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Jack Farley

@JackFarley9687,876 subscribers

Co-founder of Monetary Matters Network: https://t.co/yANVgsTvJU

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When I interviewed veteran commercial real estate (CRE) investor Anthony Dilweg, I expected him to say that the bearish headlines about CRE & office were overblown. Instead, he said the headlines weren't bearish enough, & made an analogy to the Titanic hitting the iceberg🚢 This shocking conversation, nearly two hours long, is now released in full. Here are some of the key claims from Dilweg (who in a former life played quarterback for the Green Bay Packers 🏈) on how he is viewing the CRE world: - The huge challenges CRE & office will have to contend with are WORSE than what CRE faced during the 2008 Great Financial Crisis - Office as an asset class is "structurally broken" as remote and hybrid work has caused demand to tank - As vacancy rates skyrocket, over a billion square feet of office asset class (20% of the asset class in the U.S.) will be obsolete over next 3-5 years - "Return to office" trend is vastly overstated. The CEOs may say Monday - Friday is stern policy but utilization rates reveal Tuesday-Thursday is the de facto norm - Banks are "completely overwhelmed" as CRE investors use threat of strategic default (i.e. turning keys back) to aggressively renegotiate their loans. Banks must contend with forbearance, restructuring, and extreme reduction in loan yields (350 basis point declines in loan yields are not unheard of) - The claim that impairments to office as an asset class are just in major cities (NYC, San Francisco, LA) is an overrated narrative. I say to Dilweg (whose 5.5 million square footage portfolio is located in Southeast U.S.) "so you are not quite in the eye of the storm" (I like to support my guests) and he corrects me and says "No, I am." - If Fed doesn't drastically cut rates, there will be tremendous pain felt throughout the entire CRE industry - Some banks are "behaving in an interesting way" and Dilweg speculates that FDIC & OCC might still be operating behind the scenes to prevent more bank failures - Private credit is on the margin replacing some bank financing, but terms are "very punitive" As usual, this interview is available on Forward Guidance podcast and on " Blockworks Macro" YouTube channel Lastly, a big thank you to MetaMask.eth 🦊 Portfolio for sponsoring today's episode Enjoy! 🔥

Jack Farley

479,722 просмотров • 2 лет назад

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How @FedGuy12 is seeing things: - The recession doomers need to stop taking their "crazy pills" - Stocks will "crush" bonds as record fiscal deficits reignite inflation - Nominal GDP growth will continue to be strong as long as the U.S. government continues to print 2 Trillion of "helicopter money" 🚁 - However, the 2023 disinflation will itself prove to be "transitory," and the Fed will cut interest rates by less than the market expects (currently ~6 cuts are priced in by end of 2024) - Recent easing of financial conditions (rally in rates, stocks, and credit) will boost economic activity, particularly the housing market - Fed is likely planning to taper quantitative tightening (QT), which means that the shrinking of the Fed's balance sheet will continue even longer, until the Fed's reserves approach the LCLoR (lowest comfortable level of reserves) - We also discuss the draining of the reverse repo facility (Joseph was publicly talking about this literally 3 years, now everyone is talking about it) and mortgage-backed securities (MBS) role in QT. I ask Joseph if fall in rates will cause MBS prepays to rise, he says (I'm paraphrasing) technically yes, but it will be a very mild effect As usual, this interview is available on Forward Guidance on all podcast apps and on "Blockworks Macro" YouTube channel. Video version is now also available on Spotify Huge thank you to Public for sponsoring this interview! Enjoy 🔥

Jack Farley

269,643 просмотров • 2 лет назад