• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

CARNM

Commercial Association of REALTORS® - CARNM New Mexico

  • Property Search
    • Search Properties
      • For Sale
      • For Lease
      • For Sale or Lease
      • Start Your Search
    • Location & Type
      • Albuquerque
      • Rio Rancho
      • Las Cruces
      • Santa Fe
      • Industry Types
  • Members
    • New Member
      • About Us
      • Getting Started in Commercial
      • Join CARNM
      • Orientation
    • Resources
      • Find A Broker
      • Code of Ethics
      • Governing Documents
      • NMAR Forms
      • CARNM Forms
      • RPAC
      • Needs & Wants
      • CARNM Directory
      • REALTOR® Benefits
      • Foreign Broker Violation
    • Designations
      • CCIM
      • IREM
      • SIOR
    • Issues/Concerns
      • FAQ
      • Ombuds Process
      • Professional Standards
      • Issues/Concerns
      • Foreign Broker Violation
  • About
    • About
      • About Us
      • Join CARNM
      • Sponsors
      • Contact Us
    • People
      • 2026 Board Members
      • Past Presidents
      • REALTORS® of the Year
      • President’s Award Recipients
      • Founder’s Award Recipients
    • Issues/Concerns
      • FAQ
      • Ombuds Process
      • Professional Standards
      • Issues/Concerns
      • Foreign Broker Violation
  • Education
    • Courses
      • Register
      • All Education
    • Resources
      • NMREC Licensing
      • Code of Ethics
      • NAR Educational Opportunities
      • CCIM Education
      • IREM Education
      • SIOR Educuation
  • News & Events
    • News
      • All News
      • Market Trends
    • Events
      • All Events Calendar
      • Education
      • CCIM Events
      • LIN Marketing Meeting
      • Thank Yous
  • CARNM Login
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Archives for May 2019

National Association of REALTORS® Moves to Dismiss Moehrl Suit; Shows Lawsuit is Based on Rule Fabricated by Class Action Attorneys

May 18, 2019 by CARNM

Filing demonstrates lawsuit misrepresents facts, ignores legal precedent and fails to prove legal harm.

The National Association of REALTORS® (NAR) moved to dismiss the Moehrl v. NAR lawsuit on the basis that the complaint misrepresents NAR rules for the operation of Multiple Listing Services (MLSs), which have long been recognized by the courts across the country as protecting consumers and creating competitive, efficient markets that benefit home buyers and sellers. The filing was made in federal court in Chicago.

“In today’s complex real estate environment, REALTORS® and Multiple Listing Services promote a pro-consumer, pro-competitive market for home buyers and sellers, contrary to the baseless claims of these class action attorneys,” said John Smaby, President of NAR. “Our filing today shows the lawsuit is wrong on the facts, wrong on the economics and wrong on the law.”
NAR’s brief points out that, as the centerpiece of their case, the seven class action law firms who represent one plaintiff have resorted to fundamentally mischaracterizing NAR’s rules. That mischaracterization, according to the NAR’s filing, led the class action attorneys to “dream up” purportedly anticompetitive rules that simply do not exist in NAR’s Handbook or Code of Ethics. In reality, NAR rules specifically direct listing brokers to determine – in consultation with their clients – the amount of compensation to offer buyers’ brokers in connection with their MLS listings. Furthermore, under NAR rules, a buyer’s broker is free to negotiate a commission from the listing broker that is different from what appears in the MLS listing. Neither NAR nor any MLS has any say in setting broker commissions.
Ultimately, these rules create a system of highly competitive markets where consumers receive superior service.
Beyond misreading the facts, NAR’s filing to dismiss demonstrates the shaky legal grounds of the plaintiff’s case, pointing out that the lawsuit disregards legal precedents that have upheld the pro-competitive benefits represented by the MLS system. For example, past court rulings have noted that NAR rules provide a more transparent marketplace, and encourage REALTORS® to share listing information and cooperate in the sale of real estate.
In fact, when considering the structure of commission payments, NAR’s filing notes that listing brokers’ offers of commission to buyers’ brokers on MLSs has been shown to actually increase the number of potential buyers. “When a seller elects to permit their brokers to pay compensation to the buyer’s broker, it frees up buyer cash thereby potentially increasing the number of buyers able to bid for that home and the amount of funds available for the purchase price,” the filing states.
“The MLS system is designed to create competitive markets to facilitate the sale of residential property in a way that benefits both buyers and sellers,” said Smaby.
Contrary to the career class action attorneys’ manufactured rules and claims, the plaintiff’s transaction was subject to the same rules as all transactions facilitated via an MLS: commissions are agreed upon up front by the seller and listing broker – independent of NAR – and commissions are negotiable. These rules have been proven to promote competition and ensure that brokers act in the best interests of their clients.
On the basis of these fundamental arguments that refute the plaintiff’s allegations and reading of legal precedent, as well as a failure to demonstrate harm, NAR is seeking to dismiss the lawsuit “with prejudice.”
By: NAR
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

