RENO, NV-Florida-based Fountain Investments owned by M.C. Davis and Heath Rushing has purchased 1.283 million acres of land here from Pico Holdings Inc. CBRE Group Inc. says the $31 million sale is one of the largest land sales, by acreage, in US history.

The land stretches from Reno to the Utah border along Interstate-80. La Jolla, CA-based Pico Holdings had owned the property for 15 years.

Of the 1.2 million acres involved in the transaction, 483,000 acres, encompassing 750 square miles, were purchased outright as fee-simple land. Fountain Investments acquired mineral rights for the other 800,000 acres and recently hired Don Pattalock, formerly of Pico Holdings, to serve as the president of New Nevada Resources, a new entity formed to oversee the mineral rights. Pattalock will also serve as a senior advisor to New Nevada Lands, the entity created to manage the fee-simple land.

The majority of Nevada’s 110,567 square miles—approximately 85%—is either tribal or owned by the federal and state governments, with just 15% of the total land area in the State being privately-owned. The total of this transaction represents just over 12% of the privately-owned land in the State of Nevada, and equates roughly to the size of Rhode Island, according to Steve Lehr, senior managing director with CBRE’s land services group which represented the seller in the transaction.

Brett Edwards of CBRE’s Reno office worked with Lehr on the deal.

“A land sale for more than $30 million is very significant today,” Lehr says. “The good news is that values have appeared to stabilize.” Lehr also notes that while a handful of land deals have traded at prices between $50 and $115 million, most of those involved far less acreage than this transaction. “By acreage, this is one of the largest, if not the largest, brokered land sale ever. It was an extremely complex transaction due to its sheer size, and the buyer pool for this type of asset is quite limited.”

This is the third major land sale completed by Lehr and CBRE’s land services since 2009. The group sold the 13,000-acre Yellowstone Club resort in 2009 in conjunction with CBRE’s golf services group and last year, completed the 7,000-acre sale of Festival Ranch in Phoenix, which is entitled for 14,000 homes and five golf courses. “The recent sale in Nevada represents a trend of investors seeking hard assets in the US and as hedges against inflation,” according to Lehr.

Continue Reading for Free

Register and gain access to:

  • Breaking commercial real estate news and analysis, on-site and via our newsletters and custom alerts
  • Educational webcasts, white papers, and ebooks from industry thought leaders
  • Critical coverage of the property casualty insurance and financial advisory markets on our other ALM sites, PropertyCasualty360 and ThinkAdvisor
NOT FOR REPRINT

© 2024 ALM Global, LLC, All Rights Reserved. Request academic re-use from www.copyright.com. All other uses, submit a request to [email protected]. For more information visit Asset & Logo Licensing.

Natalie Dolce

Natalie Dolce, editor-in-chief of GlobeSt.com and GlobeSt. Real Estate Forum, is responsible for working with editorial staff, freelancers and senior management to help plan the overarching vision that encompasses GlobeSt.com, including short-term and long-term goals for the website, how content integrates through the company’s other product lines and the overall quality of content. Previously she served as national executive editor and editor of the West Coast region for GlobeSt.com and Real Estate Forum, and was responsible for coverage of news and information pertaining to that vital real estate region. Prior to moving out to the Southern California office, she was Northeast bureau chief, covering New York City for GlobeSt.com. Her background includes a stint at InStyle Magazine, and as managing editor with New York Press, an alternative weekly New York City paper. In her career, she has also covered a variety of beats for M magazine, Arthur Frommer's Budget Travel, FashionLedge.com, and Co-Ed magazine. Dolce has also freelanced for a number of publications, including MSNBC.com and Museums New York magazine.