
Volume 2 | Issue 97 | Wednesday, May 21, 2003
|
 |
| |
Sponsored by: |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| "Moviegoers can now sink
into cushy seats in a stadium setting with extravagant
sound systems and everything from Starbucks cafe
lattes to Soft Taco Supremes to fill tummies." - Larry
Feldman, president and CEO of Feldman Equities,
discussing a renaissance in movie theater profitability
through expansion and diversification. |
 |
 |
 |
 |
 |
| |
 |
 |
| |
 |
 |
|
Top National News
Homeowners
Grab 10-Year Mortgages (Wall Street Journal)
Mortgage
Aids Are Attacked (Salt Lake Tribune)
Fannie
Mae Overstepping Mission--Rivals (Reuters)
Bill
Aims to Rein in High-Cost Lenders (Boston Globe)
Fannie
Mae, Freddie Mac Prepay Differential 'Nothing New' (Dow
Jones Newswire)
Bonds
Rally on Heightened Terror Alert (Los Angeles Times)
Freddie
Pursues CRA-Eligible Loans From Community Banks (Dow
Jones Newswire)
New
Mortgage Programs Reward Buyers of Energy-Efficient Houses (Sarasota
Herald-Tribune)

Residential Finance News
FHA
Proposes to Tighten Appraiser Roster
MBA
Calls FAA Bill "Ambiguous and Inappropriate"
Rates
Plunge Again in MBA Weekly Application Survey
Residential
Briefs
Commercial/Multifamily Finance
News
DealMaker
of the Day
MBA News
CampusMBA's
Audio Program: How to Close More Loans, Make More Money
and Have a Life
Spotlight: Commercial/Multifamily
Movie
Theaters Could Find Investment 'Reloaded' For Summer
Homeowners
Grab 10-Year Mortgages
Wall
Street Journal (05/21/03) P. D1; Simon, Ruth
A growing number of homeowners are trading in their
30-year mortgages for 10-year loans to save on interest
and pay off their homes before they reach retirement
age. Lenders say 15-year, 20-year, and 25-year loans
are also becoming popular, but many homeowners are
simply refinancing their 30-year mortgages to slash
their monthly payments. Since shorter-term loans carry
higher monthly payments, borrowers are urged to consider
their future income to avoid financial crisis. Though
lenders were anticipating fewer refinancings as the
economy picked up steam, interest rates have remained
at record lows, forcing the Mortgage Bankers Association
of America to revise its mortgage volume estimate to
an all-time high of $3 trillion.
(More
- Subscription Required)
(Back To Top)
Mortgage
Aids Are Attacked
Salt
Lake Tribune (05/21/03) ; Mitchell, Lesley
Mortgage lenders in Utah are questioning whether down-payment
assistance programs are responsible for the rising
rate of foreclosures in the state. Utah had the second-highest
percentage of Federal Housing Administration insured
mortgages in foreclosure last year, and the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development is investigating the
rising trend. Lenders are suggesting that such programs
may be helping low- to moderate-income home buyers
who otherwise would not have been able to buy a home,
ultimately setting up families living from pay check
to pay check for failure when they are faced with long-term
payments, and maintenance and repairs cost on their
home. As many as 4,000 home buyers may have benefited
from the Nehemiah program, The Buyer's Fund, and dozens
of similar down-payment assistance programs last year
when about 30,000 homes were sold in the state.
(More)
(Back To Top)
Fannie
Mae Overstepping Mission--Rivals
Reuters
(05/20/03)
FM Policy Focus insists that Fannie Mae's "PaymentPower" program,
which lets borrowers skip some mortgage payments and
adds them to the loan balance, goes far beyond its
mission of purchasing mortgages and into direct lending.
Though Fannie claims the program is provided by individual
lenders to help borrowers avoid default, FM Policy
Focus considers it direct lending because the borrower
receives a new loan obligation. The group also accuses
the government-sponsored enterprise of neglecting to
seek the approval of the Department of Housing and
Urban Development and wants the agency to eliminate
the program. GE Capital Mortgage Insurance, Wells Fargo
Home Mortgage, Household International, and Chase Manhattan
Mortgage are just four of the companies that make up
FM Policy Focus.
