Kushner Companies Sells 17,628 Units

NJBIZ :

Kushner Companies has agreed to sell part of its multi-family residential portfolio comprising over 17,500 apartments in five states. The announcement comes just eight weeks after the Florham Park-based real estate firm put its portfolio of residential units on the market in the states of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland and New York.

About The Company:

Kushner Companies is a diversified private real estate organization involved in the ownership, development, redevelopment and management of prime single and multifamily housing, commercial, retail, industrial and hotel properties throughout the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic regions. Headquartered in Florham Park, New Jersey, with executive offices in Manhattan, the company manages and grows its residential and commercial portfolios through its corporate offices and operating divisions. These include Westminster Management LLC, the residential management arm; Westminster Communities LLC, the construction division; Kushner Properties, the commercial leasing and management division; Westminster Hospitality, the hotel division; Westminster Capital Corp., which coordinates financing for the firm; and various acquisition and land development teams. The Company delivers in-house site selection, planning, development and acquisition, construction, financing, leasing, sales, marketing and property management.

Source: http://www.kushnercompanies.com/

Review: The Real Estate Growth Website

If you are a Real Estate agent you know that a ringing phone in your office is a welcomed sign. You also know that “crushing” your competition is a day to day business. Even if you do not view it this way, the fact is that in real estate place #2 brings you a whooping 0% commissions.

Phones will ring if you know how to market your business, your listings and even yourself well. You may also learn how to deal with your competition. Unfortunately these things are no being taught in the school preparing you for the real estate examination.

Here is where the Real Estate Growth comes in! The website is dedicated to teach real estate agents about real estate marketing by offering a free course called “The Real Estate Insider”- a $197 value absolutely for free. The website also maintains a real estate marketing blog where you can find extra tips on real estate marketing.

Foreing Real-Estate Funds Are Booming

The Wall Street Journal is reporting boom in foreign real-estate funds:

It is getting easier to invest in Australian shopping malls and Norwegian office towers.

Financial-services firms are rolling out scores of foreign real-estate funds. In the past few weeks alone, Charles Schwab Corp. launched a global real-estate fund that is betting in part on strong rental growth in London office properties. WisdomTree Investments Inc. listed a new exchange-traded fund that tracks an index heavily weighted to Australia, Hong Kong and Japan.

Just this year, real-estate investment trusts were introduced in the U.K.

Several new closed-end funds, aimed at more-conservative investors, also have been launched, including Alpine Global Premier Properties Fund that began trading in April after raising $2 billion.

Investors have poured about $6 billion into foreign real-estate funds this year, substantially more than was invested in domestic property funds, according to Morningstar Inc. Those big inflows follow strong past returns for foreign real-estate-investment trusts, the main holdings of these funds, which rose nearly 31% a year in the three years ended April 30, according to Fidelity Investments. By comparison, U.S. REITs rose 22% in that period, while the S&P 500 was up 8.5%.

How Do You Choose Location For Your Business?

Choosing the location for your business may be crucial for your business success and growth. CNNMoney has great suggestions for business owners on choosing the right location:

1. Stay on the beaten path. The old cliché about “location, location, location” is one that you can’t afford to ignore. Rather than assume that you know your customers’ preferences, ask them where they would like to do business with you. When Jacqueline Williams noticed sales slowing at Sterling Realtors, her firm in Middletown, Conn., she surveyed her clients to find out how she could serve them better. It turned out that many considered her office inconvenient. She had set up shop near the Wesleyan University campus, where she had started out finding homes for professors. In her research off-campus clients said it would be easier to drop by her office if it was in the downtown business district. She ended up moving to a building in that area.

The result: Revenue picked up, not only because many potential clients noticed her shingle while driving by, but also thanks to an increase in client referrals. Recently, Williams renovated the space after buying out her partner’s share of both the 17-year-old company and the building. She re-opened her offices with a ribbon cutting ceremony hosted by the mayor.

2. Consider rush hour. If you do business in a densely populated area, choosing a location right off a major highway or near public transportation may have a big effect on your team’s productivity, says Matthew Adler, executive vice president of the Adler Group, a Miami-based commercial real estate firm. It is tough to schedule morning meetings if key employees are continually getting stuck in traffic. “You need to be in a place that your workforce can get to easily,” says Adler.

How best to figure out whether the location you’re considering fits the bill? Jason Weissman, principal in Boston Realty Advisors in Boston, suggests you pinpoint your office location on a map, then draw a circle around the spot to see just what communities in the area would be no more than an hour’s commute. Or, try MapQuest (mapquest.com), to see how long the estimated commute time is for a few likely nearby towns.

3. Follow the talent. Will your company need to hire employees with specialized skills or a high level of education? If so, setting up shop near an existing talent pool will make your job easier, says Weissman. For instance, if you anticipate that you will need to hire IT workers, picking an office near a university with a strong tech program will put you at an advantage in winning top employees. To locate metropolitan areas with large concentrations of whatever skills you need, try the Bureau of Labor Statistics site (www.bls.gov).

