Commercial
-
October 30, 2024
Walker & Dunlop CEO Says GSEs Must 'Get Back To Business'
Government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac need to get out of conservatorship and regain for-profit motivations so they can innovate and grow, Walker & Dunlop CEO Willy Walker told Law360 Real Estate Authority in an interview.
-
October 30, 2024
KKR, ECP To Plug $50B Into Data Centers, Power Projects
Private equity firms KKR & Co., advised by Simpson Thacher, and Energy Capital Partners have teamed up to inject $50 billion into building data centers and energy generation projects in a bet on meeting rising demand for infrastructure to support the artificial intelligence boom.
-
October 30, 2024
MVP: Gibson Dunn's Farshad E. Morè
Farshad E. Morè, a partner in Gibson Dunn & Crutcher's Century City office and member of the firm's real estate department, advised longtime client KKR on two record-breaking multifamily and student housing transactions, earning him a spot as one of the 2024 Law360 Real Estate MVPs.
-
October 29, 2024
Real Estate Exec's Wife Says Prostitution Claims Defamed Her
The wife of Northstar Commercial Partners CEO Brian Watson has filed a lawsuit in Colorado federal court alleging an Illinois woman defamed her by accusing her of being a prostitute and that her husband frequently procures the services of prostitutes, estimating her damage at roughly $50 million.
-
October 29, 2024
Pa. Seeks State Takeover Of Embattled Hospital System
Pennsylvania urged a state court to appoint a receiver for a hospital system after its operator, Prospect Medical Holdings Inc., allegedly violated an asset purchase agreement by spending millions of dollars on its investors instead of healthcare system management.
-
October 29, 2024
Russia To Fight Seizure Of Assets In $5B Ukraine Oil Row
The Russian Federation is looking to challenge a recent seizure of its state-owned assets in Finland following a successful bid from NJSC Naftogaz of Ukraine, which aims to enforce a $5 billion arbitration award related to the 2014 expropriation of its Crimean assets.
-
October 29, 2024
Investments In Energy Tax Credit Boom Could Draw IRS' Eye
The 2022 climate law's green energy tax incentives sparked a surge of big-ticket development projects nationwide, and tax practitioners expect that the investments could be subject to intense scrutiny from the IRS amid a crackdown on abusive schemes in other areas.
-
October 29, 2024
Infrastructure Firm Raises $780M With CBRE's Help
Accelerate Infrastructure, represented by Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP, raised $780 million in total capital including backing from CBRE Investment Management, the real estate infrastructure firm announced Tuesday.
-
October 28, 2024
Gov't Defends GSA's Ohio Office Lease Award
The federal government has urged the U.S. Court of Federal Claims to swat down a bid protest from a company claiming the General Services Administration unfairly awarded a 15-year office lease in Ohio to another company.
-
October 28, 2024
EB-5 Industry Eyes Legislative Fixes To USCIS Struggles
A 2022 revamp brought the EB-5 investment visa program a boost in interest and respectability, but as frustrations continue with U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, industry players are hoping new legislation is a better alternative than litigation.
-
October 28, 2024
No COVID Property Tax Break For Hotels, Wash. Court Told
Hotels in Washington state should not get property tax breaks for COVID-19 because the pandemic was not a natural disaster that allows relief, the assessor of the state's most populous county told a state court.
-
October 28, 2024
NYC Real Estate Week In Review
Gibson Dunn and Seyfarth Shaw are among the law firms that steered the largest New York City real estate deals that hit public records last week, a list headlined by a pair of Brooklyn deals above the $200 million mark.
-
October 28, 2024
Hotel Guests Ask 3rd Circ. To Look At Algorithm Price-Fix Suit
Three Atlantic City guests are taking their beef with hotel-casinos to the Third Circuit after a New Jersey federal court threw out their lawsuit that accused hotel owners in the town of using an algorithm to inflate the price of rooms.
-
October 28, 2024
Linklaters, White & Case Rep DigitalBridge's Yondr Buy
DigitalBridge Group Inc. will purchase data center company Yondr Group for an undisclosed amount, in a deal guided by Linklaters LLP and White & Case LLP, the global alternative asset management company announced Monday.
-
October 28, 2024
King & Spalding Steers Data Center Co.'s $1.5B Fundraise
Cologix has raised $1.5 billion in capital with guidance from King & Spalding that will allow the company to build new data centers in the future, with an emphasis on its core markets in Virginia, Ohio and Canada.
-
October 28, 2024
Ind. Tax Board Denies Exemption For Undeveloped Property
A religious organization in Indiana cannot claim a property exemption for a property to be developed because it was unable to show substantial progress toward the completion of the building, the state Board of Tax Review said.
-
October 28, 2024
Paul Hastings Adds REIT Partners In Boston, Chicago
Paul Hastings LLP announced Monday that a pair of experienced real estate attorneys who have worked on some of the industry's largest initial public offerings have joined its Boston and Chicago offices as partners — additions the firm said are part of a strategic focus on capital markets.
-
October 25, 2024
US Trustee Opposes NJ Building's Receiver Stipulation
The U.S. Trustee's Office is asking a New York bankruptcy judge to hold off a decision regarding the receivership of a New Jersey building owned by New York developer Moshe Gold until the judge decides what court the bankruptcy should be heard in, if any.
-
October 25, 2024
Steward Gets OK For 7 More Hospital Sales
A Texas bankruptcy judge said he would approve the sale of seven more of Steward Health Care's hospitals to affiliates of California-based Healthcare Systems of America, including five in Florida and two in Texas.
