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Current Market Conditions
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REITs: Where Are The Good Deals

Real-estate
investment trusts sold $24 billion in new stock last year, raising to
profit from commercial-property distress by picking up high-quality
real estate at bargain prices. But they are having trouble finding
deals. Tishman Spier, recently handed the keys back to the banks. Peter
Cooper village and Stuyvesant Town comprise 56,000 units. Another 2.6
billion dollar deal was handed back to Barclays and they have no
intention of putting these properties up at bargain basement prices.
They are looking past the problem waiting for better days.
So,
REITs bought only $4.6 billion of property in 2009, a 67% decline from
the previous year, according to research firm Real Capital Analytics.
They cant get prime properties on the cheap. After dumping so much
residential property on the market, driving prices down and gathering
much evil eye for doing that, they learned a lesson.
Why
Commercial
property prices some 35% to 50% off their peaks, most banks are keeping
their best assets off the market. Many REIT expected the number of
distressed buildings forced to market to surge as owners defaulted and
lenders foreclosed. But while the number of problem loans has been
growing, so far this hasn't translated into many fire sales. Finally
there are some signs of an end to the equity drubbing taken by
commercial real-estate owners.
From a cash-flow perspective,
REITs still face declining rents and occupancy levels and equity
evaporation. The REITs raised so much money waiting for the banks to
hand off quality properties on the cheap and instead, they are going to
manage and hold property. This may not be the generational opportunity
the REITs expected. but I think it speaks volumes about how the world
has changed for the better. Suddenly, there is a view that better times
are coming.
REsourced
from www.yourpropertypath.com
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