Wells Fargo Sells San Francisco Office Tower at $60M Loss

The buyer of 13-story building will pay less than half of original acquisition value.

The fire sale of aging office buildings in San Francisco shows no signs of abating: this week, Wells Fargo disclosed it is selling a 13-story Financial District office tower it listed last year for $160M for about $45M.

The bank is preparing to take a $60M loss on the building, located at 550 California Street. Wells Fargo bought the building in 2005 for $108M, or $304 per SF. The sale price translates to about $125 per SF, according to a report in the San Francisco Business Times.

This is the second time 550 California Street has gone on the selling block in the past twelve months. Last June, JLL listed the building, but got no takers for the asking price.

Bids for the 355K SF building at 550 California Street came in around $39M, Green Street reported. The original whisper price was $160M. After Wells Fargo assigned Eastdil Secured to relaunch the listing in January, the whisper price was slashed to $53 million, the report said.

The buyer of the 63-year-old tower has not been disclosed. The bank said it vacated the building as workers shifted to remote work.

Last June, a 33-story building at 333 Market Street went on the market shortly after Wells Fargo renewed its lease for the entire 620K SF tower for another ten years. Columbia Property Trust and Allianz Real Estate Trust have been shopping the building.

Columbia paid $395M for the 622K SF tower at 333 Market in 2012 and now owns a 55% stake in the property.

In pulling back from 550 California Street, Wells Fargo consolidated its office space with a focus on its HQ at 420 Montgomery Street. The reduction in the bank’s office footprint included the termination of a least for office space at 45 Fremont.

Last month, two more downtown office properties were listed with pricing that reflects collapsing office valuations in San Francisco.

CBRE Investment Management is shopping a 138K SF office building at 123 Townsend Street which is 73% leased to PayPal. The property, which is being marketed by Newmark, is expected to get offers around $90 million, well below the $140M CBRE Investment paid for it in July 2020, according to a Green Street report.

NYC-based Clarion Partners is marketing a 157K SF building at 60 Spear Street that is 37% occupied and is valued at $55 million, about half the $107M Clarion paid for the building in 2014, when it was 80% occupied. JLL is marketing the building for Clarion.

When it was first listed in 2020, the asking price for 350 California Street in Downtown San Francisco was $250M. In a sign of the times in the beleaguered city, the office tower was sold last month for about $60M.

MUFG Americas has sold the 286K SF tower at 350 California Street to San Francisco-based developer SKS in a deal estimated at $200 to $225 per SF. A Korean real estate investor is partnering on the deal, according to a report in the San Francisco Business Times.

The 22-story Financial District building is nearly empty. Union Bank, the anchor tenant at 350 California Street, has vacated the building. In 2021, bidding on the building never exceeded $180M and the owners took it off the market.

For 123 Townsend Street, known as the Townsend Building, CBRE Investment also is offering seller financing. Newmark’s marketing materials note that a purchase at such a low basis could allow a buyer to offer competitive rents to fill vacant space. It also touts the stable cash flow provided by PayPal, which still has six years left on its lease and has invested more than $11Mn into its space since 2018.

JLL is pitching 60 Spear Street as a value-added play, highlighting the building’s location in the Financial District, a block from the Embarcadero BART Station and San Francisco Ferry Terminal. The property was renovated in 2013.

Nearly a third of the offices in San Francisco are empty, a vacancy rate that approached 30% in the first quarter of 2023.