by Calculated Risk on 10/08/2009 09:05:00 AM
Thursday, October 08, 2009
Reis: Strip Mall Vacancy Rate Hits 10.3%, Highest Since 1992
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
Reis reports the strip mall vacancy rate hit 10.3% in Q3 2009; the highest vacancy rate since 1992. And rents are cliff diving ...
From Reuters: Shopping center vacancy rate hits 17-year high: report
"Our outlook for retail properties as a whole is bleak," Victor Calanog, Reis director of research, said. "Until we see stabilization and recovery take root in both consumer spending and business spending and hiring, we do not foresee a recovery in the retail sector until late 2012 at the earliest."A grim outlook: no recovery seen in the retail CRE sector "until late 2012 at the earliest".
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The third-quarter vacancy rate at U.S. strip malls, which include local shopping and big-box centers, rose 0.3 percentage points from the second quarter to 10.3 percent, the highest since 1992, Reis said.
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Factoring in months of free rent and other perks, effective rent fell 0.8 percent from the second quarter to $16.89 per square foot or down 3.8 percent from the third quarter 2008. Rents were the lowest since mid-2007
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"Since asking and effective rent growth only turned negative about one year ago, it is daunting to observe this acceleration in decline in what has traditionally been regarded as a stable property type," Calanog said.
Malls. Offices. Apartments. The story is the same: rising vacancies and falling rents. Here are the earlier reports this week on offices and apartments:
U.S. Office Vacancy Rate Hits 16.5% in Q3
Apartment Vacancy Rate at 23 Year High
Weekly Unemployment Claims: Lowest Since January
by Calculated Risk on 10/08/2009 08:34:00 AM
The DOL reports weekly unemployment insurance claims decreased to 521,000:
In the week ending Oct. 3, the advance figure for seasonally adjusted initial claims was 521,000, a decrease of 33,000 from the previous week's revised figure of 554,000. The 4-week moving average was 539,750, a decrease of 9,000 from the previous week's revised average of 548,750.
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The advance number for seasonally adjusted insured unemployment during the week ending Sept. 26 was 6,040,000, a decrease of 72,000 from the preceding week's revised level of 6,112,000.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph shows the 4-week moving average of weekly claims since 1971.
The four-week average of weekly unemployment claims decreased this week by 9,000 to 539,750, and is now 119,000 below the peak in April.
Initial weekly claims have peaked for this cycle, however the level of weekly claims indicates continuing weakness in the job market. The four-week average of initial weekly claims will probably have to fall below 400,000 before total employment stops falling.
Wednesday, October 07, 2009
Report: Pimco, Baupost Quit CIT Bondholder Committee
by Calculated Risk on 10/07/2009 09:50:00 PM
From Dow Jones: Pimco Has Quit CIT Bondholder Steering Committee
The future of CIT Group Inc. (CIT) grew murkier Wednesday after the disclosure that bond fund giant Pacific Investment Management Co. had quit a steering committee that's trying to prevent the commercial lender from collapse. ... Boston-based Baupost Group LLC [had quit earlier].Small firms have already been hit hard in this recession, accounting for about 45% of the job losses (see Melinda Pitts at Macroblog: Prospects for a small business-fueled employment recovery):
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The company has an estimated $75 billion in assets, and provides critical short-term financing to about one million small companies.
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Investors have until 11:59 p.m. Eastern time on Oct. 29 to tender their bonds under the restructuring plan.
In a speech [Monday], William Dudley, the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, identified financial constraints for small businesses as a restraint on the pace of economic recovery.As the article mentioned, CIT provides financing for about one million small business. If CIT files bankruptcy, the company will continue to operate, but they may not write any new business. Their competitors will pick up the best of the business, but many small firms will struggle to find new financing.
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Looking ahead, it's not clear whether small businesses will continue to play their traditional role in hiring staff and helping to fuel an employment recovery. However, if the above-mentioned financial constraints are a major contributor to the disproportionately large employment contractions for very small firms, then the post-recession employment boost these firms typically provide may be less robust than in previous recoveries.
The clock is ticking.
Jim the Realtor: "No shortage of buyers"
by Calculated Risk on 10/07/2009 05:50:00 PM
Jim says the "market is hot, real hot." This is worth watching to get a feel for what is happening at the lower end of the housing market (in San Diego at least).
