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Whole Foods signs for sixth S.F. market at new project

September 30, 2010 in Uncategorized

Whole Foods signs for sixth S.F. market at new project

San Francisco Business Times – by J.K. Dineen

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Whole Foods will open a supermarket in AvalonBay’s $50 million development on Ocean Avenue, a 173-unit apartment complex tentatively scheduled to be under construction in October.

The upscale supermarket chain will occupy 26,000 square feet on the ground floor of one of two apartment buildings to be built at 1150 Ocean Ave., a site Kragen Auto Parts previously occupied.

“We couldn’t be more excited about Whole Foods occupying the grocery space,” said Meg Spriggs, senior development director for AvalonBay. “(The market) will provide a tremendous amenity to our residents and the community at large.”

Construction of the Ocean Avenue project will take 18 to 21 months. The AvalonBay development is the fruit of a Balboa Park Station district rezoning the city adopted in 2009. The plan was designed to create a pedestrian-oriented housing and retail village near City College and the Balboa Park transit hub, which is one of the busiest BART stations.

Read more: Whole Foods signs for sixth S.F. market at new project – San Francisco Business Times

Wednesday, September 29, 2010, 5:57pm PDT Print Email RSS Feed Share Comments Some day the old San Francisco Giftcenter & Jewelrymart at 888 Brannan St. will likely be converted into a SoMa office building. But the current owner, ScanlanKemperBard, may not be around to see it happens. The Portland, Ore.-based investor has defaulted on a $73.6 million loan secured by the building, according to the newsletter Real Estate Alert. And now Wells Fargo is shopping the note, marketing it as a chance to take control the property and reposition it to offices. The sale of the mortgage comes four months after the San Francisco Planning Commission approved plans to convert the 140,000-square-foot complex into office space, a $30 million project. The May 27 vote enabled ScanlonKemperBard to convert the third and fourth floors of the wholesale showroom building to office space. Some 174,183 square feet will continue to cater to the traditional jewelry and gift trades. The center had already hit hard times when SKB, a private equity real estate firm, bought the property 2007 for $94 million. The Giftcenter had been losing business for a decade as former tenants moved to Las Vegas and the Internet increasingly rendered the traditional face-to-face wholesale trade obsolete. In testimony before the Planning Commission, SKB President Todd Gooding said the recession has taken its toll on the complex. Vacancy rates are 54 percent. Rents for the whole sale jewelry and gift businesses plummeted from more than $21 a square foot to the “low teens.” Gooding said they had several promising new tenants close to signing leases but those deals unraveled when the economy tanked. “We tried to do everything we could do to keep the gift folks — rent concessions were not enough,” said Gooding. SKB did not return calls seeking comment. Read more: S.F. Giftcenter in default – San Francisco Business Times

September 29, 2010 in Uncategorized

Wednesday, September 29, 2010, 5:57pm PDT

Some day the old San Francisco Giftcenter & Jewelrymart at 888 Brannan St. will likely be converted into a SoMa office building.

But the current owner, ScanlanKemperBard, may not be around to see it happens.

The Portland, Ore.-based investor has defaulted on a $73.6 million loan secured by the building, according to the newsletter Real Estate Alert. And now Wells Fargo is shopping the note, marketing it as a chance to take control the property and reposition it to offices.

The sale of the mortgage comes four months after the San Francisco Planning Commission approved plans to convert the 140,000-square-foot complex into office space, a $30 million project. The May 27 vote enabled ScanlonKemperBard to convert the third and fourth floors of the wholesale showroom building to office space. Some 174,183 square feet will continue to cater to the traditional jewelry and gift trades.

The center had already hit hard times when SKB, a private equity real estate firm, bought the property 2007 for $94 million. The Giftcenter had been losing business for a decade as former tenants moved to Las Vegas and the Internet increasingly rendered the traditional face-to-face wholesale trade obsolete.

