From the New York website: Surrounded by family and a few pals from the real estate
industry, Donald J. Trump on Friday became the 45th President of the United
States — and the first developer-in-chief.
“I will never, ever
let you down,” Trump said during his inauguration speech. “America will start
winning again like never before.”
Although Trump didn’t
talk industry shop during the occasionally bleak inaugural address, his friends
in real estate are filled with excitement about what he can do as president.
Leading up to the
inauguration, many
bigwigs in city real estate — Howard Lorber,
Richard LeFrak, Steve Witkoff, to name a few — descended on Washington D.C.,
pressing flesh and sipping wine at various events reserved for the biggest
campaign donors. Lorber said he was seated close behind Trump during the
inauguration ceremony. Close-up camera shots of Trump repeatedly showed his
son-in-law, Jared Kushner, directly behind the president and Melania Trump.
“When you’re in the
real estate business, you’re dealing with risk-management every day,” Steve
Witkoff said in Washington. “Reagan was a
decision maker, and that’s what Donald Trump is going to be.”
Michael
Cohen, executive vice president of the Trump
Organization, who was just named personal attorney to the president, said Trump
will be a boon to the real estate industry in New York City. He wouldn’t
specify if his impact would be felt through deregulation, merely stating that
his boss would “create jobs.”
“There’s going to be a
lot of money in the hands of a lot of people,” he said the day before the
inauguration. “When that happens, you’ll see a lot more home purchasing and a
lot more construction, which is not only good for developers but for everyone.”
TRD also caught up with Trion
Real Estate Management’s’ Louis Pfaff,
Ackman-Ziff broker Jason Meister and his father Stephen Meister, a former
attorney for Trump. All three are proud supporters of the new POTUS.
“This was my guy,”
Pfaff said with a smile. “The whole dynamic, it was definitely change.”
“No one but Trump
could have awakened the sleeping giant,” said Stephen Meister on his way to
Friday’s ceremony.
The politics of policy
Many of the sentiments
aired by these New York real estate executives reflect the same spirit that the
wider conservative
movement is projecting right now.
“Jettison the
naysayers,” Illinois Rep. Peter Raskom told a celebratory crowd at the “Peace
and Tax Reform” gala on inauguration’s eve. The event was attended by powerful
conservative figures like Grover Norquist, Ralph Reed and Trump campaign
economic advisor Stephen Moore, as well as the Meisters.
“What was an obscure
possibility, full comprehensive tax reform,” Raskom told the largely Republican
audience, “went from an outlier concept to now more likely true than not true.”
“Can I get an amen?”
Raskom asked in closing, prompting cheers.
Comprehensive tax reform
is just one among many issues at play that could radically change the flow
of profits to real estate businesses during the Trump years. EB-5, a federal
program that grants foreigners green cards in exchange for an investment in
U.S. businesses that creates jobs, could continue unabated under a Trump
presidency.
On his way out the
door, President Barack Obama
proposed changes to EB-5 to curb abuses
within the program, which alone brought back $8.8 billion in foreign investment
in 2015. If enacted, the proposed changes could render EB-5 useless as a
funding source for New York City developers. The hope — and, in many cases,
expectation — among industry experts is that Congress won’t take a hatchet to
EB-5 under Trump’s administration.
Another big-ticket
issue is infrastructure. In October, Trump’s advisers unveiled a vague plan to
spread roughly $137 billion in tax cuts in order to generate $1 trillion in
private investment in infrastructure across the country. The details on how
this will play out — in terms of federal spending and specific projects —
remain quite fuzzy. What is clear is that some familiar faces will lead the
council that will monitor the spending: Vornado Realty Trust’s Steven Roth and
Richard LeFrak. And it’s not unfathomable to think Trump’s contacts in New York
City real estate will be among the private interests that invest in Trump
administration infrastructure projects or directly benefits from them.
Deregulating
commercial mortgage backed securities through a partial or full repeal of
Dodd-Frank is now in play, too (though the latter is a long shot). In December,
risk retention rules set up during Obama kicked in, but they could wiped from
the books with the Senate, House of Representatives and the executive branch
now firmly controlled by Republicans. On Thursday, though, Trump’s nominee for
Treasury Secretary Steven Mnunchin said he supported key elements of
Dodd-Frank, notably the Volcker rule, which prevents banks from making certain
kinds of speculative
investments.
For the people, by the
people?
During his speech on
the steps of the Capitol on Friday, Trump lamented that the nation’s
infrastructure has fallen into disrepair and disuse. Much of his brief speech,
however, focused on making “the people rulers of the nation” and putting “only
America first” when it comes to matters of trade, immigration, and taxes.
“We are transferring
power from Washington D.C. and giving it back to you, the people,” he said
during the speech. “The establishment protected itself but not the
citizens of this country.”
Many of “the people”
waited more than six hours to watch Trump deliver his speech on large
television screens set up in the National Mall and the Washington Monument. By
8:30 a.m., hundreds of people flooded Virginia Avenue, slowly winding their way
to these areas, where those without tickets could view the inauguration. For
them, it seemed worth it to celebrate a man who they believe, in the words of
Nikki Darnes, of Tennessee, will “cut the red tape” and banish bureaucracy in
government — a popular set of platitudes among yeoman Trump supporters.
“I’ve always thought
that we need a businessman in office,” Darnes said. “Clearly, he likes to speak
his mind, which is a good thing and a bad thing, but he’s got what it takes.”
Erik Smek from Stoystown,
Pa., said that hundreds of people in the coal industry have lost their jobs
since Obama took office.
“Obama said he was
going to ruin coal country and that’s exactly what he did,” said Smek. He was
wearing a pin that read “Trump Digs Coal.” “He was not a liar by any means,” he
added.
Gary Sleppy, of
Somerset, Pa., was wearing a rain fedora with a white band that read “Trump
45.”
“We think we need a
president with balls and we finally got one,” he said.
While some protesters
clashed with Trump supporters in the back of one of the Capitol grounds’
ticketed viewing sections, some were more covert about their dismay over
Trump’s new role.
“I’m an interloper!”
shouted Eddie Seger, of Delaware, explaining that he had a banner strapped to
his back, hidden beneath his green poncho. The banner had “2,865,015” written
on it, signifying the number of popular votes that Hillary Clinton won over
Trump. “Hillary won the popular vote. He needs to lead with that in mind.”
He said he arrived in
Washington by train at 5 a.m., took a nap and then got in line for general
admission into the inauguration.
“My wife said if
you’re in jail, don’t even call,” he joked.
Meanwhile, in New
York, more police than protesters had formed a perimeter around Trump Tower.
One dissenter said she was there “protesting everything he embodies.” Next to
her, a man said he was hopeful that the 2016 election would put an end to “the
fetishization of American capitalism.”
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