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EXPO REAL 2009 | 12th International Commercial Property Exposition | 5 - 7 October 2009 | New Munich Trade Fair Centre | Sunday, 12. October 2008 This is the print version of the exporeal.net offer. For printing, please use the print button of your browser. |
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![]() ARTICLES USA
Smooth landing The real estate market in the USA is cooling down. However, most market observers predict a smooth landing, not a market crash. After a four-year binge with double-digit growth rates, the US real estate markets have downed their landing gears. Signs of a cooling activity are visible almost everywhere. Sales in the housing market are taking a dip, inventories are growing, and prices are flattening, with corrections in a series of regional markets that had reached advanced price levels. This summer, the median price for single-family-homes in Washington, D.C. has softened for the first time in five years. Meanwhile, commercial real estate is carried on by a growing number of jobs and above-estimate earnings in some leading industries. A sustained inflow of capital into the US is contributing to that. Overall, many observers are forecasting a systematic retreat from recent record prices and sales volumes, but not a crash. In some regions of the country, in the “Sunbelt” and the state of Utah, for instance— where the population is growing and industry is building up capacity—observers are witnessing a continued boom, albeit at slower growth rates. Weaknesses in the residential real estate market According to the National Association of Realtors (NAR), the housing market is in a process of stabilizing with little change in overall sales volume expected over the balance of the year. New-home sales are projected to drop 12.8 percent in 2006 to 1.12 million, still the third-best result on record. “The rise in housing supply is the biggest change in the market over the last year”, says NAR President Thomas Stevens, commenting on the equation having shifted into a buyers market, putting pressure on prices.
In the office market, investors that are priced out of coastal markets continue to turn further inland, causing capital to flow into secondary and tertiary markets. Properties are most popular where old lease agreements are due for extension at much higher prices. “Improving rents and occupancies are becoming the primary price drivers,” says Patricia A. Nooney, Managing Director of CB Richard Ellis in St. Louis. In terms of volume, Manhattan and California remain the most consistently active investment markets. “But while the pace of sales is starting to slow,” says Patricia A. Nooney, “it is unlikely the trend will drop off substantially this year.” Office supply, meanwhile, is starting to grow at a lesser rate. Exceptions include the “Sunbelt”, which continues to gain popularity with both the general population as well as with investors and corporations. Retail real estate still “on the top” The market for industrial property is cooling down as well, with pockets of further growth. In cities like Austin, Boston, Atlanta and Baltimore the availability of space is rising. However, there are still cities where demand outpaces supply, like Tampa, Palm Beach and Las Vegas. At commercial ports like Long Beach and Portland “the demand for industrial warehouse space remains at a fever pitch,” says Patricia A. Nooney. According to her, the most active markets are currently Dallas, Seattle and San Jose. Demand for new business ideas Since GDP growth halved to 2.5 percent in the second quarter, many experts are now trying to determine how a cooling real estate market can ripple across the economy. In the words of Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, the impact will be “orderly”. Analysts at Merrill Lynch expect that the lower numbers in homebuilding could deduct a percentage point from the overall gross domestic product in the third quarter of the year. “We don’t think it’s going to be a disaster; it’s just going to be bad,” says David Wyss, Chief Economist at Standard & Poor’s in New York.
The Topic at EXPO REAL 2006 For detailed information click here. Further articles in this column:
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