So, how was your week? There was no shortage of news, thatâs for sure. It might be telling that a piece of news that nearly slipped our mind because it happened in the long, long ago of Tuesday, May 16, was that Sandeep Mathrani announced he was [stepping down]( as head of WeWork to join private equity firm Sycamore Partners. Mathrani is one of the more esteemed names in the real estate industry, having made his bones by turning a massively indebted, bankrupt GGP into the second-largest mall REIT in the country by the time it was purchased by Brookfield. When Mathrani was tapped for the role of CEO of the struggling coworking company back in 2020, the choice seemed like an interesting corrective to the freewheeling, fiesta atmosphere cultivated by the companyâs previous CEO, Adam Neumann. David Tolley is stepping in as temporary CEO as WeWork figures out a permanent chief. But, then, there were a lot of comings and goings last Tuesday. Joseph Fingerman, the head of Signature Bankâs commercial real estate originations team, was [laid off]( along with 11 other essential players. The news broke as Signature executives (along with Silicon Valley Bank honchos) were [facing withering criticism]( under the klieg lights of a Senate hearing about the banksâ implosions. âIt seems like big losses and a struggling stock price motivated management to jump-start profits and boost the stock price, and in doing so you just didnât seem to care about increasingly obvious risk,â Ohio Sen. Sherrod Brown said to ex-SVB CEO Greg Becker. âMr. Becker, your version of events blames SVBâs failure on too many interest rate hikes ⦠and the regulators for being too slow to highlight longstanding problems. It sounds a lot like the dog ate my homework.â Louisiana Sen. John N. Kennedy was even blunter. âMr. Becker, you made a really stupid bet that went bad, didnât ya?â Kennedy said. âAnd the taxpayers of America had to pick up the tab for your stupidity, didnât they?â Of course, while the [SVB fallout]( is something that the finance industry (not to mention the politicos) will be untangling for quite some time, an even bigger potential economic threat is looming in the capital â potential default on the federal debt. Also on Tuesday, President Biden was meeting with Speaker of the House Kevin McCarthy at the White House, where they attempted to stave off an expected [breach of the debt ceiling]( on June 1. Default would, in the opinion of a number of real estate experts, prove catastrophic. It âwould upend one of our most fundamental assumptions of how the global financial system works â the characterization of Treasurys being risk-free â if the U.S. fails to meet its obligations,â NYUâs Sam Chandan told Commercial Observer. âAll of us are just assuming theyâre going to solve it because thereâs nothing else we can do,â opined GFPâs Jeff Gural. âIf we really thought weâd default on our debt, we might as well leave the country.â Somehow, that didnât make us feel better. The mouse that roared The intersection between real estate and politics was not confined to the nationâs capital. In Florida, the war between Disney and Gov. Ron DeSantis leveled up when Disney announced that it was [canceling plans]( to build an $864 million mixed-use development in Orlando and closing its Star Wars-themed hotel. âGiven the considerable changes that have occurred since the announcement of this project, including new leadership and changing business conditions, we have decided not to move forward,â Josh DâAmaro, head of Disneyâs parks, experiences and products division, said in [a memo to staff]( that was obtained by the Wall Street Journal. This comes as Disney has been feuding with the Florida governor after the previous Disney CEO, Bob Chapek, criticized the stateâs âDonât Say Gayâ bill, which resulted in Florida legislators attempting to strip Disney of its governing power over the site of its themed park. Well, the Sunshine State can always turn to [Lincoln Road]( to try to make up the shortfall. The death of a legend One of the very biggest shocks of the week, however, was the news that [Sam Zell had died](. The shock might have something to do with the fact that he was such a potent and seemingly immortal force in real estate. From his plucky, humble beginnings (he would buy Playboy magazines and resell them to his schoolmates for six times what he paid for them) he became a force of nature within the business, having amassed a property portfolio where the office portion alone was worth an ungodly $39 billion by the time Zell sold it to Blackstone in 2007. Two days before he died, Commercial Observer had [named him No. 11]( on our Power 100 list along with Equity Residential CEO and President Mark Parrell. Speaking of Power 100⦠The big news around the CO offices, though, was the publication of our annual list of the [100 most powerful people in commercial real estate](! We have to admit, it is getting tougher and tougher to rank the high and mighty of the industry. A lot of office owners seemingly owned the Power 100 in past years, but theyâve taken [a considerable hit]( in the last couple of years in our estimation â particularly flex operators, who have been repped by at least one company (if not more) in the last few years. But [not in 2023](. Likewise, we had to cast a cold eye over a lot of [politicians who have graced the list]( in years past. It was always a given that New Yorkâs governor and mayor (even when they hated each other) would be ranked among the powerful real estate players, given that their decisions carried so much weight around New York City ⦠but do they anymore? Gov. Kathy Hochul and Mayor Eric Adams are pretty openly pro-development, and yet theyâve been stymied at just about every turn by the NIMBY folks in the state Senate and City Council. Given the bankruptcies, the delinquencies and other woes besetting the industry, itâs probably a better time (or a more active time) [to be a lawyer]( in CRE than a politician. But just as office owners and politicians might have suffered in 2023, there were others who rose in our estimation. The multifamily developers? The industrial owners? The data center gurus? The heads of the Federal Reserve? They [shot sky high](. And, as one of COâs missions has long been to look at the national real estate picture, we tried to inject as much [new blood]( as we could. We hope itâll make for interesting reading â happy Sunday! --------------------------------------------------------------- [View in Browser]( | [Advertise]( | [Forward to a Friend](
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This newsletter was published 05/21/2023