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San Francisco’s Largest Hotels May Be Sold by Real Estate Group.

Park Hotels and Resorts has ceased payments on a $725m loan on its San Francisco properties, including the 1,921-room Hilton San Francisco Union Square and the 1,024-room Parc 55 San Francisco. The company is expected to give the two hotels back to its lender. The decision is a major disinvestment for the city’s hospitality market, which was once one of the strongest in the US. By Madeline Beaumont Park Hotels and Resorts has ceased payments on a $725m loan on its San Francisco properties, including the 1,921-room Hilton San Francisco Union Square and the 1,024-room Parc 55 San Francisco. The company is expected to give the two hotels back to its lender. The decision is a major disinvestment for the city’s hospitality market, which was once one of the strongest in the US. The two hotels make up around 9% of the city’s total stock of hotel rooms. The move could be among the first in a line of dominos to fall in San Francisco’s hotel market, As reported in hotel consulting firm Atlas Hospitality Group. As reported in the SF Standard, Park Hotels and Resorts, a real estate investment firm based in Virginia, has announced that it has ceased…

San Manuel Band of Mission Indians buys stake in Dana Point resort

Tribe behind Yaamava’ Casino owns 40% of Waldorf Astoria Monarch Beach Resort JUN 7, 2023, 11:30 AM | By TRD Staff An Indian tribe in the Inland Empire has bought a major stake in the Waldorf Astoria Monarch Beach Resort & Club in Dana Point. The San Manuel Band of Mission Indians, owners of the Yaamava’ Resort & Casino in Highland, has taken a 40-percent stake in the 175-acre resort at 1 Monarch Beach Resort, the Orange County Register reported. The San Manuel Band paid an undisclosed sum to Ohana Real Estate Investors, based in Redwood City, which in 2020 bought the 400-room, five-diamond hotel campus for $497 million. “We are impressed with Hilton and Waldorf Astoria’s strategic repositioning of the property over recent years,” San Manuel Chairwoman Lynn “Nay” Valbuena told the Register. The Mission-style hotel, once known as Monarch Beach Resort, sits atop a 150-foot bluff on the inland side of Pacific Coast Highway, overlooking the ocean. The property includes a 6-acre private beach club, three swimming pools and an 18-hole golf course. Ohana and San Manuel did not disclose the dollar amount of the investment, but noted the tribe has “the option to increase its ownership through one or…

Beverly Hills Voters To Decide Whether World’s Richest Person Can Build Hotel

If Approved, LVMH’s Proposed Cheval Blanc Hotel Would Attract Guests With Rodeo Drive Site, Analyst Says By Jack WitthausCoStar NewsMay 19, 2023 | 3:49 P.M. A proposed luxury hotel in affluent Beverly Hills, California, would attempt to lure guests to an area that’s considered underserved for hospitality — as long as residents vote to support the project. French luxury conglomerate LVMH needs to win a special election on May 23 on whether it can proceed with redeveloping a former Brooks Brothers at 468 N. Rodeo Drive into a 109-room Cheval Blanc hotel. LVMH’s founder, chairman and reported owner of about half the company is Bernard Arnault, who Forbes and Bloomberg have ranked as the world’s richest person. Beverly Hills is among the strongest hotel markets in Los Angeles and generates some of the highest rates in the city because of its famous shopping, relative lack of hotel competition and tourist attractions, said Alan Reay, president of Irvine-based hospitality brokerage Atlas Hospitality Group. Adding to the hotel’s appeal is its location on Rodeo Drive, one of the world’s most valuable shopping districts. The Hollywood-Beverly Hills hotel market has an average daily rate of $348.82, well above the greater L.A. average of $199.18, according to CoStar data. “It would phenomenally successful,” Reay said…

Union Square Woes: San Francisco Hotel Owner Stops Debt Payments on Hilton, Parc 55

Written by Kevin TruongUpdated at Jun. 05, 2023 • 12:36pmPublished Jun. 05, 2023 • 12:07pm Park Hotels and Resorts, a Virginia-based real estate investment firm, said Monday that it had stopped paying back a $725 million loan on its main San Francisco properties and is likely to give two of the largest hotels in the city back to its lender. The decision to offload the city’s largest hotel—the 1,921-room Hilton San Francisco Union Square—as well as its fourth-largest hotel—the nearby 1,024-room Parc 55 San Francisco—represents a major disinvestment and negative sign for what was once one of the strongest hospitality markets in the country. Taken together, the two properties make up around 9% of the city’s total stock of hotel rooms. Park Hotels announced that it had stopped making payments on the loan, which has a November 2023 maturity date. In an earnings call earlier this month, Park Hotels CEO Thomas J. Baltimore Jr. said that the company expected to have the situation resolved by summer. Alan Reay, president of hotel consulting firm Atlas Hospitality Group, said some hotels are facing headwinds similar to San Francisco’s office market, which is seeing record-high vacancies.  “You tend to see issues, particularly in large, full-service hotels that have been…

