[quote author="acpme" date=1225760656]you're refering to general growth props. they've lost 90% of their value in the past few months. the fall has been sudden and dramatic although not surprising. you're absolutely right that the entire sector overleveraged and debt maturities are the elephant in the room with these companies, and GGP is the one with the most debt coming due in the next 2 yrs. debt to asset ratios continue to rise as property values plummet which makes financing even more difficult.
i have heard for far too long that dividends were a justification for buying REITs. unfortunately too many people just took the high yields at face value without asking skeptically whether those dividends could be maintained. turns out many companies are not able to cover. almost every company in this sector that has reported 3q has announced a div cut or no div payout at all for 4q, as well as significantly lower guidance for 2009. div cuts are not a good sign for "dividend stocks".
but even outside of the RE-specific sectors, a crash in commercial RE is going to have broad effects. historically, RE has accounted for 25% of corporate balance sheets. with the commerical RE bubble that number has undoubtedly risen due to inflated prop values. in addition corporations that had small JVs and side-businesses that dabbled in RE became heavily reliant on the growing revenues of that sector. life insr companies, financing and investment arms of corporations (GE capital), public pension funds, private equity, etc. you name it - they overinvested in that asset class.</blockquote>
Yes, it is general growth props. They are in quite the bind. I'd short them, but the price of the stock is too low, and buying puts is risky since I don't know when they will go BK.
Anyway, do you remember some of those commercial RE bulls from earlier in the year? Yeah... I just might dig up of few of those gems here soon, like the guy who had the handle re_fan. That guy thought he knew his stuff, with all the industry knowledge he had, and all the financial models that confirmed his bullish perspective. I know I should be more humble, but I wonder how he feels now, knowing we were right and he was horribly wrong?
Anyway, here is some of the latest chartpr0n from <a href="http://www.voitco.com/voit_reports.htm">Voit on OC's office space</a>...
<em>"<strong>Net absorption for the county posted a negative 361,184 square feet for the third quarter of 2008, giving the office market a total of 1.37 million square feet of negative absorption for the first three quarters of this year. Last year Orange County had a total of 947,370 square feet of negative absorption.</strong> This negative absorption can be attributed to the credit crunch and finance companies consolidating."</em>
More than 2.3 million negative absorption in less than 2 years. That sucks, even with the losses from the mortgage cos.
http://www.badongo.com/t/640/4698804.jpg
http://www.badongo.com/t/640/4698809.jpg
http://www.badongo.com/t/640/4698813.jpg
I always wondered how job growth in the health and education sectors would help absorption rates and lease rates. I guess the nutter was not so nutty after all.