(More)
(Back To Top)
Bill
Aims to Rein in High-Cost Lenders
Boston
Globe (05/21/03) ; Grillo, Thomas
Mortgage companies that lend in Massachusetts say a
new antipredatory lending bill would make business
unprofitable in the state. A hearing is scheduled for
Wednesday on the bill co-sponsored by Senate chair
of the Joint Committee on Banks and Banking, Andrea
Nuciforo Jr. (D-Pittsfield). The bill requires mandatory
credit counseling, limited prepayment penalties, and
a reasonable and tangible net benefit for borrowers
who receive loans at more than 5 percentage points
above the 5-year Treasury rate. "This bill is far too
aggressive and will drive out lenders," says Massachusetts
Mortgage Bankers Association board member Linda Bates,
who co-owns Sherwood Mortgage Group.
(More)
(Back To Top)
Fannie
Mae, Freddie Mac Prepay Differential 'Nothing
New'
Dow
Jones Newswire (05/20/03) ; Haviv, Julie
Though faster prepayments of mortgage-backed securities
are to blame for Freddie Mac's loss of market share
to rival Fannie Mae, Bear Stearns prepayment analyst
Dale Westhoff says the companies' constant prepayment
rates (CPRs) revealed similar differences in the last
four refinancing cycles. Only during the 1998 refinancing
frenzy were differences absent, mainly because lenders
did not join forces with Fannie and Freddie until 1999
and 2000. Westhoff blames the speedier prepayments
on Wells Fargo and ABN Amro, which account for much
of Freddie's business. Last month, Fannie's CPR for
15-year 6s was 58, compared to Freddie's CPR of 68.
(More
- Subscription Required)
(Back To Top)
Bonds
Rally on Heightened Terror Alert
Los
Angeles Times (05/21/03) P. C4
After the U.S. government raised the nation's terror-alert
level once again to "orange" on Tuesday, Treasury bond
yields slipped to new generational lows. The yield
on the 10-year T-note, widely viewed as a benchmark
for mortgages, ended at 3.36 percent--a 45-year low.
In addition, the purchase of longer-term Treasury bonds
has been stoked by a number of portfolio managers'
need to hedge against the potential for their mortgage-backed
bonds to be paid off early. As rates remain on the
decline, mortgage refinancings will likely see another
surge.
(More
- Registration Required)
(Back To Top)
Freddie
Pursues CRA-Eligible Loans From Community Banks
Dow
Jones Newswire (05/20/03) ; Kopecki, Dawn
Freddie Mac has embarked on a plan to aggressively
purchase and repackage mortgages originated by small
lenders. The government-sponsored enterprise is reselling
them at a premium to banks that are looking to bolster
their low-income investment scores with federal regulators.
Freddie Mac officials have established several alliances
with such organizations as the American Bankers Association
and the Credit Union National Association in recent
months, buying up their loans that qualify for Community
Reinvestment Act (CRA) credits and offering free portfolio
management and securitization training to bank employees.
Freddie officials believe there is a lot of promise
in consolidating the secondary mortgage market among
smaller depository institutions, which typically boast
less than $500 million in assets.
(More
- Subscription Required)
(Back To Top)
New
Mortgage Programs Reward Buyers of Energy-Efficient
Houses
Sarasota
Herald-Tribune (05/17/03) ; McLinden, Steve
Homeowners who want to do more than install programmable
thermostats or add weather-stripping around doors to
boost their homes' energy efficiency may want to consider
an Energy Efficient Mortgage (EEM). The U.S. Department
of Energy says these loans--which are used to make
energy-efficient improvements--allow homeowners to
put the savings from lower utility bills toward their
mortgage payments. Homeowners can borrower as much
as 15 percent more than the home's value without an
extra down payment or income with the Fannie Mae-backed
EEM, which is currently available from Countrywide
Home Loans. Since many lenders are unaware of EEMs
because they have been focused on the refinancing boom,
RESNET executive director Steve Baden urges borrowers
to bring the program to their attention.
