The Union Democrat

Trump loan transferre­d to special servicer

- By JOHN GITTELSOHN

NEW YORK — The mortgage on former President Donald Trump’s Manhattan tower at 40 Wall St. has been transferre­d to a special servicer.

The Financial District building has been on watchlist status since February as costs and vacancies increased.

“Contact has been made with the borrower and a pre-negotiatio­n letter is being reviewed,” according to a filing Friday on the building’s commercial mortgageba­cked security.

Payments for the debt on the 72-story tower have been made through this month. The mortgage on 40 Wall St. has an outstandin­g balance of $122.6 million, down from an original $160 million, according to loan documents.

“The loan is in full conformanc­e,” a Trump Organizati­on spokespers­on said in an email Friday. “We have never missed a payment, we have never paid late and we have never breached a loan covenant. We are incredibly proud of 40 Wall St. and we will continue to operate this worldclass building.”

Trump is facing a civil fraud trial, with New York Attorney General Letitia James accusing the former president and co-defendants of duping banks, insurers and others by inflating his wealth on financial statements. James is seeking fines and penalties, including banning Trump from running a business in New York.

The former president has denied wrongdoing and says his net worth was far higher than the state claims.

A New York judge had issued an order earlier to dissolve some companies owned by Trump. That was temporaril­y delayed last month by an appellate judge as the civil fraud trial continues in Manhattan.

The mortgage on 40 Wall St. has a 3.67% coupon and matures in July 2025, according to loan documents. The tower’s occupancy rate dropped to 77% as of June 30 from 98% when the loan originated in 2015.

Pre-negotiatio­n letters allow talks between borrowers and lenders to begin before workout discussion­s, which can lead to a loan modificati­on or, in the most serious circumstan­ces, a foreclosur­e. Special servicers are assigned to manage CMBS loans that are in default or at potential risk of default.

Representa­tives of Rialto Capital, the special servicer, didn’t immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Like other U.S. cities, New York is grappling with a surge of office vacancies since remote work became widespread during the pandemic. Rising borrowing costs also have depressed property values, and more landlords are walking away from money-losing buildings.

The share of office CMBS managed by special servicers climbed to 8.55% in October from 3.72% a year earlier, according to loandata firm Trepp.

Also Friday, the owner of the Trump Internatio­nal Hotel Waikiki in Hawaii said it will rename the property, buying out a licensing agreement with the former president’s company and joining a brand in Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc.’s system.

Trump’s fortune is valued at $3.1 billion, up from $2.6 billion in 2021, according to the Bloomberg Billionair­es Index.

 ?? Michael M. Santiago
/ Getty Images /TNS ?? Former US President Donaldtrum­p speaks while the court takes a lunch recess during the first day of his civil fraud trial at Newyork State Supreme Court on Oct. 2 in Newyork City.
Michael M. Santiago / Getty Images /TNS Former US President Donaldtrum­p speaks while the court takes a lunch recess during the first day of his civil fraud trial at Newyork State Supreme Court on Oct. 2 in Newyork City.

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