Capital Markets Overview and Forecast

Page 1

Capital Markets Overview & Forecast December 2013


Agenda

• Executive Summary • Economy & Jobs • U.S. Sales/Pricing Trends • Debt/Equity Markets • Outlook

2


Executive Summary • 2013 will go down as another subpar recovery year for economic growth; but there is an upward bias in the outlook for 2014 & 2015. • Job creation has been steady. At the current rate of hiring, the U.S. will return to peak employment by June of 2014. • Lawmakers were beaten down in the polls by the recent government shutdown – creating a strong incentive for budget compromises by the January 15th deadline. • The Fed’s monetary policy is likely to remain loose for a long time, but the data is beginning to support the first tapering in early 2014. • Interest rates will resume a controlled climb upwards, but tame inflationary pressures will keep rates well below the historical average

3


Executive Summary • Unlevered annual returns are exceeding 10% in nearly two-thirds of the country in 2013 • Demand for CRE loans is at all time high and lending standards will continue to loosen. • With the jobs recovery spreading to numerous geographies, sales and pricing are accelerating in secondary/tertiary markets • Investors will see less upside with core assets, but healthier debt markets will keep pricing in this segment of the market elevated

• The need for yield in combination with stronger economic growth will increasingly push capital into suburban and value-add opportunities

4


Economy & Jobs

5


Fed’s Economic Outlook Real GDP & Forecast 4

3.3 3.2

3

2.5

3.0

3.4 3.3 3.3

2.2 1.9

2 1

0 -1

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010

2011

2012

2013

2014

2015

-2

-3 -4

Actual

June 2013 FOMC Forecast

September 2013 FOMC Forecast

CT Forecast

The Fed revised its GDP estimate down from 2.5% to 2.2% in 2013 and revised 2014 down from 3.3% to 3.0%.

CT’s Forecast is below the Fed’s outlook for 2013 but slightly more optimistic for 2014 & 2015.

Source: Investment Strategy Group, Goldman Sachs

6


Gov’t Shutdown Hits Q4 Growth 1995-96 Shutdown

Recent Shutdown

4.5

25

4

20

3.5

15

3

10

2.5

5

2

0

Real GDP, Year-ago % chg.

Net Absorption, Office Space msf

5 4.5 4 3.5 3 2.5 2 1.5 1 0.5 0

25 20 15 10 5

0

Real GDP, Year-ago % chg.

Net Absorption, Office Space msf

The 1995-96 shutdown (21 days), shaved 50 bps off of 1995Q4 GDP and U.S. net absorption of office space was reduced by 7 msf in that same quarter; it bounced back in the following period.

The recent shutdown lasted 16 days. S&P estimates it shaved 60 bps off 2013Q4 GDP. CT estimates the recent shutdown will reduce U.S. net absorption of office space by 5 msf, but demand will bounce back in 2014Q1.

Source: Cassidy Turley Research

7


Financial Markets Shrug It Off CBOE Volatility Index SP500 VIX 90

14.5

Lehman collapse

80 14

70 2011 debt ceiling debate

60

13.5

50 Recent gov’t shutdown

40

13

30 20

CBOE VIX

12.5

10

The CBOE VIX stayed relatively calm during the recent gov’t shutdown, staying below 14 compared to the last debt ceiling debate when it jumped to over 40.

The long-run average of the VIX is 20; it was 12.7 on November 21 st – a near recovery low.

14-Nov

12-Nov

10-Nov

8-Nov

6-Nov

4-Nov

2-Nov

31-Oct

29-Oct

27-Oct

25-Oct

23-Oct

21-Oct

19-Oct

17-Oct

15-Oct

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

13-Oct

12

0

Source: SIX Financial Information, Moody’s

8


10-Year Treasury Update Historical

Past 3 Months 3.1

7

3

6.03

6

2.9

4.79

5

2.98

2.79

2.8 4

2.71

2.7 2.79

3 2

2.6 2.5

1.80

1

2.53

2.4

The 10-Year Treasury rose 60 bps to 2.98% following Chairman Bernankee’s “tapering” comment in June, but it has fallen over 40 bps since the government shutdown and debt ceiling debate.

The 10-Year remains well below its historical average of 5.2% since 1990, but is expected to trend upwards gradually over the next few years.

