Silverstein May Default on Debt for 575 Lexington Now Faces “Imminent Default” On Debt Tied To The Property

Posted By on March 11, 2010

Silverstein May Default on Debt for 575 Lexington


By Brian Louis and David M. Levitt

March 10 (Bloomberg) — New York developer Larry Silverstein, who teamed with the California State Teachers Retirement System to buy a 35-story skyscraper in 2006, now faces “imminent default” on debt tied to the property, Fitch Ratings said today.

Silverstein and Calstrs paid $400 million for the tower at 575 Lexington Ave. in Midtown Manhattan near the height of the U.S. property boom. A loan balance of $325 million was turned over to so-called special servicing today, Fitch said.

The transfer “was done at our request to help facilitate ongoing discussions with our lender about a modification to our loan, which is not currently in default,” Silverstein spokesman Dara McQuillan said in an e-mailed statement.

Investors are defaulting on loan payments for commercial real estate at record levels as vacancies at malls, offices and industrial properties climb and rents fall. Delinquencies on loans packaged and sold as commercial mortgage-backed securities rose to a record 6.7 percent in February from 1.7 percent a year earlier, according to New York-based research firm Trepp LLC.

Kushner Cos. said last week that it sought special servicing on the debt it used to buy Manhattan’s 666 Fifth Ave. in 2007 for $1.8 billion, what was then a record price for a U.S. office building. Vornado Realty Trust, the New York-based real estate investment trust founded by Steven Roth, last week asked that a $217 million loan on properties it owns in North Carolina be sent to a special servicer, saying it wasn’t prepared to fund any shortfalls on the debt.

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