In testimony before the Planning Commission, SKB President Todd Gooding said the recession has taken its toll on the complex. Vacancy rates are 54 percent. Rents for the whole sale jewelry and gift businesses plummeted from more than $21 a square foot to the “low teens.” Gooding said they had several promising new tenants close to signing leases but those deals unraveled when the economy tanked. “We tried to do everything we could do to keep the gift folks — rent concessions were not enough,” said Gooding.

SKB did not return calls seeking comment.

Read more: S.F. Giftcenter in default – San Francisco Business Times 

NET LEASE DEALS BECOME A BRIGHT SPOT IN A SLOW SALES MARKET MAR 23, 2010 12:29 PM Stan Johnson Co. sold the above CVS, in Texas, last month, for approximately $2.26 million. Average transaction prices have been trending up recently, from $1 million and $1.5 million deals to $4 million and $5 million. While total investment sales activity in the retail real estate sector remains slow, single-tenant net lease deals are picking up steam, according to industry insiders. The lower price tags associated with single-tenant properties have translated into greater demand from investors. Meanwhile, the easier risk assessments inherent in deals involving single tenants with long-term leases make net lease acquisitions seem like a safer bet to lenders. As a result, in the first quarter of this year, there was an appreciable uptick in transaction volume compared to the first quarter of 2009, and on some of the highest quality assets, cap rates declined. “These deals aren’t trading on pure real estate; they are trading on the credit of the tenant [as well.] That adds value in a tough market,” says Kris Cooper, managing director with the retail capital markets at Jones Lang LaSalle, a Chicago-based real estate services firm. “And a lot of those deals are done long term, with 10-year, 15-year, 20-year leases, so you have a lot of stability, a lot of security.” Because of net lease deals’ perceived stability, the sales volume in the sector hasn’t dropped as far during the down cycle as it has for overall retail investment sales. While total sales declined about 80 percent from mid-2007 through mid-2009, sales of net lease properties decreased by only about 40 percent, according to Bernard J. Haddigan, senior vice president and managing director of the national retail group with Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services, an Encino, Calif.-based firm. Even during the deep freeze of 2009, single tenant assets occupied by the likes of McDonald’s and AutoZone continued trading, says Jon Adamo, vice president of dispositions with National Retail Properties Inc., an Orlando, Fla.-based REIT specializing in single-tenant net lease investments. And now that financing has become easier to obtain and tenants are once again talking about expansion, investors are starting to target larger properties in major metro markets. Among these are well-performing drugstores including CVS and Walgreens; dollar stores and bank branches for large national banks like Chase and Bank of America, according to Adamo. Brokers say Walgreens drugstores are among the most coveted single-tenant properties on the market. Brokers note that though there has been less interest from 1031 exchange buyers (simply because in today’s market those buyers have fewer gains to protect), high net worth individuals and newly formed funds continue to have an appetite for single-tenant net lease deals. While last year many of the deals that closed were in the $1 million to $2 million range, in the first quarter of 2010 there were more transactions with $5 million and $6 million price tags, says Randy Blankstein, president with Northbrook, Ill.-based net lease brokerage firm The Boulder Group. In part that’s a function of financing availability—loans for transactions larger than $8 million are still difficult to get, he notes. But on smaller deals involving a good credit tenant it’s possible to secure conservative financing with a 70 percent LTV ratio and an interest rate of approximately 6.25 percent, with a five-year term and a 25-year amortization schedule. (That’s not far off the historical norms of 80 percent LTVs, 10-year terms and 30-year amortization schedules.) In addition, Blankstein notes that approximately 30 percent of net lease transactions today are done on an all-cash basis. The more favorable market conditions have caused cap rates on assets occupied by the most desirable tenants to compress by about 20 basis points to 25 basis points, to the mid-7 percent range, according to several brokers. Today, a deal on a Walgreens, which is considered a benchmark for the net lease market, would close at approximately 7.75 percent, says Gill M. Warner, senior director of investment sales with Stan Johnson Co., a Tulsa, Okla.-based commercial real estate investment firm. Warner estimates that in the first quarter of 2010 Stan Johnson, which specializes in single-tenant net lease assets, experienced a 50 percent increase in transaction volume from the first quarter of 2009. Even assets occupied by riskier tenants are trading hands, though at higher than average cap rates. Last month, for example, National Retail Properties closed on a sale of a Starbucks site in Harlingen, Texas at an 8.62 percent cap rate. Starbucks has eight years remaining on its lease. Barring any unforeseen circumstances, the net lease market will likely continue to improve through the rest of the year, according to Cooper. “I think we are at the bottom, we’ve seen stabilization occur. At some point, we’ll see prices increase,” he says. —Elaine Misonzhnik

