Jerry J. Moore
Jerry J. Moore | |
---|---|
Born | 1927 Houston, Texas |
Died | November 23, 2008 (age 80) |
Nationality | American |
Spouse | Jean H. Moore |
Children | 3 |
Jerry J. Moore (1927–2008) was an American real estate developer and by 1989, he was the largest shopping-center developer in the United States.[1][2]
Biography
[edit]Moore was born in Houston to Polish-Jewish immigrants in 1927, the son of a plumber.[1][2] He attended San Jacinto High School in Houston but dropped out after sophomore year to sell vacuum cleaners door-to-door (he would later earn a high school equivalency diploma in 1987).[1] In 1958, he founded Jerry J. Moore Investments, and after borrowing money from banker Irvin Shlenker (father of Sidney Shlenker), he purchased a small house in North Houston which he fixed up and sold.[1] Using the proceeds he repeated the same pattern, purchasing houses, small apartment buildings, and strip malls primarily in working-class neighborhoods in Houston.[1] In the mid 1960s, he focused on finding run-down strip malls in high-traffic areas and after sprucing them up, he would increase the rent anywhere from 20 to 40 percent.[1] He was able to undercut his competitors who focused on new construction as he used his own workers for renovation and maintenance.[1] The strategy was very successful and he soon stopped renovating houses and apartments to focus on strip malls and then began purchasing full-fledged shopping malls.[1] By 1989, he was the largest shopping-center developer in the United States with more than 160 properties and 19 million square feet of space in Texas of which 70 percent was in greater Houston.[1] In 1991, Texas Monthly ranked him the third richest Texan.[1]
In 1993, he planned to take his company public as a real estate investment trust and hired Kidder Peabody but the appetite for new REITs had soured.[1] In 1994, he again contemplated going public in partnership with Morgan Stanley who was interested in buying his portfolio.[1] In January 1995, Morgan Stanley agreed to purchase a controlling interest in 50 percent of Moore's properties for $400 million (although $300 million was in assumed debt).[1][3] In 1997, after his two-year non-competition agreement with Morgan Stanley ended, Moore returned to purchasing shopping malls.[1] His net worth was then estimated at between $600 million and $800 million.[1]
Personal life
[edit]In 1955, he married Jean H. Moore; they had three children: Terri Moore Conwell; Jeff Moore; and Shelly Moore.[4] He died on November 23, 2008, and was buried at Beth Yeshurun Cemetery.[4]
Moore purchased an eighteenth-century French château that had been transplanted to Texas brick-by-brick.[5][1] Moore also had an extensive car collection with over 700 antique cars[6] including thirty Duesenbergs.[1][2] Most of his assets were allocated to limited partnerships so that his children would not have to pay estate taxes after his death.[1]
Moore's creed was "A dollar borrowed is a dollar earned."[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s Texas Monthly: "Moore of the Same - Until the early nineties, Houston’s Jerry J. Moore was the shopping center king of Texas. He’d like to be again, and he has a plan." by Claire Poole October 1998
- ^ a b c People Magazine: "For $6.5 Million Jerry Moore Drives Home a Wheel Gem" By Ron Arias July 21, 1986
- ^ Chicago Tribune: "Mega-deal For Moore" February 12, 1995
- ^ a b Houston Chronicle: "Jerry J. Moore" November 25, 2008
- ^ Swamplot: "Jerry J. Moore’s French Chateau Is Still With Us — At Least Most of It" December 10, 2010
- ^ New York Times: "A RED-HOT MARKET IN VINTAGE CARS" by James Kaplan December 4, 1988