Financial woes take shine off New York skyscrapers

Wed Oct 29, 2008 7:35pm EDT
 
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By Ilaina Jonas

NEW YORK, Oct 29 (Reuters) - Owning a New York office building used to signal a landlord had arrived at the top of the heap. But a crippled financial industry has tarnished the prize, judging by financial results and forecasts of two large real estate companies.

"If you define our four markets as Boston, Washington, D.C., New York City and San Francisco, I would say the strongest market is Boston, followed by Washington, followed by San Francisco, followed by New York," Doug Linde, Boston Properties (BXP.N) president told analysts during a conference call on Wednesday.

Fueled by rich rents from investment banks, insurance companies, hedge funds and private equity firms, New York easily topped that list over the past four years.

Some of those financial tenants no longer exist and others are merging or cutting their staff.

Canadian-based Brookfield Properties (BPO.TO), which owns 10 million square feet of office space in downtown Manhattan, acknowledged the negative impact the financial industry industry will have on that market.

"We are anticipating some downward pressure which will become more apparent in rent, particularly in 2009," Dennis Friedrich, Brookfield's head of U.S. commercial real estate told a conference call.

Shares of Boston Properties closed down 10.6 percent on Wednesday. Brookfield's U.S.-traded stock fell 9.3 percent.

Real estate services company NAI Global expects the New York office space availability rate, now around 5 percent, to grow to 8.5 to 10 percent as consolidating financial-services companies dump more leased space onto the market.

It also sees New York real estate prices falling by as much as 20 percent.

High barriers to supply, a highly educated workforce and an ability to attract global capital may help offset near-term tenant risk, Property & Portfolio Research Inc said in a report Wednesday.

"But given the dubious fate of America's investment banking industry, New York's longer-term worry could be competition from other global financial centers," the report said.

Among Boston Properties' 1,200 tenants, Citigroup Inc (C.N) is its biggest rent generator, contributing $77 million annually. A unit of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc (LEHMQ.PK), the investment bank that filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection, is third, contributing about $43 million a year.

Forty-eight hedge fund tenants account for about $57 million annually. Citadel Investment Group, a hedge fund that has recently sought to quell rumors it is liquidating some of its portfolios, accounts for about $10 million of that.

Fifty-one investment management firms account for about $49 million, and 48 private equity firms contribute $35 million of revenue to Boston Properties.

Lehman's bankruptcy and the close of law firm Heller Ehrman LLP prompted Boston Properties to set aside $13.2 million, or 15 cents per share of funds from operations in the third quarter in case neither met their rent obligation. So far, the two have not defaulted on their rent.  Continued...

 

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