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Fairstead s Jeff Goldberg on Multifamily Megadeals and Long-Term Plays
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Ian Livingstone with his wife Natalie © A Davidson/Shutterstock
Over the past 30 years, brothers Ian and Richard Livingstone have quietly amassed a multibillion-pound property portfolio spanning some of the finest hotels in the world. “But their shrewdest bet by far is a different kind of investment,” says The Daily Telegraph. The brothers’ stake in Evolution Gaming – a Swedish-based online gambling business that has surged during the pandemic – has delivered 5,000% returns since they became shareholders, jumping 200% in the last year alone. The brothers’ 8.6% stake is now worth almost $3bn, and Evolution has proved a crucial source of liquidity while many of the hotels in their London and Regional property empire have been closed.
(iStock/Illustration by Alexis Manrodt for The Real Deal)
Instead of setting aside $470,000 in security deposits at 11 East Harlem buildings, Isaac Kassirer’s Emerald Equity Group says it siphoned the money into its operating accounts.
The practice ongoing since Emerald Equity acquired the apartment buildings in late 2017 came to light in a declaration made by the landlord’s attorney in an ongoing bankruptcy proceeding.
Emerald Equity defaulted on $203 million in loans from LoanCore for the Harlem buildings in December 2020. The firm acquired the four properties on 107th street in 2018 for $116 million, while the properties on 117th street were part of its massive $358 million Dawnay Day portfolio acquisition in 2016. In a Chapter 11 bankruptcy filing, the landlord attributed its default to unfavorable changes to the rent law in 2019 and an ongoing rent strike.
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The purchaser of a business will often want to ensure that any
goodwill associated with the business is protected. In particular,
they will not want the seller to set up a competing business
following completion, attracting many of the business
customers, utilising business secrets to gain an unfair advantage,
or poaching staff.
Walker Morris Commercial Dispute Resolution specialists
Gwendoline Davies, Rebecca Jackson and Jack Heward explain some of
the ways in which UK contract and competition law can afford
protection for a purchaser/employer, and some of the risks and
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