Fannie Mae Puts New Condo Guideline In Place

By Anthony Longo 27 03 2009

Money is already tight at The Wilshire Condominium, and new lending rules threaten to make life even more difficult for it and other condos around the country.

Arthur Barr, a board member of the Wilshire homeowners association, estimates 30 percent of the owners in the 378-unit building in North Miami Beach are behind on their fees. That makes it difficult to pay for things like elevator repairs and gardening.

Now, Fannie Mae — the biggest player in the mortgage market — wants to ensure that if it’s backing a loan for a condominium, the building is in good shape. If the building is brand new, Fannie Mae wants to be certain there are enough owners to pay for maintenance and preserve the value of the property.

Sound simple?

Nothing is simple in Washington these days.

The new rules were designed to protect buyers and lenders, but they may make it harder for condo owners to sell. That could hobble the recovery of the condo market.

And in the end, critics say, the rules will mean cash-strapped associations like the Wilshire’s won’t be able to maintain the very buildings that Fannie Mae wants to preserve.

“I guess things can get much worse before they’re going to get better,” Barr said.

Under the new regulations, Fannie Mae will reject any mortgage for a condo buyer if more than 15 percent of the other owners are delinquent on their association fees. What’s more, Fannie Mae will only guarantee mortgages in new or newly converted condo developments if 70 percent of the units are sold or under contract.

Critics say the rules, which went into effect this month, could force some new developments into bankruptcy because the 70-percent requirement will be hard to reach if buyers can’t get a loan.

There’s already more than a year’s supply of condos for sale on the market. And about 93,000 new units are expected to be completed this year, a 28 percent jump from 2008, according to Reis Inc., a real estate firm based in New York.

“By setting the higher threshold they’ve reduced their risk of making these loans, but they’ve also virtually killed the potential for many projects to be successful,” said developer Jeff Spear, owner of The Spear Group in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. “It’s going to make it extremely difficult for this inventory to get absorbed.”

The riskiest market in the country is Miami, which saw a building boom beginning in 2002. Since than, about 38,000 condo units have been built or are under construction in Miami-Dade County, with more than 22,000 of those concentrated in or near Miami, said Jack McCabe, president of McCabe Research & Consulting.

“It’s not surprising that developers are talking about a death spiral,” McCabe said. “There are so many units that are unsold and they are unable to pay off construction loans.”

He estimated that as much as 40 percent of the 16,000 completed units in Miami remain unoccupied. More than a half-dozen condo projects in the Miami area are stalled because sales have slowed to a crawl and the credit needed to build them has disappeared, said Jennifer Drake, real estate attorney with Becker & Poliakoff.

Developers in other hot markets, such as Las Vegas, also rushed to build condos and condo-hotels but had developments stalled or canceled. Las Vegas real estate agent Sue Naumann estimated that of about 100 planned high-rise condo projects, only about 20 were completed.

The excess condo development and subsequent financial problems were fueled in part by speculators like Izad Djahanshahi, who invested in 41 units during the real estate frenzy that gripped Miami from 2002 to 2005. Now, he has eight condos in foreclosure. He has filed for bankruptcy protection from creditors and estimates he owes about $500,000 in back mortgage payments.

“We just bought and sold and bought and sold,” said Djahanshahi (jah-han-SHAH-hee). “We kept the money in the company and we invested more and more. Suddenly, everything stopped.”

As investors like Djahanshahi failed to pay mortgages, units were foreclosed upon and have remained empty, leading many condo associations to cut back on services like security, valet parking and landscaping because they can’t collect enough fees.

Florida condominium ombudsman Bill Raphan could not offer specific numbers, but estimated that a “good percentage” of condominium associations have delinquencies more than 15 percent.

Attorney Donna Berger represents 1,000 community associations in Florida. She said delinquencies were up around 5 percent among the groups the represents, and reached 90 percent in certain “mostly investor-owned communities.”

“I understand (Fannie’s) need to insulate their risk, but I think further tightening the stranglehold on condo owners is not the answer,” Berger said.

Fannie Mae spokeswoman Amy Bonitatibus defended the company’s new guidelines, saying it wants to reduce risk for lenders and protect buyers from condo fee increases or special assessments, company spokeswoman said.

But the bottom line is condo sales will likely take another hit.

The rules are discouraging buyers like Jim Lyon, who wants to buy a new condo in Miami for about $250,000.

“I’m leery of making the commitment now to a condo,” said Lyon, 55. “The restrictions are that much tighter now.”

As buyers get shut out condo prices may fall further. Fewer buyers also could mean higher association fees for the rest of the owners who may have to shell out more money to cover vacant or delinquent owners, said Robert White, managing director of KW Property Management & Consulting in Coral Gables, Fla.

