Recognition of the improvements undertaken by W&H Properties is revealed in the number of publicly traded companies that have chosen to relocate to portfolio properties. Public companies seek quality and consistency: they want high quality properties in the best neighborhoods, top-of-the-line offices, convenience, state-of-theart facilities and excellent services.
It's no surprise, then, that many publicly-traded companies have gravitated to W&H properties in recent years. Today, there are tenants in each of our buildings that are listed on the NYSE, the NASDAQ or AMEX. They include:
NYSE
Bank of America Corp. (The Lincoln Building)
Charles Schwab Corp. (The Lincoln Building)
EDO Corp. (The Lincoln Building)
The GAP Inc. (250 West 57th Street)
Gerber Technology, owned by Gerber Scientific (1359 Broadway)
JP Morgan Chase (250 West 57th Street and The Lincoln Building)
Keane (1359 Broadway)
Payless Shoesource, Inc. (The Lincoln Building)
Sun Life Financial Inc. (The Lincoln Building)
York International Corp. (The Lincoln Building)
NASDAQ
Warnaco (501 Seventh Avenue)
EMMIS Communications Corporation (The Lincoln Building)
AMEX
Bear Stearns & Company, Inc. (The Lincoln Building)
"These additions to our tenant rosters say a lot about the improvements we have made in our buildings," says Anthony E. Malkin, president of Wien & Malkin Supervisory Services, the asset manager for the W&H portfolio. "We are delivering quality properties and service to the marketplace to tenants who expect the best the market has to offer without sacrificing value. W&H performs for them so that they, in turn, can perform for their stakeholders."