JP Morgan Chase & Co.

JPMorgan Close to Shedding Five Floors at Rudin’s 345 Park; But That’s an Exception as Financial Firms Sit Tight

345 Park Avenue
Property Shark
345 Park Avenue

Given the woes on Wall Street and the billions upon billions in write-downs financial-services firms are facing, it would seem like a fine time for the financial sector to vacate some office space—or so one might think.

But movement on the financial front has been almost eerily quiet in the real estate world. Few major firms are taking space anywhere—that much has been expected—but the banks also seem reluctant to put any office space up for grabs through subleasing.  read more »

Spitzer Chases Elusive Tax Breaks

The JP Morgan Chase tower, as envisioned by a neighborhood resident.
The JP Morgan Chase tower, as envisioned by a neighborhood resident.

Governor Spitzer was about limiting the lure of “off-the-shelf” tax incentives when he announced this morning that JP Morgan Chase had agreed to lease Site 5 at Ground Zero from the Port Authority. But he gave three different estimates on how much those tax breaks would be.

“They are all a part of pre-existing, lower Manhattan rent exemptions, the as-of-right statutory rent tax exemptions that would be available to anybody within certain geographic parameters,” he said at first. “That will have a value of perhaps $100 million to JPMC.

“From JPMC’s perspective it is a good, fair deal,” he said later, after noting that JP Morgan Chase executives, some of whom were in the room with him, should not feel like they did not negotiate hard enough. “Whether it is the commercial rent tax exemption, the lower Manhattan sales tax exemption or the sales tax exemption on core-and-shell, these are not insignificant numbers. Just those three alone probably come in at about $160 million dollars.”  read more »

Union Guy Gets Inside Tax-Break Game

The newest member of an obscure panel that gives out hundreds of millions of dollars in city tax breaks each year, the Industrial Development Agency, is promising to cast a skeptical eye on the process.

"New York is so vibrant and strong that companies are under significant pressure to be in New York City," Kevin Doyle, executive vice president for Local 32BJ, told The Real Estate. "What's the rationale for spending public money to do things that [companies] are going to be doing anyway?"

It is rare that a labor representative sits on the I.D.A. board of directors. Mr. Doyle, 58, was recommended to the post by Manhattan Borough President Scott Stringer, who has a close relationship with 32BJ, an 85,000-member division of the Service Employees International Union, which represents building workers.

Mr. Doyle also said he would question the labor practices of companies applying for tax incentives, mentioning that JP Morgan Chase, which is reportedly pushing for more subsidies to move to Ground Zero, pays its security guards "as little as $8 an hour."

Mr. Doyle, who was appointed in February, is realistic about the impact he will have, given that nine of the 15 members are appointed by the Mayor, and the others, recommended by the borough presidents and city comptroller, must be confirmed by him. (There are currently some vacancies.)

"It's a mayorally driven process," he said.

- Matthew Schuerman

Another for Broadway Partners: Busy Firm Buys 280 Park for Over $1.2 B.

1180 Avenue of the Americas.
PROPERTYSHARKS.COM
1180 Avenue of the Americas.

The most ferocious investment firm of the last six months, Broadway Partners, is in contract to purc  read more »

Breakfast at Balthazar

Too sexy for his loafers? Dana Vachon on Spring Street.
Michael Nagle
Too sexy for his loafers? Dana Vachon on Spring Street.

Dana Vachon, the 28-year-old banker turned blogger turned novelist about town, was not wearing socks  read more »

Credit-Card Pirates Ripe for Regulation

Claire McCaskill recently got a chance to do something that millions of us have wanted to do.  read more »

Storied West Side Bar Stands Athwart Bank-Branch Boom

To bank or not to bank: P&G at a crossroads.
Hamza Zaman
To bank or not to bank: P&G at a crossroads.

Like many torch-bearers of old family-owned businesses, Steve Chahalis hopes that his son, too, will  read more »

Countdown to Bliss

Charlie in charge: J.P. Morgan analyst Charlie Asfour with fianc
Charlie in charge: J.P. Morgan analyst Charlie Asfour with fianc

Charlie Asfour and Rebecca McFarland   Met: September 2005 Engaged: Dec. 27, 2006  read more »

Countdown to Bliss

Charlie in charge: J.P. Morgan analyst Charlie Asfour with fianc
Charlie in charge: J.P. Morgan analyst Charlie Asfour with fianc

Charlie Asfour and Rebecca McFarland   Met: September 2005 Engaged: Dec. 27, 2006  read more »

Countdown to Bliss

Charlie in charge: J.P. Morgan analyst Charlie Asfour with fianc
Charlie in charge: J.P. Morgan analyst Charlie Asfour with fianc

Charlie Asfour and Rebecca McFarland   Met: September 2005 Engaged: Dec. 27, 2006  read more »

DeWine and the Boys

We're hearing rumors (okay, we've seen the invite) that U.S. Senator Mike DeWine will be parachuting into the city next Monday, June 26, to raise some old fashioned New York cash for his November re-election bid.

