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Newest Mortgage Crisis Victims: Malls, Hotels

MATT APUZZO | November 27, 2008 09:14 PM EST | AP

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WASHINGTON — The full scope of the housing meltdown isn't clear and already there are ominous signs of a new crisis _ one that could turn out the lights on malls, hotels and storefronts nationwide.

Even as the holiday shopping season begins in full swing, the same events poisoning the housing market are now at work on commercial properties, and the bad news is trickling in. Malls from Michigan to Georgia are entering foreclosure.

Hotels in Tucson, Ariz., and Hilton Head, S.C., also are about to default on their mortgages.

That pace is expected to quicken. The number of late payments and defaults will double, if not triple, by the end of next year, according to analysts from Fitch Ratings Ltd., which evaluates companies' credit.

"We're probably in the first inning of the commercial mortgage problem," said Scott Tross, a real estate lawyer with Herrick Feinstein in New Jersey.

That's bad news for more than just property owners. When businesses go dark, employees lose jobs. Towns lose tax revenue. School budgets and social services feel the pinch.

Companies have survived plenty of downturns, but economists see this one playing out like never before. In the past, when businesses hit rough patches, owners negotiated with banks or refinanced their loans.

But many banks no longer hold the loans they made. Over the past decade, banks have increasingly bundled mortgages and sold them to investors. Pension funds, insurance companies, and hedge funds bought the seemingly safe securities and are now bracing for losses that could ripple through the financial system.

"It's a toxic drug and nobody knows how bad it's going to be," said Paul Miller, an analyst with Friedman, Billings, Ramsey, who was among the first to sound alarm bells in the residential market.

Unlike home mortgages, businesses don't pay their loans over 30 years. Commercial mortgages are usually written for five, seven or 10 years with big payments due at the end. About $20 billion will be due next year, covering everything from office and condo complexes to hotels and malls.

The retail outlook is particularly bad. Circuit City and Linens 'n Things have sought bankruptcy protection. Home Depot, Sears, Ann Taylor and Foot Locker are closing stores.

Those retailers typically were paying rent that was expected to cover mortgage payments. When those $20 billion in mortgages come due next year _ 2010 and 2011 totals are projected to be even higher _ many property owners won't have the money.

Some will survive, but those property owners whose loans required little money up front will have less incentive to weather the storm.

Refinancing formerly was an option, but many properties are worth less than when they were purchased. And since investors no longer want to buy commercial mortgages, banks are reluctant to write new loans to refinance those facing foreclosure.

California, New York, Texas and Florida _ states with a high concentration of mortgages in the securities market, according to Fitch _ are particularly vulnerable. Texas and Florida are already seeing increased delinquencies and defaults, as are Michigan, Tennessee and Georgia.

The worst-case scenario goes something like this: With banks unwilling to refinance, a shopping center goes into foreclosure. Nobody can buy the mall because banks won't write mortgages as long as investors won't purchase them.

"Credit markets have seized up," corporate securities lawyer Michael Gambro said. "People are not willing to take risks. They're not buying anything."

That drives down investments already on the books. Insurance companies are seeing their stock prices fall on fears they are too invested in commercial mortgages.

"The system has never been tested for a deep recession," said Ken Rosen, a real estate hedge fund manager and University of California at Berkeley professor of real estate economics.

One hope was that the U.S. would use some of the $700 billion financial bailout to buy shaky investments from banks and insurance companies. That was the original plan. But Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has issued a stunning turnabout, saying the U.S. no longer planned to buy troubled securities. For those watching the wave of commercial defaults about to crest, the announcement was poorly received.

"He's created havoc in the marketplace by changing the rules," Rosen said. "It was the stupidest statement on Earth."

The Securities and Exchange Commission is considering another option that might ease the crisis, one that would change accounting rules so banks don't have to declare huge losses whenever the market declines.

But the only surefire remedy is for the economy to stabilize, for businesses to start expanding and for investors to trust the market again. Until then, Tross said, "There's going to be a lot of pain going forward."

WASHINGTON — The full scope of the housing meltdown isn't clear and already there are ominous signs of a new crisis _ one that could turn out the lights on malls, hotels and storefronts nationwi...
WASHINGTON — The full scope of the housing meltdown isn't clear and already there are ominous signs of a new crisis _ one that could turn out the lights on malls, hotels and storefronts nationwi...
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05:58 PM on 12/04/2008
I say this in all sincerity:

All of the economic woes we are blogging about are not having an impact on the Amish.
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05:47 PM on 12/04/2008
Over expansion in commercial properties has been the hallmark of local leaders for several decades. Increased tax revenues! Increased jobs! The problem with this is that most of the expansion was unnecessar­y in the first place. Population and incomes did not rise with all this constructi­on. What rose were real estate investment vehicles.

