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Tuesday, July 06, 2010

Reis: U.S. Office Vacancy Rate at 17 year high

by Calculated Risk on 7/06/2010 08:23:00 AM

Office Vacancy Rate Click on graph for larger image in new window.

This graph shows the office vacancy rate starting 1991.

Reis is reporting the vacancy rate rose to 17.4% in Q1 2010, up from a revised 17.3% in Q1 (revised up from 17.2%), and up from 16.0% in Q2 2009. The peak following the previous recession was 16.9%.

From Bloomberg Office Vacancy Rate in U.S. Climbs to 17-Year High, Reis Says

The vacancy rate climbed to 17.4 percent from 16 percent a year earlier and 17.3 percent in the first quarter, the New York-based research company said today in a statement. Effective rents, the amount tenants actually pay landlords, fell 5.7 percent from a year earlier and 0.9 percent from the previous three months, according to Reis.
It appears the rate of increases has slowed.

Reis should release the Mall and Apartment vacancy rates over the next few days, and those will probably be at record levels.

Monday, July 05, 2010

Rogoff sees "Collapse" in China's Property Market

by Calculated Risk on 7/05/2010 08:29:00 PM

From Bloomberg: China Property Market Beginning Collapse That May Hit Banks, Rogoff Says (ht jb)

“You’re starting to see that collapse in property and it’s going to hit the banking system,” [Kenneth Rogoff, Harvard University professor and former chief economist of the IMF] said today [in an interview with Bloomberg Television in Hong Kong].
...
He also said that while recoveries across the global economy are “very slow,” the danger of a return to recession isn’t “elevated.”
It appears Rogoff is talking about a "collapse" in sales, but price frequently follows volume in real estate - so perhaps he is also talking about a steep decline in prices.

Note: Here is the weekly summary and a look ahead (with plenty of graphs from last week).

The Nikkei is off about 1.5% in early trading.

And from CNBC: Pre-Market Data shows the S&P 500 off over 1% (close to breaking under 1000) and Dow futures are off about 110 points.

Best to all.

More on the slowdown in China

by Calculated Risk on 7/05/2010 03:58:00 PM

Just a follow up to the previous posts on oil prices and the 2nd half slowdown ...

From Bloomberg: China Car Sales Grow at Slower Pace; Services Index Slides to 15-Month Low (ht Paulo)

China’s auto sales grew at a slower pace in June and a services-industry index slid to a 15-month low, adding to signs that the economy leading the world recovery is cooling.

Passenger-car purchases rose 10.9 percent from a year earlier, down from May’s 25 percent gain, the China Automotive Technology & Research Center said today. The services-industry measure fell to 55.6 from 56.4, HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics said in an e-mailed statement.
Slowing in China is just one of the 2nd half stories - there is also less stimulus spending, state and local government cutbacks, more household saving impacting consumption, another downturn in housing, and a slowdown and financial issues in Europe.

On the flip side, Yahoo had a headline this morning: 8 Problems That Could Trigger a Double-Dip Recession (ht Brian). Brian joked that this might be a new contrary indicator (like the old magazine cover indicator).

Update on Oil Prices

by Calculated Risk on 7/05/2010 01:21:00 PM

With the weakness in the US and European economies, and an apparent slowdown in China, it might be time to look at oil prices ...

Oil Prices Click on graph for larger image in new window.

These are spot prices for Cushing WTI from the EIA (source).

Back in the Spring of 2008, we started seeing many signs of potential demand destruction - including fewer U.S miles driven, Asian countries reducing gasoline subsidies, and China stock piling oil for the Olympics. That was a pretty clear sign that oil prices would fall after China stopped stock piling oil.

So far miles driven have been increasing slowly (although the most recent data is for April, and there may be more weakness in June). And once again the Shanghai stock market is suggesting a slowdown in China. Not a clear sign like in 2008, but something to watch.

Europe: Austerity or "rigorous fiscal policies"?

by Calculated Risk on 7/05/2010 08:57:00 AM

A couple of quotes from the WSJ: Lagarde: Banks Will Pass Stress Tests

"There is no choice between austerity and stimulus," [Finance Minister Christine Lagarde] said at an economic conference in Aix-en-Provence. "Our policy is a subtle mix between growth-friendly spending cuts and letting play out the remainder of our stimulus package," she said.
...
"We are in a period when we have to manage budgets very cautiously. ... You may call that austerity if you want, I call this rigorous fiscal policies," [European Central Bank President Jean-Claude Trichet] told reporters on the sidelines of an economic conference in southern France.

"If you want sustainable growth, then you have to restore confidence and to do that you need to have balanced and sustainable fiscal policies in place," he added
Paul Krugman disagrees: Plan XVII For Europe