starwood

Costar…

Equity Residential (NYSE: EQR) sold a portfolio of seven multifamily complexes totaling 1,626 units in the Baltimore/Washington, DC area to a joint venture between Starwood Capital Group Global (NYSE: STWD) and Bainbridge Cos. LLC. The partnership’s $300 million investment includes the purchase price and improvements. Freddie Mac financed the properties for seven years at 4.87 percent. The communities range from nine to 24 years old and the…

Visit link:
Equity Sells 7 Multifamily Properties in DC Area

Find our Weekly Commercial Real Estate, Private Equity and Fund Newsletters at www.WeeklyBrief.net

{ 0 comments }

Jan. 28 (Bloomberg) — Barry Sternlicht, chief executive officer of Starwood Capital Group LLC, discusses the distressed real-estate market. Sternlicht talks with Erik Schatzker on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack” at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. (Source: Bloomberg)

Visit link:
Video: Sternlicht Says Starwood `A Little Nervous’ About Rates

{ 0 comments }

Real Money: Starwood Pays 40 Cents on the Dollar for 137 Commercial Loans

January 13, 2011

Starwood Capital Group acquired a non-performing commercial loan portfolio with an outstanding principal balance of $157 million from a major Midwest regional bank. The portfolio of loans was purchased for 40 cents on the dollar, representing an attractive price of 32% of initial capitalization. The portfolio consists of 137 commercial loans with concentrations in Florida, Indiana, Michigan, North Carolina and Ohio. Through its Starwood Global…

Read the full article →

Sheraton Premiere Hotel in VA Sells for $84.5 Million

December 17, 2010

The JBG Cos., a Chevy Chase, MD-based commercial real estate investor and developer, purchased the 443-room Sheraton Premiere Hotel at Tysons Corner in Vienna, VA, for $84.5 million in cash. A partnership between FelCor Lodging Trust (NYSE: FCH) and Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide (NYSE: HOT)? sold the property for $190,745 per room. FelCor, a hotel real estate investment trust, said it received $42.25 million in gross proceeds, and there…

Read the full article →

Real Money: Starwood Closes on $3 Billion of Fund Raising, Financing

April 14, 2010

Starwood Capital Group closed an aggregate $2.8 billion for its two newest funds: Starwood Global Opportunity Fund VIII at more than $1.8 billion and Starwood Capital Hospitality Fund II at $965 million. SOF VIII is the largest fund ever raised by Starwood…

Read the full article →

FDIC Selling Busted Bank Loans on Terms That Make It `Hard to Lose Money’

