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CRE Loans Going Bad at Frightening Rate

Posted: Tue Aug 04, 2009 11:54 pm
by annarborgator
Holy shnikes...check out the charts below to see it in all its glory...

Note that these problems have nothing to do with "liquidity." (Remember earlier this year, when Tim Geithner was blaming everything on a "lack of liquidity"?) These loans are going bad because the real estate companies can't make their interest payments--because the tenants can't pay their rent.

Richard summarizes the situation:

Loan Performance Deteriorating Precipitously

* Speed of deterioration in loan performance is unprecedented, even relative to the early
1990s
* Total delinquency rate reached 4.1% in June, 2.2 times its March level and 3.5 times
that in December
* Delinquency rates are likely to soar higher over next 24+ months on billions of dollars of pro forma loans that never stabilized and resetting partial IO loans
* With 2,158 delinquent fixed rate loans ($27.9 billion) special servicers may soon be under pressure
* DB CMBS Research projects term losses will reach 4.3-6.3% for the outstanding CMBS
universe ($31.3-$46.4 billion), and 8.4-12.1% for the 2007 vintage


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http://www.businessinsider.com/henry-blodget-commercial-real-estate-loans-going-bad-at-frightening-rate-2009-8

I suppose this is all already fully priced into the markets right?

CRE Loans Going Bad at Frightening Rate

Posted: Wed Aug 05, 2009 8:28 am
by MinGator
Hold on for the next drop on this roller coaster ride.

I'm sure this will require the porkulus II be passed quickly, no time to read it, just pass it and print the money.

CRE Loans Going Bad at Frightening Rate

Posted: Wed Aug 05, 2009 8:36 am
by a1bion
Commercial real estate tends to correct more quickly than residential. This has been expected.

CRE Loans Going Bad at Frightening Rate

Posted: Wed Aug 05, 2009 10:29 am
by annarborgator
It can't correct before the real economy rebounds can it? And assuming it will rebound more quickly again this time fails to acknowledge the changed paradigm. We've overbuilt for what? 30 years straight? The overcapacity in CRE is astounding and will take time. Previous corrections were accompanied by renewed growth, but this time I don't see growth potentially renewing itself like the rest of the post war recessions.