![]() ![]() Before the pandemic, these numbers were in the single digits. The continued availability of open office space as office owners struggle to rent it out makes it a tenants’ market, where companies in a “ flight to quality” are able to be choosier about the offices they pick.Īs of now, the data shows that a majority of workers who were able to work from home still do some (46 percent) or all (19 percent) of the time, according to the latest data from WFH Research. And the office space they go to will generally need to be nicer. It just won’t be as many people or as often, which means the amount of office space needed will go down. Some people will certainly still go into offices in the future. Some have predicted an “ urban doom loop” in which fewer people and less money coming in means fewer amenities and poorer quality of life, which leads to even fewer people and less money and so on and so forth. Then there are the many businesses and people who were reliant on daily traffic to and from offices for their own livelihoods. Big cities like New York are heavily reliant on property taxes, which fund a huge chunk of the city’s budget, so losses there affect everyone in the city. “Everything is going against the office sector right now”Īnd that pain will not be isolated to office building owners and their banks. In the next two years alone, $1.5 trillion in real estate mortgages are coming due and a lot of office property that took out that debt isn’t worth what it was when those loans were made. ![]() So as more office leases come up for renewal or more loans need refinancing, the number of delinquencies will continue to jump. Converting offices to other uses is expensive, and the credit to do so is hard to come by. Some fear that the recent failures of Silicon Valley Bank, Signature Bank, and First Republic could spread to other regional banks and further hurt the office market. That’s partly due to rising interest rates and trouble at regional banks, which account for most commercial real estate lending. As office owners struggle to lease space or fail to secure more financing, delinquency rates for office loans are at their highest rate - 2.8 percent - since the pandemic began, according to data from finance analytics firm Trepp. ![]() The pain this is causing in the commercial real estate world is already visible. Even New York City’s mayor, who’s been bullish on the return to the office and who mandated a five-day-a-week return-to-office policy last June, has changed his mind as the city struggles to fill empty jobs. Companies that have instituted return-to-office policies have backpedaled or failed to enforce them. For every high-profile company forcing workers to return to the office, another lets them work where they wish. So despite what you’re hearing from some bosses, things will likely never go back to the way they were.įirst off, the push to return to the office is not that robust. And despite the gains in office attendance, many office buildings themselves are in big trouble - some of which goes beyond remote work and started long before the pandemic. Sure, more people are going to the office more often than they were a year ago, but we’re still eons away from where we were before the pandemic. The so-called “return to the office” has been underway for a while now, and it’s a bit of a mess. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |