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February 28, 2023

This Week's Chicago Deal Sheet

Rosalind Franklin University's Michael Rosin To Discuss The Biotech Industry At Lake County Life Sciences April 18
CRG has executed a full-building, more than 1M SF lease at The Cubes at Country Club Hills, an industrial facility near the intersection of Interstates 57 and 80 in south suburban Country Club Hills.

This Week's Chicago Deal Sheet

“With proximity to a wide swath of the U.S. population, the Midwest ranks as a top industrial market, and modern super-bulk facilities like this one are in short supply,” Jeff Lanaghan, senior vice president and partner for the Midwest region at CRG, said in a press release. “Large users need…

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Top Stories on Bisnow.com

First Round Of CHIPS Act Funding Unlocks $39B For Manufacturing Of Semiconductors First Round Of CHIPS Act Funding Unlocks $39B For Manufacturing Of Semiconductors
Companies Still Want Office Space, But They Also Want To Stay Nimble Companies Still Want Office Space, But They Also Want To Stay Nimble
Supreme Court Ruling In Bankruptcy Case Could Pose Risk For Informal Partnerships Supreme Court Ruling In Bankruptcy Case Could Pose Risk For Informal Partnerships
Fed Economists Warn CRE Valuations Could Take A Tumble Fed Economists Warn CRE Valuations Could Take A Tumble
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Brookfield Sees $825M Wiped From Value Of Office Portfolio, But Shows Debt Market Is Open

Brookfield’s property division saw the net value of its office portfolio drop by $825M last year, due mainly to the impact of rising cap rates. But it also managed to raise new debt recently in spite of the volatility in financing markets.

Brookfield Sees $825M Wiped From Value Of Office Portfolio, But Shows Debt Market Is Open

Brookfield Property Partners, the division that owns Brookfield’s office and retail properties as well as stakes in its real estate opportunity funds, said in full-year results that income from its portfolio increased slightly, though the value of its office and retail holdings dropped.The company had a total of $113B in assets at…

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‘It Takes A Decade’: How A $124B Real Estate Giant Rebuilt Itself

How do you reposition one of the world’s largest real estate investors if you think the way people use buildings and how companies buy and build them are out of sync? And what happens when the market suddenly turns not-so-benign? “It takes a decade to move a portfolio that was mainly office and retail,” AXA Investment Managers Global Head of AXA IM Alts Isabelle Scemama told Bisnow, explaining how the Paris-headquartered investor moved into sectors that would see growth and resilient income, and how it plans to weather the current volatility.

‘It Takes A Decade’: How A $124B Real Estate Giant Rebuilt Itself

The investment division of French insurance giant AXA got where it is by building large-scale platforms in sectors that other institutional investors found too complex: first of all, in logistics, and then, in various iterations of rented residential like multifamily, student accommodation and senior living.More recently, it has made a…

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In Case You Missed It...

Waiting Out The Stigma: Progress On Social Equity Programs For Cannabis Developers Is Painfully Slow Waiting Out The Stigma: Progress On Social Equity Programs For Cannabis Developers Is Painfully Slow
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Open-Air Lifestyle Centers Are Fast Taking Over The Traditional Malls Of Suburban Chicago Open-Air Lifestyle Centers Are Fast Taking Over The Traditional Malls Of Suburban Chicago
Bears Close On Arlington Heights Property As Soldier Field's Prospects Dim Bears Close On Arlington Heights Property As Soldier Field's Prospects Dim
 
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Cushman & Wakefield, Marcus & Millichap Quietly Cut Jobs Last Year As Business Slowed

Cushman & Wakefield, Marcus & Millichap Quietly Cut Jobs Last Year As Business Slowed   Two of the nation’s largest brokerage firms saved millions of dollars by quietly laying off workers at the end of last year. Both Cushman & Wakefield and Marcus & Millichap reported headcount reductions in their fourth-quarter earnings reports, though details regarding the number of layoffs and which departments were most impacted were scant.Cushman & Wakefield cut $24.4M in operating and administrative expenses in Q4 primarily through lowered employment costs. The firm also reported an increase of $800K in restructuring changes, which it said was linked to severance payouts.  Marcus & Millichap’s workforce shrunk by 5% last year, with the majority of turnover…

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