Hawaii’s Top 3 Investment Properties – 4th Quarter 2010

Mark’s Top 3 Picks for 4th Quarter 2010:

Off Market Deal:

Approximately 50,000 SF shopping center on Maui

  • Recently changed ownership
  • Some vacancy
  • Very well located, very difficult to reproduce

Note on a larger apartment project

  • Lender preparing to foreclose
  • Looking for someone to buy a note
  • well located project
  • recently rehabilitated
  • Strong net income in place

Aloha Tower Marketplace

  • Waterfront project
  • 2 Levels, currently operating as a festival marketplace
  • Gross Leasable Area: 168,895 SF

Please contact us for more information.

Billion-dollar investor says mortgages will be negotiated before foreclosed or sold off

Billion-dollar investor says mortgages will be negotiated before foreclosed or sold off.
A client of ours has recently bought large portfolios of loans from failed banks.  Including some of the well-publicized FDIC auctions of leftover commercial real estate loans from now-closed banks.  In talking to this client last week, he believes we are seeing a divide in commercial real estate financing markets on existing debts.
The first pool of loans are the ones similar to the FDIC sales, which come from private banks, which are generally smaller in nature on local commercial real estate projects and properties.  Clearly, banks that failed have a change in ownership and are forced to make some changes to their loan portfolios, but the few we’ve seen that the FDIC has actually sold off so far are the exception.  Most banks today have been able to hold their loans and have their former mortgage originators now monitor those loans on a monthly basis to assess their cash flow potential.  With this knowledge of the up-to-date operations of each individual property, these private banks are often expending loans and softening terms.  Foreclosure is an expensive legal process and takes the loan into a different category with bank regulators.
The second type of loans are the commercial mortgage backed security loans, which as we had discussed before are pooled together and sold off as bonds in many pieces.  Our client has been active in buying a few of these pieces that on the surface seem to be riskier portions of the loan, but in all instances so far, the loan terms have been renegotiated and/or extended as opposed to foreclosed upon, even for these high-regulated CMBS loans.
Many in the industry today call it “Extend and Pretend.”  If the underlying economics are on the upswing or do continue to improve, then operating results, including the payment of pricinpal and interest, will be able to increase on these loans.  The lenders today obviously feel it is more productive for them to continue to work with the existing in-place borrower than to draw a line in the sand, pick up the company to foreclosure process, let it essentially disintegrate in condition, and thirdly command a significantly lower value at a distressed sale.
Mark D. Bratton
Vice President
Colliers International
220 S. King Street 18th Floor
Honolulu HI 96813
Tel 808.523.9708
email mark@colliershawaii.com
www.markbratton.com
www.colliershawaii.com

A client of ours has recently purchased large portfolios of loans from failed banks.  Including some of the well-publicized FDIC auctions of leftover commercial real estate loans from now-closed banks.  In talking to this client last week, he believes we are seeing a divide in commercial real estate financing markets on existing debts.

The first pool of loans are the ones similar to the FDIC sales, which come from private banks, which are generally smaller in nature on local commercial real estate projects and properties.  Clearly, banks that failed have a new ownership and are forced to make some changes to their loan portfolios, but the few we’ve seen that the FDIC has actually sold off so far are the exception.  Most banks today have been able to hold their loans and have their former mortgage originators now monitoring those loans on a monthly basis to assess their cash flow potential.  With this knowledge of the up-to-date operations of each individual property, these private banks are often extending Tenant loans and softening terms.  Foreclosure is an expensive legal process and takes the loan into a different category with bank regulators.

The second type of loans are the commercial mortgage backed security loans, which as we had discussed before are pooled together and sold off as bonds in many pieces.  Our client has been active in buying a few of these pieces that on the surface seem to be riskier portions of the loan, but in all instances so far, the loan terms have been renegotiated and/or extended as opposed to foreclosed upon.

Many in the industry today call it “Extend and Pretend.”  If the underlying economics are on the upswing or do continue to improve, then operating results, including the payment of pricinpal and interest, will be able to increase on these loans.  The lenders today obviously feel it is more productive for them to continue to work with the existing in-place borrower than to draw a line in the sand, and force the company to go through the foreclosure process, let the property essentially disintegrate in condition, and command a significantly lower value at a distressed sale.

Distressed Property in Hawaii sells just before confimration sale

A large parcel of industrial property sold in the first quarter of 2010 despite the uncertainty around the ownership of the property.  The land area is approximately 59 acres, and the property sold for $12.5MM.  The property had been in foreclosure and reportedly, the note had been sold at a small discount off the face value.  An investor came in just prior to the confirmation hearing and paid the price to pay off the mortgage.  The property is unimproved, and was recently rezoned for industrial use.  Most likely, plans include one to ten acre industrial lots with common areas and streets being put in by the new developer.

There was a lot of interest in this property, and we can see why, with a price tag of $4.86 per square foot for the raw, unimproved industrial land, there seems to be a profit for someone.  At this price, it should allow for a developer to hold the property for a couple of years, make improvements, and sell the individual lots at a retail price as the market strengthens.

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