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Is The Cycle Coming To An End? Commercial Property Sales Plummet In February

National
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The roller coaster of the current real estate cycle might be topping off, even if we’re not headed for a plunge anytime soon. Commercial real estate sales tanked in February with $25B in sales, compared to $47.3B in the same month last year.

“Clearly there has been a plateauing,” Jonathan Gray, Blackstone’s global head of real estate, tells the Wall Street Journal. In January sales were $46.2B. Prices and commercial property values are also beginning to level off.

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An index of hotels tracked by Green Street Advisors was off 10% last month year-over-year, and Green Street’s broad valuation index in February rose 8.7%, a drop from March '15's 11% surge.

It’s not clear yet whether February is an anomaly or a sign of the new normal, although other developments seem to favor the latter. Brandywine Realty Trust sold off $765M of property this year, for example.

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Concerns over interest rates and global volatility, as well as new regulations on major lenders, have also made debt financing harder to come by, a headwind for commercial real estate as a whole.

“Buyers have been hearing ‘no’ from lenders for the first time in awhile,” Jim Costello, an SVP at Real Capital Analytics, tells the WSJ.

In 2015 roughly $100B of CMBS were issued, while this year its projected volume will fall to between $60B and $75B. While worrying, the signs thus far are by no means definitive. 

It’s too early to call the end of the cycle,” Blackstone’s Gray tells the Journal. [WSJ]