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Re: Jersey City 'loses' $550G on building - Eighteen years ago city paid $2.4 mil sold it for $1.85 mil.
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Quite a regular
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The reporter is an idiot. Doing a rough, 5 minute calculation, and the information in the article, the NPV of the city's investment was approxiamately -$1.9M, while the NPV of renting is -$4.1M. This assumes an 8% cost of capital (high for a government, further penalizing the purchase) and 3% inflation. I didn't assume any investment income from the renting scenario, as I would with a private renter, since the government is more likely to spend the original purchase price rather than invest it. Optimally, if the building had been maintained (1% of purchase price per year, adjusted for inflation) then the city's NPV would have been approxiamately -$1M. Overall, I don't think they did too bad on this deal. Comparing purchase and selling prices over a long period in real estate is like comparing apples to oranges, there are too many other factors to consider.
Posted on: 2006/9/27 18:12
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I'd go over 12 percent for that
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Re: Jersey City 'loses' $550G on building - Eighteen years ago city paid $2.4 mil sold it for $1.85
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Just can't stay away
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"A rising tide lifts all boats," Healy said
Posted on: 2006/9/27 17:13
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Jersey City 'loses' $550G on building - Eighteen years ago city paid $2.4 mil sold it for $1.85 mil.
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Home away from home
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NOT WORTH $2.4M NOW
Jersey City 'loses' $550G on building Wednesday, September 27, 2006 By KEN THORBOURNE JOURNAL STAFF WRITER In the can't-miss real estate market of Jersey City, the city of Jersey City, well - missed. Eighteen years ago, the city purchased 325 Palisade Ave., a three-story building that city employees worked out of until about a year ago, for $2.4 million. Last month, the city auctioned it off for $1.85 million, taking a $550,000 bath. City officials attributed the financial soaking to dilapidated conditions. "It needs a new roof, it's not handicap compliant, the HVAC (heating and air conditioning) system needs to be replaced, it's a wreck," said Business Administrator Brian O'Reilly. "We'd have to vacate the building for a year (to repair it)." The sale became an issue Monday night's City Council caucus, when a stunned Councilman Bill Gaughan, who represents the Heights neighborhood where the building is, noted the difference between the purchase and the sale price. In order for the transaction to be considered final, the council has to pass a resolution tonight confirming the sale. Gaughan asked O'Reilly to provide more information about the sale. "I didn't expect to get much more," O'Reilly said. He did estimate that the property saved the city roughly $8 million in rent over the past 18 years. He acknowledged that the city over the years allowed the property to go downhill. "The city is the worst landlord," he said. "Money was tight in the '90s." The city purchased the building from Secaucus-based T.M.M. Realty in September 1988. At the auction, held Sept. 12, it was sold to Due Vecchio, LLC, of West Caldwell. O'Reilly's office set the minimum bid price at $1.75 million. Nearby lots the city owned were also auctioned to DRG Realty of Jersey City for $755,000 - representing a $500,000 profit from the original purchase price, O'Reilly said Link here
Posted on: 2006/9/27 10:32
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