The Housing Tax Credit: NAHB Projections and more
by Calculated Risk on 10/07/2009 04:02:00 PM
From the NAHB:
Extending the credit through Nov. 30, 2010 and making it available to all purchasers of a principal residence would result in an additional 383,000 home sales ...The NAHB has also been arguing to expand the tax credit from $8,000 to $15,000. But using $8,000 per home buyer - and estimating 5 million home sales over the next year - the total cost of the tax credit would be $40 billion.
According to the NAHB this would result in 383,000 additional home sales. Dividing $40 billion by 383 thousand gives $104,400 per additional home sold!
That is higher than my original estimate that an extension of the tax credit would cost about $100 thousand per additional home sold.
Note: If the NAHB meant $15,000 per home buyer, the cost would be $75 billion - or $157 thousand per additional home sold.
And this doesn't included the costs of the unintended consequences.
[Fed economist] Mr. Conway's presentation painted a bleak picture of the sliding real-estate values and enormous debt that will need to be refinanced in the next few years. Vacancy rates in the apartment, retail and warehouse sectors already have exceeded those seen during the real-estate collapse of the early 1990s, Mr. Conway noted. His report also predicted that commercial real-estate losses would reach roughly 45% next year. Valuing real estate has always been tricky for banks, and the problem is particularly acute now because sales activity is practically nonexistent.
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More than half of the $3.4 trillion in outstanding commercial real-estate debt is held by banks.
Anyone analyzing the tax credit should call the economists at the BLS and ask about how falling rents will impact owners' equivalent rent and CPI. Then call the economists at the Federal Reserve and ask how CPI deflation will impact consumer behavior and monetary policy. Welcome to the Fed's nightmare.
Consumer Credit Declines Sharply in August
by Calculated Risk on 10/07/2009 03:00:00 PM
From MarketWatch: U.S. consumer credit falls for 7th straight month
U.S. consumers reduced their debt for the seventh straight month in August, the Federal Reserve reported Wednesday. Total seasonally adjusted consumer debt fell $11.98 billion, or at a 5.8% annual rate ... In the subcategories, credit-card debt fell $9.91 billion, or 13.1%, to $899.41 billion. This is the record 11th straight monthly drop in credit card debt. Non-revolving credit, such as auto loans, personal loans and student loans fell $2.10 billion or 1.6% to $1.56 trillion.Cash-for-clunkers probably kept non-revolving credit from falling further - just wait for the September numbers!
Click on graph for larger image in new window.This graph shows the year-over-year (YoY) change in consumer credit. Consumer credit is off 4.4% over the last 12 months. The previous record YoY decline was 1.9% in 1991.
Here is the Fed report: Consumer Credit
Consumer credit decreased at an annual rate of 5-3/4 percent in August 2009. Revolving credit decreased at an annual rate of 13 percent, and nonrevolving credit decreased at an annual rate of 1-1/2 percent.Note: The Fed reports a simple annual rate (multiplies change in month by 12) as opposed to a compounded annual rate. Consumer credit does not include real estate debt.
Hotel Defaults and Foreclosures Increase Sharply in California
by Calculated Risk on 10/07/2009 11:52:00 AM
Hotel investment has always been boom and bust, but the most recent boom was off the charts ...
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph shows lodging investment as a percent of GDP since 1959 through Q2 2009.
Lodging investment peaked in mid-2008, but because of the length of time for hotel construction, there are many new hotels still coming online - at just the wrong time.
From the LA Times: Hotel defaults, foreclosures rise in California (ht Ann)
... Statewide, more than 300 hotels were in foreclosure or default on their loans as of Sept. 30 -- a nearly fivefold increase since the start of the year, according to an industry report released Tuesday.Not only is the recession impacting business and leisure travel, but there are just too many hotel rooms, and many more on the way.
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Most struggling hotels remain open, but industry experts believe many properties are likely to be closed down in the months ahead, even if they are not in foreclosure, because they are losing so much money. ...
"I have never seen so many lenders contemplating mothballing properties," said Jim Butler, a hotel lawyer and chairman of the global hospitality group for Jeffer, Mangels, Butler & Marmaro. "It can and it will get worse for the hotel industry."
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Statewide, 260 hotels were in default on their loans and 47 had been taken over by their lenders in foreclosure, the Atlas report said.
... a leading hotel consulting firm, Smith Travel Research, recently issued a report that predicted no significant improvement for the hotel industry until 2011 at the earliest.
"It's going to be a lot worse than it is now," said Bobby Bowers, senior vice president of Smith Travel Research.
... an increasing number of hotels have so little revenue that they can't even afford to pay their operating bills and payroll, not to mention servicing debt.
