Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by fitzroy 672 days ago
It sold for $8.5 million... ..."The auction was for the building itself, not the land. That is owned by a publicly traded real estate firm, which collects a monthly lease. But the rent from the building’s current tenants is not enough to cover those monthly payments, which are set to increase every five years and do not expire until 2123."
3 comments

Correct. This is what was lost. Louis Rossmann I think made a somewhat knee jerk video about it.[0]

The company who owns the land is called "Safehold".[1] Rent seeking upon rent seeking. I'm surprised UBS also didn't sell the mineral rights to a fracking concern before they sold the land.

0. https://youtu.be/vpV1FS-gRZw

1. https://www.safeholdinc.com

There is no way in hell anyone would get an approval to frack anything in Manhattan of all places, and there isn’t really anything worth fracking under there anyways. Manhattan has never been a large source of mineral wealth.
Poe's law invoked.
fracking comment was tongue-in-cheek
Ick! That is a gross ownership model. Seems almost feudal to me.
Its not a gross ownership model. These things are set up this way because different groups of people will pay different amounts of money for different bundles of things that are taxed at different rates/advantages depending on their use. The land lease has scheduled payments for the next ~100 years, long beyond the time horizon of DCFAs that anyone is doing for investors. Many buildings in NYC and elsewhere have this ownership model. Why should a land owner be into construction and and why should a land owner be exposed to the volatility of commercial real estate rents if they don't need to be.
It is very common to have leasehold properties in Hawaii, usually larger buildings for residential purposes, but sometimes also single family homes and commercial buildings. Usually, they are owned by native organizations, which do not want to sell the land (for obvious reasons given their history) but want it to go to productive use.

It isn't a big deal here, and most locals support leaseholds because it allows the natives who had most of their land stolen to hold onto at least a bit of it, while still utilizing what little space they have on the islands.

Imagine that you own an empty lot. You could build something there yourself, but you don't want to bear the risk and manage it because you've never done it, and you don't have funds to do it. Why wouldn't you offer somebody else to do it for a fixed monthly fee?

On the other hand, imagine that you're a developer. You know how to build and sell, you've been in the business a long time and confident about your ability. But you don't have enough money to buy a piece of land AND build. Why wouldn't you rent land instead and then pocket the profits?

Kinda? I mean the name "landlord" directly traces back to the feudal era. The land owner could have a mortgage too in some cases and depends on that income to pay as well as taxes and insurance. The building owner is usually subleasing or selling subunits within the building so it's really just a tiered chain of ownership and leasing with various trade-offs in capital efficiency, risk, etc.
And literally called "Feu duty" in Scotland and only abolished in recent times (24 years ago).
Very common model in Germany as well, called Erbbaurecht. The land is usually owned by the Catholic Church or the city itself. They then give you a lease valid for 99 years and after that time the land falls back to them.
Interesting. So, it's like buying a house on leased land, which I see quite a bit of in Southern California as real estate values shot to the moon. Why would anyone buy an office building like this? Is the expectation that people will go back to office in the near future and the owners will be back in the profit on rent?
The area is zoned mixed use, so you could tear down and drop a mixed residence/hotel on it. Or redevelop the existing building into that use.