Real estate

Tyler Durden's picture

Richard Koo Says If Banks Marked Commercial Real Estate To Market,It Would "Trigger A Chain Of Bankruptcies"





Richard Koo's latest observations on the US economy are as always, a must read. The critical observation from the Nomura economist explains why the realists and the naive idealists are at greater odds than ever before: the government continues to perpetuate, endorse and legalize accounting fraud in the hope that covering everything up under the rug will rekindle animal spirits. The truth, as Koo points out, is that were the FASB to show the real sad state of affairs, the two core industries in the US - finance and real estate, would be bankrupt. "If US authorities were to require banks to mark their commercial real estate loans to market today, lending to this sector would be extinguished, triggering a chain of bankruptcies as borrowers became unable to roll over their debt." In other news Citi, Bank of America, and Wells just reported fantastic earnings beats on the heels of reduced credit loss provisions. Nothing on the conference call mentioned the fact that all would be bankrupt if there was an ounce of integrity left in financial reporting, and that every firm is committing FASB-complicit 10(b)-5 fraud. One day, just like Goldman's mortgage follies, all this will be the subject of epic lawsuits. But not yet. There is some more money to be stolen from the middle class first, by these very firms.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Moody's Reports That February Commercial Real Estate Prices Are Again Heading Lower





In the rush over Goldman coverage and volcanic news, a very relevant piece of market update may have gotten lost, namely that Moody’s/REAL All Property Type Aggregate Index just peaked once again. Moody's reports that this index "measured a 2.6% price decline in commercial properties in February. This decrease comes on the heels of three consecutive months of rising prices, and brings the level of commercial property prices 41.8% below the peak measured in October 2007. Values are now down 25.8% from a year ago, and 41.6% from two years ago." This is the first time prices have fallen since October of last year: have we just hit price resistance in CRE?

 
Reggie Middleton's picture

Wall Street Real Estate Funds Lose Between 61% to 98% for Their Investors as They Rake in Fees!





How many ways can a Wall Street Banker bend over an institutional client before they scream "ouch"??? Let me count the ways (with a spreadsheet, may I add)...

 
Leo Kolivakis's picture

Europe's Commercial Real Estate Timebomb?





Europe faces a commercial property debt timebomb with almost €1 trillion (£896bn) outstanding from the sector and a quarter of that potentially distressed. The UK accounts for 34% of the €970bn total, with Germany second with 24%. Not to worry, global pension funds are busy snapping up properties but do they really know how long it will be before this crisis blows over? And what if it gets a lot worse before it gets better? Are pensions prepared to deal with those losses?

 
Chopshop's picture

So, about that Chinese Real Estate Bubble ...





While anal-ytic 'debate' about whether Chinese real estate prices have reached nose-bleed territory continues in merry-go-round circle-jerk fashion, there is only one (very simple) question to ask:

is this the kickoff to a new bull market in Chinese RE or a terminal throw-over (cause there ain't anything in between) ?

 
Tyler Durden's picture

CoStar Seeks Your Input On The Truth Behind Commercial Real Estate





We have so far avoided discussing this weekend's most tragicomic news, which undoubtedly is the Mortgage Bankers' Association selling their headquarters for a huge loss in less than two years. The building which was acquired for $76 million was sold to CoStar for $41.25 million. How the MBA is in any way supposed to provide insight on sentiment and market perspectives after a slap in the face such as this is beyond us. At best, they should start a $2.95 newsletter titled "How to top tick the market and never look back while waiting for the Dow 36k." The other implications of this transaction are self-explanatory. Yet courtesy of diligent readers, we have received some other very amusing information, which however focuses on the buyer in this transaction, specifically CoStar, which on its website brands itself as the "#1 Commercial Real Estate Information Company." Apparently the validity of this branding is only as good as the (un)solicited hot tips CoStar receives every day. A letter sent out earlier by an editor of CoStar's Watch List Group seeks to expand on the groupthink permeating the permabullish CRE investor landscape (we hope they approached Cohen and Steers with their query for an objective and unbiased perspective), with a set of questions that makes one question the validity of CoStar's self-branded imprimatur.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Kanjorski Admits There Is A "Growing Bubble In Commercial Real Estate" As S&P Observes Recognition Of CRE Losses Could Wipe Out Banking System





