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| PikeNet
Dispatch, February 21, 2002 Vol 7 No. 15 (0547) "More than 9,000 subscribers" |
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Here are some interesting comments sent to me by a consumer of national brokerage and management services (who requested anonymity). "From my experience, there is currently little consistency in reports from market to market, both in terms of format and integrity of data. What we get from [name deleted] in one market may be excellent and reliable, in another market scanty and suspect. ... I am also amused that, in spite of the data presented, the conclusions drawn are inconsistent with that data. "No one seems to want to admit that rental growth does not occur until vacancies drop into the single digits, sometimes the 5-8% range. Somehow, when the economy picks up in 2003, rents are also supposed to immediately head up. History tells us otherwise, as landlords will take turns buying deals as long as there is a substantial overhang of space. Depending on the magnitude of the recovery, many markets could be looking at a three-year or more lag before rents pick up. I have yet to see anyone acknowledge that in print." ... Is he wrong? --Peter Pike |
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