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Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Deutsche Bank slashes price tag for two Macklowe buildings

Deutsche Bank slashes price tag for two Macklowe buildings
December 09, 2008 05:12 PM
By David Jones

As pressure mounts to close the books on the Harry Macklowe foreclosure saga, Deutsche Bank has lowered the price tag for 1540 Broadway and Worldwide Plaza to $800 million, according to financial and legal sources familiar with the discussions.

http://therealdeal.com/blog/2008/12/09/deutsche-slashes-price-tag-for-two-macklowe-buildings-2/

The price drop comes weeks after the collapse of an agreement to sell the buildings to George Comfort & Sons for $2 billion. The deal fell apart when NBC backed out of talks for a 600,000-square-foot lease at Worldwide Plaza, which would make the building a much riskier investment.

“It’s going to trade at a discount, especially because they don’t have a large tenant now,” said Dennis Russo, an attorney with Herrick Feinstein, who represents some of the potential bidders. “You may never rent that space in the next year.”

Deutsche has several offers on the table for the two buildings, but the offers range from only about $600 million to $700 million. Sources said the buyers are interested in buying distressed assets, but declined to identify the buyers.

“A lot of them are bottom fishers; they may not be what Deutsche Bank wants,” said a person familiar with the talks. It was not immediately clear which investors would take the lead on a deal for 1540 Broadway and Worldwide Plaza. Before talks heated up with George Comfort & Sons, Guggenheim Partners reportedly had been in the running for the two buildings. However, the Wall Street Journal reported earlier this month that JPMorgan Chase seized tens of millions of dollars in collateral from a fund controlled by Guggenheim Partners.

Officials at George Comfort & Sons could not be immediately reached for comment.

Deutsche is under considerable pressure to dump the final two properties it seized earlier this year from Macklowe after he defaulted on $7 billion in debt. Sources say that Deutsche has told buyers that it had lined up three prospective tenants, but would leave it up to the new buyers to negotiate a lease. Deutsche Bank was not immediately available for comment. CB Richard Ellis, which is marketing the building, declined to comment.

In July 2009, advertising firm Ogilvy & Mather is scheduled to leave Worldwide Plaza, at 825 Eighth Avenue and 49th Street, for its new headquarters at 636 11th Avenue at 47th Street, where rents start at $51 a square foot, mainly to escape the $95 a square foot rents sought by Macklowe.

By contrast, 1540 Broadway, also known as the Bertelsmann Building, is relatively stable. Asking rents on lower floors average $95 a square foot, while CB Richard Ellis is open to negotiating 111,600 contiguous square feet of space on the 39th to 44th floors, which are available for lease.

“Leases have come due. [Macklowe was] very ambitious on the rents they wanted, but the tenants found cheaper space somewhere,” said Ruth Colp-Haber, president of Wharton Realty Partners, who is not involved in the discussions.

Following the September stock market crash, the Manhattan office market has been flooded with sublease space and Colliers ABR predicts that asking rents will slide more than 25 percent by mid-2010. Therefore, tenants will have many more options for quality locations and have the ability to rent at a significant discount from current prices.

“While Worldwide Plaza is a nice building, it’s all the way on the West Side,” said Woody Heller, managing director of Studley. “If you’re a tenant looking for large space, is that your first choice?”

http://therealdeal.com/blog/2008/12/09/deutsche-slashes-price-tag-for-two-macklowe-buildings-2/

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