SF’s biggest hotels to stop mortgage payments 

Park Hotels and Resorts will cease servicing $725M debt in “best interest” of investors JUN 5, 2023, 5:39 PMBy Pawan Naidu Park Hotels and Resorts announced it will cease making payments toward a $725 million non-recourse CMBS loan which is scheduled to mature in November 2023.  The loan was secured by two of its San Francisco hotels — the 1,921-room Hilton San Francisco Union Square and the 1,024-room Parc 55 San Francisco. “After much thought and consideration, we believe it is in the best interest for Park’s stockholders to materially reduce our current exposure to the San Francisco market,” CEO Thomas Baltimore Jr. said in a statement. “Now more than ever, we believe San Francisco’s path to recovery remains clouded and elongated by major challenges — both old and new: record high office vacancy; concerns over street conditions; lower return to office than peer cities; and a weaker than expected citywide convention calendar through 2027 that will negatively impact business and leisure demand and will likely significantly reduce compression in the city for the foreseeable future. Unfortunately, the continued burden on our operating results and balance sheet is too significant to warrant continuing to subsidize and own these assets.” The interest-only…

Bay Area hotel market struggles with post-COVID hangover

Recovery in San Jose badly trails other Western cities By GEORGE AVALOS | gavalos@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News GroupPUBLISHED: May 22, 2023 at 5:30 a.m. | UPDATED: May 22, 2023 at 3:50 p.m. The Bay Area’s hotel industry is still struggling to rebound from coronavirus-linked shutdowns, even as the lodging sector outside the region has flourished. And not everyone is in agreement about what’s to blame. San Jose’s core hotel markets have been far slower to recover financially from the pandemic than those in other major city centers in the western United States. Hotel revenues in San Francisco and Oakland also remain sluggish. Downtown San Jose ranked dead last in the peer group of 14 markets in terms of its recovery, according to information that STR, which analyzes the hospitality market, provided to this news organization. San Jose’s airport area was nearly as feeble. “San Jose has a heavy reliance on high-tech business travel, which has not rebounded post-COVID,” said Alan Reay, president of Atlas Hospitality Group, which tracks the lodging sector. Together, San Jose’s hotel markets downtown and near the airport generated revenues in 2022 that were 45% below the 2019 total, before the pandemic began. Downtown San Jose’s hotel market alone was even worse, generating…

Bank, Hospitality Execs Discuss State of Lending

Opinions Vary on Impact of Banks Collapsing PACE Financing an Opportunity for Some LOS ANGELES — The state of the financial markets and lending have been hot-button topics in the hospitality industry after three regional U.S. banks collapsed over the past three months. Lenders and hospitality executives at the 2023 Meet the Money national hotel finance and investment conference commented on the current state of the banking crisis: Ash Patel, president and CEO, Commercial Bank of California This current crisis has nothing to do with the credit crisis yet. And I use the word yet because this current crisis is a crisis of confidence. … None of our pencils are up because we’re not facing one of the previous crises that we went through. This is a very unique crisis. This crisis only happened in 1907 when [banks] went bankrupt, and since then, and through the last 50 years, we have not heard of a bank that failed because there was a bankruptcy, meaning the depositor lost confidence in the viability of a particular bank. That’s why all of us on the table here are still continuing to lend. Alan Reay, president, Atlas Hospitality Group Depending on what the regulators…

Landmark East Bay Claremont hotel is bought for more than $160 million

OAKLAND — The Claremont Club & Spa, an iconic hotel perched in the hills on the Oakland and Berkeley border, has been bought by a Bay Area real estate developer in a deal that tops $160 million. The hotel, part of the Fairmont chain, was bought for about $163.3 million, according to documents filed on May 12 with the Alameda County Recorder’s Office. Redwood City Ohana Real Estate Investors, acting through an affiliate, bought the hotel in an all-cash deal, the county records showed. The 276-room hotel is located at 41 Tunnel Road in Berkeley. Properties located both in Oakland and Berkeley were included in the property transaction, the county documents show. An affiliate headed up by Blum Capital Partners and Fairmont Hotels & Resorts sold the hotel site to the Ohana Real Estate Investors group, county and state public documents show. The late Richard Blum for many years was a principal executive of Blum Capital. Blum also was married to U.S. Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-California). “The purchase by Ohana really speaks to how people view trophy assets in great locations, such as the Claremont,” said Alan Reay, president of Irvine-based Atlas Hospitality Group, which tracks the hotel sector. The…

