Residential

  • February 05, 2025

    Brokerage Lines Up $166M Financing For Va. Community Buy

    Marcus & Millichap arranged $165.9 million in financing for a multifamily real estate investment firm's acquisition of an Alexandria, Virginia, apartment and townhome community, the brokerage announced.

  • February 04, 2025

    Wells Fargo Clears 2 More Consent Orders Amid Rehab Efforts

    The Federal Reserve said Tuesday that Wells Fargo & Co. has exited a pair of mortgage-related consent orders from more than a decade ago, another step forward in the banking giant's regulatory rehabilitation efforts.

  • February 04, 2025

    Norfolk Southern Hit With 'Toxic Nightmare' Derailment Suit

    Hundreds of Ohio and Pennsylvania residents affected by the fallout of the Feb. 3, 2023, Norfolk Southern train derailment have accused the rail company, government agencies and several businesses of downplaying the ongoing harm of the incident, marking one of the latest lawsuits filed on or near the two-year milestone.

  • February 04, 2025

    State Farm Seeks Emergency Rate Hike After Calif. Fires

    State Farm asked the California Department of Insurance to approve an emergency rate hike, including a 22% average increase for homeowners across the state, citing the company's worsening financial condition following the fires in Los Angeles.

  • February 04, 2025

    Real Estate PE Firm Closes $125M Sunbelt-Focused Fund

    Tioga Capital LLC collected $125 million worth of capital commitments for a fund that aims to invest in real estate in the Sun Belt, the Atlanta-based real estate investment firm announced Tuesday.

  • February 04, 2025

    Ecovie Brings Water Recycling Tech To Real Estate

    With building developers and operators increasingly having to pay attention to water management, the property technology firm Ecovie is looking to do its part to help the situation, property by property.

  • February 04, 2025

    Late Developer's Atty Asks For Help To Determine Privilege

    The attorney of Sergio Pino, the late founder and CEO of Century Homebuilders Group LLC, asked a Florida judge Tuesday to appoint a special master to review privileged documents requested by Pino's estate regarding entities the attorneys helped Pino set up and asset transfers he worked on.

  • February 04, 2025

    Real Estate Lawyers On The Move

    Morgan Lewis, Holland & Hart and Bryan Cave are among the law firms that have made recent real estate or construction hires.

  • February 03, 2025

    4th Circ. Won't Block SC Mixed-Use Housing Project

    The Fourth Circuit refused to temporarily block the development of a nearly 4,000-acre mixed-use Charleston, South Carolina, development project, ruling that the conservationists challenging the project failed to show that the federal government violated federal law after issuing a Clean Water Act permit for the project.

  • February 03, 2025

    Climate Group Says Insurance Hikes Threaten Housing Market

    The U.S. housing market could sustain a $1.4 trillion loss in value over the next 30 years as insurance costs surge and consumer demand shifts due to climate change, according to a report Monday from climate analytics company First Street.

  • February 03, 2025

    McGuireWoods Nabs Chicago CRE Partner From Ice Miller

    McGuireWoods LLP announced Monday that the firm has added a commercial real estate lawyer from Ice Miller LLP, adding that the lateral partner hire has been tapped to lead the firm's real estate initiatives in Chicago and across the Midwest. 

  • February 03, 2025

    KKR Provides $155M Loan To Build NJ Multifamily Project

    KKR & Co. Inc., through insurance accounts that the private equity firm manages, has loaned $155 million to a developer to build a 27-story residential tower in Hoboken, New Jersey, according to a Monday announcement by borrower-side broker JLL.

  • February 03, 2025

    Lender Sues Property Manager Over $506M Loan Default

    A New York City-based property management company and its entities have been accused by Wells Fargo in New York state court of defaulting on a $506.3 million commercial mortgage loan.

  • February 03, 2025

    NYC Real Estate Week In Review

    Cole Schotz and Lazar Grunsfeld are among the law firms that guided the largest New York City real estate deals that became public last week, a period that saw several Manhattan residential unit trades hit records.

  • February 03, 2025

    Heitman Caps $806M Real Estate Debt Fund

    Investment management firm Heitman said Monday it has closed its latest real estate debt fund at $806 million, beating its fundraising target, and plans to capitalize on a growing demand for financing.

  • February 03, 2025

    DC Judge Joins RI In Blocking Trump Funding Freeze

    A D.C. federal judge on Monday temporarily blocked the Trump administration from implementing a freeze on federal spending while a group of nonprofits sue over the move, ruling the pause appears to "suffer from infirmities of a constitutional magnitude."

  • January 31, 2025

    Small Biz Attys Jump Into 4th Circ. Shell Co. Law Challenge

    A business group has urged the Fourth Circuit to stop the U.S. Department of the Treasury from enforcing a law that requires companies to disclose personal identifying information about their beneficial owners and applicants to the agency, saying the law exceeds the limit of Congress' power to regulate intrastate economic activity.

  • January 31, 2025

    Ohio Businesses Hit Norfolk Southern With Derailment Suits

    Norfolk Southern was hit with a slew of new lawsuits over the February 2023 train derailment and chemical spill in Ohio, including by two landlords who claim they lost tenants because of the environmental contamination.

  • January 31, 2025

    Top Bribe-Taker In NYC Housing Corruption Bust Gets 4 Years

    A Manhattan federal judge hit a former New York City public housing superintendent with a four-year prison term Friday, after he admitted taking $329,000 in bribes — the largest amount among 70 city workers caught up in a large-scale anti-corruption takedown.

  • January 31, 2025

    HUD Seeks Pause On Insurers' Appeal Over Fair Housing Rule

    U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development attorneys asked a D.C. Circuit court Friday to pause consideration of an insurance industry trade group's appeal over a HUD rule addressing discrimination claims under the Fair Housing Act, saying the agency's new leadership may reconsider the rule altogether.

