Sunday, July 5, 2009

Commercial Real Estate 2.0 - Looking for Signs of Life in Retail


Searching for Signs of Life in Retail @ Yahoo! Video


SpacePlace.net ~ The Commercial Real Estate industry's definitive source for searching, listing and connecting to commercial real estate properties, professionals, and market information.

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Wednesday, June 24, 2009

SpacePlace.net - Commercial Real Estate 2.0 Bailout News

SpacePlace.net ~ The Commercial Real Estate industry's definitive source for searching, listing and connecting to commercial real estate properties, professionals, and market information.
A Bailout for Commercial Real Estate @ Yahoo! Video

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Saturday, June 20, 2009

Commercial Real Estate Outlook

The state of commercial real estate has become a growing concern for the economy. Martin Cohen, chairman and co-CEO of Cohen & Steers Capital Management, shares his outlook for the sector.

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Friday, June 19, 2009

Real Estate Lawyer Gary Wachtel on Commercial Tenant Strategies

The "Apocalyptic" Commercial Real-Estate Crash

Rough Times For Commercial Real Estate CRE

Friday, May 29, 2009

Commercial Real Estate CRE - The Economy's Anvil

Commercial real estate may soon bulldoze the green shoots.

A coming wave of defaults on loans to developers of condominiums, office buildings and malls could do significant damage to the already deflating economy. That was the overwhelming concern expressed at a public hearing of the Congressional Oversight Panel on Thursday that focused on corporate and commercial real estate lending.

The COP was set up last fall as part of legislation that gave the Treasury Department permission to spend $700 billion to rescue the nation's ailing financial system. The panel, which is headed by Harvard Law professor Elizabeth Warren, has no legislative or official regulatory powers. It is supposed to monitor the Treasury's spending and report back to Congress as to whether it is being effective in boosting lending, and shoring up the financial sector.

Thursday's hearing was one of a number of public forums the COP is hosting on different segments of the lending market. Warren is often criticized for being too critical of banks and their lending practices. But at the hearing on commercial real estate Warren focused on how big a problem future loan defaults will be and what should be done about it.

She got an earful. Richard Parkus, an analyst at Deutsche Bank, said he thought two-thirds of all commercial real estate loans due in the next few years, hundreds of billions of dollars worth, could go bust. Jeffrey DeBoer, president of trade group The Real Estate Roundtable, fretted that problems in the lending business could cost the nation thousands more construction and real estate jobs. Next up, Congressman Jerrold Nadler of New York expressed worry that the country was headed for a lost decade of economic stagnation.

There were not a lot of solutions offered. Nadler said he thought the government should create new banks. Those banks, unencumbered by souring loans, would boost lending. Nadler said he thought private investors would be interested in helping to fund the new banks. A number of the panelists thought the government's TALF and PPIP programs meant to boost lending were helpful, but not the answer. Parkus said he thought extending terms of commercial loans set to default would only delay the problem and make it worse. As more and more bad loans pile up, he predicted, it will become progressively harder for any of them to get refinanced.

What was clear from the hearing is that commercial real estate could turn out to be a much bigger problem for banks and the economy than the Treasury Department, the Federal Reserve and other bank regulators seem to believe. "The question is what percentage of commercial real estate loans will have trouble refinancing," Parkus said at the COP hearing. "It is likely to be a big problem."

How big? In the government's recent bank stress test, examiners predicted that commercial real estate loan losses for the 19 largest banks in the nation would be far lower than the value of home loans that go unpaid in the next two years--$53 billion versus $185 billion. But Warren said she thought the two-year horizon of the government stress test may have understated the size of the banks' commercial real estate problem. The government assumed different default rates for each of the 19 banks for commercial real estate and other types of loans. Warren said the government had not given much information as to what determined the default rate used for each bank; she plans to release a report on the stress test in early June.

Parkus concurred that the stress tests probably went too light on potential losses. He expects that a little over a $1 trillion in commercial real estate loans will be up for refinancing in the next four years. Because of falling real estate prices and lower rental incomes, he said, as many as two-thirds of those loans may not be eligible for refinancing and could end in default.

Kevin Pearson, executive vice president of M&T Bank, said he thinks banks will be able to avoid many of those loan losses through loan modifications, or "through blocking and tackling," as he put it. Parkus, though, said that outlook was too positive. He countered that banks will have a very tough time refinancing the poor loans they made at the height of the credit bubble. "There are very large losses embedded in the system," said Parkus.

