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Commercial Real Estate Crash in Tampa? ….Say it Ain’t So!

November 9th, 2009 Leave a comment Go to comments

….Well, I did say “it isn’t so” and still do say that the predictions of impending crash of the commercial real estate market are greatly exaggerated.  I was recently quoted by James Thorner, of the St Petersburg Times about my feelings on the market.  I believe I was the only Tampa commercial real estate broker or professional in the article that felt the gloom and doom is over done.  Is there stress in the market?  You bet there is.  Vacancy rates are at their highest in years.  Values have fallen in the area on average between 30-40%.  The loans on all of these deals that were made at the peak of the market will have to be renewed in the next 3 years.  Under normal times, these loans would be challenging if not impossible to renew.  BUT….these are not normal times.

The banking system has been rocked from the collapse of the residential and derivatives markets.  The sytem has been leaking water like an old wooden skiff.  The regulators and elected officials have decided that it would not be a good idea to kick the teetering financial system over the cliff.  As was mentioned in previous posts in this blog, the IRS and FDIC have provided new guidance in regards to easing renewals of loans that are performing, but failing to meeting current underwriting standards (called performing/non-performing assets).

I don’t think these measures can be taken lightly.  The government has the ability to stamp out a commercial real estate fire or at least keep the burn a controlled one.  Certainly, the bankers I have spoken to have felt some of the pressure taken off, particularly from the FDIC guidance (although, you can trust me that they are not sleeping soundly these days, regardless).  And, I don’t believe these will be the last actions government bodies will take to make sure the “problem can” will be kicked down the road.  The general call to action is “A rolling loan gathers no loss” and this will be the recipe du jour for some time to come.  Are we facing tough times?  Yes, the commercial market will be a tough slog over the next few years?  But, what about Armageddon?  Nope.  I don’t see it happening, not this time anyway.

For those interested, here is Mr. Thorner’s article from the Sunday paper:

Commercial Real Estate Crash Coming, Many Say

By James Thorner, Times Staff Writer

In Print: Sunday, November 8, 2009

We all know why home foreclosures are bad. Nose-diving home values and neighborhood blight are just two of the ugly offshoots of mortgage defaults.

But should we care if the neighborhood shopping center, office park or condo project go bust?

We should. A lot.

Experts fear that a commercial real estate meltdown, following hard upon the housing collapse, could prolong economic turmoil in a Tampa Bay region (…..for the complete article)

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  1. November 11th, 2009 at 13:41 | #1

    Kudos to you for seeing the light at the end of the Tunnel. Take a page out of the residential market fiasco. Prudent owners/investors are doing fine – assuming there are in the 90% still employed. Investors who dove in CRE head first in the past three years with too good to be true loans are now in the same position as their residential brothers 12 months ago. The underlying current however has been positive over the past 90 days and the troubled waters will calm, eventually, but certainly before any pending and incorrectly targeted market collaspe.

  2. Rich Allen
    November 13th, 2009 at 07:33 | #2

    When discretionary spending returns for the retail sector there will be pent-up demand and retail will rebound dragging the market kicking and screaming back to some semblance of a return to normalcy whatever that is. Will it happen? Historically yes. When will it happen? that is the proverbial 64 dollar question.
    Hopefully from forecasts I have read the more positive ones indicate late spring of 2010. That would be nice. But don’t go out and buy inflated priced retail CRE just yet. Let the market settle out and see who is left standing.

    Rich Allen
    RMT Consultants
    Building Envelope Consultant

  3. Eric Odum
    November 13th, 2009 at 09:40 | #3

    I agree Rich. Its all about employment right now and corporate investment. Everything else will follow.

    It is going to take some time to work through the high leverage though on CRE.

  1. February 13th, 2010 at 17:48 | #1