Professional Team Property Listings Services Market Info Austin Blog NAI Global

Moderator

Kim_Gatley
Kim Gatley
Sr. Vice President
& Director of Research
NAI REOC Austin
(bio)

Got a Commercial Real Estate Need or Question?

Ask One of Our Trusted Advisors

Put Our Years of
Experience to
Work For You

Property Management
Marketing
Project Leasing
Acquisition
Disposition
Tenant Representation
Site Selection
Research
Market Reports
Advisor Magazine

Fed’s Lockhart: Commercial Real Estate Trouble Risk to Economy

This article was written by the WSJ staff for the Wall Street Journal Blog Real Time Economics

Please click here to view the the Real Time Economics blog 

NASHVILLE –The latest big threat to economic recovery in the U.S., the commercial property market, could be the next target of an expanded special lending program from the central bank, Dennis Lockhart, president of the Atlanta Federal Reserve Bank, said Saturday.

“On our watch list this year as a risk to the [economic] outlook is continuing
worsening in the commercial real estate sector,” Mr. Lockhart said.

The central banker was speaking at a conference on financial policy hosted by
Vanderbilt University’s Owen Graduate School of Management to honor former Fed
Governor Dewey Daane.

Fed policymakers are still considering whether to include sponsorship for
commercial property loans under its Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility,
or TALF, Mr. Lockhart said, adding that there’s been no official decision.

“The details haven’t been fully worked out,” he said.

Lockhart is currently a voting member on the Fed committee that deliberates
the bank’s policy actions. At the last meeting, March 18, the committee
announced a new plan to buy $300 billion in longer-term Treasurys and expand by
$750 billion the size of lending programs aimed at reducing mortgage rates. The
TALF program, which can accommodate around $1 trillion of support for the
asset-backed markets that support consumer and business lending, has only just
gotten underway, to a tepid reception from investors.

The commercial real estate market has suffered on a variety of fronts, from
rising unemployment in the corporate sector to a drop in business travel that’s
depriving hotels of guests. As a result, Mr. Lockhart said, there’s a real risk of a
spike in delinquencies and failure to refinance the roughly $400 billion of
commercial real estate loans coming due this year.

  • Share/Bookmark

Leave a Reply

 

 

 

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>