Cannabis Real Estate Investors Are Attracted to Opportunity Zones to Shelter Capital Gains

May 17, 2019 by CARNM

There is a growing number of cannabis-related Opportunity Zone projects around the country.
Qualified Opportunity Zones (QOZs) offer investors a way to defer and reduce taxes on capital gains, while building equity in real estate assets and improving low-income, distressed neighborhoods.
Investors can defer tax payments on recent capital gains until 2026 if those gains are reinvested in an Opportunity Zone fund or business. Gains from an eventual sale of the Opportunity Zone property or qualified business will also be tax free if the investment is held for 10 years.

Additionally, if equity in the property or business is sold prior to 2026, when the program “sunsets,” the 10-year hold period required for elimination of capital gains tax will reset. And while the program deadline is 2026, the IRS will allow investors to continue claiming this tax benefit until 2048.
Despite these exceptional tax benefits, investors have been slow to invest in QOZs. Cannabis real estate projects and operations within QOZs, however, are beginning to attract investors. Unlike liquor stores, country clubs, massage parlors and tanning salons, cannabis uses are not among business operations ineligible for QOZ tax benefits, according to James Mann, tax partner in the New York office of Greenspoon Marder LLP.
Cannabis businesses are still subject to tax code 280E, which eliminates deduction of business expenses for income tax purposes for any business operation that includes Schedule I and II drug production or distribution, according to Mann. But despite cannabis’ status as a Schedule I drug, Mann, notes that “the tax benefits for investment in Opportunity Zones are unaffected by cannabis’ illegal status under federal law, so investors can be assured that they can take advantage of this tax benefit.”
Still, investors should exercise caution, according to Jim Fitzpatrick, principal at Costa Mesa, Calif.-based Solutioneers. Given that cannabis is a Schedule 1 drug, 280E states, ‘No deduction or credit shall be allowed.’” He suggests that if 280E is applied, no tax benefits would be allowed and the asset could end up as a distressed property, because the underlying uses won’t be viable.
So far, Mann’s client, Erik Murray, CEO and managing partner at Oakland, Calif.-based Oak Funds, a minority-owned business focused on investing and developing cannabis real estate, has set up a $40-million investment fund and is seeking investors for an adaptive reuse project in an Opportunity Zone in downtown Los Angeles that will include one of the state’s largest cannabis retailers.
The two-story, 50,000-sq.-ft. property, which was formerly a Honda dealership, at 1540 Figueroa St., is an attractive location for a high-end cannabis dispensary that sells popular and emerging cannabis brands, he notes, as it is across the street from the Los Angeles Convention Center and about a block away from Staples Center and the LA Live entertainment district.
The project will be divided into several uses that will include a 15,000 to 20,000-sq.-ft. cannabis dispensary and a food and beverage operation on the ground floor, with a boutique hotel or other creative use above. Once the architect completes the building redesign, Murray will begin pre-leasing.
“We’re excited for our real estate investors to roll over their capital gains to this opportunity, but it is potentially advantageous for the cannabis operator too,“ he says. Murray notes. “Because our project is in an Opportunity Zone, our dispensary operator has an extremely unique opportunity to defer and eliminate capital gains tax as the business grows.”
Another downtown Los Angeles project by BaseCanna LLC, a New York firm that develops cannabis real estate and funds cannabis entrepreneurs, is seeking investors for a 30,000-sq.-ft. adaptive reuse project in an Opportunity Zone near the Fashion District, about seven minutes away from Staples Center. The firm has established an Opportunity Zone fund to finance acquisition of the building, an additional property, and capital improvements, which must exceed the cost of the property and be completed within 30 months.
According to BaseCanna CEO Jack Boyajian, this project is already fully approved for cannabis cultivation, manufacturing or distribution. Noting that investors can participate in the real estate or cannabis operation or both, he suggested in a report by Medium that this is an opportunity to leverage cannabis to transform low-income communities that have been traumatized by the criminalization of the drug.
“Our Opportunity Zone investments will not only improve entire neighborhoods, but also provide good paying jobs to communities that have been harmed by cannabis prohibition,” he remarked.
Canna-Hub, a California-based cannabis real estate development and property management company, is building a 1.2-million-sq.-ft. cannabis business park in an Opportunity Zone in Williams, Calif., which is about an hour north of Sacramento. Company founder and CEO Tim McGraw says that it is exciting to offer cannabis operators a place to grow their businesses, but there should also be positive social and economic impact on the City of Williams.
The firm has established two Opportunity Zone funds, one to finance the ground-up development and another one to fund cannabis operations, which McGraw says will provide operators access to institutional capital by funding tenant improvements and operational build-outs.
The project is licensed for all types of cannabis operations, except outdoor cultivation, including: third-party testing labs, indoor cultivation, greenhouses, nurseries, volatile and non-volatile manufacturing, tissue culture labs, distribution and transport.
“Our campus provides huge advantages for our operators that they wouldn’t have elsewhere,” McGraw says.  “The combination of savings realized from on-site security, no local tax and reduced transportation costs equates to millions of dollars in savings for our tenants.” McGraw notes that besides Opportunity Zone tax benefits, the city of Williams has no revenue tax. “This is substantial competitive and business advantage for our tenants as it lowers their overhead thus increasing margins for investors.” He adds that the average local or county tax in California is 7.6 percent, but can be as high as 25 percent.
Other benefits include shared security costs, and an on-site third-party testing lab, which eliminates the need to transport products offsite for testing.
By: National Real Estate Investor
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

ExxonMobil: Investments May Bring $64 Billion in NM Benefits

May 17, 2019 by CARNM

ExxonMobil investments in New Mexico could kick up a $64 billion tidal wave of benefits for the state over the next 40 years, according to a new study released Friday by the oil giant.
The study calls the company’s existing and planned activities in the Permian Basin in southeastern New Mexico and West Texas a “world-class mega project” that for New Mexico alone will generate about $62 billion in net fiscal benefits over four decades from leases, royalties and taxes. Local communities could also benefit from about $1.8 billion in economic growth.
“The Permian Basin is the engine of America’s energy renaissance and New Mexico residents will see direct economic benefits and opportunities from our planned investments,” ExxonMobil Chairman and CEO Darren Woods said in a statement. “We will be a significant, long-term economic contributor to the state of New Mexico and will work hard to be a trusted member of the community.”
Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham expressed optimism about ExxonMobil’s projections.
“The benefit to this state’s bottom line, as represented by investments from companies like ExxonMobil, has been enormous,” the governor said in a statement.
ExxonMobil’s public and government affairs division commissioned the Texas-based economic consulting firm Impact DataSource for the study, given the company’s massive investment plans in southeastern New Mexico.
ExxonMobil subsidiary XTO Energy plans to drill about 6,500 wells on more than 400,000 net acres in Eddy and Lea counties over the next four decades, representing $55 billion in capital expenditures for drilling, facilities construction and oil and gas extraction operations.
The company said in March that XTO’s Permian Basin activities in both New Mexico and Texas will climb to 1 million barrels per day of oil equivalent by 2024. That’s up from a previous forecast in early 2018 of 600,000 barrels by 2025, which ExxonMobil predicted after investing $5.6 billion in 2017 to acquire 275,000 acres of leases in the Permian.
That purchase nearly doubled the company’s total holdings there to about 6 billion barrels of oil equivalent hydrocarbons, more than half of it on the New Mexico side of the Delaware Basin, an oval-shaped rock formation within the Permian that protrudes from southwest Texas northward into Lea and Eddy counties.
That area has become one of the country’s most-prolific oil and gas zones, producing some of the highest returns for oil firms operating in the U.S. today and converting New Mexico into the nation’s third largest oil-producing state.
Most of the $62 billion in projected government revenue would come from direct payments to the state, including $44 billion from lease and royalty charges and $8.5 billion from severance taxes.
It could be a conservative estimate, because the projections are based on $40-per-barrel prices. At $56 per barrel, the study estimates $83 billion in net fiscal benefits.
By: Kevin Robinson-Avila (ABQ Journal)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

10 Major Upcoming IPOs to Watch in 2019

May 17, 2019 by CARNM

NEW YORK, NY - JANUARY 2: Traders and financial professionals work at the opening bell on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE), January 2, 2019 in New York City. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped more than 250 points at the open on the first day of trading in the new year.

