Cushman & Wakefield

No Spin Zone! Brokers Brutal on Commercial Market's '08 Turn

Joseph Harbert.
Joseph Harbert.

The commercial real estate market must really be wretched. How else to explain Cushman & Wakefield’s midyear breakfast on Tuesday morning when, in Michael’s glassed-in patio, a couple of ballsy brokers erupted with skepticism, calling into question their bosses’ own stats—to those bosses’ faces. In front of the press.

“If I were sitting in the media looking at the stats, I’d think that someone was drinking the Kool-Aid,” said Joshua Kuriloff, a broker at the firm.

Mr. Kuriloff even uttered the R-word (“recession”) to describe the economy—a term that’s verboten among most real estate types, who favor limper nouns like “contraction,” “slowdown” and “downturn.  read more »

Tumble! Manhattan Investment Sales Plunge In '08


Over $13.8 billion in Manhattan investment sales closed or went under contract in the first six months of 2008, a precipitous drop from the $34 billion in sales volume done in the first six months last year. Nearly half of this 2008 volume came via foreign investors.

The numbers come from brokerage Cushman & Wakefield's latest quarterly Manhattan market report, released this morning during a breakfast at Midtown power eatery Michael's.

The dismal investment sales numbers--which cover building, property and portfolio sales--aren't a surprise, really. Nor is the increase in the amount of foreign investment (it accounted for maybe 12 to 15 percent of investment sales in previous six-month periods).  read more »

Cushman and Wakefield Finds Cushman and Wakefield's New World Headquarters

via nytimes.com

Brokerage giant Cushman & Wakefield will relocate its headquarters to an enormous new space on Sixth Avenue.

C&W, which calls itself the “largest privately held commercial real estate services firm,” signed a 15-year lease for a whopping 156,282 square feet, the entire seventh floor and portions of the eighth and ninth floors at 1290 Avenue of the Americas, between 51st and 52nd streets. The 43-story Emery Roth & Sons-designed building is owned by Vornado Realty Trust.  read more »

Duplex Penthouse for $1.3 M. Annually? Sure... Just One Catch

Forget your modern (and soul-crushing) office space aesthetic. Who needs cubicles and florescent lighting, when you could have a working fireplace, a rooftop terrace, and views of Central Park?

If that’s your bag, and you’ve got $1.3 million in that bag to spare, have we got the space for you.  read more »

Study Confirms: Commercial Market is in a Rut

The real estate wonks at Cushman & Wakefield have said it, so it must be true: the market is contracting.

Egad(!) is right.

C&W's "First Quarter 2008 New York Capital Markets Group Manhattan Market Overview" makes the following sobering conclusions:  read more »

Manhattan and Brooklyn Office Rents: The Divide Grows Big-Time


It's become a truism that Brooklyn commercial rents are a bargain when compared to Manhattan's. That truism is now, if you will, even truer.

A Cushman & Wakefield first-quarter survey of 82 commercial buildings in Brooklyn revealed that, between the first quarters of 2005 and 2008, the average rent per square foot in Brooklyn rose 14 percent to $31.44, while in Downtown Manhattan, the average rose an astronomical 62 percent to $50.28.

The difference between rents in the two markets was far less pronounced back in the halcyon days of 2005, when Brooklyn rents averaged $27.51 a foot, while Downtown Manhattan rents averaged $31.03.  read more »

It Is So On! Cushman, CBRE To Battle for Reporters' Stomachs

It’s a balls-out move, but this Wednesday CB Richard Ellis will take on its archrival Cushman & Wakefield by hosting a first-quarter analysis luncheon for media folks the day after Cushman & Wakefield hosts its own first-quarter breakfast for the same media folks.

Call it a schmooze-fight.  read more »

It's So On! Brokers to Battle On Stairs of Empire State Building

wallyg via flickr.

Time to ready the oxygen tanks: Commercial brokers are planning to race up 86 floors of the Empire State Building.

Come Feb. 5, an Empire State Building spokeswoman tells us that the city’s biggest brokerages will square off with each other as part of the building’s annual “Run-Up,” with Jones Lang LaSalle, Cushman & Wakefield, CB Richard Ellis, Studley and Newmark Knight Frank each planning to send at least one team of five runners (team names include the “Sub-Primers” and “Victoria’s Secret”).  read more »

Manhattan Office Space Disappearing

Office-leasing activity in Manhattan dropped in 2007, suggesting a slowdown in a once furiously fast-paced market. In the fourth quarter of 2007, companies leased slightly more than 5 million square feet of office space, less than in each of the previous three quarters, according to a report out today from brokerage Cushman & Wakfield. Leasing dropped 12.8 percent for the year from 2006.  read more »

USA! USA! Homegrown Money Dominates Manhattan Investment Sales During Record '07

Israeli Lev Leviev (right) bought the old New York Times building earlier this year.
Getty Images
Israeli Lev Leviev (right) bought the old New York Times building earlier this year.

For all the chatter about foreign money inundating Manhattan, when it comes to buying and selling massive properties like skyscrapers and apartment portfolios, Americans still lead the way. You go, America!

