Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Big Money Betting On Housing - CNNMoney.com

http://money.cnn.com/2013/02/04/investing/housing-market/index.html?section=money_realestate&utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=linkedin&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+rss%2Fmoney_realestate+%28Real+Estate%29

Investors are betting big on the housing recovery.

Hedge funds and private equity firms have been rushing in to buy up companies and assets in every part of the housing supply chain, including undeveloped land, homebuilders, foreclosed homes, and building parts manufacturers.

One of the most notable moves is coming from hedge fund manager John Paulson, best known for his big (and lucrative) bets against subprime mortgages in 2006 and 2007.

Now, he's turned his attention to snapping up undeveloped land in areas hardest hit by the housing crisis. "Land is the accordion in the home building equation," said Michael Barr, who runs Paulson's real estate investments. "It falls the most in a downturn, but also rises the most in an upturn."

Over the past two years, Paulson & Co has bought up enough land in California, Arizona and Nevada to build up to 25,000 homes and is aggressively scouting for more, according to Barr.

Related: Home prices post biggest jump in 6 years
 
Private equity firms are also getting in on the game. Blackstone Group (BX) spent $2.7 billion last year to buy 17,000 single family homes, post-foreclosure, around the United States and plans to continue ramping up those efforts in 2013.

Pine River Capital Management took real estate investment trust Silver Bay Realty Trust (SBY) public in December. Silver Bay, which acquires, renovates, leases and manages single family homes, has already purchased more than 2,500 homes in areas hard hit by the housing crisis. In a recent SEC filing, Silver Bay said that it plans to purchase 3,100 more homes.

And in a sign of investors' growing appetite for a piece of the housing market, shares of publicly traded homebuilders have been soaring. PulteGroup (PHM), KB Home (KBH), and Lennar (LEN) are all trading near 52-week highs. Pulte's shares have more than doubled over the past year, while the KB Home and Lennar's shares have nearly doubled.
And for the first time since 2004, homebuilders are testing the IPO waters.

Tri Pointe Homes (TPH), which builds single family homes in California and Colorado raised $232 million through an IPO last week. Shares of the company, owned by Starwood Capital, rallied 20% on their first day of trading.

Related: Home building surges 12%
 
Others are lining up. Scottsdale, Ariz., homebuilder Taylor Morison has filed to go public and is expected to kick off its investor roadshow in the next few weeks. And building supply company Boise Cascade, jointly owned by PE firm Madison Dearborn and OfficeMax (OMX, Fortune 500), plans to make its public debut next week.

Investment bankers and IPO investors say they expect more homebuilders to go public this year. "As the sector rotates back into favor again, it makes sense for housing companies to monetize," said Brad Miller, co-head of global equity syndicates at Deutsche Bank.

Brad Geisen, CEO of Foreclosure.com, which keeps a database of foreclosures around the nation, said he's been seeing a lot of interest from investors looking to buy up large numbers of foreclosed properties over the past three months.

"A lot of investors see a short window of opportunity where there's good inventory on the market at bottom market prices," said Geisen. "No one knows how long it will last, so these investors are trying to buy as much as they can right now." To top of page

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Real Estate Provisions in “Fiscal Cliff” Bill

http://www.realtor.org/articles/real-estate-provisions-in-fiscal-cliff-bill?om_rid=AAKj0R&om_mid=_BQ5jQiB8v$B8GF&om_ntype=NARWeekly

Real Estate Provisions in “Fiscal Cliff” Bill

On Jan. 1 both the Senate and House passed H.R. 8 legislation to avert the “fiscal cliff.” The bill was signed into law by President Barack Obama on Jan. 2.
Below is a summary of real estate related provisions in the bill:

Real Estate Tax Extenders

  • Mortgage Cancellation Relief is extended for one year to Jan. 1, 2014
  • Deduction for Mortgage Insurance Premiums for filers making below $110,000 is extended through 2013 and made retroactive to cover 2012
  • 15-year straight-line cost recovery for qualified leasehold improvements on commercial properties is extended through 2013 and made retroactive to cover 2012
  • 10 percent tax credit (up to $500) for homeowners for energy improvements to existing homes is extended through 2013 and made retroactive to cover 2012

