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[Re-sent] Rise Realty Blog Page #3 (Rise Contacts)
Rise Realty CRE Morning Update
May 7, 2018
Good Morning! Monday Motivation:
New week BRING IT ON! Don't forget your Mother's Day gifts...because you only got one!
The owners of Jungle Island want to build a family-friendly hotel at the Watson Island theme park.
On May 24, park owner ESJ Capital Partners will ask the Miami City Commission to put a referendum on the August ballot that would ask voters to approve the development of a hotel of up to 130 feet tall with up to 300 rooms.
would include an extension of Jungle Island’s lease with the city, rezoning to allow the hotel, and the financial terms of the agreement.
“We will create a hotel that really enhances the skyline in a way consistent with botanical nature of the park,†said John Dunlap, CEO of Iconic Attractions and president of Jungle Island. “Our intent is to keep families in Miami and staying with us."
Jungle Island would pay an additional $250,000 in rent initially and, upon completion of the hotel, pay the greater of $1.15 million or 5 percent of hotel revenue. Jungle Island would also contribute $700,000 to the nearby Ichimura-Miami Japanese Garden and $500,000 to the city's low-income housing fund.
ESJ Capital Partners acquired Jungle Island for $60 million in 2017.
Jungle Island aims to reopen on Memorial Day weekend with scheduled tours of part of the park with close-up animal encounters.
During the summer, a Tree Walk Village will open with a ropes course and tree houses. Later in the year, there will be a new playground, pool, Flow Rider wave machine, outdoor skydiving experience, indoor trampoline park, escape rooms and a zip line. The final piece, a man-made crystal lagoon, should open in summer 2019.
WeWork Finds Favor In Debt Market To Tune Of $700M bisnow.com/national/news/…#cre#miami#coworking@Rise_Realty#broker
— Keith A. Darby (@keithadarby)
1:37 PM • Apr 27, 2018
Despite a lack of cash flow and a middling credit rating, WeWork managed to blow out a bond sale to the tune of $702M.
The New York-based co-working operator, which hit a valuation of $20B last year, sold seven-year bonds at par with a nearly 8% interest rate, surpassing an initial deal size expected to be $500M.
This bond sale came despite investor concerns that WeWork has few assets, numerous office lease obligations across the globe, including in some of the priciest real estate markets like New York and San Francisco, and has negative cash flow.
The company has a single-B credit rating.
WeWork reported that earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization were more than $190M in the red. But the company reported an EBIDTA of nearly $50M “before growth investments†and a “community adjusted Ebitda†— which excluded general and administrative expenses — of more than $230M.
Should be insightful. Looking forward to what Adam Vaisman has to say! lnkd.in/gq94vH6lnkd.in/ggfwS82
— Keith A. Darby (@keithadarby)
3:36 PM • Apr 26, 2018
Non-farm payroll employment increased by 164,000 jobs in April, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, marking the country's 91st straight month of employment gains.
The unemployment rate fell to 3.9%, the first time it has gone below 4% since 2000. The unemployment rate had been at 4.1% for six consecutive months.
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