
Great Depression Online
Long Beach, CA
November 13, 2009
Inside This Issue You Will Discover…
*** Snuffing Out
*** Going Bad Faster than and Over Ripened Tomato
*** If You Thought the Housing Meltdown Was Bad…
*** And More
“By the pricking of my thumbs, something wicked this way
comes.” – William Shakespeare, Macbeth
Snuffing Out
Stocks, oil, and gold…they all keep going up. GDP’s
up too. What does it mean? Has the recession ended?
Is a robust economic recovery just around the corner?
We don’t know, exactly. But we have our doubts.
Jobs are still being cut. No one’s hiring. The
unemployment rate’s at 10.2 percent. And state governments are
going broke. So why are stocks, oil, and gold going up?
Simple…because the dollar is going down.
~~~~~~What’s Coming Next?~~~~~~
The shocking 1990 collapse of the Japanese Market.
The extraordinary
The mainstream media didn’t. The top economists
didn’t. The great financial advisers didn’t. But One Man
Did.
What’s coming Next? When will it happen? What
should you do to Prepare for it?
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
In fact, on Wednesday the dollar index hit a 15-month
low…while oil hovered around $80 a barrel. But the rise in oil
prices, along with a falling dollar, is a particularly sensitive
phenomenon. For it could snuff out any sparks of economic
growth. Rising oil prices, you see, take more and more money
out of the consumer’s pocket, and subsequently out of the economy.
“The weakness in the U.S. dollar risks inflating a bubble
in the oil market, which could threaten consumer spending and
potentially cause a double dip recession,” explains Reuters.
In regard to commercial real estate, this could deliver the
knock out punch to a sector of the economy that’s already buckled
over against the ropes.
Here’s why…
Going Bad Faster than an Over Ripened Tomato
It’s quite visible when travelling through the outer
suburbs – like Southern California’s
But during the housing boom not only were too many houses
built…too much commercial real estate space was also built.
With each new ‘master planned’ community came an oversized shopping
center, full of oversized stores.
Of course, during the boom it all made sense. People
who would live in these houses would need places to spend their
money. They would need furniture stores, appliances stores,
electronics stores, home improvement stores, Applebee’s…and even
places to buy doodads, gewgaws, thingamabobs, and plastic light up
reindeer antlers to stick in their front yards at Christmas.
The enchantment of an inflating housing bubble spurred an
overcapacity of commercial retail space of epic proportions. And now
that many of these houses are vacant or in foreclosure, and
consumers are saving, these stores are sitting empty. What’s
more, the loans are now going bad faster than an over ripened
tomato.
For all the particulars on this developing train wreck, and
how to capitalize on it, we bring you a guest essay from Doug Hornig,
Senior Editor,
Casey Research.
Enjoy,
M.N. Gordon
Great Depression Online
---
If You Thought the Housing Meltdown Was Bad…
By Doug Hornig, Senior Editor,
Casey Research
…wait until you see what’s in the cards for commercial real
estate.
That’s right, the next train wreck will be in commercial
real estate. Couldn’t be worse than last year’s residential market
crash? That remains to be seen. But it’s coming soon, probably as
early as the second quarter of next year, and there’s nothing that
can prevent it. The government will intervene, trying desperately
to delay the day of reckoning, and may even succeed. For a while.
But make no mistake about it, that train is going off the tracks no
matter what.
Every part of the sector – from multifamily apartment
buildings to retail shopping centers, suburban office buildings,
industrial facilities, and hotels – has accumulated a huge amount of
defaulted or nonperforming paper. It’s an impossible, swaying
structure that cannot long stand.
Just ask Andy Miller.
Andy is one of the most knowledgeable people around when it
comes to commercial real estate. Co-founder of the Miller Fishman
Group of Denver, he has spent twenty years buying and developing
apartment communities, shopping centers, office buildings, and
warehouses throughout the country. He’s also worked extensively –
especially lately – with asset managers and special servicers (those
who handle commercial mortgage-backed securities, or CMBS) from
insurance companies, conduits, and the biggest banks in the U.S.,
advising them on default scenarios, helping them develop realistic
pricing structures, and making hold or sell recommendations.
It isn’t easy. Commercial real estate sales are off a
staggering 82% in 2009, compared with 2008, and last year was worse
than ’07. No one is selling at depressed prices, but it hardly
matters as there are no buyers, either because they’re afraid of the
market or can’t meet more stringent loan requirements. Two years
ago, the value of all commercial real estate in the
“If the banks had to take that hit all at once, there
wouldn’t be any banks,” he says.
And it’s actually worse than that. As even average
citizens became aware during the subprime meltdown, loans in recent
years were bundled into exotic financial vehicles that could be sold
and resold, a class generically known as conduits. These commercial
mortgage-backed securities, while less well known than their cousins
built upon home loans, are nonetheless ubiquitous.
Three guesses who were among the significant buyers of
CMBS. If you said banks, banks, and more banks, you got it. Thus
these folks are sitting not only on their own malperforming loans,
but on a whole lot of everyone else’s toxic junk, too.
