After years of lowered expectations, there was a figure last week that caught the attention of your humble Commercial Observer editors. One. Trillion. Dollars. That was the value Brookfield gave on [its earnings report]( last Wednesday for the assets it had under management. A lot of it was due to investments in artificial intelligence and renewable energy, according to Brookfiledâs 36-year-old wunderkind president Connor Teskey. âWe⦠continue to see unprecedented opportunities in our renewable power and transition business, as evidenced by the recent partnership with Microsoft and our agreement to acquire Neoen, one of the worldâs leading renewable power operators,â said Teskey. âWith one of the largest pipelines of over 230,000 megawatts of renewable power in operation and under development, and our rapidly growing data center platforms, which has seen its U.S. capacity grow fourfold over the last two years, we are the infrastructure leader behind the ongoing AI revolution.â And, while the trillion dollar figure seemingly casts every smaller deal into silence, there were a few other big numbers we saw thrown around last week. Cain International and OKO Group began the [search for $5.25 billion]( to complete One Beverly Hills, their ultra-luxury development that will be the two tallest buildings in Beverly Hills when theyâre completed. (Cain and OKO are hoping to finish by the 2028 Olympics in L.A.) Michael Dellâs [MSD Capital]( [secured $1 billion]( from Citigroup to refinance the 1,047-unit Boca Raton Resort & Club (the deal technically closes on Aug. 22). Equity Residential plunked down nearly $1 billion ($964 million) for [an 11-property portfolio]( in Atlanta, Denver and Dallas from Blackstone. Finally, we [checked in]( with Michael Swerdlow about his new 8,000-unit affordable housing development in South Florida; price tag: $3 billion. Good earners Weâve got the first full week of August behind us and that means that the laggard earnings calls for the second quarter of 2024 are hereby in the can. Some of the news was good, like with Brookfield, or DigitalBridge, which [raised $14 billion]( mostly for data center development and saw net income of $77 million. Some of the news was bad. Starwood Property Trust saw its [net income cut by half]( (49 percent) to $77.9 million from what it was the previous quarter. Plus, Starwood had to foreclose on properties and downgrade a number of their loans. However, the companyâs chairman and CEO was sunny on the call. âWe strategically diversified Starwood Property Trust into investment cylinders other than commercial lending as we saw risk and reward shift,â said Barry Sternlicht. âWe think the roughest patch for the property sector globally is behind us, and the U.S. and Europe will be moving into an easing cycle.â Some of it was good and bad at the same company. Yes, we mentioned Brookfieldâs dizzying âtâ word, but they also [saw their income dip]( 47 percent. Vornado Realty Trust saw some good deals (they [sold their Uniqlo space]( at 666 Fifth Avenue for $350 million) but, also, despite the fact that [office leasing was generally healthy]( last quarter, Vornado [lost some key tenants]( like Facebook. And, while we didnât learn about it on an earnings call, it came to our attention that Bill Ackmanâs Pershing Square Capital Management, the largest shareholder in Howard Hughes Holdings, was [pushing to take HHH private](. Shocks to the system Of course, all of these earnings calls might look very different next quarter. Indeed, last week saw the most tumult in the markets in quite some time. Stocks zigged and zagged, and there were [calls on the Fed]( to cut interest rates to head off a recession. (A cut will very likely happen in September if not sooner.) Which would certainly be welcome in the real estate market, given its own share of tumult and crazy discounts. Just last week Downtown Los Angelesâ 801 Tower, aka 801 South Figueroa Street, [sold for $60 million](, or about $129 per square feet, to an unnamed Chinese buyer. Just a decade ago the same building traded for $178.2 million. Donald Trumpâs former Washington, D.C., lodging, Trump International Hotel, (currently the Waldorf Astoria Washington D.C.) [sold at a foreclosure auction]( for $100 million to merchant bank [BDT & MSD Partners](. Finally, a Goldman Sachs-led consortium [took the keys back]( on L&L Holding Group and Fortress Investment Groupâs $2.5 billion TSX Broadway. On the move There have been a couple of interesting job switches so far this August. Kevin Cullinan, who had spent a decade at Mack Real Estate Group as a partner and head of credit, has[landed in the same role]( at Ohana Real Estate Investors. (You know Ohana â among their $4.5 billion in investments and $850 million in hotel loans, some of their greatest hits include the Four Seasons Hualalai in Hawaii and the Fontainebleau Miami Beach.) âWe are beyond excited to welcome Kevin to Ohana,â said the firmâs president and CIO, Franco Famularo, in an announcement about the hire. âAs we continue to grow our credit and capital markets capabilities, Kevinâs deep expertise and experience will be invaluable in allowing us to provide a broader array of debt solutions to our investors and to owners of high-quality properties.â Also, Ronnie Levine and Seth Grossman have left their perch at Meridian Capital Group to [start a new equity firm]( called Green Pine Real Estate. While Meridian wished Levine and Grossman well in a statement to CO, it was probably a blow to the firm, which has been bleeding talent like Adam Hakim, James Murad, Tal Savariego and Judah Hammer, and which [announced the departure]( of their president, Yoni Goodman, last month. Sunday reading House hunting is a great Sunday tradition, and we wouldnât want to intrude on whatever you have planned today, but, while weâre on the topic, may we recommend reading an interview with one of the best designers in the business: Thomas Juul-Hansen. The man behind the designs at One57 and 720 West End Avenue [sat down with CO]( to talk about Gary Barnett, big apartments, good materials and more as a part of our architecture and design issue last week. And, while youâre on the topic of building as a verb, you should check out our look at construction in an ever [hotter and hotter New York City]( (and by âhotterâ we mean temperature-wise), the push to [diversify the architecture field](, and [the proptech firms and fixes]( that architects are using. See you next week! [View in Browser]( | [Advertise]( | [Forward to a Friend](
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This newsletter was published 08/11/2024