Archive for the ‘Research’ Category

Mobile Technology to Play a Large Role This Christmas; CMBS Investors Ready for New Issuance (Friday’s News & Notes)

As we round off the first decade of the oughts, the way we shop has been changed dramatically by all the new technology that’s been developed in the past few years. Previously, we discussed the impact of social media sites on the way malls do business.

For example, this winter a slew of new iPhone applications will allow shoppers to compare bargains found at their local store against those offered by other retailers or on the web. Both retailers and retail property owners better start thinking about how to use these applications to their advantage. The impact of this new technology is likely to be huge, and not just when it comes to consumer behavior.

Agent Genius discusses ways brokers can use new mobile applications to help them do business. Imagine augmented reality applications on smart phones that allow you to view a building through a phone’s camera and instantly be given listings on leasing availabilities or the building’s price. We’re just at the tip of an iceberg here.

Meanwhile, Web Designed Pinoy takes a look at how one iPhone application helps shoppers navigate retail properties. It allows shoppers to navigate shopping centers, search mall store inventories and lists available sales.

Lastly, Oklahoma per Square Foot had some thoughts on our story about Inland Western Retail Real Estate Trust’s successful Facebook campaign.

Here are some other news and notes from recent days.

  • Mobility Site looks at how more malls now feature Windows Phone kiosks.
  • Calculated Risk looks at how retail sales in December so far have been slow after a burst of activity during Black Friday weekend.
  • Luxury department store Barneys New York is looking into filing for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, and would like to be bought out by the owners of the Lord & Taylor chain, according to The New York Post.
  • The Wall Street Journal reports that mobile phone seller Nokia is also struggling in the U.S. and will close its flagship stores in New York and Chicago.
  • Real estate developers remain cautious. According to a new Reed Construction Data report, construction materials orders declined during the month of October.
  • There’s more movement on the financing front for individual properties. On the negative side, Forest City, recently missed a mortgage payment on its Atlantic Yards project, notes The Real Deal. However, West Oaks Mall is emerging from foreclosure, according to Chron Business. The 1.1-million-square-foot mall was recently purchased for $15 million.
  • Private equity fund managers and real estate partnership managers may face a huge increase through how carried interest is treated. The House passed a bill to raise the rates on carried interest from 15 percent to 35 percent–bringing it in line with capital gains tax rates. This is not the first time such a bill has passed the House. It has normally failed in the Senate. ICSC, among others, is urging industry pros to call their Senators and try to stop the tax.
  • Lending giant CIT Group completed its reorganization. We previously wrote about the potential impact of the reorganization on small retailers.
  • According to Reuters, an upcoming CMBS issue backed by Inland Western’s assets has attracted a lot of interest. Importantly, it was done without using TALF. And it speaks to a rise in interest among investors hungry for new CMBS bonds, according to the CoStar Group.

November Retail Sales Rise Inflated by Gas

According to the Commerce Department, November retail and food sales increased 1.5 percent from October and were 2.1 percent below September 2008.

The U.S. Census Bureau announced today that advance estimates of U.S. retail and food services sales for November, adjusted for seasonal variation and holiday and trading-day differences, but not for price changes, were $352.1 billion, an increase of 1.3 percent (±0.5%) from the previous month and 1.9 percent (±0.5%) above November 2008. Total sales for the September through November 2009 period were down 2.1 percent (±0.3%) from the same period a year ago. The September to October 2009 percent change was revised from +1.4 percent (±0.5%) to +1.1 percent (±0.2%).

Retail trade sales were up 1.4 percent (±0.5%) from October 2009 and 2.2 percent (±0.5%) above last year. Building material and garden equipment and supplies dealers were down 9.3 percent (±1.8%) from November 2008, but gasoline stations sales were up 8.9% (±1.3%) from last year.

However, don’t pop the champagne corks just yet. As Business Insider points out, a big part of the gain was a jump in gasoline sales.

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Calculated Risk’s take is here. On the positive side, at least consumer sentiment took a big jump in the most recent Reuters/University of Michigan index. The consumer sentiment index rose to 73.4 in early December from 67.4 in November. Calculated Risk’s retail sales chart and consumer index chart are below.

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Ackman’s ICSC Presentation: “If You Wait For The Robins, Spring Will Be Over”

Here’s a 68-page look into William Ackman’s mindset. It’s a much rosier outlook on things than what we heard from the majority of people we talked to at ICSC’s New York National Conference and Dealmaking. Even folks that had optimistic outlooks weren’t quite this optimistic. Then again, there’s a reason Ackman’s as successful as he is. In addition, Ackman is largely talking about the outlook for public mall REITs. REITs, in general, have fared better than private owners this year because of their ability to tap public markets for debt and equity. That’s how they’ve been able to delever.

