Current:Home > MarketsCompanies are shedding office space — and it may be killing small businesses -Wealthify
Companies are shedding office space — and it may be killing small businesses
View
Date:2025-04-19 07:21:57
LOS ANGELES — James Wallace Sears has more shoes at his repair shop these days than he knows what to do with.
"These are all pandemic shoes," says Sears, 80, pulling out drawer after drawer full of leather boots, suede loafers and designer flats. "They were dropped off here pre-pandemic, and they never picked them up."
The shoes mostly belong to lawyers, consultants and financial advisers. Before the COVID-19 pandemic, they would leave their broken soles with Sears and head to work in the nearby corporate towers. After shutting down for a few years, Sears recently reopened and figured he'd see all his old customers again.
But everything is different now.
"Right now I'm maybe getting four or five customers a day," says Sears, who estimates his monthly sales are down 85% from before the pandemic. "I'm here now starting up again to see if it's still going to work, but I don't know — I'm very slow."
Remote work — long assumed to be a temporary phase of the pandemic for many white-collar workers — is dragging on with no real end in sight. Combined with high inflation, climbing interest rates and tightened credit conditions, it's leading many companies to reassess whether they need all that pre-pandemic office space.
"The typical building has about half the number of people in it as they normally do, and so companies, when their leases are up, they're cutting back their uses of space," says Kenneth Rosen, chair of the real estate research firm Rosen Consulting Group.
Nearly 1 out of every 5 offices sits empty
Nearly 20% of office space across the U.S. is sitting empty, a milestone that exceeds the vacancy rate following the 2008 financial crisis. It's worse in downtown Los Angeles and San Francisco, where 28% and 29% of spaces were registered vacant in the first quarter of 2023, respectively.
Analysts worry that this trend could set off a domino effect: If companies continue to give up their office leases, their landlords may not be able to keep up with mortgage payments, increasing the risk of defaults and foreclosures.
It's a concern that's already playing out in some markets.
Office owner Columbia Property Trust defaulted on $1.7 billion in debt tied to seven buildings in San Francisco, New York City, Boston and Jersey City, N.J., in February. That same month in Los Angeles, Brookfield, the city's largest office owner, defaulted on loans for two buildings downtown. In fact, if you were to take the 40 largest office spaces in downtown LA, landlords for roughly a quarter of them are said to be in talks with lenders about their own financing troubles, according to sources familiar with those discussions.
This distress in the office market is a troubling development for banks. The bulk of these debts — estimated to be worth $1.2 trillion — is owed to smaller regional banks. They're already facing turmoil following a series of collapses and takeovers this year.
The unraveling of this sector of the commercial real estate market could make regional banks "not as profitable or even not viable," says Rosen, who is also chair of the Fisher Center for Real Estate & Urban Economics at the Haas School of Business at the University of California, Berkeley.
"It's the next big shoe to drop."
Without foot traffic, small businesses have shortened hours and locked doors
The stress that these vacancies are placing on small-business owners operating in the shadows of high-rise buildings is palpable.
In the same underground retail plaza where Sears mends shoes, lights were off at a barbershop well before its listed closing time during a recent midweek visit. A planner sitting on one of the workstations revealed only two appointments for the day.
The door was locked at a nearby dry cleaner during regular business hours. Worker Mart Mandingo eventually did appear, explaining that he keeps the door locked because "there are a lot of crazy people coming down here now," referring to the growing homeless population in neighboring Skid Row, up 13% from 2021, according to a Rand Corp. study.
Inside, a rack that once carried suits and blouses looked sparse. Like Sears, he too is holding on to a collection of pandemic clothes, hoping his customers will return.
But that hope is fading day by day.
"I've had some feelers out to different customers, and some of them say they're not going to come back," says Sears. "If they come back, it may be only three days a week."
At that rate, Sears says, his shop, which his father opened 50 years ago, might be gone by year's end.
veryGood! (11)
Related
- What to know about Tuesday’s US House primaries to replace Matt Gaetz and Mike Waltz
- Los Angeles officials fear wave of evictions after deadline to pay pandemic back rent passes
- Doritos recall: Frito-Lay recalls Nacho Cheese chips sold in Pennsylvania for allergy concerns
- Blackpink’s Jisoo and Actor Ahn Bo-hyun Are Dating
- The Best Stocking Stuffers Under $25
- Lionel Messi scores 2 goals, overcomes yellow card and jaw injury as Inter Miami wins
- Drug agents fatally shoot 19-year-old man in Georgia. They say he pulled out a gun
- The incandescent lightbulb ban is now in effect. Here's what you need to know.
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Ohio utility that paid federal penalty says it’s now being investigated by a state commission
Ranking
- New Mexico governor seeks funding to recycle fracking water, expand preschool, treat mental health
- Florida set to execute inmate James Phillip Barnes in nurse’s 1988 hammer killing
- Florida sheriff deputy jumps onto runaway boat going over 40 mph off coast, stops it from driving
- 12 dogs die after air conditioning fails on the way to adoption event
- Appeals court scraps Nasdaq boardroom diversity rules in latest DEI setback
- Keep quiet, put down the phone: Bad behavior in blockbusters sparks theater-etiquette discussion
- This Northern Manhattan Wetland Has Faced Climate-Change-Induced Erosion and Sea Level Rise. A Living Shoreline Has Reimagined the Space
- Judge agrees to allow football player Matt Araiza to ask rape accuser about her sexual history
Recommendation
Skins Game to make return to Thanksgiving week with a modern look
An end in sight for Hollywood's writers strike? Sides to meet for the first time in 3 months
Husband arrested after wife's body parts found in 3 suitcases
Petting other people's dogs, even briefly, can boost your health
Travis Hunter, the 2
'God, sex and death': Rick Springfield discusses the tenants of his music
Trump is due to face a judge in DC over charges he tried to overturn the 2020 presidential election
Leah Remini Sues Scientology and David Miscavige for Alleged Harassment, Intimidation and Defamation