The Real Estate Espresso Podcast

Victor Menasce

Welcome to The Real Estate Espresso Podcast, your morning shot of what's new in the world of real estate investing. Join investor, syndicator, developer, and author Victor J. Menasce as he shares his daily real estate investment outlook. Our weekday episodes deliver 5 minutes of high-energy, high-impact content to fuel your success. Plus, don't miss our weekend editions featuring exclusive interviews with renowned guests such as Robert Kiyosaki, Robert Helms, Peter Schiff, and more. read less
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Episodes

Where to Find Good Data?
3d ago
Where to Find Good Data?
On today’s show we are talking about the non headline revisions to economic data.  I’m here to tell you beyond a shadow of a doubt that the US economy is in recession.  What I’m sharing today is the good work that is done by Danielle DiMartino Booth. She is the CEO and chief strategist at QI Research. Previously Danielle was at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas for nine years working under Richard Fisher.  This past FOMC meeting marked a significant departure from previous meetings where Fed chairman Jerome Powell described a change in Fed posture. This was not part of the initial remarks or the press release, but rather a response during the question period.  He said that the Fed was shifting posture from fighting inflation to a return to its dual mandate to both maximize and maintain price stability. That means that the Fed is seeing something in the employment data that is concerning. On this show I’ve been reporting inconsistencies in the employment data for many months.  Well now we have one more data point that categorically shows what is really happening in the jobs market.  Every month the BLS puts out the payroll establishment survey and they publish the GDP for the nation.  In addition to the payroll survey, the census bureau also conducts their own survey once a quarter. The data from the Census Bureau is much more comprehensive than the BLS survey. We also experience frequent revisions to the payroll survey.  What the census data shows is that in the third quarter of 2023 instead of having 640,000 jobs created during that three month period, the economy actually lost 190,000 jobs in that time period. This is not a small difference. The narrative in the mainstream media is that the economy is strong and the consumer is resilient and the jobs market is strong. If the true data was being reported, I think it would be much more difficult to propagate that story.
The War on Cars
May 8 2024
The War on Cars
Virtually every apartment project is going to be constrained by parking. That one factor will determine the density that is going to be possible.  In rental apartments, charging for parking is going to very from one area to another.  For example in a dense urban area like NYC or Boston, it’s fairly routine to charge for parking. In fact, in cities like NY, I consider a car to be more of a liability than an asset. Those areas have very effective public transit and finding parking at your destination is going to take so much time that you would spend less time and less money if you simply took an Uber or a Taxi to your destination.  In less dense areas and in places where public transit is not deeply ingrained into the culture like in Texas or Arizona, a car is a must. The distances are too large and public transit simply is not an option. Except in the rarest of instances, parking is free. So when you are designing your apartment project, how much land should you allocate to parking? Well, you’ll be surprised to hear that it’s about the same as your floor area ratio.  By the time you factor in visitor parking and accessible parking, the parking ratio is going to be pretty close to 2 parking spaces for every apartment. Some projects are not going to be viable with less than a parking ratio of less than 1.75. I’m seeing cities create incentives to reduce the parking ratio below 1.0. In some cases I’m seeing ratios of 0.7 and 0.5. In places where there is public transit within walking distance, I’m seeing buildings approved with zero parking. I personally don’t think that the market will support those buildings in the long term. If someone wants to own a car at some point, they need to move. If they get into a relationship with someone who owns a car, that person faces the choice of parking or their new found relationship. Chances are they will have to move. This translates into higher tenant turnover.  Parking is a loss leader from the perspective of a developer. It is not a source of revenue, and is simply a necessary cost.
Are You Listening J Powell?
May 6 2024
Are You Listening J Powell?
On today show we are looking at whether increasing interest rates is effective at combatting inflation.  The theory is that when interest rates rise, people are encouraged to save money and benefit from the income that is available from those higher interest rates. This is particularly true if interest rates are higher than the rate of inflation, so that you get a real positive rate of return on interest-bearing instruments. When I think back to the early 1980s, I can remember conversations with my mother about putting my savings into high-yield bonds that were government-backed. I did not truly understand the math behind nominal interest rates versus real interest rates at the time I was particularly impressed when in that one year, I earned 18% interest on a $10,000 bond. For a teenager that $1800 in interest was a lot of money. In the late 1970’s the personal savings rate was around 9% and then in jumped in the early 1980’s to around 13%. These were the days when Pauli Volcker pushed Fed interest rates all the way up to 19%.  That steadily declined until it hit a low in 2005 of 1.4% and then another low again in 2007 of 1.9%.  We witnessed a bit of a recovery in personal savings through the 2010’s to about 8.5% in 2019. Then with all of the stimulus money during the pandemic, personal savings jumped to 32% in 2020, before falling down to 12%, and then spiked again to 26% in the second wave of the pandemic.  Personal savings rates are now down to 3.2% after nearly two years of rising interest rates. The increase in interest rates is not having the desired effect. People are not saving more. Not only that, credit card balances are through the roof. Revolving consumer credit increased to nearly $1.1T in the first quarter, up from $727B in April of 2021. This supposedly strong economy is being funded by credit card debt. People are running out of credit.  ---------- Host: Victor Menasce email: podcast@victorjm.com