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Wednesday, July 01, 2009

Report: As many as One in Five U.S. hotels may default

by Calculated Risk on 7/01/2009 12:59:00 PM

I've already posted most of the data in this article ... so I'll just excerpt a quote.

From Bloomberg: Hotel Loan Defaults Double as Recession Cuts Travel (ht mark, ghostfaceinvestah, brian)

As many as one in five U.S. hotel may default on their loans by the end of 2010 as the recession forces companies to spend less on travel and perks, according to Kenneth Rosen, an economist at the University of California.

The value of hotel properties in default or foreclosure almost doubled to $17.3 billion in the second quarter through June 24 from $9 billion at the end of the first quarter, data compiled by Real Capital Analytics Inc. show. The New York-based research firm, which began tracking distressed commercial property in November, expects hotel defaults to increase by as much as $2 billion next quarter, said analyst Jessica Ruderman.

“Hotels without question will have the highest foreclosure rate of any commercial real-estate sector,” said Rosen ...
The hotel segment was the most overbuilt of all CRE - and that is saying something with all the excess retail space!

Ford June U.S. light vehicle sales down 11% YOY

by Calculated Risk on 7/01/2009 12:27:00 PM

From MarketWatch:

Ford June U.S. sales down 11% to 148,153 units

Ford to increase Q3 production to 485,000 vehicles

Volvo June U.S. sales down 0.6% to 7,042 units

Daimler June U.S. sales fell 26.5% to 16,271 vehicles.

MORE TO COME ...

Previous months:
Ford U.S. May sales fall 24.2%

Ford April U.S. vehicle sales off 31.3%

Ford U.S. March sales dropped 40.9%

February Ford sales were off 46.3% YoY

January off 42.1%

December off 32.4%

November off 31%

NAR: Pending Home Sales Index Increases Slightly

by Calculated Risk on 7/01/2009 10:49:00 AM

From the NAR: Pending Home Sales Record Fourth Straight Monthly Gain

The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator based on contracts signed in May, increased 0.1 percent to 90.7 from an upwardly revised reading of 90.6 in April, and is 6.7 percent higher than May 2008 when it was 85.0. The last time there were four consecutive monthly gains was in October 2004.
...
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, cautions that there could be delays in the number of contracts that go to closing. “Closed existing-home sales have improved but are coming in lower than expected because some contracts are delayed or falling through from the application of new appraisal rules for many transactions,” he said.
Yun is blaming the disconnect beteween pending and existing home sales on the change in apprasial rules, but there are probably other factors too - like rising mortgage rates, tighter lending standards, and the inability of homeowners to sell the current home.

Constructon Spending Declines in May

by Calculated Risk on 7/01/2009 10:15:00 AM

Private residential construction spending is 64.5% below the peak of early 2006.

Private non-residential construction spending is only off 4.1% below the peak of last September.

Construction Spending Click on graph for larger image in new window.

The first graph shows private residential and nonresidential construction spending since 1993. Note: nominal dollars, not inflation adjusted.

Residential construction spending fell further in May, and nonresidential spending was up a little (because of private spending on power), but will probably decline sharply over the next two years.

Construction Spending YoYThe second graph shows the year-over-year change for private residential and nonresidential construction spending.

Nonresidential spending is off 3.3% on a year-over-year basis, and will turn strongly negative as projects are completed. Residential construction spending is still declining YoY, although the negative YoY change should be smaller going forward.

As I've noted before, these will probably be two key stories for late 2009: the collapse in private non-residential construction, and the probable bottom for residential construction spending. Both stories are still developing ...

From the Census Bureau: May 2009 Construction at $968.7 Billion Annual Rate

Spending on private construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $649.2 billion, 1.0 percent (±1.1%)* below the revised April estimate of $655.6 billion. Residential construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $240.2 billion in May, 3.4 percent (±1.3%) below the revised April estimate of $248.8 billion. Nonresidential construction was at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $409.0 billion in May, 0.5 percent (±1.1%)* above the revised April estimate of $406.9 billion.

ISM Manufacturing Shows Contraction in June

by Calculated Risk on 7/01/2009 10:00:00 AM

From the Institute for Supply Management: June 2009 Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®

Economic activity in the manufacturing sector failed to grow in June for the 17th consecutive month, while the overall economy grew for the second consecutive month following seven months of decline, say the nation's supply executives in the latest Manufacturing ISM Report On Business®.

The report was issued today by Norbert J. Ore, CPSM, C.P.M., chair of the Institute for Supply Management™ Manufacturing Business Survey Committee. "Manufacturing continues to contract at a slower rate, but the trends in the indexes are encouraging as seven of 18 industries reported growth in June. Most encouraging is the gain in the Production Index, which is up 12.1 percentage points in the last two months to 52.5 percent. Aggressive inventory reduction continues and indications are that the de-stocking cycle is at or near the end in most industries, as the Customers' Inventories Index remained below 50 percent for the third consecutive month. The Prices Index was unchanged from May, indicating that the supply/demand balance is improving. Overall, a slow recovery for manufacturing is forming based on the current trends in the ISM data."
emphasis added
As noted, any reading below 50 shows contraction, although the pace of contraction has slowed.