(More)
(Back To Top)
|
 |
| FHA Proposes to Tighten Appraiser Roster |
MBA (5/21/03) Sorohan, Mike
FHA has finalized a rule that would strengthen the licensing
and certification requirements for placement on its
Appraiser Roster, a rule that FHA said would make it
more difficult for appraisers who have been sanctioned
by individual states to conduct appraisals on FHA loans.
The final
rule [pdf] , published
May 16 in the Federal Register, requires that appraisers
on FHA's Appraiser Roster have credentials based
on minimum licensing and certification standards
issued by the Appraiser Qualifications Board of the
Appraisal Foundation. It also clarifies that an appraiser
can be removed from the Appraiser Roster if the appraiser
loses his/her license or certification in any state
because of disciplinary action. The removal could
occur even if an appraiser whose license or certification
in any state, even if the appraiser continues to
be licensed or certified in another state.
Tim Doyle, a director in the government affairs department
at the Mortgage Bankers Association, said
the final rule gives FHA the ability to bolster its
existing regulations regarding appraisers.
"We support FHA's efforts," Doyle said. "The
most effective way for FHA to improve appraiser quality
is to strengthen its existing oversight mechanisms."
Doyle said no national system exists to license appraisers,
so the provision tying FHA's roster to state licensure
and certification would give the Appraiser Roster more
teeth. "Certainly tying the Appraiser Roster to
the states is a good step," he said.
The final rule goes into effect on June 16.
|
| (Back To Top) |
MBA Calls FAA Bill "Ambiguous and Inappropriate" |
MBA (5/21/03) Sorohan, Mike
The Mortgage Bankers Association said a bill
that would mandate certain lender disclosures regarding
noise coming from airports was "ambiguous and
inappropriate" and would increase costs to borrowers
attempting to obtain residential loans.
In a May 20 letter to House Transportation Committee
Chairman Don Young, R-Alaska, House Aviation Subcommittee
Chairman John Mica, R-Fla., and ranking Democrats James
Oberstar, D-Wis., and William Lipinski, D-Ill., MBA
said that H.R. 824, the "Aviation Investment and
Revitalization Vision Act," would result in an "across-the-board
increase in the cost to borrowers of obtaining residential
mortgage loan financing from regulated lending institutions
with no added benefit to them."
In the letter, MBA Senior Vice President for Government
Affairs Kurt Pfotenhauer said that subsections of H.R.
824 would direct federal banking regulators to develop
regulations to prohibit federally regulated lending
institutions to "…make, increase, extend,
or renew any loan that is secured by residential real
estate or a mobile home that is located or to be located
in the vicinity of an airport on the Secretary's list … unless
the loan applicant's purchase agreement for the residential
real estate or mobile home provides notice to the purchaser
(or satisfactory assurances are provided that the seller
has provided written notice to the purchaser prior
to the purchaser's signing of the purchase agreement)
that the property is within the area of the noise contours
on a noise exposure map…"
Additionally, the bill would require each federal
agency lender (including Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac)
by regulation to require …notification in the
manner provided in subsection (c) with respect to any
loan that is made by the federal agency lender and
secured by residential real estate or a mobile home
located or to be located in the vicinity of an airport
on the Secretary's list…"
"While MBA agrees that prospective homebuyers
should be aware of potential airport noise and other
environmental factors, MBA believes that this legislative
language is ambiguous and inappropriate for several
reasons," Pfotenhauer said. "Moreover, the
disclosures mandated by S. 824 are made to the prospective
homebuyer at a point after the buyer has financially
and contractually obligated himself to the purchase
of the property."
