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Tuesday, April 07, 2009

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 ...

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.
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).

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%

Stock Market Crashes 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.

S&P 500


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 ...

“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.”
Sharply falling rents. Hoocoodanode?

Report: Stress Test Results Delayed

by Calculated Risk on 4/07/2009 02:27:00 PM

From Reuters: Source: Bank 'stress test' results delayed (ht Branden DD49)

The U.S. Treasury Department is planning to delay the release of any completed bank "stress test" results ...

The Treasury is still talking about how results of the regulatory stress tests on the 19 largest U.S. banks will be released, and may disclose them as summary results that are not institution-specific, the source said.
...
The source ... said officials do not want any test results released before the earnings season wraps up for most U.S. banks on April 24.
The original time frame was no later than the end of April, so this is still on schedule. We definitely need institution-specific results.

Reuters reports GM in Intense Bankruptcy Preparations

by Calculated Risk on 4/07/2009 12:06:00 PM

From Reuters: GM shares skid on bankruptcy preparation news

... a source familiar with the company's plans told Reuters it was in "intense" and "earnest" preparations for a possible bankruptcy filing.
Also from Reuters: U.S. carmakers at 70 percent risk of bankruptcy: Moody's
Moody's Investors Service said it still sees a 70 percent chance of bankruptcy for Detroit's automakers ... "Given the lack of progress achieved and the additional progress that will be required in the revised plans, this threat will need to be seen as credible in order to compel adequate movement on the part of stakeholders," Moody's said in a note dated Monday.
At least this story has an expiration date (another 52 days for GM, 22 days for Chrysler).