How Much Longer Can Real Estate Hold Up?

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Most all of us would agree that real estate is one of the few legs left to hold up our economy. Stocks have crashed, millions of jobs have been lost, and bankruptcies continue to hit record levels. Real estate joins health care, security and government as the only active growth industries at the moment. But that has already started changing.

This is not a subject I am thrilled to write about, since I own quite a bit of real estate and wouldn’t want to see it tumble in value. Nonetheless, this month’s newsletter is my assessment of what is happening and what is about to happen.

It’s difficult to generalize about the real estate market as a whole, since there are different pockets of strength and weakness throughout the country. With that in mind, we’ll make our best effort here.

The last growth stage of real estate started in 1991, after the first Gulf War ended. The country was emerging from a short but steep recession. Demand picked up quite nicely in the residential market. California and New York joined the boom in 1993, the same year that commercial real estate nationwide started to take off.

By late 1999, the economy, the stock market and real estate were burning on all cylinders. The Y2K fear was overblown, and nothing could stop the relentless climb. Then, in March 2000, the stock market started heading downward, a move that persists. The real estate market held steady at first. Then, in late 2001, most real estate markets started to cool off, with commercial real estate feeling the pinch the most.

The Office Market
That pinch is getting worse now. Vacancies in large markets, reflected by Central Business District (CBD) rents, are falling. Naturally, markets will vary in their vacancy and rental rates, but we can still put together a national trend. Office rents are measured on a per-square-foot basis. In 1996, the average rental rates were $16.00 per square foot. They peeked in 2000 at $20.00 per square foot. At the end of 2002, the rental rate had dropped to less than $18.00 per square foot. According to Cushman & Wakefield, nationwide office vacancies were less than 10% during 2000. The firm now reports a 14% nationwide vacancy rate in large, Class "A" office buildings. In fact, Reis, Inc. reports a 16.3% vacancy rate.
During the first quarter of 2003, forty-two markets containing 92.5% of national office inventory saw their effective rents decline, according to Reis. San Jose saw a 7.7% decline in rents. Boston lost 5.5%. Denver lost 4.4%. San Francisco saw a 3.7% decline, while Austin dropped 3.5%. In fact, the 7.5% of markets experiencing a rise in rents, Norfolk, Palm Beach, San Diego, Fort Worth, Sacramento and Tampa, tend to have a heavy concentration of national defense and security companies.

It seems that one can find a "for lease" sign in front of a majority of office buildings now. As of December 2002, at least 150 Class "A" office buildings in the Denver area stood empty. Just imagine the upkeep, utilities, mortgage payments and property tax bills on your building when you produce no revenue from it. Ouch.
Builders are still busy with new construction as well, despite obviously clouds on the horizon. Between March 2003 and June 2005, New York City is scheduled to add 5.4 million square feet to its already-saturated inventory of office space. Washington, D.C. will add 9.8 million square feet. Chicago will add 3.7 million. Boston will add 4.4 million.

The Retail Market

If it seems that your neighborhood mall is quieter recently, your senses aren’t deceiving you. In 2002, approximately 13,550 stores were closed, representing 3.6% of the total supply traced by the MAX-SI Spatial Index. Closings, believe it or not, are well below levels incurred during the 1997-2000 boom cycle. New supply, though, is projected at 77,000 stores this year. With consumers finally pulling in the reins of spending, most stores are reporting little if any profit.
During the first stage of the recession, most store closings were concentrated in the stores of yesteryear, such as Kmart and Montgomery Ward. The second wave is claiming value retailers, whose superstore formats had redefined competition and shopping behavior in the previous decade. Per-square-foot rents nationwide have actually been declining since 1992, when they were just under $36.00. Now they’re under $31.00 and still falling. Retail sales per square foot have fallen steadily since 2000. Many large stores are staying open despite their unprofitability in expectation of an economic recovery. If the recovery doesn’t start soon, the eventual closings will cost the companies more, and likely will take the landlords down with them.

The Apartment Market

The apartment market is weakening everywhere except in California. The first quarter of 2003 saw negative absorption of 25,000 units. Negative absorption is great if you’re a tenant but lousy if you’re a landlord, because it means less units are being occupied. Negative absorption began in the third quarter of 2001. Since then, the nationwide market has seen a negative absorption of 81,200 units.

For some strange reason, we still see apartment buildings going up everywhere. I don’t know why. Of the 20,000 new units that came online during the first quarter of 2003, 48.2% of them remained unoccupied. The owner gets red-faced when her brand new unit just collects dust while mortgage payments, insurance, taxes and upkeep must be paid. The banker who lent the money in the first place probably winds up with as red a face.

The vacancy rate in the top 50 U.S. markets in the first quarter of 2003 stood at 6.8%, a rate not recorded since 1989. Effective rents declined by 0.3% and are lower than they have been at any time since the third quarter of 2000. Does this sound like a disaster? Certainly not. What it does show, though, is that builders haven’t learned the lesson from the 1980s: when the demand falls, don’t build until it turns around.