April 14, 2010

By Jonathan Keehner and Phil Mattingly April 14 (Bloomberg) — Starwood Capital Group LLC, Colony Capital LLC and TPG, whose leaders profited from the 1990s savings and loan crisis, are among firms buying assets from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. for as little as 22 cents cash on the dollar, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The sales, some including no-interest financing from the agency, are part of an FDIC effort to clean out $40 billion of loans that regulators seized from failed banks. Starwood Chief Executive Officer Barry Sternlicht told potential investors in February it’s “very hard to lose money” on the deals. The government, which was faulted two decades ago for letting bank assets go at fire-sale prices, is planning to profit along with investors. Instead of selling the loans outright, the FDIC kept stakes of 50 percent or more in at least five loan portfolios sold since September. It’s also demanding as much as 70 percent of any gains. “They are doing a much better job this time around,” said John Bovenzi , the FDIC’s chief operating officer until last year, who also helped unwind the S&L crisis. “They have learned a lot, and they aren’t making the same mistakes.” Loan sales planned or completed so far this year total more than $8 billion by book value, compared with $10 billion in all of 2009. The FDIC arranged at least $860 million in interest- free financing this year to support deals, according to statements from the buyers. Failed Banks The sales involve packages of loans acquired by the FDIC from 182 banks that failed since the start of 2009. The loans typically are tied to commercial real estate and residential development, and can include debt on which borrowers stopped making payments or property seized by the bank. Terms entitle taxpayers to a share of any money that private investors squeeze from delinquent borrowers or any profit earned reselling the assets. The FDIC-backed debt has to be repaid before the private-equity firms can take any cash generated by the loans. Financing doesn’t go directly to investors. Instead, the FDIC is creating limited liability companies that hold the loans being sold and receive the financing. “It’s very hard to lose money on a transaction like that,” Sternlicht said on a Feb. 11 conference call with potential investors, according to a copy obtained by Bloomberg News. “That’s the kind of asymmetric risk profile you love in a deal.” ‘So Distressed’ Financing is made on a deal-by-deal basis and won’t necessarily continue, said agency spokesman Andrew Gray . “The financing helps pricing,” FDIC Chairman Sheila Bair said in a March 19 interview. The packages include hundreds of loans where borrowers aren’t making payments. Some “may be so distressed that a healthy bank just does not want to deal with them,” Bair said. Linus Wilson , a finance professor at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette who has written more than a dozen papers on government bailout programs , said the FDIC’s zero-percent financing artificially inflates prices by as much as 20 percent and leaves the agency’s insurance fund vulnerable to losses. The regulator may have to write down the value of its holdings if private-equity managers can’t recover as much from the loans as they expect, Wilson said. The agency could also lose money if its partners don’t make enough to repay the FDIC’s financing, he said. “A better structure would not subsidize high levels of leverage, and it would eliminate the government’s stake entirely,” he said. That would also allow the agency to collect cash more quickly while reducing risk, according to Wilson. Resolution Trust Things have changed since Sternlicht, 49, oversaw a fund that bought assets from the Resolution Trust Corp., the government agency that sold loans and property of failed lenders in the 1990s. The RTC disposed of $394 billion of assets from 747 banks between 1989 and 1995, according to an FDIC review published in 2000. Back then, a fund Sternlicht managed earned about a 94 percent return on purchases including those from the RTC, he said in the February call. This time when Starwood and its partners won a stake in a company holding $4.5 billion of unpaid loans, the FDIC added an “equity kicker.” It increases the agency’s stake to 70 percent from 60 percent once the Starwood-led group makes back twice its initial investment and earns a 25 percent internal rate of return, according to the regulator. The loans Starwood will help oversee were once held by the failed Chicago lender Corus Bankshares Inc. ‘Real Partnership’ “Structured loan sales benefit both investors and the U.S. taxpayer,” Sternlicht said in a telephone interview. “There is real partnership between the FDIC and investors in these deals, so you better be good at managing the assets.” Homebuilder Lennar Corp. also bought into two limited liability companies holding loans seized from failed banks. The Miami-based builder paid $243 million for a 40 percent stake in two LLCs with $3.05 billion of unpaid loans, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Lennar’s cash contribution comes to about 19 cents per dollar of book value for its interest in one of the limited liability companies and about 23 cents for the other. In a February regulatory filing, Lennar valued the deals at about 40 cents on the dollar after taking into account $627 million in interest-free financing that went to the holding companies and the equity stake the FDIC is keeping. Book value refers to the unpaid balance of the loans. Lennar spokesman Marshall Ames declined to comment for this story. The Starwood-led group including TPG and developer Richard LeFrak bought a 40 percent stake in the company holding Corus’s portfolio for 31 cents cash on the dollar as measured against its share of the book value of the assets. The FDIC covered half of the deal’s $2.77 billion purchase price with an interest-free loan. Flats at Loft 5 Prospects for properties backing the FDIC assets are mixed, according to LeFrak , who visited a Corus property called the Flats at Loft 5 while in Las Vegas for his son’s wedding in October. About half of its 272 units are for rent, according to the leasing office . That’s because the condos didn’t sell, said LeFrak, whose holdings include 15,000 New York City apartments. “It was kind of like in the middle of nowhere, and the design was kind of unusual and you went: ‘Why would anyone do this?’” he asked. By contrast, LeFrak halted what he called “dirt cheap” sales at the Carlos Ott-designed Artech condominiums in Aventura, Florida, so that his group could raise prices. The Artech’s floor-to-ceiling windows overlook the Intercoastal Waterway, and buyers have access to boat slips, a beach club and a chartered yacht, according to marketing materials. The FDIC pledged up to $1 billion in working capital and to complete construction on unfinished developments, Starwood said in an October statement. ‘Enormous’ Risk “These are complex portfolios that face construction, litigation and performance issues,” said Colony Capital CEO Thomas Barrack , whose Santa Monica-based firm offered about 20 percent less than Starwood in the Corus bidding, people familiar with the sale said at the time. “They come with an enormous amount of risk, and bidders are betting to a degree on when the market corrects itself.” Colony returned to the FDIC auctions in January and won, paying 22 cents cash on the dollar for a 40 percent stake in a company holding $1.02 billion in unpaid commercial real estate loans. The FDIC retained a 60 percent interest and provided zero-coupon notes to finance the deal, Colony Financial Inc. said in a regulatory filing. Colony valued the purchase at 44 percent of the unpaid balance of the loans. Barrack, Bonderman Colony’s Barrack, Starwood’s Sternlicht and Fort Worth, Texas-based TPG co-founders David Bonderman and James Coulter all have experience buying bank assets dating back to the savings and loan crisis. Barrack, Bonderman and Coulter worked for Texas billionaire Robert Bass before starting their own private-equity firms. Bass oversaw the purchase of American Savings & Loan in a government- assisted rescue in 1988, at the time one of the biggest S&L failures . Representatives of Colony, TPG and Starwood Capital declined to comment about whether they are participating in pending auctions by the FDIC. FDIC sales scheduled this month included a $610.5 million package of real estate debts assembled from 19 seized lenders, including IndyMac Bank, Silverton Bank and New Frontier Bank. Regulators are also preparing to sell $3 billion of loans from AmTrust Bank, the Cleveland-based lender seized in December. Reluctant Banks Private buyers are taking a bigger role in FDIC disposals because banks are glutted with commercial property and reluctant to buy more, said Chip MacDonald , a partner with Jones Day in Atlanta who specializes in deals among banks. U.S. banks had $119 billion of non-performing commercial real estate loans on their books as of the fourth quarter, according to Foresight Analytics, a bank and property research firm in Oakland, California. Defaults are expected to pile up through 2011, and lenders have written off only 30 percent of the bad commercial mortgages they’ll ultimately face, according to a March report from Moody’s Investors Service. “They just don’t need more exposure to real estate,” MacDonald said. To contact the reporters on this story: Jonathan Keehner in New York at jkeehner@bloomberg.net ; Phil Mattingly in Washington at pmattingly@bloomberg.net .