“It’s going to lock everybody in,” White said, “including the people who are delinquent.”

(By ADRIAN SAINZ via – Associated Press)



Condo Buyer Sues at Trump Condo Hotel

By Anthony Longo 6 08 2008

A Boston restaurateur who banked on the allure of Donald Trump’s name in deciding to buy a Fort Lauderdale, Fla., condominium-hotel unit alleges in a lawsuit that he is the victim of misleading marketing.

In the lawsuit filed Monday in Broward Circuit Court, John Taglieri also contends the developer of the project violated state securities and condo laws.

SB Hotel Associates LLC failed to register Taglieri’s unit at the beachfront Trump International Hotel & Tower as a security, though it was marketed as an investment opportunity, and wrongly promoted the project as a Trump development, according to the lawsuit.

The lawsuit claims marketing material indicated the units would be worth 36 percent more with the Trump name.

Trump is not the developer and does not have any agreement to indicate the project will operate under the Trump name when it is completed, according to the suit.

Taglieri put down $146,000 in December 2005 for a $730,000 unit in the 298-unit tower under construction at 551 N. Fort Lauderdale Beach Blvd. (A1A). He was told the 24-story development would be complete in 2007.

“The impetus for the lawsuit is frustration with purchasing a product he thought he was getting that was heavily promoted in a certain way by the developer and realizing that’s not the project that will be delivered,” said Taglieri’s attorney, Jared Beck of Beck & Lee in Miami.

“In this market, misrepresentation and failure to deliver what’s promised are things a developer cannot afford to get away with,” he said.  Continued…

Source: Law.com

More Blogs on:  Condo-Hotel | Trump



Robert De Niro To Open NY Condo Hotel

By Anthony Longo 9 05 2008

robert de niro nobu condo hotelOscar winning actor Robert De Niro, who already owns several restaurants and hotels, has announced plans for The Nobu Hotel Condo in the Financial District.

Plans call for a 62 story glass tower housing 77 condos and 128 hotel rooms (mini-bars stocked with green tea and sake!), with the condo units located on the forty-first floor thru penthouse levels.

The eco-friendly building will include a health club with spa, indoor pool, and an outdoor sun terrace which will be available to both residents and hotel guests. Additionally, the Japanese themed condo-hotel and spa complex will house a Nobu restaurant which will provide room service for guests and residents.

The project will be the second in the chain, and is scheduled to open within the next three years at 45 Broad Street; the first will open this summer in Herzliya along the Mediterranean. Since there is little information currently available on this project we’ll be sure to let you know the moment the dedicated website launches.

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Trump Halts Condo Hotel in Ft. Lauderdale

By Anthony Longo 9 10 2007

trump las olas condo hotel ft. lauderdale

Condo-hotel projects once were so hot in South Florida that Donald Trump planned two in Fort Lauderdale. Now he’s back down to one amid cooling enthusiasm for the novel real estate product behind much of South Florida’s recent hotel boom.

The celebrity developer expressed confidence in the Trump International Hotel and Tower under construction on the northern end of Fort Lauderdale Beach. But his partners are worried enough about condominium sales, he said, that they’ve suspended plans for the Trump Las Olas Resort to the south.

”They want to wait until the market comes back. And I agree with them,” Trump said. “At this moment, to build in this market would be foolish.””

See Ft. Lauderdale Condos

See Miami Condos 



Condo Hotels

By Anthony Longo 18 07 2007

Mandarin Oriental Tower ChicagoJust as I was to write a post on the lack of news on Condo Hotels lately – the Condo Hotel of them all comes flying across my desk!

The Mandarin Oriental Tower to be built in downtown Chicago will raise the bar again in luxury condo living in one more city. Here in the Boston Condo market they are just about to finish putting on the face of The Residences at the Mandarin Oriental here on Boylston Street – a new Condo Hotel project right here in downtown Boston.  Well, now it looks like they are going to vertical in Chicago with an all new Mandarin.

Visit the Mandarin Chicago Here.

More info on the Chicago Condo market click here.

More info on the Boston Condo market click here.



Canyon Ranch Chicago Tower to Heal our Boomers

By Anthony Longo 28 06 2007

Canyon Ranch Chicago Would you like a shiatsu massage with your new condo? How about a bone-density test?

Arizona’s Canyon Ranch, regarded as the most glittering brand in the $10 billion spa industry, has branched into real estate, and on Wednesday will roll out a marketing campaign for the 67-story condo-hotel at Huron and Rush Streets that will bear its name.