Houses

Housing sales are tending to show slight increases in price throughout the nation. Sales of existing homes dropped 5.6% in March 2003, the biggest drop in more than a year. The median home price, however, increased to $163,100 in March, compared with a revised $161,300 in February. The key to the housing market’s survival has been low interest rates. Bankrate.com reports that, as of May 21, the average 30-year fixed mortgage rate is only 5.40%, the lowest since before recordkeeping started in 1964. The best guess is that Ike was in the White House when we last saw numbers like that. Most "experts" guess that rates will stay this low for a while, since the Fed is more concerned about deflation than inflation right now. Of course, one counter-measure is the falling dollar, a danger which could spark either inflation or stagflation despite weakness in the economy. Nationwide, the seasonally adjusted annual rate of total existing home sales reached a record of 6.68 million units in the first quarter, up 2.2 percent from a pace of 6.54 million units in the first quarter of 2002, according to the National Association of Realtors. The previous record was a rate of 6.59 million units in the fourth quarter of 2002; NAR started tracking the total state resale series in 1981. The south experienced the highest increase in existing home sales.

The median price paid for a Bay Area home was $426,000 in April 2003. That was up 1.7 percent from $419,000 in March, and up 6 percent from $402,000 for April last year, according to DataQuick. The Bay Area has the most expensive real estate in the country. Even most real estate agents agree that this has to change: only 28% of Californians can afford to buy a median-priced home.

Most areas of the nation are experiencing a glut of houses on the market. We can all see that by driving around our own neighborhoods. A record 24,972 unsold previously owned homes clog the Denver-area housing market, but prices remain at record levels. And only 2,597 homes have been placed under contract this month, making it the worst April for home sales since 1990, according to data released on the last full week of each month by Metrolist Inc. Colorado Springs listings are up 28% from a year ago. Santa Clara County, which includes Silicon Valley in California, reports twice as many homes on the market today compared to a year ago.

Some areas, though, are still quite hot. Charlotte, NC and northwestern Washington state, for example, are still going strong.
So what are we to make of all this? I’d summarize it by saying that single-family homes have held up better than all other areas of real estate during this economic slump. Housing prices are defying gravity by virtue of low interest rates. When rates rise, however, that trend will change, causing housing prices to fall.
One fact about real estate that is both positive and negative is that you can’t quickly change your mind and go the other way. If you own a stock and suddenly decide to sell it, no problem: you can be done with the whole thing in a matter of seconds. That’s not the case with real estate. Either you own it, or you don’t. It will take months if you want to sell it, and you have to be in a pretty stable market in order to get rid of it. Moreover, you can’t go short real estate, either. But the positive side is that you can’t make hasty blunders in your real estate decisions.
It used to be that you could buy a rental house, take out a mortgage, rent it out, fix a toilet once in a while, and wait for your tenant to pay off your mortgage. Nowadays, it’s not that easy. When tenants get laid off, they can’t pay your mortgage. If you advertise, you pay money to compete with other landlords who are in your same category. And the bank doesn’t want your excuses: they just want the money, whether or not you have a tenant from whom you can collect rent.

Investors who bought during the latter stages of the 1980s real estate bust made fortunes when the economy turned around. Will it do the same thing this time? Of course. But the key is: when?

Comments(9)

  • nlsecor15th December, 2003

    If you bet against real estate, you will be wrong 90% of the time. If you are right, by chance, but are off by a couple years, you probably would still have done better to invest rather than wait.

    • ram25th November, 2003 Reply

      Good stuff and still quite prudent today.

  • hibby761st July, 2003

    You said:



    "For some strange reason, we still see apartment buildings going up everywhere. I don’t know why. Of the 20,000 new units that came online during the first quarter of 2003, 48.2% of them remained unoccupied. "



    Right now investors are looking for a place to put their money where they will get a decent return. Money is cheap for builders as well. Their sales may not bring in top dollar, but they are able to build, and hold in necessary for a lot less money. I would presume that that would explain why they keep building. After all, they are builders year round no matter what the economy does, they'll keep their profession as long as they can do so successfully.

    • ram24th November, 2003 Reply

      My experience with RE development leads me to conclude that projects are generally built if, as and when capital is available. As long as lending officers' compensation continues to be correlated to loan production, and development fees and related revenues remain abundent to the developers, we're likely to experience increased supplies...but when the money spigot gets shut off, such as 1988, watch things change. Much opportunity is still available as markets change, and capital continues to flow unabated.

  • Lufos2nd July, 2003

    Guys, come on now do not go by the information above. That's for the uninformed none professional types. You make your money in Transaction. That has nothing to do with statistical information utilized as the basis of projection of future events. You at the point of transaction can make anything happen. In the roaring 20's if you check your history, there was a lot of leasing and lease options tied to the price of gold. Games were played by those in Transaction.

