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| Historic & Forecast |
Fed Chairman Bernanke said in his press conference last week that temporary factors such as high oil prices and supply chain disruptions related to the disasters in Japan are depressing output, but other, longer-lasting factors could be at play, too. Such factors could include the failure of the housing market to stabilize, reduced bank lending and persistently high levels of consumer and government debt. For commercial real estate, this economic scenario would translate into continued sluggish leasing activity with the exception of apartments and hotels. Although investors have begun targeting riskier assets this year, i.e. non-core properties and properties in secondary markets, the slow leasing market recovery could delay broader interest in value-add and opportunistic properties, where success requires strong leasing demand and rising rental rates for higher quality properties.
Sources: BEA, Federal Reserve, Grubb & Ellis

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