Monday, December 22, 2008

CRE Has Their Hand Out

According to the WSJ this morning we find that commercial real estate now needs free money.

Big property developers are asking to be included in a new $200 billion loan program as a surge in commercial mortgages comes due.
These firms managed to leverage up too much and now are in a world of hurt. For some property developers extensive use of leverage was the business model. The (poor) choices by the management needs to run its course. Bankruptcy moves the underlying assets to the hands of people who are more competent business managers. If bailouts are given then we, as taxpayers, are allowing profits to flow to the owners in the good times while the loses flow to the taxpayers.

This is not capitalism.

The tacit moves towards the nationalization of so many industries is making me apprehensive. This is the sure way to establish more government intervention and inefficiency. An extreme example is North Korea of what happens when the government manages resource allocation (I don't expect that for us). What this means is in the years ahead we can expect much weaker economic growth as resources are allocated poorly. The problem with this outcome, lower growth, is that you can't see the growth we didn't get.

Also expect to see substantial increases in both interest rates and inflation in the years ahead especially as more bailouts (money printing) comes. This could have a serious cost to our currency as the world's reserve currency. The temptation to print away all this borrowing by the Fed is going to be strong.

The more the government bails the more drag that puts on future growth. Keep in mind that the government cannot create jobs the way private business does. The simplified explanation is that any money the government spends must come from any of three sources which means a decline in assets for investment elsewhere. If they tax income, it comes from the productive class (aka the entrepreneurs) and results in more asset hiding and less business creation/investment. Borrowing by the Treasury takes money from what may have gone into other investments, say corporate bonds, which may have expanded plants and equipment. The last possibility is "printing" money or credit which causes inflation. High inflation is a tax on everyone but particularly those with least access to money and credit. This is much to simple an explanation of the impact but hopefully your further research will help the understanding of the bailout cycle and it's effects, intended and unintended.

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