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Commercial real estate collapse claims Village Square

By HUBBLE SMITH
LAS VEGAS REVIEW-JOURNAL
Posted: Dec. 24, 2009 | 5:41 p.m.
Updated: Dec. 24, 2009 | 6:13 p.m.

Village Square, once a thriving shopping center on Sahara Avenue anchored by Regal Cinemas, is going into receivership, the latest casualty of the commercial real estate collapse in Las Vegas.

Like residential real estate, the commercial sector has been battered by plummeting property values and rising vacancy rates. Some analysts predict an impending foreclosure crisis in commercial real estate, one that would take down major banks with it.

That fallout has yet to be felt, though notices of default on commercial properties have doubled in the last year, according to monthly reports from Nevada Title Co. Most of them are for vacant land.

For the two-week period of Nov. 16-30, Nevada Title reported 39 notices of default on commercial properties, including 20 for vacant land, five for storage facilities and four apartments. The largest loan of $35 million was for a professional building owned by Montecito Partners at 6605 Grand Montecito Parkway. The lender was US Bank.

The Mortgage Bankers Association reported that the share of commercial mortgage-backed loans at least 30 days past due rose to 4.1 percent this year, compared with 1.2 percent in 2008. It’s the largest increase since 1997.

About 3.4 percent of bank-owned loans on retail centers, apartment complexes, office buildings and other income properties were at least 90 days past due, up from 1.4 percent a year ago.

The situation has been called a “time bomb” waiting to explode, the next shoe to drop.

Whitney Tilson, principal of New York-based T2 Partners investment firm, told the Review-Journal in June that the final wave of foreclosures is coming from loans outside of the housing sector, the largest of which will be in the $3.5 trillion area of commercial real estate. They started to surge in 2008.

Triple Five Development, developer of Village Square, defaulted in March on a $27.6 million loan from Keybank National for vacant land in northwest Las Vegas that was planned for the Great Mall of Las Vegas. The company also developed Mall of America in Bloomington, Minn.

The company now acts as manager on behalf of different syndicated investment groups with assets in Nevada, including Village Square, said Jeff Dragovich, senior vice president of Triple Five.

“Like many other projects in Las Vegas and nationwide, Village Square has been negatively impacted by the prolonged recession, which has put a strain on occupancies and sustained cash flow, which we anticipate to continue until the public gains confidence that the economy is on its way to recovery,” Dragovich said.

Bank of America filed a $59.7 million lawsuit in District Court against Village Square Shopping Center. Triple Five has been in “constant and open communication” with the lender to resolve the situation and pull the project through the recession, Dragovich said. The company allocates significant resources and manpower to manage and lease the shopping center, and has brought in new tenants and worked with existing tenants in extending their leases to stabilize occupancy and cash flow, he said.

Jim Weld, commercial broker for Associated Ventures Capital in Las Vegas, said the market appears to be headed for the worst period in more than 16 years. Still, depending on product type and region, performing loans — those that are current on payments — are between 96 percent and 98 percent of most portfolios.

“It does sound much more dramatic to say that there is an eye-popping 500 percent increase than to say nonperforming loans went from 0.5 percent to 2.5 percent,” he said. “It’s easier to get more bang out of it when everything is negative.”

Weld said he’d heard complaints about Village Square’s poor design. In-line stores, or those sharing common walls within the shopping center, were blocked from view on Sahara Avenue by stand-alone pads out front, most of them restaurants.

“It’s always the same,” Weld said. “The developer wants the most square footage he can get on the property and the tenants want as little square footage as they can take but give them all frontage.”

Contact reporter Hubble Smith at hsmith@reviewjournal.com or 702-383-0491.

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  1. Boycott Clark County Dec. 29, 2009 | 1:17 p.m. Report Abuse

    Of course, Barak Obama was too weak minded NOT to file the lawsuits against lenders to force them to loan money to people who couldn't afford to pay it back. It must have been Bush who lied to him to induce him to file those lawsuits. This whole mess was caused by both parties working in unison. Democrats and Republicans are two teams running on the same goal post.

  2. PatrickC21 Dec. 27, 2009 | 11:42 p.m. Report Abuse

    Hey Obama, Reid, and Pelosi, THANKS FOR NOTHING!!!

  3. fremmas.mind Dec. 25, 2009 | 1:31 a.m. Report Abuse

    FYI, in the Senate Health bill Americans
    will be charged for recieving benefits or will be fined and/or jailed. As for illegal aliens their paymaents will also be paid by the American citizen. They won't be fined for not taking part in health care reform.

    All the illegal has to do to recieve benefits from health care reform is to show a social security card. SAVE which is a government saftey mechanism to find and keep illegals from getting benefits only allowed for citizens was taken out of the bill by Harry Reid.

    The American citizen will also pay into the system to provide the illegal aliens with interpretors to work at all hospitals so they can explain to all the illegals what is taking place during their hospital stay. I bet that will cost a pretty penny.

    Sen. John Ensign made a statement that this bill will benefit illegals more than citizens.

  4. TK Dec. 24, 2009 | 10:17 p.m. Report Abuse

    Forget about a job and feeding my family! I want health care that I'm forced to pay for! Morons..

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