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Inventive restructuring puts The Howard back on top.


Residents taking out second mortgages on their apartments in hopes of avoiding a foreclosure foreclosure

Legal proceeding by which a borrower's rights to a mortgaged property may be extinguished if the borrower fails to live up to the obligations agreed to in the loan contract.
... an aggressive restructuring plan which significantly lowers the co-op's underlying mortgage... reducing monthly maintenance fees that were hindering sales. Sometimes unusual circumstances call for unusual solutions.

When BREL BREL British Rail Engineering Limited
BREL Bureau Regional pour Ethnologie et la Linguistique (Italy) 
 Associates XIII, LP first began looking at The Howard a few years back, we encountered another victim of the moribund moribund /mor·i·bund/ (mor´i-bund) in a dying state.

mor·i·bund
n.
At the point of death; dying.



mor
 co-op market of the early '90s. Converted from a rental in 1992, The Howard sold 201 units in its first two years before the market sputtered and sales stopped. With two more years of inactivity and 282 units left unsold, the Rego Park, Queens Rego Park is a diverse neighborhood in the central portion of the New York City borough of Queens. It is bordered to the north by Elmhurst and Corona, the east and south by Forest Hills and the west by Middle Village. The neighborhood is part of Queens Community Board 6.  complex faced certain foreclosure by 1994.

However, a comprehensive analysis left us believing that there was great value in the units at The Howard. The real problem, as we saw it, was found in the huge underlying mortgage and prohibitive pro·hib·i·tive   also pro·hib·i·to·ry
adj.
1. Prohibiting; forbidding: took prohibitive measures.

2.
 maintenance fees, which left the units virtually unsalable Un`sal´a`ble

a. 1. Not salable; unmerchantable.

Adj. 1. unsalable - impossible to sell
unsaleable

salable, saleable - capable of being sold; fit for sale; "saleable at a low price"
 - a problem exacerbated by the fact that because less than half of the units were sold to resident owners, banks were unwilling to provide end loans to new buyers.

A creative plan was needed to alleviate those factors and put the complex on stable financial footing. After purchasing the unsold units, we began by attacking the coop's $22 million underlying mortgage, which escalated monthly maintenance fees to $385 to $986 on average, about $60 to $196 more than fees on comparable apartments in the area. We refinanced the mortgage at a lower interest rate and reduced it to $14 million by making a payment of $8 million. BREL immediately paid off $5 million, our proportionate share of the $8 million.

Then, in a highly atypical atypical /atyp·i·cal/ (-i-k'l) irregular; not conformable to the type; in microbiology, applied specifically to strains of unusual type.

a·typ·i·cal
adj.
 maneuver, we shifted the balance of the $8 million necessary for the pay-down to the 201 resident shareholders in the form of a second loan on their shares at a favorable interest rate.

As a result, monthly fees were reduced to a competitive $335 to $857 on average. The restructuring is also providing nearly $500,000 in additional annual revenue to pay for maintenance on the common areas that had been previously put off.

The crux Crux (krks) [Lat.,=cross], small but brilliant southern constellation whose four most prominent members form a Latin cross, the famous Southern Cross.  of the plan was educating the shareholders, who were not financial experts, that their debt wasn't increasing with the second loans, but that their financial responsibility was simply being transferred from the underlying mortgage to their shares.

As part of the deal, we arranged for the bank making the second loans to agree to forgive the second loans if existing owners sell their units at or below their original purchase prices. In addition, if the co-op fails or if the owner walks away, they are not personally liable for the second loans.

The result: activity at the three 12-story buildings along 66th Road just off Queens Boulevard Queens Boulevard is a major thoroughfare in the New York City borough of Queens, forming part of New York State Route 25. Location
It runs northwest to southeast across more than half the length of the borough, starting at the Queensboro Bridge in Long Island City and
 has taken a dramatic leap - 27 sales since The Howard's grand opening in the spring. Spurred not only by the renewed strength of the co-op market, but of the renewed financial strength of The Howard.
COPYRIGHT 1998 Hagedorn Publication
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1998, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Focus On: Building Management & Maintenance; New York City cooperative apartment complex
Author:Quinn, Kathryn B.
Publication:Real Estate Weekly
Date:Oct 21, 1998
Words:497
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