Property Types Retail
CBRE Arranges Sale of Winter Garden Village in Florida
Oct 3, 2008

CB Richard Ellis Inc. has arranged the sale of Winter Garden Village, a 1.14 million-sq.-ft. regional shopping center located in Winter Garden, Fla. The area included in the sale totaled 759,500 square feet of leasable space. Dennis Carson, senior vice president with CB Richard Ellis¹ Miami-Downtown office, and George Good, executive vice president with the Oakbrook, Ill., office of CB Richard Ellis, exclusively represented the seller, an affiliate of The Sembler Co. An affiliate of Cole Real Estate Investments was the buyer. Michael Strober, senior vice president, with the Tampa office of CBRE Capital Markets, arranged acquisition financing for this transaction from Northwestern Mutual. Completed in phases between 2007 and 2008, the project encompasses more than 161 acres and is home to 16 anchor tenants, including SuperTarget, Lowes Home Improvement, Best Buy, Barnes & Noble, Marshalls and Staples. The property also includes a 180,000-sq.-ft. lifestyle center that is home to tenants such as Victoria¹s Secret, Cacique, Lane Bryant, Chico¹s, Bonefish Grill and Jos A. Banks. Areas not included as part of the sale were the SuperTarget & Lowe¹s Home Improvement stores, each of which are tenant owned, and a 25-acre tract reserved for future residential development.

 
Recent Retail Headlines
Dollar Retailing Seeing Good Times
The Dow Jones index took something of a dive yesterday, possibly because of ill tidings from the likes of Time Warner and Intel, or the anticipation of bad job market numbers, or maybe because it was time to yo-yo back to roughly where the market started at the beginning of the year. In any case, the Dow was down 245.40 points, or 2.72 percent, while the S&P 500 lost 3 percent exactly and the Nasdaq lost 3.23 percent.
Cushman Report: Even Manhattan Humbled in 2008 
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Ken Riggs The Expert: Structural Shift on the Way
Projections that fourth-quarter-2008 holiday retail sales would usher in despair not seen since the Great Depression had everyone on pins and needles. Although November reports indicated that seasonally-adjusted retail sales, excluding automobiles, were down slightly more than 4 percent from year-ago sales, recent figures from the International Council of Shopping Centers show December comparable store sales to have declined by only 1 to 1.8 percent. From some of the pre-December sales-report jitters, I would not have been surprised to see retail spending fall 10 percent as 2008 came to a close!
No Bottom Yet for Residential Market
Despite poor consumer confidence and sour housing numbers, U.S. equity markets had a fairly positive day Tuesday, with the Dow Jones index ending up 184.46 points, or about 2.17 percent, and the S&P 500 and Nasdaq up 2.44 percent and 2.67 percent, respectively.