Commercial Real Estate — the Economy's Anvil
By Stephen Gandel

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

By Sue Kirchhoff, USA TODAY

Tom Howorth is feeling the impact of the crumbling real estate market.
The Oxford, Miss., architect's firm has dwindled from 18 people to 11 since mid-2007 as clients have postponed or canceled major projects. The situation appears to be getting worse. Colleagues in other parts of the country, who had been faring better, now tell Howorth they are also starting to see a steep drop in business.

"People have lost confidence," says Howorth, a principal at Howorth & Associates Architects. "Whether it's a church that doesn't know what their membership is going to be able to do (with its building fund) … to universities whose endowments have taken a huge hit, to individuals who are saying, 'Look at what's happened to real estate values,' to developers who aren't even thinking about spending money in this economy."

Contractors, investors and developers are bracing for what could be the worst real estate crunch since the early 1990s, when the industry built a small city's worth of speculative office buildings that later went begging for tenants. Commercial property sales plunged 73% last year, according to Real Capital Analytics. Vacancy rates are rising, and hundreds of large properties are in default. The American Institute of Architects' billing index, a leading indicator of construction six months ahead, is at a record low. Unemployment in the construction industry is 15.3%, well above the average 7.2% jobless rate.

The 1990s crisis was sparked by federal tax breaks that encouraged overinvestment and overbuilding. This time around, the real estate frenzy was fueled by cheap credit, which allowed investors and developers to bid up prices of existing properties. But the economic fallout could be similar: rising bankruptcies and unemployment and slower economic growth at a time when the economy is already reeling from a historic housing depression.

"This is a rolling problem that's only going to get worse," says Jeffrey DeBoer, president of the Real Estate Roundtable, estimating that about $400 billion worth of commercial real estate mortgages will come due by the end of 2009. Investors and developers might have trouble refinancing many loans, due to tight credit and falling rents and property values.
"Businesses need to be able to access the credit market when their debt comes due and their business needs require. Right now, they're not able to," DeBoer says.

The Roundtable is part of an industrywide coalition that's pushing the Federal Reserve and Treasury Department to create a special lending program to resuscitate the commercial mortgage-backed securities market. The industry says such a move would provide liquidity and restore confidence to a sector of the credit market that has essentially frozen. The Treasury Department and Fed have not issued a formal decision, but Treasury noted in November that a similar program aimed at auto, credit card and student loan lenders could be extended to include commercial mortgage-backed securities.

In a recent analysis, Citigroup noted that the sharp drop in the commercial mortgage-backed securities market is putting more pressure on banks, forcing them to extend existing loans. But the Citigroup analysts said that problems are well below the levels of the 1990s, and that banks should be able to manage the commercial mortgage-backed securities that are coming due.
Though the problems in the non-residential sector of the real estate market aren't likely to be nearly as calamitous as the housing market collapse, they could contribute to a deeper and longer recession. The non-residential real estate decline could shave about a third of a percentage point, or $30 billion, from U.S. economic growth in 2009, says Aaron Smith, senior economist at Moody's Economy.com.

Banks held more than 50% of commercial real estate loans in the second quarter of 2008. Smaller, regional lenders have a relatively larger exposure to the commercial real estate market than large money-center banks, Smith notes. The charge-off rate for such loans is about 1.1% but is quickly rising.

Government regulators moved to tighten standards for commercial real estate lending several years ago as the market heated up. The Fed, for example, imposed more stringent guidelines for banks that had a large concentration of commercial real estate loans.
Some lenders that initially fought the move now say it was helpful. But they also say the current tough stance of bank regulators is making it hard for them to extend new credit and may be adding to market uncertainty.

"We've had situations where we've shown the (federal bank) examiners a particular appraisal on a property, but they've not accepted it and told us the property was worth less than the appraisal," says James McPhee, CEO of the Kalamazoo County State Bank in Michigan.
"It's been difficult for us to get a handle of what is expected … with the devaluation of real estate, I think people are somewhat confused as to what values we dare use," says McPhee, currently vice chairman of the Independent Community Bankers of America.

How bad will it get?
Robert Murray, vice president for economic affairs at McGraw-Hill, says the downturn will get worse in the coming year but may not end up being as dramatic as the 1980s and 1990s real estate implosion. The outlook depends on what happens to the overall economy.
Office construction peaked at about 218 million square feet of new space in 2007, compared with a high of 350 million square feet during some years in the 1980s. With the exception of retail, "I don't really think there was overbuilding to the extent of the late '80s and early '90s," Murray says. "In the case of retail, it was partly due to (shopping malls) springing up where new housing developments grew; also a movement to open-air shopping centers."

