June 30, 2008 01:37PM
By James Kelly
In the face of an anticipated slowdown across the office market,
Midtown's Class B leasing activity soared in the first five months of
2008, more than double the amount during the same period a year ago.
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July 01, 2008 04:35PM
By Adam Pincus
Developers of flagging residential condo projects in the city may
be faced with a new real estate Catch-22: the prospect of having to
provide additional equity to lenders or take out more loans if they
want to cut prices to attract buyers.
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July 01, 2008 11:51AM
By Lauren Elkies
The pace of residential sales in Manhattan continues to slow, causing a backlog of inventory. The rest of the summer doesn't look any more promising.
Sales activity is down by roughly one-third from the same point last year, Jonathan Miller, president and CEO of appraisal firm Miller Samuel, said last month.
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June 30, 2008 06:18PM
By Katherine Dykstra
Located in Downtown Brooklyn, Belltel is not without its conveniences,
subway access being one of them. This was one of the major
selling points for "The Real World" team. Another? The fact that they
could have as much elbow room as they needed because the upper units
are still empty.
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July 01, 2008 01:46PM
By Jill Gardiner
Multimillion-dollar homes are still finding takers in the Hamptons, but the notoriously tony vacation destination is showing serious signs of softening.
While the market there does not mirror the meltdown in the rest of the country, the Wall Street cash that has long flooded into the East End is clearly not flowing as freely this summer.
This month, The Real Deal offers a series of stories on what's happening on the South Fork.
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June 30, 2008 04:47PM
President and CEO of McSam Hotel Group, a Great Neck-based hotel development, construction, management and investment company, which has built over 30 moderately priced hotels in New York City, has 29 under construction and 20 in the pipeline.
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June 27, 2008 06:41PM
By The Real Deal Staff
Once a thriving manufacturing area where an immigrant influx spurred the growth of the apparel industry, the Garment District, bounded roughly by Fifth and Ninth avenues and 34th and 42nd streets, by the 1990s had become one of the most depressed parts of Midtown Manhattan with the gradual loss of clothing factories, suppliers and wholesalers due to pressure from cheaper clothing imports.
But it seems that at least one industry has quietly taken over the area over the past few years: architecture, along with its counterpart, engineering.
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July 01, 2008 01:31PM
By Dorn Townsend
In the wake of the subprime and credit crises, problems are
becoming apparent even in New York City's usually buoyant real estate
market. For this supplement, The Real Deal
has chosen to bring some plaster: First, we home in on macro
difficulties, as well as some less-discussed problems.
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July 01, 2008 12:12PM
By Avi Salzman
Although the Federal Reserve has tried to stimulate the market by
lowering rates and making it easier for banks to borrow money, brokers
and economists have noted that developers, building buyers and
consumers continue to struggle to get loans, particularly from large
banks.
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July 01, 2008 01:49PM
By Alex Ulam
This time, the mortgage banking industry is not taking any chances.
Stung by the subprime mortgage crisis, the tightening credit market,
Wall Street layoffs and other bleak economic indicators, banks are
nervous. And this time around -- in contrast to other periods in real
estate history -- lenders are not waiting for the owners of commercial
properties to go into foreclosure.
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June 30, 2008 06:15PM
By Catherine Curan
Typically, the extreme ends of the market -- luxury stores like Saks Fifth Avenue and discount mass-merchants like Wal-Mart -- prove recession-proof. By contrast, mid-market chains like the Gap usually suffer.
Here in New York, many generalities hold true, but the massive influx of free-spending foreign tourists and the huge population of office workers add slightly different nuances to the demand picture.
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July 01, 2008 01:05PM
By Myles Mellor
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July 01, 2008 01:05PM
By Myles Mellor
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June 30, 2008 03:36PM
By Melissa Dehncke-McGill
For this month's Q & A, The Real Deal talked to brokers who said that while landlords are bending over backwards to maintain their monthly rental prices, they are offering more concessions than they were even six months ago in the form of a month of free rent, wiggle room on move-in dates and perks like free gym memberships.
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July 01, 2008 01:57PM
It's a tough time to be a residential
developer, as The Real Deal explores
in a series of stories. Projects
are taking longer to sell out, placing
developers in a bind as lenders
typically won't let them lower prices.
And as units sit, developers find
themselves with additional costs.
Some developers are choosing to
go with Plan B and switch from
condos to rentals, but even that is
far from a safe bet these days.
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June 30, 2008 01:14PM
By James Kelly
As the credit market tightens, demand is slowing for multi-property
portfolios — the most expensive investment sale category. Of the
property packages that do sell, more and more are being split into
smaller pieces when they change hands.
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July 01, 2008 05:39PM
By Katherine Dykstra
Over the last few years, the number of local Brooklyn blogs has
multiplied exponentially; May's Brooklyn Blogfest drew more than 100
bloggers, and some have even begun to call Brooklyn, 'Bloglyn.' For the bloggers, though, this is not just filling time -- it's about having a say in the development of the borough.
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