This is how bad conduits are: A 3% default rate last year
jumped to 6% in 2009 and is expected to double again, to 12%, in
2010. An entity that takes a 12% hit to its portfolio – and this
includes countless banks, pension and annuity funds, international
institutional investors, and others – is in deep, deep trouble.
The real tsunami is coming, probably in the second quarter
of 2010, Andy estimates. Because that’s when banks will have to
start preparing for the wave of mortgages that were written near the
market top and are maturing in 2011-12. Unlike home loans,
commercial loans tend to be relatively short-term in nature (average
5-7 years), because – outside of apartment building loans backed by
Fannie or Freddie – there are no government programs to subsidize
longer-term ones. These guys mature in bunches.
According to a recent Deutsche Bank presentation, the
delinquency rate on commercial loans as of the end of 2Q09 was
greater than 4%. Of these, they expect that north of 70% will not
qualify for refinancing. Imagine what will happen to the estimated
$2 trillion in commercial mortgages that mature between now and
2013.
And even that is not the end of it. There’s a second huge
wave on the way in 2015-16.
Problem is, instead of trying to meet this inevitable
challenge head on, asset managers have decided to believe in such
phantoms as the tooth fairy, honesty at the Fed, and an economic
turnaround powerful enough to bail them all out. De Nile is not
just a river in
To be fair, it’s difficult to envision what an intelligent,
aggressive response would look like, given the breadth and depth of
the crisis, and the lack of resources available to deal with it.
Miller recently met with a group of asset managers from a number of
different, prominent banks. They reported that they’re completely
overwhelmed and can’t even begin to cope with the sheer volume of
problem loans on their calendar. It’s so bad that they’re now
dealing with some borrowers who haven’t paid a cent in a year and a
half.
What do you do if, as Andy thinks is the case, 85-90% of
the entire commercial real estate market is under water relative to
its financing? What happens to a property when its value drops way
below the loan, a seller can’t get enough money to get out, a buyer
can’t raise enough money to get in, and the bank can’t afford to
foreclose? Simple. It just sits there, carried along on the bank’s
books at some inflated “mark to fantasy” price that makes the
institution’s balance sheet look passable. The industry even has a
catchphrase for the situation: “A rolling loan gathers no moss.”
In the case of a retail store, a bankrupt tenant walks
away. Andy looked at just the part of
The hotel business is terrible. Overbuilding based upon
travelers who went into debt to finance lavish vacations is taking
its toll on tourist destinations. At the same time, business travel
has seriously contracted. Flights into
Office space is doing okay in central business districts,
but not faring well elsewhere. Some estimates tab the national
office vacancy rate at over 16.5%, compared with 12.6% in January
2008. It exceeds 20% in parts of
Multifamily apartment buildings – and the very creaky
Fannie and Freddie are carrying a load of them – may be the next to
topple. As values deteriorate and landlords are faced with loans
coming due, there is no incentive to fix whatever goes wrong. If,
for example, you have a $10 million loan maturing in two years, and
the property value has declined to $6 million, why would you spend
half a million to fix leaky roofs? The question answers itself.
Yet, as capital spending needs are not attended to, the apartments
deteriorate. Which leads to working-class tenants replaced by meth
labs. Which leads to even lower property values. And so on. In the
end, when the banks are forced to take possession, they will be left
with either expensive repair jobs, or the cost of demolition and a
total write-off.
As the overall commercial real estate crisis escalates, the
banks will do the same thing they did last year: run to the
government, palms outstretched.
How will
The Fed has already tried to let some of the relentlessly
building pressure out of the balloon through TALF (Term Asset-Backed
Securities Loan Facility). But that hasn’t worked, because TALF
only backs the most senior, creditworthy bonds in a CMBS pool.
Those aren’t the problem. The problem is the junior notes no one
wants.
In order to increase market liquidity and get conduits
moving again, the government will likely be forced to create a
guarantee program similar to the FHA, Miller thinks, whereby
short-term money (on the order of 5-7 years) is made available.
Will that just push our problems five to seven years down the road?
Quite possibly. But what is being purchased is time, the only
thing left to buy. The hope, of course, is that it’s enough time –
for the real estate market to stabilize, prices to return to more
“normal” levels, and the world to turn all hunky dory.
Rock, meet hard place. Let all the troubled banks fail,
and the consequences will range from some excruciating but
short-term pain, to a plunge into full-bore depression. Prop them
up with yet more newly printed fiat money, and anything from high to
hyperinflation will inevitably result, along with the possibility of
extending the problem well into the next decade.
Both are frightening prospects. We don’t want either, but
realistically, we’re going to get one or the other. Let’s be clear,
it won’t be the end of the world. However, it will be the end of the
world as we know it. That makes it imperative to prepare for the
new one that’s coming.
Sincerely,
Doug Hornig, Senior Editor
Casey Research
P.S. The editors of The Casey Report, supported by
real estate pro Andy Miller, have been warning of the coming
commercial real estate debacle since September 2008. This one’s
rather easy to time – because they know when the loans will come
due. And as subscribers can testify, accurately predicting big
trends is the forte of Doug Casey and his expert team.
To learn how you can profit from making the trend your friend, Click Here.
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