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Showing posts with label CRE. Show all posts
Showing posts with label CRE. Show all posts

Thursday, September 02, 2010

Hotel Occupancy Rate: Just below 2008 Levels

by Calculated Risk on 9/02/2010 02:30:00 PM

Hotel occupancy is one of several industry specific indicators I follow ...

From HotelNewsNow.com: STR: Chain scales report weekly increases

Overall, the industry’s occupancy increased 10.6% to 60.1%, ADR rose 2.4% to US$96.50, and revenue per available room increased 13.2% to US$57.98.
The following graph shows the four week moving average for the occupancy rate by week for 2008, 2009 and 2010 (and a median for 2000 through 2007).

Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

Notes: the scale doesn't start at zero to better show the change. The graph shows the 4-week average, not the weekly occupancy rate.

On a 4-week basis, occupancy is up 7.9% compared to last year (the worst year since the Great Depression) and 3.9% below the median for 2000 through 2007.

The occupancy rate is just below the levels of 2008 - but 2008 was a tough year for the hotel industry!

Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Hotel Occupancy Rate: Almost back to 2008 levels

by Calculated Risk on 8/19/2010 10:01:00 PM

Hotel occupancy is one of several industry specific indicators I follow ...

From HotelNewsNow.com: STR: Chain-scale segments report RevPAR boost

Overall, the industry’s occupancy increased 6.9% to 68.3%, ADR rose 1.9% to US$98.88, and RevPAR increased 9.0% to US$67.52.
The following graph shows the four week moving average for the occupancy rate by week for 2008, 2009 and 2010 (and a median for 2000 through 2007).

Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

Notes: the scale doesn't start at zero to better show the change. The graph shows the 4-week average, not the weekly occupancy rate.

On a 4-week basis, occupancy is up 6.8% compared to last year (the worst year since the Great Depression) and 3.7% below the median for 2000 through 2007.

The occupancy rate is almost back to the levels of 2008 - and 2008 was a tough year for the hotel industry!

NOTE: The supply of rooms in the survey is up just over 2% from last year. The increase in the occupancy rate is from an increase in demand - although this is still fairly weak.

Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com

Moody's: Commercial Real Estate Price Index declines 4% in June

by Calculated Risk on 8/19/2010 02:22:00 PM

Moody's reported (via Bloomberg) today that the Moody’s/REAL All Property Type Aggregate Index declined 4% in June. This is a repeat sales measure of commercial real estate prices.

Below is a comparison of the Moodys/REAL Commercial Property Price Index (CPPI) and the Case-Shiller composite 20 index.

Notes: Beware of the "Real" in the title - this index is not inflation adjusted. Moody's CRE price index is a repeat sales index like Case-Shiller - but there are far fewer commercial sales - and that can impact prices.

CRE and Residential Price indexes Click on graph for larger image in new window.

CRE prices only go back to December 2000.

The Case-Shiller Composite 20 residential index is in blue (with Dec 2000 set to 1.0 to line up the indexes).

It is important to remember that the number of transactions is very low and there are a large percentage of distressed sales.

Commercial real estate values are now down 41.3% from the peak in late 2007.

As I've noted every month, this is a very thin market that is skewed by distressed sales. For more, see John Murray at PIMCO's caution about the CPPI index: PIMCO U.S. Commercial Real Estate Project and MIT Professor David Geltner comments that appear on the Real Estate Analytics LLC website on the lower right under "Professor's Corner".

Note: there is also a new CRE index from CoStar, see: CoStar: Commercial Real Estate Prices decline sharply in June

Wednesday, August 18, 2010

AIA: Architecture Billings Index shows contraction in July

by Calculated Risk on 8/18/2010 09:36:00 AM

Note: This index is a leading indicator for new Commercial Real Estate (CRE) investment.

The Business Times reports that the American Institute of Architects’ Architecture Billings Index increased to 47.9 in July from 46 in June. Any reading below 50 indicates contraction.

'We continue to receive a mixed bag of feedback on the condition of the design market, from improving to flat to being paralysed by uncertainty,' said AIA Chief Economist Kermit Baker.
The ABI press release is not online yet.

AIA Architecture Billing Index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph shows the Architecture Billings Index since 1996. The index has remained below 50, indicating falling demand, since January 2008.

Note: Nonresidential construction includes commercial and industrial facilities like hotels and office buildings, as well as schools, hospitals and other institutions.

