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Commercial Real Estate Musical Chairs, With Chairs Added Each Round

Oct 16, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

Finally some CRE news unfortunately it is not the good news we could all use.-Sean
Commercial real estate vacancies hit nearly 25% in Phoenix Valley area. Scottsdale and Southeast Valley vacancies are even higher. Please consider Office vacancy rates in Valley hit record.
Nearly 1 out of every 4 square feet of Valley office space was vacant [...]

Finally some CRE news unfortunately it is not the good news we could all use.-Sean

Commercial real estate vacancies hit nearly 25% in Phoenix Valley area. Scottsdale and Southeast Valley vacancies are even higher. Please consider Office vacancy rates in Valley hit record.

Nearly 1 out of every 4 square feet of Valley office space was vacant in the third quarter ending Sept. 30, commercial-real-estate experts said.

That’s about 28 million square feet of empty space, according to Phoenix commercial-realty brokerage Colliers International, one of several Valley firms tracking the progress of sales and the leasing of office, industrial and retail buildings.

Within the next few months, about 2 million more square feet of office space will open, and less than 20 percent of it has been reported as spoken for by a future tenant.

One of the soon-to-open buildings, the 400,000-square-foot One Central Park East office tower in downtown Phoenix [at left], has yet to announce a lease agreement despite plans to open by the end of the year.

“Actually, leasing agents are optimistic,” said Broker Mindy Korth of Phoenix-based CB Richard Ellis.

Korth said One Central Park is a desirable location that ultimately will find its audience. But she agreed with other experts that the high prices paid by companies such as One Central Park developer Mesirow Financial Real Estate Inc. could make it difficult to pay the bills, based on today’s lower lease rates.

More than 2,200 commercial properties in Maricopa County have received 90-day foreclosure notices since Jan. 1, representing more than $7 billion in real-estate loans on which the borrowers have failed to make payments.

Valley Vacancies

  • Overall vacancies – 24.2 percent
  • Scottsdale vacancies – 29.1 percent
  • Downtown Phoenix vacancies – 15.7 percent
  • Southeast Valley vacancies – 30.5 percent

Musical Chairs, With “Desirable Chairs” Added Each Round

Arizona leasing agents are optimistic because the “real-estate crash positions Phoenix as an attractive relocation area for companies in more expensive states, such as California“.

Let’s assume for a moment that businesses transfer to Arizona from California. What would that do to California jobs and California commercial real estate prices? How many tax breaks will Phoenix give to get corporations to relocate? Will California, Illinois, New York, and other places quietly let businesses leave?

Without new business expansion, this setup is nothing more than a game of musical chairs except no chairs are ever removed. Instead so-called “desirable chairs” like One Central Park are added every round, not just in Phoenix, but Miami, Chicago, Portland, San Diego, and countless other places.

Do the math. Musical chairs in reverse is not a viable economic model.

“If you build it, they will come” cannot possibly work unless the number of players increases faster than the number of chairs. The reverse is happening. More chairs are added each month than participants in the game.

Bundle of Joy

I have good news to report tonight. Someone has finally seen me for the joyful optimist that I am.

In Real Estate Strikes Back Planet Yelnick notes: “Mish was a bundle of joy today, also reporting that rents have fallen for the first time in 17 years, and that new FHA rules make condos utterly worthless.”

“Bundle of Joy” was the title of Thursday’s Podcast on HoweStreet.
Forget all that gloom’n'doom stuff, Mish has some GOOD news…rents are falling!

Please click on the link and listen in.

Phil Mackesy and I discussed housing in Vancouver, falling rents in the US, and what it’s like to be under the lights for Three Yahoo Tech Tickers: Deflation, Gold, Stock Market.

Residential rents are indeed falling, as are corporate lease rates. And with this game of musical chairs, commercial real estate lease rates are sure to continue falling for quite some time.
online pharmacy prescription drugs target=”_blank”>Source Article

Ailing Commercial Mortgage Securities Deepen CRE Woes

Oct 13, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

The next shoe…to drop.-Sean
Hawaii’s Maui Prince Resort offers white sand beaches, acres of lush tropical forest, two golf courses and even a hotel featuring cascading waterfalls. What it doesn’t provide is a return on investment.
The property, which Morgan Stanley Real Estate and local developers bought only two years ago for $575 million, is in foreclosure [...]