September 29, 2010 in Uncategorized

NET LEASE DEALS BECOME A BRIGHT SPOT IN A SLOW SALES MARKET

MAR 23, 2010 12:29 PM

Stan Johnson Co. sold the above CVS, in Texas, last month, for approximately $2.26 million. Average transaction prices have been trending up recently, from $1 million and $1.5 million deals to $4 million and $5 million.

While total investment sales activity in the retail real estate sector remains slow, single-tenant net lease deals are picking up steam, according to industry insiders.

The lower price tags associated with single-tenant properties have translated into greater demand from investors. Meanwhile, the easier risk assessments inherent in deals involving single tenants with long-term leases make net lease acquisitions seem like a safer bet to lenders. As a result, in the first quarter of this year, there was an appreciable uptick in transaction volume compared to the first quarter of 2009, and on some of the highest quality assets, cap rates declined.

“These deals aren’t trading on pure real estate; they are trading on the credit of the tenant [as well.] That adds value in a tough market,” says Kris Cooper, managing director with the retail capital markets at Jones Lang LaSalle, a Chicago-based real estate services firm. “And a lot of those deals are done long term, with 10-year, 15-year, 20-year leases, so you have a lot of stability, a lot of security.”

Because of net lease deals’ perceived stability, the sales volume in the sector hasn’t dropped as far during the down cycle as it has for overall retail investment sales. While total sales declined about 80 percent from mid-2007 through mid-2009, sales of net lease properties decreased by only about 40 percent, according to Bernard J. Haddigan, senior vice president and managing director of the national retail group with Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services, an Encino, Calif.-based firm.

Even during the deep freeze of 2009, single tenant assets occupied by the likes of McDonald’s and AutoZone continued trading, says Jon Adamo, vice president of dispositions with National Retail Properties Inc., an Orlando, Fla.-based REIT specializing in single-tenant net lease investments. And now that financing has become easier to obtain and tenants are once again talking about expansion, investors are starting to target larger properties in major metro markets. Among these are well-performing drugstores including CVS and Walgreens; dollar stores and bank branches for large national banks like Chase and Bank of America, according to Adamo.

Brokers say Walgreens drugstores are among the most coveted single-tenant properties on the market.

Brokers note that though there has been less interest from 1031 exchange buyers (simply because in today’s market those buyers have fewer gains to protect), high net worth individuals and newly formed funds continue to have an appetite for single-tenant net lease deals. While last year many of the deals that closed were in the $1 million to $2 million range, in the first quarter of 2010 there were more transactions with $5 million and $6 million price tags, says Randy Blankstein, president with Northbrook, Ill.-based net lease brokerage firm The Boulder Group.

In part that’s a function of financing availability—loans for transactions larger than $8 million are still difficult to get, he notes. But on smaller deals involving a good credit tenant it’s possible to secure conservative financing with a 70 percent LTV ratio and an interest rate of approximately 6.25 percent, with a five-year term and a 25-year amortization schedule. (That’s not far off the historical norms of 80 percent LTVs, 10-year terms and 30-year amortization schedules.)

In addition, Blankstein notes that approximately 30 percent of net lease transactions today are done on an all-cash basis.