According to the AIA, there is an "approximate nine to twelve month lag time between architecture billings and construction spending" on non-residential construction. So there will probably be further declines in CRE investment into 2011.

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Hotel Occupancy Rate at 70% last week

by Calculated Risk on 8/12/2010 01:02:00 PM

Hotel occupancy is one of several industry specific indicators I follow ...

From HotelNewsNow.com: STR: Economy segment leads weekly occupancy gains

Overall, the industry’s occupancy increased 6.7% to 70.2%, average daily rate rose 1.6% to US$99.13, and revenue per available room increased 8.4% to US$69.57.
The following graph shows the four week moving average for the occupancy rate by week for 2008, 2009 and 2010 (and a median for 2000 through 2007).

Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

Notes: the scale doesn't start at zero to better show the change. The graph shows the 4-week average, not the weekly occupancy rate.

On a 4-week basis, occupancy is up 6.9% compared to last year (the worst year since the Great Depression) and 4.0% below the median for 2000 through 2007.

Just over half way back to normal, and almost back to the levels of 2008 (the occupancy rate started to fall off in the 2nd half of 2008).

NOTE: The supply of rooms in the survey is up just over 2% from last year. The increase in the occupancy rate is from an increase in demand - although this is still fairly weak (the 2nd half of 2008 was weak for hotels).

Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com

Sunday, August 08, 2010

Jingle Mail from Hyatt Hotels

by Calculated Risk on 8/08/2010 07:15:00 AM

From Theo Francis at footnoted.com: Jingle mail in Jersey from Hyatt Hotels ... (ht NorkaWest)

If you’re in Princeton, New Jersey, anytime soon, swing by the Hyatt Regency Princeton. With the Hyatt Hotels (H) quarterly report filed yesterday, it has become a symbol of the financial crisis ... one of Hyatt’s subsidiaries “did not have sufficient cash flow to meet interest payment requirements under its mortgage loan” on the property, in this case a 347-room hotel with a restaurant, bar and comedy club, just a mile from the famous university.
...
“When hotel cash flow became insufficient to service the loan,” the company said in the filing, “HHC notified the lender that it would not provide assistance.” In other words, Hyatt decided to walk away — the equivalent of “jingle mail,” ... In Hyatt’s case, the company “and the lender agreed in principal to effect a deed in lieu of foreclosure transaction.”
Some people are still mailing in the keys!

Saturday, August 07, 2010

CoStar: Commercial Real Estate Prices decline sharply in June

by Calculated Risk on 8/07/2010 08:30:00 AM

This is a new repeat sales index for commercial real estate. Previously I've only been using the Moodys/REAL Commercial Property Price Index (CPPI) for commercial real estate.

From CoStar: CoStar Commercial Repeat-Sales Indices, July 2010

  • The commercial real estate market’s pricing has been a tale of two worlds with the largest metro markets attracting significant institutional capital and forcing prices upward over the first two quarters of 2010, while the broader market has continued to soften.

  • This divergence of the two worlds may soon change as we are now witnessing a pause and softening even within the investment or institutional grade primary markets.

  • Over the past ten months we have seen the overall CCRSI oscillate from positive to negative and back again, with preliminary July figures very likely to be down for the investment grade property markets. From May to June, the overall CCRSI was down 7.78% with the investment grade property declining by 4.83%, reversing previous positive movement.
    emphasis added
  • CoStar CRE Price Index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph from CoStar shows the indexes for investment grade, general commercial and a composite index. The investment grade index had been increasing - but turned sharply lower in June.

    On the number of transactions:
    The CCRSI July report is based on data through the end of June. In June, 665 sales pairs were recorded, up significantly from May, during which 506 transactions occurred. Overall, there has been an upward trend in pair volume going back to 2009. February 2009 appears to have been the low point in the downturn in terms of pair volume, when 374 transactions were recorded.
    ...
    Distress is also a factor in the mix of properties being traded. Since 2007, the ratio of distressed sales to overall sales has gone from around 1% to above 23% currently. Hospitality properties are seeing the highest ratio, with 35% of all sales occurring being distressed. Multifamily properties are seeing the next highest level of distress at 28%, followed by office properties at 21%, retail properties at 18%, and industrial properties at 17%.
    Just another index to follow!

    Thursday, August 05, 2010

    Hotel Occupancy Rate at 71% last week

    by Calculated Risk on 8/05/2010 01:33:00 PM

    Hotel occupancy is one of several industry specific indicators I follow ...

