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‘This is just phase one’: Tradepoint Atlantic agrees to long-term deal with Port Tampa Bay

Tradepoint Atlantic is headed south, with plans for a $50 million-plus project at Port Tampa Bay that could significantly boost the port’s container business. Port Tampa Bay commissioners on Tuesday approved a 40-year lease on 35 acres to Tradepoint subsidiary Tradepoint Tampa, which plans to build an approximately 500,000-square-foot facility for the trans-loading of cargo between ocean containers, trucks and rail cars.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Sinclair Broadcast swings to profit in fourth quarter, misses revenue forecast

Sinclair Broadcast Group swung to a profit in the fourth quarter, but revenue plunged, missing Wall Street’s expectations. The Hunt Valley-based TV station owner reported income Wednesday of $55 million, or 79 cents per share in the October-to-December period, compared with a loss of $89 million, or loss of $1.18 per share, in the fourth quarter of 2021.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Medifast’s Q4 revenue declines as CEO predicts losses will continue in 2023

Medifast Inc.’s fourth quarter earnings were down, capping off a year of decline that the company thinks will continue into 2023. The Baltimore weight loss firm’s revenue declined from $377.83 million in the fourth quarter of 2021 to $377.25 million in the fourth quarter of 2022. The company reported profits of $26.5 million or $2.43 per share, compared to $34 million or $2.93 per share in the year-ago period, a 22% drop in profits.

T. Rowe Price joins Bridgehouse Independent Platform, launches new allocation fund

Baltimore-based asset manager T. Rowe Price Wednesday announced it joined Bridgehouse Asset Managers and launched the T. Rowe Price Global Allocation Fund through Bridgehouse’s independent platform. The T. Rowe Price Global Allocation Fund seeks a combination of long-term capital appreciation and income by investing in a diverse global portfolio of stocks, bonds and alternatives diversified across interests.

snow shovel, winter service, winter
Where’s all the snow? Weak winter wreaks havoc on some businesses, creates opportunity for others

We don’t know about you, Baltimore, but “Winter Wonderland” was particularly triggering this past holiday season. The region has seen a gray, dreary, mostly snow-free winter, with the first measurable snowfall not coming until just a few weeks ago. And even then, it barely registered — just 0.2 inches. This is not normal. Typically, Maryland sees an average of 20 inches of snow in a season. Until this year, Baltimore’s weakest winter in terms of snowfall was the 1949-1950 season, when just 0.7 inches fell, according to Brendon Rubin-Oster, lead forecaster at the Baltimore/Washington forecast office of the National Weather service. “We could beat that record this year,” Rubin-Oster said.

Delays with lien sheets frustrate Baltimore’s real estate industry

When Michael Moiseyev left New York City a few months ago to run Baltimore’s finance department, he became intimately aware of a major pain point in the city’s real estate market — delays with lien sheets. Those documents, sometimes called lien certificates or lien certs, show whether a property owner owes money to the city. Moiseyev said he bought a condo in the Inner Harbor, with a nice view and in walking distance to City Hall, but it took a few weeks extra to settle all the paperwork. That was due to a backlog of lien sheet requests that has been frustrating the city’s real estate industry since last fall when a few key retirements turned a typically two-week turnaround time into a seven-to-eight-week ordeal, according to industry professionals.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Bed Bath & Beyond is closing seven Maryland stores, including three in the Baltimore region

About half of the Bed Bath & Beyond stores in Maryland are slated to close, including three in the Baltimore region, as the retailer adjusts to changing shopping patterns. Stores in Annapolis, Bel Air and Westminster are among dozens of locations the retailer announced it will close in a turnaround plan. Store closing sales are expected to continue over the next few weeks and months, the company said. The big box retailer plans to keep operating about 360 Bed Bath & Beyond stores and an additional 120 stores under the buybuy BABY banner across the U.S.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Prime Rib signs 15-year lease to remain in Mt. Vernon — and expand

The Prime Rib is in historic Mt. Vernon to stay. That’s the word from owner Rebecca Dolan who late Thursday signed a 15-year lease to remain at 1101 N. Calvert St. after a couple of years of debate over whether to move the venerable restaurant to the Village of Cross Keys. Lease negotiations took months and will include an interior expansion and $4 million in upgrades and renovations expected to begin in the coming months. Gilbert Trout, principal of Trout Daniel & Associates, brokered the deal for landlord Southern Management. Southern Management owns and manages the Horizon House, a brick tower at Chase and Calvert streets with 220 apartments.

Proposed new BGE rate would increase average customer monthly bills by $31 after three years

Baltimore Gas & Electric Co. filed a request Friday with state regulators to increase the rate it charges customers for delivery of both gas and electricity over the next three years by an average of 5% a year. The requested rate increase, if approved by the Maryland Public Service Commission, would boost the average customers’ monthly bill by about $31.07 after three years to support spending by the Baltimore-based utility. The rates would take effect Jan. 1. For the utility, which serves 1.3 million electric customers and 700,000 natural gas customers in central Maryland, the filing is the first step in a monthslong public review process requiring commission approval. The commission can approve, reject or, as it often does, scale back BGE’s planned increase.

Read More: Baltimore Sun
Congressional Village retail center poised for revitalization under new owners

A joint venture that includes Beltsville-based IVEA Restaurant Group has closed on its $44 million acquisition of the Shops at Congressional Village with plans to bring a host of new tenants to the Rockville Pike retail center. IVEA teamed up with Windfall Group USA, Caspian Group and Pacifica Square USA to cast the winning bid for the Shops after its prior owner, an affiliate of Ronald Cohen Management Co., defaulted on a 2019 loan backed by the property. The sale was recorded with the Montgomery County Circuit Court on Feb. 8. The center was a little more than 60% leased at the time of the auction to a mix of tenants including 84 Lumber, MyEyeDr and a Verizon store, but its new owners say they’ve inked a half-dozen leases combining for around 30,000 square feet in the 99,463-square-foot center at 1701 Rockville Pike.

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