On the west side, near Carnegie Hall, stands 1740 Broadway, a 26-story building that Blackstone, an investment firm, bought for $605m in 2014-only to default on its mortgage in 2022. Soaring above Grand Central station is the iconic Helmsley building. Its mortgage was recently sent to "special servicing" (it may be restructured or its owner may simply default). As the sun sets, the underlying problem becomes clear: working from home means fewer tenants.
Floors bright with lights, here workers potter about, sit sandwiched between swathes of black.
This is not a new development. Many buildings have stood empty for four years, since covid-19 struck. At first, owners hoped to wait out the pandemic. But workers were slow to return, meaning employers ended up downsizing. Vacancy rates, especially in shabbier buildings, rocketed. Then interest rates rose.
Most commercial buildings are financed via five- or tenyear loans. And many of these loans will shortly be refinanced, while rates remain uncomfortably high. Some $ltrn in American commercial-property loans will roll over within the next two years, an amount that represents a fifth of the total debt owed on commercial buildings.
Recently a number of office buildings in big cities have traded at less than half their pre-pandemic prices. These sorts of losses will wipe out many owners' equity, leaving banks to swallow hefty losses of their own. Indeed, three institutions have already been hit hard. In recent weeks New
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