Jump to Navigation
Home

Main menu

  • Home
  • News
  • Markets Map
  • Sentiments
  • Topics
  • Data
  • Comments
  • Images
  • Blog
  • About

Secondary menu

  • Latest News
  • Top Rated
  • Most Popular
  • Archive
  • Discussions
  • InterDigital's CEO Presents at Barclays Global...
  • Wuxi Suntech's debts reach $2.88 billion
  • China's State Grid invests in Australian assets
  • BDC Risk Profiles Part 3: Leverage
  • Consumers prefer to go green, even without the subsidies
  • Our plan is to sell 1,00,000 units this year: Nissan CEO
  • Asia on Debt Binge as World Sobers Up
  • Ministry responds to public concerns about pollution
  • Japan’s Abe reiterates commitment to reforms
  • China holds key to cleaner skies

    Old Whine in New Bottles: Commercial Real Estate Lobbies For Bailout

    Thu, 07/09/2009 - 15:17 EDT - Baseline Scenario - The Blog
    • commentary
    • Comments
    • commercial real estate
    • retail

    The commercial real estate industry would like a bailout – see my preview/links to testimony before the JEC today.  This is not a surprise – even some of the most libertarian people I meet think the government should help them personally when times are bad.  Is there really a case treating commercial real estate as special?
    The sector is definitely taking a beating, but who is not?  This lobby’s most sophisticated advocates are arguing that various Fed facilities can be extended to support commercial real estate financing, i.e., so there is no cost to the government’s budget or your future taxes.
    But this is illusory.
    We cannot have the Fed indefinitely takeover the provision of credit to most of the economy.  Asset prices need to fall and, if necessary, debts have to be restructured.  This is easier, generally, for commercial real estate developers and operators than it is for residential mortgages.
    The global crisis is surely not over, but we are out of the panic phase.  There is little compelling reason to provide “emergency” financial support to anyone at this point.
    The price of retail space is falling because consumers are spending less and retailers are contracting or going out of business.  This is painful and will turn around only when consumers figure out the new (higher) level of savings they want.  We are already cushioning this blow with a big increase in public spending and a difficult future for public debt issues.
    Going further for commercial real estate specifically is not appealing.   If we do it for them, why not for everyone?
    Of course, if commercial real estate worsens considerably, we will see further damage among banks.  But didn’t the government stress tests assure us that the banks have enough capital to handle even worst case scenarios?
    By Simon Johnson

    • Original article
    • Login or register to post comments
     

    Related

    • Scott Brown: ATM For The Big Banks

      By Simon Johnson During the Dodd-Frank financial reform debate in early 2010, newly elected Senator Scott Brown of Massachusetts was referred to as an ATM for the bankers – meaning that whenever they needed some more cash, they would stop by his office.  It was not paper money he was handing out, of course, it was something much more valuable – rule changes that conferred a greater ability to take on reckless risk, damage consumers, and impose higher future costs on the taxpayer.

    • November Performance Review For 7 Commercial Mortgage REITs

      By Zvi Bar: Generally, there is an industry divide between residential mortgage REITs and commercial mortgage REITs. Commercial mortgage REITs should hold mortgages on commercial properties such as office, retail, medical, industrial and warehouse buildings, while residential mortgage REITs hold residential mortgages on houses and apartments.

    • 7 Small Caps Commercial Mortgage REITs and Their 2011 Performance

      Zvi Bar submits:Generally, there is an industry divide between residential mortgage REITs and commercial mortgage REITs. Commercial mortgage REITs should hold mortgages on commercial properties such as office, retail, medical, industrial and warehouse buildings.

    • Small-Cap Commercial Mortgage REITs: Valuations Continue to Exhibit High Risk/Reward Characteristics

      Zvi Bar submits:Commercial real estate is believed by many to hold the greatest risk within the mortgage REIT industry, and possibly within the financial and real estate sectors. Of course, with significant risk comes the opportunity for significant losses or gains.Bad loans and bad tenants complicate the industry. Moreover, history indicates that commercial real estate often falls after the residential real estate market.

    • Commercial Mortgage REITs: 7 Small-Caps in This High Risk / Reward Asset Class

      Zvi Bar submits:In reviewing mortgage REITs, real estate investment trusts investing in mortgages instead of the underlying properties, I have previously focused on residential agency mortgage REITs and non-agency residential mortgage REITs, but in so doing many commercial mortgage REITs have

    • They Saved the Big Banks But Kind Of Lost The Economy Doing It

       By Simon Johnson It would be easy to take relatively cheap shots at the portrayal of Tim Geithner — “we saved the economy but kind of lost the public doing it” — in the New Yorker, out today. 

    • Interview with a Chinese Real Estate Insider

      The Pragmatic Capitalist submits: There has been much chatter in recent week’s regarding China’s potential bubble economy.

    • Government Debt, Greece is a Very Small Part of the Problem

      Roubini Says Rising Sovereign Debt Leads to Inflation, Defaults Credit-rating cuts on Greece, Portugal and Spain this week are spurring investors’ concern that the European deficit crisis is spreading and intensifying pressure on policy makers to widen a bailout package. Roubini’s remarks underscore statements by officials such as Dominique Strauss-Kahn, managing director of the IMF, that the global economy still faces risks.

    • Commercial Property Crunch

      Jason Kelly submits: While the residential real estate bubble collapse has used up all the oxygen in the economic room, economists and real estate analysts have been telling us for more than a year that the impending commercial real estate foreclosure wave will add to the damage.

    Latest

    This 6-Person Startup 'Won' SXSW — And It's Nearly Profitable After Just One Year
    This 6-Person Startup 'Won' SXSW — And...
    China's Bird Flu Goes Airborne
    China's Bird Flu Goes Airborne

    User login

    • Create new account
    • Request new password
    • Click on the icon to sign in with your social network login or enter your Bullfax.com login

    Our Blog

    • Pandora: the charm might fade away
    • Japanese Market, Indian Rupee, China’s Stocks and Oil Prices in Our Daily Round-Up for 05/23/2013
    • IMF calls on Osborne to spend on infrastructure

    Markets Map

    Markets Map

    Follow Us

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS
    S&P 500: 1650.51 -0.29% FTSE: 6696.79 -2.14% Nikk.: 14867.9 2.58% DAX: 8351.98 -2.14% HSI: 22666.57 -0.01% FX: EUR/GBP: 1.1671 USD/EUR: 1.2918 JPY/USD: 102.295 Commodities: Gold: 1394.35

    Bullfax.com - Market News & Analysis 2008-2011
    Contact Us | About Us | Terms & Conditions

    Follow Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google Plus and RSS LinkedIn Facebook Twitter Google Plus RSS .

    Secondary menu

    • Latest News
    • Top Rated
    • Most Popular
    • Archive
    • Discussions