According to a new report from brokerage heavyweight Cushman & Wakefield, only 12 percent of the investment-sales transactions closed or put under contract in the first three quarters of 2007 have been to foreign buyers alone. It’s been a banner, booming year for investment-sales in Manhattan—the $42.5 billion in property traded through Sept. 30 already dwarfs the amount traded in all of 2006, which itself was a record year.

Other takeaways from the report after the jump.  read more »

This Summer's Office Market: Swan Song or More of the Same?

The Manhattan office market left the summer behind as healthy as ever, with vacancy rates low and rents rising to record-high averages. Still, one has to wonder: With the credit market crises continuing, was the third quarter of 2007 a swan song?

The overall office rent for Manhattan was $62.91 a square foot in the third quarter, which ended Sunday, according to a new report from brokerage Cushman & Wakefield. That's an increase of more than $3 over the second-quarter average and a nearly $10 increase over the first quarter's average. In midtown, where the the choicest office space abounds, rents hit a record high of $74.47 a foot; they averaged nearly $50 a foot a year ago.

But the borough's vacancy rates perhaps foreshadow rockier times to come. The vacancy rate rose in midtown and midtown south from the second quarter to the third, and in Manhattan overall. Still, the increases were mild; in midtown, for instance, it rose from 5.3 percent to 5.6 percent. And all the vacancy rates were lower than they were a year ago.

The Observer's John Koblin will have more on the office market numbers in tomorrow's paper.

Report: Everybody Calm Down--The Office Market's Fine

A Cushman & Wakefield report released today said that the market will be just fine despite the credit problems.

Anything to worry about with investment sales? Nah, nothing will affect it unless lots of people lose jobs. With leasing? No, it's fine too unless there's a "pronounced and prolonged" downturn in financial services, which obviously drives the real estate market these days.

The report is for you to judge, but C&W doesn't hint about any possibility of dropping office rents (however slight), even though that's becoming a more popular line of thinking among more real estate people.

But as optimistic as the report is, there's a limit to it. There is no indication the sales market or leasing side will continue to surge at the breakneck pace it's traveled over the last 12 months. Still, the report says values, particularly in investment sales, should "remain stable."

Milunec Jumps from GVA Williams to Stacom's Team at Cushman

One of the industry's hot young talents, Paul Milunec, is leaving GVA Williams for Cushman & Wakefield.

The 28-year-old Mr. Milunec is joining Tara Stacom's high-profile team, where he'll be a director. Ms. Stacom has spent the better balance of the year rebuilding her team, after a devastating hit last year when Paul Amrich left for CB Richard Ellis. Earlier this year, Ms. Stacom added ex-Vornado broker David Green and now she brings in Mr. Milunec, who actually got his start at C&W in the emerging brokers program.

In an email today, Mr. Milunec made the announcement:

I am delighted to announce that after six wonderful years at GVA Williams I have decided to join Tara Stacom's team at Cushman & Wakefield. I look forward to working with Tara, David Green and the rest of her team.

All year, brokers have been whispering about Mr. Milunec, knowing that his increasing profile and popularity in the industry would eventually be too big for GVA to hold onto him. It's Cushman that had the foresight to claim him first.

Mr. Milunec is currently the treasurer for the Young Men's and Women's Real Estate Assocation, where David Green is a governor. Let this be a lesson to all those aspiring brokers: network!

Breaking! Manhattan Office Market 'Hot!'

“The real estate market in New York these days is like the weather,” Cushman & Wakefield’s Joe Harbert said this morning. “Hot!”

The chief operating officer for the New York region certainly had the statistics to back up that statement when the firm released its midyear report for the Manhattan commercial real estate market this morning.  read more »

Cushman & Wakefield Buys Sonnenblick-Goldman

Cushman & Wakefield has purchased the majority ownership position in the real estate investment company Sonnenblick-Goldman. The price was not disclosed.

Under the agreement, Cushman & Wakefield will become the majority owner in the company, while Sonnenblick principals will stay aboard. Sonnenblick-Goldman was involved in $7.5 billion of transactions last year, including arranging the $390 million financing for 485 Lexington Avenue.

This is Cushman & Wakefield's biggest move since the IFIL group purchased the company last year for $563 million. Last December, IFIL chief Carlo Sant'Albano said that the Italians would "bring something to the table in assisting the team at Cushman & Wakefield in growing their business." This is the Italians first step in proving that. 

Full release after the jump.  read more »

Bill Clinton on Congestion Pricing: 'Let's Get It On'


“Today is a happy day for me,” said Bill Clinton after lunchtime this afternoon at the Hilton in midtown. He was speaking to clients and brokers for the commercial brokerage firm Cushman & Wakefield.

The reason he’s happy is because tonight he’ll be joining Michael Bloomberg in a joint effort to convince major cities all around the world to become a little bit greener.

Mr. Clinton praised Mayor Bloomberg’s greening plan for the city and discussed its most charged component, the $8 fee that it could cost to drive into midtown during rush hours.  read more »