The next shoe…to drop.-Sean

Hawaii’s Maui Prince Resort offers white sand beaches, acres of lush tropical forest, two golf courses and even a hotel featuring cascading waterfalls. What it doesn’t provide is a return on investment.

The property, which Morgan Stanley Real Estate and local developers bought only two years ago for $575 million, is in foreclosure after defaulting on a $192.5 million loan. Its investors, which also includes Swiss banking giant UBS, may be wiped out on the deal.

The loans behind Maui Prince were financed by commercial mortgage-backed securities, or CMBS. The resort’s failure reflects the troubled market for these bonds, which are backed by a pool of mortgages on commercial properties. The market for CMBS is one leg of the stool supporting the commercial real estate sector, providing a vital source of funding for mortgages on hotels, offices, shopping malls and other business properties. And as we’ve been saying a lot of late, that stool is collapsing.

The CMBS market has yet to revive after seizing up last year. In 2007, sales of commercial mortgage-backed debt rose to roughly $240 billion and accounted for nearly half of all commercial lending. Today, sales of CMBS have sunk to just over $12 billion.

Loans underpinning CMBS are deteriorating fast. As of August, delinquency rates were seven times their level of a year ago, and 12 times the rate shortly before the real estate bubble burst in 2007. Unpaid balances on CMBS investments, which are typically held by banks, insurance companies, pension funds and other large investors, exceed $28 billion, up a startling 592 percent from 2008 (click on chart to expand).

In a sign of how quickly things are unraveling, credit rating agency RealPoint expects that figure to rise to $50 billion by year-end. Deutsche Bank in a July report estimated that total losses on all CMBS could reach 12 percent, and as high as 15 percent for commercial mortgage securities backed by more recent loans.

The trouble with CMBS indicates not only the sinking price of commercial property, but also ongoing concerns with securitization, in which loans are sliced up and sold to investors. After freezing up in 2008, certain segments of the securitization market have shown signs of life. Yet CMBS sponsors remain gun-shy about taking on the risk of pooling loans for securitization.

Here’s why all of this matters (and thanks for sticking with me). With CMBS investors on the sidelines, it becomes all but impossible to refinance maturing mortgages. That squashes the price of commercial property and hurts sales of distressed assets. More borrowers are thrown into default. Banks, already reeling from losses on residential mortgages, get creamed (they also lose out as major servicers of CMBS), further choking off credit for commercial development.

Whole loans festering on their books remain the principal problem for banks. But the deterioration in CMBS loans isn’t helping.

Source cheap prescription drugs Article

Tax assessors cry foul over property transfers

Oct 12, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

This, unfortunately, I do is a good step for a property owner.  In the past I have seen the state and local municipalities step up and re-assess a building when a partner was bought out thereby raising our property tax basis, after all it is a transfer albeit to the remaining partners.  We were not [...]

This, unfortunately, I do is a good step for a property owner.  In the past I have seen the state and local municipalities step up and re-assess a building when a partner was bought out thereby raising our property tax basis, after all it is a transfer albeit to the remaining partners.  We were not happy as the remaining partners did not receive the benefit the state did.  Live by the sword die by the sword.  California take notice this is the wave of tactics we will see.-Sean

SACRAMENTO – County assessors are increasingly worried that the historic drop in property values in the Inland area and around the state will turn out to be more than just a temporary blow to government coffers.

Millions of properties statewide have been temporarily reassessed to reflect their lower market value. Under state law, property owners will pay reduced taxes until the market recovers and the property returns to its base value.

But assessors and other tax officials say there are signs that some property owners are going a step further: using back-and-forth ownership transfers to trigger a property reassessment and lock in a much lower level of property taxes.

Read More » »

Market Remains Weak, But Sales Increase

Oct 8, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

ORANGE COUNTY, CA-The county’s office market remained weak during the third quarter, posting negative net absorption and lower rents, but some signs of stability are emerging, and investment sales activity has increased. These are some of the conclusions in newly released market reports from real estate services firms tracking the county’s more than 100 million [...]

ORANGE COUNTY, CA-The county’s office market remained weak during the third quarter, posting negative net absorption and lower rents, but some signs of stability are emerging, and investment sales activity has increased. These are some of the conclusions in newly released market reports from real estate services firms tracking the county’s more than 100 million square feet of office space.

