Business World

Kushner, Anbang close Manhattan tower talks, other confabs emerge

- Forbes

NEW YORK — Kushner Companies, the real estate firm headed by President Donald Trump’s son-in-law until recently, said on Wednesday it ended talks to redevelop its flagship New York office tower with China’s Anbang Insurance Group.

Talks had centered on Anbang providing as much as half of $2.5 billion in equity for the planned redevelopm­ent of 666 Fifth Avenue in Midtown Manhattan, a media report said last week.

The failed talks are the latest twist in a story that initially involved Jared Kushner, who is married to Trump’s daughter Ivanka, before he sold his interest in Kushner Cos to a family trust at the beginning of the year.

Three Democratic lawmakers questioned the White House earlier this month over its handling of potential conflicts of interest by Kushner, given his role as a top adviser to Trump.

“Kushner Companies is no longer in discussion­s with Anbang about 666 Fifth Avenue’s potential redevelopm­ent, and our firms have mutually agreed to end talks regarding the property,” a spokesman said in a statement.

An Anbang representa­tive declined to comment.

The Kushner spokesman said advanced talks are ongoing with other investors to redevelop the 39-story building, valued for its proximity to St. Patrick’s Cathedral and Rockefelle­r Center.

Any plan could be hampered by the cost of buying out tenants with longterm leases or Spanish retailer Zara’s store on the corner of 52nd Street.

Zara is controlled by Amancio Ortega, the world’s fourth-richest man according to magazine, who has no intention to sell, said a broker who represente­d the billionair­e when one of his companies paid $324 million for the locale in 2011.

“He never sells, he has rarely sold anything in his portfolio and this is particular­ly valuable for them,” said Borja Sierra, a broker for Savills Plc when asked about Ortega’s plans for the prime real estate.

“They’re super happy with the property,” Sierra told Reuters when reached in Barcelona. “It’s not a negotiatin­g position.”

Some tenants in the office portion of the building have more than 10 years left on their leases, and getting them to leave is unlikely to be cheap.

A case study of Kushner’s purchase in 2006 of 666 Fifth Avenue by Columbia University’s Center for Urban Real Estate said it cost $47 million to buy out former occupants Brooks Brothers and almost $12 million to buy out Hickey Freeman.

The study said it took four years to buy out the National Basketball Associatio­n from its space in the building.

Any deal must also be agreed to by Vornado Realty Trust, which owns the remaining store frontage and 49.5% of the building’s office portion.

The Kushner plan calls for stripping the building down to its steel columns and adding about 40 floors, the Wall

Street Journal reported last week. The project was designed by Zaha Hadid, a Pritzker Prize award winner for architectu­re, before she died last year.

News of Kushner and Anbang ending talks was first reported by the New York

Post. — Reuters

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