  • January 31, 2025

    LA Fire Claims Tracker Reports More Than $4.2B In Payments

    More than $4.2 billion in claims has been paid in connection with the devastating Eaton and Pacific Palisades fires in Los Angeles County that erupted in early January, according to data from a California Department of Insurance tracker.

  • January 31, 2025

    Insurer Says $30M Suit Over Child's Murder Not Covered

    An insurer told a Tennessee federal court Friday that due to an assault and battery exclusion, a property management company had no coverage for an underlying $30 million wrongful death suit brought after a boy was fatally shot at one of the company's facilities.

  • January 31, 2025

    Supreme Court Eyes Its 'Next Frontier' In FCC Delegation Case

    A case about broadband subsidies will give the U.S. Supreme Court the chance to revive a long-dormant separation of powers principle that attorneys say could upend regulations in numerous industries and trigger a power shift that would make last term's shake-up of federal agency authority pale in comparison. And a majority of the court already appears to support its resurrection.

  • January 31, 2025

    Property Plays: Surfside, Citadel, El Tropicano

    Property Plays is a weekly roundup of the latest loans, leases, sales and projects around the country. Send your tips — all confidential — to realestate@law360.com.

  • January 31, 2025

    Ga. Bill Seeks Homebuilding Sales Tax Break For Nonprofits

    Georgia would provide a sales and use tax exemption for property used by nonprofit organizations to build or repair affordable housing as part of a bill introduced in the state House of Representatives.

Expert Analysis

  • Beware Unique Compliance Risks In Home Equity Lending

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    As borrowers increasingly look to junior-lien mortgages and home equity lines of credit instead of first-lien mortgages, regulators will pay increased attention in turn and lenders will have to watch for a number of legal and regulatory pitfalls as they rush to meet this newfound demand, say attorneys at Orrick.

  • 4 Business-Building Strategies For Introvert Attorneys

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    Introverted lawyers can build client bases to rival their extroverted peers’ by adapting time-tested strategies for business development that can work for any personality — such as claiming a niche, networking for maximum impact, drawing on existing contacts and more, says Ronald Levine at Herrick Feinstein.

  • New AI Lending Tech Could Exacerbate Old Bias Risks

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    As credit and mortgage lending businesses increasingly utilize artificial intelligence technology to help make decisions, they must be aware of the legal risks that may arise under familiar anti-discrimination laws, say Kali Bracey and Grace Wallack at Jenner & Block.

  • AI Road Ahead Is Promising For Cautious Fintechs

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    Financial institutions should understand the conceptions and misconceptions about artificial intelligence likely to influence regulators, and proactively study potential adverse impacts and establish use case strategies and other guardrails for deploying AI, say attorneys at Jones Day.

  • Why All Eyes Are On Florida's Affordable Housing Reform

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    Florida's Live Local Act, which took effect last month, promotes much-needed affordable housing developments with a mix of zoning preemption provisions and tax benefits that may attract interest from developers across the nation, say attorneys at Nelson Mullins.

  • What Came Of Texas Legislature's Long-Promised Tax Relief

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    Following promises of historic tax relief made possible by a record budget surplus, the Texas legislative session as a whole was one in which taxpayers that are large businesses could have done somewhat better, but the new legislation is clearly still a positive, say attorneys at Baker Botts.

  • Looking Behind The Curtain Of Residential Transition Loans

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    As residential transition loans and securitizations of such loans grow increasingly popular, real estate stakeholders should take care to understand both the unique features and potential challenges offered by this novel asset class, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.

  • Hedging Variable Interest Rates In A Volatile Market

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    Variable rate loans, which were an advantageous borrowing method prior to the recent Federal Reserve rate hikes and subsequent volatility, are now the difference between borrowers remaining current on their obligations and defaulting due to the sharply increasing debt service requirements of their loans, say attorneys at Cassin & Cassin.

  • CRA Plays Role In DOJ Fight Against Redlining

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    The U.S. Department of Justice’s recent consent order with ESSA Bank & Trust is a reminder that although the Community Reinvestment Act lacks a civil enforcement provision, financial institutions' CRA compliance efforts may have ramifications under various anti-discrimination statutes, say Collin Grier and Levi Swank at Goodwin.

  • Colo. Eviction Case Could Transform Tenant Rights

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    The Colorado Supreme Court recently granted certiorari in a case that could open the door for tenants to assert allegations of discrimination and retaliation during eviction proceedings, and dramatically prolong the state's process, says Jacob Hollars at Spencer Fane.

  • Harsh 11th Circ. Rebuke Should Inspire Changes At CFPB

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    The Eleventh Circuit's recent Consumer Financial Protection Bureau v. Brown decision, which found the CFPB's conduct had been egregious in a debt collection enforcement action, should encourage some reflection at the bureau regarding its level of attention to the reasonable due process concerns of regulated institutions, says Eric Mogilnicki at Covington.

  • 3 Alternatives To CRE Collateralized Loan Obligations

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    With current commercial real estate market conditions pushing issuers away from collateralized loan obligations, several Freddie Mac offerings should be considered as alternative exit strategies for mortgage loans secured by multifamily properties, say attorneys at Mayer Brown.

  • Fla. Banking Brief: All The Notable Compliance Updates In Q2

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    Florida financial institutions must now navigate minimum interest rates for attorney trust accounts, restrictions on property sales to prohibited foreigners, and a ban on weighing environmental, social and governance factors to determine a customer's creditworthiness — changes that will add to banks' compliance pressures, says Patricia Hernandez at Avila Rodriguez.