Casey Files:
Commercial
Real Estate - the Next Shoe to Drop
Olivier Garret
Casey Research
The
Casey Report
Nov 28, 2008
The residential real estate
sector is in a shambles and, some economists say, will
not recover until the end of 2010, at the earliest. Now it looks
like commercial real estate may be the next block to fall in
our "Jenga economy."
On November 19, bonds and stocks
backed by commercial real estate loans plummeted on investors'
fears the struggling U.S. economy might lead to a wave of defaults.
Big real estate companies suffered
big losses: shares of Simon Property Group, the top U.S.
mall operator, declined 13%; Boston Properties Inc., owner
of skyscrapers and office buildings in key U.S. markets, fell
12.1%.
General Growth Properties
Inc., which owns more
than 200 mall properties throughout the United States, is teetering
on the brink of annihilation. If the flailing company can't come
up with the $958 million of its debt that is now due, and the
$3.07 billion due next year, it will have to file for bankruptcy
protection.
"Ghost malls" may
become a common sight around the country, with major mall developers
and big-name retail chains like Linens 'n Things and Circuit
City going broke and others, such as Starbucks, closing
hundreds of stores nationwide. Small businesses are even worse
off as shoppers tighten their belts.
A recent Newsweek article quipped
that it would "take some kind of sorcery to keep the current
mix of store closings, skeletal inventories, hard-to-find sales
staff and anxious consumers from turning the yuletide shopping
season of 2008 into a seriously cranky Christmas. Even Santas
have been getting pink-slipped."
None of what's happening surprises
Andy Miller, a consummate real estate entrepreneur and friend
of Doug Casey's, who presented his outlook on the commercial
real estate market in the September edition of The Casey Report.
Andy Miller on Retail Shopping Centers:
"Retail are the most exposed
product type. For example, we have a grocery-anchored shopping
center in Phoenix that's about 94% occupied. We've been trying
to sell it for the last nine months. We've had it under contract
probably four times. Each time, it's fallen through because the
buyers were unable to find a lender. The lack of liquidity is
particularly acute in the commercial markets.
"Most commercial mortgages
that were written over the last 10 years for most product types,
except apartments, were done by conduits, and they were done
by asset-backed finance securitizations, CDOs, etc. The overwhelming
number of those conduits are now either out of the market or
shut down. There's going to be a tremendous upheaval in the commercial
market relative to the fact that there's almost no conduit money
available anymore."
Andy Miller on Office Space:
"The office market, of
course, is eroding. While I expect the central business districts
around the 20 top cities in the country to probably be relatively
stable in terms of office occupancy, I think the suburban markets
are going to get creamed."
Andy Miller on Warehouses:
"Warehouses are bad. They're
very flat. Users are consolidating; they're not expanding."
Andy Miller on Hotels:
"I'd also be wary of hotels.
The hotel business is proliferating right now, in a way that
I've never seen. There are so many new hotels being built right
now nationally that there's no way, even in good times, that
I think they could sustain occupancy. A lot of these hotels now
have created new flags and they're putting them in multiple locations
in most big cities. So there's been a tremendous proliferation
of hotels and, with high air fares and high gas costs, there's
no question that that's going to be a bad place to be."
Andy Miller on the Real Estate Bubble:
"There is no historical
comparison to the situation today. Not even the Great Depression
was like this. I believe we've just lived through the greatest
expansion of capital in the history of planet Earth, in the history
of mankind.
"And this happened really
all over about 12 or 13 years, this gigantic, dynamic expansion
of money. There is no precedent for this. One truth about cycles
is that the downward part of the cycle is usually quicker and
more painful than the upward swing. We didn't get into this thing
overnight. It took many years, and we are not going to get out
of it overnight. It's going to take many years to unwind."
Waiting for the other shoe
to drop is an uncomfortable position to be in. Thankfully, there
are a number of lifelines we as investors can grab on to, to
avoid getting sucked into the whirlpool of declining asset values
and a declining dollar and we should take every chance we get
to use them.
How well you do in the unfolding
crisis will depend on how well informed you are. "Making
the trend your friend" is now more critical than ever to
financially survive the onslaught of tidal waves rocking the
U.S. economy. The
Casey Report diligently analyzes major economic trends and
provides actionable advice on how to profit from the "market
riptides" - with the goal of preserving and multiplying
your assets while others capsize in the stormy seas. Learn
more here.
Nov 24, 2008
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