ICSC Mall REIT Presentation 12-7-2009

(Via Value Plays)

Industry Wrestles With Web at ICSC New York National Conference

The mood at ICSC’s New York National Conference and Dealmaking is markedly better than it was this time last year, but most feel that the retail real estate sector is far from out of the woods.

A year ago, attendees still seemed dazed by the events that crippled Wall Street and were unsure of what was to come. Since then, the sector has experienced a major reshuffling. Among retailers there have been huge drops in retail sales, store closures, bankruptcies and liquidations. There were financial woes at industry giants Centro Properties Group and General Growth Properties. Investment sales activity all but dried up. The credit crunch and a collapse in the CMBS market made financing scarce. And property fundamentals, including rents and vacancies have deteriorated. Having gone through that, there is a hope within the industry that the worst is now behind us. No one expects a robust recovery is the cards. But there is hope that 2010 will not be as bad as 2009.

An opening general session featuring Gregory Melich, a managing director and retail analyst with Morgan Stanley, Simon Ziff, president of Ackman-Ziff Real Estate Group LLC and Glenn Rufrano, CEO of Centro Properties Group, set the tone for the event. Rufrano, who has helped steer Centro onto firmer footing in the past 12 months and was recently appointed to General Growth Properties’ board of directors, talked about what it takes to navigate the process of restructuring debt–a challenge that may lay before many in the industry given that there is about $320 billion in commercial real estate debt coming due in 2010, according to ING Clarion.

“The restructuring process in one word: Time,” Rufrano said. It is about working with lenders and creating the time necessary in order to get a property performing again or get to a point where prices have recovered enough to make a sale possible. But it’s also about convincing a lender that you remain commited to the asset. Rufrano talked of three critical points that need to be won early–establishing trust and credibility with the lender, proving to them that you are in the best position to run the asset and proposing to them a fair deal. Without doing those three things lenders may decide to cut their losses and bring in another manager or sell the debt at deep discounts to someone else. The challenge for distressed owners will be to prove to lenders that they can get a higher return by staying the deal and working through the problems than by selling.

However, there’s a sense that there remains a bit of a waiting game in the distressed process. Distress has started to spread, encompassing commercial real estate assets worth $132 billion—a 122 percent increase in distressed situations from the beginning of 2009, according to ING Clarion. That includes 1,486 properties, valued at $32 billion, in the retail sector. But in many cases banks are not working through the bad loans. They are extending and pretending. In additon, bank regulators have not pushed banks to recognize the losses that exist on balance sheets. The relaxation of accounting and tax rules has created a climate where banks are kicking the can down the road rather than addressing problems. “We’re all waiting for bank regulators to tell banks they need to clean up their balance sheets,” Ziff said.

The other big challenge for the industry will be the continued evolution of e-commerce. It is no longer about consumers sitting in front of their computers and browsing sites. Increasingly, people are making purchases via cell phones and other mobile devices. That is opening the doors to new ways of comparison shopping. For example, there is an application for I-phones that allows people to scan bar codes when looking at an item in a store and then being presented with a list of online purchasing options where the item may be less expensive.

As an early indicator of the changes occuring, online sales accounted for up to 15 percent of Black Friday sales this year. Traditionally, online sales account for about 4 percent of retail sales, but Melich sees the Internet’s share climbing to 6 percent in the next few years. The implication to that is that when retail sales do rebound, the recovery will be less robust at brick-and-mortar locations than in the last cycle. In the post 2001-recession, year-over-year same-store sales gains averaged about 5 percent during the strongest periods of growth. But the increased share of Internet sales could shave a percentage point off that growth this time around. Furthermore, a rise in the savings rate coupled with high unemployment and reduced availability of consumer credit will make any retail sales recovery weaker than in the last cycle, according to Melich. As a result, Melich concludes that between 200 million square feet and 300 million square feet of existing retail real estate estate may need to be shuttered or repurposed.

Beyond the reduced sales, the evolution of shopping patterns presents a challenge to owners and managers in how they will work with retailers going forward to meet consumers where they are at. How will they be a part of the equation in which people walk through malls and shop online simultaneously? This is something owners and managers are only beginning to try to figure out if conversations on the show floor are any indication.

For additional ICSC coverage, check our Twitter feed for periodic updates from the show floor and look back at the blog later today for another update.

