Mark Cuban: Good at Owning Basketball Teams, Terrible at Real Estate

Categories: Real Estate

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Dallas -- nay, America -- has many good reasons to love Mark Cuban. He turned the Mavericks into NBA champions. He's the most accessible billionaire in the universe. He yells at terrible refs on our behalf and feuds with the Perots. He was a disruptor before disrupting was cool. But for all of Cuban's endearing qualities, let's be honest about something: He's really terrible at real estate.

The sample size here is small, just the office complex he wants to build at Preston Road and Northwest Highway and Wonderview, the gigantic mixed-use development he was going to build on a landfill next to Cedar Crest Golf Course.

Wonderview was announced in 2010 to great fanfare and rosy predictions that it would save southern Dallas. It would be massive, 176 acres of shops, apartments, townhouses, sports fields, parks, the Mavs' headquarters and so on costing up to $1 billion Construction was imminent.

In retrospect, the name alone should have been enough to trigger bullshit detectors citywide. "Wonderview" sounds like a ride at Disney World. Not a cool one like Space Mountain either but one in the little kid area with polyresin Dumbos and bored 3-year-olds. How can that development not flop?

Four-and-a-half-years on, Cuban's shovel has yet to pierce the earth, and neighbors and everyone else have mostly forgotten about the grandiose promises. Even the government-subsidized apartments haven't been built, thanks to HUD's refusal to support the project.

See also: Wonderful Wonderview: Proposed Development Plans

"Nobody's paying attention because that property's been over there vacant for over 100 years," says Betty Culbreath, the district's plan commissioner. She doesn't think Wonderview is dead, but she's never met with Cuban or his reps and there is no sign that activity is imminent

Cuban is not unique among real estate developers for over-promising and under-delivering. Deals fall apart. Relationships sour. Even realistic plans can be derailed.

Cuban's proposed office buildings at Preston and Northwest Highway is stupid for different reasons. From an economic standpoint, putting offices there makes sense. Preston Center is the hottest/most lucrative office market in the city right now, and there's plenty of demand for more space. It's how he's gone about getting in on the Preston Center office market that's curious.

As we mentioned last week, Cuban has been collecting properties on that corner since 1988. He now owns six valued on the tax roles at $7 million. This year, according to DCAD's property tax calculator, he'll owe about $200,000 in property taxes. Stretched over three decades, the total he's paid to Dallas County is well into the millions.

See also: Mark Cuban Wants to Turn Several Preston Hollow Estates into Office Buildings

That's little more than a rounding error for Cuban, but paying it only makes sense as an investment if there's a payoff at the end, and it's all but guaranteed that Cuban's office buildings won't get built. Trying to do so in a corner of Preston Hollow that is marginally wealthier and more powerful than the one that just killed two less offensive residential projects is akin to vigorously shaking a hornet's nest while naked and deathly allergic to hornets, doubly so when you go about it as Cuban has. Even die-hard opponents of Transwestern's plans to build an eight-story apartment complex on the northeast corner gave the firm credit for transparency and trying to compromise with neighbors. Cuban, by contrast, started razing fences and uprooting trees unannounced and hired a property developer, Michael Romo, whose flippancy has not endeared him to neighbors.

Maybe, though, Cuban is playing a game that's longer and smarter than non-billionaires can comprehend.

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11 comments
Steeve
Steeve

Shit takes time, dumbfuck.

LionelHutz
LionelHutz

My guess is he'll sell some to that Bible church for a nice profit. They seem to be busting at the seams and at least one of his tracts is abutting church owned lots on the NE corner of Douglas and NWHwy. 

judd_bradbury
judd_bradbury

Mr. Cuban has a very sharp mind for business. He has been buying these properties since the bottom of the financial crisis. I reviewed a couple of them at the same time and wondered why he was buying. It is a little bit more clear now. No one ever knows exactly what will happen with investments. What can be known is that Mr. Cuban will make money on these properties whether they are re-zoned or not. Some of the purchase prices were below market.


At the same time during the financial crisis, Mr. Cuban was buying corporate bonds by the basketful. Very few investors had the deep understanding to do this. Correctly he identified that the corporations were stronger than the governments.

I have enjoyed a couple of economic debates with Mr. Cuban. The last time was over the future of YouTube. It is clear now that it did not turn into a hairball of copyright lawsuits.


Like every other investor sometimes you get it right and sometimes you get it wrong. Stupid? No. Crazy? Maybe. In some circles that is a complement.


elpinchederelicto
elpinchederelicto

stick to minority run schools, JWP, bullshit toll roads that nobody wants and music reviews DO.

ozonelarryb
ozonelarryb

Mark will never 'lose' on this. Even if it's only greenmail down the road.

But good for him that he didn't crawl into bed with a council member or city development office employee....

Rooster0620
Rooster0620

This article once again reinforces my belief that no one at the Observer should ever...ever..write about topics concerning business or economics, since it is painfully obvious they have absolutely zero experience at either one.

The likes of Eric Nicholson calling a Mark Cuban investment "stupid" is almost laughable.

mavdog
mavdog topcommenter

@Rooster0620 

While the author's choice of the word "stupid" may be in itself unintelligent. he did leave the reader with "Maybe, though, Cuban is playing a game that's longer and smarter than non-billionaires can comprehend".

I will say this about the Northwest Highway plan: there is close to a zero probability those properties ever become a commerical development. They do not have the zoning entitlements, and the neighborhood will never support a rezone. In fact the neighborhood will fight a rezone tooth and nail.

Rooster0620
Rooster0620

I never said it was "smart", I just said you can't call it stupid.

You don't know what he paid for it. You don't know how it fits in with the rest of his portfolio. You don't know the eventual purpose...and most important of all...

...you don't know what he'll eventually seller for.

This means neither you, Eric Nicholson, or anyone else on this blog can determine if it's a "stupid" investment.

James_the_P3
James_the_P3

@Rooster0620 I don't know what he paid for them, that is true.  I do know, however, that he is buying residential properties in Preston Hollow at the height of the market.


And that would be okay, if there were some prospect of that property being rezoned for commercial development.  But there's not.


One day, he may sell off these properties; he may even turn a modest profit.  But it's hard to see how.


Regardless, I don't think it's premature to characterize this as a questionable investment given what we know about it right now.  Nor do I think it's unfair to identify "Wonderview" as being "terrible."

Rooster0620
Rooster0620

No. You don't know what he paid for it. Did he overpay for it? Did he underpay? Was it one property included in a portfolio of properties purchased? You also don't know that he purchased it at the "height" of the market, if for no other reason than no one on the planet knows what the "height" of the market is.

So essentially I think it's quite premature to characterize this investment as "questionable" given the absolute nothing you know about it.

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