📄 Extracted Text (1,812 words)
From: "Morris, Paul V"
To: "jeffrey E." leevacation&mail.com>
Subject: Opportunity Zones
Date: Tue, 15 Jan 2019 16:44:33 +0000
Inline-Images: image001.jpg; image002.jpg; image003.jpg; image004.jpg
Hope all well, are you doing anything around these or clients?
In a former warehouse on a dimly lit street in the South Bronx, developers sipping Puerto Rican
moonshine listened as a local official urged them to capture a new U.S. tax break by rebuilding the
decaying neighborhood.
In Alabama, a young lawyer quit his job after seeing the same tax break's potential to help one of
the nation's poorest states. He now spends his days driving his Hyundai from town to town,
slideshow at the ready, hoping to connect investors with communities.
And on a conference call with potential clients, a prominent hedge fund executive pitched
investments in a boutique hotel in Oakland, which he described as San Francisco's Brooklyn. The
project is eligible for the same tax break, designed to help the poor.
Betting on Opportunity Zones
Sales of development sites are surging in areas eligible for tax breaks
Source: Real Capital Analytics
Fervor about opportunity zones is heating up across the U.S. For a limited time, investors who
develop real estate or fund businesses in these areas are able to defer capital gains on profits earned
elsewhere and completely eliminate them on new investments in 8,700 low-income census tracts.
The goal is to reinvigorate these areas. But the question is whether the 2017 tax law will, as U.S.
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin predicts, pump $ioo billion into places that need it most, or if
investors will play it safe by funding projects in a few zones already on the upswing.
QuicktakeWill `Opportunity Zones' Help the Rich, the Poor or Both?
There's no lack of optimism among officials in shrinking Rust Belt towns, wind-swept Western
landscapes and hurricane-ravaged Puerto Rico, who hope to jump-start local economies. The
incentives are so flexible they could be used for everything from affordable housing to solar farms.
Yet on the investor side, much of the attention is fixed on how to turn a profit in already thriving
areas. They include neighborhoods surrounding Manhattan, Atlantic beach towns drawing
vacation-home developers, bedroom communities near Silicon Valley and anomalies like Portland,
Oregon, where the entire downtown was deemed eligible for the breaks.
"The phrase I keep thinking of is `gold rush,' " said Michael Lortz, an accountant who works with
developers in Portland. "There's a lot of money from out of town that's coming here."
Already, a policy debate is raging. Backers are urging people to reserve judgment and say the tax
breaks have galvanized cities, businesses and investors to think creatively about boosting parts of
the country most in need. Critics say the incentives were poorly calibrated and may amount to a
boondoggle far in excess of the official $1.6 billion projected cost.
Americans may have to wait months or years to learn which side is right. That's because the law
doesn't require investors to disclose projects, making it difficult to tell which areas are benefiting
the most.
But there's plenty of evidence that a boom is brewing. Goldman Sachs Group Inc., which already
had an investment team focusing on struggling communities, has disclosed about $150 million in
projects in recent months. Purchases of sites inside opportunity zones spiked as the tax law took
effect, outpacing growth in other areas, according to Real Capital Analytics, which tracks property
sales. Altogether, investors spent 62 percent more on properties eligible for tax breaks in the 12
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months through September, compared with those in the same census tracts a year earlier, its data
show.
Here are snapshots of what's happening across America:
Bronx Boost
Port Morris Distillery, which makes a high-alcohol rum called pitorro, was the perfect spot for an
opportunity zone pitch. It's on a block with a colorful mural, industrial buildings ready for loft
conversions and views of the Manhattan skyline. Much of the surrounding South Bronx is now an
opportunity zone.
"We have always been the most ignored," Marlene Cintron, the borough's head of economic
development, told an audience of developers and lawyers in November. "These opportunity zones
are here for you to take advantage of them."
The case for the Bronx, where incomes are among the lowest in New York, is that it's the last
borough awaiting revitalization. The tax incentives are designed to unleash it. If developers can buy
at current Bronx prices, before seeing a Brooklyn-like rise, the breaks would be massive.
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The Bronx Tavern and Port Morris Distillery.
Photographer: David 'Dee' Delgado/Bloomberg
"Huge, huge upside that you're not going to get if you build a strip mall in Topeka," said Terri Adler,
managing partner of law firm Duval & Stachenfeld LLP, who also spoke at the event.
Yet the Bronx faces a formidable problem: It's competing with other zones across the city, including
waterfronts in Brooklyn and Queens with stronger momentum. The tax break Bronx officials hope
will rejuvenate their borough may instead lure more money to what looks like a safer bet across the
river.