MBA notes the bill's legislative language would prohibit
federally regulated lending institutions to: "…make,
increase, extend, or renew any loan…" which
suggests that the language would apply to lending transactions
involving refinancings and modifications of existing
loans. "However, those financing transactions
do not involve home purchases and, as such, do not
involve the transfer of a property from a seller to
a buyer," Pfotenhauer said. "Thus, a plain
reading of the language implies that a borrower seeking
to refinance would have to present the original sales
contract, from years past, to qualify for the refinance."
MBA said the bill would be of "little or no benefit" even
to borrowers seeking to purchase properties located
in these areas, "because the vast majority of
those borrowers undoubtedly would know (by personal
observation from visits to the property, by notice
from reputable real estate agents, or as a result of
the independent appraisal of the property) that a property
is located in an area with air traffic. Many borrowers,
in fact, might consider an additional fee to cover
a lender's cost of ensuring that they have received
proper notification from sellers to be duplicative
of the cost paid to receive a reliable and thorough
real estate appraisal of the property. Other borrowers
might object to such a fee simply on the grounds that
the location of a property within an air traffic area
is readily determinable by them."
Pfotenhauer said the bill was a "misguided attempt" to
protect borrowers in the same manner that the flood
insurance laws protect borrowers from unexpected losses
due to floods. Additionally, he said the bill, by establishing
a precedent, would further increase borrowers' home
financing costs.
"Such disclosure requirements could encourage
other well intended but misguided legislation aimed
at protecting borrowers from other risks associated
with purchasing a home," Pfotenhauer said. "For
example, a legislator could decide to introduce legislation
requiring lenders to ensure that borrowers seeking
to buy homes near major interstate highways receive
notification that the properties have proper sound
barriers, while another legislator might decide that
lenders should ascertain whether borrowers have received
notice about whether a property is located near a waste
management facility. Still, other legislators could
decide that lenders should require borrowers to present
notice of the existence of lead paint in a home, or
that a home is in or near a high crime area."
Pfotenhauer said if lenders "are forced to assume
the additional responsibility of checking to see whether
borrowers receive these notifications, lenders' costs
will be passed along to borrowers as additional closing
fees because the costs would be incurred for the benefit
of borrowers-not the lenders. As a result, the legislation
would be a net loss for all borrowers, including borrowers
whose properties are not within the affected noise
areas and borrowers who are not seeking to purchase
a home."
|
| (Back To Top) |
Rates Plunge Again In MBA Weekly Application Survey |
MBA (5/21/03) Richardson, Tisha
In light of the Mortgage Bankers Association's
recent announcement that its originations forecast
for 2003 had increased to more than $3 trillion dollars,
the results of MBA's Weekly Application Survey for
the week ending May 16 is hardly a surprise. For the
second week in a row, interest rates for fixed-rate
mortgages have hit record lows, triggering strong application
volumes.
MBA reported that interest rates for fixed-rate mortgages
again decreased to record lows. Rates for 30-year fixed
mortgages reached a record low of 5.17 percent; the
previous record of 5.27 percent was reached last week.
Rates for 15-year mortgages also decreased to a record
5.61 percent; the previous record of 5.68 was also
reached last week.
"Interest rates are now at 45-year lows, and
consumers are definitely taking advantage these rates," said
MBA Senior Economist Phil Colling. "With long-term
interest rates continuing to decrease in response to
the Federal Open Market Committee's May 6 comments
regarding the current very low level of inflation,
MBA now expects 2003 to be yet another record year
in terms of mortgage originations."
Refinancing activity increased to 76.0 percent of
all applications from 72.4 percent the previous week.
Other seasonally adjusted index activity included
the Purchase Index, which decreased by 4.7 percent
to 395.8 from 415.2, the Refinance Index, which increased
by 15.2 percent to 8351.1 from 7250.0; the Conventional
Index, which increased by 11.3 percent to 2313.5 from
2078.3 from the previous week; and the Government Index
which decreased by 1.7 percent to 310.2 from 315.7.
