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September 2009
The
"Other" Real Estate Issue- Revisited
The
“Other” Real Estate Issue - Revisited…It
was in early February of this year that we penned a discussion
about the state of the commercial real estate markets.
Of course at the time the Street’s eyes were collectively
glued on the near free fall in residential real estate values and
general activity. Our
suggestion at the time was that CRE (commercial real estate) was
about to make a very prominent guest appearance on the economic
stage as being yet another meaningful real estate related issue
for the financial sector, the economy, and for those holding
significant investment positions in the asset class such as
institutional pension funds. You
know what has happened since, but the reality is that CRE will
continue to be a problem child issue for some time to come.
As we’ll see in just a minute, relative to prior
historical CRE reconciliatory cycles, we’re just getting
started. Will this be
yet another “challenge” for the banks ahead?
You bet. But
the miracle of the eraser the government allowed the banks to
invoke sidestepping mark-to-market activity may delay the true
realization of asset value declines.
As you’d guess, we have a lot of charts that together
tell quite the story of deflation in values and activity, both now
and we expect also yet to come in the current cycle.
And why is this issue important to really the broader
US
economy as we look ahead? Simple
- its implications for bank lending and normalized functioning of
credit markets ex the massive baling wire and duct tape support of
the financial sector the Fed/Treasury/Administration (none of
which has been removed as of yet, or can be if asset values such
as CRE continue to deteriorate) has engineered.
We believe the CRE issue will forestall a return to credit
flows from the banks as they privately (no mark-to-market)
continue to nurse balance sheet wounds for some time to come.
Let’s get started.
We
want to kick off this analysis with some data we have never shown
you before. But it is
certainly very timely right now.
Why? Because
this data is both current and market value based.
We’re NEVER going to see this type of data coming from
the banks as they will lie as long as they can about CRE values on
their books. They have
the blessing of the government, so don’t hold your breath in
terms of trying to find truth coming from the financial sector.
Alternatively, and very importantly, the institutional
investment community still marks their real estate assets to
market each quarter in terms of keeping integrity in calculating
ongoing total rates of return for their funds.
Thank God someone is willing to tell the truth, right?
It seems there’s less and less of it around each day.
The
National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (NCREIF) is
an association of institutional real estate professionals who
share a common interest in their industry.
They are investment managers, plan sponsors, academicians,
consultants, appraisers, CPA's and other service providers who
have a significant involvement in pension fund real estate
investments. They come together to address vital industry issues
and to promote research. The
NCREIF was established to serve the institutional real estate
investment community as a non-partisan collector, processor,
validator and disseminator of real estate performance information.
Now you know what we are talking about in terms of
integrity of the data. No
tier I, II and III assets for these folks to manipulate and
massage in terms of values, just honest third party actual
quarterly appraisals of real properties.
The NCREIF publishes a National Property Index (NPI) on a
quarterly basis that gives us some very good insight into what is
happening quarter by quarter with the value of institutionally
held commercial real estate investments.
And you can be darn sure they are much closer to the truth
of what is happening with CRE values than the banks in this
country will ever let on. The
NPI covers all “classes” of institutional investment in CRE
including, office, retail, hotel, industrial and apartment
properties.
The
NCREIF Property Index is a quarterly time series composite total
rate of return measure of investment performance of a very large
pool of individual commercial real estate properties acquired in
the private market for investment purposes only. All properties in
the NPI have been acquired, at least in part, on behalf of
tax-exempt institutional investors - the great majority being
pension funds. As such, all properties are held in a fiduciary
environment. NCREIF
requires that properties included in the NPI be valued at least
quarterly, either internally or externally, using standard
commercial real estate appraisal methodology. Each property
must be independently appraised a minimum of once every three
years. Because the NPI
is a measure of private market real estate performance, the
capital value component of return is predominately the product of
property appraisals. As such, the NPI is often referred to
as an "appraisal based index."
At the moment there are roughly 6000 individual properties
in the index whose value approaches $300 billion.
Sorry for the knock down drag out description as to who
these folks are and how the index is calculated, but we believe it
is one of the most “transparent” pieces of data regarding
ongoing CRE values we can find.
Of course it seems the government alternatively believes
that by wiping away mark to market we can just go back to lying to
ourselves and everything will be just fine.
That worked out really well in the prior cycle, no?
In terms of honesty and integrity, we’ll take the NCREIF
data any day of the week, thank you.
Finally
to the point, below is the three decade-plus history of quarterly
returns for the NCREIF property index.
Get the picture as to current trends?

