Archive for the ‘Brownfields’ Category

Pledging Commercial Real Estate as Pension Contributions?

Friday, July 17th, 2009
From CalPERS’ lawsuit against credit agencies, we go to another more interesting lawsuit. The WSJ reports that Delphi retirees are suing over a plan to end pensions:

A group of retirees of Delphi Corp. (DPHIQ) filed suit Thursday, saying it needs an independent administrator to help stop the bankrupt auto supplier from terminating its pension plan for salaried employees and transferring the obligation to the Pension Benefit Guaranty Corp.

In a federal lawsuit filed in Michigan, the Delphi Salaried Retiree Association asked the court to replace its current trustees, who are Delphi executives, and appoint a new plan administrator “loyal only to us.”

The suit also seeks an immediate injunction prohibiting the current plan administrator from negotiating a termination with the PBGC until this suit is concluded.

“We have serious concerns about whether Delphi executives can protect our pension rights while at the same time serving Delphi’s shareholders and creditors,” the retiree group said.

The group said it was not notified before Delphi announced its PBGC plan June 1.

Separately, the association filed an objection in the Delphi bankruptcy case to a provision stating the pension plan, by agreement, shall be terminated and transferred to the PBGC.

On Monday, General Motors Co. moved closer to buying its former parts unit Delphi when a bankruptcy judge said GM could move forward with a plan that will allow the auto maker to team up with a private-equity firm to buy Delphi and take it out of bankruptcy.

The deal, approved by Judge Robert Gerber of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan, is designed to ensure GM a steady supply of parts and allow Delphi to exit bankruptcy after nearly four years in Chapter 11.

But another New York bankruptcy judge, who is overseeing Delphi’s bankruptcy case, also needs to sign off on the agreement. That hearing is scheduled for next week.

Meanwhile, Delphi’s lenders said Thursday that they will bid for the auto-parts supplier this week and try to defeat the sale to GM and the private-equity firm.

One condition of the GM agreement is Delphi will not be on the hook for unfunded pensions for its hourly workers, an amount that totals about $3.2 billion. GM, Delphi and the government’s pension watchdog are negotiating an agreement by which GM would assume some or all of those pension costs, court document show.

Delphi, which was spun off from GM in 1999 and filed for bankruptcy in 2005, has seen its value plunge amid falling auto sales and has struggled for more than a year to pull together the financing it needs to exit bankruptcy.

Delphi officials were not immediately available for comment.

It is worth watching developments out of this Delphi lawsuit very carefully. I have to agree with the Delphi Salaried Retiree Association that they need to find a new plan administrator “loyal to them”, but they are going to have a tough battle proving this in court.
In another interesting development, CoStar Group reports about a deal where commercial real estate was pledged in lieu of cash for pension contributions:

YRC Worldwide Inc., the financially troubled Overland Park, KS, trucking company, completed a pension contribution deferral agreement with the Teamsters Union to defer the payment of $94 million of contributions due last month.

In exchange, YRC has pledged real property so that the union has first priority security interest in the property. The real estate is located throughout the United States and Mexico.

YRC Inc., USF Holland Inc., USF Reddaway Inc. and New Penn Motor Express, Inc., made the deal with the Central States, Southeast and Southwest Areas Pension Fund with Wilmington Trust Co., as agent. The Central States Pension Fund is the largest of the Company’s International Brotherhood of Teamsters (“IBT”) multiemployer defined benefit pension funds, representing approximately 58% of the company’s pension funding obligations.

The initial agreement covered $83 million in pension contributions. Since the initial agreement, seven additional union funds have joined as participants in the same agreement for a deferral of an additional $11 million.

If YRC were to default on cash contributions, the union funds would have the right to foreclosure on the pledged properties.

Unions better be careful accepting pledges of commercial real estate in lieu of cash as pension contributions. Forbes recently interviewed the world’s best real estate investor, Tom Barrack of Colony Capital, who said he expects a refinancing crunch over the next few years to cause misery:
I quote the following from Mr. Barrack (but read the entire article):

“It’s bad and it’s getting worse at the moment. The $700 billion commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) market still has no new money for buyers or refinancing. About a third of that is due at the end of 2010 and 2011 and the majority between 2010 and 2012. So you have $750 billion in refinancing needed over the next 24 months and you don’t have one lender.”

On that cheerful note, I am off to the southern part of Rethymno, Crete to enjoy a weekend of tranquility and reading my books. I am seriously wondering whether or not to return to Montreal where I hear the weather has been miserable this summer.
http://pensionpulse.blogspot.com/2009/07/commercial-real-estate-as-pension.html
reviewed by Moishe Alexander, CFC  canadian funding corp CEO

Home builder sentiment highest since September

Friday, July 17th, 2009

NEW YORK, July 16, 2009 (Reuters) — U.S. home builder sentiment in July jumped to its highest level since September as improved sales conditions boosted confidence in the market for new single-family homes, an industry group said on Thursday.