Read the full article →

Starwood Raises 28B For RE Funds

April 2, 2010

& Companies in the News Starwood Capital Group has raised $2.8 billion for two of its real estate funds, Bloomberg reports. The investment firm has raised over $1.8 billion for Starwood Global Opportunity Fund VIII, while The Hospitality Fund II has

Read the full article →

New strategies emerge for CRE, REIT firms

April 1, 2010

Analyzing quarterly filings, the CoStar Group has identified at least 12 strategies commercial real estate companies and REITs are adopting to navigate the post-recession but still fragile economy. For instance, Starwood Property Trust identified

Read the full article →

Starwood Raises $2.8 Billion For Its New Funds

April 1, 2010

Private equity firm Starwood Capital Group has raised $2.8 billion for its two real estate funds. According to Reuters, the funds will focus on distressed properties. These funds are Starwood Global Opportunity Fund VIII and Hospitality Fund II. These

Read the full article →

Starwood Capital raises $2.8bn for distressed property funds

April 1, 2010

US private equity firm Starwood Capital Group has raised $2.8bn for two funds focusing on distressed real estate assets. According to reports, the Starwood Global Opportunity Fund VIII will target distressed debt and properties, and has raised over

Read the full article →

Starwood Raises $2.8 Billion For Real Estate Funds: Report | Reuters

April 1, 2010

The Starwood Global Opportunity Fund VIII, which will target distressed debt and properties, has raised more than $1.8 billion. The Hospitality Fund II, which will invest in hotels, raked in almost $1 billion, the agency said. Starwood, led by

Read the full article →

Starwood raises $2.8 billion for real estate funds: report

April 1, 2010

Reuters) – U.S. private equity firm Starwood Capital Group has raised about $2.8 billion for two real estate funds that will focus on distressed properties, Bloomberg said, citing a person familiar with the effort. The Starwood Global Opportunity Fund

