Peter Pays Paul

Inside commercial hard money lending.

A Different Recession Produces Different Results

CoStar interviewed Hessam Nadji, managing director of research services for Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services, asking him his thoughts on the current recession.

Here are some of his thoughts on the length of the current recession:

We think job losses and the recession will end in 2009. We’re expecting that job losses will bottom by the third quarter, perhaps into the fourth quarter. For 2010, if you look historically, we’ve had plenty of instances where sharp declines and severe and sudden recessions have been followed by years of growth spike and better-than-average growth — especially the first year after a recession. But this time around, we still have a significant amount of consumer debt to unwind and we’re still dealing with a lot of headwinds in housing and corporate debt. I don’t think 2010 will bring an economic spike.

Nadji acknowledges that retail is going through some issues and may not recover until 2011 or 2012. He ascribes this to a problem of overbuilding in the retail sector.

On Distressed Property

We also need to know how much distressed inventory is going to appear and move through the market. I believe a lot of buyers with lots of cash are sitting on the sidelines looking for signs of an economic bottoming and waiting to see the scale of distressed property sales. Over the next six months, we’re going to get a better reading on the market because both financial institutions and owners of properties are still having stress and they’re going to have to decide what to do with those assets. I think there will be more motivation to sell at more realistic prices than there was a year ago.

One or two high-profile deals are not going to refine the market. Its going to take a little more volume, and a sampling of different asset sales in different places starting to trade, for it to become more of a widespread conviction that it’s time to get back in.

Using Cap Rates in Today’s Market

Nadji that cap rates are not as important as they once were in the realm of commercial real estate.

That’s not to say that no one thinks about cap rates anymore — they certainly use it as a metric — but you have to look at return on cash, number one, and using the new underwriting parameters to clear this market for financing, which requires more equity up front and much more realistic rent growth projections and occupancy projections. That would lead you to look at the return on investment for years year one through three in terms of cash flow, which is right now far more important than just a cap rate, which you can come up with in so many different ways.

RTC 2.0?

Nadji doesn’t believe that the current recession and distress in commercial real estate will lead to a second coming of the RTC.

Rather, the forces are working to minimize foreclosures, and therefore this notion of an RTC 2.0 that will bring quality assets to market at huge discounts may not materialize the same way.

He suggests that there are still quality deals available that have cash, can underwrite to today’s rent and occupancy rates, and are seeking to add value to their projects.

Tags: cap rates, Commercial Real Estate, Distressed Property, real estate investment


Share on Twitter

Related Posts

Posted Thursday, May 7th, 2009 at 10:36 am
Filed Under Category: Commercial Real Estate, Distressed Property
You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

This website uses IntenseDebate comments, but they are not currently loaded because either your browser doesn't support JavaScript, or they didn't load fast enough.

0

Leave a Reply