In 1968, he worked for Morse-Diesel Construction Company where he was responsible for the supervision and construction of more than one million square feet of new office space.[4]
In 1972, he joined the family business managing its real estate assets (8.5 million square feet of real estate worth about $3 billion in 2010) and helping the growth of his family's Manhattan brokerage firm then known as Newmark Grubb[3] which he has headed since 1978.[1]
In October 2011, Newmark Grubb Knight Frank was acquired by BGC Partners.[7] Like his father, his strategy has always been to hold onto real estate over the long term.[8]
In 2015, he was mentioned in the biography of Governor Andrew Cuomo of New York (The Contender: Andrew Cuomo) in a book chapter describing the evolution of New York State Racing, including the international investment sector. Jeffrey Gural was the owner and operator of Vernon Downs Racetrack during the research report, Reflections on Community Integration in Rural Communities in Upstate New York (Racino, 2014).
In 2017, Gural became chairman of GFP Real Estate LLC when Newmark Holdings diverged from Newmark Group and changed its name.[9]
Philanthropy and activism
Gural is committed to cleaning up the harness racing industry: all horses that run on his tracks are subject to blood and urine samples to test for illicit drugs and the training centers or farms can be inspected at any time by his investigator.[10]
In 2014, Gural applied for a license to add table games to Tioga Downs. The state government rejected his application. Gural publicly expressed anger over the rejection. Governor Andrew Cuomo immediately requested that the state gaming commission add a casino upstate; As of 2015, Gural was the only applicant for that license. Gural and his wife have donated to several of Cuomo's political campaigns.[11]
In 2016, Gural was an important backer of Public Question 1, a ballot measure that would amend New Jersey's constitution to allow casino Gambling in North Jersey.[12] After numerous polls showed that Question 1 had no chance to pass Gural, along with Paul Fireman, pulled their financial support for the measure. Bill Cortese, the leader of Trenton’s Bad Bet, a group opposed to the question, said, “Trenton’s Bad Bet will not be distracted by billionaire developers throwing temper tantrums because they don’t get what they want.”[13] Gural blamed the failure of Question 1 on the general political climate and said that he might sponsor a similar ballot measure in 2018.[citation needed]