Third-quarter foreclosures climb 103 percent in Suffolk County, 808 Columbus Ave. racks up celebrity tenants ... and more

November 05, 2009 08:00AM

1. Property investors on the hunt again [WSJ]
2. Pharma mogul Richard Ullman sells One CPW condo for $17M, but no takers for his $75M spot at 15 CPW [Post, 2nd item]
3. $300B in federal housing aid, but only $60B for renters [Time]
4. Third-quarter foreclosures climb 103 percent in Suffolk County [PropertyShark]
5. Two new rental buildings coming to 127th Street and and 128th Street in West Harlem [Curbed]
6. New 808 Columbus Ave. building counts Shannon Elizabeth and Anthony Anderson as tenants [Post, 3rd item]
7. Buffett, Goldman bidding for Fannie Mae tax credits [WSJ]
8. Fairway Market expanding to Westchester [NYT]
9. Under new legislators, planned Long Island developments may be at risk [LIBN]
10. Diana Olick: "Pay-option ARMs are the new subprime" [CNBC]
11. UK Retailers, builders starting to recover [Financial Times]
12. Commercial real estate "between a rock and a hard place," Deutsche Bank economist says [A Student of the Real Estate Game]
13. Has the housing bubble completely burst yet? [BiggerPockets]
14. Weighing the new FDIC bank rules [National Real Estate Investor]
15. PIMCO says housing prices will fall further [Square Feet Blog]
16. Survey: Commercial RE will take time to emerge from crisis [Reuters]
17. Asian investors, low interest rates driving an asset bubble [Yahoo Finance]
18. Construction starts to rise 11 percent in 2010, forecasts McGraw-Hill report [Realty Times]
19. Liability insurance costs skyrocket for REITs [National Real Estate Investor]
20. FHA delays yearly fiscal report release, citing concerns about accuracy [Housingwire]
21. CMBS at risk in the tens of billions of dollars [Costar]
22. Developers Diversified deal could lead to more CMBS sales [WSJ]
23. Investor says Roubini is wrong about bubbles in gold, emerging market stocks [Bloomberg]


Comments

Leave a Comment

(optional)
(optional)

The Real Deal reserves the right to delete any comment it finds to be rude, obscene, racist, sexist, bigoted, irrelevant or repetitive, as well as inappropriate comments about anyone's personal appearance. The Real Deal does not endorse any comments posted on its Web site nor does it verify the veracity of comments or the identity of posters.