The more favorable market conditions have caused cap rates on assets occupied by the most desirable tenants to compress by about 20 basis points to 25 basis points, to the mid-7 percent range, according to several brokers. Today, a deal on a Walgreens, which is considered a benchmark for the net lease market, would close at approximately 7.75 percent, says Gill M. Warner, senior director of investment sales with Stan Johnson Co., a Tulsa, Okla.-based commercial real estate investment firm. Warner estimates that in the first quarter of 2010 Stan Johnson, which specializes in single-tenant net lease assets, experienced a 50 percent increase in transaction volume from the first quarter of 2009.

Even assets occupied by riskier tenants are trading hands, though at higher than average cap rates. Last month, for example, National Retail Properties closed on a sale of a Starbucks site in Harlingen, Texas at an 8.62 percent cap rate. Starbucks has eight years remaining on its lease.

Barring any unforeseen circumstances, the net lease market will likely continue to improve through the rest of the year, according to Cooper. “I think we are at the bottom, we’ve seen stabilization occur. At some point, we’ll see prices increase,” he says.

—Elaine Misonzhnik

Home » Retail Stocks » Earnings Earnings Cheat Sheet: Walgreen Pops Some Profit Pills September 28, 2010 | about: WAG Font Size: Print Email Recommend 0 Share 0 Wall St. Cheat Sheet 38284 Followers 15 Following Follow Profile Articles (565) StockTalks (950) Recommends (4) Comments (61) Send Message About this author: Visit: Wall St. Cheat Sheet Submit an article to Walgreen Co. (WAG) is popping some serious profit pills. In our Walgreens earnings preview, we said “even a mediocre report may be cause for a move to the upside” in shares of the ubiquitous neighborhood drugstore. Turns out the report was excellent and the stock is soaring over 11%. Earnings: Earnings increased to $470 million ($0.49 cents a share) from $436 million ($0.44 cents a share) last year. Revenues: Sales increased 7.4% to $16.87 billion. Notable Stats: Prescription sales (66% of total revenue) increased 6.5% and 1.6% on a same-store basis. Prescription volume popped 3.3%. Market share in retail pharmacy was 19.5% (+0.6%). Drugstore count was up 8.1% to 7,561 drugstores. Front-end same-store sales (sales of food, cosmetics, junk, etc.) edged up 1.2%. The network of certified immunizers and other health-care professionals grew from 16,000 to 26,000 since last year’s flu season. Technicals: As you can see in the chart below, shorts are getting their faces ripped off as WAG shares spiked over the 200 DMA.

September 29, 2010 in Uncategorized

Earnings Cheat Sheet: Walgreen Pops Some Profit Pills

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Walgreen Co. (WAG) is popping some serious profit pills. In our Walgreensearnings preview, we said “even a mediocre report may be cause for a move to the upside” in shares of the ubiquitous neighborhood drugstore. Turns out the report was excellent and the stock is soaring over 11%.

Earnings: Earnings increased to $470 million ($0.49 cents a share) from $436 million ($0.44 cents a share) last year.

Revenues: Sales increased 7.4% to $16.87 billion.

Notable Stats: Prescription sales (66% of total revenue) increased 6.5% and 1.6% on a same-store basis. Prescription volume popped 3.3%. Market share in retail pharmacy was 19.5% (+0.6%). Drugstore count was up 8.1% to 7,561 drugstores.

Front-end same-store sales (sales of food, cosmetics, junk, etc.) edged up 1.2%. The network of certified immunizers and other health-care professionals grew from 16,000 to 26,000 since last year’s flu season.

Technicals: As you can see in the chart below, shorts are getting their faces ripped off as WAG shares spiked over the 200 DMA.

