Michael Frankel
Analyst · Bank of America. Please proceed with your question
Hey, Jamie, it's Michael, thanks so much. Thanks for joining us, Jamie, it's Michael. Laura, maybe I'll just give a brief context on kind of how we see the market and the occupancy. You can dive into the tenant credit and the aggregate and we can then talk about the ability to put money to work in this environment. And Jamie, obviously, great questions; I think the first part of the question was comparing today's environment with the potential and a lot of concern in the economy as compared to prior cycles. And I think with the most recent downturn obviously would take us back to the great financial crisis. And I think there's a lot of great tremendous takeaways from that experience as they may or may not relate to what we see today or what may bring -- what the market may bring in the near term. And just briefly, the market today, first of all, in the great financial crisis, which was a true shock to demand in the first quarter of 2009 order flows for many tenants actually stopped. We have never seen that before. And what was interesting in terms of the infill Southern California market was that it performed in a manner that was very counterintuitive. We never saw a supply problem in infill Southern California. Going into the great financial crisis, vacancy was 2% to 4%. The worst it ever got was 3% to 5.5% throughout infill, Southern California. So we just never, even during the worst of times, we never had a supply problem and you didn't have to go far to see a substantial supply problem. In the big box markets, the situation that was very different, even in the Eastern inland empire, where vacancy double, tripled or worse during the great financial crisis. And then we ask ourselves, well, how is the market prepared today as compared to then? The market today is very different than the market was. The market today is so much stronger in terms of preparedness or positioning and by so many metrics. Number one, going into the great financial crisis, as I mentioned, market vacancy was around 2% to 4%, call it an average 3%. Today we're at 0.8% throughout infill Southern California; 0.8% vacancy. If you were to drill down into the vacancy and look at the actual things that are vacant to compete with Rexford, probably less than half of the stated market vacancy even begins to compete with Rexford's portfolio on a location or functional basis. So we're an environment today where tenants literally have no options. And that is very different than a 3% vacant market, although 3% is an extremely strong market. Tenants could find options in terms of other space. It might take a while, but they could find them. And then the other big difference today as compared to going into the great financial crisis is the deep and diversity of demand. We have segments of demand that did not even exist going into the great financial crisis. Many of them driven by e-commerce, new business models, electric vehicle industry, space exploration, we're looking at a transformation of the three PL business that is embracing technology, like never before and reinventing their businesses, driving substantial incremental demand. We have, food delivery, same-day delivery. So many factors driving demand today that did not exist going into the great financial crisis or even five years ago, frankly, to the degree they exist today. So very, very different market backdrop today. And Laura, do you want to talk a little bit about tenant credit?