Tishman Speyer: The Grand Walkaway

It’s not just homeowners in Phoenix or Miami who are walking away from their mortgages. Tishman Speyer Properties, a big and you would think sophisticated real estate outfit, is doing the stroll on a $4.4 billion mortgage. The company is turning over the keys to more than 11,000 apartments in New York City’s sprawling Peter Cooper Village and Stuyvesant Town apartment complex in lower Manhattan, which it bought in 2006 through a partnership that includes investment firm Blackrock.

Forget loan modifications; forget Help for Homeowners. This baby was beyond help, though the property’s owners struggled mightily for months to come up with a compromise loan restructuring. That was a big, fat No Go.

The walkaway, first reported by the Wall Street Journal, is bad news for the creditors who inherit a property currently valued at $1.8 billion— or less than half of the outstanding mortgages. That’s what you call deep underwater, and it captures the logic of Tishman Speyer’s chiefs as well as thousands of American homeowners facing a similar upside-down equation. As asset prices decline, and debt does not, the economics of a deal are utterly changed. Default isn’t the guaranteed outcome, but increasingly it’s looking like the logical option.

In fits and starts—and foreclosures– the deleveraging of America’s economy is proceeding apace. It’s not pretty though it is necessary. If not through loan modifications and debt restructurings then it’s going to be through walkaways or in the case of Tishman Speyer and Blackrock, a default followed by a gentlemanly deed-in-lieu of foreclosure, where creditors don’t get cash—but keys.

Time contributor Ken Stier points out the moral dilemma underlying some highly leveraged institutional forays into residential real estate http://www.time.com/time/business/article/0,8599,1954160,00.html

But the larger take away from Tishman Speyer’s spectacular news is that it is just the latest entry in an expanding log of debt forgiveness that is transforming America’s economy. Whether it is residential homeowners walking away from mortgages they can no longer afford or want, or a super-sized borrowers kissing their assets goodbye, debt written off is debt forgiven.

And that puts us one step closer to a sustainable economic recovery.

Related Topics: Economy & Policy
  • Latest on Business

    Don Emmert / Getty Images

    Apple Now Worth More Than Microsoft, Google Combined

    How high can Apple soar? The tech juggernaut is closing in on $500 per share, a dramatic psychological threshold that underscores the company’s stunning performance over the last decade. How massive has Apple become? It’s now worth more by market capitalization than Google and Microsoft combined. The company’s latest stock price surge is being fueled by rumors that a new version of the iPad — the iPad 3 — will appear next month.

    Chipotle Is AppleSlate

    Photo-Illustration by Alexander Ho for TIME; Getty Images

    After Motorola Deal Approval, Can Google Hardware Be Far Behind?

    Now that federal regulators appear poised to approve Google’s $12.5 billion purchase of Motorola Mobility, speculation is mounting about what the Internet giant will do with its newly acquired assets. And what assets they are. Once the deal is formally approved — an announcement could come next week, according to multiple reports — Google will be in possession of some 17,000 patents related to mobile phone technology. And it will be well-situated to enter the hardware business, which could mean that consumers will soon see Google-branded phones and home entertainment devices.

  • deconstructiva

    Welcome, John! Thanks for this piece and Ken’s. (BTW, the CC home page doesn’t yet have your / your new colleague’s pix / bios.) Might the Stuyvesant tenants still avoid the eviction games, or will they need to take to the streets and airwaves? Whatever national media political slants exist, local TV stations will not be friendly to corporate landlords kicking out tenants.
    .
    re: private equity / residential , how much are “big players” investing here, Tishman aside? Are they literally buying up blocks of foreclosed homes too? Diana Olick asked similar big-picture questions while focusing on Las Vegas market – http://www.cnbc.com/id/34525266 …if true, what happens to these homes? Not all can be sold or rented out in a crappy market. Thanks for your thoughts.

  • seandougherty

    I guess it almost goes without saying that whoever ends up owning this next is going to make a fortune. It just won’t be anyone associated with the initial deal.

blog comments powered by Disqus