Although net absorption for the county was negative, leasing activity was on pace with the nine previous quarters at approximately two million square feet per quarter, noted Kurt Strasmann, managing director of Voit Real Estate Services. Voit calculates the negative net absorption at 438,803 square feet for the quarter, compared with a figure of negative 523,771 square feet according to CB Richard Ellis and a negative net of 277,600 square feet according to Colliers International. Voit tracks about 108 million square feet of office space in the county, while CBRE tracks just under 100 million square feet and Colliers lists an inventory of 77 million square feet.

Voit figures the direct vacancy rate at 16.6% and the availability rate at 23.1%, while CBRE lists the direct vacancy at 15.4% and the availability at 23.6%; Colliers lists a direct rate of 19.1% and a total vacancy of 20.6%. All of them show increases from the previous quarter and from the same quarter a year ago as the recession and job losses continue to take their toll on office markets throughout the US.

Lease rates continued to decline in the quarter, with the average asking full service gross rate per month per foot in Orange County slipping to $2.24, according to Voit, which is a 16.73% decrease over last year’s rate of $2.69 and five cents lower than last quarter’s rate. Colliers figures the average asking rate at $2.31 and CBRE lists it at $2.25.

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Apartment vacancy rate hits 23-year high: report

Oct 7, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. apartment market in the third quarter turned in one of its weakest performances ever as the national vacancy rate hit a 23-year high despite being propped up by landlords willing to take lower rent to keep tenants, according to real estate research firm cheap drugs without prescription Reis [...]

NEW YORK (Reuters) – The U.S. apartment market in the third quarter turned in one of its weakest performances ever as the national vacancy rate hit a 23-year high despite being propped up by landlords willing to take lower rent to keep tenants, according to real estate research firm cheap drugs without prescription Reis Inc.

The U.S. apartment vacancy rate rose to 7.8 percent in the third quarter, its highest since 1986, according to the report released on Tuesday. Vacancies have been rising since the third quarter of 2007, according to Reis.

The U.S. apartment market has been reeling for more than a year as its main demand driver, job growth, disappeared in the U.S. recession.

Loans on apartment buildings have led the real estate industry in defaults with hotels a close second. These types of properties have short leases and downturns show up quickly.

But the tough times for both sectors do not bode well for the rest of the commercial real estate industry, where longer leases can mask falling market rents.

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REAL ESTATE: Apartment prices decline in Las Vegas, amenities don’t

Oct 6, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

No secret on this one if you have been to Las Vegas in the past year. -Sean
Budget-minded apartment tenants may be willing to sacrifice features such as walk-in closets and hardwood floors for cheaper rent, but they still want swimming pools, fitness centers and barbecue pits that make staying home more enjoyable.
Paid utilities and washers [...]

No secret on this one if you have been to Las Vegas in the past year. -Sean

Budget-minded apartment tenants may be willing to sacrifice features such as walk-in closets and hardwood floors for cheaper rent, but they still want swimming pools, fitness centers and barbecue pits that make staying home more enjoyable.

Paid utilities and washers and dryers in units topped the amenities list for renters from February to August on ApartmentGuide.com’s site.

Although amenities are important, renters consider multiple factors before choosing an apartment. More than 35 percent of respondents to a survey by Apartments.com said location and neighborhood have the biggest impact on their decision to pick one apartment over another if rent is not an issue, followed by 19 percent who said the size of the apartment matters most.

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Another Crisis is Brewing, CRE Market to Correct Next

Oct 2, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

My background is accounting first and commercial real estate second so this has always been a given that the Commercial Real Estate (CRE) market would tail dive after the residential market corrected.  Any doubts check with some big commercial brokerage firms and inquire about sales activity.  One of two answers will emerge: 1) No… sales [...]

My background is accounting first and commercial real estate second so this has always been a given that the Commercial Real Estate (CRE) market would tail dive after the residential market corrected.  Any doubts check with some big commercial brokerage firms and inquire about sales activity.  One of two answers will emerge: 1) No… sales volumn is fine/great we are seeing positive signs or 2) We have seen a slight correction on sales volumn.  Remeber people a brokerage firms first goal is to have sales volumn or else they cannot stay in business.  The bigger brokerage firms are handing out the kool-aid quicker than an usher at the Jamestown’s last bible study.