    From HotelNewsNow.com: STR: US results for 31 July 2010

    In year-over-year measurements, the industry’s occupancy increased 6.8 percent to 71.0 percent. Average daily rate rose 1.5 percent to US$99.27. Revenue per available room increased 8.5 percent to US$70.45.
    The following graph shows the four week moving average for the occupancy rate by week for 2008, 2009 and 2010 (and a median for 2000 through 2007).

    Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Notes: the scale doesn't start at zero to better show the change. The graph shows the 4-week average, not the weekly occupancy rate.

    On a 4-week basis, occupancy is up 6.3% compared to last year (the worst year since the Great Depression) and 5.7% below the median for 2000 through 2007.

    Just over half way back to normal, and almost back to the levels of 2008 (the occupancy rate started to fall off in the 2nd half of 2008).

    Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com

    Wednesday, August 04, 2010

    Q2: Office, Mall and Lodging Investment

    by Calculated Risk on 8/04/2010 04:07:00 PM

    First - the advance Q2 GDP report released last week showed an annualized real increase of 5.2% for investment in non-residential structures. This broke a streak of seven straight quarterly declines. However the construction spending report released on Monday suggests that most of this gain will be revised away.

    Second - with the release of underlying detail data today - we can see that most of the reported gains in Q2 were for power and petroleum mining structures. My guess is some of this investment was related to the BP oil gusher.

    If we look at just office, mall and lodging investment, non-residential structure investment continued to decline in Q2.

    Office Investment as Percent of GDP Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows investment in offices as a percent of GDP. Office investment as a percent of GDP peaked at 0.46% in Q3 2008 and has declined sharply to a new series low as a percent of GDP (data series starts in 1959).

    Reis reported that the office vacancy rate is at a 17 year high at 17.4% in Q2, up from a revised 17.3% in Q1 and 16.0% in Q2 2009. With the office vacancy rate still rising, office investment will probably decline further - although most of the decline in investment has already happened.

    Mall Investment as Percent of GDPThe second graph is for investment in malls.

    Investment in multimerchandise shopping structures (malls) peaked in 2007 and has fallen by over two-thirds (note that investment includes remodels, so this will not fall to zero). Mall investment is also at a series low (as a percent of GDP) and will probably continue to decline through 2010.

    Reis reported that the mall vacancy rate increased in Q2 2010, and was the highest on record at 9.0% for regional malls, and the highest since 1991 for strip malls.

    Lodging Investment as Percent of GDPThe third graph is for lodging (hotels).

    The bubble boom in lodging investment was stunning. Lodging investment peaked at 0.32% of GDP in Q2 2008 and has fallen by over 70% already. And I expect lodging investment to continue to decline through at least 2010.

    As projects are completed there will be little new investment in these categories for some time.

    Also notice that investment in all three categories typically falls for a year or two after the end of a recession, and then usually recovers very slowly (flat as a percent of GDP for 2 or 3 years). Something similar will probably happen again, and there will not be a recovery in these categories until the vacancy rates fall significantly.

    Thursday, July 29, 2010

    Hotel Occupancy Rate at 71.8% last week

    by Calculated Risk on 7/29/2010 01:17:00 PM

    Hotel occupancy is one of several industry specific indicators I follow ...

    From HotelNewsNow.com: STR: Strong luxury results week ending 24 July

    Overall [year over year], the industry’s occupancy increased 7.3 percent to 71.8 percent, ADR rose 1.3 percent to US$99.60, and RevPAR increased 8.6 percent to US$71.54.
    The following graph shows the four week moving average for the occupancy rate by week for 2008, 2009 and 2010 (and a median for 2000 through 2007).

    Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Notes: the scale doesn't start at zero to better show the change. The graph shows the 4-week average, not the weekly occupancy rate.

    On a 4-week basis, occupancy is up 7.0% compared to last year (the worst year since the Great Depression) and 4.8% below the median for 2000 through 2007.

    On a weekly basis this is the second week since summer 2008 with the occupancy rate above 70%. However last week was probably the peak for the occupancy rate for 2010 - although the 4-week average will move up over the next few weeks.

    In 2009, the occupancy rate peaked at 67% in mid-July.

    Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com

    Thursday, July 22, 2010

    Hotel Occupancy Rate above 70% last week

    by Calculated Risk on 7/22/2010 01:35:00 PM

    Hotel occupancy is one of several industry specific indicators I follow ...

