Chicago to Offer Most Generous Subsidies in U.S. to Save Its Downtown
Chicago gave birth to the skyscraper in the late 19th century. Now, local developers and politicians are trying to keep many of today’s office towers from dying off, the Wall Street Journal reported. The city is going beyond any other in providing public subsidies to convert obsolete office space into apartments and hotels, despite enormous budgetary challenges. Even Chicago’s politically progressive mayor signed on last month. The city’s office market has been hurt by weakening demand, higher interest rates and difficulties in refinancing. Big companies such as Citadel and Boeing have moved their headquarters elsewhere, and Chicago commercial-property values have plummeted. While these economic trends have afflicted central business districts in other major U.S. cities, by one measure Chicago’s is the hardest-hit. Three-quarters of the mortgages backing its office space that were converted into securities are either in default or are at risk of default, the highest of any major metropolitan area in the nation, according to credit research firm KBRA Analytics. Chicago’s office-vacancy rate has soared to 16.3% from 11.9% in early 2020, and it is notably higher than the U.S. average of 13.8%, according to data firm CoStar Group. Some downtown office buildings have sold for less than one-quarter of what they were valued at a few years ago. (Subscription required.)
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Adam Neumann Gives Up on Buying Back WeWork
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Circuits Split: Does Anti-Modification Apply to Any Property with a Principal Residence?
Eleventh Circuit seems to hold that a mortgage on any property with a principal residence can’t be modified even if the principal use of the property is commercial.
Court:
Analysis: Bankruptcies Have Left More Stores Vacant, but the Space Doesn’t Sit Empty for Long
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Investors Eye Expansion in Private Credit
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U.S. Existing Home Sales Drop 1.9% in April, Pushed Lower by High Rates and High Prices
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Lender Seeks Buyer for Four Seasons Embarcadero Hotel Debt
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New York Mega Mall’s Muni Bonds Stave Off Default for Now
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Florida’s 125% Surge in Property-Insurance Bills Sows Havoc
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