Apartment Finance
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UPFRONT
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Fairfield Declares
Bankruptcy
APARTMENT FINANCE TODAY • January/February 2010
BY Les Shaver
IN DECEMBER, SAN DIEGO-based
Fairfield Residential announced that
it was filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy
protection.
Fairfield had been renegotiating
with its lenders for more than a year but
eventually collapsed under the weight
of purchases made from 2004 to 2007.
Many of those deals are now under
water, leaving the company
in violation of covenants
with Wells Fargo (which
made the loans through
Wachovia Corp.) and Capmark
Corp.
It was bad buys that did Fairfield
in. Real Capital Analytics in New York
reported that since 2001, the firm made
acquisitions of $6.1 billion and dispositions
of $8.8 billion. Fairfield was
most exposed with 52 properties in
the decimated Phoenix market (which
has also caused problems for operators
such as The Bascom Group and Bethany
Holdings Group). That exposure was
magnified by 30 properties in Los Angeles;
30 properties in Seattle; 29 assets in
Atlanta; and 20 assets in Denver.
“They found themselves upside
down,” says Doug
Bibby, president of the
Washington, D.C.-based
National Multi Housing
Council. “Asset values
have fallen so far they’re under water
in terms of what the property is worth
versus what they owe on the mortgage.”
The industry buzz is that there
won’t be a big court-ordered firesale but
instead an orderly transition of what
could be the entire portfolio.
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