    From HotelNewsNow.com: STR: US hotel results for week ending 17 July

    In year-over-year measurements, the industry’s occupancy increased 7.3 percent to 71.0 percent. Average daily rate rose 1.6 percent to US$99.07 Revenue per available room went up 9.0 percent to US$70.30.
    The following graph shows the four week moving average for the occupancy rate by week for 2008, 2009 and 2010 (and a median for 2000 through 2007).

    Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Notes: the scale doesn't start at zero to better show the change. The graph shows the 4-week average, not the weekly occupancy rate.

    On a 4-week basis, occupancy is up 6.8% compared to last year (the worst year since the Great Depression) and 4.7% below the median for 2000 through 2007.

    On a weekly basis this is the first week since summer 2008 with the occupancy rate above 70%. In 2009, the occupancy rate peaked at 67% in mid-July.

    Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com

    Wednesday, July 21, 2010

    Office Vacancy, Lease Rates and New Investment

    by Calculated Risk on 7/21/2010 10:29:00 PM

    Voit Real Estate released their Q2 quarterly reports today for CRE in Las Vegas, Phoenix, San Diego, Orange County and several other southwest cities.

    These two graphs from the O.C. office report really tell a story ...

    Orange County office vacancy rate and construction Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    The first graph shows the vacancy rate and amount of new construction. Notice that new construction has fallen to almost zero this year, and the vacancy rate in Q2 was 18.34%, slightly above the Q1 rate of 18.21%.

    Look back at the early '90s when the vacancy rate was at about the same level (in '93 and '94), there was very little building for the next three years even with the vacancy rate falling.

    These is so much excess capacity that there is no need for new investment for some time.

    Orange County office lease rates The second graph shows the average full-service monthly lease rate per sq ft.

    This is just asking rates, but it looks like rents are off about 25% to 30%, and are back to 1999 levels.

    Party like it's 1999!

    This is just one area, but something similar is happening in most cities around the country. This also shows up in the Architecture Billings Index that showed contraction again in June. Historically the billings index will turn up 6 to 9 months before an increase in non-residential structure investment - there is a long way to go!

    AIA: Architecture Billings Index shows contraction in June

    by Calculated Risk on 7/21/2010 03:59:00 PM

    Note: This index is a leading indicator for new Commercial Real Estate (CRE) investment.

    Birmingham Business Journal reports that the American Institute of Architects’ Architecture Billings Index increased to 46 in June from 45.8 in May. Any reading below 50 indicates contraction.

    The ABI press release is not online yet.

    AIA Architecture Billing Index Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    This graph shows the Architecture Billings Index since 1996. The index has remained below 50, indicating falling demand, since January 2008.

    Note: Nonresidential construction includes commercial and industrial facilities like hotels and office buildings, as well as schools, hospitals and other institutions.

    This suggests the slump for commercial real estate design is ongoing. According to the AIA, there is an "approximate nine to twelve month lag time between architecture billings and construction spending" on non-residential construction. So there will probably be further declines in CRE investment into 2011.

    Monday, July 19, 2010

    Moody's: Commercial Real Estate Price Index increases in May

    by Calculated Risk on 7/19/2010 04:40:00 PM

    Moody's reported today that the Moody’s/REAL All Property Type Aggregate Index increased 3.6% in May. This is a repeat sales measure of commercial real estate prices.

    Below is a comparison of the Moodys/REAL Commercial Property Price Index (CPPI) and the Case-Shiller composite 20 index.

    Notes: Beware of the "Real" in the title - this index is not inflation adjusted. Moody's CRE price index is a repeat sales index like Case-Shiller - but there are far fewer commercial sales - and that can impact prices.

    CRE and Residential Price indexes Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    CRE prices only go back to December 2000.

    The Case-Shiller Composite 20 residential index is in blue (with Dec 2000 set to 1.0 to line up the indexes).

    It is possible that commercial real prices have bottomed - in general - but it is hard to tell because the number of transactions is very low and there are a number of distressed sales.

    Commercial real estate values are now down 6.3% over the last year, and down 38.9% from the peak in late 2007.

    Comments from PIMCO

    As I've noted every month, this is a very thin market that is skewed by distressed sales. John Murray at PIMCO also cautioned about the CPPI index in a recent note: PIMCO U.S. Commercial Real Estate Project

    National price indices such as the Moody’s Commercial Property Price Index (CPPI) can provide misleading indications of a recovery in CRE asset price levels. Since November 2009, the index has rebounded 3%.

