Brooklyn developer taps Israeli market ending Urbancorp drought

epa03491894 A home for sale in Weston, Massachusetts, USA, 30 November 2012. In a report by 2012 Coldwell Banker US Home Listing Report, Massachusetts ranked second as the most expensive state for average listing prices for homes at 489,063 US dollar, behind the state of Hawaii at 742,551 US dollar. Weston, Massachusetts, was listed as the 14th most expensive city market in the US with the average listing price at 1,105,692 US dollar.  EPA/CJ GUNTHER

 

Bloomberg

Brooklyn developer The Leser Group Ltd. is selling 125 million shekels ($32.5 million) of bonds in Israel,
reopening a market that was shut to North American real estate companies after Canadian developer Urbancorp Inc.’s April default rattled investors.
The new issue, a retap of Leser’s 6.9 percent bonds due in May 2026, will yield 6.6 percent, according to Poalim I.B.I – Management & Underwriting Ltd., the lead manager on the deal. It originally sought to raise 75 million shekels but decided to increase the offering after getting double that demand from institutional investors, Poalim said. The yield on the existing debt rose for a third day, increasing 2 basis points to 6.6 percent at 10:08 a.m. in Tel Aviv.
Israeli bond investors’ appetite for foreign real estate debt dried up after Urbancorp filed for bankruptcy protection and luxury developer Extell Development Co. said financing for one of its projects would take longer than expected, sending borrowing costs on foreign real estate bonds soaring. U.S. firms have raised at least $2.8 billion in Israel since 2008, lured by cheaper financing costs and higher credit ratings than they could earn at home.

WAITING ON EXTELL
Leser was able to return to the market because it’s already known to Israeli investors, said Yaniv Saylan, a real estate analyst at Tel Aviv-based Israel Brokerage & Investments. New companies without buildings that are already generating income will have a harder time getting cheaper borrowing costs in Israel than at home, he said.
Chairman Abraham Leser “is very well known, he comes every quarter,” Saylan said by phone. “I don’t see the case of any developer coming to Israel and the institutional investor will open the door.” Israeli investors are still waiting to hear whether Extell has obtained construction financing needed to complete its One Manhattan Square project.

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