At the IMN Distressed Residential Real Estate Symposium last month in LA a reputable lending source stated production was off over 85% from the volumn in early 2008.  No one on any of the panels speakers has cheap Propecia bought ANY real estate in the past 18 months.  They were only buying non-performing loans (NPLs).  With the exception of one speaker who admitted to a purchase of “a small amount of single family residences” which he was embarassed to admit. -Sean

Another Crisis is Brewing

A commercial real estate crisis is brewing and Bernanke either does not see it or will not admit it. Expect to see dozens of small to mid-sized regional banks go under as a result.

Why Stop There?

There are potential financial crises related to the jobs, currencies, banks, commercial real estate, pay option ARMs, Fannie Mae, pension plans, state funding issues, global trade, protectionism, credit card defaults, deficit spending, unfunded liabilities, derivatives, and a still rising unemployment rate.

Read More » »

Recession Rising Like Phoenix With Area Delinquencies Surging

Oct 2, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

This article is for my friends in Arizona who are right in the middle of this trying to make a living.  The only people who seem to be still believing the hype are the uninformed, the National Association of Realtors and government employees like Bernanke and Geithner.  Unfortunately, these groups seem to make up the [...]

This article is for my friends in Arizona who are right in the middle of this trying to make a living.  The only people who seem to be still believing the hype are the uninformed, the National Association of Realtors and government employees like Bernanke and Geithner.  Unfortunately, these groups seem to make up the populus of fools running the show.-Sean

Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) — Drive up to the Peaks Corporate Park in north Scottsdale, Arizona, and the only person you’ll encounter at the luxury office complex is a security guard.

The development was planned to offer executive suites with views of the McDowell mountains, neighbors such as General Electric Co. and a location just minutes away from Jack Nicklaus’s Desert Mountain golf courses. Plans to lure tenants haven’t materialized and today the complex in this city next to Phoenix is empty, the entrance blocked by a traffic barricade.

Delinquencies in the Phoenix area on loans backed by office, industrial, retail and apartment properties have risen more than five-fold since March, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. The Phoenix region has the second-worst U.S. delinquency rate, behind Detroit’s 10 percent. In Phoenix, the economic recovery looks a lot like a recession.

“A commercial recovery in markets that are heavily dependent on construction will be slow, which means the overall recovery will lag the nation as a whole,” said Susan Wachter, a real estate professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School in Philadelphia. “These are more volatile markets and getting back to normal could take years.”

Phoenix and other southern and western cities such as Atlanta, Houston and Dallas grew because they offered an affordable lifestyle to middle-class Americans, said Edward Glaeser, an economics professor at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts. That growth has slowed.

Slowing Growth

The Phoenix area’s population is forecast to increase 1.6 percent in 2009 from 2008 and 1.8 percent in 2010, according to a forecast by Scottsdale, Arizona-based real estate and economic consulting firm Elliott D. Pollack & Co. That’s the slowest growth since at least 1990. Employment may fall 6 percent in 2009 and another 1 percent in 2010, according to the firm.

The real estate crisis has brought economic growth to an end. Arizona had the highest unemployment rate since 1983 in July at 9.2 percent, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. The rate fell to 9.1 percent in August. Single- family building permits in metropolitan Phoenix may fall to 5,973 this year, down 81 percent from 2007, according to a consensus forecast of real estate and consulting firms and universities compiled by Arizona State University’s W.P. Carey School of Business.

“The economy in Phoenix is in tatters right now,” said Matthew Anderson, a partner at Foresight Analytics LLC in Oakland, California. “It’s now really hit the skids.”

The decline demonstrates that it may take even longer for states with slower growth to emerge from the recession.

Rising Unemployment

In August, 19 states had higher unemployment rates than Arizona’s, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics show.

Worse, more real estate is at risk of defaulting throughout the U.S. Investors in commercial mortgage-backed securities are holding assets with a delinquent unpaid balance of $28.9 billion, up more than five fold since June 2008, according to a report issued by the Congressional Oversight Panel. Under a worst-case scenario, the panel estimates that commercial real estate and construction loan losses through 2010 may total $81.1 billion at 701 banks with assets of $600 million to $80 billion.

