Brookfield Corp., one of the world’s largest private equity firms formerly called Brookfield Asset Management, has chosen to default on $755 million in loans related to two Los Angeles office towers rather than refinance the debt in the face of weakening demand for office space.
Category: 21 February 2023
AMAZON TELLS WORKERS TO BE IN THE OFFICE AT LEAST THREE DAYS A WEEK
As of 1 May, Amazon’s office workers will need to show up at a central office at least three days a week, CEO Andrew Jassey wrote in a 17 February memo to staff.
TOP TREND 2023, OFFICE BUILDING BUST: MANHATTAN LOSING $12.4 BILLION A YEAR AS EMPLOYEES WORK FROM HOME
Manhattan’s commuter workforce is in town on Tuesdays, Wednesdays, and Thursdays, but thins out on Mondays and disappears on Fridays, according to Stanford University data analyzed by Bloomberg.
MANUFACTURING SLUMP TELLS THE STORY
The Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia’s index of manufacturing activity in the mid-Atlantic region registered -24.3 this month, diving from -8.9 in January.
INVESTORS CUT BACK SINGLE-FAMILY HOME PURCHASES
Private equity firms and other investors bought 48,445 single-family homes in last year’s fourth quarter, 46 percent fewer than the same quarter in 2021, according to online broker Redfin, which monitors home sales in 40 major U.S. metro areas.
BLOOMBERG: NEW CARS ARE NOW ONLY FOR THE RICH
The average monthly U.S. payment for a new car has reached a record $777, industry research firm Cox Automotive reported, about 15 percent of American households’ median income after taxes.
ONLINE REAL ESTATE FIRMS IN A TAILSPIN AS HOME SALES PLUNGE 40 PERCENT
U.S. home sales in 2022’s last quarter dove 40 percent from the same period in 2021, online brokerage Redfin reported.
WHOLESALE INFLATION STRONGER IN JANUARY THAN PREDICTED
In January, the Producer Price Index (PPI), a measure of wholesale prices, gained 0.7 percent, the greatest monthly increase since June, and 6 percent annually, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported.
AMERICANS ARE TAPPING THEIR SAVINGS TO MEET BASIC EXPENSES
Twenty-seven percent of Americans are pulling money out of their savings accounts to keep spending, and 54 percent of that group is using that money to meet basic living expenses, an Ipsos poll has found.
CONSUMERS SPENT MORE TO BUY LESS IN JANUARY
The dollar volume of U.S. retail sales last month shot up 3 percent from December’s total, according to the U.S. Census Bureau, beating analysts’ prediction of a 1.8-percent rise.