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Home News San Francisco Small Businesses Face Auctioning Due to Mortgage Crisis

San Francisco Small Businesses Face Auctioning Due to Mortgage Crisis

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San Francisco real estate has been in shambles for some time, and the small businesses aren’t left out. A combination antique shop, printmaker, and event venue in San Francisco will face auctioning next year.

A picture of the 'Painted Ladies' of San Francisco
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The business, known as BoxSF and owned by Mark Sackett, sits in a building with a broken window. In addition, its address, 1069 Howard St., is next door to a drug sobering center.

According to his interview with San Francisco Chronicles, Sackett purchased the building at $1.575 million in 2004. However, he cannot refinance the existing $2.5 million mortgage because as many as 30 lenders have refused to help. Consequently, the building and the small businesses face the risk of auctioning next year.

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While there seems to be no hope for BoxSF, Sackett reveals that he expects the building will be sold “at a massive loss.” According to him, six lenders “are not making commercial real estate loans in San Francisco due to the state of the city.”

“[San Francisco city officials] don’t even return my calls,” Sackett said in his interview with San Francisco Chronicles. “They care about bike lanes, nonprofits, safe injection sites… They have just ignored small businesses. I’m just done with San Francisco and the bullsh** here. It’s out of control.”

The news of BoxSF’s auction comes some weeks after the San Francisco Bay Project discontinuation. According to reports, Google and Australian developer Lendlease discontinued the project, which was meant to create 15,000 new units, including condos, multifamily, and affordable units across four neighborhoods in the area.

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Although construction was to begin in 2026 and finish in 2038, the project is currently on hold. In addition, Lendlease paused another San Francisco-based project called Hayes Point in August. The project was also a “47-story mixed-use, live-work-play project,” according to its website. Landlease was initially scheduled to finish the project in 2027. However, the new completion date remains unknown, as this was the estimated date before the pause.

San Francisco’s real estate market has suffered from the ongoing mortgage crisis and real estate market turmoil. The latest example is when the apartment complex for NEMA San Francisco’s commercial mortgage-backed securities loans decreased for the second time. While the 2018 value was $543.6 million, the current loan is down 48% to $279 million.

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According to reports, the building is turning ten years old this year. Also, it is located along 10th Street in the city, near where X, formerly known as Twitter, and Uber have their headquarters. The NEMA building has 754 units across 37 floors.

It also has several above-ground terraces with fire pits, a pool, a gym, and a skylight studio. The building also has spa suites for residents and their pets. However, it is not clear what the price of rent at the NEMA San Francisco is.

California’s state of the real estate market, inbound moves to San Francisco have stagnated in the last couple of years with a rate of 49.5%. In 2019, the rate was 54%, per the National Association of Realtors. California’s inbound moves did not outpace its outbound ones, as the state lost 0.3% of its population in 2022.

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