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Executive Homes

Relocating:
Philip Morris USA, Prudential moves boost real estate

Directory of Residential Real Estate Firms
A selection of firms that can help navigate Virginia’s executive home & estate marketplace

by Peter Galuszka
Virginia Business
June 2003

When Michael E. Pfeil commutes to work, he takes a one-hour-long express train ride — one way — from his home near Princeton, N.J., to Philip Morris USA current headquarters near Grand Central Station in the middle of New York City. From there it’s a 30-minute walk or a $5 cab ride. If he misses the express train, the local takes about 30 minutes longer. In the evening, he repeats the process.

But now that Philip Morris plans on moving its headquarters to Richmond, Pfeil’s commute can be cut to as little as 10 minutes, depending upon where he and his family decide to buy a home. He’s one of the 680 Philip Morris USA headquarters staff who is expected to take up new offices in the former Reynolds Metals building in Henrico County just west of the Richmond line by next June. “I will definitely have a shorter commute, even if we move to the mountains,” Pfeil says.

At least in terms of commutes and housing prices, the recently announced relocation is good news for the Richmond area. Even better news came in late April when Richmond-based Wachovia Securities announced it would likewise relocate employees from New York-based brokerage units of Prudential Financial to Virginia’s capital. Published reports claim 1,000 employees will move, although a Wachovia Securities spokesman says the number hasn’t been decided.

The announcements underscore what has long been a fact of life in corporate America. Mergers, consolidations and globalization continue, despite the weak economy. Uprooting executives, families and companies remains a fairly commonplace event and can involve most areas of the Old Dominion. And when firms do pack up and move, they are aided by small armies of relocation specialists and real estate agents who are experts in keeping the transition smooth and costs in check.

Indeed, real estate agents, relocation officials and local merchants are agog. Philip Morris’ relocation means that scores of highly paid mid- and high-level managers, with salaries averaging about $130,000 a year, will be looking for houses, schools and amenities. At least 14 senior level executives are involved. Local real estate agents are seeing stars in their eyes. “People think their ship is coming in,” says one Richmond Realtor. “They’re already counting their million dollars in commissions. This is just like Motorola in the mid-1990s (the chipmaker’s planned factory failed to materialize) but this time, it will be real.”

Leading the way for the Philip Morris move is Relocation Resources International, a relocation firm based in Massachusetts, and Fairfax-based Long & Foster Realty. Realtors from Long & Foster are already scouring neighborhoods for higher-end housing. They’ve even bused Philip Morris employees from New York to Richmond for housing searches and conducted information sessions in New York. At Philip Morris’ Park Avenue headquarters there’s a “Richmond Room” where employees can pick up visitors’ guides and information about good neighborhoods.

Richmond, of course, isn’t the only part of the state with work-related transfers. Thousands of military, federal government workers and civilian contractors come and go each year in Hampton Roads and Northern Virginia. Richmond, Lynchburg and Roanoke all boast of global firms, such as Dupont or Framatome or ITT Industries that handle much corporate relocation.

For now, however, the focus is on Richmond because of the back-to-back additions of Philip Morris and Prudential. While Richmond can’t boast of the haute culture of the Big Apple, it does have some big advantages. Real estate industry calculations show that a salary of $130,000 in Richmond can buy a lifestyle that would require a salary of $355,000 in Manhattan. Housing is much less than it is in the New York area. A luxury four-bedroom, 3,500-square-foot house within a 90-minute commute to Philip Morris’ Manhattan offices can cost $850,000, while a comparable house with only one third the commute time in the Richmond area can cost roughly half as much. Property taxes are much less, too. One home in Princeton, N.J., where some top Philip Morris executives live, is on the market for a cool $5.25 million. Annual property taxes are a stunning $59,779. A similar property in Goochland County, for instance, would require annual taxes of only about $35,000.

Having dealt in such a fast-paced market, the cigarette company officials will likely prove to be smart buyers. “They know the cost of living is less, but they know not to pay too much,” says Monica Dirom, a Long & Foster Realtor at its Grove Avenue office. She’s helping Philip Morris USA chief executive and chairman Michael E. Szymanczyk search for homes. Szymanczyk now lives in Darien, Conn., one of the most expensive areas in the U.S., where housing averages more than $957,000 for a single family home. He’s likely to be looking in the upper end of Richmond’s real estate market since his cash compensation last year was nearly $2 million.

Even though a weak economy has cut average corporate moves by about 20 percent of late, the need to place executives in far flung spots is still strong because business has become more global, and costs are an ever more important factor. Philip Morris, for example, expects to save about $60 million a year by moving to its new headquarters. The cigarette maker needs to save money because its products are taking big hits from discount cigarette makers and a flurry of health-related lawsuits.