Permanent Repeal of Pease Limitations for 99% of Taxpayers

Under the agreement so called “Pease Limitations” that reduce the value of itemized deductions are permanently repealed for most taxpayers but will be reinstituted for high income filers.  These limitations will only apply to individuals earning more than $250,000 and joint filers earning above $300,000.  These thresholds have been increased and are indexed for inflation and will rise over time.  Under the formula, the amount of adjusted gross income above the threshold is multiplied by 3 percent.  That amount is then used to reduce the total value of the filer’s itemized deductions.  The total amount of reduction cannot exceed 80 percent of the filer’s itemized deductions.
These limits were first enacted in 1990 (named for the Ohio Congressman Don Pease who came up with the idea) and continued throughout the Clinton years.  They were gradually phased out as a result of the 2001 tax cuts and were completely eliminated in 2010-2012.  Had we gone over the fiscal cliff, Pease limitations would have been reinstituted on all filers starting at $174,450 of adjusted gross income.

Capital Gains

Capital Gains rate stays at 15 percent for those in the top rate of $400,000 (individual) and $450,000 (joint) return.  After that, any gains above those amounts will be taxed at 20 percent.  The $250,000/$500,000 exclusion for sale of principal residence remains in place.

Estate Tax

The first $5 million dollars in individual estates and $10 million for family estates are now exempted from the estate tax.  After that the rate will be 40 percent, up from 35 percent.  The exemption amounts are indexed for inflation.

Wednesday, January 2, 2013

The Tide Has Changed...

Home Prices Hit a Milestone

Growing Demand, Shrinking Supply Buoy Housing Market; 'Tide Has Changed'

By NICK TIMIRAOS for WSJ.com


Home prices are on track to notch their first yearly gain since 2006, the strongest performance since the housing bust and a development that could accelerate the real-estate rebound even as the broader economy stutters.

The housing market's revival has had several false dawns in recent years, but a recovery that began in the spring has strengthened throughout the summer and fall. The latest confirmation came on Wednesday, when the Standard & Poor's/Case-Shiller 20-city index showed that prices rose by 4.3% from a year ago in October. Since January, prices are up 6.9% so far this year, the largest year-to-date gain since 2005. A separate index released Wednesday by Lender Processing Services Inc. LPS +3.86% showed that national home prices were up by 5.2% this year through October.
 
U.S. home prices slipped in October from a month earlier amid expected seasonal weakness but were up from a year earlier, according to Standard & Poor's Case-Shiller home-price indexes. WSJ's Nick Timiraos analyzes the data and looks ahead to 2013.

"The tide has changed," said Ivy Zelman, chief executive of research firm Zelman & Associates. "People feel it's OK to go back into residential real estate—it's no longer taboo—and that change in sentiment could have a very powerful effect."

Prices have risen this year amid stronger demand and sharp declines in the number of homes for sale. Banks slowed down foreclosures after abuses in processing paperwork surfaced two years ago. Since then, banks have become more aggressive at modifying loans or approving short sales, where the home is sold for less than the amount owed. The decline in new foreclosures has reduced the number of homes on the market that sell for large discounts.

Homeowners who normally would sell their properties have been holding them off the market rather than sell at what they perceive to be a lowball prices, leaving inventories of previously owned homes at an 11-year low.
Weak home construction in past years also is a factor and has left inventories of new homes for sale near the lowest levels in at least 50 years.

Demand, meanwhile, has picked up, first as investors scooped up perceived discounts on properties that can be rented out or resold quickly for a profit. Traditional buyers—those planning to live in the property and not flip it—also returned to the market, drawn by record-low mortgage rates, rising rents and steady job gains that are increasing household formation.

"People got tired of living in mom and dad's basement, and rents have gotten much higher than your mortgage payment," said Glenn Kelman, chief executive of Redfin, a real-estate brokerage. To be sure, housing markets are still fragile and face stiff headwinds. Mortgage lending standards are still strict, as lenders scrutinize appraisals and borrowers' income history to make bulletproof mortgages. Millions of borrowers owe more than their homes are worth or don't have enough equity to sell their home and make a down payment on a comparable property.

Median sales prices of previously owned homes stood at $180,600 in November, according to the National Association of Realtors, and have posted year-over-year gains for nine months, the longest such streak since May 2006, when home prices peaked.

