S.F. Apt Building Depreciates Almost 50% In Value, Leaving Some Calif. Residents Worried


SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA. (Photo by Justin Sullivan/Getty Images)

OAN’s Brooke Mallory
11:40 AM – Monday, October 23, 2023

In the course of five years, the value of an apartment building in San Francisco, California, has decreased by 48%.

Advertisement

For the second time, NEMA San Francisco’s loan for commercial mortgage-backed securities decreased. Trepp Wire reports that the current loan amount is $279 million, despite the fact that its 2018 value was $543.6 million.

This year also marks the building’s tenth anniversary.

It is situated along 10th Street in the city, close to the office buildings of major online platforms like Uber and X, formerly known as Twitter.

NEMA occupies 37 stories and 754 flats. A spa room for homeowners and their pets, a pool, a gym, a studio with skylights, and fire pits are all located on a number of above-ground terraces.

Crescent Heights, a real estate investment firm, now owns the building. The corporation has been purchasing NEMA-style structures in Chicago, Boston, Miami, and other major cities.

The brand name NEMA is self-labeled as a “lifestyle apartment brand.” It has also purchased two different buildings in the previous four years.

“Established in 2013, NEMA San Francisco is the original luxury lifestyle pioneer that sparked an exciting shift in the San Francisco rental market with its unprecedented array of hospitality-style amenities and services,” Crescent Heights wrote on its website. “The building was fully leased at a record pace, catalyzing the Mid-Market neighborhood transformation.”

At 49.5%, the pace of inbound migrations to San Francisco has plateaued in the past several years.

According to the National Association of Realtors, the rate was 54% in 2019. California lost 0.3% of its population in 2022, thus, inward migration did not outweigh outgoing migration. However, statistics for 2023 regarding California’s current population have not been reported as of now.

Stay informed! Receive breaking news blasts directly to your inbox for free. Subscribe here. https://www.oann.com/alerts

Advertisement

Share this post!





Source link