    Today I am buying a building to flip. I am buying it at 4.5 times the Gross. Impossible you say? Right on. I am buying it because the nice large corporation peopled and staffed by number crunchers cannot collect the rents, do not know how to keep a proper repair level going etc. etc. I am going to flip flop it right out of the secondary escrow for 8 times the gross which as you know is still a great bargain. But, here comes the fun part. I am taking a three year management contract at 4% collected rents. Everybody will be paying their rents (yes we will collect weekly plus small additional fee) because we understand at this economic level, they cannot pay month after month, nor accumulate enough money to make the monthly rental payment. The repairs will be made at about 25% of the cost of regular professional plumbers, painters, electricians. And where did this new maintanence crew come from? Why the tenants of course. I employ them at full cash payment around $6 an hours and I mean a real hour.



    But all is not Grits and Beans. Once a month this apartment house holds a BBQ. We feed everybody in the building cause they are doing all the cooking and we sell to all the neighbors who while they cannot pay their rents do like a good BBQ on weekends. Everybody loves everybody. Everybody helps everybody and the new new owners after the flip flop are making a proper return on their money. And guess what about three years down the road I will show them how to make more money. They will sell the building on a Co/op base to the tenants who will each come up with a $1,000 downpayment from Bank of America. I will of course sign their notes for this sum and take recourse on their notes. The building will be sold to these resident new owners for about 12 times the gross. Is this not fun, can you all see what is happening? We have done a really fine series of make money transactions and in the process started the tenants movement up from slum to lower middle cl***** participants in our great?? Democratic?? Society. They now are property owners.....

    I knew that Phd would come in handy some day just as long as I could keep it from getting in the way of common sense. Fun damn right. Making money oh yes. Doing a good for society my fellow man? Ohh yes. Lucius

  • fruits1110th August, 2003

    Am i the only contributer from new york...

    seldom does anyone mention real estate here, where a $50,000 (same) house in most other states is $200,000 here. Even in Jersey City, brownstones have gone from $150,000 in 1997 to $400,000 today. I am new to re intesting and am trying to purchase outside of immediate tri-state area. I compare it to mountain climbing. If the market does slide, I'd rather fall off a small hill than Mount Everest! Any suggestions, please feel free. thanks

  • ram24th November, 2003

    The answer, as always, is "who knows". While the long-term, secular markets have trended upward, many short-term, cyclical periods have brought upheaval and the essential purging (transfers) of bad deals from weaker to stronger custodians of capital. The discipline of pension fund managers and other successful investors, namely careful due diligence and organized diversification, has historically stabilized returns over the long-haul. Especially in light of all the corruption still unfolding across many aspects of Wall Street, one might do well to maintain a strict allocation to the old time investment adage of the Rothchilds...Cash (Notes/Bonds), Businesses (Stock), and RE (properties of all types). My observations from Dallas are that prudent investors have been selling selectively since 1996, continually tweaking their portfolios, and making measured acquisitions with the recent cheap money, remaining conscious that the long-term trend is still up...I read an AP press release memorializing the Kennedy Assasination last week and found it noteworthy that Oswald's landlady of 1963 was charging him $12 weekly...do you suppose rent houses were trading around $5000 at that time? Times change, but long-term trends tend to remain...now's a great time to lock in cheap financing, pick up some good long-term property and prepare for future rental increases as the next cycle unfolds. Vive la RE.

    • Lufos25th November, 2003 Reply

      The Rothschilds, the quote you used is correct but it dates back to their spiritual father. A guy from the old Hansiatic League, a Banker by the name of Fruger. Charles the First owed him a great deal of money and was bankrupt, so Fruger made him a deal. Charles would allow money lending throughout the Holy Roman Empire and Banker Fruger would excuse the debt. Now thats a real deal. This is what really brought into being the Merchantile Society we now enjoy.



      My Grandfathers name was Robertson and my grandmothers maiden name was Rothschild. Their real claim to fame is a famous Beverly HIlls dish. A toasted Bagel spread with butter, cream cheese and the topper Peanut Butter" aka, Goyish a kop.



      Mixed type person Lucius

      • ram25th November, 2003 Reply

        Good stuff and still quite prudent today.

  • Goldie26th November, 2003

    Looking at the market as a whole can be helpful but before you divest your holdings, read below. Remember, real estate markets are imperfect. In fact they are very inefficient which is why there is opportunity for all of us to make money.



    Looking at the real estate market in macro terms will usually have little to do with what is going on in your back yard. The most important thing is to understand your submarkets and the neighborhoods where you invest. That is where you can determine the demand and supply factors which are most relevant to your respective investments. You make money on the buy and when you understand the dynamics of your market.

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