Centex
in Negotiations to Sell Pointe West
Galveston
County Daily News, January 2, 2008
by Laura Elder
GALVESTON
— Dallas-based Centex Corp. confirmed Monday that
it was in negotiations to sell some properties in its resort
division, including the Pointe West development on almost
1,000 acres of the island’s westernmost tip.
“We’re
in discussions with a potential buyer,” said Centex
spokesman Eric Bruner. “It’s premature to discuss
any further.”
Centex officials
declined to name the potential new owner of what five years
ago was billed as the most ambitious residential real estate
project on the island.
Officials
also would not specify which other Centex Destination Properties
resorts are the subject of negotiations.
But sources
say the company is in talks with Macfarlan Capital Partners,
a Dallas-based real estate investment management firm.
Officials
with Macfarlan Capital Partners did not return phone calls.
The move by
Centex Destination Properties to sell some resort developments
is among efforts to cut costs and generate cash during what
Bruner called a housing “trough.” The company
owns property from Texas to Hawaii.
The company
said 2007 was one of the most challenging that it and the
industry had faced in decades as the housing downturn proved
“deep and widespread.”
Centex posted
a loss of $975 million, or $7.94 per diluted share, for
the third quarter of fiscal 2007 compared with losses of
$228 million, or $2.02 per diluted share, for the same period
a year before. The company’s third quarter ended Dec.
31.
The losses
were on revenues of $1.9 billion, down 30 percent for the
same period the year before.
News of the
possible sale of Pointe West comes after Centex Destination
Properties said in July it had “adjusted” the
pace of its island development to accommodate market malaise.
A lull in construction at Pointe West has generated speculation.
But representatives
continue to sell at Pointe West, which is eventually supposed
to feature 1,800 single-family and condominium units. The
pool, club and restaurant are open at the resort, where
some homes and condominiums already are built.
The exact
number of units built at Pointe West was not immediately
available Monday, Bruner said.
In March 2003,
when Centex Destination Properties announced its plans for
the island’s West End, it heralded one of the biggest
real estate projects ever proposed in Galveston.
The company
said it planned to develop a walkable community with single-family
homes and multifamily residences from beach to the bay at
San Luis Pass, on the last 3.5 miles of the island. Centex
said only 300 acres would be used for development within
the project, which was tentatively named Pointe San Luis.
Since then,
more developers and investors have staked out spots along
32 miles of island beach. One group is Marquette Land Investment,
which in 2006 paid a reported $33 million for 1,050 acres
of the Chapoton parcel it plans to develop into a massive
resort project to rival that of Centex Destination Properties.
It was the biggest land deal in Galveston’s history.
The Chapoton
Ranch land is between 8 Mile and 11 Mile roads on both sides
of FM 3005. The majority of the tract is north of FM 3005,
with some acreage on the beach and north of Stewart Road.
Centex said
last year it worked to improve cost structures by aggressively
paring the amount of land and lots it owned or controlled,
among other efforts.
Macfarlan
Capital Partners has completed $1 billion in commercial
real estate transactions and $600 million in sponsored investments
through 27 partnerships, according to promotional materials.