Of
course you do. We’re
currently looking at the most significant period of consecutive
quarterly drops in value in what admittedly is the short history
of the data (going back to 1978).
Although we do not detail the quantitative numbers in the
chart, over the last four quarters (3Q 2008-2Q 2009) the index has
recorded a 22.5% contraction in value.
And just what does this infer about bank holdings of CRE
loan paper? Thanks to
the current Administration’s financial sector “don’t ask,
don’t tell” policy for bank assets, we’re not going to
really know any time soon. Good
thing the
US
banks can simply move forward reporting record earnings and ignore
the current inconvenient truth of declining CRE values, no?
We only see some glimpse of the truth in asset values every Friday
when we see that week's
US
bank failures. Did you catch how BB&T wrote down
Colonial Bank asset values by 37% after Colonial's essential
failure and melding into BB&T? The write down never
happened until Colonial hit the tarmac nose first, yet asset
values had vaporized long ago. And this is the
"transparency" we've been promised?
In
the next chart we’ve taken CRE individual asset class quarterly
returns from the NCREIF data and produced a compound rate of
return series for each asset class since the beginning of the
current decade. Please
be aware that the NCREIF rate of return data includes two
components - an income return and capital price change.
Although we will not drag you through the specific
quantitative data mud, you’ll just have to trust us in telling
you that income returns have been positive each and every year.
That means the capital return (price change) both primarily
drives the direction of the data in the chart below plus is a bit
worse than the actual numbers in the chart show due to the
positive influence of the income flows.

In
short, we are looking at some very substantial price declines to
produce these compound annual rate of return trends for each
property type. In the
table below we delineate the NCREIF pure prior four quarter rate
of return by property type for the period ending 2Q 2009. Again,
it is the true reality of actual property price appraisals that is
driving these numbers. C'mon, can't we allow the pension
funds to simply make up "fair value" numbers like the
banks do? It just doesn't seem fair they should have to take
these types of asset value hits, right? They can't convert
to bank holding companies, can they?
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CRE
Property Class
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NCREIF
Prior Four Quarter Rate Of Return
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Industrial
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(22.0)%
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Office
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(26.0)
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Retail
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(14.4)
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Apartment
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(24.3)
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Hotel
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(27.3)
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Certainly
the numbers you see above are breathtaking, especially given that
they only cover the prior four quarters through 2Q of this year.
And to be totally honest, value declines in the third
quarter of last year for all property types were less than 1%.
Meaning that 95% of the price damage you see in the table
above has occurred since September month end of last year to the
present. Just how
meaningful is this historically?
How does the present CRE down cycle compare to historical
cycles? We only wish
we had the very long term data.
But what we do have is a copy of a presentation done by Ken
Riggs, President and CEO of Real Estate Research Corp. (RERC)
given at the summer 2009 conference of the very same NCREIF.
RERC bills themselves as “one of the first, and one of
the most recognized, independent
and objective commercial real estate research, valuation
and consulting firms in the nation. For more than 75 years, RERC
real estate research, publications, market studies, property
valuations, investment criteria and trends analysis have proven
visionary”. Anyway,
the following is some data Mr. Riggs presented to the NCREIF crowd
literally seven weeks ago in terms of prior CRE cycle character.
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Periods
Of Commercial Real Estate Downturns
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Quarters
Of Duration
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Price
Adjustment For Each Period
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1Q'90
- 4Q'95
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24
quarters
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(32.3)%
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3Q'01
- 1Q'03
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7
quarters
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(3.5)
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2Q'08
- Present
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4
quarters so far
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(19.2)
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As
you can see, his numbers for current magnitude of decline are not
too far off what the NCREIF property index tells us.
As we look at the data above, what is most striking is that
it has only now taken really three quarters in the current cycle
to produce 41% of the decline seen in the 24 quarter down cycle of
the early 1990’s. And
of course the early 1990’s CRE collapse was in good part driven
by the vaporization of the S&L industry.
Seven quarters of CRE decline early this decade produced a
“rounding error” of price decline magnitude relative to the
present cycle. And
unfortunately, as we see it, we’re still in the first few
innings of the current CRE cycle reconciliation game for now.
And as far as the banks and their CRE assets are concerned, the
national anthem has not yet even been played.
We’ll just have to see how it all unfolds from here.
Final chart from the good
folks at the NCREIF. As
is often the case in any asset class where a very meaningful
decline in values takes place over a very short period of time,
activity simply dries up. You
may remember our personal near and dear mantra courtesy of Ray
DeVoe - “Liquidity is a coward.
There’s always too much when it’s needed the least and
it’s never around when it’s needed the most.”
Please be aware that the 2009 number in the chart below has
indeed been annualized. Quite
the collapse in activity, right? In no way will this help
"price", quite the opposite.