November Same-Store Sales Disappoint

Retail Forward, ICSC and Retail Metrics have all done their monthly numbers crunching. The verdict is not very good. November same-store sales disappointed. According to ICSC sales were down. Retail Metrics and Retail Forward, however, reported that there was a slight year-over-year raise. What’s interesting is that there usually is not this much divergence between the three sources.

According to Retail Forward, sales-weighted same-store sales excluding Walmart increased 0.9 percent in November for the approximately 31 retailers that reported numbers. (A pdf with each retailer’s results can be downloaded here.) Frank Badillo, senior economist at Retail Forward, said in a statement, “Shoppers continue to give signs that they are ready to loosen the grip on their spending plans, but at the same time remain very cautious and deal-focused in their spending.”

ICSC’s tally of 32 retailers is that same-store sales fell 0.3 percent in November in comparison with last year after rising in both September and October. Here are ICSC’s results going back to 1993. According to its report, “These data suggested that the holiday season got off to a weak start in November for retailers–though the tail-end of the month saw relatively strong sales for electronics and online spending, but that seemed to be at the expense of some in-store performance and apparel demand, in particular.”

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Retail Metrics, meanwhile, reported that same-store sales increased 0.9 percent–results the firmed called “a giant miss”. Retail Metrics’ numbers include 37 retailers. Of those, 14 posted gains, two had flat sales and 21 posted same-store sales declines.

The bottom line is that comp store sales VERY disappointing ahead of the critical December Holiday shopping season. Facing the easiest monthly comparison this decade, retailers managed to eek out a very soft 0.7% increase. This despite increased ad spending and earlier sales events. The standard line from any retailers was a stronger YOY Black Friday weekend was not enough to offset very weak sales throughout most of the month.

Black Friday Reaction; Beware Justin Bieber; There’s an App for Malls(Holiday Weekend Roundup)

We made it through Black Friday and the rest of the weekend. NRF’s early take is that up 0.5 percent. ShopperTrak’s numbers are extrapolated off the traffic counts the company conducts at malls.

Barry Ritholz looks at why the earliest numbers that get reported are a bit suspect. We’ll get more reliable figures tomorrow. That’s when ICSC and Goldman Sachs report the first weekly holiday same-store sales stats. Still, all the early numbers should be viewed with some skepticism and we really need to wait until the full season has passed and we started getting the monthly same-store sales numbers from retailers. We’ll get November numbers in early December. That will be the first really clear view of how the holiday shopping season is panning out.

As the stats come rolling in, the Wall Street Journal has a report that wonders if any of the holiday sales predictions matter. Most of the previews come out in September and October. Is that too soon for forecasts? The report also looks at the methodologies of the different prognosticators and wonder if any are accurate enough.

Here are some other news and notes from the last few days.

Court Rulings on Atlantic Yards, DestiNY USA and Block 37; Smaller Concepts for Target, Ahold (Tuesday’s News & Notes)

It’s been a while since we posted a roundup here. So here are some headlines and blog posts from the past week or so that you might be interested in if you hadn’t seen them yet.

  • Atlantic Yards has cleared some legal obstacles. The Court of Appeals dismissed a challenge to the state’s use of eminent domain for the project. The development has long been delayed by legal wranglings and other issues. Now it may finally be able to move forward.
  • In a ruling that could have big implications, Citigroup is being forced to continue funding the construction of Destiny USA. The bank believes the project is a failure and wants to stop funding construction. The court ruled against it and now others are wondering what kind of language needs to be in place on construction financing that will enable banks to back away from questionable projects.
  • Another court decision that has people talking is a ruling in Chicago which removed Joseph Freed and Associates as the developer behind the Block 37 project. This ruling comes just as the first stores for the project are about to open. David Stejkowski has some interesting analysis of the ruling. He calls it shortsighted and argues that the lender was within its rights to push for a receiver, but that it may hurt the bank in the long run.
  • NREI detailed findings from a Fitch report that concluded that life insurance companies will be able to endure CMBS delinquencies. Conservatively, Fitch projects that life insurers will take a hit of $15.7 to $19.1 billion on their commercial real estate investments, compared with industry capital of $228 billion as of June 30.
  • Food retailer Royal Ahold NV is planning to expand in the U.S. through opening of convenience stores and other formats. It had previously operated in the sector, but got out of the business in 2005. It is currently operating a pilot store in Pennsylvania.
  • In a similar vein, Target is also looking at a smaller concept than its typical 128,000-square-foot locations. It wants to open more urban stores and wants a smaller, more flexible concept that it can roll out in cities. At those locations, Target may prune the number of items available by as much as 25 percent by cutting certain sizes and colors of products to ensure the stores are well-stocked.
  • MetLife and Prudential face up to $23 billion in losses on commercial real estate.
  • Estimates from Real Capital Analytics are that total investment sales volume in commercial real estate in 2009 will amount to $49 billion. That will make it the lowest annual investment sales volume since the firm began tracking deals in 2001. Bloomberg has the report.