Read the full article →

Starwood raises $2.8 bln for real estate funds-Bloomberg

March 31, 2010

Reuters) – U.S. private equity firm Starwood Capital Group has raised about $2.8 billion for two real estate funds that will focus on distressed properties, Bloomberg said, citing a person familar with the effort. The Starwood Global Opportunity Fund

Read the full article →

Starwood Said to Raise $2.8 Billion for Real Estate Funds

March 31, 2010

by Barry Sternlicht, finished raising capital for two funds totaling about $2.8 billion that will invest in real estate. The Starwood Global Opportunity Fund VIII, which will target distressed debt and property, took in more than $1.8 billion, according

Read the full article →

Lennar Buys 2,700 Plots of Land from Starwood Subsidiary

February 26, 2010

more than 2,700 plots of land, for building new homes in 38 communities across Florida, from residential real estate investment firm Starwood Land Ventures . The land was part of the Florida portfolio of the now-bankrupt builder Tousa that Starwood

Read the full article →

New York Property Weathered Slump, Sternlicht Says (Update1) (Bloomberg)

December 9, 2009

Dec. 9 (Bloomberg) — New York City’s real estate market has “weathered the storm” and residential property sales are picking up, according to Barry Sternlicht , chairman and chief executive officer of Starwood Capital Group LLC.

Read the full article →

Corus loans likely to be bought by Starwood group: report

October 3, 2009

Insurance Corp (FDIC) is running the auction, which is being watched for its potential impact on the commercial real estate market. The consortium likely to win is made up of Starwood and TPG, which would have significant equity stakes in the Corus

Read the full article →

Corus loans likely to be bought by Starwood group: report

October 3, 2009

Insurance Corp (FDIC) is running the auction, which is being watched for its potential impact on the commercial real estate market. The consortium likely to win is made up of Starwood and TPG, which would have significant equity stakes in the Corus

Read the full article →

Starwood-led Group Likely To Win Corus Assets

October 3, 2009

Insurance Corp (FDIC) is running the auction, which is being watched for its potential impact on the commercial real estate market. The consortium likely to win is made up of Starwood and TPG, which would have significant equity stakes in the Corus

Read the full article →

Starwood likely wins Corus asset

October 3, 2009

Insurance Corp (FDIC) is running the auction, which is being watched for its potential impact on the commercial real estate market. The consortium likely to win is made up of Starwood and TPG, which would have significant equity stakes in the Corus

Read the full article →

Starwood group likely wins Corus assets: source

October 2, 2009

Insurance Corp (FDIC) is running the auction, which is being watched for its potential impact on the commercial real estate market. The consortium likely to win is made up of Starwood and TPG, which would have significant equity stakes in the Corus

Read the full article →

CORRECTION – - UPDATE 1-Starwood group likely wins Corus assets – source

October 2, 2009

Insurance Corp (FDIC) is running the auction, which is being watched for its potential impact on the commercial real estate market. The consortium likely to win is made up of Starwood and TPG, which would have significant equity stakes in the Corus

Read the full article →

UPDATE 1-Starwood group likely wins Corus assets – source

October 2, 2009

Insurance Corp (FDIC) is running the auction, which is being watched for its potential impact on the commercial real estate market. The consortium likely to win is made up of Starwood and TPG, which would have significant equity stakes in the Corus

Read the full article →

How to Play It: Real Estate (BusinessWeek)

September 17, 2009

A slew of financial heavy hitters, including Starwood Capital’s Barry Sternlicht, Colony Capital’s Thomas Barrack Jr., and Apollo Global Management’s Leon Black, are piling into the distressed-mortgage market.

Read the full article →

New Starwood REIT Raises $810M; May Top Mead Johnson’s Record $828 …

August 12, 2009

Market sources tell Real Estate Channel Starwood is among at least two dozen private-equity firms planning to form publicly traded REITs to buy or originate debt used to finance offices, retail centers and other real estate . Other recent offerings include those by Apollo Management LP and Colony Capital LLC. PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust, established by former executives of Countrywide Financial Corp., has raised $335 million by selling shares, less than half of the … Read the rest here: New Starwood REIT Raises $810M; May Top Mead Johnson's Record $828 …

Read the full article →