2019 IPOs to watch: Ten highly anticipated new issues.

As markets brushed off a wildly volatile end to 2018, many investors were shaken as the New Year began. But even uncertain investors knew one thing: 2019’s upcoming initial public offeringswould include a ton of high-profile, world-class young companies that don’t come around too often. Many, like Uber, Lyft, WeWork, and Pinterest, were worth more than $10 billion. Before the end of May, it was clear that 2019 would be a special one for IPOs, with plenty of headline-grabbing surprises, from disappointments to unforeseen winners and everything in between. Here are 10 of 2019’s most anticipated upcoming IPOs, for better or worse.
HONG KONG, HONG KONG - JANUARY 18:   In this photo illustration,a young lady using a Mac book pro as she uses Slack website on January 18, 2017 in Hong Kong, Hong Kong.

Slack

One of the hottest upcoming IPOs of 2019 is Slack. The popular workplace messaging service has been openly planning its IPO since 2018. Slack plans to go public via a direct listing, meaning company insiders, investors and employees are the ones offering shares to the public. On the upside, direct listings reduce Wall Street fees. However, Slack itself won’t get any juicy IPO proceeds to grow its business. The Slack IPO is planned for June 20. Revenue grew 65% to roughly $134 million in the first quarter, while losses grew 50% to about $39 million. Money-losing tech companies, it seems, just love going public.
Potential 2019 IPO valuation: $17 billion
BANGKOK, THAILAND - 2018/07/18:  In this photo illustration, the AirBnB application seen displayed on a Sony smartphone.

Airbnb

One of the few upcoming IPOs in 2019 expected to join Slack by listing directly is home-rental platform Airbnb. This makes more sense for Airbnb than for Slack, however, since Airbnb is regularly profitable on an EBITDA (earnings before interest, taxes depreciation and amortization) basis. The hard work building a profitable, sustainable business is over, and Airbnb’s powerful network effect and brand have cemented it as the leading global marketplace for renters and leasers. Airbnb already reportedly boasts quarterly revenue above $1 billion and may still be growing 30% annually. It’s currently worth more than both Hilton Hotels (HLT) and Expedia (EXPE).
Potential 2019 IPO valuation: $38 billion
Logo and signage at the headquarters of big data analytics company Palantir, in the Silicon Valley town of Palo Alto, California, August 25, 2016.

Palantir Technologies

Co-founded by Peter Thiel, the legendary entrepreneur who co-founded PayPal (PYPL) and invested early in Facebook (FB) and Airbnb, Palantir is arguably the most mysterious of 2019’s top upcoming IPOs. A little mystery is unavoidable given the business: Palantir is a secretive data analytics and intelligence firm rumored to have played a big role in the 2011 Osama bin Laden takedown. Though Wall Street’s been abuzz about a Palantir IPO in the second half of 2019, there’s no guarantee. Its valuation is as mysterious as anything else about it. Recent estimates for Palantir range from $11 billion to $41 billion.
Potential 2019 IPO valuation: $11 billion to $41 billion
Close-up of logo for investment management app Robinhood on paper, against a light wooden surface, April 21, 2019.

Robinhood

The no-fee trading platform Robinhood, which surpassed E-Trade (ETFC) in user count in 2018 only five years after forming, now has more than 5 million accounts. Robinhood is definitely mulling an IPO. The service revolutionized trading and is a favorite among millennials, earning its money from interest on account balances, margin trading and selling order flow to stock exchanges. Its latest funding round raised $363 million and gave Robinhood a $5.6 billion valuation. In November, Robinhood hired Amazon’s (AMZN) vice president of finance Jason Warnick as its chief financial officer, making Robinhood one of the biggest IPOs to watch in 2019.
Potential 2019 IPO valuation: $5.6 billion
Close-up of logo reading We Deliver With Postmates, referencing the Postmates food delivery app service, on a restaurant window in the Silicon Valley, San Jose, California, June 7, 2018.

Postmates

Like many of the aforementioned tech “unicorns” on this IPO list, food delivery app Postmates began exploring the process of going public in fall 2018, consulting several banks about the underwriting process. Postmates’ most recent round of funding fetched a $1.85 billion valuation, making it one of the smaller companies on this list. Despite intense competition from GrubHub (GRUB), UberEats, DoorDash and others – and even considering Uber’s underwhelming IPO day – Postmates may want to go public before the bull market fizzles out. There’s no official date now but shares are expected to start trading in June or July.
Potential 2019 IPO valuation: $1.85 billion
View of the exterior of the building at 100 South State Street occupied by the workspace sharing company WeWork in Chicago, Illinois, October 28, 2018. The WeWork logo is visible.