Costco Takes Manhattan; Banks Shake Off Toxic Loans (Friday’s News & Notes)

It was a mixed bag today in terms of news for the retail real estat industry. Costco’s announcement of its first store in Manhattan was encouraging. Wal-Mart’s warning that we might be in for a lackluster holiday shopping season was not.

  • For some landlords, the break-down in leasing fundamentals is proving to be a blessing in disguise. Bloomberg reports that warehouse club Costco opened its first store in Manhattan , in East Harlem. Costco has been looking for a location in the city for years, but was finally able to close the deal because of a deep discount on the rent.
  • Those in the retail real estate industry, however, should brace themselves for the possibility that this downturn might last a while. When reporting its sales results today, Wal-Mart warned its customers still worry about spending money, according to The New York Post. That means the holiday shopping season isn’t likely to be great for the retailers.
  • In addition, it seems the string of liquidations in the retail sector is not over yet. This week, ink seller InkStop filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy, reports Cleveland.com.
  • Meanwhile, Forbes published a story criticizing private equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts for getting too greedy on the Dollar General deal. KKR reportedly took millions of dollars in fees from the retailer’s coffers before its IPO.
  • The encouraging news is that there is finally some movement on the real estate front. CoStar reports that institutional investors are beginning to buy class-A commercial assets. You can read Retail Chatr’s reaction to some of the points the story makes here .
  • At the same time, some banks have begun to dispose of the most toxic real estate loans on their balance sheets, according to Money CNN. In a market where many lenders still prefer to “pretend and extend,” that’s a sign of a breakthrough.

Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2010

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PricewaterhouseCoopers and the Urban Land Institute released their Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2010 this morning. They did a media call earlier today. I provided Twitter updates during the call.

Here are some of the key charts in the report.

Cap Rate Projections
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Debt & Equity Capital Market Forecasts
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Buy/Hold/Sell Recommendations
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More Worries About Commercial Real Estate; NIMBY Wars; Dollar General’s IPO (Wednesday’s News & Notes)

More people are worrying about commercial real estate. A Reuters piece from earlier this week features comments from Jon Greenlee, associate director of the Fed’s Division of Banking Supervision and Regulation.

Greenlee, remember, testified in a hearing before Congress in July on the precarious state of commercial real estate. What makes me worry about these kinds of hearings is that the logic of them is to put pressure on Congress to give the financial system (or developers) government aid. Is that really what we want?

Puffing up the threat commercial real estate poses to the system could lead to unnecessary bailouts and taxpayers being on the hook for losses that should be recognized by Wall Street. The logic of where we’re headed is that no one should take any losses for the highly-leveraged bad bets on properties with inflated values that took place. I think losses need to be recognized and while the process may be painful, we shouldn’t avoid it by having another bailout enacted.

Here are some other recent news and notes about retail and retail real estate.

  • The Llenrock Blog reviews Saint Consulting’s new book, Nimby Wars. Saint Consulting specializes in land use politics consulting and the book summarizes some of the lessons the firm has learned over the years. The review gives a good sense of the book’s contents and says it is a must read for developers.
  • There’s been a recent meme on a couple commercial real estate blogs and sites recently about how today is different than the commercial real estate crash in the early 1990s. Square Feet blog does an excellent job putting all the posts together in one place and summarizing the arguments.
  • We published Realpoint’s monthly look at CMBS delinquencies here. This Bloomberg piece looks at the numbers from Reis Inc. Both outlets say that CMBS delinquencies and defaults hit a new high in the third quarter.
  • The Wall Street Journal reported on Developers’ Diversified’s TALF deal. The shopping center REIT obtained a $400 million loan from Goldman Sachs secured by 28 properties that was to be converted into a CMBS offering through TALF. The Fed is reviewing the deal now. The story indicates that it is likely to approve the transaction.
  • Calculated Risk takes an informative look at the different commercial real estate indexes. The blog opted to do this after conflicting data emerged from different indexes in recent days. A monthly price index showed continued deterioration in commercial real estate pricing while the latest transaction-based index showed a surprising spike in values. The post explains how that happened.
  • More details emerged about Dollar General’s pending IPO. It will offer 34.1 million shares priced between $21 and $23 per share.
  • The Wall Street Journal reported that Blackstone will pay $195 million for stakes in some Glimcher malls.