by Calculated Risk on 4/08/2009 02:48:00 PM
Wednesday, April 08, 2009
CRE: Rents Fall 24% in San Francisco, Landmark Foreclosure in Atlanta
From Bloomberg: San Francisco Office Rents Fall Most Since 2001 (ht Dwight)
San Francisco office rents dropped 24 percent in the first quarter from a year earlier ... The average rent fell citywide to $38.80 a square foot from $50.92 for the highest-quality, best-located space, known as Class A space, according to a preliminary report by commercial brokerage Colliers International. The office vacancy rate rose to 13.2 percent from 12.6 percent in the previous quarter and up from 10.2 percent a year earlier.And from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: Landmark Equitable building in foreclosure (ht jp, Bradford)
Downtown Atlanta’s Equitable building, an iconic 30-plus story office tower that once dominated the city’s skyline, has fallen into foreclosure.
A foreclosure notice said the 40-year-old skyscraper is scheduled to be auctioned on the Fulton County courthouse steps on May 5.
March FOMC Minutes: Outlook Revised Down
by Calculated Risk on 4/08/2009 02:00:00 PM
Here are the minutes for the March FOMC meeting.
Excerpts:
Staff Economic OutlookAnd the worsening outlook led the FOMC to agree to "substantial additional purchases of longer-term assets":
In the forecast prepared for the meeting, the staff revised down its outlook for economic activity. The deterioration in labor market conditions was rapid in recent months, with steep job losses across nearly all sectors. Industrial production continued to contract rapidly as firms responded to the falloff in demand and the buildup of some inventory overhangs. The incoming data on business spending suggested that business investment in equipment and structures continued to decline. Single-family housing starts had fallen to a post-World War II low in January, and demand for new homes remained weak. Both exports and imports retreated significantly in the fourth quarter of last year and appeared headed for comparable declines this quarter. Consumer outlays showed some signs of stabilizing at a low level, with real outlays for goods outside of motor vehicles recording gains in January and February. .... The staff's projections for real GDP in the second half of 2009 and in 2010 were revised down, with real GDP expected to flatten out gradually over the second half of this year and then to expand slowly next year as the stresses in financial markets ease, the effects of fiscal stimulus take hold, inventory adjustments are worked through, and the correction in housing activity comes to an end. The weaker trajectory of real output resulted in the projected path of the unemployment rate rising more steeply into early next year before flattening out at a high level over the rest of the year. The staff forecast for overall and core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation over the next two years was revised down slightly. Both core and overall PCE price inflation were expected to be damped by low rates of resource utilization, falling import prices, and easing cost pressures as a result of the sharp net declines in oil and other raw materials prices since last summer.
emphasis added
In the discussion of monetary policy for the intermeeting period, Committee members agreed that substantial additional purchases of longer-term assets eligible for open market operations would be appropriate. Such purchases would provide further monetary stimulus to help address the very weak economic outlook and reduce the risk that inflation could persist for a time below rates that best foster longer-term economic growth and price stability.
Pulte and Centex Merge
by Calculated Risk on 4/08/2009 12:26:00 PM
From Bloomberg: Pulte to Buy Centex for $1.3 Billion in Survival Bid
Pulte Homes Inc. agreed to buy Centex Corp. for $1.3 billion in an all-stock deal that creates the largest U.S. homebuilder by revenue ...This is a stock swap (no cash).
“This is really good because not only are there too many homes, there are too many homebuilders,” said Vicki Bryan, a senior high-yield bond analyst for New York-based Gimme Credit LLC.
...
Because of complementary geographic presence and market segments, the new company will save $350 million annually, [Pulte Chief Executive Officer Richard Dugas] said.
Dugas talks about signs of a housing bottom, but the last sentence makes it clear that this merger is about layoffs and cost savings.
Shadow Inventory?
by Calculated Risk on 4/08/2009 11:06:00 AM
From Carolyn Said at the San Francisco Chronicle: Banks aren't reselling many foreclosed homes (ht Starburst)
Lenders nationwide are sitting on hundreds of thousands of foreclosed homes that they have not resold or listed for sale, according to numerous data sources.I'm not convinced. There might just be a built in a lag between when the banks foreclose to when the properties are finally sold. Instead of using aggregate statistics, it would probably be better to do a survey - follow some number of foreclosures and see what happens to them each month.
...
"We believe there are in the neighborhood of 600,000 properties nationwide that banks have repossessed but not put on the market," said Rick Sharga, vice president of RealtyTrac ...
"There is a real danger that there is much more (foreclosure) inventory than we are measuring," said Celia Chen, director of housing economics at Moody's Economy.com in Pennsylvania.
...
In the Bay Area, a Chronicle analysis of data from San Diego's MDA DataQuick shows that more than one-third of foreclosures are in shadow territory - that is, they are not registering in county records as having been resold.
For the 26 months from January 2007 through February 2009, banks repossessed 51,602 homes and condos in the nine-county Bay Area, according to DataQuick. Yet in the same period, only 30,823 foreclosures were resold, leaving about 20,000 bank repos unaccounted for.