In November, ,Amazon.com Inc, selected Longhlara for its next headquarters. Portions of that
Queens neighborhood, including a former plastics factory the retailer plans to occupy, are inside
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opportunity zones, even though they're among the city's fastest-growing areas. In 2017, more
apartments were built there than in any other neighborhood in the city.
Driving Alabama
Alex Flachsbart, 30, has a lot of lime to talk when he's in his SUV crisscrossing Alabama. A lawyer
who specialized in economic development grants and tax breaks, he quit his job last year to start
Opportunity Alabama, aiming to connect capital to worthy projects. For the past several months,
he's been educating people about opportunity zones, speaking to local officials, businesses and
investors.
"I have done the OZ PowerPoint God knows how many times," Flachsbart, who grew up in the Bay
Area, said from behind the wheel one day in December.
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Alex Flachsbart gives a presentation on opportunity zones in Athens, Alabama.
Photographer: Nicole Craine/Bloomberg
When he read about opportunity zones in a 2017 draft of the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, his mind
reeled. Here was an uncapped subsidy far more flexible than anything he'd used before. It could
draw investment for an array of projects. He imagined funding startups in Huntsville, where
NASA's presence has lured a deep bench of talented engineers, and the renovation of an old civic
complex in Mobile.
Flachsbart's nonprofit—which has board members from the state's largest utility and its biggest
bank, Regions Financial Corps—is now in talks for 10 potential projects that need more than $100
million in equity investment, he said. None have been funded yet, but he's certain some will be.
Meanwhile, he keeps driving.
Baltimore Billionaire
One of the arguments over opportunity zones is whether the U.S. is handing wealthy investors and
companies big breaks on projects they would've done anyway. One example: Hedge fund executive
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and former White House spokesman Anthony Scaramucci plans to build a "swank, boutique hotel"
in Oakland. The paperwork for the permit was filed months before the neighborhood was
designated an opportunity zone.
But that project pales in comparison to what's happening in Baltimore. More than a year before
President Donald Trump signed the law, real estate developer Steven Siegel helped negotiate one of
the largest public financing deals of its kind for a client, a company owned by billionaire Kevin
Plank, founder of athletic-wear maker Under Armour Inc.
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Port Covington area of Baltimore.
Photographer: Sarah L Voisin/The Washington Post via Getty Images
In 2016, Baltimore's city council approved a $660 million financing package for a 235-acre mixed-
use development, including new offices for Under Armour, along the city's waterfront. The area was
already designated as an enterprise zone and a brownfield site, connoting additional lucrative tax
breaks, and the project attracted a $233 million investment from Goldman Sachs's urban
investment group.
Then came the opportunity zone designation.
The tax break is only supposed to apply to real estate purchased after the law took effect. But
lawyers across the country quickly began working around that to get the benefits for projects
planned before the law was passed. Many tax experts have recommended sales to new entities. So
long as the seller owns no more than 20 percent of the buyer, the transaction counts as arm's-
length and qualifies.
Siegel said his firm, Weller Development, has found enough new investors to comply with the
arm's-length requirement. The company has seen so much demand, he said, that he's looking to
replicate the project elsewhere.
"We've been fielding a lot of inbound interest," Siegel said, declining to name cities that have
approached him. "That stimulated us to take this show on the road."
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Boulder Balks
In mid-December, during a marathon city council meeting that stretched past midnight, Boulder
became perhaps the first jurisdiction in the country to reject its own opportunity zone. Officials in
the Colorado town imposed an 18-month moratorium on almost all development in its only census
tract earmarked for the incentives.
The move highlights how local officials have the power to respond to criticisms of the law—in this
case, that investors may rush to build projects the community doesn't want. Boulder has long been
a favorite spot for growing companies because people want to live there, thanks to its college-town
vibe and quick access to nature.
"People think we have too much" development, said Bob Yates, a council member. "We're not
Detroit."
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An eyebrow salon is surrounded by empty stores at Diagonal Plaza in Boulder.
Photographer: Rachel Woolf/Bloomberg
Though Yates, a former telecom executive, opposed the moratorium and worries it will make things
difficult for businesses in the zone, he understands why people in Boulder, a liberal enclave, were
skeptical of an idea enacted by a Republican Congress. He just wishes his city would take a more
measured approach.
The zone includes an aging mall called Diagonal Plaza. The tax incentives could have spurred
investors to redevelop it to include affordable housing, which is sorely needed, he said.
"Boulder's teachers can't live in Boulder," he said. "It's not a healthy thing to have socioeconomic
divide where lower-income people have to live outside of town to serve higher-income people in
town."
Paul V. Morns
Managing Director —the Morris Group
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Private Banking and Investment Group
Bank of America Merrill Lynch
illith Floor
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