Content Provided by Zacks.com Market News Stock Market News for September 29, 2010 By: Zacks Equity Research September 29, 2010 | Comments: 0 Recommended this article (2) PFE | INTC | AA | CVX | AAPL | HPQ | WAG Stocks closed with modest gains on Tuesday, wiping off almost all of the previous session’s losses, as investors set aside some concerns resulting from a drop in consumer confidence. Better-than-estimated earnings from Walgreen Co. also helped lift stocks higher. The Dow Jones Industrials Average added 46 points, or 0.43%, to 10858.14. Leading the 30-share index higher were Pfizer (NYSE:PFE – Analyst Report), Intel (NASDAQ:INTC – Analyst Report) and Alcoa (NYSE:AA – Analyst Report) which rose 1.5%, 1.4%, and 1.2%, respectively. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index closed the day at 2379.59, up 9.82, or 0.41%. The broader S&P’s 500-stock index gained more than 5 points, or 0.5%, to 1147.70. Advancing shares beat those that fell in price by a two-to-one margin as volume picked up slightly. The market’s measure of volatility, the CBOE Vix, edged up 0.3% to 22.60. As grim economic news continued to pour in, investors grew hopeful that the Federal Reserve would reinitiate measures that would squeeze out broader uncertainties from the economy. Meanwhile, Chevron (NYSE:CVX – Analyst Report) reported that it had drilled the first deepwater North American well since the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe in the Gulf, off Newfoundland’s coast. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL – Analyst Report) shares fell 1.5% on rumors the company’s COO Tim Cook was leaving to head Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:HPQ – Analyst Report). Leading the S&P 500 industry sectors higher were Consumer Services, up 1%, and health care, up 0.8%. Walgreens (NYSE:WAG – Analyst Report) posted fiscal fourth-quarter earnings of 53 cents a share, ex-items, well above estimates of 44 cents. Health care shares rose on reports the Supreme Court had agreed to hear an appeal from drug makers that would block hospitals and clinics from suing for violations of a federal program allowing discount purchasing of medicines. Gold prices reached a new all-time high of $1300, with Treasury’s $35 billion auction of 5-year notes receiving the lowest-ever yield of 1.26% with demand from both direct and indirect bidders. The US dollar dropped 0.5% against a basket of currencies. The Treasury plans to auction $29 billion 7-year notes following Tuesday’s well-bid sale of 5-years.

September 29, 2010 in Uncategorized

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Stock Market News for September 29, 2010

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September 29, 2010 | Comments: 0

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PFE | INTC | AA | CVX | AAPL | HPQ | WAG

Stocks closed with modest gains on Tuesday, wiping off almost all of the previous session’s losses, as investors set aside some concerns resulting from a drop in consumer confidence. Better-than-estimated earnings from Walgreen Co. also helped lift stocks higher.The Dow Jones Industrials Average added 46 points, or 0.43%, to 10858.14. Leading the 30-share index higher were Pfizer (NYSE:PFE - Analyst Report), Intel (NASDAQ:INTC - Analyst Report) and Alcoa (NYSE:AA - Analyst Report) which rose 1.5%, 1.4%, and 1.2%, respectively. The tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index closed the day at 2379.59, up 9.82, or 0.41%. The broader S&P’s 500-stock index gained more than 5 points, or 0.5%, to 1147.70. Advancing shares beat those that fell in price by a two-to-one margin as volume picked up slightly. The market’s measure of volatility, the CBOE Vix, edged up 0.3% to 22.60.As grim economic news continued to pour in, investors grew hopeful that the Federal Reserve would reinitiate measures that would squeeze out broader uncertainties from the economy.Meanwhile, Chevron (NYSE:CVX - Analyst Report) reported that it had drilled the first deepwater North American well since the Deepwater Horizon catastrophe in the Gulf, off Newfoundland’s coast. Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL - Analyst Report) shares fell 1.5% on rumors the company’s COO Tim Cook was leaving to head Hewlett-Packard (NYSE:HPQ - Analyst Report).Leading the S&P 500 industry sectors higher were Consumer Services, up 1%, and health care, up 0.8%. Walgreens (NYSE:WAG - Analyst Report) posted fiscal fourth-quarter earnings of 53 cents a share, ex-items, well above estimates of 44 cents. Health care shares rose on reports the Supreme Court had agreed to hear an appeal from drug makers that would block hospitals and clinics from suing for violations of a federal program allowing discount purchasing of medicines.Gold prices reached a new all-time high of $1300, with Treasury’s $35 billion auction of 5-year notes receiving the lowest-ever yield of 1.26% with demand from both direct and indirect bidders. The US dollar dropped 0.5% against a basket of currencies. The Treasury plans to auction $29 billion 7-year notes following Tuesday’s well-bid sale of 5-years.

