Commercial Property

OC Office Loan Special Servicing


You won’t hear a lot about office woes in Orange County, but nowhere is perfect. 

The commercial mortgage-backed securities debt connected to an office park located in Westminster went to special servicing after the borrower defaulted on about $16 million debt after eight months of delinquency, according to Morningstar Credit and Trepp.

The three-building, mid-rise, office campus at 5405, 5455 and 5555 Garden Grove Boulevard, with a total of 150,000 square feet, is owned by Younan Properties, which did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The property is worth $28 million, or $187 per square foot, according to a pre-pandemic appraisal, although keeping tenants has been an issue: The campus was 98 percent full at underwriting, but had fallen to 64 percent by June 2024, per the latest available data. 

The special servicer notified the borrower but had not received a response as of October, according to servicer commentary via Morningstar. 

Leases over losses?

Hudson Pacific Properties’ chairman and chief executive Victor Coleman can tout an office recovery all he wants, but the company is still bleeding money

The Los Angeles-based real estate investment trust reported losses of $294 million in the nine months ended September 30 compared with $197 million a year earlier. The company mostly blamed the studio business, which is lagging throughout Los Angeles, for losses. 

Coleman took the opportunity of the third-quarter earnings call to boast about technology and artificial intelligence companies and their need for office space in the Bay Area—although he missed a chance to name-drop Elon Musk, whose company leased 100,000 square feet at a Hudson Pacific office property in Palo Alto. 

In all fairness, the company has inked 1.7 million square feet of leases in the nine months ending September, which it said is its best year-to-date leasing performance since before the pandemic. But office revenues are still declining and total occupancy is lower than 80 percent. 

It remains to be seen whether the losses or leases will win out when it comes to Coleman’s compensation. Last year, he raked in about $25 million worth of salary, stocks and bonuses while his company’s losses ballooned to $364 million.

Earnings elsewhere

By the numbers: Office-and-apartment REIT Douglas Emmett reported a net loss of $11 million in the third quarter compared to a $5 million profit a year earlier. Revenues were unchanged at $251 million.

Retail developer and landlord Macerich reported a $87 million loss compared to $108 million loss the year before — and revenue increased to $253 million from $220 million. 

Commercial investor Kennedy Wilson reported a net loss of $21 million compared to $77 million during the same period, but revenues declined to $116 million from $127.5 million.

A Lincoln buy

Lincoln Property Company purchased a Manhattan Beach office building for $70 million to knock it down and replace it with apartments — and the seller, Continental Development Corporation, issued a $45 million note to make it happen.

The deal for the 123,000-square-foot property at 1500 Rosecrans Avenue came out to $569 per square foot.

The Beach Cities office sector, which encompasses Manhattan Beach, Hermosa Beach and Redondo Beach, has a 15 percent vacancy rate — much better than downtown Los Angeles’ 33.3 percent. But the average Manhattan Beach home value is $3 million and the average rent is $5,500 a month, so it seems Lincoln thought apartments were a better bang for its buck. 

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