Recent Articles
Caisse pitches new Montreal rail network
Caisse pitches new Montreal rail network
The Caisse de dépôt et placement du Québec is proposing to build a $5.5-billion automated rail network connecting downtown Montreal with the south and north shores and the airport. The pension fund unveiled details of the 67-kilometre project which would generate an estimated $5-billion in private real estate developments along the route.
Globe and Mail – Canada Newswire – Montreal Gazette
Public saga erupts about the future of Couche-Tard
Concerns about family succession and the abilities of the children of Alimentation Couche-Tard (ATD.A-T) founders to steer the convenience store chain into the future has erupted into a public saga, putting the Quebec company at odds with some of its biggest institutional investors.
Globe and Mail – Globe and Mail – Globe and Mail – Globe and Mail
GM buys TO site for “mobility campus”
General Motors of Canada has purchased a seven-acre site on the east side of Toronto’s downtown from Cinespace Film Studios and plans to transform it into the “Toronto GM Mobility Campus.” GM plans to develop a multi-use property comprised of: office space; research and development facilities; vehicle sales and services, including sales of electric vehicles; and a public experience centre featuring innovations in mobility.
Fire in Gatineau building displaces 1,800 staff
The Department of National Defence is trying to determine what to do with as many as 1,800 of its employees after a fire closed the Louis St. Laurent building in Gatineau this week. The department is the main tenant for the building at 555 Boul. de la Carrière.
Divided Edmonton city council approves 16-storey tower
Edmonton city council passed zoning changes Wednesday to allow a 16-storey tower just south of Whyte Avenue, overruling advice from its professional planners and volunteer design committee. After the motion passed 9-3, Coun. Ben Henderson railed at his colleagues for also ignoring a neighbourhood plan yet again.
Edmonton Journal – Edmonton Journal – Edmonton Journal
Calgary developer behind oceanfront project
The Royer brothers — Terry, Randy and Greg — who amassed a lot of experience during their 30 years in the hospitality industry starting with the launch of Relax Inns are behind the Pacific Landing development in Victoria. With Royal Host they managed 27 TravelLodge properties, 121 hotels in the United State and the Grand Okanagan Resort and Conference Centre in Kelowna.
CalgaryNEXT proposal double original estimate
The Calgary Flames’ ambitious vision to build a professional and amateur sports complex in the West Village hit a major roadblockWednesday following the release of a city analysis showing CalgaryNEXT could cost ultimately about $1.8 billion and have taxpayers pay up to two-thirds of the tab.
Calgary looks to incentivize higher-density development
Darrell Sargent, Calgary’s co-ordinator of citywide planning, hasn’t lived in Calgary long, but the New Zealander says he understands one of the city’s most pressing problems. Addressing that issue has been a priority for the municipal government for the past seven years and, in 2016, it hopes to introduce incentives for developers to help the city grow upwards, not out.
Councillors pursue polluter pay principle for CalgaryNEXT
City councillors say it’s time for the provincial government to enforce the polluter pay principle after a new analysis of the CalgaryNEXT proposal shows it would cost as much as $140 million to clean-up contaminated land in the West Village.
Giant Tiger founder recognized at Franchise Awards gala
Giant Tiger founder Gordon Reid was honoured Monday night with the Lifetime Achievement Award at a gala event that was part of the Canadian Franchise Association’s 25th annual national conference. “It was time to recognize Gordon Reid for his insight, for his innovation, for his success, for the quality of the brand that Giant Tiger is,” CFA president and CEO Lorraine McLachlan said.
Crowdfunding: An alternative to direct real estate investment
The shock from the relentless slide in oil prices is spreading ever further into our economy and financial markets, with the dollar, the stock market and bond yields all descending to new lows. Public markets today are extremely interconnected and if China sneezes, the rest of the world catches pneumonia!
Crowdfunding’s move to platform white labeling in 2016
The real estate crowdfunding industry has been flooded with marketplaces over the last several years. Some of the more prominent industry-leading marketplaces have raised considerable amounts of venture funding to staff their platforms and present opportunities for investment, particularly for accredited investors.
Digital disruption is shaking up banking and real estate
Europe’s business leaders may recognise the need to evolve to take on the disruptors like Uber and AirBnB, but they’re still not moving quickly enough, experts are warning. “Time and time again we have seen the mighty fall because they didn’t pay attention until it was too late,” Adam Graham, chair of digital industry association BIMA.
FIRPTA revisions free foreign capital to invest in U.S. REITs
Prentiss Feagles, a partner at Hogan Lovells LLP, recently noted foreign investors “have always had a problem in the United States. (Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act) reform has freed them up to invest like other large institutional investors in REITs.” Qualified foreign pension firms can also invest in REITs without being subject to FIRPTA, he noted.
SL Green, Citigroup speed up sale of Manhattan office
SL Green Realty Corp. and Citigroup Inc. have agreed to speed up the $2 billion sale of 388-390 Greenwich St. in downtown Manhattan by more than a year. Citigroup is saying the earlier purchase will result in “significant cost savings” and SL Green plans to pay off the mortgage early. SL Green has owned the property since late 2007, when it acquired it with an affiliate of Ivanhoe Cambridge.
Featured Column
An anti-anti-development rant
I’ll start with a warning that anyone who doesn’t like exclamation marks should stop reading right now. This story makes me angry. It is the inspiration for this anti-anti-development rant and and I know my natural tendency towards overusing the e-point.
