After Denial Comes Accommodation
Back in June of 2006 I posted some long excerpts from an internal report produced by Colorado & Santa Fe Real Estate, a Denver firm owned by an entrepreneur named Marcel Arsenault. After riding the long bull market in U.S. real estate to a considerable personal fortune, Marcel was doing something unusual for a real estate guy: He was selling out at what now appears to be the top. But not just selling out. He was so convinced that real estate was headed for a crash that he'd converted his company to a hedge fund that was shorting REITs and industrial commodities. So far so good. Over the past year his fund's short positions are up over 50%. We sold most of our property near the top, but real estate values are falling and on the last few deals we had to cut our prices. I recently sold my Aurora Corporate Center for a couple million less than I paid a few years ago. In over 140 deals, it's the first money I ever lost on real estate (a tribute to how long the boom was!). In the past 20 years any idiot could have made money in real estate. We've sold over 4 million square feet, or about two-thirds of what we started with, in order to build a war chest of cash to buy distressed real estate later. Buying Busted Condo Projects We've formed a new real estate company, Condo Capital Solutions, and it's already getting attention: Bloomberg recently interviewed me for a TV program featuring Florida real estate. The number of "busted condo" projects is growing, but wholesale prices are not being marked to market yet by the sponsors (or the lenders taking projects back in foreclosure). In a market that's in freefall, like Florida, buyers and sellers are able to "write their own script" about where future housing prices will land. We bid on a partly-sold-out condo deal in Florida with a $55 million loan balance and a $44 million appraisal, but it was difficult to price in a falling market. The appraiser had to value it at "current market" even though prices for units being sold were in freefall. We offered $29 million, which the seller doesn't want to accept because it's below appraisal. At this point most sellers of distressed condo projects can't hit the bid. Commercial Real Estate (Retail, Office, Industrial) The thing that's keeping commercial real estate afloat is that owners enjoyed a good economy for the last five years. Tenants are still paying rent, and until recently, expanding. But once the economy turns negative - I think we're probably in the beginning stages of a recession - then that fig leaf of "I've got income fundamentals working for me" goes away. By year end, it's a different world for commercial owners. After six years of writing mortgages at super peak values, in which commercial mortgage debt doubled nationwide, commercial mortgage lenders are suddenly realizing that they're highly exposed and are starting to tighten up. Once mortgage volumes start falling, lenders will tighten mortgage underwriting, triggering a feedback loop that produces a crescendo of falling values. Our proprietary liquidity index predicts a downtrend that reflects the past few years' logarithmic upturn, but in reverse. So why bid on property now? We want to line up our operating and financial partners, and for that you have to have your infrastructure in place. We have to be out there talking to banks even if the banks don't see a serious drop in price coming. The best way to talk is to make the banks an offer. Right now the banks are unrealistic, but they know we have the financial capacity to buy. If they have our offer in their file and we stay in touch, someday our $29 million offer is going look reasonable. Meanwhile, there's always the chance that some boss comes from corporate and says "we have to get something off the books; I don't like $29 million, but can these guys close by the end of the month?" And you get the call out of the blue saying "okay we'll take 29." So you need the staff, website, brochures and working partners on the ground in Florida. You've got to have your investors lined up. You have to be ready to perform once the sellers are ready to hit the bid. Avoid the financials, particularly banks. They're just working through the first of three or four perfect storms that are coming. They're dealing with their subprime problems but they haven't set much aside for the coming consumer credit card and auto loan recession; they haven't set much aside for the coming wave of corporate loan defaults, nor have they prepared for a commercial real estate downturn. According to the FDIC, many banks' commercial real estate exposure is triple their capital. I wouldn't touch most commercial real estate loans made in 2005-2007 with a ten foot pole. They'll have to write a lot of this off as the economy deleverages. In the meantime, remember: 1. Cash is Emperor John Rubino |
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