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Who Still Needs the Office? US Companies Start Cutting Space

Full Story Blog Post Friday, July 24, 2020 in Blog   View 1 Comment 1 Comment
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Corporate America is downsizing its real estate footprint as companies allow more employees to work from home, a growing threat to the bottom line of owners of traditional office buildings and a sign that companies are looking for ways to cut costs as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
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A Reuters analysis of quarterly earnings calls over the past week revealed more than 25 large companies plan to reduce their office space in the year ahead, a move designed to reduce the second-largest expense after payrolls at corporations.

Energy company Halliburton Co said it intends to close more than 100 facilities. Financial services company State Street Corp said it is going to nearly double the workers assigned to one office before adding additional space, based on the assumption that a significant portion of its workforce will continue to work from home even after a vaccine for COVID-19 emerges. Bedding company Sleep Number Corp plans to slow the growth of its total square footage as more consumers shop online.

"You should expect and hold us to a much lower footprint really starting quite soon, State Street Corp`s CEO, Ronald Philip O`Hanley, said on the company`s July 17 earnings call.

Regions Financial Corp, meanwhile, told analysts: "Whether through increased use of hoteling, work from home or modified scheduling, we are confident overall office square footage will continue to decline, as some workers share desks or stop coming into the building.

Analysts say the plans to cut back on real estate are likely the first wave of cost-cutting measures to hit office workers as companies try to maintain margins going into what may be a long recession. So far, the majority of the 14.7 million U.S. jobs lost during the pandemic have been in hard-hit areas such as restaurants, travel and retailers.

Reductions in office spending could likely be followed by layoffs and investments in technology that should help improve productivity with a reduced workforce, said Bill McMahon, chief investment officer of active equity strategies at Charles Schwab.

"Clearly, we`re seeing businesses starting to rationalize their physical plants and at some point they will turn to labor too, he said.

Morgan Stanley in June forecast that work-from-home policies will increase vacancy rates in office buildings. Vacancy rates in New York will reach 10%-12% in the next two to five years from 8.7% now, while San Francisco will reach 7-9% from 5.8%, it predicted.

So far, concerns about declining office space use have not hurt commercial mortgaged-backed securities, with the iShares CMBS ETF up 4.4% for the year to date.

www.reuters.com



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Monday, July 27, 2020 at 8:21 PM
Google to Keep Employees Home Until Summer 2021 Amid Coronavirus Pandemic

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