Trump’s 40 Wall St. Tower Loan Transferred to Special Servicer
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2023-11-11 05:51
The mortgage on former President Donald Trump’s Manhattan tower at 40 Wall St. has been transferred to a

The mortgage on former President Donald Trump’s Manhattan tower at 40 Wall St. has been transferred to a special servicer.

The Financial District building has been on watchlist status since February as costs and vacancies increased. The tower’s occupancy rate dropped to 77% as of June 30 from 98% when the loan originated in 2015.

The mortgage on the 72-story tower has an outstanding balance of $122.6 million, down from an original $160 million, according to loan documents. Payments have been made through this month, and the fixed-rate loan with a 3.67% coupon matures in July 2025.

“Contact has been made with the borrower and a pre-negotiation letter is being reviewed,” according to a filing Friday on the building’s commercial mortgage-backed security.

Pre-negotiation letters allow talks between borrowers and lenders to begin before workout discussions, which can lead to a loan modification or, in the most serious circumstances, a foreclosure. Special servicers are assigned to manage CMBS loans that are in default or at potential risk of default.

Representatives of the Trump Organization and Rialto Capital, the special servicer, didn’t immediately respond to requests for comment.

Trump is facing a civil fraud trial, with New York Attorney General Letitia James accusing the former president and co-defendants of duping banks, insurers and others by inflating his wealth on financial statements. James is seeking fines and penalties, including banning Trump from running a business in New York.

The former president has denied wrongdoing and says his net worth was far higher than the state claims.

Trump’s fortune is valued at $3.1 billion, up from $2.6 billion in 2021, according to the Bloomberg Billionaires Index.

Read more: Trump’s Wealth Has Jumped $500 Million Since He Left White House

Like other US cities, New York is grappling with a surge of office vacancies since remote work became widespread during the pandemic. Rising borrowing costs also have depressed property values, and more landlords are walking away from money-losing buildings.

The share of office CMBS managed by special servicers climbed to 8.55% in October from 3.72% a year earlier, according to loan-data firm Trepp.

Also Friday, the owner of the Trump International Hotel Waikiki in Hawaii said it will rename the property, buying out a licensing agreement with the former president’s company and joining a brand in Hilton Worldwide Holdings Inc.’s system.

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