by Calculated Risk on 7/08/2009 12:56:00 AM
Wednesday, July 08, 2009
Apartment Vacancy Rate at 22 Year High
From Reuters: U.S. apartment vacancies near historic high: report
The vacancy rate for U.S. apartments reached its highest level in more than 20 years...Note: the Reis numbers are for cities. The overall vacancy rate from the Census Bureau was at 10.1% in Q1 2009. This fits with the NMHC apartment market survey.
The national vacancy rate rose to 7.5 percent ... The record high was 7.8 percent in 1986.
"We are reaching that historic high very quickly," said Victor Calanog, Reis director of research.
... effective rent was down 1.9 percent from the prior year and 0.9 percent from the first quarter to $975, Reis said.
... "With general expectations of an economic recovery pushed back to early 2010 at the earliest, it seems likely that apartments will have to endure a few more quarters of distress, lower rents and higher vacancies," Calanog said.
Rising vacancies. Falling Rents. This time for apartments ...
Tuesday, July 07, 2009
More Evidence of the "Foreclosure Backlog"
by Calculated Risk on 7/07/2009 09:00:00 PM
From Peter Hong at the LA Times: L.A. County's May default rate double last year
May's 9.5% [seriously] delinquency rate [more than 90 days] for L.A. County was up from 5% of mortgages ... in May 2008 [First American CoreLogic reported today].Ramsey Su (REO broker in San Diego) sent me some data today. He wrote:
... the final foreclosure stage -- has shrunk. In May, the L.A. County repossession rate was down to 1% of mortgages, from 1.1% a year ago. This discrepancy is the "foreclosure backlog" now looming over the housing market. ...
Nationally, First American reported 6.5% of mortgages were in default in May, up from 4% in May 2008. The national repossession rate was 0.7% in May, up from 0.6% in May 2007.
[Pent Up Foreclosures - a stat Ramsey follows] measures the difference between foreclosures completed versus defaults. This gap is widening as a result of government intervention. ... If they do not ACCELERATE the foreclosure process and release some of the pressure now, the consequences will be disastrous.The foreclosures are coming. The foreclosures are coming!
CNBC Interview with Bryan Marsal, CEO of Lehman Brothers Holdings
by Calculated Risk on 7/07/2009 06:32:00 PM
This is an interesting interview from early this morning with Bryan Marsal, CEO of Lehman Brothers Holdings, who is unwinding Lehman Brothers ... especially at the 18 minute mark:
One of my partners said yesterday that we are going to call this phase the "extend and pretend" phase in our economy. Which is you extend someone's maturity - because they are going to default - and you pretend that business will come back or that leverage factor is going to come back.This applies to all kinds of debt - extend and pretend - that sounds like most of the residential loan modifications! But eventually many of those same loans will reach the "send" phase.
Then we'll enter phase two, which he said is the request to extend or "amend".
Then "send". In other words send the keys.
That is the phases we are in right now. Everyone is trying to buy time, as opposed to dealing with the leverage, they are trying to buy time. Whether you are a banker or a company, they are all trying to buy time. I don't see the leverage coming back, and I don't see the consumption of good and services coming back.
Bryan Marsal, CEO of Lehman Brothers Holdings.
CRE: Another Half Off Sale and Market
by Calculated Risk on 7/07/2009 03:54:00 PM
First, the market was off about 2% today ... Click on graph for larger image in new window.
This 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.
And from Bloomberg: Deutsche Bank to Sell New York Tower for $605 Million (ht Brad, Brian)
Deutsche Bank AG, Germany’s largest bank, plans to sell Manhattan’s Worldwide Plaza to ... RCG Longview and George Comfort & Sons ... for about $605 million ...More like 65% off, but all that vacant space was probably a huge factor.
Deutsche Bank is selling the last of seven buildings it seized from developer Harry Macklowe. He paid $1.74 billion for the 1.75 million square-foot property in February 2007, according to Real Capital Analytics Inc. data. Manhattan office building prices have dropped 30 percent to 50 percent since the peak in 2007, according to Woody Heller, head of the capital transactions group at Studley, a New York-based brokerage. Heller wasn’t involved in the transaction.
...The 47-story building will have more than 700,000 square- feet of vacant space with the expected departure of advertising and public relations firm Ogilvy & Mather.
Office Vacancy Rate and Unemployment
by Calculated Risk on 7/07/2009 02:33:00 PM
Last night Reis reported that the U.S. office vacancy rate hits 15.9 percent in Q2. (See Reis: U.S. Office Vacancy Rate Hits 15.9% in Q2 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 - given 9.5% unemployment - the office vacancy rate isn't even higher? This is probably a combination of less overbuilding as compared to the S&L related overbuilding in the '80s, and the tech bubble overbuilding a few years ago. And possibly because a higher percentage of construction, manufacturing and retail workers (non-office workers) have lost their jobs in the recession (I'll have to check that).
Note: Hotel and retail structure investment were off the charts during the recent boom, but office investment was somewhat muted in comparison ...
The second graph shows office investment as a percent of GDP since 1972 through Q1 2009. Office investment peaked in Q3 2008, and with the office vacancy rate rising sharply, office investment will probably decline at least through 2010.
Note: In 1997, the Bureau of Economic Analysis changed the office category. In the earlier years, offices included medical offices. After '97, medical offices were not included (The BEA presented the data both ways in '97).
There is still too much space coming online. From Reuters:
During the second quarter, office space coming on the market topped rented space by about 20 million square feet, slightly less than the 25.2 million square feet in the first quarter.
Year-to-date, 45.2 million more square feet came onto the market than was rented, in line with Reis' projection of about 67.6 million square feet for all of 2009.
If the projection holds true, 2009 will be the worst year for net absorption of office space since Reis began tracking it in 1980.


