Real estate’s keystone species
Though he may not know it, in commercial real estate, dentist Ky Nguyen has just become a keystone species, for reasons illustrated by the opening of this Wall Street Journal article from a while back:
Ky Nguyen, a dentist, inside the shopping plaza in Manteca, Calif., that he purchased at a discount in July. Max Whittaker for The Wall Street Journal
Four months ago, Ky Nguyen was paying about $6,000 a month in rent for his small, 1,600 square-foot dental office, part of a mostly vacant strip mall in Manteca, Calif.
South of Stockton in the San Joaquin Valley
In July, he bought the entire 25,000 square-foot mall for $1.9 million, purchasing it from a loan servicer that had foreclosed on the property.
And why did Mr. Nguyen become an unlikely landlord?
[He paid] one-fifth of what the prior owner paid.
The mall was an empty burrow, Dr. Nguyen its sole inhabitant. To the loan servicer, the mall was on its way to being a negative asset. Not so for Dr. Nguyen, to whom it represented an occupancy opportunity:
“We jumped on the opportunity,” said Mr. Nguyen, a 36-year-old Vietnamese immigrant.
To Dr. Nguyen, purchase gave him economic security, and plenty of motivation to get a return on investment – by becoming an amateur but local landlord:
Now, with an affordable mortgage and some rental revenue, his debt service comes to about $2,000 a month less than he used to pay in rent for his office.
Dr. Nguyen’s mall (1333 Historical Way, Manteca, CA)
If empty structures are not to be demolished (either by euthanasia or by dilapidation), they must be reoccupied, preferably by residents who will protect their castle. Owned homes, where jobs go to sleep at night, are defended by their owners, one of many reasons their prices hold up better than many other asset classes, whose diurnal workers empty it every evening.
Around $400 billion of commercial real-estate loans made by all lenders mature in 2012, up from $375 billion this year and $250 billion in 2010, according to Deutsche Bank.
With hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth of overlevered commercial real estate sitting on financial institutions’ books, changes have to be coming.
Special servicers, the troubled loan specialists that oversee hundreds of billions in commercial mortgages on behalf of bond investors, have sold $11.6 billion in distressed loans and foreclosed property in the past 12 months, according to analysts at Deutsche Bank AG.
That’s up from $7 billion over the prior 12-month period and from $1.2 billion in the 12 months prior to that, according to Deutsche Bank.
The properties will never recover their current debt in any short time interval, so there are only two choices: Cut the debt (usually through bargain-basement resale), and raise the NOI (through new occupancy).
Anyone want to be some non-performing loans?
By and large, these assets are being shed at big losses. Of the loans sold by the special servicers, bond investors suffered an average 38% loss on loans or property sold this year, according to Deutsche Bank.
For the NOI boost, the properties need new occupants, and who more motivated than the potential investor?
Three years after the economy’s turn sent commercial property prices tumbling, opportunities for investors are on the rise as lenders and servicers are disposing of a growing volume of distressed loans and foreclosed properties.
On the market: Loan and property sales by special servicers on US commercial property. Source Deutsche Bank.
The increased flow brings in new owners to ‘zombie’ buildings that have for years been struggling with high vacancy and a lack of investment by owners overwhelmed by debt.
Not zombies, which are animated corpses devoid of thinking. Rather, these malls and similar commercial real estate properties are emptied burrows, built by one species and now left hollow, to be reoccupied by newer, smaller species. The original developers are like gopher tortoises, which dig extensive burrows that they eventually abandon, only to provide a haven for other species that move in when the gopher tortoises are gone:
Need to work on the curb appeal and signage, don’t you think?
The burrows, which are dug by the tortoises, also provide homes for other animals, such as indigo snakes, gopher frogs, mice, foxes, skunks, opossums, rabbits, quail, armadillos, burrowing owls, snakes, lizards, frogs, toads and other invertebrates. Some species share the burrows with the tortoises and others utilize abandoned burrows.
Choose from many spaces and locations
Digging reusable burrows makes gopher tortoises a keystone species, one whose presence has a disproportionately large effect on the environment. A burrow adaptively reused by other animals creates a new pricing point, and the catalyst for market revival by market clearing:
At the same time, though, the new owners pose a threat to existing landlords who are still struggling to get by on boom-year debt levels. Today’s investors are able to charge lower rents and still make a profit.
That’s neither Dr. Nguyen’s problem, nor the market’s. Competition at lower price points will force realization of the embedded losses being deferred by owners whose tenants are laboring under above-market leases that will gradually expire.
Existing landlords are “between a rock and a hard place,” says William Robert, a Scottsdale, Ariz.-based former banker who now invests in distressed property with his sons. “They can’t make their debt service on the lower rental rates that are available.”
Then their lenders had better reset it.
To be sure, many property owners who are unable to pay off mortgages amid a sluggish economic recovery are cutting deals with lenders and servicers to modify and extend the terms of these loans.
As Margaret Thatcher was fond of saying, there is no alternative.
Cut the debt now or cut it later
“For the first year or two of the crisis, stuff was coming in faster than it would go out,” said Tad Philipp, a [former] managing director at Moody’s Investor Service who tracks commercial mortgages. Now, he said, “a whole lot of stuff that got into trouble in ’09 has now gone through the process.”
Tad’s getting a fillip out of the flipping
Vintage by vintage, the industry will work through the Great Global Deleveraging of income-producing assets.
“They’re finally starting to dump these assets at prices that make sense,” said Nate Paul, chief executive of World Class Capital Group, an Austin, Texas-based private-equity firm [Which I suspect adheres to Smith's Law of Organizational Scale – Ed.] that has spent about $150 million on 25 acquisitions this year.
Bit by bit, the assets will come up for sale.
Buyers are welcoming the increased volume of distressed assets being put on the block.
Many of them raised money in the early years of the downturn in hopes of buying discounted properties but until recently there hasn’t been much for sale.
The buyers are one half of the necessary ecosystem, because they bring money to renovate and refurbish the empty burrows. Dr. Nguyen and those like him are the other half – and in many ways, the more important half – because they find the new animals to reinhabit the burrow.
Opportunities are increasing in particular for small investors like Mr. Nguyen. Most of the loans and properties being sold by special servicers are small, with an average size in 2011 of $8.4 million, according to Deutsche Bank.
Empty burrows are key to a healthy ecosystem because they create low-cost ready-to-move-in spaces for smaller species to live in the burrow. Snakes reuse meerkat burrows. Woodpeckers live in gum trees hollowed out by termites.
See any snakes?
Well located empty malls invite new business formation:
He plans to fill much of the vacant space with a restaurant run by his in-laws and a chiropractor’s office run by his wife.
That puts capital back to work, puts people back to work, and little by little puts our economy back to work.
Auction.com, a commercial loan-sale website that has sold more than $5 billion in commercial loans and foreclosed properties this year, says 80% to 90% of its buyers are smaller local investors.
Plenty of good real estate and businesses in the bargain basement

























