I'm sorry for all the suffering (real and imagined) that's happening, but this deflation is the invisible hand at work.
11:01 AM on 11/29/2008
As a nation, we are over stored. By the time big companies finish with their layoffs, we will be over hoteled and over officed as well. It may take years to bring supply and demand in balance.
01:56 AM on 11/29/2008
Wait! What about the bailout ... it's not helping the little people Cash&Carry even admitted. So ... why do they keep giving money and what exactly is it doing?

When will they get the people have the power ... to spend, pay their bills, pay taxes, and the govt, and corporatio­n, and the wealthy ... their well-being rests on the masses of little people.

Man is this in a downward spiral or what!
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05:48 PM on 12/04/2008
Let's bail out Motel 6 investors.
09:20 PM on 11/28/2008
In Arizona, the "right to starve state". I have noticed the new trend is for 2-3-or more friends and
families moving into one house to exist. I think the crash is coming, but why is everyone afraid.
Starting over is not always a bad thing. Remember, we are supposed to learn how to live......
05:05 PM on 11/28/2008
Every thing in the US is leveraged to the max.
Printing money to get this right is not a answer to the problem.
The fundamenta­ls of leverage are wrong, often corrupt.
02:49 PM on 11/28/2008
Government of the wealthy and for the wealthy means that billionair­e hotel owners such as the Marriotts will get bailouts. Family homeowners will not get any help.
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05:49 PM on 12/04/2008
That's what puts the Merry in Marriott!
01:18 PM on 11/28/2008
well that was their greed--not bailouts here , unless the government is also going to bail out every mortgage owner in the U.S.
12:39 PM on 11/28/2008
Perhaps this is the partial solution to the housing crisis for homeless and less fortunate. Not the malls as much as the office buildings. Major plumbing and heating is in place. And tenants are waiting. It also "neighbori­zes" downtowns. As my first post I want you to know that this was just a knee jerk reaction.
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05:51 PM on 12/04/2008
There is compassion in your reaction. Let's house the homeless, let's feed the starving, and let's heal the sick. There is opportunit­y in these times.
11:43 AM on 11/28/2008
This should work in American Education'­s favor -

Since most kids of school age are attracted to malls all the time any way, let us convert foreclosed malls into schools - the current schools are in rundown conditions and malls attract kids.
11:24 AM on 11/28/2008
The underlying problem is that there are too many stores and malls.

Too little income is being spread over too many locations.
02:52 PM on 11/28/2008
The real problem is that regular people's incomes have declined as a direct result of globalizat­ion and the structure of the tax system that greatly benefits corporatio­ns and the wealthy at the expense of working people. Hopefully this crisis will awake the American people to the giant rip off that has occured under the rule of Republican­s and corporate Democrats. Make sure Obama is kept accountabl­e, so far his appointmen­ts suggest the rich will get richer and the rest will get poorer.
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05:53 PM on 12/04/2008
Friends, I am on your side.
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Happy to be here
10:47 AM on 11/28/2008
From "The Onion"
A little levity can go a long way...


In The Know: Should The Government Stop Dumping Money Into A Giant Hole?

http://www­.theonion.­com/conten­t/video/in­_the_know_­should_the­_governmen­t

Enjoy.
10:26 AM on 11/28/2008
boy are all the scum bag coming out. like this ad jos a bank sweater was 268 now 60 dollars.cr­ooks and they still making money. where is my bailout. I need 1B because my va disability is to low. where were they when i was homeless for 4 years. you are a business sink or swim
09:58 AM on 11/28/2008
There will be no property tax pinch -- not here in Ohio at least. All of these commercial developers were given tax abatements in the name of economic developmen­t, because they created ten part-time no health-ben­efit-jobs, so they don't pay property taxes anyway
12:26 PM on 11/28/2008
It's the same for a lot of corporatio­ns that were given a free ride to bring their companies to whatever state it may be. The were given tax breaks and incentives and almost to the point of the taxpayers of the state paying for the constructi­on of the building for them. It was almost like the corporatio­ns moving in without having to put a down-payme­nt and no payments required for 10 years or whatever. Ends up on the back of the taxpayers in the end as the corporatio­ns pay no property taxes, they get other corporate breaks yet all the services to the buildings still have to be paid for.

As far as malls and hotels --let them go down. We're saturated with them.
09:45 AM on 11/28/2008
Wakie Wakie! However, there is more - much, much more.

http://www­.trosch.or­g/law/fed-­paper-mone­y.html

Excellent reading. The Money Managers have been in total control for far too long. Paulson does not represent the country or the taxpayers. He merely represents his private company (FRS) with one purpose, to collect interests on monies loaned - to make a profit.

It doesn't take a rocket scientist to figure this out and it is no conspiracy theory - it's factual!!