It’s
a shame all the buyers have vanished, because as you may remember
close to $300 billion-plus of CRE mortgage loans are up for
renewal or reset this year. And
as of now the asset backed market for commercial real estate loans
is contracting as opposed to expanding.
Much like the residential asset backed markets, the
commercial asset backed markets are no longer open 24/7.

That
really leaves the banks as the potential saviors for commercial
real estate finance. But
here unfortunately again, the banks are nursing their CRE wounds
in the privacy and blackness of their non-mark to market balance
sheets. What we do
know is that per the most recent bank loan officers survey, over
65% of banks were still tightening standards for commercial real
estate loans when these folks last answered the phone (a quarterly
survey).

So just
where does that leave CRE owners who need to refinance this year
or early next? In
trouble, that’s where. And
if this were not enough, we can tell you from first hand knowledge
that bank regulators have been crisscrossing the country examining
bank CRE loans intently. They
do not want another mortgage debacle as was residential real
estate on their current watch.
Like they have a choice, right?
In many cases current CRE appraisals are being conducted
against existing bank property loans and capital calls are going
out to CRE owners who have always been model credits and have
never missed a payment in their lives.
And CRE values will improve in this type of a regulatory
and available capital environment?
Quite the opposite, as you already know.
Taking
The Lead?...So
just where does all of this lead us with CRE ahead?
When will we begin to get some “green shoots” or signs
of “stabilization” in CRE values?
We wish we had the answer.
But we do have yet another data point from an industry
source we hope can help in terms of timing ahead.
The wonderful folks at the National Association of Realtors
have put together what they call the Commercial Leading Indicator
(CLI). The Commercial
Leading Indicator for Brokerage Activity is a tool to assess
market behavior in the major commercial real estate sectors. The
index incorporates 13 variables the NAR believes reflect future
commercial real estate activity.
The index is designed to provide early signals of turning
points between expansions and slowdowns in commercial real estate.
We like it in that it is comprised of the NCREIF price
index, the NAREIT price index, industrial production, labor market
data, retail sales, personal income and capital spending data
factors. As much as we
distrust most data or comments from the NAR, the CLI appears a
very reasonable indicator. In
fact, this is what it is telling us right now.

