Monday, February 13, 2006

RealEstateJournal | Clouds Over Condos: Are Stormy Times Ahead?

RealEstateJournal Clouds Over Condos: Are Stormy Times Ahead?: "Clouds Over Condos: Are
Stormy Times Ahead?

By Amir Efrati
From The Wall Street Journal Online

In Boston, a condominium developer is asking new owners to help it promote its unsold units, while another is putting in hardwood floors free. In Sarasota, Fla., sellers of condos are offering buyers incentives such as exclusive golf-club memberships worth as much as $75,000. In Atlanta, the developer of a high-rise is promising shoppers it will pay their first year of condo-association fees.

Perks being offered by sellers? Until recently, buyers in many markets were competing for the chance to snap up new condos downtown. But even as many cities continue to see condo prices appreciate, there are spreading signs that the market may be cooling, just as in the overall market. The worry for investors is that this real-estate slowdown will mirror that of the early 1990s, when condo values in some markets dropped more sharply than those of single-family homes, in part because many had been bought by speculators -- the same kind of speculative buying that has fueled this era's boom.

To see how condominiums are faring this time around, we took a look at five U.S. cities, aiming for regional spread and active markets: Boston, Atlanta, Minneapolis, San Diego and Sarasota, Fla. "

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

RealEstateJournal | Commercial Lending Is Showing Signs of Strain

RealEstateJournal Commercial Lending Is Showing Signs of Strain

Commercial Lending IsShowing Signs of Strain
By Christine Haughney From The Wall Street Journal Online

Rating services are flagging some of the first signs of strain in the booming commercial-lending market.
Moody's Investors Service Inc., which rates and monitors commercial mortgages that are packaged and issued as bonds, says in a report released this morning that the commercial-mortgage market is showing two disturbing trends. Loan-to-value ratios, which measure the amount of a loan in relation to its market value, and debt-service coverage ratios, which measure the monthly amount the borrower pays in relation to the property's cash flow, are carrying more risks than they ever have before, according to the report.