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Tales From The Front Line | May 11, 2020
Tales From The Front Line | May 11, 2020
This week we hear from two new contributors – Steve Quazzo, Co-Founder & CEO, Pearlmark, and Teri Frankiewicz, Senior Vice President & COO, Crown Community Development.聽 We also continue to hear from Mary Ludgin, who has shared with us from Week 1 – we may need to do a “Ludgin Retrospective” in a few months.
Enjoy our Monday read over your morning coffee!
Cindy McSherry |聽Executive Director聽| ULI Chicago
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Tales From the Front Line | May 18, 2020
STEPHEN R. QUAZZO
Co-Founder & CEO | Pearlmark
Not since my high school days as a former newspaper sports editor have I had an opportunity to pen a column. Back then my monthly column was entitled 鈥淥n the Green鈥 a sophomoric pun on our school color/nickname and a youthful optimism concerning my golf game.
And it鈥檚 that optimism that I want to tap into here. I鈥檓 old enough to have lived through – and remember vividly – all the major business calamities our country has faced over the last half century:
Year / Crisis / US Economy
As an investor, I understand that past results do not guarantee future performance – but it鈥檚 still the best indicator we have. It is also well understood that commercial real estate is tied to our economic growth and, with 30 million unemployed Americans, things do look bleak for our industry at the moment. Yet I remain an optimist. Our federal government has provided a significant economic stimulus, our financial institutions are strong, our biomedical industry is closing in on a cure, and the American entrepreneurial spirit has not been extinguished.
With mass disruption comes rapid change – and pricing real estate values at the moment is extremely difficult. But history has shown that the first three years immediately following a crisis have been the best time to invest in property. Underwriting durable income streams, devising the right capital structure and protecting the downside will be critical to making sound real estate investments during the coming 12-18 months and weathering this storm. Our economic recovery is likely to be gradual (a 鈥渟woosh鈥 and not a 鈥淰鈥) and it will differ by geography and product types, but long term I believe in the US economy.
In John Belushi鈥檚 stirring, rallying cry 鈥淎nimal House鈥 speech he opened with 鈥淲as it over when the Germans bombed Pearl Harbor?…鈥. 聽While Belushi may have had his facts a bit off, directionally he was spot on. The US economy will recover and so will real estate values. Hang in there.
MARY LUDGIN
Senior Managing Director & Director Global Investment Research | Heitman LLC
I think about what I am going to write for this series throughout the week, with increasing earnestness as Friday approaches. By Friday morning, I am likely to try an opening sentence out loud.聽 The dog 鈥 my constant companion in this extended home stay 鈥 rarely takes notice of me talking to myself. He is more concerned about my running in place when my Fitbit prompts me to get moving. 聽This column is valuable real estate 鈥 space in an email that goes out to hundreds of 蜜柚视频members. In thinking about what to write, I ask myself what do I know that I didn鈥檛 a week prior that might put this crisis in perspective? What I have learned this week relates to considerations as I contemplate trading my kitchen table for my spot in our office building in downtown Chicago. 聽In thinking about going back to the office, I am reading up on which elements of a day at the office carry the greatest risk. Not my walk to the el. It is the least-risky part according to what I read. Based on contact tracing of people who have contracted COVID-19, less than one percent got it while outside. My stop at the grocery store on the way home is not particularly risky if I wear a mask 鈥 retail accounts for only 3% of transmissions. Clutching the strap on the el is only slightly more risky than my time in the grocery store. Transmission from germs on surfaces accounts for only 6% of cases. It is really about my extended time in a space where I might inhale airborne germs. So, I will be masking up while on the el and in the office, washing my hand at every turn, using my skirt or sweater edge to open any doors that require hands or to punch elevator buttons, and staying much more distant than I would ordinarily.
How will the business of real estate investment get done? Travel is out for now, other than by car. Our clients have embraced Zoom as a means of catching up. Assessing new investment will take creativity. My team and I will be Zooming this week to discuss how to conduct due diligence in the COVID era. Google Earth will take on greater meaning. Virtual space tours will have increasing relevance. So will insights from trusted third parties in the markets where prospective investments are located. We will need to keep an eye out for instances where what we see is not the complete picture. I will share with my team my own folly in a lake house rental from early in the on-line era. The photos were accurate. The house was as beautiful in person as it was on the website. Moreover, it was on the lake. But the owner had neglected to mention the state highway that ran between the house and the lake. My mistake for not asking.
THERESA O. FRANKIEWICZ
Senior Vice President & Chief Operating Officer | Crown Community Development
I must say it鈥檚 so nice not to be the cause of a Global Recession this time around.
We can leave that to a bizarre looking styrofoam ball dotted with red spikes. The 鈥渏ewels of the crown鈥 seen under a microscope (and hence the name coronavirus) is the last thing that any of us wish to adorn ourselves with, especially in the housing industry.
But for Housing, the question is: since we aren鈥檛 the cause this time (along with the associated flimsy bank underwriting standards, lack of regulatory controls on securitization of commercial and residential mortgages, etc.), could we be an actual POSITIVE influence on the GDP during these overall darker economic times?
I think the answer is a potential 鈥淵es鈥.
Let鈥檚 try to build some perspective…
Housing entered this recession under vastly different circumstances than in 2008.
Perhaps next week we can explore where the path looks like its leading, although predictions are all over the board! Multi-Family…Yikes! Single Family…on the precipice of long needed growth.
*Hats off to John Burns Real Estate Consulting for many of these stats.
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