Still, sales of existing homes in November were up 14.5% from a year earlier, putting them on pace to reach their highest level since 2007. On Thursday, the Census Bureau is set to report new-home sales for November.

The upshot is that more buyers have been chasing fewer homes for sale, putting upward pressure on prices. "We've been seeing just crazy competition. Supply and demand has tipped in the seller's favor," said Nani Luculescu, a real-estate agent in Anaheim, Calif.

Last month, she represented a buyer who made the winning bid—among 52 offers—for a $320,000 four-bedroom home in Garden Grove, Calif., that sold for 10% more than the asking price. Although the home drew better offers, the owner sold to her clients, a newlywed couple buying their first home, after they included pictures of themselves and their pet dogs—two Pugs—in a cover letter.

Some buyers aren't only bidding above the list price, but also are making all-cash offers and forgoing home inspections in an effort to make the sale as easy as possible for the seller.

Frustrated by a lack of inventory, others are instead purchasing new homes. Sonal Basu, a real-estate agent in San Francisco's East Bay, said in August she noticed that prospective buyers began camping out in tents at the new-home development where she lives in San Ramon, Calif. Some of the "campers," she says, are being paid $250 a day by buyers to wait in line for them.

Since August, every area new-home development has also had campers waiting in line to buy homes, she said. "A year and a half ago, nobody wanted to move out here because they felt it was the boonies," Ms. Basu said. "Now, they're not hesitating with this commute."

Prices are rising in part because the share of "distressed" homes—those selling out of foreclosure or in short sales—has dropped. While 18 of 20 cities posted year-over-year price gains in October, the largest increases have taken hold in some cities hit hard by the housing bust. In Phoenix, for example, prices have jumped by 21.7% over the past year. Prices gained by 10% in Detroit and 8.5% in Miami.

Economists say many such gains aren't sustainable and instead reflect prices rebounding from very low levels. "They're not going to continue at that pace," said Thomas Lawler, an independent housing economist in Leesburg, Va. He said he expected prices to go up next year, but at a slower pace than this year.

Also, some states where banks have struggled to follow court-administered foreclosure processes have large overhangs of mortgages where borrowers haven't made any payments in at least a year. Those homes could eventually hit the market, putting pressure on prices if demand isn't strong. Prices in New York and Chicago, which both have large overhangs, saw prices decline by 1.2% and 1.3% in October from one year ago.

A more immediate concern is how consumer confidence might fare if lawmakers don't reach a solution to avoid the "fiscal cliff," a raft of automatic tax increases and spending cuts set to take place in early 2013.

For now, low inventories of distressed properties are finally boosting the fortunes of the nation's home builders that have long been sidelined by competition from cheap bank-owned properties.

The stock prices of U.S. home builders, as measured by the Dow Jones home construction index, were up more than 75% year-to-date as investors are betting that the housing recovery could be sustainable. Others are plowing money into startups that invest in single-family homes as rentals. That, in turn, is ramping up construction hiring and spending on everything from lumber to cement to air-conditioning units.

"It hasn't gotten to any big level yet, but our carpet businesses and brick businesses and all of that will come on with residential construction, and that has turned," said Warren Buffett, chief executive of Berkshire Hathaway, in an interview last month with CNBC.

Real-estate executives say their biggest worry right now is that more homes aren't available to meet demand. Mr. Kelman says he is looking to increase Redfin's workforce of 400 agents nationally by 50% by the end of January. "I'm going across the country meeting with managers, and the only topic we're talking about is hiring," he said.

Earlier this year, the company ended up referring about half of its potential customers to other companies because "demand outstripped the supply of agents," he said. Redfin is unusual among real-estate companies because it pays a salary and benefits to its agents instead of commissions. "Our model means we have to go long on real estate," Mr. Kelman said, "and we did not go long enough."

Wednesday, December 19, 2012

Home Sales, Prices Jump in Maui County - Pacific Business News, Dec. 10, 2012

http://www.bizjournals.com/pacific/news/2012/12/10/home-sales-prices-jump-in-maui-county.html

Maui County home and condominium sales saw double-digit increases last month with a 10 percent spike in single family homes and a 24 percent jump in condominium purchases, according to statistics from the Realtors Association of Maui.

