoenas to order executives of Milbank and LNR Partners to appear at HPD’s offices in
    January to discuss the Bronx properties.

    Knakal, in his interview with Insights from The Real Deal conducted before the subpoena was
    announced, said owners were not deterred by housing advocates.

    “Buyers have to have a lot of intestinal fortitude to deal with properties that have rent-regulated
    tenants in them from the beginning, so a little bit of pressure from housing advocates doesn’t really
    dissuade investors,” he said.

    Knakal said activity on note sales was high.

    “I would say on the notes we have sold this year, where the collateral has been Manhattan-based
    properties, we have gotten a minimum of 50 offers,” he said.

    Harold Shultz, senior fellow at the non-profit research center Citizens Housing and Planning Council, said
    lenders and special servicers in many cases have been reluctant to sell notes, because they have to mark
    down their value.

    “But presumably they can’t hold on to them forever. Perhaps this is the beginning of the big sell off,” he
    said.

    [more]

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  • During the real estate boom, buyers such as Vantage Properties and Urban American snapped up large multi-family portfolios, and real estate moguls like Harry Macklowe made eye-popping office building acquisitions.

    With the downturn, that activity largely stopped as overall sales declined and financing large deals became even more difficult.

    Yet in recent weeks, two significant portfolios have been brought to market, signaling a shift in expectations, brokers said, but bringing risks as well.

    “There is a real belief that pricing has returned in many instances,” David Schechtman, senior director at Eastern Consolidated, said in the latest edition of Insights from The Real Deal (see video above).

    The larger portfolio, asking $276 million, is a package of 26 mostly residential properties owned by landlord Steven Croman, which is being marketed by Massey Knakal Realty Services. The other is a smaller collection of six mixed-use properties and a parking lot on the Upper East Side owned by the estate of Arthur Brown, listed by Schechtman for $26 million. The six walk-up buildings have 45 apartments and seven retail locations along First and Second avenues.

    The 26-building Croman portfolio is being offered as a single package or in 16 smaller groupings. As a package, it is believed to be the most expensive portfolio put on the market since the downturn began in 2008, several brokers said.
    “These are mature assets that are turnkey and probably have, give or take, 20 to 25 percent more upside,” Croman said. “We have done a lot of work on these, we have done the heavy lifting.” He said he would use proceeds from individual sales or a bulk sale to buy new properties, in what is referred to as a 1031 exchange.

    Croman, who said he owns approximately 100 buildings in New York City, is considered by brokers to be an aggressive landlord who maximizes the value of his properties before returning them to the market, meaning it was unlikely a buyer could expect to improve rental income substantially from what he has achieved.

    The Croman portfolio is concentrated on the East Side in neighborhoods such as Kips Bay, Gramercy Park and the East Village.

    Schechtman said there were risks with bringing such a large portfolio to market today, as real estate sales activity remains soft.

    “I think the two greatest risks are one, finding financing and two, the amount of equity you are going to put up,” he said.

    Others were skeptical Croman would be able to achieve the $276 million asked.

    Timour Shafran, an investment sales broker at Capin & Associates, speculated that European investors anticipating a decline in the euro might pay such a relatively high amount, as an investment strategy. But he did not think local investors would pay anywhere near that much.

    “Short of that, I don’t see anyone stepping up to the plate to pay this number,” he said.

    [more]

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  • Vantage Properties, the Queens landlord that recently settled for $1 million in a harassment case with its rent-regulated tenants, has reached an agreement with the union representing its superintendents to raise salaries and add health care coverage, according to the Daily News. “Once the buildings get better… the tenants will be treated better,” Ozzie Lo Verme, president of Teamsters Local 808, explained. Lo Verme said negotiations with the landlord began to pick up in the midst of the controversy surrounding Vantage’s tenant harassment suit. The new contract, Vantage’s first with the union, affects 86 supers and porters in 88 Queens buildings. [NYDN]

    [more]