The fund-raiser will take place at the 21 Club -- one of the original old-boy hangouts -- where guests will pay $1,000 for lunch or $2,100 if they want to rub shoulders with Mr. DeWine & Co. at a pre-lunch VIP reception. The hosts include such Wall Street sugar daddies as Citigroup CEO Chuck Prince, JPMorgan Chase chairman Bill Harrison, and Goldman Sachs executive veep Ed Forst, as well as GOP musclemen Senator John Sununu, Senator Chuck Hagel, and Congressman Michael Oxley.

Given DeWine's position on gay marriage -- he's one of the guys who sponsored the amendment banning same-sex marriage -- we doubt he'll be flying in a day early to cheer on the marchers at next Sunday's Pride parade down 5th Avenue. In fact, we doubt he'll be seeing much of New York at all beyond the cool interiors of '21' and his Town Car. But you never know.

-- Lizzy Ratner

Mr. Puck’s Gefilte Fish

High tar and no filter Christopher Buckley, Aaron Eckhart and Jason Reitman
James Hamilton
High tar and no filter Christopher Buckley, Aaron Eckhart and Jason Reitman

On a recent Friday evening, as a cold March sun set on the Hudson, Rabbi Naftali Citron stood in his  read more »

Mr. Puck's Gefilte Fish

On a recent Friday evening, as a cold March sun set on the Hudson, Rabbi Naftali Citron stood in his  read more »

Monday: Sunshine and Cabbage Strudel

cipriani.jpg
Downtown Cipriani on West Broadway
  • Developer Steven C. Witkoff fired Corcoran Sunshine Marketing from his Cipriani project and replaced them with Prudential Douglas Elliman the following day. Louise Sunshine says "I feel raped," but she and Pamela Liebman remain the best of friends. (The New York Times)
  • After Boston's Big Dig, developers entice prospective residents with luxury condos and sprawling park space in the center of town. (The New York Times)
  • The Morgan Library complex, J. P. Morgan's "second-hand mansion" and private library, will reopen after renovation in April. (The New York Times)
  • The Church of St. Brigid in the East Village, designed by Irish architect Patrick Keely, doesn't have the funds to bring the building up to code and it will likely be demolished. (New York Post)
  • The owner of the oldest boatyard in New York is giving up fishing to farm, and developers are knocking on every door nearby, on City Island in the Long Island Sound. (The Village Voice)
  • Single women are twice as likely to be home buyers than single men, because, well, men are immature. (The New York Times)
  • The ever expanding New York University plans to build the largest research and training facility for children's psychiatric treatment in the world on First Avenue between 25th and 26th streets. (New York Daily News)
  • There are "enforceable" rules in coops, like no smoking. (New York)
  • Broke after a "bad real estate deal," a plumber went from bankrupt to turning a major profit. (NewYork)
  • Nora Ephron inspires new trend: strudel. (New York)
 read more »

PLA Envy

Developers normally grit their teeth when they hear of a rival striking a “project labor agreement” with construction trade unions, because they typically include some sort of labor concessions. But when the unions make a deal with a developer known for hiring non-union workers, well, that makes erstwhile colleagues blurt out in public—which is what Related Companies CEO Steven Ross did at a Dec. 8 panel sponsored by the New York University Real Estate Institute. “Boymelgreen bought a building downtown and the unions made a deal with him to reduce a lot of their restrictions,” he said, referring to Shaya Boymelgreen’s project to convert the old Chase Manhattan offices at 20 Pine Street into 409 Giorgio Armani-designed condos. “What about all the developers who built with unions all along and here they are rewarding developers who use non-union labor.”