There were 84 single-family homes sold in November, compared with 76 sales during the same month last year. The median price for a single-family home in Maui County jumped 10 percent to $467,500 last month. The price was $422,500 in November 2011.

Meanwhile, there were 96 condo sales last month, compared to 77 the same time last year. The median sales price for condos rose 47 percent to $390,945, from $265,000 in November 2011.

Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Hawaii Real Estate Paradise Returns With Goldman Sachs Loan Bloomberg BusinessWeek

http://www.businessweek.com/news/2012-12-11/hawaii-real-estate-paradise-returns-with-goldman-loan-mortgages

Hawaii, buffeted in the aftermath of the U.S. recession and Japan’s tsunami, is benefiting from a travel rebound that’s sent tourism revenue to a record and spurred real estate investments across the islands. 

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) last month announced a $1.85 billion loan for a once-distressed hotel portfolio that has five Hawaiian properties, including the Sheraton Waikiki and the Westin Moana Surfrider in Honolulu. Companies from Walt Disney Co. to Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide Inc. (HOT) are expanding resorts. On the Big Island, the first new residential development in at least five years is starting construction.

Property investors and lenders are seeking to take advantage of increased demand from affluent Asian travelers and visitors from Northern California enriched by the technology- industry boom, according to Honolulu-based Hospitality Advisors LLC, an industry consulting firm. Oahu, which attracts the most visitors of Hawaii’s eight major islands, has the highest hotel occupancy among the top 25 U.S. markets, research firm STR said.

“What’s driving Hawaii now, particularly Oahu, is the resurgence of the Japanese market -- there was a lot of pent-up demand after the tsunami -- and substantial growth in Chinese and Korean numbers because of the increase in wealth in those regions,” said Joseph Toy, president of Hospitality Advisors.

Lodging and tourist-industry revenue, including room rentals and food and retail sales, rose 15 percent to a record $3.62 billion this year through Sept. 30, according to Hospitality Advisors. That compared with a low of $2.59 billion in the first nine months of 2009, when the U.S. was in a recession after the credit crisis.

Japan Tsunami

Travel was also reduced by the March 2011 Japanese earthquake and tsunami that killed thousands of people and led to the worst nuclear crisis since Chernobyl, according to Hawaii’s tourism board. Mary MacNeill, managing director at Fitch Ratings, predicted at the time that the disaster would set back a recovery by one to two years.

“Tourism bounced back sooner than expected,” she said in an e-mail last week. “The Japanese tourism decline was not as great as originally expected. In addition, other markets, particularly China and Korea, had a large increase in travel to Hawaii.”

The average property value for Oahu hotels probably will climb 24 percent to $547,764 a room by 2015, according to HVS and STR, developers of an index that tracks supply and demand, profit and loss forecasts, and investment yields. Oahu’s projected per-room value is the second-highest among 65 major U.S. markets, after New York City, the firms said.

Strong Comeback

“This market has come back so strongly after the downturn,” Suzanne Mellen, a San Francisco-based senior managing director at hospitality-consulting firm HVS, said in a telephone interview. The firm conducted appraisals of the hotels for the Goldman Sachs financing.

That deal involved hotels owned by private-equity firm Cerberus Capital Management LP and known as the Kyo-ya portfolio in the commercial-mortgage backed security market. The loan backed by the properties was sent to special servicing in April 2011 after the hotels’ value dropped. Special servicers negotiate with landlords on behalf of bondholders and decide whether to modify a loan or foreclose.

Cash flow at the properties has almost doubled since 2009, Deutsche Bank AG (DB) analysts said in a May research note. That month, Cerberus sought to replace debt after a deal struck with New York-based Goldman Sachs in 2011 failed to close, three people familiar with the transaction said at the time.

CMBS Demand

The new financing will include a mortgage and mezzanine loans. A portion of the debt may be sold as bonds as investor demand for CMBS surges. Wall Street banks issued about $16 billion of securities tied to everything from mobile home parks to skyscrapers in the fourth quarter, a post-credit-crisis record, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. Sales are on pace to reach $46 billion in 2012, almost 50 percent more than last year, the analysts said.

The extra yield investors demand to own top-ranked CMBS rather than Treasuries has dropped to 0.98 percentage point from 2.47 percentage points on Jan. 3, according to the Barclays CMBS Aaa Super Duper index. That’s the narrowest spread since at least January 2008.

