Member Spotlight: Ruth Colp-Haber, CRE

“Long-term relationships matter.  Your reputation matters.  Providing great service matters.  Giving back to the community matters.  And being a part of organizations like The Counselors matters.”

Ruth Colp-Haber’s parents and grandfather spent their distinguished careers as medical doctors, so one would presume Ruth’s professional trajectory would follow the same course.  That is until she was told by her mother that she “would never cut it in medicine!” Taking the comment to heart, Ruth became the first person in her family to enter the world of business, graduating Magna Cum Laude from the University of Pennsylvania and earning her MBA in finance from The Wharton School.

After spending a few years as an investment banker on Wall Street including managing a $500 million mortgage trading portfolio, in 1989 Ruth founded Wharton Property Advisors which is a boutique tenant representation firm in New York City.  Given how difficult the real estate market was at the time and despite some discouragement from others, she transitioned into real estate after talking with a business advisor who suggested she would be “a natural” in office leasing.  That sage advice held true as Ruth closed 18 transactions her initial year in business, the first being a 2,000 square-foot lease with a New York hedge fund which has remained a long-time client.  Her largest transaction to date is a 60,000 square-foot lease of raw space at 30 Wall Street where she represented both the landlord and shared space tenant WeWork.

“Small becomes big,” says Ruth. “You do a good job and you get more work.”

More than 500 deals later, she has built her reputation through honesty, diligence, and creativity—and in a city that she says has “the biggest rats in the biggest race.”  Double entendres aside, her motto is “be true to yourself” while recognizing everyone has their own style.

“I take pride in creating solutions that minimize the liability of a lease.  And the mere introduction of an experienced real estate advisor puts the landlord on notice that market realities will not be ignored and that the tenant will be professionally represented in all aspects of the negotiation,” says Ruth.  “This immediately increases a tenant’s negotiating leverage.

“Landlords know that it can take 12 months for a tenant to relocate.  So, when a tenant starts renewal negotiations with only a few months remaining on its lease, it indicates to the landlord that renewal may be the tenant’s only real option.  I often tell clients ‘even if you plan to stay put, act as if you’re ready to move.’  A competitive environment is crucial to an effective negotiation.  The landlord will not negotiate seriously unless it is made clear that the tenant can, and might, relocate—even when they have absolutely no inclination to do so.”

A CRE since 2017, Ruth says the market value of any office space is a function of two factors—the condition of the space, and rental rates both in the building and the neighborhood in general.  “The value of the space to the landlord is a critical factor.  What rent could the landlord expect to realize if the space were vacant and had to be rented to an outside tenant?  If the market dictates a landlord contribution of $20 per square foot toward tenant improvements, and a renewal would not require this expense, the rent for a ten-year renewal should be approximately $2 per square foot lower than the market rent.”

Read the full article here