4. Keep your competitors close. Doing business down the street – or hallway – from your rivals may seem like a roadmap to bankruptcy, but it can be a smart choice. In New York City’s fashion industry, for instance, many accessories makers run showrooms in the same building, because it is more convenient for buyers from other cities to visit. “When customers come in from out of town, this makes it easy for them,” says David Levy, principal of Adams & Co. Real Estate in New York City. “They just spend the day going from office to office.” If you have a slightly different niche from other firms in your area, you will probably be able to pick up clients from each other. “Companies need to be close to their competitors,” says Chad Bemingham, a vice president with CBIZ-Gibraltar Real Estate Services in Chicago. Commercial realtors can tell you if there are such buildings in your area. Or, try trade publications for your industry or local business journals; they sometimes include real estate listings.

5. Know when to spring for pricey digs. Not every company needs to invest in Class A space. In some fields, starting up in the garage is a badge of honor. But if you work with big-name corporate clients who will visit you frequently – or you are selling your expertise in creating the right image – you can’t afford to scrimp on your office for long.

Just ask Peter Madden, president of AgileCat, who just moved his seven-year old Philadelphia branding and corporate identity-consulting firm to high-rent Center City. He left behind a smaller place in a less-desirable neighborhood. Although he is now paying six times more to do business from his new headquarters, he expects to be able to attract enough high-profile clients to make his investment pay off. “In this region, if you’re not in this part of town, you’re not looked at as a major player,” he says.

The key of course, is making sure you generate enough sales to pay the tab. Rule of thumb: Manufacturing companies should generally pay no more than 20 percent of gross sales for rent, according to Levy. Service businesses, which have lower overhead, can go up to 30 percent.

6. Push for flexibility. If the real estate market in your area is soft, your landlord may be willing to negotiate. Ask for both the right to cancel your lease with a specified amount of notice and the freedom to sub-lease the space.

Know Your Ratio – Loan to Value and Debt to Income

By Andrea Carangelo

If you are thinking about refinancing a loan or requesting your private mortgage insurance (PMI) be removed, you should know your loan to value ratio.

It is easy to figure out using these steps:

If you will be applying for a loan:

1) Start with the purchase price of the property as the value for the property. (example: $150,000)

2) Subtract the amount of your down payment ($20,000).

3) Take the loan amount which will be the purchase price minus the down payment ($130,000)

4) Divide loan amount ($130,000) by the purchase price ($150,000=value). It would look like this: $130,000 divided by $150,000, which equals 0.87, or 87 percent=your ratio.

5) Use this number with your lender when referring to your loan.

Most loans with an LTV over 80 percent require PMI.

If You Already Have a Loan:

1) You should get an appraisal of your property. This is the only way to get an accurate assessment of its value. If you are just doing this so you are aware of your loan to value ratio, you can save the appraisal fee and estimate the value by comparing your property to similar homes in your neighborhood that have sold. This will be the value number for the equation

2) Look on your most recent loan statement to find out how much you owe (your balance). This will be the loan number for the equation.

3) Divide the loan figure by the value figure. This is your ratio.

If you are requesting the removal of PMI, you will have to get an appraisal. In removing PMI, you may request in writing to your current lender that the PMI be removed if the ratio is 80 percent or less. If you request an appraisal and the value is not high enough, you will still pay for the appraisal.

When you apply for a loan, mortgage loan or any other type of credit, Lenders use your debt to income ratio (how much you owe on credit cards and loans compared to how much you earn) to help evaluate your credit.

How You Can Figure Your Debt To Income Ratio:

1) Add up your total net monthly income. This includes your monthly wages and any overtime, commissions or bonuses that are guaranteed; plus alimony payments received, if applicable. If your income varies, figure the monthly average for the past two years. Include any money earned from any other additional income.

2) Add up your monthly debt. This includes all of your credit card bills, loan and mortgage payments. If you rent, be sure to include your rent payments.

3) Divide your total monthly debt by your total monthly income. This is your total debt to income ratio.

4) If your ratio is higher than 0.36, which professionals would call a score of 36. The lower the better. If the score is higher than 36 it might cause an increase in the interest rate or the down payment on a loan you apply for.

Remember:

When you total your monthly debts, use the minimum payment on your statements.
When calculating your income, a lender usually only considers money from a job that you have been at for at least two years.
Unreported earned income cannot be used in the calculation.

AC Associates helping individuals across the United States reach their financial goals. We offer a program to Home Owners on how to successfully sell their home by offering Owner Financing. Purchaser of Owner Financed Mortgage Notes, Deeds of Trust, Lawsuit Settlements, Life Insurance, Lottery/Contest Winnings and Seller Financed Business Notes.
http://www.acassociatesusa.com

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