“We’re going to let the financing speak for itself,” Michael DuVally, a Goldman Sachs spokesman, said in an e-mail. John Dillard, a spokesman for Cerberus with Weber Shandwick in New York, didn’t return a telephone call and e-mail seeking comment.

‘Completely Irreplaceable’

“These properties are completely irreplaceable because of the restrictive Waikiki zoning laws that make any new builds nearly impossible, and they are incredible cash cows,” Mellen said. “You can’t be better located than these hotels, sitting right on the beach in Hawaii.”

Many lodging investors are limited to redeveloping existing hotels, rather than constructing new ones, because of strict environmental and zoning laws meant to prevent overbuilding in Hawaii, especially near beaches, Mellen said.

“It is the highest barrier of entry market I can think of,” she said. “People say New York is a high-barrier market or San Francisco, but I think Hawaii is much worse.”

In August, Walt Disney (DIS) announced plans to expand its Aulani Resort on Oahu, just one year after its opening, for an undisclosed amount. The Burbank, California-based company plans to add a third swimming pool and a splash zone for kids, and has already added more lawn space for weddings. The new pool and splash zone are scheduled for completion in mid-2013.

Hawaii Flights

Starwood Hotels last month said it completed work at four properties: the $188 million redevelopment of the Sheraton Waikiki, the $6.5 million renovation of the Sheraton Maui Resort & Spa, the $16 million upgrade of the Sheraton Kauai Resort and the $20 million refurbishment of the Sheraton Kona Resort & Spa at Keauhou Bay.

The work is intended to help meet “the increased demand for high-quality accommodations as business and leisure travel to the Hawaiian islands continues to grow,” the Stamford, Connecticut-based company said in a statement.

This year through September, total seats on flights to Hawaii rose 7.3 percent, including a 47 percent increase in scheduled seats from Asian countries, according to data from the Hawaii Tourism Authority. Seats from the Oceania region, which includes Australia and New Zealand, climbed 30 percent, and from Japan they rose 13 percent. Scheduled seats from the U.S. West Coast rose 4.1 percent.

Any airline cutbacks or economic slumps in countries such as China or Japan may quickly upset Hawaii’s recovery, according to Stephen Hennis, a director at Boulder, Colorado-based STR Analytics.

Very Susceptible

“The fact that you can only get to Hawaii by plane or boat makes it more susceptible to cutbacks by airlines,” he said. “And its dependence on discretionary spending makes it very susceptible to economic changes in the regions it gets most of its visitors from.”

The state’s visitor arrivals this year through September climbed 9.6 percent to 5.97 million, according to a Hawaii Tourism Authority study. The biggest increases came from Japan, with a jump of about 16 percent, and the category that includes China and Korea, which had a 27 percent gain.

Hawaii’s gross domestic product is expected to rise 2.4 percent next year, compared with a projected 1.6 percent increase in 2012 and a decline of 0.2 percent in 2011, according to data from the state Department of Business, Economic Development and Tourism. GDP probably will climb 2.5 percent in both 2014 and 2015, according to the agency.

Ripple Effect

While Hawaii’s recovery is driven largely by tourism, real estate categories other than lodging also are improving.

“The ripple effect on other aspects of the Hawaiian economy is phenomenal,” said Mellen of HVS. Building-permit volume in the state, including residential and industrial applications, climbed 33 percent to $1.2 billion worth of projects this year through September, according to data from Colliers International, a Seattle-based real estate services company. That’s the highest level since 2007, when permits for a record $1.35 billion worth of development were filed in each of the comparable periods.

In Honolulu, construction of a dozen condominium projects with a total of about 3,000 units is expected to begin in the next three years -- about the same growth pace as in the peak years of 2006 and 2007, said Michael Hamasu, a Honolulu-based director of consulting and research at Colliers.

Residential Communities

On Maui, two residential communities -- Kehalani and Maui Lani -- are under construction, and on Oahu, a couple of large residential projects are being developed, including Ho’opili, a planned community by Fort Worth, Texas-based D.R. Horton Inc. (DHI)’s Schuler division, Hamasu said.

