Credit Freeze Hits High Fliers of Commercial Real Estate

Slowdown plus tough credit slams office market
By Jim O'Neill,  Newser Staff
Posted Feb 4, 2009 11:20 AM CST
Credit Freeze Hits High Fliers of Commercial Real Estate
Frozen credit markets make commercial real estate deals--like the sale of the New York Times building--difficult.   (AP Photo/Frank Franklin II, File)

When the commercial real estate market was hot, the sky seemed to be the limit, and increasingly complicated financing arrangements were common. Now the combination of economic crisis and credit freeze has exposed the market's precarious underpinnings, which resemble the pitfalls that brought the residential real estate sector to its knees. One analyst tells NPR: "I call it the commercial real estate of the subprime loan."

Overleveraged developers have been caught with their pants down as the rental market ices over and property values plummet. Residential credit has loosened slightly, but commercial borrowers are scrambling to cover short-term loans one developer compares to "a time bomb." Even developers with solid credit ratings are getting the cold shoulder. “You've got an absolute freeze going on in the credit markets,” says the developer.
(More commercial real estate stories.)

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