Don't see images? Click Here SUBSCRIBE FOR FREE MANAGE EMAIL PREFERENCES
Bisnow - (Almost) Never Boring
March 27, 2019

Miami's Next Generation: 5 30-Somethings Doing Big Real Estate Deals

Not all millennials are crying into their avocado toast over their crushing student loan debt — some of them are already out developing real estate. 

Miami's Next Generation: 5 30-Somethings Doing Big Real Estate Deals

Of course, it helps to have been born into the business, like Related Group Vice President Jon Paul Perez or hotel scion Dev Motwani of Merrimac Ventures, two of six men…

Read the full story here.

  Share:  
 
Perforation

Top Stories on Bisnow.com

WeWork's Losses Doubled In 2018, Reaching Nearly $2B WeWork's Losses Doubled In 2018, Reaching Nearly $2B
MedMen Beset By Lawsuits, But This Investor Is Still Betting On The Cannabis Retailer MedMen Beset By Lawsuits, But This Investor Is Still Betting On The Cannabis Retailer
BlackRock Buys Private French Equity, Real Estate Analytics Platform For $1.3B BlackRock Buys Private French Equity, Real Estate Analytics Platform For $1.3B
In Their Own Words: What The Next Economic Downturn Will Mean For Commercial Real Estate In Their Own Words: What The Next Economic Downturn Will Mean For Commercial Real Estate
Perforation

David Beckham's Soccer Club Tries To Win Over Miami While Flirting With Fort Lauderdale

David Beckham's Soccer Club Tries To Win Over Miami While Flirting With Fort Lauderdale  

David Beckham's new Major League Soccer team, Inter Miami, has gone through a lot — multiple proposed-then-nixed stadium sites, a key public vote, legal challenges and scads of political battles — to get where it is now: negotiating to build a 25,000-seat stadium and $1B mixed-use project on a…

Read Full Story

  Share:  
Perforation

Florida Charter Schools Sell in $45M Transaction

Florida Charter Schools Sell in $45M Transaction  

Two South Florida real estate investment companies, ESJ Capital Partners and MG3 Developer Group, have sold two charter school properties in Florida to their operator for a combined $45M.  The schools — Renaissance Charter School at Goldenrod in Orlando and Renaissance Charter School in Wellington — were sold to Red…

Read Full Story

  Share:  
Perforation

In Case You Missed It...

After 35 Years With No Beachside Building, Delray Hotel Will Be Demolished For Ultra-Luxury Condos After 35 Years With No Beachside Building, Delray Hotel Will Be Demolished For Ultra-Luxury Condos
Fort Lauderdale Gives David Beckham OK For Soccer Stadium Fort Lauderdale Gives David Beckham OK For Soccer Stadium
Florida Bill Would Create Commissions For Opportunity Zones Florida Bill Would Create Commissions For Opportunity Zones
Kushner Launching First Miami Project: A $550M Apartment Complex Kushner Launching First Miami Project: A $550M Apartment Complex
 
Perforation

Anthony Scaramucci Talks Trump, Opportunity Zones And How His White House Flameout Was Good For Business

Anthony Scaramucci might be the living embodiment of the phrase, "There's no such thing as bad publicity."

But even as he has re-entered the world of private equity, Scaramucci believes that what matters most is that people have heard of him at all. He explained his reasoning by invoking the man to whom he tied his political fortunes and whose presidency he still appears on TV to defend.

"[President Donald Trump] had a nice line about it, where he said, ‘If 100 million people know you, and 50 million hate you and 50 million like you, that’s better than 100 million people not knowing you,’" Scaramucci said. "So as long as you can take the heat, it’s OK."

Scaramucci's hedge fund, SkyBridge Capital, launched a qualified opportunity fund late last year, and recently partnered with Westport Capital Partners to manage the fund with a target of $3B in investment. Even if his political dalliance and brash, confrontational style turn some potential investors away, Scaramucci said his phone has rung more than it would have had he never set foot in the White House.

Read the full story here.

 
Perforation

Influx Of Capital Into Medical Real Estate Creating New Competition For Established Players

 

Growing demand for healthcare services has created a booming market for medical office buildings, bringing a host of new investors into the space and making it more challenging for the sector's traditional players. 

Anchor Health Properties Executive Vice President Katie Jacoby, whose company has been developing medical facilities for over 30 years, said she is seeing a surge of private equity competing for healthcare real estate deals. 

"Ten years ago, healthcare was hardly even considered an asset class; now it's one of the top asset classes," said Jacoby, who will speak April 11 at Bisnow's National Healthcare Mid-Atlantic event in D.C. "There is increased competition to purchase properties and to develop properties."

Read the full story here.

Perforation
 
 
       
 
You are receiving this email because you are either a member of the Bisnow community, have attended a Bisnow event, because you have a legitimate interest in real estate news and events because of your profession, or because of your business associations, memberships or partnerships.
 
This email was sent to: newsletter.archives@bisnow.com
 
   
 
123 William St, Suite 1505, New York NY 10038