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Tuesday, October 13, 2009

CRE in San Diego, Orange County and Las Vegas: Higher Vacancy Rates, Lower Rents

by Calculated Risk on 10/13/2009 11:18:00 AM

Voit released Q3 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. It also shows new construction has slowed sharply. Here are a couple of graphs for Orange County and San Diego. We are seeing a similar pattern nationwide ...

O.C. Office Vacancy Rate and New Construction
Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph shows the annual Orange County office vacancy rate and new construction since 1988. See Voit report for more.

Note that in the previous slumps, office construction didn't pick up until the vacancy rate dropped below 10%.

From the Voit report:

Net absorption for the county posted a negative 438,803 square feet for the third quarter of 2009, giving the office market a total of 1.92 million square feet of negative absorption for the year.
...
The average asking Full Service Gross (FSG) lease rate per month per foot in Orange County is currently $2.24, which is a 16.73% decrease over last year’s rate of $2.69 and five cents lower than last quarter’s rate.
...
Total space under construction checked in at 166,455 square feet at the end of the third quarter, which is less than half the amount that was under construction this same time last year.
emphasis added
San Diego Office Vacancy Rate and new construction The second graph is for San Diego. The dynamics are similar, but absorption is slighly positive in San Diego. From Voit:
Net absorption for the county posted a positive 346,030 square feet for the third quarter of 2009, giving the office market a total of 653,537 square feet of positive absorption for the year.
...
The average asking Full Service Gross (FSG) lease rate per month per foot in San Diego County is currently $2.39, which is a 12.8% decrease over last year’s rate of $2.74 and eight cents lower than last quarter’s rate. The record high rate of $2.76 was established in the first and second quarter of 2008.
Once again, investment in new office space will probably not increase until the vacancy rate is below 10%.

Although Voit didn't provide a similar graph for Las Vegas, the situation is clearly worse:
The amount of occupied space valley-wide fell to 38.2 million, a level not witnessed since the second quarter of 2007. The average vacancy rate reached 22.7 percent, which represented a 0.7-point increase from the preceding quarter (Q2 2009). Compared to the prior year (Q3 2008), vacancies were up 5.7 points from 17.0 percent.
...
On an annualized basis, new supply has dwindled and less than one million square feet of new supply is expected to enter the market during 2009, a figure not seen since 2003. We expect even less development in 2010 with a plug on the development pipe until the supply-demand imbalance corrects itself.
New office construction has slowed significantly in these markets, and will not pick up until vacancy rates drop sharply.

Report: CIT Nears Bankruptcy, CEO to Resign

by Calculated Risk on 10/13/2009 08:23:00 AM

From Reuters: CIT debt swap struggles, bankruptcy looms. Reuters is reporting that "sources familiar with the matter" say bondholders are showing little interest in the debt exchange offer and a bankruptcy is now more likely.

Also this morning CIT announced that CEO Jeffrey Peek is resigning effective Dec 31st.

The possible bankruptcy of CIT is a major concern because CIT provides financing for about one million small businesses. And small businesses are already having trouble obtaining credit.

From Peter Goodman in the NY Times: Credit Tightens for Small Businesses

Many small and midsize American businesses are still struggling to secure bank loans, impeding their expansion plans and constraining overall economic growth ...

Most banks expect their lending standards to remain tighter than the levels of the last decade until at least the middle of 2010, according to a survey of senior loan officers conducted by the Federal Reserve Board. ... Bankers worry about the extent of losses on credit card businesses ...[and] are also reckoning with anticipated failures in commercial real estate. Until the scope of these losses is known, many lenders are inclined to hang on to their dollars rather than risk them on loans to businesses in a weak economy ...
Also see: Small Business and Employment

A CIT bankruptcy will probably lead to even tighter credit for many small businesses exacerbating the current credit situation.

Monday, October 12, 2009

Fed's Bullard: Falling Unemployment Rate "Prerequisite" for Rate Increase

by Calculated Risk on 10/12/2009 10:07:00 PM

Usually this would be a "duh", but with some of the Fed talk recently, this is worth noting ...

From Bloomberg: Bullard Says Lower Unemployment Condition to Tighten

...“You want some jobs growth and unemployment coming down. That is a prerequisite” for an increase in interest rates, Bullard said. “It doesn’t mean you need unemployment all the way down to more normal levels.”
...
Bullard, referring to a prior jobless rate of 10.8 percent, said “I don’t think we will quite hit the peak we hit in 1982, but things have surprised us before.”
...
“I’m the north pole of inflation hawks,” Bullard said. “But we are trying to describe optimal policy, some optimal outcomes in an environment where inflation is below target -- we have an implicit target of 1.5 to 2 percent -- and you have the specter of a Japanese-style outcome, which I have worried about and some other members of the FOMC have worried about.”
...
“It is a little disappointing that private-sector economists are thinking so much about when we are going to move our fed funds rate up,” he said. “We are at zero. We are going to be there awhile. The focus should be more on” the Fed’s asset purchase program.
As Paul Krugman noted this weekend, we are a long way from when the Fed will raise rates.

CBRE: Retail Cap Rates Increase Sharply in Q3

by Calculated Risk on 10/12/2009 06:42:00 PM

From CB Richard Ellis: U.S. Retail Cap Rates

Ending at 8.71%, cap rates were up again. The 59 basis point gain is the largest quarterly increase we have ever measured, even trumping last quarter's previous record.
emphasis added
Retail Cap Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph from CBRE shows the retail cap rate since 2003. Note that 2009 is an average of Q1 through Q3, and the cap rate in Q3 was at 8.71% - above the 2003 annual level.

Sharply higher vacancy rates, lower rents, reduced leverage and much higher cap rates - this is what Brian calls the "neutron bomb for RE equity"; destroys CRE investors (and lenders), but leaves the buildings still standing.

Cap Rate: the net operating income divided by the current value (or purchase price). Net operating income excludes depreciation and interest expenses. Say an investor paid $100 thousand in cash for a retail property, the investor would expect to clear $8,710 in cash per year after expenses with an 8.71% cap rate (the $8,710 is before paying income taxes that depend on financing and depreciation).

The History of the World wouldn't be complete without ...

by Calculated Risk on 10/12/2009 04:45:00 PM


From Larry Gonick's The Cartoon History of the Modern World, Part 2, on page 248 ... (ht TDM)

Click on cartoon for larger image in new window.

Posted with permission from Larry Gonick. Thanks!

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