by Calculated Risk on 10/06/2009 11:43:00 AM
Tuesday, October 06, 2009
Report: Manhattan Office Vacancy Rate Increases, Rents Decline
From Bloomberg: Manhattan Office Vacancies Reach Five Year High, Cushman Says
Manhattan’s third-quarter office vacancy rate hit a five-year high ... The rate rose to 11.1 percent, the highest since the third quarter of 2004, New York-based broker Cushman & Wakefield said in a statement today. Rents fell 5.2 percent from the second quarter to $57.08 a square foot and were down 22 percent from a year earlier.Yesterday, NY Fed President commented about falling commercial real estate prices:
emphasis added
First, the capitalization rate—the ratio of income to valuation—has climbed sharply. At the peak, capitalization rates for prime properties were in the range of 5 percent. That means that investors were willing to pay $20 for a $1 of income. Today, the capitalization rate appears to have risen to about 8 percent. That means that the same dollar of income is now capitalized as worth only $12.50. In other words, if income were stable, the value of the properties would have fallen by 37.5 percent. Second, the income generated by commercial real estate has generally been falling.According to Cushman, rents are off 22% over the last year (probably more since the peak), and combined with the higher cap rate, Dudley's estimate suggests office building prices have fallen by half or more in New York.
There was a little good news in the Cushman report:
Sublease space declined to 11.1 million square feet from 11.4 million at mid-year, the first drop since the end of 2007, Cushman said.However the vacancy rate is still expect to rise further, perhaps to 14% in New York according to Cushman.
“A decline in sublease space is indicative of the market beginning to move towards stabilization,” said Joseph Harbert, chief operating officer for Cushman’s New York metropolitan region.
The national office vacancy data from REIS will be released soon.