The share of ARM activity decreased to 12.5 percent
from 12.7 percent the previous week.
|
| (Back To Top) |
Residential Briefs |
MBA (5/21/03) Sorohan, Mike
The Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) announced today
that in the first quarter of 2003 the nation's thrift
industry set records for net income, profitability,
equity capital and mortgage refinancing volume.
The industry earned a record $3.33 billion for the
quarter, nine percent higher than the previous record
of $3.05 billion set in the first quarter of 2002.
This was the third consecutive quarter of earnings
growth for the industry, and only the second time that
quarterly income has topped $3 billion.
"Continuing the trend from 2002, the favorable
interest rate environment in the first quarter of 2003
continued to support a mortgage refinance boom, leading
to record strength in earnings, profitability and capital
for the thrift industry," said OTS Director James
Gilleran.
Profitability, as measured by return on average assets,
also set a new record, at 1.30 percent. This topped
the previous record of 1.24 percent in the year-ago
first quarter, and the 1.20 percent figure for the
fourth quarter of 2002. The improvement came chiefly
from other noninterest income, which primarily includes
sales of assets, dividends on Federal Home Loan Bank
stock and income from leasing office space.
|
| (Back To Top) |
 |
| DealMaker of the Day |
MBA (5/21/03) Murray, Michael
Newman Financial Services' Structured Products Group
(SPG), Denver, Colo., provided $6.375 million in acquisition
and renovation financing for three office buildings
located in the Takoma Park, Md., area.
SPG, a division of GMAC Commercial Holding Capital
Corp., Horsham, Pa., provided bridge financing for
80 percent of the costs. SPG's total commitment was
$6.375 million with $4.65 million funded at closing
and $1.35 million held back for rehabilitation, tenant
improvements and leasing commission costs. A $375,000
earnout is available to the borrower upon the successful
achievement of an underwritten net operating income
(NOI) hurdle.
SPG officials said the property and the transaction
appeal to the firm because of the location, the property's
high in-place income and a strong sponsorship. But
there were also challenges on the transaction, such
as the age of the buildings, the non-traditional office
location and the number of small space users.
However, Jay Rollins, managing director of SPG and
senior vice president of Newman Financial Services,
said that the transaction is "a unique opportunity
to finance a value-added transaction with a strong
in-place cash flow."
The property was 90 percent occupied at closing by
approximately 170 tenants, mostly smaller users in
short-term leases, SPG officials said.
But the value-added strategy for Newman Financial
is to convert a portion of those smaller users to larger
users on long-term leases, which could increase the
durability of the cash flow and increase the property's
NOI. To achieve this objective, the borrower plans
to redirect the marketing of the property to target
larger local users and consolidate existing tenants
into an executive suite model.
"The cash flow does not have to dramatically
increase in order for SPG to exit the loan, but a different
tenant mix does need to be orchestrated," Rollins
said.
The loan carries a 36-month term with one, 12-month
extension option available. The loan was priced with
a spread floating over 30-day LIBOR and with a 25-year
amortization schedule.
The loan closed with debt service coverage (DSC) above
2.0x, and SPG officials project the DSC to remain above
1.65x over the course of the loan. The exit fee will
be reduced if Newman Financial Services or other GMAC
Commercial Holding Corp. entities provide the takeout
financing. The loan is locked out of prepayment for
the first 12 months, but the borrower could prepay
it in whole or part anytime after the year without
penalty.
The three interconnecting office buildings, located
on New Hampshire Avenue, consist of 145,000 net rentable
square feet. The buildings vary in height from three
to seven stories. They were built in 1956, 1964 and
1972.
|
| (Back To Top) |
 |
| CampusMBA's Audio Program: How to Close
More Loans, Make More Money and Have a Life |
MBA (5/21/03) CampusMBA Staff
Find out how you can position yourself to succeed in
today's competitive mortgage industry. Learn how to
get into the offices of realtors, builders, accountants
and other service provider to solicit their agents
and clients. Find out how you can use the Internet
to enhance and expand your business.
