Media Contact: LaToya Nelson
212.431.2191
latoya.nelson@nyls.edu
“Real Estate Workouts in a
Securitized World”
New York Law School’s Center for Real
Estate Studies
Holds Forum with Panel of Experts
New York, NY
(March 12, 2009)—The Center for Real Estate Studies at New York Law
School will hold a breakfast forum on “Real Estate Workouts in a
Securitized World,” which will explore the problems faced by
borrowers and lenders with the state of today’s economy, on
Wednesday, March 18 at 8:15 a.m. at the Law School, located at 47 Worth
Street.
“Real estate has always been cyclical, but in
past downturns borrowers and lenders were able to meet face-to-face to
negotiate sensible workouts,” Professor Marshall Tracht, Director of
the LL.M. in Real Estate Program at New York Law School, said.
“Today, we face a new and troubling situation: hundreds of billions
of dollars in defaulted loans that have been securitized and are owned by
trusts on behalf of public investors. The health of the financial system,
and our economy overall, depends on the ability of the mortgage holders,
loan servicers, and borrowers to resolve these defaults
efficiently—a task that is far more difficult and complex than we
faced in past downturns.”
Professor Tracht will be a keynote speaker, along with Michael J. Berey, General Counsel and Senior Vice President, First American Title Insurance Company of New York; and William Campbell, Partner, Stroock & Stroock & Lavan LLP.
Michael J.
Berey is General Counsel and Senior Vice President, First American Title
Insurance Company of New York, where is he is also Director of the Board
of Directors. He is a member of the Real Property Law Committee of the
Association of the Bar of the City of New York and a fellow of the
American College of Mortgage Attorneys. He received his J.D. from Boston
College Law School. Berey has written numerous articles on real estate
which have been published in the New York Law Journal and the New York
Real Property Law Journal.
William Campbell is Partner at Stroock
& Stroock & Lavan LLP, where he represents clients in commercial
real estate transactions, including national and investment banks,
securitization lenders, and pension and hedge funds. He received his J.D.
from Fordham University School of Law. Campbell is experienced in the sale
and purchase of performing and non-performing real estate loans and
“REO” properties, and has extensive experience in loan
workouts and restructurings.
Professor Marshall Tracht joined New
York Law School in 2007 and is the Director of the Law School’s new
LL.M. in Real Estate Program. Previously, he was member of the Hofstra
University School of Law faculty since 1994, serving as Vice Dean from
2001 to 2006. He is a member of the editorial board of The Banking Law
Journal, a contributing editor to the Real Estate Law Report, and has
written extensively in the areas of real estate development and
construction financing, workouts, and bankruptcy. Before going into
academia, Professor Tracht practiced in the real estate and bankruptcy
groups at Arnold & Porter LLP in Washington, D.C., and clerked for the
Honorable S. Martin Teel Jr., of the Bankruptcy Court for the District of
Columbia.
This event is open to the public and free of charge.
Registration is required and seating is limited. To register, please visit
www.nyls.edu/realestate or call 212.431.2135.
About the Center for
Real Estate Studies
The Center for Real Estate Studies (CRES) at New
York Law School provides students with a unique educational opportunity to
study both the private practice and public regulation of real estate.
Leveraging the School’s location in the prime real estate market of
New York City, the Center enables students to gain practical experience in
the real estate community and make contacts for future employment. Launched
in 2007, the Center offers an extensive selection of classroom courses,
advanced seminars, and independent study projects, as well as externships
in governmental offices and real estate firms. It also sponsors
conferences, symposia, and continuing legal education programs on a broad
spectrum of issues. The Center for Real Estate Studies aims to help bridge
the existing gap between the private practice and academic study of real
estate, and is one of the premier research centers in the country for the
study of real estate.
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