Market Trends and Research
U.S. office market sending mixed signals
The U.S. office market appears to be at the stage in the real estate cycle that analysts often describe as a turning point or tipping point. Overall, the U.S. office market continued to post solid fundamentals during the first quarter, including very strong net absorption, while traces of a slowdown in demand appeared in some markets.
Investors should look beyond REITs: Jeffery Kolitch
The real estate market, in general, still has plenty of potential for growth, but investors should start thinking beyond just real estate investment trusts to gain exposure. “Given where we are right now in the cycle, we advocate a broader more inclusive approach to real estate investing,” said Jeffrey Kolitch, portfolio manager of the $1.5 billion Baron Real Estate fund.
Real Estate Companies
Real estate firms putting portfolios into play
Spurred by ongoing trends of investor activism and peak property evaluations for long-held assets, five publicly held U.S. REITs and real estate investment companies announced plans this month to pursue strategic alternatives.
REOC Financial Reports
Real Estate Investment Trusts
Granite appoints Brydon Cruise director
Granite Real Estate Investment Trust and Granite REIT Inc. (TSX: GRT.UN / NYSE: GRP.U) have appointed Brydon Cruise to their respective Board of Trustees and Board of Directors effective immediately. Mr. Cruise is currently Chairman and Managing Partner of Brookfield Financial Corp. and has been a senior member of the Brookfield group since 2003.
Lanesborough REIT announces sale of Beck Court in Yellowknife
Lanesborough Real Estate Investment Trust (TSX: LRT.UN) has agreed to sell a 120-suite apartment property located in Yellowknife, known as Beck Court, for $23 million, subject to the customary closing adjustments.
REITs counting on JV partner capital
REITs looking for capital are turning to joint venture partners to help finance growth. The dollar volume of REIT joint venture activity surged 50 per cent in 2015, according to a new EY research report. One of the key drivers behind the spike in joint venture activity is the current climate for REITs on Wall Street.
REIT governance influenced by institutional shareholders
One of the most prominent corporate governance issues pertaining to REITs today is the increased influence of major institutional shareholders, according to Jim Hanks, a partner at Venable LLP. Hanks noted that a concentrated group of sophisticated institutional investors exists in the REIT industry today, which REITs have had to be mindful of.
Retail
Int’l chains, off-price concepts driving store openings
The retail sector is rebounding, albeit slowly. At a time when a lot of chains are closing underperforming stores, there are five sectors where the industry will see an influx of brick-and-mortar openings, according to Neil Stern, senior partner with the retail consulting firm McMillan Doolittle.
National Real Estate Investor – National Real Estate Investor
New Development
Plan for former police station site in Saskatoon abandoned
A $500-million plan to redevelop the Saskatoon’s old police station site to include student housing, a new downtown library and a grocery store was rejected when the cost of the library was deemed too high. City hall accepted a conditional $14-million offer last July to sell the police station and resurrect the site.
Build to Lewis Farms number-one for Edmonton LRT
City officials said Thursday building LRT to Lewis Farms in west Edmonton is a priority. The move would promote redevelopment along Stony Plain Road and serve West Edmonton Mall, one of Alberta’s top tourist destinations.
Contested Regina development sent back to the drawing board
Parking was a recurring concern at Wednesday evening’s City of Regina planning commission meeting, and ultimately it was parking that led to the commission asking for changes to a proposal for a new development in the Cathedral area.
Keeping The Bay’s facade in downtown Winnipeg
Some may see the downtown Hudson’s Bay store as the city centre’s big white elephant, with all that empty room. Others, me included, see the iconic 90-year-old, six-storey building as a historical and architectural treasure, anchoring the western entrance to downtown Portage Avenue that was once Winnipeg’s grand promenade.
Sports Venues
LeBreton decision looms a pivotal moment
The Senators may not be in the playoffs this spring but a massive waiting game the club is playing will come to an end next Thursday at 2 p.m. when the National Capital Commission’s board of directors will confirm which group they’re going to negotiate with for the valuable land at LeBreton Flats.
Saying farewell to Mosaic Stadium
Regina’s Mosaic Stadium, alias Taylor Field, will see its last season of Saskatchewan Roughriders use this year. And to see off its stadium in style, the City of Regina says more than 280 hours of community events and programming are planned for it over the next few months.
Many Ontario and Quebec ski hills suffer devastating season
Ski conditions flipped this year in Canada with Western operators popping champagne and those in Central Canada bidding good riddance to one of the poorest seasons in memory. While the amount of snowfall at Western Canadian resorts nearly doubled from last year, warm weather melted away revenues and profits from Ontario and Quebec’s most frequented ski regions.
Infrastructure
Halifax Port Authority revenue grows almost five per cent in 2015
Revenues at the Halifax Port Authority increased almost five per cent to $35.4 million in 2015, reflecting a solid year for the authority’s three lines of business — cargo, cruise and real estate. In figures released by the HPA Tuesday, net revenues increased 2.88 per cent over 2014 to $4.395 million.
Via Rail on right track with ‘frequency over speed’ proposal
Canadians love their cars, and finding ways to break that bond — or at least loosen it — will remain a challenge for many Earth Days to come. Around the world, transportation is among the fastest-growing contributors to climate change, and though car emissions are only part of the problem, getting more people out of their vehicles is certainly part of the solution.
Other
New Holiday Inn opens in downtown Oshawa
A new $25-million, six-storey hotel that includes 125 guest rooms and suites has opened in downtown Oshawa, Ont. on Simcoe Street North. The Holiday Inn Express & Suites includes an indoor heated pool, 24-hour fitness facilities and underground parking, explains a release.
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