Landlord that mirrored property boom & bust to foldup

 

Bloomberg

BentleyForbes once owned such renowned properties as the Watergate office complex in Washington and Bank of America Plaza, Atlanta’s tallest skyscraper. Now the company is on the verge of vanishing.
C. Frederick Wehba, who co-founded the Los Angeles-based real estate firm in 1993 and was chairman until 2012, said he will announce his official separation as an adviser and consultant this week. BentleyForbes now has just three employees and manages four properties, two of them small office buildings in Cleveland and Toledo, Ohio. It plans to sell the real estate within the next 12 months, then dissolve, Wehba said.
The rise and fall of BentleyForbes — named after the luxury car and business magazine — closely tracks last decade’s commercial real estate boom and bust. Until the early 2000s, the closely held company owned modest single-tenant office, industrial and retail properties. Its ambitions grew, and the firm began scooping up landmark buildings at what turned out to be top-of-the-market prices — then lost most of them in the crash. While property values have since rebounded past the last peak, the landlord has lingered as a shadow of its prior self.
During the boom, “we were organizing to go public as a REIT,” Wehba, 69, said in an interview.
That would have allowed BentleyForbes to refinance its loans and get tax benefits offered to real estate investment trusts. “We were going to go for $1 billion cash, and we were going to pay down our debt.”
Prices Plunge
Instead, the market collapsed. U.S. commercial-property prices reached a peak in October 2007 before plummeting 40 percent in just over two years, according to the Moody’s/Real Capital Analytics Inc. index. Values have since rebounded almost 15 percent past the prior record.
BentleyForbes never rebounded yet never quite went away.
The company’s pain from the crash stretched from Chicago and Washington to Atlanta and Dallas. In Atlanta, it bought Bank of America Plaza in 2006 for $436 million, then the city’s biggest real estate deal ever. Less than six years later, the 55-story tower sold at auction for just $235 million after BentleyForbes missed mortgage payments.
The purchase was part of a series of expensive acquisitions. Also in 2006, BentleyForbes paid $470 million for Prudential Plaza, a Chicago complex with 41-story and 64-story towers that occupies a full city block. Later in the year, the company bought the Four Seasons resort in Irving, Texas, for $210 million, then spent $60 million on upgrades. The firm had planned even more purchases.
“We think we’ll do $2 billion next year, that’s our goal,” Wehba said in an October 2006 interview.
The cracks emerged as U.S. property prices plunged. One of the first BentleyForbes buildings to run into trouble was the Watergate, purchased in 2005 for $86.5 million. The 11-story complex — made famous by the political scandal that brought down President Richard M. Nixon — was pulled from the market in May 2008 after failing to attract a high enough offer.
Expansion Plans
Still, just a few months later, BentleyForbes announced an ambitious five-year growth program, with plans to expand its portfolio to $12 billion by 2014 from $3 billion at the time.
It wasn’t meant to be. In March 2009, BentleyForbes put the Watergate back on the market, but turned it over to partner Capri Capital Partners the following year. By November 2009, BentleyForbes was behind on payments on the Texas Four Seasons, which eventually was sent to special servicing, then sold in 2014. Prudential Plaza faced a similar fate, with a loan on that property being transferred to a special servicer in October 2012.
The biggest mistake BentleyForbes made was expanding from small, single-occupant buildings to large, multitenant office properties, Wehba said.
“We ran a very stable portfolio of assets that returned at a predictable rate through the ups and downs of the market cycles,” he said. Adding multitenant buildings “seemed like a logical path at the time, but it became too much to sustain in the face of the collapsing financial markets that derailed our IPO and our ability to operate assets in the recession that followed.”

 

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