Owners of such hotels are increasingly handing the keys back to the lenders, and the problem is likely to get worse: As many as 1 in 5 U.S. hotel loans may default through 2010, UC Berkeley economist Kenneth Rosen said.
In some cases the lenders are simply locking up the properties...
emphasis added
Office Vacancy Rate and Unemployment
by Calculated Risk on 10/07/2009 10:31:00 AM
Last night Reis reported that the U.S. office vacancy rate hits 16.5 percent in Q3. (See Reis: U.S. Office Vacancy Rate Hits 16.5% in Q3 for a graph).
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph shows the office vacancy rate vs. the quarterly unemployment rate and recessions.
The unemployment rate and the office vacancy rate tend to move in the same direction - and the peaks and troughs mostly line up.
As the unemployment rate continues to rise over the next year or more, the office vacancy rate will probably rise too. Reis' forecast is for the office vacancy rate to peak at 18.2 percent in 2010, and for rents to continue to decline through 2011.
One of the questions is why - with a 9.8% unemployment rate in September - the office vacancy rate isn't even higher? This is probably because of less overbuilding, as compared to the S&L related overbuilding in the '80s, and the tech bubble overbuilding a few years ago. Also a number of non-office workers (construction and retail workers) have lost their jobs in the current employment recession.
The second graph shows office investment as a percent of GDP since 1959 through Q2 2009.
Office investment peaked in Q3 2008, and with the office vacancy rate rising sharply, office investment will probably decline at least through 2010.
Of course many existing office buildings were purchased in recent years at very low cap rates, with excessive leverage, and optimistic income projections. Now that prices have fallen sharply, many of these building owners are far underwater - and that will lead to more losses for lenders. See the WSJ: Fed Frets About Commercial Real Estate
NY Times: Employment Tax Credit Gains Support
by Calculated Risk on 10/07/2009 09:21:00 AM
From Catherine Rampell at the NY Times: Support Builds for Tax Credit to Help Hiring
... a tax credit for companies that create new jobs ... is gaining support among economists and Washington officials ...The timing is probably better than in 1977 when employment was already recovering. If the 1970s estimate is accurate (about 2/3 of the jobs would have been created anyway), this proposal is already much better targeted than the housing tax credit, and better for the economy and the housing market too.
Timothy J. Bartik, a senior economist at the Upjohn Institute for Employment Research who is working on the draft with John H. Bishop of Cornell, estimates that it would cost about $20,000 for each job created.
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Under the proposal from Mr. Bartik and Mr. Bishop, the credit in the first year would equal 15.3 percent of the cost of adding an employee. In the second year, it would fall to about 10.2 percent.
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The authors estimate their proposal could create more than two million jobs in the first year.
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Of course, even in recessionary times, some companies are hiring without tax breaks. So a subsidy could merely benefit those businesses that already would have added new workers.
An American Economic Review study has suggested that the 1970s policy was responsible for adding about 700,000 of the 2.1 million jobs that were awarded the credit.
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Advocates argue that such incentives would be more effective this time around not only because of design, but also because of timing. In 1977, hiring was already on the upswing, whereas economists expect today’s job market to decline a bit more and then stagnate for months.
A key problem for housing and the economy is that there are too many housing units compared to the number of households. This proposal will indirectly stimulate more household formation - more jobs will create more households - and more households is the key to the housing market and the economy.
Reis: U.S. Office Vacancy Rate Hits 16.5% in Q3
by Calculated Risk on 10/07/2009 01:11:00 AM
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph shows the office vacancy rate starting 1991.
Reis is reporting the vacancy rate rose to 16.5% in Q3 from 15.9% in Q2. The peak following the previous recession was 17%.
From Bloomberg: U.S. Office Vacancies Reach Five-Year High of 16.5%, Reis Says
U.S. office vacancies ... climbed to 16.5 percent ... New York-based Reis said in a report. Effective rents ... fell 8.5 percent, the biggest year-over-year drop since 1995.Earlier this year Reis forecast that the U.S. office vacancy rate will top out at 18.2 percent in 2010, and that rents will continue to decline through 2011.
“The decline in effective rents really accelerated after the fall of Lehman Brothers,” Victor Calanog, director of research at Reis, said in a statement. “Tenants will continue shedding occupied space as jobs are lost.”
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“Weakness in rents is not concentrated in just a few” cities, Calanog said.
No wonder the Fed is so worried (previous post).


