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Foreclosure wave seen for commercial buildingsJeff Collins
Lanser on Real Estate
OCregister
February 7th, 2009
A wave of foreclosures will hit the commercial market in late 2009. Commercial property values already have fallen 20% to 30% and sales volume has dropped 70%. Cap rates will rise to 9% and above.
That’s the assessment of O.C.’s newest commercial real estate guru, Glen Esnard, who came to Santa Ana in June as Grubb & Ellis’ president of Capital Markets. There’s a lot of new talent coming to O.C. as the result of the merger a year ago that resulted in Grubb’s headquarters moving from Chicago to Santa Ana.
According to a Grubb news release, Esnard is the former president of brokerage services at Colliers International. He came to Orange County after nearly 30 years of commercial real estate experience. In the newly created position as capital markets chief, Esnard is responsible for directing Grubb & Ellis’ investment brokerage business, which includes its Institutional Investment Group and Private Capital Investment Group. We asked him about his recent forecast that commercial foreclosures will soon rise.
Us: You recently forecast a surge in foreclosures in the commercial real estate sector. When will this occur and how bad will it get?
Glen: We anticipate the first significant waves of foreclosure activity to hit as we move into the second half of 2009. It is difficult to anticipate the magnitude. However, one of our benchmarks is CMBS loans (commercial mortgage-backed securities) that originated in 2005-2007.
Due to several factors, not the least of which was that they originated at the peak pricing point in the cycle, we view them as the loans most vulnerable to foreclosure. There are roughly $50 billion of such loans due in 2009 in the CMBS sector alone. This is where we believe the surge will commence.
Us: What types of properties will be affected?
Glen: Clearly all property types will be impacted, however we see the greatest vulnerability in hotels, retail, office then apartments, in that order, although currently apartment properties seem to have an edge based on direct lender feedback. Also at high risk are properties currently under development that started the process before 2008.
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