Blackstone nears $950M refi on Hotel del Coronado in San Diego

Blackstone nears $950M refi on Hotel del Coronado in San Diego Barclays leading CMBS deal on 1880s hotel Blackstone is nearing a $950 million deal to refinance its historic Hotel del Coronado in San Diego, The Real Deal has learned.  Barclays is leading a commercial mortgage-backed securities package that will be backed solely by the 757-key hotel, located at 1500 Orange Avenue, according to data from Trepp and a source familiar with the matter. Blackstone declined to comment.  The floating-rate, interest-only loan, which is expected to close later this month, is about 60 percent loan-to-value, according to Trepp, meaning the property is valued at about $1.6 billion.  “It is such an iconic building,” Alan Reay, who runs hotel brokerage Atlas Hospitality Group, said of the hotel. “It’s impossible to duplicate or rebuild.” Blackstone bought the 134-year-old Hotel del Coronado, which sits on the southern end of San Diego’s Coronado peninsula, in 2015 as part of a larger $6 billion acquisition of Strategic Hotels and Resorts. Blackstone paid $600 million for the property, according to records.  A year later, Blackstone had struck a deal to sell off the Hotel del Coronado — and the entire Strategic portfolio — to Anbang Insurance Group. However,…

Ohana Real Estate Investors buying Claremont Hotel Club &Spa

Several new liquor license applications related to the 276-room hotel, 41 Tunnel Road in Berkeley, indicate that Redwood City-based developer and investor Ohana Real Estate is in the process of acquiring the hotel. The luxury Fairmont Hotel chain and financier Richard Blum, the late husband of Sen. Dianne Feinstein, bought the hotel nearly a decade ago. Executives of Ohana Real Estate Investors — including Ohana’s chief financial officer, an asset management partner, and vice president of asset management — were named in the newapplications. The entity behind the applications is at the same mailing address as Ohana in Redwood City. The hotel property is anchored by a $120 million commercial mortgage-backed securities loan, which was refinanced in 2019 for$125 million and set to mature in July. A CMBS industry report notes “the property was listed for sale recently and is presently under contract” as of last month. Representatives of Ohana and Fairmont Hotels did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Tuesday morning, but I’ll update this story if I learn more. The acquisition price was not immediately available. FRHI Hotels &Resorts and the Blum group purchased the hotel from the Government of Singapore Investment Group in 2014 for…

Ohana buys Claremont Hotel & Spa on the Berkeley-Oakland border

Redwood City investor pays unknown price for the 276-room property appraised at $183 million MAY 10, 2023, 11:38 AMBy TRD Staff Ohana Real Estate is buying the 108-year-old Claremont Hotel & Spa, which straddles Berkeley and Oakland.  The Redwood City-based investor is acquiring the 276-room hotel at 41 Tunnel Road in Claremont, the San Francisco Business Times reported, citing liquor license applications. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. The seller is Toronto-based FRHI Hotels & Resorts, which owns the luxury Fairmont Hotel brand, and the Blum Group, owned by financier Richard Blum, the late husband of Sen. Dianne Feinstein. They bought the landmark hotel in 2014 for $86 million, then launched a multimillion-dollar renovation. Executives of Ohana Real Estate Investors — including Ohana’s chief financial officer, an asset management partner, and vice president of asset management — were named in the new applications, according to the Business Times. The entity behind the applications is at the same mailing address as Ohana in Redwood City. The hotel property is anchored by a $120 million commercial mortgage-backed securities loan, which was refinanced in 2019 for $125 million and set to mature in July. A CMBS industry report notes “the property was listed for sale…

Bay Area hotel market wobbles in San Jose, San Francisco, Oakland

Famed San Francisco hotel’s “non-performing” loan gets shopped to buyers By GEORGE AVALOS | gavalos@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News GroupPUBLISHED: March 1, 2023 at 5:30 a.m. | UPDATED: March 1, 2023 at 1:28 p.m. Fresh signs have emerged that the Bay Area’s hotel market is wobbly — including efforts to scout for one or more investors willing to take over a faltering loan for a lodging icon that’s perched atop San Francisco’s famed Nob Hill. The Stanford Court Hotel, a historic lodging site at 905 California Street and one of the best-known hotels in the region, is the focal point of an attempt to find a new holder of the loan on the property, according to a marketing flyer reviewed by this news organization. The primary financing vehicle for The Stanford Court Hotel is a “non-performing senior loan with a total outstanding balance of $108.2 million,” stated the marketing package that’s being circulated by Eastdil Secured, a commercial real estate firm. Stanford Court isn’t the only historic hotel on Nob Hill that faces a delicate financial situation. The next block over, at 1075 California Street, the Huntington Hotel is in default on a $56.2 million loan on the property, San Francisco county records show. Deutsche Bank, the…

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