11/21/13

11/14/13

11/7/13

10/31/13

10/24/13

10/17/13

10/10/13

10/3/13

9/26/13

9/19/13

9/12/13

11/21/13

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

2001

2000

9/5/13

2.3

0

Source: Federal Reserve

9


CMBS Spreads Tightening New-Issue Spread Over Swaps 250 200

New Issue Fixed Rate (Conduit)

150

100

Avg. Life

11/20

Week Earlier

52-wk Avg.

5.0

S+72

S+71

55

10.0

S+99

S+98

93

AA

10.0

S+159

S+158

166

A

10.0

S+227

S+222

218

BBB

10.0

S+335

S+329

333

AAA

50

10-Yr AAA 11/8/13

9/20/13

8/2/13

6/14/13

4/26/13

3/8/13

1/18/13

11/30/12

10/12/12

8/24/12

7/6/12

5/18/12

3/30/12

2/10/12

12/23/11

11/4/11

9/16/11

0



Spread (bp)

Spreads continue to tighten. The 10-Year AAA swap spread fell to 99 bps on November 8th, down 28 bps from midJuly.

Source: Commercial Mortgage Alert

10


Monetary Stimulus 3500 3000 2500

QE3

2000 QE2

1500 1000 500

QE1

0 Jan 1970

May 1974

Sep 1978

Jan 1983

May 1987

Sep 1991

Jan 1996

May 2000

Sep 2004

Jan 2009

May 2013

Monetary Base, U.S. $Bil.

“The target for the federal funds rate is likely to remain near zero for a considerable time after the asset purchases end, perhaps well after the jobless rate breaches the Fed’s 6.5 percent threshold.” – Ben Bernanke, November 20, 2013

Source: U.S. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System

11


U.S. Employment (Non-Farm) U.S. Employment Tracker Total Nonfarm Employment, 000’s 138,000 137,000

At the current rate, we will reach prerecession peak by June 2014

136,000 135,000

8.7m jobs lost 6.7m jobs gained

134,000 133,000 132,000 131,000 130,000

129,000 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

12


U.S. Job Growth By Sector Oct 13/Oct 12, % chg. Natural resources and mining Professional and business services Construction Leisure and hospitality Retail trade Total nonfarm Education and health services Wholesale trade Financial activities Transportation and Utilities Other services Information Manufacturing Government

-1%

0%

1%

2%

3%

4%

5%

6%

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

13


But Still Very Uneven Jobs Regained In Recovery, Select Markets Market Washington, DC Metro Houston Dallas New York, NY Baltimore San Francisco Minneapolis Seattle Atlanta Philadelphia Miami Chicago Santa Ana Phoenix Los Angeles Newark

Jobs Regained (%)

Jobs Lost During Recession (000's)

Jobs Added During Recovery (000's)

376% 335% 229% 190% 163% 138% 130% 101% 90% 79% 71% 70% 60% 59% 53% 29%

-25 -75 -81 -158 -41 -61 -90 -101 -156 -59 -63 -237 -128 -181 -296 -61

93 249 184 278 66 84 117 103 141 47 44 165 77 106 156 18

Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Cassidy Turley Research

14


Momentum Tracker Job Growth: Oct 2013 vs. Oct 2012, % Change

Tampa Charlotte Dallas Houston Orlando Denver San Jose

Momentum Tracker Tampa Charlotte Dallas Houston Austin Nashville Orlando Atlanta Denver Salt Lake City Seattle San Jose Minneapolis San Francisco Raleigh Phoenix Louisville Santa Ana Boston San Diego

3.4% 3.3% 3.0% 2.9% 2.9% 2.8% 2.8% 2.7% 2.6% 2.5% 2.5% 2.5% 2.4% 2.3% 2.1% 2.0% 2.0% 2.0% 1.9% 1.8%

New York Portland Newark Indianapolis Baltimore Chicago Los Angeles Charleston Edison San Antonio New Orleans Columbus Kansas City Cincinnati Sacramento Oakland St. Louis DC Metro Milwaukee Dayton

1.7% 1.7% 1.6% 1.4% 1.4% 1.4% 1.4% 1.2% 1.1% 1.0% 1.0% 0.9% 0.9% 0.9% 0.9% 0.6% 0.4% 0.3% 0.2% -0.8%

Represent the change in ranking since 2013Q1. Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics

15


Sales & Pricing Trends

16


U.S. Sales Volume $600

Billions

$500 $400 $272

$300 $200 $100 $0 02

Yr-Over-Yr % Chg

120%

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

11

12

YTD 13

80% 40% 0% 02 -40%

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

11

12

YTD 13

-80% 

Sales volume for 2013 on pace for $319B – the highest level in the recovery, but still 55% below the peak in 2007.

