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April 23, 2024

This Week's Chicago Deal Sheet

An ex-Citadel executive's quantitive trading firm is doubling its working footprint and moving to an office tower Onni Group is renovating. 

Aquatic Capital Management signed a lease for roughly 30K SF at 225 W. Randolph St., Crain's Chicago Business reports. The company will relocate from 1 N. Wacker Drive and more than double its 14K SF footprint.

This Week's Chicago Deal Sheet

Onni Group has a $140M revamp of the 853K SF Randolph Street tower in the works, a bold bet on the Loop as the central business district's woes continue to intensify. The total vacancy rate in the CBD topped 25% in the first quarter, a high-water mark for the seventh consecutive quarter, according…

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Small-Format Grocers Foxtrot, Dom's Closing All Locations 5 Months After Merger

Small-Format Grocers Foxtrot, Dom's Closing All Locations 5 Months After Merger

Less than six months after merging, grocers Foxtrot Market and Dom's Kitchen & Market are closing all stores, effective immediately.The closures affect 33 Foxtrot locations in Chicago, Washington, D.C., Austin and Dallas. Dom's two storefronts are in Chicago.Foxtrot's first location locked its doors and sent employees home before 10 a.m.,…

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Chicago Tops All Metros In Office-To-Industrial Conversions. Could Angry Locals Halt The Gravy Train?

America's Second City will probably never convert the rest of the country into believing deep dish is pizza in its purest form. But its industrial players have effectively converted aging office assets to in-demand industrial properties at a rate that is second to none in the U.S. 

The Chicago area is embracing the office-to-industrial trend more than other parts of the country, with hundreds of millions of dollars invested in ambitious industrial projects across its suburbs. The Windy City leads the way in such conversions among all U.S. metros, according to Newmark.

Yet not all communities are friendly to industrial development: Deerfield made headlines when it greenlighted an amendment to its zoning code in February barring several types of industrial assets, including motor freight terminals, logistics centers, fulfillment centers and facilities designed for trucks.

Whether that is an anomaly or the beginning of a reversal that stops the trend in its tracks is now playing out.

Chicago Tops All Metros In Office-To-Industrial Conversions. Could Angry Locals Halt The Gravy Train?

Vocal area residents are the biggest obstacle to developers convincing cities to approve these conversions, said Suzanne Serino, vice chair at Colliers. Serino brokered deals for the former suburban headquarters of Allstate and Sears, which developers…

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WeWork Files Motion To Keep First Chicago Lease, Strikes Agreement On 4 Others

WeWork Files Motion To Keep First Chicago Lease, Strikes Agreement On 4 Others  

Beleaguered coworking titan WeWork plans to assume its first Chicago lease, along with lease assumptions in four other cities, the company announced Monday. 

The company aims to keep its lease at 448 N. LaSalle St., one of its nine Chicago locations. The move, which is pending court approval, is part of WeWork's efforts to restructure its real estate portfolio as it  navigates bankruptcy proceedings.  WeWork reached an agreement to reduce the…

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SPECIAL REPORT: In The Bare-Knuckle World Of Real Estate, Green Loans Are Losing The Fight

 

Save the planet, and get cheaper debt, too. It should be the ultimate win-win. 

Green loans are a tool that could help the commercial real estate sector dramatically reduce its huge carbon output, theoretically providing a way for lenders to make money by helping borrowers decarbonize their real estate portfolios.

But commercial real estate lenders and borrowers remain hesitant to engage with green lending. Just over half of the largest lenders to the industry globally offered some form of green lending program, an ongoing Bisnow investigation into real estate’s claims around carbon reduction found.

Even as green lending to global economies has soared in the past five years, it remains infrequently used in real estate.

Debt providers have yet to be convinced that green lending can yield the same returns as traditional lending, while borrowers are hesitant to jump through additional hoops to get financing, industry figures said.

Fears about accusations of greenwashing, coupled with pushback in some quarters against the growth of environmental, social and corporate governance factors influencing the corporate world, are also holding green lending back, others said. 

As well as the findings on green loansBisnow’s analysis showed only around a third of lenders had a decarbonization target that applied to their real estate loan book — meaning the majority aren't aligned with the decarbonization targets of their home countries. 

As it stands, a moral imperative is one of the reasons lenders and borrowers are engaging with green lending. But guilt won’t lead to the market making changes by itself, said James Wong, executive chairman of Hong Kong-based Hon Kwok Land Investment Co. The financial imperatives need to be clearer, and for that to happen, the structure of green lending has to change. 

“If you want to put a number on it, guilt's worth a quarter point on interest on a loan,” he said. “That's it. That's guilt. Anything beyond that, it's got to be something that can flow down to the bottom line. Right now, that's not matching up.”

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