Join industry expert, Brian Sacks, on Wednesday, May
28, from 3:00-4:30 p.m. EDT to learn how to "Close
More Loans, Make More Money and Have a Life."
For additional information, go to http://www.campusmba.org/.
|
| (Back To Top) |
 |
| Movie Theaters Could Find Investment
'Reloaded' For Summer |
MBA (5/21/03) Murray, Michael
If receipts for "The Matrix: Reloaded" are
a sign of movie theater attendance this summer, then
a movie theater industry that had once been flailing
might itself be rejuvenated for higher profits in the
second half of the year. That rejuvenation could also
provide the impetus for greater investment in movie theater
and retail properties.
The Phoenix, Ariz., office of Feldman Equities, Inc.,
Manhasset, New York, recently completed a deal to upgrade
a 15-screen Loews Cinema in Foothills Mall, a Tucson,
Ariz.-based retail complex. Renovations include an
exit into the mall rather than the parking lot to increase
pedestrian traffic and potential sales. In exchange,
Feldman Equities will fund theater upgrades for the
Loews cinema in the mall.
"It's a classic 'win-win' business deal for both
parties," said
Larry Feldman, president and CEO of Feldman Equities. "With
modern stadium seating, Loews is expected to generate
substantially more ticket sales."
The mall appears to be a strong location for the Loews
cinema. A five-mile radius of Foothills Mall has shown
33 percent population growth from 1990 to 2000 as well
as a high-income group in the northwest Tucson area
near the mall and a 2.5 percent unemployment rate in
Tucson. Also, access became easier after construction
widened a local roadway going into the mall, officials
at Feldman Equities said.
Mike Norris, president of Loews Cineplex Entertainment
United States, said that the renovations to the theater
will not only enhance the lobby area but access to
and from the theater will be more convenient for theater
goers and mall patrons.
"The conversion to stadium seating of the Foothills
cinema is also consistent with our plans to upgrade
and expand our facilities," Norris said.
But not all movie theaters have reaped the benefits
of box office smash hits like the recently released "Matrix:
Reloaded" movie. In the mid to late 1990s, multiplex
movie theater construction shot up to a frenetic pace
and caused a number of theaters, including Loews and
Regal Cinemas to declare bankruptcy. The Loews Cinemas
chain filed for bankruptcy in 1998.
"A depression kicked into the whole movie theater
business," Feldman said.
In 1999, that bankruptcy and other theaters filing
for financial protection, stalled a contract between
Earvin "Magic" Johnson's Magic Johnson Theatres,
Inc. (MJT), Los Angeles, and a new retail and entertainment
development planned for Landover, Md. near Washington,
D.C. called The Boulevard at Capital Centre. The $85-million
planned town center project would cover approximately
55 acres on the Washington Beltway at the former site
of US Airways Arena.
But some leaders in the community said that without
the Magic Johnson Theatres as an anchor in the mall,
the project could be compared to a failed retail center
a mile away called Landover Mall.
Loews Cineplex Entertainment partnered with MJT in
1998, and Loews Cineplex now operates under Sony, Cineplex
Odeon, Star Theatres and Imax Theatres.
In February of 2001, an investor group comprised of
Onex Corp., OakTree Capital Management, LLC and Pacific
Capital Group Inc. signed an agreement to purchase
the theater chain. One-year later, in March 2002, Loews
Cineplex emerged from bankruptcy.
"The balance sheet is in good shape and their
theater is making money," Feldman said.
Now, after four years of negotiations and a bankruptcy
behind it, the Washington Post reported this week that
MJT has agreed to operate a 12-screen, 52,000 square
foot movie theater complex as anchor to the $82 million
shopping mall called Boulevard at the Capital Centre,
scheduled to open this November.
The planned redevelopment of Capital Centre is the
culmination of a promise by Washington Sports and Entertainment
chairman Abe Pollin, partial owner of the Washington
Wizards and former owner of the Washington Capitals,
to make the Capital Centre a viable part of the Prince
George's County community, Cordish Co., officials said.