Source: Real Capital Analytics

17


Sales Volume Across Property Types

Sales Volume Jan – Oct 13 (Billions)

$37.2 $12.0 Land

$74.3

$80.7

Office

Multifamily

$46.8

$21.0

Hotel 34%

29%

Industrial

Retail

31%

29%

23% 17%

Yr/Yr % Change

Land

Hotel

Industrial

Retail

Office

Multifamily

Source: Real Capital Analytics

18


Sales Volume by Metro All Property Types Rankings Q1-Q3 2011

2012

2013

Market

1 2 7 4 3 9 8 6 13 10 16 5 11 15 18 12 14 17 19 20

1 2 6 4 5 9 11 8 7 12 13 3 10 14 17 15 19 18 20 16

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20

Manhattan Los Angeles Houston Dallas Chicago Atlanta Suburban VA Boston Seattle Washington, DC San Jose San Francisco Phoenix Denver NYC Boroughs San Diego Northern NJ Miami Las Vegas Orange County

Q1 – Q3 13 Sales Volume ($B)

YOY % Change $23.6

$18.1 $9.7 $9.6 $8.0 $8.0 $7.3 $6.5 $6.0 $5.4 $5.3 $5.3 $4.9 $4.8 $4.5 $4.1 $4.1 $3.4 $3.1 $2.9

35% 34% 31% 34% 14% 19% 21% 10% 18% 12% 14% 15% 10% 9% 19% 10% 13%

-2% 3% 123%

Source: Real Capital Analytics

19


Buyer/Seller Trends Foreign

Inst'l/Eq Fund

Listed/REITs

33%

Buyers

10% 46%

07 

55% 17%

9%

34% 18%

User/other

41%

42%

15%

21%

24%

8% 16%

27%

32%

29%

23%

08

09

10

11

12

YTD 13

Public REITs are gaining market share, accounting for 21% of properties purchased 2013YTD, compared to 15% in 2012.

41% 52%

Sellers 

38%

49%

Private

25% 13%

41% 16%

43%

43%

45%

41%

9%

12%

8%

11%

34%

28%

28%

33%

24%

19%

22%

4%

5%

7%

7%

10%

12%

7%

07

08

09

10

11

12

YTD 13

Institutional/Equity Funds have accounted for 33% of property dispositions 2013YTD, compared to 28% in 2012.

Source: Real Capital Analytics

20


Top 25 Buyers/Sellers in the U.S Total Investment Volume, Past 12 Months ($ Billions) $0 Blackstone Equity Residential Spirit Realty Capital Blackstone AvalonBay Communities American Realty Capital Starwood Capital Group JP Morgan Caisse de Depot GIC (Govt of Singapore) Invesco RE Brookfield Asset Mgmt Realty Income Corp CalPERS Cole RE Investments Vornado Realty Trust Lone Star Greystar RE Partners TIAA-CREF MetLife ARCP Goldman Sachs DDR MAA REIT Norges Bank Invt Mgmt Related Companies

$10

Buyers

$20 Lehman Bros Holdings Cole RE Investments Blackstone Equity Residential Fortress GE Capital Inland Real Estate Group Goldman Sachs Hines Carlyle Group JP Morgan Invesco RE Colonial Properties Trust AR Capital Trust Forest City CBRE Westfield Group CapLease Rockpoint Group Beacon Capital Partners CalPERS Morgan Stanley TIAA-CREF CBRE Global Investors Prudential RE Investors

