THE GOVERNMENT HAS $72 BILLION FOR GREEN REAL ESTATE
July 9, 2010 on 12:38 am | In GREEN, Government, Lenders, Problem Solving, Uncategorized, all | 6 Comments
By Jodi Summers
Experts have calculated that the Obama administration has put together more than 30 programs worth $72 billion that can be used to increase energy efficiency in commercial buildings and multifamily housing.
“The Obama Administration has tremendous, untapped opportunities to use legal tools already at its disposal to enhance the energy efficiency and sustainability of the nation’s multifamily and commercial buildings — all without seeking new funds or authority from Congress,” observes a report prepared by Van Ness Feldman. “All told, the programs identified in this report have the potential to directly provide or facilitate over $72 billion in funding or loan guarantees, and can leverage hundreds of billions of dollars in private investment through instruments such as mortgage insurance and regulation of the real estate lending market.”
Titled “Using Executive Authority to Achieve Greener Buildings: A Guide for Policymakers to Enhance Sustainability and Efficiency in Multifamily Housing and Commercial Buildings,” the legal analysis, suggests several ways the Obama administration can use existing programs to enhance building efficiency:
* Reforming appraisal and underwriting practices at Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac Greening federal banking regulations
* Promoting flexible FHA insurance products
* Integrating energy efficiency and sustainability criteria into competitive grants and funding formulas
* Strengthening minimum property standards for federal housing and economic development programs to reflect energy efficiency and sustainability standards
* Improving performance standards applicable to federal buildings and leases
* Refining guidance applicable to the energy efficient commercial buildings tax deduction and the national historic preservation tax credit
* Using SBA funding mechanisms to support small business energy efficiency investments
* Streamlining Title 17 loan guarantees to make them suitable for buildings
“As an early adopter of green buildings and the LEED green building certification system, the federal government has been a leader in bringing green buildings to cities and towns across America,” said Roger Platt, the USGBC’s senior vice president of Global Policy & Law declared. “This new report unveils an even larger opportunity for the Obama Administration to increase our nation’s energy efficiency, while creating thousands of jobs and saving taxpayers money.”
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http://www.usgbc.org/government
http://www.greenbiz.com/news/2010/04/30/obama-already-has-72b-tap-green-buildings-study-says
http://www.rechargenews.com/multimedia/archive/00032/obama_solar_3_32125a.jpg
State of the Commercial Loan Market
April 15, 2010 on 12:01 am | In FUNNY...MONEY, Lenders, Money, Uncategorized, all, economy | 3 Comments
By Robert Schroell
The rough ride isn’t over the for the commercial loan market.
Community banks in particular will likely have a tough time in 2010. Hundreds of regional institutions have a significant chunk of their loan portfolios ― up to and exceeding a quarter in some places ― in commercial mortgages.
At the same time, commercial debt is coming due at a staggering rate. The market will need about $1 trillion to service more than $3 trillion in commercial mortgage debt, according to a recent forecast by Keefe, Bruyette & Woods, a well-known New York analyst.
That’s likely to make cash a disappearing commodity, primarily for the banking industry. In fact, experts at Keefe, Bruyette & Woods are urging banks to consider offering extensions to cash-strapped homeowners, many of whom have struggled to refinance their existing mortgages.
A significant slew of delinquencies in CMBS (commercial mortgage-backed securities) and bank loans is also expected to shape the course of 2010. It’s also almost difficult to imagine CMBS delinquencies getting any worse ― the rate skyrocketed an astounding 500 percent last year, jumping past 6 percent in December 2009 for the first time ever.
The governor of the Federal Reserve Board recently tried to rally optimism, noting that recovery should begin to take root as the year progresses. But those rosy projections didn’t include the commercial real estate market, which continues to flounder amid strained credit conditions and stagnant refinancing.
All in all, it’s a less than inspiring picture of what’s likely on the horizon.
“We estimate that the weighted average price decline for the commercial mortgage market is roughly 25%,” the experts at KBW state in their analysis. “This suggests that almost all the equity in the commercial sector has been wiped out.”
Fortunately… there’s pretty much no place else to go but up.
