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Forge & Foster builds portfolio as Hamilton CRE booms

3 years ago

Forge & Foster is a relatively new firm rapidly making its presence felt in the growing city of Hamilton and other southern and southwestern Ontario communities. It says 2020 was a record year for CRE in the city, with 289 transactions worth $1.2B.

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A deal that would see Toronto’s Starlight Investments purchase and redevelop the Portage Place mall in downtown Winnipeg is proving elusive, as the company is reportedly asking for $50 million in grants and $240 million in loans.

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Vancouver-based CIBT Education Group has received approval for its Global Education Mega Centre, a residential and school complex featuring one of the tallest towers in Surrey. The 49-storey tower will be adjacent to the Surrey City Centre SkyTrain station.

Don Wilcox

Managing Editor

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IT services firm Infosys (INFY-N) has chosen Calgary for the next phase of its Canadian expansion. The company already has offices in Toronto, Vancouver, Montreal and Ottawa, and is planning to double its Canadian workforce to 4,000 by 2023.

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Ryan Drudge has watched Markham-based developer FLATO Developments receive approval for three development projects in the span of a year on the agricultural and environmentally sensitive land that surrounds his property. The developments were fast-tracked using a minster’s zoning order.

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Crescendo Equity has sold a 12-unit apartment building on Drummond Road in the Niagara Falls area for $2.965 million. This translates to $247,000 per unit, compared to a previous benchmark of $176,000 for units in the area.

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Windsor Private Capital Limited Partnership announced it has acquired an aggregate of 10,000 class-A shares of Trez Capital Senior Mortgage Investment Corporation (TZS-T) for an aggregate price of $23,100, $2.31 per share. Windsor now owns and controls approximately 10.00% of issued and outstanding shares.

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Many retailers will recover only after months of late rent payments and other challenges that may have strained the relationship with their landlords. Others will have had to shut down, leaving landlords with vacancies to fill.

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By luring a pair of senior bankers from Goldman Sachs Group Inc. to run its fledgling financial technology startup, Walmart Inc. (WMT-N) is gaining even more heft as it seeks to become a one-stop shop for consumers’ financial needs.

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George Weston‘s (WN-T) fourth-quarter profit fell year-over-year as it was hit by one-time charges. The company, which operates through Loblaw (L-T), Choice Properties (CHP-UN-T)  and Weston Foods, says it earned a profit of $289 million or $1.88 per diluted share in Q4.

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Artis REIT, (AX-UN-T), Canada Newswire
Cominar REIT, (CUF-UN-T), Canada Newswire

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Ivanhoé Cambridge will partner with Jitendra Virwani’s Embassy Group to develop commercial properties in southern India. The two companies have formed a $500-million venture with Ivanhoe accounting for 80% of the share. The partners will initially focus on Bangalore and Chennai.

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Las Vegas Sands (NLVS-N) is selling the Venetian casino resort and Sands Expo and Convention Center for $6.25 billion. VICI Properties will buy Venetian Resort Las Vegas and the Sands Expo and Apollo Global Management (APO-N) will acquire Venetian.

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Crafting and hobby retail chain Michaels Cos. (MIK-Q), has agreed to a sale to Apollo Global Management (APO-N) for approximately US$3.3 billion. Apollo will pay US$22 per share to Michaels shareholders — a 22 per cent premium from Tuesday’s close.

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Blackstone Group bosses quietly smiled when Britain’s biggest-selling tabloid unwittingly endorsed their largest European real estate deal since the pandemic. The Sun indicated foreign travel curbs meant they’d be splashing their cash at the much-maligned seaside town of Bognor Regis.

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CIBC Deputy chief economist Benjamin Tal warned that upward pressure on mortgage rates as a result of volatility in the bond market could catch Canadian mortgage-holders flat-footed even though underlying rates remain near historic lows.

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A tribunal has upheld an Abbotsford strata’s decision to deny an owner an exemption to its non-rentals clause, leaving the owner unable to sell or rent her unit, likely because of “massively higher” monthly fees because of rising insurance fees.

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February residential sales in metropolitan Montreal fell for the first time since 2015 as transactions plunged outside Quebec’s largest city. The Quebec Professional Association of Real Estate Brokers says February sales decreased three per cent year-over-year to 5,106 homes.

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Unsurprisingly, a new report from Torontorentals.com notes Toronto properties experienced the largest falling rent rates, with prices dropping a staggering 21% year-over-year. A $500-plus decline on the average rental price leaves the new average at $2,000.

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