$0

$20

$40

Sellers

Source: Real Capital Analytics

21


U.S. Treasury Rate vs. Cap Rate Office

Industrial

Cap Rate 10-yr Treasury Rate

10%

10% 8%

6.93%

6%

6%

Average = 384 bps 414 bps

4% 2%

7.65%

8% Average = 416 bps

486 bps

4% 2.79%

0%

2%

2.79%

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Oct-13

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Oct-13

0%

Multifamily

Retail 10%

10%

8%

8%

6.96%

6.15%

6%

Average = 301 bps

2.79%

Oct-13

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

2006

0% 2005

2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 Oct-13

0%

2% 2004

2.79%

2003

2%

4%

2002

4%

Average = 370 bps 417 bps

336 bps

2001

6%

Source; Real Capital Analytics

22


Commercial Property Index Moody’s/RCA CPPI Indices 220

National Major Markets Non- Major Markets

200 180 160 140 120 100

Aug-13

Dec-12

Apr-12

Aug-11

Dec-10

Apr-10

Aug-09

Dec-08

Apr-08

Aug-07

Dec-06

Apr-06

Aug-05

Dec-04

Apr-04

Aug-03

Dec-02

Apr-02

Aug-01

Dec-00

80

Source: Real Capital Analytics

23


NCREIF Returns vs. 10-Year No clear pattern between interest rates & returns

2013Q2

2012Q3

2011Q4

2011Q1

2010Q2

2009Q3

2008Q4

2008Q1

2007Q2

2006Q3

2005Q4

2005Q1

2004Q2

2003Q3

-4%

2002Q4

-2%

2002Q1

0% 2001Q2

0% 2000Q3

2% 1999Q4

2%

1999Q1

4%

1998Q2

4%

1997Q3

6%

1996Q4

6%

1996Q1

8%

1995Q2

8%

-2% -4%

-6%

-6%

-8%

-8%

-10%

-10%

-12%

-12% NCREIF NPI Office, Rate of Return, %

10-Year Treasury Yield, %

Source: NCREIF, Federal Reserve

24


24% 24%

20% 20%

16% 16%

12% 12%

8% 8%

4% 4%

16% 20%

12% 15%

8% 10%

4% 5%

0% 0%

Multifamily Tampa Milwaukee San Diego Baltimore Kansas City Minneapolis Atlanta Columbus Los Angeles Charlotte San Francisco U.S. Louisville Denver Dallas Nashville San Jose Indianapolis Cincinnati Phoenix Central NJ Houston Saint Louis

Northern NJ Sacramento Central NJ Minneapolis DC Metro Boston Tampa Atlanta Oakland Raleigh San Diego Los Angeles U.S. New York San Francisco Nashville Baltimore Phoenix Dallas Denver San Jose Charlotte Houston

Office

Los Angeles Minneapolis DC Metro New York Oakland Nashville Baltimore Dallas Phoenix Central NJ San Diego Sacramento U.S Raleigh Indianapolis Houston San Francisco Boston Denver Northern NJ Cincinnati Charlotte San Jose

Northern NJ DC Metro Baltimore San Diego Orange County Boston U.S. Minneapolis Phoenix Atlanta Tampa Charlotte Dallas Los Angeles Denver Kansas City Raleigh San Francisco San Jose Houston New York Oakland Nashville

NCREIF Returns Index 2013YTD

Select Metros, unlevered returns Industrial

Retail

Source: NCREIF

25


4% New York Dallas Charlotte Boston Atlanta Houston Kansas City Oakland Raleigh San Jose U.S. Phoenix Tampa DC Metro Northern NJ Los Angeles Nashville Minneapolis Denver San Diego Baltimore San Francisco Orange County

15%

12% 12%

9% 9%

6% 6%

3% 3%

Multifamily

14%

12%

10%

8%

6%

14% 12% 10% 8% 6% 4% 2%

Columbus Milwaukee Cincinnati Houston Indianapolis Tampa Dallas Minneapolis Phoenix Kansas City Saint Louis Central NJ Atlanta Nashville U.S. Louisville Charlotte San Diego San Jose Baltimore Los Angeles Denver San Francisco

Office

Indianapolis Nashville Dallas Raleigh Boston Minneapolis Baltimore Charlotte Denver Oakland U.S DC Metro Houston San Diego Los Angeles San Jose Central NJ Phoenix Sacramento Cincinnati San Francisco Northern NJ New York

15%

Minneapolis Dallas Houston Atlanta Denver Saint Louis Central NJ Sacramento U.S. Los Angeles Tampa Boston San Diego Baltimore Northern NJ San Francisco Raleigh Phoenix Charlotte DC Metro New York Nashville San Jose

