The Signal

Reports: Westfield defaults on nearly $200 million loan connected to mall

- By Trevor Morgan

A $195 million loan connected to the Westfield Valencia Town Center was not paid off by its deadline, according to a Los Angeles-based real estate news publicatio­n, The Real Deal.

According to The Real Deal’s reporting, Fitch Ratings — a financial market analysis company — attributed the missed payment to an anticipate­d increase in defaults and said the Valencia Town Center was the “largest contributo­r to losses” of all the properties attached to the loan.

The loan was taken out by Unibail-rodamco-westfield, a Paris-based company that owns the

Valencia Town Center, and was provided by UBS and Barclays.

URW released a statement on Monday that said they’re currently in negotiatio­ns with their lenders.

“URW is in ongoing discussion­s with our lenders for Westfield Valencia Town Center, but these discussion­s have no impact at all on our operations. The center is open and it is business as usual for shoppers, our retail partners, and the community,” read the prepared statement.

URW has unloaded several properties across the country and in the L.A. metro area recently, selling Westfield Santa Anita and two Woodland Hills malls to local billionair­es.

The upscale mall in the heart of

Santa Clarita still has a large vacant space where Sears used to be, following Chapter 11 bankruptcy in 2018.

Earlier this month, The Canyon Santa Clarita announced it was closing its Valencia mall location due to numerous challenges, including a flooding incident during a New Year’s Eve show — which proved to be the final straw for the venue, which had called Westfield Valencia home since 2017.

“We’ve had so many problems with flooding, and Westfield’s been totally unable to, or unwilling to help with anything,” The Canyon’s Luanne Nast said, adding the issues on New Year’s Eve made it several years in a row the club had problems with the location.

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