It is still a long slog
October 24, 2012
It has become
evident that we are in for a very long slog no matter who is president and that
there will be more shocks to the world economy, including San Diego investment real estate, for possibly several more years.
Europe
is nowhere near solving its problems and it now seems they are willing to kick
the can further to avoid the real pain, and just let Draghi save the day for
the politicians with his bond buying program. It could easily be 5 to 10 more
years until Europe is really back on a sustainable growth track, and even then
the monetization of the problems at the ECB will be very hard to unwind in an
orderly way.
China has been having
more trouble hiding the substantial problems hidden away in its banks. Not only
do they hold many underwater real estate loans, but it now turns out that a substantial
number of loans to borrowers in the commodities business may be fraudulent.
On several occasions
recently, banks went to seize the collateral on defaulted loans only to find
the warehouses empty or not even existing. With the world economy in deep
trouble it is clear the export driven Chinese economy will have much slower
growth over the next several years, and without exports it raises question as
to how much wealth increase there may be to drive the domestic economy. Many
Chinese entrepreneurs and even political managers are seeking to get out or at
least get their capital out. The major political, social, environmental and
lack of freedom issues are taking their toll, and could lead to internal
problems in several years. There is also the rapidly growing confrontation with
Japan which could get ugly, and the confrontation over oil and other raw
materials with the southeast Asian nations. China has always believed any
threat to its nearby territory is a war like threat, and there is no way to know
how all of this will get resolved. China is no longer the rapidly growing power
it had been, and various tensions are likely to increase over the next several
years. That will mean more and more capital outflow and it may come here for
investment in San Diego investment real estate.
India has huge problems
and they are not getting any better. The level of corruption and red tape in
India is now badly hampering its potential for growth, and that is not going to
change much in the next few years. India essentially blew it because of the
corrupt political system. Someday there will be either a revolution or some
other event to try to change that, but it is not something any of us need to
concern ourselves about now.
It is clear the Fed has
stated with its pocket book that the US is in serious trouble and it will be
several years before things with San Diego investment real estate really get a lot better. At least 2015 and
probably longer. The combination of the capital markets crash and the bad
policies of Obama which have held back the recovery, combined with the out of
control deficit, means we have years more to a real recovery no matter who is president.
Unless Romney wins and the entire Congress is controlled by the Republicans so
that there is an end for awhile to gridlock, then the hard decisions will not
get dealt with.
So all of this is likely
good for US based real estate. Capital will continue to flee here from Asia and
Europe. Anyone who understands monetary policy and economics knows that we are
just setting the table for bad inflation in 3-5 years with the massive monetary
and fiscal stimulus. There is no way the economy can suck up all of this
monetization on top of all of the excess private capital sitting on the
sidelines in corporations and with individuals. Bonds will eventually get
killed. That has to happen. The control of the stock market by high speed
computers, and the continuing scandals like MF Global, Perigrine and others,
just causes investors to look for other investments. Commodities are risky for
many. Gold is nice but is limited in dollar capacity. Emerging markets are
probably good but the issues of all that I mentioned above will continue to
cause those countries to be subject to currency issues and political issues
brought about by the struggling world economy.
Back to San Diego investment real estate. It is likely to continue over the long
run to be the place to be for many investors. It becomes where else to go, as
opposed to anything else. As I have said in the past, if you can find good real
estate, even if it is not at the absolute best distressed price, lock in 3%
debt, and hold, you will do very well and you will ride out the volatile world
we are in with war in the middles east, collapse of currencies, and who knows
what other black swans. Buy good assets at reasonable prices, leverage it
reasonably at these historic low rates, and you will succeed.
Source: Joel Ross –
GlobeSt.com
DISCLAIMER: This blog has
been curated from an alternate source and is designed for informational
purposes to highlight the commercial real estate market. It solely represents
the opinion of the specific blogger and does not necessarily represent the
opinion of Pacific Coast Commercial.
Comments
Post a Comment