Historic NCREIF Returns Index

Select Metros, Average 1985-2013Q3 Industrial

Retail

Source: NCREIF

26


Debt/Equity Markets

27


CRE Debt Outstanding Total Q2 13 $2.45 Trillion Billion $855

Banks Other, 10% $557

CMBS, CDO & other ABS issues

Federal Govt, 3%

$388

Agency & GSE Portfolios and MBS Life Insurance Companies , 13%

Agency & GSE Portfolios and MBS, 16%

Banks, 35%

$326

Life Insurance Companies State & Local Government

$96

Federal Government

$84 $60

Finance Companies

CMBS, CDO and other ABS Issues, 23%

Other

$47

REITs

$35

$0

$200

$400

$600

$800 $1,000

Q2 13

Source: Mortgage Bankers Association

Q1 13

28


Lender Composition All Property Types

Pvt/Other

13%

11%

9%

11%

11%

Reg'l/Local Bank

12% 7% 10%

12% 7%

12%

14%

7%

16%

6%

15%

20%

14%

30%

27%

5%

5%

3% 11%

17%

2009

2010

Nat'l Bank Int'l Bank Insurance Gov't Agency

44%

Financial CMBS

9% 12%

26%

18%

5%

7%

17%

23%

24%

2011

2012

H1'13

Source: Real Capital Analytics

29


CMBS Issuance $, Billions

$250

$10

$200

$8

$150 $6 $100

Avg. = $79.8 $79.1

$4 $50 Nov-13

Oct-13

Sep-13

Aug-13

Jul-13

Jun-13

May-13

Apr-13

Mar-13

Feb-13

Jan-13

Dec-12

2013

2012

2011

2010

2009

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

2003

2002

2001

2000



Nov-12

$2

$0

CMBS issuance is up 70% from 2012 and is on pace to reach $79B in 2013. Issues remain one-third of the peak level reached in 2007.

Source: Commercial Mortgage Alert

30


CRE Loan Supply vs. Demand Senior Loan Office Opinion Survey on Bank Lending Practices 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% -20% Q1 Q4 Q3 Q2 Q1 Q4 Q3 Q2 Q1 Q4 Q3 Q2 Q1 Q4 Q3 Q2 Q1 Q4 Q3 00 00 01 02 03 03 04 05 06 06 07 08 09 09 10 11 12 12 13 -40%

-60% -80%



% Tightening Credit Standards

% Reporting Stronger Demand for CRE Loans

The latest from the Fed Senior Loan Survey shows that demand for CRE loans is at an all-time high, and lending standards have loosened significantly.

Source: Federal Reserve

31


CMBS Maturity Schedule Upcoming Loan Maturity Volume $160 $140

$154

Other Industiral

$127 $129

$125

Multifamily

Billions

$120

Hotel

$100

Retail

$93

Office

$80 $55

$60 $40 $20

$33 $25 $8

$1

$7

$27 $20

$19 $10

$8 $12

$0

Source: Trepp

32


Capital Issuance REIT Capital Offerings, $ Billions $68.1

Q1 - Q3 13 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000

$73.3 $51.3 $47.5 $34.7 $18.1 $36.0 $47.5 $31.7 $38.5 $25.6 $19.8 $18.8 $10.4

$0

$10

$20 IPO

$30

Common

$40 Preferred

$50 Unsecured

$60

$70

$80

Secured

Source: NAREIT

33


Public Equity Capital Flows Capital Raised by REITs $80 $68.1

$70

Billions

$60

$50 $40 $30 $20 $10 $0 00

01

02

03

04

05

06

07

08

09

10

11

12 YTD 13

Source: NAREIT

34


Outlook

35


NABE’s Consensus Forecast Annual Forecast Made Sept 2013 2013 Forecast

2014 Forecast

Median

Five Lowest

Five Highest

Median

Five Lowest

Five Highest

Real GDP, % change, Q4/Q4

1.9

1.5

2.5

3.0

2.2

4.0

CPI, % change, Q4/Q4

1.6

1.1

2.2

2.1

1.0

2.9

Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index less food energy, % chg, Q4/Q4

