Report: Commercial mortgage market will hit bottom in 2011

by Ann Withanee — January 28, 2011—The commercial mortgage market will shrink for another year, bottoming out at about $2.9 trillion in late 2011, and then begin to rise in 2012 with volume reaching about $3.3 trillion by 2015, according to new research issued by Prudential Real Estate Investors. PREI is the real estate investment management business of Prudential Financial, Inc.

The PREI report Deleveraging the Commercial Mortgage Market: How Much Further to Go? bases its findings on a model that calculates the ratio of commercial mortgages as a share of gross domestic product. Based on this model, the commercial mortgage market will shrink through the fourth quarter of 2011, dipping to $2.9 trillion from its $3.4 trillion peak in the first quarter of 2009, a cumulative drop of about 14 percent.

A similar pattern occurred in the 1990s, when the ratio of commercial mortgages as a share of GDP fell for three years after the absolute size of the market was growing. Back then, the banking crisis was mostly limited to the commercial real estate market. This time, the crisis affected other sectors, notably the residential sector. Also, the commercial sector’s growing connection to the capital markets should make the current crisis steeper, yet faster to resolve than in the 1990s, according to the report.

PREI is a leader in the global real estate investment management business and has been managing real estate investments for institutional clients since 1970 when the company introduced the industry’s first commingled, open-end equity real estate fund to U.S. pension plans.

For more information, visit the PREI Web site.