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http://www.mortgageloanplace.com/commercial-mortgage.html
http://www.newagedesign.com.au/library/scales.jpg
http://www.acumenlawgroup.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/11/commercial-loan.jpg
COMMERCIAL LOANS SHOULD BE EASIER TO COME BY
May 28, 2009 on 12:42 am | In Government, Lenders, Money, Problem Solving, Transaction Issues, Trends, Uncategorized, all, economy | 4 CommentsPERHAPS COMMERCIAL LOANS WILL BE EASIER TO COME BY
The Federal Reserve authorized longer- term loans for investors buying securities backed by commercial mortgages in a $1 trillion emergency credit program, taking a step the industry said was needed to avert defaults.
Beginning in June, the Fed will offer five-year loans at higher interest rates than the three-year loans previously approved for the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, the central bank in a statement from Washington. The Fed will also accept securities backed by loans designed to help small businesses buy insurance.
Get all the details @
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601068&sid=asH8tMd6ss4c
REAL ESTATE DEVELOPERS IMPACT BY BERNIE MADOFF’S “PONZI SCHEME”
February 21, 2009 on 12:04 am | In FASCINATING INFORMATION, FUNNY...MONEY, LENDERS + VENDORS, Legal, Lenders, Uncategorized | 11 Comments
REAL ESTATE DEVELOPERS IMPACT BY BERNIE MADOFF’S “PONZI SCHEME”
Several major East Coast Real Estate Developers have been named as victims in Bernard Madoff’s complex Ponzi scheme, which is rumored to have stripped investors of $50 billion in assets.
According to GlobeSt.com this list includes:
· Larry Silverstein, the World Trade Center developer;
· The Wilpons and Rechlers families;
· Brokers at Newmark Knight Frank and CB Richard Ellis–including Stephen Siegel, chairman of worldwide operations there,
· New Jersey developer Fred Daibes is rumored to have lost a significant amount of money;
· Mort Zuckerman, the chief executive of Boston Properties;
· Fred Wilpon, who owns the Mets and is head of Sterling Equities;
· Steven Simkin, a partner at the New York law firm of Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison and chairman of the firm’s real estate department;
· A number of limited real estate partnerships in DC are also among the supposed victims.
· Other recognizable names on the list include John Malkovich, Sandy Koufax and Tim Teufel, - if these are the actor and baseball players, respectively, is unconfirmed, as is Larry King, the talk-show host, Frank Lautenberg, the Democratic senator from New Jersey, and Mark Green, a former public advocate of New York City.
Madoff was known to have focused on the rich and famous, sometimes requesting as much as a $20 million minimum.
A large number of the developers who invested with Madoff are reported to have pledged securities held by him for development projects. It has yet to be determined whether the actions of one person, will again impact bank lending criteria.
The complete client list of Madoff has been provided by the Wall Street Journal:
http://online.wsj.com/public/resources/documents/madoffclientlist020409.pdf
Info courtesy of:
http://www.globest.com/news/1341_1341/newyork/176748-1.html
https://ecf.nyeb.uscourts.gov/
http://designdepartment.wordpress.com/2006/09/07/
http://marketplace.publicradio.org/display/web/2006/10/27/down_in_debt/
http://www.observer.com/term/25509
http://gothamist.com/2007/09/07/revised_vision.php
http://blog.lib.umn.edu/mcgin017/blog/fall_2008/honors_intro_to_philosophy_fall_08/
GREEN YOUR BUILDINGS WITHOUT DEBT
July 5, 2008 on 4:42 pm | In Bravo, GREEN, Lenders, Trends, Uncategorized, economy | 7 CommentsGREEN YOUR BUILDINGS WITHOUT DEBT
BOMA - The Building Owners and Managers Association International- has unveiled a standardized contract that allows building owners to reduce energy costs via retrofitting their buildings and at the same time finance those retrofits without placing additional debt on their buildings. The model contract, developed by BOMA in cooperation with the Clinton Climate Initiative, is an agreement between an energy service provider and a building owner in which the energy service provider guarantees to save the building owner a certain amount of money on energy costs each year by retrofitting a building. In return, the building owner agrees to pay the energy services provider out of the savings realized through the retrofit.
The new BOMA-CCI model energy performance contract is designed to overcome those obstacles by providing a standardized contract that addresses all of the legal and technical issues involved in negotiating such a deal, and it also provides a blueprint for financing the contract via a lease between the building owner and the energy services provider. Henry Chamberlain, president and CEO of BOMA stated the association’s objective was to create “a turn-key program and a simplified contract” for building owners. Get all the details @ http://www.globest.com/news/1185_1185/denver/171797-1.html
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