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Archive for July 14th, 2010
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Time, MSNBC, Fortune All Proclaim CRE Recovery
by David Bodamer July 14th, 2010
This is what makes following commercial real estate so maddening.
Less than a week ago, Forbes had a post looking at the big storm brewing in commercial real estate. And the phrase “next shoe to drop” was still being tossed around.
Yet in the last few days articles have appeared at Time, MSNBC and Fortune boasting about various aspects of a brewing commercial real estate recovery. John Reeder over at Marketwi.se warns us that this might be a reason to worry given the mainstream media’s track record of calling booms or busts at exactly the wrong times.
Time’s piece appeared first. It’s an interview with Mike Kirby, chairman of Green Street Advisors, that asks if commercial real estate is bouncing back.
Fortune’s piece came next, showing up yesterday afternoon. Its piece looked at how the CMBS market has exhibited some vitality lately (something we’ve noted as well). What’s been most remarkable about the CMBS recovery is that many people thought that the old model would have to be modified in some way for CMBS to come back. But that’s not been the case. Nor has the intervention of the federal government been as essential to the process as some had thought.
The piece is interesting and traces how the recovery of the CMBS sector has unfolded through a series of fortuitous occurrences, shifts in strategies and the emergence of buyers for bonds that previously may not have been so interested in the sector.
MSNBC, meanwhile, posted a piece this morning saying that commercial real estate fundamentals have improved–but only in coastal markets. New York, Los Angeles, Seattle and Boston are mentioned. But there’s a different picture in the rest of the country where there’s less evidence of any kind of positive momentum.
So what to make of all of this?
I think ultimately the lesson is that too often the concept of “commercial real estate” is overly simplified by the mainstream business press.
There are tons of moving parts. There are different kinds of lenders. There are different kinds and qualities of properties. There are different markets. During the boom years there was an awful lot of compression in cap rates and values and financing terms and it seemed as if those differences between markets and property quality had disappeared. For example, the spread in pricing between a class-A building in New York and a class-C building in St. Louis compressed. When getting loans, LTVs were high, interest rates were low and all loans were non-recourse.
But the end of the boom and subsequent recession have reintroduced those differences with a vengeance. And I think what we’re going to see is a recovery playing out at different speeds and in different degrees for different parts of the commercial real estate business.
So I don’t think we can spin one simple narrative of commercial real estate as a sector rising or falling in unison. It’s neither the “next shoe to drop” nor is it “recovering.” It’s a messy story. Unfortunately, messy stories don’t make for clean and neat narratives when writing trend pieces. So the messiness gets glossed over.
We’re going to see continued pain in some places alongside recovery in others. It does very much appear, though, that a bottom in values has formed. But I don’t think anyone can say for certain what the contours or speed of recovery in values is going to look like. And it’s going to play out differently in different markets and in different property sectors.
We are seeing improvement or stability for top properties in top markets. That makes a lot of sense. Class-B or class-C properties–especially ones in secondary or tertiary markets–are going to have a much tougher road. And some, ultimately, will never succeed as they were envisioned. They’ll need to be redeveloped or demolished.
On the lending side, life insurance companies were more conservative than commercial banks and conduit lenders. And today the loans on their books have the lowest delinquency rates. So they have less problems to deal with going forward as loans mature. And financing is available from various sources, but not on the terms we saw at the frothiest time in the market.
Lastly, I think it’s hugely important to remember that the health of commercial real estate as a sector is contingent on the health of the rest of the economy–particularly the jobs situation. Without a jobs recovery there will be no rise in demand for office space, no recovery in business and leisure travel, no sustained recovery in consumer spending and less people doubling up or living at home and moving into their own apartments.
So until that happens, I expect that the mainstream media’s read on commercial real estate will continue to swing wildly depending on whatever the latest zeitgeist happens to be.
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