by BoatSurfer600
via YAHOO:
(Bloomberg) — Sweden’s beleaguered property sector suffered another blow when one of the largest office landlords in the capital was downgraded to junk status by Moody’s Investors Service.
Stockholm-based FastPartner AB saw its rating cut one step to Ba1 with the possibility for further downgrades to come if the company cannot shore up its finances. The cut “reflects the rapid increase in interest rates combined with subsequently challenging capital markets,” Moody’s said in a statement late on Friday night.
The company’s shares fell as much as 10.4% when trading started in Stockholm on Monday. Its floating-rate notes due in May 2025 were marked half a point lower at a bid price of 91.6, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
The property firm, with 80% of its rental value from the Greater Stockholm area, joins a growing list of so-called fallen angels that have seen their ratings leave the investment grade bracket and enter high yield. The rating actions are exacerbating a financing crunch in a market that is seen as a canary in the coal mine for Europe’s real estate industry given much of the debt is short term and floating rate.
Here is a much more conventional way of expressing that.
Circa 2008 (Housing Bubble burst followed by massive QE) the rich began to get very rich compared to the lower 50% pic.twitter.com/7xYk9kg3ID
— Bob Hyneman (@BobhynemanUSA) June 17, 2023
Might take a while, but the housing bubble burst in Nigeria will be catastrophic. t.co/Tmke844uxB
— Ururuaja 1 of Mbieri (@Uzrdinma) June 15, 2023
WHITE HOUSE: WE ARE STARTING TO SEE A COOLING IN THE HOUSING MARKET
— First Squawk (@FirstSquawk) June 13, 2023
Twin Cities housing market cooling off after several busy years t.co/P23JmUCAJM pic.twitter.com/5eFDKuMkOR
— WCCO | CBS News Minnesota (@WCCO) June 16, 2023
Americans are not paying off their credit-card debt, per MarketWatch.
— unusual_whales (@unusual_whales) June 18, 2023
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