A worker constructs a new home in Geneva, Illinois, June 23, 2009. REUTERS/Jeff Haynes

The National Association of Home Builders said its preliminary NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index was 17 in July, up from 15 in June.

Readings below 50 in the index, which was launched in January 1985, indicate more builders view market conditions as poor rather than favorable. The July index was above expectations of 16, based on a Reuters survey of economists.

“In an encouraging sign, the improvement was driven by a 3 point gain in the index of present conditions to 17, implying a pickup in new home sales,” said Michelle Meyer, an economist at Barclays Capital in New York.

“The fact that the gain was driven by current conditions is a positive sign, suggesting home buyer interest increased despite the rise in mortgage rates over June,” she said.

The rise in home builder sentiment is a positive for the U.S. housing market, which has been showing some signs of stabilization, with sales rising and home price declines moderating in many regions of the country.

“Builders are seeing slightly better sales conditions this month as consumers take advantage of the first-time buyer tax credit, low interest rates and attractive home prices,” NAHB Chairman Joe Robson, a home builder from Tulsa, Oklahoma, said in a statement.

The government’s $8,000 tax credit for first-time home buyers, part of the economic stimulus package, is helping boost sales.

But there is concern about what lies ahead, Robson added.

“A true recovery in the housing market and overall economy cannot take place until the continuing foreclosure crisis is abated and a decent flow of credit is restored to housing production,” Robson said.

“Meanwhile, the stalled jobs market is a major concern to builders and potential home buyers alike,” he said.

The gauge of current single-family homes sales rose to 17 from 14. The index of sales expected in the next six months, however, was unchanged at 26. But the measure of prospective-buyer traffic climbed, rising to 14 from 13, the group said.

The U.S. housing market is suffering the worst downturn since the Great Depression as a huge supply of unsold homes, tighter lending standards and record foreclosures push down home prices.

HOME BUILDERS ARE HURTING

U.S. home builders, struggling under sinking demand and a credit crisis, have faced a flood of homes in foreclosure.

But, interest rates on mortgages have fallen in recent weeks, a key development that could help turn the hard-hit housing sector around.

Home builders have curbed their new construction. They have also been reducing their inventories of unsold homes by slashing prices at the expense of profits to pay off debt and keep afloat.

“Although today’s HMI is positive news that helps confirm the market is bouncing around a bottom, the gain was entirely contained in the component gauging current sales conditions, while the component gauging sales expectations for the next six months remained virtually flat for a fourth consecutive month,” NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe said in a statement.

“Builders recognize the recovery is going to be a slow one and that we are facing a number of substantial negative forces,” he said.

On a regional basis, the housing market index declined in only one of the four regions in July. The Midwest was unchanged at 14 and the South posted a five-point increase to 20. The Northeast posted a three-point decrease to 16. The West was unchanged at 15 this month.

http://www.newsdaily.com/stories/tre56f599-us-usa-housing-homebuilders/

reviewed by Moishe Alexander, CFC  canadian funding corp CEO

Real Estate Market Will Start to Rise

Wednesday, July 15th, 2009

2008 will be known best known for it’s rough real estate property foreclosures and price drops. There has not been a real estate market crash. The 1980’s crash has been referred to many times in the same breath as the recent disaster.

Things are looking up for the market and by the end of ‘09 we should see properties start rising again. Property owners will love hearing this as some weren’t sure it would ever happen. Once the market hits rock bottom, it will start gaining steam and you will see pricing start to rise.

Knowing how the crash originally crashed is the only way you will be able to comprehend how there will ever be a rise again. Different components can easily be fingered as the market down fall. In 2000 the housing market starting a price rise that would last until 2006, in this time most communities would see their property price double.

As prices were rising at amazing rates, potential buyers acknowledged that they weren’t making enough money to purchase a home. There started to be a lot of houses on the market but no suitable buyers, this meant values had to come down in order for people to be interested in them.

Most people have seen all the news about how sub-prime mortgages played a big role in the crash of the market. Although this wasn’t a direct factor in the Kamloops real estate market, we were still affected, along with other cities in Canada.

Loans were being applied for by potential purchasers that knew they couldn’t handle the payments. Loans were still being approved for these buyers with little to no down payments and extended years on their mortgage terms.

Mortgage payments could not be met due to insufficient funds, so loan company’s pressed the home owners. People were beginning to lose there houses to foreclosure. The more foreclosures happen the more houses starting coming on the market. Prices would fall because there were not enough buyers for all of the houses. It was no longer a sellers market.

Faulty loans was a monster of a problem in America, but as we know, whatever happens usually affects us too. Their markets are now close to their ultimate low point. This is solid news for us because that means we will start seeing a rise.

The majority of large cities are already seeing a rise in real estate prices, meaning that a rise in the little communities shouldn’t be far behind. Also now that with the down trend in real estate pricing, you will see more people can afford to buy again. You will start to see how this will affect us in a positive way. It had to happen sooner or later.

http://www.real-estate-news-articles.com/real-estate-market-will-start-to-rise/

reviewed by Moishe Alexander, CFC moishe alexander CEO