Posts Tagged ‘journalism’

Commercial Real Estate Still Troubled

Monday, July 6th, 2009

Don’t look for the country’s commercial real estate market to improve any time soon.  In fact, expect it to continue to get worse for the next year or so.  That was the conclusion from a panel at the National Association of Real Estate Editors journalism conference in Washington, D.C., that addressed the question:  “Commercial Real Estate in the Obama Era:  Next Domino to Fall?”

“The (other) shoe has dropped,” NAREIT president Steve Wechsler said of commercial real estate.  While the public commercial real estate market of publicly traded REITs likely hit bottom in March, the remaining 90 percent of the market that is private won’t bottom out until next year.6a00e551d321cb883401157034b517970c-800wi

The $6 trillion property market is split evenly between debt and equity, thanks to the explosion of securitization that occurred in the 10 years prior to the current credit crisis, said Chip Rodgers, Jr., a senior vice president of the Real Estate Roundtable.  At the end of 2008, the commercial real estate industry had $3.5 trillion of outstanding debt.  Ten years ago, the industry’s outstanding debt was $1.3 trillion.

Washington-based Real Estate Roundtable has a plan to help end the crisis that’s paralyzed practically all speculative development on the commercial side.

First, Rodgers said, the Term Asset-Backed Loan Facility (TALF) program needs to be expanded to include commercial mortgage based securities.  Rodgers expects this to restart the securitization market.

Second, the United States needs to repeal or change tax laws that have curtailed foreign investment.  Changing the laws will attract new capital to the market.

Also, accounting rules and regulations need to be amended to ensure they do not create “a pro-cyclical impact on credit capacity,” Rodgers said.  And, banks that have existing cash flow need to be encouraged to extend loans.

The panel’s third member, Jamie Woodwell, a commercial real estate researcher at the Mortgage Bankers Association, said the current real estate recession differs from the 2001 recession.  In 2001, the dot-com bust results in large amounts of office vacancies while the retail market remained relatively stable.  Vacancy rates in office were closely tied to the country’s unemployment numbers.

“This time around,” Woodwell said, retail is more closely following unemployment numbers and being hit harder than the office market.  “More firms still have (office) leases in place,” he said.

But things will change, Woodwell said.  “Real estate is a very cyclical business, especially now.”

Our guest blogger is Tony Wilbert.  He is owner of Wilbert News Strategies, a public relations firm specializing in real estate.  Prior to moving into PR, Wilbert covered real estate at several newspapers and served as editor of National Real Estate Investor.

Social Media Shines a Bright Light on Iranian Revolution

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

Generally, political events, unless they affect our industry, are beyond the purview of the AlterNow blog.  However, the news from the Middle East gives us pause because our country has become, quite remarkably, an actor in one of the most stirring displays of courage and political defiance in recent memory.  We may not fully realize it yet but the Green Revolution that’s taking place in Iran, beyond its political implications, is a singular event because it may be the moment of arrival for citizen journalism.traiill

Reading the tweets  from the streets of Tehran as protestors rail against an election that was probably rigged and the intractability of the theocracy of the mullahs is like entering an entirely new category of reporting.  It goes beyond the ground-level observations and interviews of even the finest reportage to deliver something close to a longitudinal study of mass consciousness.  Tweet after tweet renders a population that’s beaten, water hosed, tear gassed and doused in chemicals but also one that’s buoyed by rumors and made intrepid by the pain of others and the injustice of a repressive system.  It’s heartbreaking and stirring.  What’s also worth considering is that technology hatched in America – micro blogging – has delivered to this movement the power of instant expression and instant appeal to the court of world opinion.

Consider what this means.  In 1936, General Franco was able to silence Frederico Garcia Lorca and half a million Spanish Republicans during the Spanish Civil War by cutting off communication and having them executed.  From 1973 to 1990, Augusto Pinochet was able to blot out more than 1,000 Chileans by simple fiat, consigning them to a blind spot in the country’s collective memory.  No more.  The Iranians in the streets who are recording the remarkable events will not be “disappeared” by their council of dictators.  For the Iranian revolutionaries, social media has preserved that most sacred of human agencies — their voice and its claim on the truth.