The San Francisco Chronicle is reporting in Commercial real estate market softens that some smaller office buildings are on the edge of foreclosure.
Owners of several small commercial buildings in San Francisco already are behind on payments, and local industry observers are laying odds on which large property could be the first to be seized by a lender.
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“Real estate fundamentals are softening dramatically,” said Richard Parkus, research analyst at the German bank. “Over the next 12 to 18 months, we expect to see pretty significant deterioration.”
Of particular concern for San Francisco is the fact that nearly 75 percent of the Class A – premier – office buildings downtown traded hands in the past four years, according to Tove Nilsen, director of market research at Colliers International. The flurry of activity propelled sales prices to record highs and drove the ratio of rental income to cost to all-time lows.
According the article vacancy in San Francisco has risen by 32% from the 1st Quarter of 2008 to the 1st Quarter of 2009.
Marcus & Millichap predicted in their 2009 National Office Report a rise in vacancy of 400 bps to 15.1% in 2009 for San Francisco. As well, they predict that effective rents could drop as much as 10.7%.
Falling rents and rising vacancies will drive the value on a leased office property lower. Lower values make it more difficult to obtain financing.
Another factor that is hurting owners’ ability to refinance is rising cap rates. Investors are acknowleding the greater risks inherent in real estate and are expecting a greater return. This desire for a greater return is driving cap rates higher.
It may be a while before we see the end of the commercial real estate cycle. Properties that provide a strong cash flow now may still be a good buy. Don’t expect to find financing in today’s market for a property that cannot service the debt at a ratio of $1.10 of income to $1.00 of debt service. More institutional lenders are requiring even hire debt service coverage ratios of 1.3 or greater.
Tags: Credit Crisis, San Francisco, san francisco bay area