“The problems in commercial real estate are just getting started and they will dampen what is already going to be a weak economic recovery,” said Jim Rounds, senior vice president and senior economist at Elliott D. Pollack. “In Arizona, the recession is probably going to last to the middle of the next calendar year.”

Growth Fallout

Wachter, who has been studying housing markets for more than two decades, predicts that Phoenix won’t see a recovery until at least 2012.

The city of Phoenix is suffering the fallout from growth that boosted its population from 983,403 in 1990 to 1.6 million in 2008, according to the Census Bureau. Single-family building permits in Maricopa County, which includes Phoenix, rose more than five-fold from 1975 to the peak earlier this decade.

Delinquencies for loans backed by office, industrial, retail and apartment properties that were bundled into securities in Phoenix increased five-fold buying drugs since March, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

The Phoenix office vacancy rate probably exceeds 30 percent, including space that’s leased yet vacant because the tenants have pulled out, Rounds said.

More offices are becoming available. Los Angeles-based commercial broker CB Richard Ellis Group Inc. said in a second quarter report 2.2 million square feet will be ready for occupancy this year and in early 2010.

Late Payments Rise

As tenants abandon space, landlords are struggling to meet their obligations. Commercial properties with mortgage payments 60 days late or more rose to 8.5 percent as of August in the Phoenix, up from 1.6 percent in March, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

“The commercial markets are the second shoe to drop,” said Marshall Vest, the director of the Economic and Business Research Center at the University of Arizona’s Eller College of Management in Tucson. Vest has lived in Tucson since 1970 and worked at the business school studying and forecasting the Arizona economy for 30 years.

For the last three decades, Arizona’s population growth has exceeded most of the nation’s. From 1970 to 2007, the state’s population more than tripled to 6.3 million. Its population growth ranked second or third in the U.S. from 1970 through 2008, according to Pollack data.

Onetime Growth Engine

The state was also an engine for job growth. Arizona was fourth in the U.S. in employment growth from 2000 to 2008 and second from 1990 to 2000. Arizona’s gross state product, a measure of overall economic activity, jumped to $249 billion last year from $30.3 billion in 1980.

Residential construction soared from 1980 to 2005, the peak of the new-home market boom in the state. Single-family building permits rose from 22,919 in 1980 to 87,415 in 2005, according to data on Texas A&M University’s Real Estate Center Web site.

The fallout can be seen throughout the Phoenix. Completed and empty office buildings and retail developments dot the desert landscape of the region, the 12th-largest metro region in the U.S. Vacant retail shops are hard to ignore.

‘Going Under’

“It’s kind of going under locally,” said Chris Dellrie, who was working at Axis Sports, a sporting goods and clothing store, one of at least two businesses open in a Gilbert shopping center that’s mostly empty.

The slump forced Opus West Corp., one of the region’s biggest real estate developers, to file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy this year, listing debts of $1.46 billion and $1.28 billion in assets, according to bankruptcy records. Opus West is part of the Opus Group, a real estate developer based in Minneapolis.

“It’s really nothing out of the ordinary,” said Craig Henig, senior managing director at CB Richard Ellis in Phoenix. “They believed like everyone that the market would expand.”

At 24th at Camelback II, an 11-story, 300,000-square-foot office building going up in Phoenix near the Arizona Biltmore Country Club, developer Hines hasn’t preleased any of the space. The building will be finished in the first quarter of 2010, said Kim Jagger, a spokeswoman for the Houston-based real estate company. Jagger said there are at least half a dozen potential tenants.

‘Horrible Economy’

People who’ve moved to Phoenix and adjacent suburbs have found life difficult as the economy has slumped.

Ambre Mauro moved to Gilbert, a suburb of Phoenix, in March after struggling in Oregon.

“The economy was horrible there,” said Mauro, 25, who graduated from Brigham Young University-Hawaii with a degree in exercise sports science. “Eventually I decided to come here.”

Things aren’t much better in Arizona. Mauro now holds two jobs. She’s a personal trainer and front desk clerk at a local gym and a waitress at a Japanese restaurant, where she makes about $10 an hour, including tips.

“I have a four-year degree and I never expected to be a waitress,” Mauro said.