Even as ever more Congressmen express concern about the implications of the ongoing CRE "bubble" (yes, this is a quote), S&P comes out with a report noting that should the banking system be forced to take all appropriate CRE-associated writedowns, it likely would not survive. And all this is occurring as REITs probe new 52 week highs. Welcome to the new economy.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

Harry Reid Hopes To Proceed With Bernanke Vote Late In Week, Succeeds At Keeping His Commercial Real Estate Holdings' Values High





Harry Reid hopes to have enough votes to proceed with Bernanke's reconfirmation by Friday. More relevantly, Harry Reid hopes to have secured the value of his Commercial Real Estate holdings likely valued at over $3 million from collapsing should the Chairman not be reappointed, and have the opportunity to sell, sell, sell. But all Senators who have acquiesced to Reid's prodding for a Bernanke vote knew all this already. Right? After all, this is in no way a conflict of interest.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

January 2010 Beige Book: "Commercial real estate was still weak in nearly all Districts"





CRE is still the biggest wildcard: "Commercial real estate was still weak in nearly all Districts with rising vacancy rates and falling rents. Since the last report, loan demand continued to decline or remained weak in most Districts, while credit quality continued to deteriorate." - Beige Book

 
asiablues's picture

China Is No Dubai Or Enron: Real Estate Rebalance to Buoy Gold





While some China Bears are busy publicizing prediciton of an utter Dubai or Enron-like collapse in China, Beijing is actually in the process of rebalancing its economy and an overheated real estate market. And gold is poised to benefit the most from this shift.

 
Chopshop's picture

Ten Commandments for 21st Century Real Estate Finance





excerpted from The Stamford Review, 2009: Volume Two, "Mortgages, Finance Markets, and the Imperative of Growth" by Hugh Kelly

 
madhedgefundtrader's picture

Residential Real Estate is Dead Money for the Next Decade





How high can home prices go with a ten year inventory overhang? Baby boomers are about to suck the life out of this market. No “rosebud” for me. The first in a series of seven on The Mad Hedge Fund Trader’s Annual Asset Allocation review.

 
Tyler Durden's picture

China Between Rock And Hard [Place/Case] After Public Anger Mounts Over House Unaffordability, Real Estate Bubble





Even as China proves to the world it has perfected Greenspan's repertoire for blowing asset bubbles in any and every asset class, the fact that China is still a communist country and thus has to carefully respond to public pressure (ironically, more carefully than "capitalist" America) could put a damper in its plans to overtake the US in flooding the market with masses of excess liquidity. The reason: increasing social anger at the affordability of houses. Because unlike the US, where Mozillo's hellspawn and other subprime henchmen were all too willing to subsidize every deadbeat with a 150% LTV on a FICO of 101, China's credit mechanism is not that "advanced" meaning billions of people have become cut off from the home market for the simple reason of lack of affordability (yes, the concepts of equity and savings are still appreciated in certain non-US dominated parts of the world).

 
Tyler Durden's picture

An In-Depth Evaluation Of Morgan Stanley's Real Estate Portfolio - Part 1





As was pointed out yesterday, Morgan Stanley's massive Real Estate empire is starting to unravel building by building. With a building here, five buildings there, the shareholder pain, and the writedowns start accumulating. But it was not always makeshift tears and walking away from buidings when your equity is underwater. In those long ago days of 2005 it was hope and bubblemania. Which is why we dug up various Morgan Stanley Real Estate Fund documents and materials, exposing the firm's delirium just as the peak in the real estate bubble was about to set in.

 
Reggie Middleton's picture

Morgan Stanley, Real Estate, Bad Deals, and Blogs





At least a few MDs at Morgan Stanley DO read my blog, but it is obvious that the guys in the real estate division don't. Early in 2008 I named Morgan Stanley the "The Riskiest Bank on the Street". The following is one of the reasons why.

 
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