-
October 25, 2024
'Starting Point' Algorithm Enough To Fix Prices, DOJ Says
The Justice Department is using the first algorithmic price-fixing case to reach an appeals court to argue that just because an algorithm only set "starting points" doesn't make its use legal, in a Ninth Circuit amicus brief backing efforts to revive a room rate lawsuit against Las Vegas casino hotels.
-
October 25, 2024
Weyerhaeuser Expects To Hit $1B In Timber Deals By 2026
The CEO of lumber company Weyerhaeuser told investors in a call Friday that it expects to close $1 billion worth of "strategic timberland acquisitions" by the end of 2025.
-
October 25, 2024
Property Plays: Skyline, Rockefeller Center, Capital One Arena
Property Plays is a weekly roundup of the latest loans, leases, sales and projects around the country. Send your tips — all confidential — to realestate@law360.com.
-
October 25, 2024
Clarion Partners Sells Bay Area Office Complex For $162M
Real estate investment firm Clarion Partners sold off an office complex in San Francisco's East Bay area to commercial real estate company PSAI Realty Partners in a $162 million deal guided by Newmark Group Inc., the real estate adviser announced.
-
October 25, 2024
Wells Fargo Wants Quick Win In NYC Office Foreclosure Suit
Wells Fargo is urging a New York federal court to grant it an early win in its commercial mortgage foreclosure suit as it seeks to take control of a midtown Manhattan office building after the owner fell behind on its $31.5 million loan.
-
October 25, 2024
Cleveland Browns Sue City To Protect Stadium Move Plan
The Cleveland Browns took their city to Ohio federal court to protect their plan to move the NFL team to an adjacent town, saying a Buckeye State law restricting how and when sports teams can move out of taxpayer-supported stadiums is unconstitutional.
Expert Analysis
-
Parsing Tax Implications Of NYC Office Leasing Transactions
Though New York City's tax laws generally do not require negotiated contractual risk allocation in the case of sublease and early lease termination transactions, it is still helpful for counsel to both landlords and tenants to understand the laws' nuances, say attorneys at Lowenstein Sandler.
-
NY's Take On Premises Insurance Policies: What's In A Name?
A New York appellate court's recent decision in Wesco Insurance v. Fulmont Mutual Insurance — requiring insurance coverage for a property owner not named on the policy — strengthens a state case law trend creating a practical exception in premises liability cases to normally strict requirements for coverage, says Craig Rokuson at Traub Lieberman.
-
Bankruptcy Ruling Shows Section 363's Magic Has Its Limits
The Ninth Circuit Bankruptcy Appellate Panel's recent ruling in Groves demonstrates that Section 363 — which allows a debtor-in-possession to sell their property in order to generate cash — fails as a tool when it’s used to turn a nondebtor entities' property into property of a debtor's bankruptcy estate, says Brian Shaw at Cozen O'Connor.
-
Shifts In The CRE Landscape Demand Creative Loan Solutions
An increase in commercial real estate loan workouts makes it critical for borrowers, lenders and other CRE participants to examine all the available options and remedies, including mortgage and mezzanine foreclosures, bankruptcy filings and property short sales, say attorneys at Goulston & Storrs.
-
A Smoother Process For CRE Receiverships In Conn.
A newly effective Connecticut law concerning distressed commercial real estate provides a number of opportunities and strategic considerations for creditors, and should be watched even by counsel in other states as adoption of the law could become more widespread, say John Loughnane and Steven Coury at White and Williams.
-
What Came Of Texas Legislature's Long-Promised Tax Relief
Following promises of historic tax relief made possible by a record budget surplus, the Texas legislative session as a whole was one in which taxpayers that are large businesses could have done somewhat better, but the new legislation is clearly still a positive, say attorneys at Baker Botts.
-
CRE Guidance Helps Lenders Work With Struggling Borrowers
In recognition of growing troubles with commercial real estate loans, four federal regulators' recently updated loan accommodations guidance provides a helpful framework for approaching loan workouts without the punitive results of adverse classifications, say Jaclyn Grodin and Muryum Khalid at Goulston & Storrs.
-
NYC Cannabis Landlord Accountability Law Has Limitations
A recently passed bill in New York City, aiming to crack down on the illegal cannabis market by levying fines against landlords who knowingly lease to unlicensed sellers, contains loopholes that may potentially limit the bill’s impact and lead to unintended consequences, say attorneys at Falcon Rappaport.
-
When Investment Banks Can Sell Real Estate In Calif.
When investment banks sell businesses that own property in California, they may run into trouble if they are not licensed real estate brokers, unless the property is merely incidental to the deal at hand, say attorneys at Holland & Knight.
-
Hedging Variable Interest Rates In A Volatile Market
Variable rate loans, which were an advantageous borrowing method prior to the recent Federal Reserve rate hikes and subsequent volatility, are now the difference between borrowers remaining current on their obligations and defaulting due to the sharply increasing debt service requirements of their loans, say attorneys at Cassin & Cassin.
-
Parsing FTC's Intercontinental-Black Knight Merger Challenge
The Federal Trade Commission's recent Article III case challenging a merger between Intercontinental Exchange and Black Knight suggests the agency is using a structuralist approach to evaluate the merger's potential anti-competitive harm, says David Evans at Kelley Drye.
-
Effectual Relief Questions Linger After Section 363 Ruling
In the months since the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling in MOAC Mall Holdings, courts and practitioners must grapple with the issue of what effectual relief courts may grant upon an appeal of an unstayed sale order, says Monique Jewett-Brewster at Hopkins Carley.
-
3 Alternatives To CRE Collateralized Loan Obligations
With current commercial real estate market conditions pushing issuers away from collateralized loan obligations, several Freddie Mac offerings should be considered as alternative exit strategies for mortgage loans secured by multifamily properties, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.