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Monthly Archives: October 2009
COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE – WHAT INNING?
Tom Barrack is the chairman of Colony Capital. He controls some $40 Billion worth of real estate, spanning from hotels, to office properties, to Michael Jackson’s Neverland Ranch. When foreign investors look to place their money in the US they look to Colony Capital as one of the top players.
DOWNTOWN CHICAGO SEES THE FIRST CLASS A PROPERTY SELL THIS YEAR
In my opinion it’s questionable whether or not it lives up to standard of a Class A property. I guess it all depends on who is delivering the message.
“The first Class A asset to sell downtown this year, McMorgan & Co. had sold its 311,000-square-foot 303 W. Madison. The 26-story building was purchased by an international real estate investor in a deal that closed Wednesday for a reported $60 million. Sold by CB Richard Ellis, which will continue to manage and lease the property, the building’s buyer is reported to be tequila maker Jose Cuervo.”
FAS 13 – ARE YOU READY?
The proposed changes to the Statement of Financial Accounting Standards No. 13, known as FAS 13, which governs the accounting of leases, would reclassify “operating” leases as “capital” leases, ending the long-standing and long-debated practice of accounting for leases as off-balance-sheet transactions.
Costar has a nice segment on this found here.
POOR UNDERWRITING CONTINUES
The delinquency rate on commercial mortgages jumped 33 basis points to 3.34 percent last month, according to Credit Suisse Group AG. Payments on $22.4 billion of mortgages were at least 60 days late in September, the report from the financial services firm said, a sharp increase from the same time period a year ago, when $3.2 billion in mortgages were delinquent. Credit Suisse analysts attributed the uptick in delinquencies to poor underwriting on recent loans, as borrowers expected rents on space — particularly retail — to keep rising.
U.S. OFFICE VACANCIES REACH 5 YEAR HIGH OF 16.5%
Reis Inc., a New York based real estate research firm, reported 3rd quarter vacancy rates of 16.5%. Couple this with a climbing unemployment rate of 9.8% (Yikes) and there doesn’t seem to be a recovery of any sort happening here.
Rightly so, The Wall Street Journal is reporting (Fed Frets About Commercial Real Estate) that the Fed has concerns about commercial real estate and the speed with which banks are taking their losses.
The fact of the matter remains unless you have jobs growth there is no demand for office space. People can’t or won’t start new companies and existing employers are shedding space not expanding into space.