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Global property slowdown? Bring it on, say analysts

The risks are growing but the U.S. subprime crisis was just what the booming global real estate market needed to avoid a bigger and more damaging bubble further ahead, leading property investors and analysts have said .

In speeches and subsequent panel discussions, the main message from the Reuters Real Estate forum on the 2008 global outlook for commercial property was that the industry needed to “keep a cool head” as assets re-priced because investor interest in the asset class could not be taken for granted. Nick Tyrrell, head of research and strategy at JP Morgan Asset Management, said that the subprime crisis “has introduced a new note of realism in the pricing of real estate across the world.” “We are seeing deals coming across our desks at 15-20 percent below where they were six months ago.” He echoed Joe Valente, global head of research at property services firm DTZ , who called the U.S. subprime crisis and subsequent global credit crunch a “red herring” because it was “not the cause” of property’s growing malaise but rather “the catalyst” of a cyclical downturn. A credit squeeze has inevitable adverse consequences for property investment and prices because the market tended to suck up a lot of debt, analysts said.

That probably meant a rise in distressed selling as some property firms struggled to refinance deals, although opinion was split on how much of this was already coming through. But commercial property had become overpriced in many markets and so was due a correction, not least in the U.K., where activity has slumped and a re-pricing of assets was well underway and even beginning to draw the attention of some foreign buyers. As in the United States, Britain’s housing market was in decline and policymakers had responded by cutting interest rates, potentially creating new problems, Valente said. “The bigger risk now is of a bigger bubble in 2008-2010 if interest rates come down too quickly,” he said. — Reuters

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