Public hearing scheduled about possible CVS site Request seeks to raze Benedict’s, part of shopping center BY SARAH LAKE • STAFF WRITER • SEPTEMBER 29, 2010 Comments(2) Recommend(2) Print this page E-mail this article Share Type Size A A A SALISBURY — Nearly two years after CVS developers faced resident opposition to plans for construction of a store on South Salisbury Boulevard, a possible compromise has been set forth and is slated to be discussed at an upcoming public hearing. The new proposal would not affect the adjacent residential area, as developers are requesting permission to build on property located within a general commercial district. J.C. BAR Properties, a development company based in Camp Hill, Pa., has submitted an application to the city’s Board of Zoning Appeals regarding the “approval to enlarge a legal nonconforming shopping center at 1000-1054 South Salisbury Boulevard.” The application requests the demolition of roughly 4,150 square feet of the Clairmont Shopping Center, including the adjacent Benedict the Florist, as well as the construction of an 11,900-square-foot free-standing retail building. Glenn Benedict Jr., part owner of Benedict the Florist, said the sale of his property to developers is contingent upon whether this application is approved. “There are actually a lot of contingencies, and this is one of them,” he said. “It’s a very complicated deal.” The developer’s preliminary plan, which came under fire in late 2008, required the purchase of one adjoining property zoned as R-10 residential and the redivision of the parcel to make it one lot, which would then be zoned part-commercial, part-residential and would fall under the split zoning category in the zoning code. But the City Council blocked these plans by closing what was referred to by former mayor Barrie Parsons Tilghman as a “loophole” in the city’s zoning code. Residents of the adjoining Clairmont Village were concerned about the potential development of a commercial property in their neighborhood. In December 2008, John Nason, a South Clairmont Drive homeowner, told The Daily Times he didn’t want to see the neighborhood risk losing its historic character as a residential area. “The (CVS) chain is certainly a very fine drugstore chain and it would be a very worthy addition to the city of Salisbury,” he said. “But the neighborhood takes the position that this is an inappropriate use of the property, and the drugstore could exist with a scaled-back site plan that would not be offensive.” Now, Nason still holds he is not opposed to a CVS on South Salisbury Boulevard, provided it does not affect his neighborhood. Resident Marcus Stephanides said he has not been able to review the new proposal; however, he does not think there will be much resident opposition. “My gut feeling is we would be in no position to fight this because it’s on the other side of the fence,” he said. “They’ll have plenty of room for it, and the traffic will not be as horrendous.” Jason Mitchell, director of development at J.C. BAR Properties, did not respond to requests for comment.

September 29, 2010 in Uncategorized


Public hearing scheduled about possible CVS site

Request seeks to raze Benedict’s, part of shopping center

BY SARAH LAKE • STAFF WRITER • SEPTEMBER 29, 2010

SALISBURY — Nearly two years after CVS developers faced resident opposition to plans for construction of a store on South Salisbury Boulevard, a possible compromise has been set forth and is slated to be discussed at an upcoming public hearing.

The new proposal would not affect the adjacent residential area, as developers are requesting permission to build on property located within a general commercial district.

J.C. BAR Properties, a development company based in Camp Hill, Pa., has submitted an application to the city’s Board of Zoning Appeals regarding the “approval to enlarge a legal nonconforming shopping center at 1000-1054 South Salisbury Boulevard.”