A joint venture of real estate investor Kennedy Wilson (KW) and Irvine, California-based IHP Capital Partners is spending about $300 million on Kohanaiki, a new golf-and-residential development on the Big Island of Hawaii’s Kona Coast, said William McMorrow, chairman and chief executive officer of Beverly Hills, California-based Kennedy Wilson. The companies expect the project to have a value of about $1 billion when it’s fully completed, in 10 to 15 years, he said. 

“Everything in Hawaii is hitting on all cylinders,” McMorrow said in a telephone interview. “It’s an opportune time to deliver product to the Hawaiian market.”

Kohanaiki is the Big Island’s first new residential development in at least five years, said Saul Pinto, CEO of Kohanaiki Shores LLC, the property’s developer. The 500-unit, 500-acre (200-hectare) project received permits in 2004, then stalled during the slump, he said. Lots and units will be marketed at $1.7 million to $6 million “and up” toward the end of 2013’s first quarter, Pinto said.

California Buyers

“I would say 80 percent of buyers on the Big Island come from California, and to a lesser degree from Seattle and Portland,” Oregon, McMorrow said. “The majority of California buyers are from Northern California, and they have benefited from the success in the tech and venture-capitalist sectors. It’s a big driver.”

One of the biggest names in the technology industry, Oracle Corp. founder Larry Ellison, earlier this year bought 98 percent of the island of Lanai for an undisclosed price. The sale included two resort hotels, two championship golf courses and club houses, and more than 88,000 acres of land.

The sales volume for commercial-property transactions of at least $1 million is likely to reach about $2 billion this year in Hawaii, the highest level since 2007, when sales totaled $3.04 billion, according to Colliers. Real estate investments are likely to increase for the foreseeable future, said Toy of Hospitality Advisors.

“We see a lot of capital that is in search of acquisitions in Hawaii,” he said. “My phone rings a lot these days.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Nadja Brandt in Los Angeles at nbrandt@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Kara Wetzel at kwetzel@bloomberg.net; Rob Urban at robprag@bloomberg.net

Saturday, December 8, 2012

Singapore Government to Buy Grand Wailea

Singapore Government to Buy Grand Wailea | Maui Now

According to bankruptcy proceedings today in the US Bankruptcy Court for the Southern District of New York in Manhattan, the Government of Singapore Investment Corp will buy the Grand Wailea and three other luxury resorts.

After no bidders stepped up to bid on the bankrupt resort properties owned by the New York-based Paulson & Co., the resort properties sold for $1.5 billion to The Government of Singapore Investment Corp., according to a new report by the Pacific Business News today.

Apparently, an auction had been scheduled for today but was canceled after no other competing bids were received by the Monday deadline.

Other properties included in the deal: the La Quinta Resort & Club and PGA West golf course in La Quinta, Calif. and the Arizona Biltmore Resort & Spa in Phoenix. All three resorts are managed by Waldorf Astoria Management under Hilton Worldwide’s Waldorf Astoria Hotels & Resorts brand. A fourth property included in the deal is the Claremont Resort & Spa in Berkeley, Calif.

Wednesday, December 5, 2012

Delaware entity bids $55M for Ritz-Carlton Club and Residences at Maui’s Kapalua Bay

 Delaware entity bids $55M for Ritz-Carlton Club and Residences at Maui’s Kapalua Bay Pacific Business News Date: Wednesday, December 5, 2012


A lending entity registered in Delaware bid $55 million at a foreclosure auction on Maui for 61 residential and commercial units and more than 500 club interests at the Ritz-Carlton Club and Residences at Kapalua Bay.

The Maui News reports Island Acquisitions Kapalua LLC offered the highest bid at Monday's auction for the property. The newspaper reports the entity is a lending entity that purchased a portion of the lender's interests, according to Honolulu attorney George Van Buren, the appointed commissioner in the case, who said the winning bid must still be confirmed by a judge.

Island Acquisitions Kapalua LLC was registered in Delaware on Nov. 28, according to that state's Division of Corporations website.

A total of $304 million was owed in principal, interest and fees on the 56 residential units and five commercial units at the Ritz-Carlton Residences and the 567 club interests in the Ritz-Carlton Club.

The Maui News reports that the resort's management company Ritz-Carlton, which is owned by Marriott International (NYSE: MAR) recently extended its deadline to pull out of the project to Dec. 31.