A Boymelgreen spokesman, Lloyd Kaplan, said that the developer sometimes uses union labor, depending on the project, but he could not elaborate on the Pine Street deal. Anthony Pugliese, an organizer for the New York District Council of Carpenters, said that the carpenters did not reduce their wages nor make other concessions, but that the other trades may have agreed to productivity measures, such as cutting the minimum number of workers needed on the job. In return for the developer promising to hire union on the upcoming Pine Street rehab, Pugliese said locals agreed to stop putting The Rat outside a nearby Boymelgreen project at 15 Broad Street. We waited to post this item until we got more details from participants, but unfortunately we still have not heard back from Ed Malloy, president of the Building and Construction Trades Council, who coordinates the unions that would have taken part in the pact.  read more »

-Matthew Schuerman

Eliot's Republican Guest

More than 1,300 people showed up at Eliot Spitzer's $5 million fundraiser tonight, but observers of the state's shifting power structure took particular note of one guest: Michael Finnegan.

Finnegan is a Republican and a former top aide to Governor Pataki who now works for JPMorganChase (a firm that does quite a bit of bond work for the state). Equally important, he's a close personal friend of Pataki.

And now, it appears, he's another player in the state power structure moving toward Eliot. (Not the first: that honor goes, perhaps, to Al D'Amato's lobbyist brother, Armand, who showed up at a Spitzer fundraiser this time last year.)

Finnegan and the rest of the crowd heard Eliot strike a slightly more partisan note than usual.

"No party has done so much for so few who need so little," he said of the GOP.

The setting -- a fundraiser full of lobbyists -- generally struck a contrast with the event's righteous tone, which featured pledges from Spitzer's wife and mother that they only plan to vote for him because of what he'll do for New York State. Mom, one thinks, could be forgiven for voting for him just because he's her son. Silda too. But what about Mike Finnegan?  read more »

There’s No Free Market At America’s Airports

The statistic that shook up business writers around the country is that more than half of domestic p  read more »

It's Trouble When "Al" Shows Up; Woozy Crook Loves Magazines

In the same way that the New York City Department of Health produces an annual list of the most popu  read more »

Crime Blotter

Marauding Miscreants' Motto:'Bring Us Your Weak'  read more »

Cry Me a River

Producer Marty Richards won over Oscar judges last year and claimed Best Picture honors for his scre  read more »

The Crime Blotter

Women have lots of ways of telling their boyfriends they've fallen out of love.  read more »

Crime Blotter

NYPD Publicly Criticizes BanksOn Handling of Recent Hold-Ups  read more »

Crime Blotter

This Rambunctious RevelerWhile characteristically rowdy, this year's St.  read more »

The Crime Blotter

Bank Robbery 101:Props May Strengthen Plea  read more »

They Take Responsibility, But They Never Get Fired

Normally, I shudder every time I read a new layoff announcement, but I took the news that J.P.  read more »

City of Ambition Will Rise From Ashes of 9/11

As the head of Chase Manhattan Bank, a great international power, David Rockefeller's appointment bo  read more »

Banker, Loan Maestro Jimmy Lee Switched Suspenders for Sweaters

On a Friday morning in early November, JP Morgan Chase's Vice Chairman James Bainbridge Lee Jr.  read more »

The Crime Blotter

Ever So Lightly, Thief Lifts Rare Tiffany's Jay Pearsall, the owner of Ivy's Books at 2488 Broadway,  read more »

NYSE's Chairman Unplugs His Plans For a New Exchange

Last summer, the New York City Economic Development Corporation quietly circulated a glossy brochure  read more »

Crime Blotter

Members of the 19th Precinct's grand-larceny unit were trolling East 86th Street in search of action  read more »

Without a Developer, City May Go it Alone on New NYSE Building

In case it fails to find a developer willing to pay hundredsof millions to build a 900-foot skyscrap  read more »

Beyond the Met Staircase Lies the Byzantine Glory

I have never cared much for what art museums call "orientation" galleries.  read more »

Scouts Should Be Prepared for Our Society's Hostility

The Supreme Court ruled in June that the Boy Scouts had a constitutional right to reject the service  read more »

How Wall Street Learned to Stop Worrying About the Bomb

Before dawn on Friday, Feb. 11, a bomb went off on Wall Street and nobody really cared.  read more »

The Casual Banker: In Fashion Shift, J. P. Morgan Dresses Down

J.P. Morgan & Company, bastion of the old way of doing things, has surrendered.  read more »

Feeling a Chill at the Thought of a Market Spill

The economy is swell or swelling like a flooding river, so I'm told.  read more »

Ragtime: It's Big! It's Safe!It's Full of Generic Symbolism!

There has been a sharply divided critical response to the $10 million musical Ragtime , and I join t  read more »