Financial Fall-out Will Impact New York Office Market
September 17 2008 - 1:13PM
PR Newswire (US)
SANTA ANA, Calif., Sept. 17 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Grubb &
Ellis today issued the following special report regarding the New
York Office Market. To receive a copy of the full report or to
speak with the report's author, Richard Persichetti or David Arena,
President of Grubb & Ellis Company, NY, please contact Janice
McDill at 312.698.6707 or via email . (Photo:
http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080917/AQW092) Lehman
Brothers' bankruptcy filing and Bank of America's buy-out of
Merrill Lynch will not only permanently alter the global banking
landscape, it will also have implications for the New York office
market. The biggest impact will come in the form of available
sublease space, since the two firms occupy approximately 6 million
square feet in Manhattan. In addition, the struggles at AIG need to
be closely monitored, since the firm owns and leases close to 3.5
million square feet of office space in Manhattan. Although the
Federal Reserve bailed out the world's largest insurer, AIG, the
company's Manhattan portfolio could be restructured since the U.S.
government is now in charge. The additional sublease space will
increase options for tenants and inevitably drive vacancy higher.
At 5.7 percent, the Manhattan vacancy rate is already up 120 basis
points since 2007. Since the start of 2008, 2.1 million square feet
of sublease space has been placed on the market, and that number is
expected to grow as the fall-out from the credit market turmoil
continues. The growing sublease inventory will likely cause asking
rents to decrease in the last quarter of this year and into 2009.
As landlords begin to price direct space more competitively with
discounted subleases, expect overall average asking rents to
decline by approximately 7 percent over the next 12 months. In
August, the increase in marketed subleases altered the ratio of
direct versus sublet available space. Sublease space now accounts
for 25 percent of the market's availability rate, compared to the
22 percent market share averaged over the last 19 months. The
financial services sector has already shed between an estimated
22,000 and 25,000 jobs this year. However, after the Lehman and
Merrill announcements, New York Governor David Paterson, stated
that an additional 40,000 Wall Street job cuts could occur. These
projected job losses translate into approximately nine to ten
million square feet of occupied office space, which if placed on
the market would increase the vacancy level to 8.5 to 9.0 percent.
In New York, this vacancy range is accepted as market equilibrium,
or a healthy market balance. Although an increase in vacancy would
give tenants more space options, the additional inventory will keep
negotiations between landlords and tenants on an even playing
field. http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20080917/AQW092
DATASOURCE: Grubb & Ellis CONTACT: Janice McDill of Grubb &
Ellis, +1-312-698-6707, Web site: http://www.grubb-ellis.com/
Company News On-Call: http://www.prnewswire.com/comp/136726.html
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