The application requests the demolition of roughly 4,150 square feet of the Clairmont Shopping Center, including the adjacent Benedict the Florist, as well as the construction of an 11,900-square-foot free-standing retail building.

Glenn Benedict Jr., part owner of Benedict the Florist, said the sale of his property to developers is contingent upon whether this application is approved.

“There are actually a lot of contingencies, and this is one of them,” he said. “It’s a very complicated deal.”

The developer’s preliminary plan, which came under fire in late 2008, required the purchase of one adjoining property zoned as R-10 residential and the redivision of the parcel to make it one lot, which would then be zoned part-commercial, part-residential and would fall under the split zoning category in the zoning code.

But the City Council blocked these plans by closing what was referred to by former mayor Barrie Parsons Tilghman as a “loophole” in the city’s zoning code.

Residents of the adjoining Clairmont Village were concerned about the potential development of a commercial property in their neighborhood.

In December 2008, John Nason, a South Clairmont Drive homeowner, told The Daily Times he didn’t want to see the neighborhood risk losing its historic character as a residential area.

“The (CVS) chain is certainly a very fine drugstore chain and it would be a very worthy addition to the city of Salisbury,” he said. “But the neighborhood takes the position that this is an inappropriate use of the property, and the drugstore could exist with a scaled-back site plan that would not be offensive.”

Now, Nason still holds he is not opposed to a CVS on South Salisbury Boulevard, provided it does not affect his neighborhood.

Resident Marcus Stephanides said he has not been able to review the new proposal; however, he does not think there will be much resident opposition.

“My gut feeling is we would be in no position to fight this because it’s on the other side of the fence,” he said. “They’ll have plenty of room for it, and the traffic will not be as horrendous.”

Jason Mitchell, director of development at J.C. BAR Properties, did not respond to requests for comment.

New Real Estate Tax

September 27, 2010 in Uncategorized

Under the new health care bill – did you know that all real estate transactions will be subject to a 3.8% Sales Tax?  The bulk of these new taxes don’t kick in until 2013.   If you sell your $400,000 home, there will be a $15,200 tax.  This bill targets the retiring generation who often downsize their homes.   Guess what, you aren’t alone.

New Real Estate Tax

2010: The Year of the Short Sale

September 26, 2010 in Uncategorized

2010: The Year of the Short Sale

by CalculatedRisk on 9/25/2010 10:58:00 PM

From Dina ElBoghdady and Dan Keating at the WaPo: Walking away with less. First some stats:

Completed short sales have more than tripled since 2008, and 400,000 of these deals are projected to close this year, according to mortgage research firm CoreLogic. … Fannie Mae approved short sales on 36,534 home loans it owned in the first half of the year, nearly triple the number in 2007 and 2008 combined. Freddie Mac … approved 22,117 in the first half of 2010, up from a mere 94 in the first half of 2007.

The article has an interesting anecdote about a short sale buyer who bought in 2008, and is now selling … as a short sale:

The original owner bought the home for $400,714 in 2006; Harris and her husband … paid what seemed to be a bargain price, $289,000, in 2008. … they have fallen behind on their mortgage payments … Now they have a $246,000 offer for the home, and the balance on their mortgage is more than that.

Knife catchers. Ouch.

The Boulder Group Completes Sale of Net Lease CVS Ground Lease for $3.6 Million in Chicago by ADMIN on SEPTEMBER 24, 2010 (Northbrook, IL -September 24, 2010)- The Boulder Group, a net leased assets work firm, has complete the sale of a azygos remunerator net leased CVS ground engage settled at 6355 West Belmont Avenue in Chicago, IL for $3,630,000. The concept is 100% leased to CVS on a long constituent lease. Randy Blankstein and Jimmy clarinettist of The Boulder Group represented the seller, a clannish metropolis developer. A New royalty based institutionalised real estate consort was the purchaser. ”This sale reflects the attractiveness of set azygos remunerator properties in the present real estate market” said Randy Blankstein, President of The Boulder Group. Jimmy Goodman, Partner of The Boulder Group added, “Ground leases in worker one metropolitan areas are in broad obligation and we rest astir with CVS developers and owners.” CVS Caremark Corporation operates as a medicine services consort in the United States. It operates in two segments, Pharmacy Services and Retail Pharmacy. The Pharmacy Service portion provides a arrange of medication goodness direction services, including accumulation visit medicine services, specialty medicine services, organisation organisation and administration, book management, and claims processing. This portion primarily serves employers, insurance companies, unions, polity employee groups, managed tending organizations and other sponsors of upbeat goodness plans, and individuals. About The Boulder Group The Boulder Group is a store assets real estate service firm specializing in net engage properties. The concern provides a flooded arrange of brokerage, advisory, and finance services broad to a material and heterogeneous computer base, which includes broad net worth individuals, developers, REITs, partnerships and institutionalised assets funds. Founded in 1997, the concern has participated in the acquisition and effort of more than $1.2 1000000000 of net engage real estate transactions through individual real estate cycles. The Boulder Group is headquartered in suburban Chicago.

September 25, 2010 in Uncategorized

The Boulder Group Completes Sale of Net Lease CVS Ground Lease for $3.6 Million in Chicago

by ADMIN on SEPTEMBER 24, 2010

(Northbrook, IL -September 24, 2010)- The Boulder Group, a net leased assets work firm, has complete the sale of a azygos remunerator net leased CVS ground engage settled at 6355 West Belmont Avenue in Chicago, IL for $3,630,000. The concept is 100% leased to CVS on a long constituent lease.

Randy Blankstein and Jimmy clarinettist of The Boulder Group represented the seller, a clannish metropolis developer. A New royalty based institutionalised real estate consort was the purchaser.

 ”This sale reflects the attractiveness of set azygos remunerator properties in the present real estate market” said Randy Blankstein, President of The Boulder Group.  Jimmy Goodman, Partner of The Boulder Group added, “Ground leases in worker one metropolitan areas are in broad obligation and we rest astir with CVS developers and owners.”

 

 

CVS Caremark Corporation operates as a medicine services consort in the United States. It operates in two segments, Pharmacy Services and Retail Pharmacy. The Pharmacy Service portion provides a arrange of medication goodness direction services, including accumulation visit medicine services, specialty medicine services, organisation organisation and administration, book management, and claims processing. This portion primarily serves employers, insurance companies, unions, polity employee groups, managed tending organizations and other sponsors of upbeat goodness plans, and individuals.

About The Boulder Group

The Boulder Group is a store assets real estate service firm specializing in net engage properties. The concern provides a flooded arrange of brokerage, advisory, and finance services broad to a material and heterogeneous computer base, which includes broad net worth individuals, developers, REITs, partnerships and institutionalised assets funds. Founded in 1997, the concern has participated in the acquisition and effort of more than $1.2 1000000000 of net engage real estate transactions through individual real estate cycles. The Boulder Group is headquartered in suburban Chicago.

Hotel for Sale The Wharf Inn San Francisco, California Share This Video Upload Your Video Duration: 0:53 Added: Sep 24, 2010 Channel: YouTube Rating: (0 ratings) Views: 0 Category: Home Video Hotel, for, Sale, The, Wharf, Inn, San, Francisco, California Tags Hotel, Sale, Wharf, Inn, San, Francisco, California

September 25, 2010 in Uncategorized

Hotel for Sale The Wharf Inn San Francisco, California

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Duration: 0:53 Added: Sep 24, 2010 Channel: YouTube
Rating:  (0 ratings) Views: 0 Category: Home Video

Hotel, for, Sale, The, Wharf, Inn, San, Francisco, California

Tags Hotel, Sale, Wharf, Inn, San, Francisco, California