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Commercial Real Estate Time Bomb

Posted by Carla Fried
July 20, 2009 12:24 pm
from: Money Magazine

There’s a new main character moving to center stage in the great real estate meltdown. Underwater homeowners vying to refinance or score a loan modification have grabbed much of the headlines (and bailout attention) to date. But now commercial real estate is moving into the spotlight as the next potential body slam for the economy.

Last week The Washington Post reported that the U.S. Treasury department has begun to contemplate what can muck things up for the economy and the recovery beyond what is currently being bailed out. This effort has come to be known as Plan C. As in, “Yikes, Plan B might not do the trick, so what do we need to focus on next?”

Reports the WaPo, “The officials in charge of Plan C — named to allude to a last line of defense — face a particular challenge in addressing the breakdown of commercial real estate lending.”

The story line reads like a sequel to the residential debacle: Commercial property owners are sitting on loans that need to be refinanced. The Real Estate Roundtable estimates that about $400 billion a year in commercial loans will need to be refinanced over the next decade.

bank_sign.ju.03But with commercial property values way down, vacancies way up, and the recession making it unlikely there will be a demand pick-up anytime soon, banks haven’t been inclined to offer refinancing deals. If they do open the spigot at all, the terms are nowhere near as cheap as what commercial property owners had enjoyed during the boom. Sounds familiar, eh?

Earlier this month, in testimony before the Congressional Joint Economic Committee, Jon D. Greenlee, the Fed’s associate director of banking supervision and regulation, summed up the Plan C worry: “At the end of the first quarter [of 2009],” he testified, “about seven percent of commercial real estate loans on banks’ books were considered delinquent. This was almost double from the level a year earlier.”

Greenlee says there is about $3.5 trillion of outstanding debt associated with commercial real estate, and banks had about $1.8 billion trillion of that tidy sum on their books. That computes to about $126 billion (so far) in delinquent commercial mortgages on the banks’ books.

Now if you’re Goldman Sachs, you might be able to absorb commercial real estate writedowns (reportedly of more than $1 billion) with record trading profits elsewhere. And, to be sure, the vultures are already circling in the hopes of picking up distressed commercial property.

But if the squeeze on commercial real estate is as persistent and pernicious as what we’ve seen in the residential market, it wouldn’t exactly be a shock if the government beefs up its support/bailout. Get your taxpayer dollars ready for Plan C.

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Uncategorized

  1. at 19:40 | #1

    I known about this from personal experience I tried to refinance my small commercial building on 07 when the market started to melt and there was no money anywhere, also spent months trying to get financing on a Mix Use for a client same thing.

  2. at 20:37 | #2

    Just wanted to let you know that my company may be able to help. We represent a law firm with over 70 years experience in helping commercial property owner with a modifiction of their loan. They have a 97% success rate and the average time is usually less than 60 days. Pass it along and tell them to visit my website at SmartMove.CommercialRelief.com

  3. at 20:46 | #3

    I was mentioning this to everybody.It will be more serious as jobs are connected to commercial real estate-be it industrial, retail or office. Secondly there are no \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\"home owner bail out\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\" programs. Commercial is easy target for politicians to ignore. No votes ( only money from big fe players).Hotel owners are advised to expect bumpy ride for next 2.1/2 years.The greatest tranfer of wealth is about to begin. There are other pains that are not financial- social, emotional etc. Read them on my blog-foreclosureworkouts.info– PAmin

  4. Joe
    at 03:10 | #4

    @Paul DeMaria
    Your link is not working in 4 different searche engines, is it the right one?

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