The Capital Centre was a sports arena that Pollin developed
in 1972 but later changed the name to the U.S. Airways
Arena.
"[The retail/entertainment center] will create
a much needed sense of place for the community in a
wonderful upscale environment," said David Cordish,
chairman of The Cordish Co., at a groundbreaking ceremony
last year.
MJT touts itself as providing quality family entertainment
to underserved areas, and some analysts say MJT fostered
economic development and increased sales within minority
communities in New York and Los Angeles. Under the
MJT/Boulevard at Capital Centre deal, Cordish will
make a $9 million investment to pay for the costs to
develop the theatres.
Last year was the strongest year for movie attendance
since 1957, with about 1.64 billion tickets sold, Feldman
said, and multiplex theaters reversed a decline in
attendance from the year before with an 8 percent increase
in 2002.
The National Association of Theater Owners reports
steady growth in moviegoer audiences with 2002 box
office increases of nearly 9 percent to $9.37 billion
from $8.41 billion in total U.S. box office grosses
in 2001.
An increase in demand for movies and an improved balance
sheet made movie theaters more attractive to Wall Street
as Regal Cinemas formed an Initial Public Offering,
and Loews is on-hold for one, Feldman said.
Feldman said that about 50 percent of moviegoers are
younger than 25, and about 33 percent of moviegoers
are between 25 and 39. Some analysts say that younger
movie audiences might frequent one film numerous times
if it becomes popular, such as the "Star Wars" and "Harry
Potter" films, making them greater moneymakers.
"The hits keep coming," Feldman said. "They're
rolling out one big blockbuster after another."
Although average U.S. movie ticket prices increased
more than 9 percent in 2002, Feldman said that the
movie theater industry attracts audiences with an investment
of billions of dollars in the movie theater experience
itself.
"People are attracted by the new amenities offered
by exhibitors," Feldman said. "The improvements
in the theaters include high-tech sound systems, brighter
pictures and stadium-style seating that provides better
sight lines. Moviegoers can now sink into cushy seats
in a stadium setting with extravagant sound systems
and everything from Starbucks cafe lattes to Soft Taco
Supremes to fill tummies."
Feldman Equities of Arizona not only focuses on real
estate investment and management but development as
well. The firm purchased Foothills Mall in April of
last year and the mall now has more than 97 percent
occupancy, but Feldman Equities and its partner, Paul
Ash Management, plan to create 50,000 square feet of
new retail space within a 508,000 square foot entertainment
and retail center. The plans also include a 10,000
square-feet expansion of the mall now under construction
with the capability for an additional 80,000 square
feet of expansion.
|
| (Back To Top) |
|
|
ABOUT
MBA NewsLink
Publisher: Cheryl Crispen, Senior Vice President -
Communications and Marketing
Editor: Mike Sorohan 202/557-2855 michael_sorohan@mbaa.org
Deputy Editor: Michael Murray 202/557-2851 michael_murray@mbaa.org
Advertising Opportunities: Bill Farmakis 203/966-1746 bill@jlfarmakis.com
MBA NewsLink, a daily electronic publication, is free
to you as an employee of an MBA member company. For
membership information, visit MBA's website at www.mortgagebankers.org/membership
If this e-mail has been forwarded to you, please visit www.mortgagebankers.org/mbanewslink to
receive your own free subscription. If you wish to
unsubscribe or if you wish to receive MBA NewsLink
at another e-mail address, click
here.
To view the NewsLink archives, click
here
Abstracts Copyright
(c) 2003 Information, Inc., Bethesda, Maryland
USA
The links at the end of each abstract are to the
publisher, publication, or article. Some links may
require registration or subscription. Information,
Inc. is not affiliated with the referenced publications.
(Back To Top)
|
|
Copyright © 2003-2002
Mortgage Bankers Association
1919 Pennsylvania Ave. NW Washington, DC 20006-3438
(202) 557-2700, All Rights Reserved.
http://www.mortgagebankers.org/ |
|
|