Admittedly
it’s not looking too wonderful, especially as a “leading
indicator”. Sorry
for the small print in the chart above.
It covers the 1990 to present period and, of course, it’s
the direction that’s most important.
Directly from their latest report comes these comments.
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“The
sharp fall in the CLI implies that commercial activity, as
measured by net absorption and the completion of new
commercial buildings, will likely contract quite severely
over the next six to nine months. Commercial real estate
construction spending (i.e., non-residential structural
investment) had held on relatively well in the current
economic recession, but is anticipated to tumble in
commercial real estate building construction in upcoming
quarters. Commercial practitioners can also anticipate a
much weaker net absorption in the office and industrial
sectors later in the year and a far fewer number of new
commercial buildings reaching the market.”
“We
now expect office vacancy rates to rise very sharply,
surpassing 20 percent in 2010. Office rents will fall 7
percent in 2009 and further fall an additional 1 percent
in 2010. Industrial and retail sectors will face
deteriorating conditions as well. Only the multifamily
sector looks to squeeze out positive rent growth, though
at a slower rate of increase than in the past.”
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Comforting,
right? Sure it is.
One final comment in terms of the commercial real estate
cycle and how that cycle relates to residential real estate.
The following is simply an update of a chart we have shown
you the past. Directly
from the GDP data, we are looking at the year over year change in
residential fixed investment (residential real estate) set against
the same year over year change in non-residential fixed investment
(a loose proxy for CRE).

Important
point being that at least as per the historical message of past
cycles, the rate of change in the residential markets turns up
before the rate of change in non-residential activity does.
And at least as of yet, residential construction/investment
activity is not turning up. As
we said a few minutes ago, the CRE down cycle is unfortunately
still young. We hope
we can anticipate the eventual turn when we see the NAR CLI
reverse up and the annual rate of change in residential fixed
investment bottom and begin to move higher.
That
Vacant Look…And
we’ll close with a bit more data from the super folks at the
National Association of realtors.
In conjunction with the production of their Commercial
Leading Brokerage indicator, they also project forward vacancy
rates for office, industrial and retail property types.
Here’s what they think is coming down the pike for the
remainder of this year and looking into next. Maybe we're
colorblind, but it seems even the NAR can't find any "green
shoots"? We never thought we'd see the day. The
numbers for this year and next are certainly sobering.
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Property
Type And Data Points
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2007
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2008
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2009
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2010
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OFFICE
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Vacancy
Rate
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12.5%
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13.4%
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16.1%
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20.4%
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Net
Absorption (000 sq ft)
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57,265
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12,271
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-81,708
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-114,978
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Rent
Growth
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8%
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(0.4)%
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(7.2)%
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(0.8)%
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RETAIL
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Vacancy
Rate
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9.2%
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9.7%
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12.1%
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15.8%
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Net
Absorption (000 sq ft)
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11,081
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-7,315
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-38,570
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-44,225
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Rent
Growth
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3.2
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(2.0)%
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(2.1)%
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(1.5)%
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INDUSTRIAL
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Vacancy
Rate
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9.4%
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10.4%
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11.9%
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12.6%
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Net
Absorption (000 sq ft)
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120,321
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-57,241
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-51,011
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23,176
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Rent
Growth
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3.6%
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(0.8)%
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(3.4)%
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(4.0)
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There
you have it. We
suggested in February of this year that CRE would be an important
issue before the current year had run its course.
The numbers, analysis and industry commentary tidbits
suggest the down cycle is far from complete.
The ultimate impact on the financial sector remains an open
question mark at this point. Will
banks simply ignore the issue, as they continue to do with many a
residential real estate foreclosure situation by simply not
sending out notices of default?
Will the Fed/Treasury/Administration devise yet another
taxpayer funded bailout scheme for their very close friends at the
banks and in the
US
financial sector at large? Without
question, the regional and community banks are most at risk with
current and to come CRE issues.
We do not expect death and destruction as excesses in CRE
lending were NEVER as egregious as what we witnessed in
residential lending. But
these folks will need time to heal.
They will need time to earn their way out of their current
and to come CRE problems. This
simply tells us their will be less aggregate systemic risk taking
and credit availability from this crowd of regional and community
bankers ahead. It can
be no other way. And
yet equity investors continue to attempt to discount a “V”
economic recovery, as is implicit by the recent vertical action in
equities? They
certainly know something we do not.
They do know something, don’t they?
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