WeWork

After officially filing to go public in late April, shared office space startup WeWork is one of the most exciting upcoming IPOs to watch for in 2019. The trendy real estate company, which leases space in its sleek, open locations to small, medium and large businesses as well as freelancers and remote workers, more than doubled its revenue to $1.8 billion in 2018. Unfortunately, losses more than doubled too, reaching $1.9 billion. Even its biggest deep-pocketed investor SoftBank, which has sunk over $10 billion into WeWork, can’t finance its losses forever. Going public is best for all parties if WeWork is to last.
Potential 2019 IPO valuation: $47 billion
Close-up of logo for ride sharing and crowdsourced taxi service Lyft on a Lyft vehicle in the San Francisco Bay Area town of Daly City, California, November 3, 2017.

Lyft (LYFT)

Lyft hasn’t just been racing Uber to adopt self-driving cars, drive down labor costs and break even; the last year’s been a win-at-all costs race to tap the public coffers before its biggest rival. Lyft won that battle, going public on March 29 at the IPO price of $72 a share. The ride-hailing company raised over $2.3 billion at a $24 billion valuation and shares finished their first day 9% higher. Since then, it’s been all downhill, falling over 40% in its first six weeks of trading. In under two months, about $9 billion had been shaved off of Lyft’s IPO market capitalization.
Final 2019 IPO valuation: $24.3 billion
Close-up of sign with logo at headquarters of social media company Pinterest in the South of Market (SoMa) neighborhood of San Francisco, California, October 13, 2017. SoMa is known for having one of the highest concentrations of technology companies and startups of any region worldwide.

Pinterest (PINS)

By late 2018, rumors were swirling that Pinterest was nearing an IPO, perhaps even in the first quarter. The image search and sharing app didn’t make that deadline, but it went public at the end of April at $19 per share, or a $10 billion valuation. The wait was worth it: Its debut trading day on the New York Stock Exchange saw shares close 28% above the IPO price. While some irrational exuberance drove shares as high as $35 in the days that followed, even after coming down to earth, PINS stock trades well above its IPO price.
Final 2019 IPO valuation: $10 billion
MIAMI BEACH, FL - FEBRUARY 24:  A general view during the South Beach Wine & Food Festival's Heineken Light Burger Bash, where Al Roker's booth served the Beyond Burger on February 24, 2017 in Miami Beach, Florida.

Beyond Meat (BYND)

In what has undoubtedly gone down as the most exciting IPO of 2019, this El Segundo, California-company founded in 2009 took Wall Street by storm when it went public on May 2. The unassuming food company, which makes “plant-based meats” that imitate popular meat products, raised about $240 million at $25 per share, or a $1.5 billion valuation. Investors couldn’t get enough of the stock though, and shares rocketed 163% higher on the first day of trading. Its premier product is the Beyond Burger, which sells at places like Whole Foods and TGI Fridays, to name a couple.
Final 2019 IPO valuation: $1.5 billion
A man checks a vehicle at the first of Uber's 'Work On Demand' recruitment events where they hope to sign 12,000 new driver-partners, in South Los Angeles on March 10, 2016

Uber (UBER)

Although Beyond Meat is the best IPO of 2019 to date, global ride-hailing giant Uber was easily the most anticipated upcoming IPO. Former Expedia Group CEO Dara Khosrowshahi was hired in 2017 to replace founder Travis Kalanick as the CEO amid a torrent of scandals. Years later, public relations issues still abound, including a driver strike days before Uber’s IPO. The offering once thought to fetch a $120 billion valuation went public at $45 per share, with an $82.4 billion valuation. Even then, it fell 7.6% on day one and another 10% the next trading day. The unprofitable ride-hailing company raised $8.1 billion.
Final 2019 IPO valuation: $82.4 billion

These could be the biggest IPOs of 2019.

  • Slack
  • Airbnb
  • Palantir Technologies
  • Robinhood
  • Postmates
  • WeWork
  • Lyft (LYFT)
  • Pinterest (PINS)
  • Beyond Meat (BYND)
  • Uber (UBER)

By: John Divine (U.S. News)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 3
  • Page 4
  • Page 5
  • Page 6
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Go to Next Page »
  • Search Property
  • Join CARNM
  • CARNM Login
  • NMAR Forms
  • All News
  • All Events
  • Education
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • FAQ
  • Issues/Concerns
6739 Academy Road NE, Ste 310
Albuquerque, NM 87109
admin@carnm.realtor(505) 503-7807

© 2026, Content: © 2021 Commercial Association of REALTORS® New Mexico. All rights reserved. Website by CARRISTO