Billionaires and CEOs bet on San Francisco’s cheap real estate

By Biz Carson | Bloomberg

In San Francisco’s financial district, the One Montgomery building evokes the opulence of America’s turn of the 20th century gilded age. With its Tuscan columns, marble staircases and bronze doors, the Renaissance Revival landmark once housed Crocker Bank, named after one of the tycoons who built the western portion of America’s first transcontinental railroad.

These days, the property exemplifies the city’s shifting fortunes: Ghazi Shami, chief executive officer of the record label Empire, bought it in January for $22.5 million, more than 70% below its selling price only six years before.

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Ghazi grew up in San Francisco, depositing coins from his family’s laundromat at a Crocker Bank branch and then founding Empire in his hometown. In buying One Montgomery, he seized on what he calls a generational market opportunity. “I could have easily picked up, planted the flag in LA or New York, where there’s a fervent music scene,” says Ghazi, 48, who’s worked with artists Kendrick Lamar, Snoop Dogg and Shaboozey and goes by his first name professionally. “I was interested in being an entrepreneur that invested in my city.”

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