    While it is natural to draw comparisons between the CPPI and the S&P/Case-Shiller index used to gauge residential home prices, we caution that indexes such as the CPPI are relatively meaningless in today’s limited transaction environment – commercial real estate transaction volume fell nearly 90% from 2007 to 2009.

    Our ride along meetings highlight another limitation of the CPPI. Based on repeat transactions, the index excludes the truly distressed or overpriced properties acquired in the past few years that have yet to trade, and is instead skewed by the high proportion of trophy asset and Agency-financed multifamily transactions.
    Comments from MIT Professor David Geltner

    Dr. Geltner writes a column that appears on the Real Estate Analytics LLC website on the lower right under "Professor's Corner". This is based on last month's data, but still explains the market dynamics:
    CPPI advanced in April, due to the very strong performance of “healthy” properties (i.e., those without the RCA “troubled asset” flag). Figure 4 shows that the healthy property breakout index (estimated using the same methodology as the CPPI only dropping out the “troubled assets”) rose 6.3% from March to April while the “distressed” index declined more than 5%. The “healthy property index” is now only 33% below the October 2007 peak, while properties falling into distress since then are still selling more than 50% below 2007 values on average.
    CRE and Residential Price indexes Graph from Dr. Geltner.
    Whereas 2009 saw the advent of a bifurcated market between “healthy” and “distressed” properties, 2010 is now seeing what might be called a “trifurcated” market. Not only are distressed properties selling at sharp discounts, but “trophy” properties and solid “core” assets are selling at very respectable prices well above the general market average.
    Roughly, CRE prices are moving up for "trophy" properties, moving sideways for the general market, and falling again for distressed properties. But this is based on very few transactions ...

    Sunday, July 18, 2010

    SoCal: Office Vacancy Rate increases, Rents Fall

    by Calculated Risk on 7/18/2010 08:45:00 AM

    From Roger Vincent at the Los Angeles Times: Office vacancies rise, rents drop in Southland again

    Overall vacancy in Los Angeles, Orange, San Bernardino and Riverside counties rose to nearly 20% from 17% a year earlier, while average asking rents dropped to $2.37 a square foot per month from $2.52 ...

    The weakest market was the Inland Empire, where vacancy surpassed 25% in the second quarter. Orange County was also weak, with 22% of its office space unleased.
    More excess supply, but at least the new construction has stopped.

    Thursday, July 15, 2010

    Hotel Occupancy Rate increases compared to same week in 2009

    by Calculated Risk on 7/15/2010 12:36:00 PM

    Hotel occupancy is one of several industry specific indicators I follow ...

    First, some comments from the Marriott conference call today:

    After dropping for eight straight quarters occupancy rates bottomed in the Fourth Quarter of 2009. .. [W]e said we hope to increase room rates year-over-year, some time in 2010. As it turned out we were able to increase room rates much faster than we anticipated. In period five roughly equivalent to May, domestic Company operated room rates rose 1%. The first increase in nearly two years. In period six, roughly equivalent to June, domestic Company operated room rates rose 3%.
    ...
    Leisure demand in the Second Quarter ... was solid. On weekdays Marriott brand REVPAR rose an impressive 9% in the quarter but weekends held their own with REVPAR up 5%.
    ...
    Business in Europe and the UK remains strong despite rumbling of economic concern. Our European hotels are benefiting from strong American tourism, attracted to fabulous destinations that are on sale due to the weaker currencies. In Asia, occupancy rates at Company operated hotels rose over 16 points as newer hotels continued to mature and the Shanghai world expo attracted strong demand.
    And from HotelNewsNow.com: STR: US results for week ending 3 July 2010
    Overall, in year-over-year measurements, the industry’s occupancy increased 3.9 percent to 62.5 percent, ADR rose 0.4 percent to US$94.69, and RevPAR was up 4.3 percent to US$59.17.
    The following graph shows the four week moving average for the occupancy rate by week for 2008, 2009 and 2010 (and a median for 2000 through 2007).

    Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Notes: the scale doesn't start at zero to better show the change.

    On a 4-week basis, occupancy is up 6.5% compared to last year (the worst year since the Great Depression) and 5.3% below the median for 2000 through 2007.

    A little more than half way back ...

    Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com

    Wednesday, July 14, 2010

    AIA Forecast: Nonresidential Construction Spending to fall 20% in 2010

    by Calculated Risk on 7/14/2010 12:11:00 PM

    From Reuters: US nonresidential building seen down 20 pct in '10

    Spending on U.S. nonresidential construction is likely to fall more than 20 percent this year before recovering slightly in 2011, according to a semiannual survey by an architects' trade group.
    ...
    Construction spending on hotels will drop more than 43 percent this year, construction of office buildings will decline almost 30 percent, and retail and industrial categories will be down more than 20 percent, the [American Institute of Architects] said.
    Nonresidential construction investment has been a drag on GDP for six consecutive quarters (through Q1 2010), and will remain a drag throughout 2010 and probably into 2011.

    Here is a repeat of a graph shows the rolling 4 quarter contribution to GDP from residential investment, equipment and software, and nonresidential structures. This is important to follow because residential investment tends to lead the economy, equipment and software is generally coincident, and nonresidential structure investment trails the economy.

    For the following graph, red is residential, green is equipment and software, and blue is investment in non-residential structures. The usual pattern - both into and out of recessions is - red, green, blue.

    Investment Contributions Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Equipment and software investment has made a positive contribution to GDP for three straight quarters (it is coincident). Tech has done better than most other sectors.

    Residential Investment (RI) made a small positive contribution to GDP in the second half of 2009, but was a drag in Q1 2010. It will be positive again in Q2 2010 (tax credit related), and be negative again later this year. The rolling four quarter change is moving up, but as expected there has been no strong boost to GDP from RI.

    Nonresidential investment in structures continues to be a drag on the economy, and as usual the economy is recovering long before nonresidential investment in structures recovers.

    Friday, July 09, 2010

    Hotel Occupancy Rate increases

    by Calculated Risk on 7/09/2010 11:22:00 AM

    From HotelNewsNow.com: STR: US results for week ending 3 July 2010

    In year-over-year measurements, the industry’s occupancy increased 10.0 percent to 63.4 percent. Average daily rate rose 1.3 percent to US$96.65. Revenue per available room jumped 11.5 percent to US$61.32.
    The following graph shows the four week moving average for the occupancy rate by week for 2008, 2009 and 2010 (and a median for 2000 through 2007).

    Hotel Occupancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    Notes: the scale doesn't start at zero to better show the change.

    On a 4-week basis, occupancy is up 7.5% compared to last year (the worst year since the Great Depression) and 4.1% below the median for 2000 through 2007.

    This as close to "normal" as the occupancy rate has been all year.

    Data Source: Smith Travel Research, Courtesy of HotelNewsNow.com

    Wednesday, July 07, 2010

    CRE Extend and Pretend

    by Calculated Risk on 7/07/2010 08:20:00 PM

    From David Levitt at Bloomberg: U.S. Commercial Property Sales Trail Six-Year Average (ht Mike in Long Island)

    In top cities such as New York and Washington, owners who owe more than their properties are worth are instead finding new sources of equity and lenders are willing to restructure their loans, [Sam Chandan, Real Capital’s chief economist] said. In less attractive markets, banks have been extending loans, waiting for higher prices so they don’t record losses ...
    From Carriick Mollenkamp and Lingling Wei at the WSJ: To Fix Sour Property Deals, Lenders 'Extend and Pretend'
    A big push by banks in recent months to modify [commercial real-estate] loans—by stretching out maturities or allowing below-market interest rates—has slowed a spike in defaults. It also has helped preserve banks' capital, by keeping some dicey loans classified as "performing" and thus minimizing the amount of cash banks must set aside in reserves for future losses.

    Restructurings of nonresidential loans stood at $23.9 billion at the end of the first quarter, more than three times the level a year earlier and seven times the level two years earlier
    With office vacancy rates at a 17 year high, and mall vacancy rates at a 19 year high, there is going to be a long wait ...

    Tuesday, July 06, 2010

    Reis: Mall Vacancy Rate rises in Q2

    by Calculated Risk on 7/06/2010 11:59:00 PM

    Strip Mall Vacancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

    From Reuters: US shopping center vacancy rates rose in 2nd qtr

    For U.S. strip centers, the vacancy rate in the second quarter rose ... to 10.9 percent, slightly below the 11 percent in 1991 during the prior real estate bust ...

    "Until we see stabilization and recovery take root in both consumer spending and business spending and employment, we do not foresee a recovery in the retail sector until late 2012 at the earliest," said Victor Calanog, Reis director of research.
    At regional malls, the vacancy rate rose to 9.0% - the highest since Reis starts tracking regional malls in 2000. The record vacancy rate for strip malls was in 1990 at 11.1%.