Finance  Lending
Research Facility in Boston's Healthy Life Science Market Attracts $350M Loan
Jul 01, 2009
By: Barbra Murray, Contributing Editor

Flying in the face of the frosty credit market, BioMed Realty Trust Inc. has just gotten its hands on a $350 million loan secured by its successful new 700,000-square-foot Center for Life Science | Boston. John Hancock Life Insurance Co., TIAA-CREF, and Westdeutsche ImmobilienBank AG stepped up to the plate to provide the financing.

Carrying the address of 3 Blackfan Circle, the Center for Life Science sits in Boston's Longwood Medical Area, which is home to a bevy of hospitals, biotechnology companies, pharmaceutical firms and life science research institutions. BioMed agreed to acquire the property when it was in the early stages of the construction phase from Lyme Properties in 2006 for $473 million, with plans to spend an additional $227 million to complete the project. Construction wrapped up in 2008. As of January of this year, the 18-story office and lab facility was 91 percent leased to a long list of credit-worthy tenants that includes Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute and Children's Hospital Boston, which expanded its occupancy to 150,200 square feet with an amended lease agreement last November.

BioMed's new five-year loan on the Center of Life Science carries an interest rate of 7.75 percent, and it is scheduled to mature in June 2014. The proceeds are being used to pay off part of the $507.1 million secured construction loan the life science real estate REIT obtained upon acquisition of the development project in 2009; that loan had been scheduled to mature in November 2009, although there was an option for a one-year extension. With this latest financial transaction, BioMed has no further debt maturities on its plate this year.

The tattered economy has not spared the life science real estate sector, but the Boston market is holding its own. As noted in a report released by the Milken Institute in May, in terms of strength and performance, Boston tops the list of the nation's leading life science clusters. The industry in Boston is reinforced by its close proximity to such world-class academic and non-academic scientific research institutions as Harvard Medical School and Merck Research Laboratories. The direct vacancy rate for life science properties in the city, according to a recent report by real estate services firm GVA Thompson Hennessey & Partners, is 6.6 percent, a relatively low figure compared to those found in more hard-hit sectors like office and retail.

The area's strong industry fundamentals coupled with the Center of Life Science's high occupancy level and quality tenant roster could very well be construed as a recipe for low-risk lending in the midst of an incredibly challenging economic environment.

 
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Economic Update - Economists Call for Downsizing Financial Companies
If some esteemed economists testifying before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress Tuesday had their way, "too big to fail" would be a phrase of historical interest only--applying especially to that period of history just before 2008.
Eddie Bauer Latest Retailer to File for Bankruptcy
Clothing retailer Eddie Bauer Holdings Inc. has filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, becoming the latest firm to be stung by the retail industry’s sharp downturn.
JLL: Hotel Market Conditions Remain Murky
Even as more and more preconditions of a global economic recovery are being met, the path toward a commercial property market rebound is uneven and yielding divergent regional trends. Occupancy, ADR, property values, transaction pricing levels, and debt availability are all showing evidence of this uncertainty, according to a new report by Jones Lang LaSalle.
GE Taps Wells for New Debt Investment Position
GE Capital Real Estate has appointed Skip Wells to serve as fund manager for senior secured debt investments.
ING Clarion Lands $51M Financing for Maryland M-F
ING Clarion Partners has secured $51.4 million in first mortgage financing for Columbia Town Center, a 531-unit multi-family complex in Columbia, Md.
Economic Update - CRE Defaults Head for High Ground
A new report by Real Estate Econometrics, based on FDIC data, puts thecommercial real estate loan default rate at its highest level in morethan a decade and a half, at least those loans held by regulateddeposit-taking institutions—banks and thrifts, for the most part. Thedefault rate soared from 1.62 percent in the last quarter of 2008 to2.25 percent in the first quarter of 2009. That rate doesn’t includedefaults on loans associated with multi-family rental properties, whichReal Estate Econometrics put at 2.45 percent in the first quarter of2009, up 68 basis points from the previous quarter.
Economic Update - As Markets Tumble, Administration Gives Sneak Peek at Bank Overhaul Plan
There’s been plenty of evidence in both the political and business worlds over the past few days that the recent talk of an economic turnaround in the near future may have been a bit premature.
Looking to Re-Enter Investment Market, Steelbridge Hires Cushman Vet Caplin
Steelbridge Capital has tapped Jay Caplin, formerly executive director of Cushman & Wakefield Inc.’s capital markets group, as managing principal. In his new role, Caplin will play a major role in Florida-based Steelbridge’s return to active investment in commercial property market—a game the firm stayed out of in recent years of sky high pricings and cap rate compression.
Financing Keeps Rolling in for Colonial
Despite the fact that widespread job losses have begun to take a toll on the multi-family market, owners of this asset type are still able to secure financing in what remains a frigid lending environment. Just three months after having wrapped up a $350 million secured credit facility, Colonial Properties Trust has landed another major financing deal with the closing of a new $156.4 million secured credit facility.
Cityscape Speakers Rate Real Estate's Performance in Tough Economy
From the historical baseball metaphor to hurricane terminology, speakers at the first Cityscape Connect business breakfast yesterday evaluated commercial real estate’s recessionary progress—and agreed to disagree.
Q&A with Steve Bram: Shortfall of Supply When Recession Ends in 2011
Steve Bram is president & co-founder of George Smith Partners Inc. An expert on multi-family finance, he has personally arranged over $2.5 billion of financing in over 150 transactions during his 25 years at George Smith, including all types of construction, bridge and permanent financing on commercial and residential properties along with joint venture and equity placements. He recently spoke with CPN’s sister magazine Multi-Housing News about what lies ahead for the multi-family market.
In Stalled Development Market, New Firm Aims to Help Banks with Non-Performing Loans
With development projects stalled across sectors, the need to deal with loans that have gone bad is one of the few growing niches of the commercial property industry. To that end, Diversified Properties has formed a partnership with industry veteran Jonathan Stein to form Diversified Realty Advisors, a real estate advisory and turnaround group providing lenders with interim portfolio or individual asset management services during the workout or foreclosure stage, as well as long-term strategies such as asset and construction management, acquisition support and disposition services.
Economic Update - Homebuyers Slowly Returning to Existing Home Market
Homebuyers seem to be returning to the existing-home market this summer, according to the latest report by the National Association of Realtors on existing U.S. housing sales. The sales of single-family homes, condos and coops rose 2.4 percent in May compared with April, coming on top of a gain for that month compared with March, thus marking the first back-to-back monthly increase in existing home sales since 2005.