Murray expects commercial real estate construction, measured by square footage, to decline by 24% or more in 2009, after falling an estimated 24% in 2008. The retail segment, stores and shopping centers, which fell 33% in 2008, will decline another 29% in 2009.
Office space construction will plunge in 2009 by 26% — though Murray cautions that the office market is becoming increasingly vulnerable as unemployment rises. The hotel industry will move from a 3% dip in 2008, to a 30% drop in 2009.

Still, Goldman Sachs last week upgraded its outlook for hotel stocks. Noting a 70% increase in the number of hotel projects abandoned or deferred in the past 12 months, Goldman Sachs analyst Steven Kent said a more realistic supply outlook should help stabilize earnings for the industry.

Conditions differ regionally, though the pain is becoming widespread.
Charles Hendricks, a partner at architecture firm The Gaines Group, says he still has enough work to carry his office through the first quarter of 2009, and possibly the first half. The six-person firm, with offices in Charlottesville, Va., and Harrisburg, Va., specializes in environmentally sustainable architecture, doing light commercial projects and residential work.
"Our clientele is pretty well protected from the ebb and flow, and still moving forward," Hendricks says. "As the economy slows down … we're doing more renovation; people are staying in place."

Not the same view
In Phoenix, it's a different story. The office vacancy rate in metropolitan Phoenix has climbed near 18%, the highest in the nation. The pain isn't ended yet, given that 3.9 million square feet of additional office space is under construction, says Elliott Pollack, who heads the Phoenix forecasting firm Elliott D. Pollack and Co.

Pollack expects the local office vacancy rate to climb to 20% next year. He expects Phoenix will post net job losses in 2009 after shedding jobs this year. That would be the first time employment has fallen in the area for two consecutive years since the 1950s.

"When things clear up, as they invariably will, you will see Phoenix grow out of it," Pollack says. "There will be an extended period where there is little new office construction. There was virtually none for four years in the early 1990s; it could easily take three or four years this time, as well."

Overall, the U.S. office vacancy rate increased to 11.7% in the second quarter of 2008, according to CoStar, a Bethesda, Md.-based firm. That's the third quarterly increase in a row, and the highest vacancy rate since 2005.

Detroit had the second-worst performance behind Phoenix, with a 17.2% vacancy rate. Oklahoma City, by contrast, had some of the lowest numbers, with an 8.3% vacancy rate.
But the outlook depends on whether the economy starts to stabilize by midyear, as many economists forecast, or deteriorates more than expected.

Huge retailers, including Target, Best Buy, Home Depot and Lowe's, have scaled back on new construction and closed existing stores, while others, such as Linens 'n Things and Circuit City have filed for bankruptcy-court protection.

NAI Global, a major real estate leasing and financing firm, noted an increasing number of empty downtown storefronts, with vacancy rates for such properties rising by 14%, to 7.5% in 2008. Still, the national average rental rate for downtown retail space rose 7% last year. The national average rental rate for regional malls fell 21%, and the vacancy rate nationwide increased by 15% to 5.6% in 2008.

"We believe we will see further erosion in all sectors before vacancy rates and rental rates stabilize in late 2009 or early 2010," said Jeffrey Finn, president and CEO of NAI Global.
Finn says he hopes President-elect Barack Obama's emerging economic stimulus plan will revive the economy and consumer confidence. Some firms are hoping for even more immediate assistance.

As the housing and commercial real estate sectors have slowed, construction firms have relied on public works projects such as bridges and schools to stay busy. A number of those projects are being mothballed as states and cities struggle to balance their budgets in the face of declining tax revenue.

"Arizona has a (budget) shortfall, so they are starting to put state-funded or tax-funded projects on hold. We have a couple ready to start construction that are on indefinite hold, and we don't know what indefinite means," says J. Doug Pruitt, chairman and CEO of Sundt Construction in Tempe, Ariz.

Pruitt's firm, which also does work in California and other states, says that if conditions don't turn up soon, he'll have to start thinking about layoffs at his company.
He and others in the construction industry are pushing Congress to quickly approve hundreds of billions of dollars in new public works spending, including bridges, roads and schools, to tide workers over until the economy recovers.

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