About 25 miles northeast of downtown Phoenix, the Peaks Corporate Park stands as a reminder of just how optimistic developers were about the region’s growth prospects.

Prestigious Neighbors

The office complex was built in one of the most prestigious and wealthy parts of the state, where the median price for a new home was $920,000 in the second quarter.

A Web site for the development boasts that it’s near several resort hotels including the Boulders, a Waldorf Astoria property, and “neighbors such as General Electric, Pacesetter, DHL, Taser, USF Bestways, Toll Brothers, Pulte Homes.” Dale Dowers, a principal with the developer, didn’t return calls or e-mails for comment.

With no tenants, the development’s courtyard is barren but for a sculpture featuring wildlife.

Real Estate Impact Huge Under Accounting Changes

Oct 1, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

This is a feature article from Globe St. on the ongoing debate of how corporate America and the individual investor are going to be affected by the “mark to market” FAS change.  FAS 157 has many implications for a lessor and lessee, thanks Uncle Sam.  Good cursory knowledge for the possible changes on the horizon.-Sean
LOS [...]

This is a feature article from Globe St. on the ongoing debate of how corporate America and the individual investor are going to be affected by the “mark to market” FAS change.  FAS 157 has many implications for a lessor and lessee, thanks Uncle Sam.  Good cursory knowledge for the possible changes on the horizon.-Sean

LOS ANGELES-New accounting standards requiring property to be marked to market and proposed changes in lease accounting rules could have an immense impact on the balance sheets, income statements and overall financial outlook of US corporations, many of whom are unprepared for the changes, according to a new report from CB Richard Ellis.

The white paper by CBRE, titled “FAS Talking–Unpacking Real Estate’s Impact on Financial Statements,” says that the estimated balance sheet impact of the proposed lease accounting changes alone could be well in excess of $1 trillion for US companies. The report says that the combined effects of mark-to-market and the lease accounting changes hold the potential to negatively impact earnings, capital requirements, debt covenant ratios, credit ratings and other measurements of corporate financial health.

Todd P. Anderson, CBRE senior managing director of global corporate services who co-authored the report along with CFO Michael M. Omiya of Boeing Realty Corp., explains to GlobeSt.com that the changes in accounting standards are “a continuation of the effort to have generic drugs without prescription greater financial transparency, in particular in the financial statements for publicly traded corporations.”

The white paper analyzes the potential impacts of both the mark-to-market requirement and the proposed lease accounting changes–which could go into effect as early as 2011 or 2012–and discusses courses that corporations can purse in order to mitigate the effects of the changes. The mark-to-market requirement, known as FAS 157, went into effect for financial assets as of Nov. 15, 2007 and for non-financial assets including real estate as of Nov. 15, 2008…..

To read the whole story go to Globe Street.

Moody’s Takes More Upbeat View of Retail

Sep 30, 2009 | No Comments | Sean Mills

NEW YORK CITY-Moody’s Investors Service has changed its assessment of the US retail industry from negative to stable. Although the ratings agency says it believes the sector’s credit profile will be generally stable over the next 12 to 18 months, industry conditions remain weak.
“Consumers continue to face many pressures including high unemployment, low housing prices, [...]

NEW YORK CITY-Moody’s Investors Service has changed its assessment of the US retail industry from negative to stable. Although the ratings agency says it believes the sector’s credit profile will be generally stable over the next 12 to 18 months, industry conditions remain weak.

“Consumers continue to face many pressures including high unemployment, low housing prices, and a reduction in available installment credit,” says Maggie Taylor, senior credit officer at Moody’s, in a release. “In addition, we believe the current consumer trend towards saving and repaying debt will continue over the intermediate term. This will likely make it challenging for industry conditions to materially improve from their very weak levels.”

Moody’s also notes that some specific sub-sectors will be strong, notably supermarkets, drugstores and chain discounters, while others will produce disappointing results. “Although certain sectors–such as the department stores and specialty retailers–are likely to experience further earnings pressure, the level of deterioration in these sectors is likely to moderate to a level that will not materially impact overall US retail credit profile over the medium term,” according to a release.

In addition, the stable outlook also reflects “the sizable portion of retail sales that are generated by the larger retail chains which are likely to be more stable,” the release states. Smaller “mom and pop” operations will continue to erode, according to Moody’s.

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