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To: chic_hearne who wrote (86753)3/28/2001 10:18:17 AM
From: Ilaine  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 436258
 
>>About 80% of Bay Area Web Firms Will Fail, San Francisco Study Finds

By SHEILA MUTO
Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

SAN FRANCISCO -- In an ominous sign for this Internet boomtown, the
authors of a new study project that about 80% of the remaining dot-com
companies in the Bay area will collapse in the next year, wiping out some
30,000 jobs.

The report, set to be released Thursday by real-estate services concern
Cushman & Wakefield Inc., of New York, and Rosen Consulting Group
bases its projections for dot-com closures in part on a review last month of
the debt levels and current and projected earnings of a sampling of 150
publicly traded Internet companies.

The study, which focuses primarily on how
commercial real estate will be affected by the
technology shakeout, estimates that
Internet-related companies will give up another four million square feet of
real estate in the next year, a huge amount of office space. That number
was based on the Internet closure projections, coupled with a review of
nearly 1,000 lease transactions in San Francisco and sublease space that
already is available.

During the past few years, prices paid for office real estate in San
Francisco soared to among the highest levels in the nation. At the peak last
summer, prices paid for office property hit a high of slightly more than
$500 a square foot, according to Cushman & Wakefield. Rents rose even
faster, as vacancy rates shrank to near zero in many areas, largely because
of space-hungry Internet companies.

Rosen Consulting, which specializes in economic and real-estate
consulting, estimates that about 150,000 people in the Bay area were
employed in the dot-com sector at the beginning of last year, and about
22,000 of those jobs have been lost since then. The Berkeley, Calif., firm
estimates that eight million square feet of the 66 million square feet of total
office space in the city had been leased by dot-com companies as of last
year. Property owners, particularly those who own warehouse-type
buildings in the so-called South of Market area where many Internet and
technology companies flocked, have had to contend with rising vacancy
rates and falling rents.

While the report is bad news for landlords, some suggest the overall San
Francisco economy will remain stable. Despite the weakness in the
manufacturing and dot-com sectors, "more traditional service industries
have been adding jobs, and smaller companies that have been priced out
of the labor market are now starting to recruit people," says Kei Matsuda,
senior vice president of economic research at Union Bank of California.

Stephen Levy, director of the Center for the Continuing Study of the
California Economy in Palo Alto, Calif., believes that while more dot-coms
may fail, "those that meet the test of the market will survive and grow and
prosper." In the end, "we're going to have more software and computer
service jobs" of which the dot-coms are a small portion, he says.

The study found that average rents for top-tier, class A space in the South
of Market area fell 8.5% to $63.60 a square foot during the first three
months of the year, while class B office space fell 24% to $55.32. In the
Financial District, average rents for class A office space declined a more
modest 7.5% to $74.16. By comparison, at the beginning of the year, the
average Class A rent in midtown New York was $67.11 and was $35.63
in downtown Chicago, according to Cushman & Wakefield.

Adding to the growing surplus of office property, 4.6 million square feet of
office space is expected to come on the market during the next two years,
though about half of that already is leased. Another 1.4 million square feet
of renovated space will come on the market by next year.<<

interactive.wsj.com



To: chic_hearne who wrote (86753)3/28/2001 10:41:51 AM
From: patron_anejo_por_favor  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 436258
 
<<Patron, if you're watching: "the horse race" - which of the 4 horseman will be a single digit stock first>>

Hmmm, that's a tough one to handicap. My money's on ORCL, if only because it appears that Ellison's ego has prevented him from coughing up hairballs to the degree that SUNW and Sicko have. OTOH, Sicko's got a weak, weak sector dragging it underwater like that anchor chained to "Big Pussy" on the last episode of the Sopranos last year....

Nah, best to stick with your first answer on these multiple choice questions. Go ORCL!