2.0

1.1

1.7

1.7

1.2

2.4

Civilian Unemployment Rate, % annual average

7.5

7.4

7.6

7.0

6.7

7.3

Federal Funds Target, % year-end

0.125

0.125

0.147

0.125

0.125

0.750

10-Yr Treasury Note Yield, % year-end

2.76

2.43

3.12

3.29

2.50

3.80

Housing Starts, millions of units

0.95

0.90

1.01

1.16

0.95

1.41

Home Prices, FHFA, % change, Q4/Q4

6.0

2.7

9.7

4.8

2.0

7.5

Oil Prices, $ per barrel, December Average

100

93

107

100

89

112

S&P 500 Index, December 31

1700

1500

1754

1764

1590

1912

36


CT’s Baseline Forecast 2012 US Economy Real GDP, % Nonfarm Employment, ths. Office-using Employment, ths. Unemployment Rate, % Retail Sales & Food Services, % CPI Inflation, % CCI Fed Funds Rate 10-year Gov't Bond ISM Manufacturing Index West Texas Intermediate Office Sector Net Absorption, msf Vacancy Rate Asking Rents Industrial Sector Net Absorption, msf Vacancy Rate Asking Rents Retail Sector Net Absorption, msf Vacancy Asking Rents Apartment Sector Net Absorption, ths. Vacancy Asking Rents

2013

2014

Q3

Q4

Q1

Q2

Q3

Q4

Q1

Q2

2012

Annual 2013

2.8 409 129 8.0 4.4 2.1 65 0.1 1.6 51 92

0.1 545 147 7.8 5.3 2.2 70 0.1 1.7 51 88

1.1 645 212 7.7 3.3 1.4 63 0.1 1.9 53 94

2.5 584 238 7.6 1.2 -0.03 75 0.1 2.0 50 94

1.8 478 109 7.6 4.3 2.2 80 0.1 2.7 54 97

2.6 519 118 7.4 5.8 2.4 82 0.1 3.1 54 99

2.9 536 122 7.3 4.1 2.9 83 0.1 3.3 54 101

3.2 586 134 7.2 4.2 3.2 85 0.1 3.5 54 101

2.8 2,237 696 8.1 4.8 2.1 67 0.1 1.8 51.7 94

1.9 2,227 677 7.6 3.7 1.5 75 0.1 2.5 53 96

3.2 2,286 622 7.0 4.5 3.2 87 0.1 3.6 55 101

7.7 15.8% $21.72

22.7 15.5% $21.67

6.1 15.5% $21.73

14.9 15.3% $21.75

14.1 15.1% $21.97

15.2 14.9% $22.05

14.1 14.7% $22.16

15.2 14.5% $22.27

51.1 15.8% $21.75

45.3 15.2% $21.88

56.6 14.4% $22.34

24.8 9.0% $5.07

40.3 8.7% $5.01

28.7 8.6% $5.05

26.7 8.5% $5.06

24.4 8.3% $5.09

23.2 8.2% $5.11

26.7 8.1% $5.12

22.1 8.0% $5.12

104.0 9.0% $5.05

103.0 8.4% $5.08

103.2 7.9% $5.12

1.7 11.0% $18.27

2.8 10.9% $18.30

2.9 10.8% $18.34

2.5 10.8% $18.39

2.6 10.8% $18.44

3.0 10.8% $18.49

3.4 10.7% $18.54

3.3 10.6% $18.59

10.3 11.0% $18.29

11.1 10.8% $18.41

13.4 10.6% $18.60

25.2 4.7% $1,009

42.9 4.6% $1,014

39.5 4.4% $1,018

32.2 4.3% $1,025

41.3 4.3% $1,032

51.4 4.3% $1,039

41.9 4.1% $1,044

39.8 4.0% $1,049

137.5 4.8% $1,004

164.5 4.3% $1,029

162.8 4.1% $1,051

2014

37


10-yr Gov’t Bond Forecast

Cassidy Turley NABE*

2013

2014

2015

2016

2017

2.5%

3.6%

4.5%

5.0%

5.0%

-

-

-

1.8% - 2.8% 1.9% - 3.5%

Moody's Analytics

2.2%

3.2%

4.3%

4.8%

4.6%

Federal Reserve

1.9%

2.7%

3.4%

4.3%

4.8%

CBO

2.1%

2.7%

3.5%

4.3%

5.0%

*year-end 

The consensus forecast is that 10-Yr Treasuries will generally trend upwards from this point forward.

The 10-year averaged since 1980 = 6.71%; since 1990 = 5.17%

Source: Cassidy Turley

38


Capital Markets Overview & Forecast December 2013


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