“What drives relocation is cost and talent pool,” says Kay Kutt, regional vice president for global business development at Paragon Decision Resources Inc. Often, these are opposing themes within corporations but they both play critical roles. Companies do need to cut costs as they respond to the need to reach out to domestic and international markets. At the same time, they must try to keep employees with critical talents happy as they move. Oftentimes, though, “where the CEO wants to be located is the driver,” says Kutt, whose customers include Abbot Laboratories and Caterpillar.
Relocation companies offer employees information about their new homes including the state of the real estate market, schools, standardized test scores for schools and information about retail shopping, recreation and cultural activities. Typically, relocation companies arrange for workers and their spouses to stay in local hotels on house-hunting trips, organize real estate agents and temporary housing and help with moving companies.

What companies offer can be diverse and often follows where the firm can get the biggest tax break. Some companies, for instance, are generous with meal allowances and let workers stay for months in temporary quarters. Some allow more trips back to visit families before their moves than other firms. Besides tax breaks, a company’s generosity is often motivated by its goals. “One question is whether you are moving people who are key for talent development,” says Kutt.

International moves are more complicated since visas, greater distances and customs and foreign tax regulations are involved. So are inconveniences. One executive of a shipping line told of a family whose heirlooms and other personal items were being moved from Europe to the U.S. in a shipboard container. A freak wave swept the entire container overboard in the middle of the Atlantic.

In Philip Morris’ case, about 680 employees, from mailroom workers to the CEO, are all being offered jobs in the Richmond area. Real estate agents say that the cigarette executives are stunned to find they can buy a house in Richmond’s West End or in the Fan and be in their new headquarters in a matter of minutes rather than hours. Hence, many are already looking for homes in close-in areas, such as the River Road corridor, the Windsor Farms subdivision, the newer subdivision of Wyndham in western Henrico County and at larger properties in the Manakin Sabot areas of eastern Goochland County.
Some real estate agents, however, say that there’s a shortage of high-end property in the Richmond area — an opinion other agents reject. Horse farms may be attractive to some, but some say houses over $500,000 in price have become less available. “I have less land now than I have in the 20 years I’ve been fooling with real estate,” says Frank Carter, of Goochland’s Carter Realty Co. In late April, for instance, there were only 13 houses for sale for more than $500,000 in Goochland, Carter says. A Web search shows that in the Princeton, N.J. area, 40 houses worth more than $1 million were available.

To be sure, there are trade-offs with the move to Richmond. The capital area doesn’t have the excitement, shows, concerts, dramas, restaurants or sports that New York does. Philip Morris’ CFO Dinyar Devitra has an apartment at the Beresford on Manhattan’s Central Park West, one of the most sought-after addresses in the U.S. Two-bedroom apartments with views of Central Park regularly sell for $2.3 million. Devitra’s neighbors included comedian Jerry Seinfeld and actress Nastassia Kinski. For his part, executive Pfeil says that he’s found Richmond housing prices surprisingly high — perhaps a reflection of the tight market at present.

Shopping has long been an especially weak point, although Richmond is due to see two new shopping malls open this fall with toney store such as Saks Fifth Avenue, Lord & Taylor and Nordstrom. That news has made moving to Richmond more appealing to some Philip Morris families. It’s also family friendly. “We thought there were great family services, and the public school options are very good,” says Howard A. Willard, senior vice president for youth smoking prevention. Pfeil says he’s been traveling to Richmond for 20 years, but never realized that it had a good number of trendy, upscale neighborhoods such as Carytown with small boutiques. The city also has more of an academic atmosphere than he thought.

Meanwhile, Wachovia Securities addition of many Prudential Securities workers will only make the Richmond real estate market hotter. The Richmond investment house now has about 1,700 workers downtown and in Henrico County. Cheaper costs are a reason for the move, which won’t be completed for 18 months.

Already, the cigarette maker’s move is drawing national attention. “PHILIP MORRIS, QUITTING PARK AVENUE, AIMS TO SELL STAFF ON SOUTH’S EASY LIVING” read a recent headline in The Boston Globe. The article notes Richmond’s choice location two hours from mountains, the ocean and Washington. What’s more, Virginia is so tobacco friendly that state cigarette taxes are only 2.5 cents per pack, the lowest in the nation. And unlike in New York, Philip Morris workers will be able to smoke their free cigarettes on the job.

With Joan Warner in New York


Return to Virginia Business - June 2003