Joining an increasingly crowded field in the city’s luxury high-rise market, Canyon Ranch Living-Chicago is a $650 million bet that well-heeled condo buyers will be drawn to an unusual rendition of that eternal real estate promise, “lifestyle.”

Specifically, it’s the “wellness lifestyle” on which Canyon Ranch has made its name, and when the first occupants move into the Chicago outpost in 2011, they’ll not only have access to such typical spa amenities as a fitness center, massages and yoga, but also to medical care.

“We will have a physician on site,” said company President Kevin Kelly. The doctor — perhaps two, depending on demand — will be joined by nurses, nutritionists and exercise physiologists on the staff, he said.

Though not intended as primary-care providers for the building’s residents, the medical staff will offer physical exams and coordinate exercise and other health-related programs, Kelly said.

They will mirror the medical services available at the 18-year-old, privately held spa in Tucson, Ariz. The company has a combined staff of 21 physicians and PhDs in health-related fields there and at a sister facility in Lennox, Mass. It also collaborates on some programs with the Cleveland Clinic.  Continued…

Source: Chicago Tribune



Trump SoHo Breaking the Price Barrier

By Anthony Longo 1 06 2007

Trump SOHO$2000 per square foot and you can’t even live in it year round!  Gotta love NY!

Now that the long-awaited plans for Trump SoHo have finally been approved by the city, the next question is: How much are these suckers going to cost? Although the sales office has yet to open (the offering plan will be ready “imminently,” we’re told) and our requests for specific pricing information have been unsuccessful, the parties involved predict the numbers will be unprecedented below 14th Street.

“The demand is going to create a price point that will set the benchmark for pricing downtown,” says Shaun Osher of Core Group Marketing, which will be selling the hotel-condo units. “It will be well in excess of $2,000 a square foot.”

Though Donald Trump Jr. notes that “$2,000 a square foot doesn’t have the shock factor it used to” (especially to foreign buyers taking advantage of the weak dollar), that price point is still high compared to the new Hudson Square buildings a stone’s throw west of Trump SoHo.  Continued…

Source: New York Post

For the same money of one of their high-end units, you could visit our SOHO fav – 25 Bond (with only one unit left).  Also, visit other NY Condos and condo-hotels here.



Trump Condo-hotel gets green light to build (SOHO)

By Anthony Longo 12 05 2007

Trump Condo Hotel SohoThe Department of Buildings on Tuesday approved the plans and the application for a building permit for Donald Trump’s proposed 42-story condo-hotel on Spring St. in a manufacturing district in Hudson Square, a project that has roused intense opposition from preservation advocates.
The approval of the application for 242 Spring St. at Varick St. did not yet include the actual permit to continue construction on the site, where the foundation is nearly completed, according to a department spokesperson.
The developer, actually Bayrock/Sapir Organization, with the participation of Trump and his grown children, still had to submit nearly 20 technical documents before a permit could be issued, according to a Department of Buildings statement.

Continued….

or visit the DEV WEBSITE:  www.TRUMPSOHO.com 

Source: The Villager



Condo Hotel King; Falor Bowing Out

By Anthony Longo 7 05 2007

Setai Condo Hotel Miami BeachRobert Falor, whose acquisition of the Royal Palm hotel three years ago cemented his status as the leader in South Florida’s condo-hotel conversion trend, has surrendered management of the property.

Falor said his departure from the South Beach hotel signals the beginning of the end of his stormy tenure in South Florida real estate. His other South Beach project, the Breakwater and Edison hotels, are in bankruptcy. Falor said both hotels, along with a South Florida property where he owns a small stake, Islamorada’s Cheeca Lodge, are for sale.

”For me, it made sense to move on,” the Chicago developer said.

Falor’s departure from the Royal Palm was first announced in a court hearing Friday for a lawsuit developer R. Donahue Peebles filed against Royal Palm owners claiming gross mismanagement by Falor. Majority owner Guy Mitchell said Falor was removed as manager in March. Continued…

Source: Miami Herald



Buy your furniture at your nearest hotel?

By Anthony Longo 25 04 2007

W Hotel Condo

No, we are not talking about a yard sale.

We have all been to a hotel where we love a piece of furniture or decorative item and wished we could just buy it (unlike the towels we just steal).  Well, now more and more hotel’s are doing this.  The W Hotels which have led the industry in creative luxury overnight-stay’s is now allowing you to live it year round in your own home.  Of course you could always buy a condo-hotel from Starwood Group and have it be done,  but we are talking about going shopping for that cool, hip modern furniture that is always so hard to find and having it delivered to your own home.

Visit The W Hotel Store:  They have everything from footwear and music to bedding and furniture.  Pretty neat right?