by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2009 02:31:00 PM
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Reports: IMF and Barofsky's SIGTARP
Here are the links to the reports released today (IMF and SIGTARP):
Website: Office of the Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP)
April 21, 2009 - Quarterly Report to Congress
IMF: Global Financial Stability Report website
More on Office Vacancy Rates and New Construction
by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2009 01:55:00 PM
Voit released quarterly reports today for CRE in Las Vegas, San Diego and Orange County.
The reports show the vacancy rates are up, and lease rates (falling rents), net absorption, transactions and construction are all down.
It appears new construction has all but stopped. Here are a couple of graphs for Orange County and San Diego. We are seeing a similar pattern nationwide, although new construction in these areas probably slowed earlier than most of the country.
Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This graph shows the annual Orange County office vacancy rate and new construction since 1998. (See Voit report for more.
In 2007 the rapid increase in the vacancy rate was due to a huge increase in new space combined with negative absorption as a number of Orange County financial companies (like New Century) went under. New construction has almost stopped, but the net absorption rate is still negative, so the vacancy rate is still rising.
Because of the concentration of subprime lenders in Orange County, the office space market was hit earlier than other areas of the country.
From the Voit report:
Total space under construction checked in at 173,209 square feet at the end of the first quarter, which is almost 80% lower than the amount that was under construction this same time last year. ... The office vacancy rate (for direct and sublease space) finished the year at 15.58%, constituting an increase over last year’s rate of 13.28%.Although the chart only goes back to 1998, the record year for new development in Orange County was 1988, when 5.7 million square feet of new space was added. The vacancy rate peaked at approximately 24% in 1988 (the S&L crisis related office boom).
The second graph is for San Diego. The dynamics are similar, but construction halted later than in Orange County. From Voit: The office vacancy rate (for direct and sublease space) finished the quarter at 16.03%, constituting a 25.23% increase over last year’s first quarter rate of 12.80%. This increase is a result of the new construction, 2.5 million square feet during 2008, coupled with a slowing economy ...Although Voit didn't provide a similar graph for Las Vegas, the situation is clearly worse:
Currently there is 1.3 million square feet of Office construction underway, and total construction is lower than it was a year ago when 3.2 million square feet was under construction. This is a decrease of 59% when compared to last year ...
The valley-wide average vacancy rate reached 19.6 percent, which represented a 2.0-point increase from the preceding quarter (Q4 2008). Compared to the prior year (Q1 2008), vacancies were up 4.9 points from 14.7 percent.Although each market is different, clearly new office construction has all but halted.
...
The northwest witnessed the completion of Montecito Point near the intersection of key freeways, the Interstate 215 and US-95. The 186,300-square-foot building remains substantially vacant.
...
As of the close of the quarter, approximately 1.9 million square feet was in some form of construction. The southwest reported nearly 1.1 million square feet underway. As market conditions continue to shift, the timing of selected projects remains uncertain. Nearly 30 percent of product identified as under construction has delayed timing, halted material development activity or in the foreclosure process ...
emphasis added
Citi CEO: Citi Will Repay TARP
by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2009 12:22:00 PM
From Bloomberg: Pandit Says He’ll Repay ‘Every Dollar’ of TARP Funds
Citigroup Inc. Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit, speaking at the company’s annual shareholder meeting, said he will repay “every dollar with interest” of funds received [from TARP].More from the WSJ:
Citigroup Chief Executive Vikram Pandit struck a positive, even hopeful tone, at the embattled banking giant's annual meeting, insisting that it is well prepared for success in an economic recovery.Remember Pandit took over in December 2007, not long after Chuck - “As long as the music is playing, you’ve got to get up and dance. We’re still dancing.” - Prince resigned.
In his review of Citi's 2008, Pandit said, "The vital signs of Citi are improving." He predicted Citi will have "strong operating leverage" going forward once the economy recovers.
Geithner Testifies
by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2009 10:25:00 AM
From the WaPo: Geithner Faces Oversight Grilling
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner is testifying before a congressional oversight committee headed by Elizabeth Warren, the overseer of the bailout, underway right now.Here is the text of the letter describing the bailout.
Warren is setting the tone of the hearing, telling Geithner that Americans are "angry" at how the bailout has been administered so far, by both Geithner and his predecessor, Hank Paulson.
"People want to see action in terms that make sense to them," Warren said, is Geithner nodded solemnly.
Here is the CNBC feed.
And a live feed from C-SPAN.
IMF: Global Losses may hit $4.1 Trillion
by Calculated Risk on 4/21/2009 09:12:00 AM
From Bloomberg: IMF Says Global Losses From Credit Crisis May Hit $4.1
Worldwide losses tied to rotten loans and securitized assets may reach $4.1 trillion by the end of 2010 as the recession and credit crisis exact a higher toll on financial institutions, the International Monetary Fund said.Here is the Reuters report.
Banks will shoulder about 61 percent of the writedowns, with insurers, pension funds and other nonbanks assuming the rest ... The fund projected losses of $2.7 trillion at U.S. financial institutions, an increase from its estimates of $2.2 trillion in
January and $1.4 trillion in October.
The $4.1 trillion estimate is the first by the IMF to include loans and securities originating in Europe and Japan. ...
The report said U.S. bank losses at the end last year totaled $510 billion. Additional writedowns of $550 billion are expected through 2010. The projections exclude government-sponsored enterprises.
And from the WSJ: IMF: Banks Need $875 Billion in Equity