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  • Vantage Properties, the Queens landlord that recently settled for $1 million in a harassment case with its rent-regulated tenants, has reached an agreement with the union representing its superintendents to raise salaries and add health care coverage, according to the Daily News. “Once the buildings get better… the tenants will be treated better,” Ozzie Lo Verme, president of Teamsters Local 808, explained. Lo Verme said negotiations with the landlord began to pick up in the midst of the controversy surrounding Vantage’s tenant harassment suit. The new contract, Vantage’s first with the union, affects 86 supers and porters in 88 Queens buildings. [NYDN]

    [more]

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  • Vantage still under fire

    March 24, 2010 10:06AM

    Queens landlord Vantage Properties was already hit with a $1 million settlement last month after the state accused the company of harassing its rent-regulated tenants, but it is not out of the water yet. According to the Daily News, Vantage has been in negotiations for over a month in a separate case in which tenants sued for abusive business practices. The 21 plaintiffs, who filed the class action lawsuit in 2009, are asking for between $1,000 and $5,000 each in civil penalties. Their attorneys said settlement discussions are still ongoing, though it remains to be seen whether a deal will come from it. Vantage declined to comment. The next court date is scheduled for April 13. [NYDN]

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  • Attorney General Andrew Cuomo

    Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s settlement agreement announced today
    not only forced landlord Vantage Properties to pay $1 million, but it
    put all residential landlords on notice that the state’s top law
    enforcement officer wants property owners to be more tenant-friendly
    than the law demands.

    The deal struck with Vantage forces the controversial landlord to
    adhere to a three-year oversight program that will force the company
    to stop serving what Cuomo described as baseless legal notices and frivolous Housing Court
    actions, he said in the statement.

    Cuomo was prepared to sue Vantage over the company’s alleged
    harassment
    of tenants following an investigation of the company, he
    said.

    Vantage also must pay $750,000 into a tenants’ compensation fund and
    $250,000 to a legal and education fund.

    Cuomo said all landlords should follow the tighter rules, which will
    form a “best practices” standard in the industry. [more]

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  • From left: Area Property Partners chairman William Mack and Vantage president Neil Rubler

    As pressure mounts on underperforming commercial real estate in New York City, partnerships are likely to rely more heavily on legal minutiae to battle amongst themselves, legal experts said.

    An expected lawsuit by state Attorney General Andrew Cuomo against Vantage Properties could give ammunition to an equity partner of the major city landlord to restructure ownership or remove the landlord from its position in the partnership, legal experts speculated. [more]

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  • Cuomo plans to sue landlord Vantage

    January 28, 2010 02:47PM

    From left: New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo and Neil Rubler, president and CEO of Vantage Properties

    New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo announced today that he would
    sue Vantage Properties, one of the largest landlords of rent-regulated
    housing in New York City, for allegedly harassing tenants. Cuomo said in a statement that he would sue to halt the alleged
    harassment and seek monetary damages to tenants who were victimized. “[Vantage's] underhanded tactics displace long-time residents from
    their homes and exacerbate the acute affordable housing shortage,”
    Cuomo said in a statement. This is not the first time the office of the New York attorney general
    has put pressure on a large city landlord. In December 2006, the office
    of then Attorney General Eliot Spitzer hammered out an agreement with
    Pinnacle Group, a landlord that was strongly criticized for evictions
    and rent charges. The allegations against Vantage, headed by Neil Rubler, include trying
    to evict tenants with claims that the apartment is not their primary
    residence, and suing tenants in housing court for non-payment despite
    receiving rent payments in cash. [more]

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  • Five Washington Heights residents have filed suit against their landlord for allegedly violating the Tenant Protection Act by intimidating, harassing and threatening them in order to force them out of their rent regulated apartments, according to the Indypendent. The target of the suit, Vantage Properties, has also been accused of not addressing health and safety concerns, such as damaged floors and leaky ceilings, in the building at 3495 Broadway. “The tenants live with mold, rodents and roaches because of Vantage and 3489 Broadway LLC’s gross negligence and disregard,” Lyda Tyburec, a Manhattan Legal Services staff attorney affiliated with the case, said. There are a reported 100 different housing code violations on the 80-unit building, according to the city housing agency.

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