Apartment Rents Fall 4% in SoCal
by Calculated Risk on 4/08/2009 09:18:00 AM
Roger Vincent writes in the LA Times: Apartment rents fall in Southern California
... The average rent in Los Angeles County fell almost 4% in 2008 as apartment occupancy rates dropped and new units came online. The decline should continue this year as more renters lose their jobs, according to the annual USC Casden Forecast expected to be released by the university today.Falling rents. Rising vacancies. Same story for apartments, malls, and offices ...
"In L.A. County alone, 41,000 people moved out of apartments last year compared to the 29,000 people who moved in during the last five years," said forecast director Delores Conway.
...
Orange County is generally stronger than the rest of the region, the report said, though rents came down 2% last year ...
Mall Vacancy Rate Increases Sharply in Q1
by Calculated Risk on 4/08/2009 12:32:00 AM
From Bloomberg: Vacancies at U.S. Retail Centers Hit 10-Year High, Reis Says
Retail vacancies at shopping centers were the highest since Reis began publishing quarterly data in 1999 and reflected a net decrease in occupied space of 8.7 million square feet, the biggest drop for a single quarter and more than the 8.65 million square feet given back during all of 2008.
Rents paid by tenants fell 1.8 percent from the previous quarter and 2.9 percent from a year ago ...
The vacancy rate at neighborhood and community shopping centers rose to 9.5 percent from 8.9 percent the previous quarter and 7.7 percent a year ago ...
Vacancies at regional malls and super-regional malls ... climbed to 7.9 percent from 7.1 percent in the fourth quarter and 5.9 percent a year earlier ...
Click on image for larger graph in new window.This graph shows the strip mall vacancy rate since Q2 2007.
Double digits, here we come ...
More from Reuters: Vacancies soar at US strip and regional malls-Reis
Barring a significant economic change, Reis does not expect vacancies to stabilize until sometime in the middle of 2012 if an overall U.S. economic recovery appears next year.
Tuesday, April 07, 2009
WSJ: Treasury to Approve Life Insurer Applications for TARP Money
by Calculated Risk on 4/07/2009 09:25:00 PM
The WSJ reports: Treasury Plans to Extend TARP to Life Insurers
The Treasury is expected to announce within the next several days the inclusion of life insurers that are bank holding companies or own a thrift...This is apparently for life insurers that are bank holding companies or own a thrift. These bank holding were already eligible for TARP money.
The WSJ mentions that Prudential, Hartford, and Lincoln National have all applied.
Apartment: Vacancy Rate Increases, Rents Fall
by Calculated Risk on 4/07/2009 05:39:00 PM
From Reuters: US apartment market worsens with economy--Reis
... The national apartment vacancy rate rose to 7.2 percent in the first quarter, up 0.60 percentage points from the prior quarter and 1.1 percentage points from a year earlier ...This puts more pressure on house prices, and also raises more questions about the BLS measure of "Owners' equivalent rent" (that is showing an increase).
It was the highest vacancy rate since the first quarter of 2002. That was right before the last downturn bottomed out, but Reis expects the picture to get a lot darker as "we are arguably only at the beginning of the current downturn."
Behind the rising vacancy rate is a build-up of available apartments ...
Asking rents fell by 0.6 percent to $1,046 per month, the largest single-quarter decline since Reis began reporting quarterly performance data in 1999.
With new supply coming online, and families doubling up, it appears rents will decline for some time. Here are some comments from BRE properties in February:
We believe we are looking at a negative rent curve for the next two years.
We believe on a composite basis, market rents in 2009 could fall between 3 and 6% from peak levels in 2008. And the rent cuts in 2010 could be deeper ...
Stock Market April 7th: More Volatility
by Calculated Risk on 4/07/2009 03:48:00 PM
More volatility ...
Dow down 2.3% (7,789)
S&P 500 down 2.4%
NASDAQ down 2.8% Click on graph for larger image in new window.
The first graph is from Doug Short of dshort.com (financial planner): "Four Bad Bears".
Note that the Great Depression crash is based on the DOW; the three others are for the S&P 500.
The second graph shows the S&P 500 since 1990.
The dashed line is the closing price today.
This puts the recent rally into perspective - the S&P is still off almost 50% from the 2007 high.
Report: NY Office Rents Decline Sharply
by Calculated Risk on 4/07/2009 03:25:00 PM
From Bloomberg: Manhattan Office Rents Fall Most in Quarter Century (ht Bob_in_MA)
Manhattan office rents ... dropped 6 percent from the fourth quarter to $65.01 a square foot, commercial property broker Cushman & Wakefield Inc. said in a report today. The decline is the most in records dating back to 1984 ...Sharply falling rents. Hoocoodanode?
“It’s gone beyond the financial firms,” Joseph Harbert, Cushman & Wakefield’s chief operating officer for the New York region, said in a telephone interview. “It’s broad across a lot of industries. ... Rents are “falling faster than they did in the last two recessions.”


