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The Fed Notices The Commercial Real Estate Debt Threat: The Big Point

Professor Glenn A. Okun

The Rabid Capitalist: The Big Point is a brief summary of a detailed note available to paid subscribers.

The Federal Reserve Board has become concerned about the banking system’s exposure to commercial real estate loans.  For the first time, its quarterly Report on Financial Stability featured a section on these risks.  The Rabid Capitalist has been discussing these threats since July (see https://therabidcapitalist.com/2023/07/25/bank-lending-diet-or-starvation/, https://therabidcapitalist.com/2023/10/03/hybrid-work-threatens-the-downtown-economy/, https://therabidcapitalist.com/2023/10/14/switchers-stop-quitting-and-the-smart-money-exits-office-reits/ and https://therabidcapitalist.com/2023/10/18/commercial-real-estate-correction-continues/).

The Fed’s concern extended beyond analysis in its quarterly report.  Its bank supervisors have developed more extensive examination procedures for banks with these exposures. 

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5 responses to “The Fed Notices The Commercial Real Estate Debt Threat: The Big Point”

  1. Hello, paid subscriber here, I am having issues accessing the content, it continuously loops me to subscribe. Any help?

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    1. Same issue here.

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        Check that they’ve signed up to receive email notifications, and at what frequency they’ve set up to receive them.
        They can visit https://subscribe.wordpress.com/ to manage their subscriptions (a WordPress.com account is not required), along with their delivery frequency.
        It’s possible their email provider has marked your blog post notifications as spam. They can check their spam or junk folder, and then make sure to flag the notification as not spam so future notifications are sent to their inbox.
        Ask your other subscribers if they received the email notification of a new blog post. This will let you know if the issue is specific to a single subscriber, or if there’s more you need to investigate. Check for common themes if it’s more than one subscriber. Are they all using the same email provider? Do they show up under followers? Have they confirmed their subscription delivery preferences?

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  2. Same here for the last few days

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    1. WordPress suggests the following:

      Cache and Cookies WordPress requires the use of cookies during the login process. If cookies are not enabled, WordPress login can’t occur. The browser cache refers to the temporary files stored on your web browser when you access a web page.Mar 15, 2023

      New Post Notifications to Subscribers

      Do you have a subscriber who has let you know they’re not receiving email notifications when you publish a new blog post? Here are a couple of ideas you can share with them.

      When are Post Notifications Sent?

      A new post notification is sent when a blog post is published (or scheduled to be published) publicly.
      A notification is not sent when:
      – a blog post is re-published
      – a blog post is moved from private to public
      – a blog post is updated
      – your site was set to private when the post was published
      – a page, instead of a blog post, is published

      Subscription Management

      First, visit your WordPress.com dashboard and click on Users → All Users and check if the subscriber is listed under Subscribers tab.
      Next, Ask the subscriber to check that they’ve signed up to receive email notifications, and at what frequency they’ve set up to receive them.

      They can visit https://subscribe.wordpress.com/ to manage their subscriptions (a WordPress.com account is not required), along with their delivery frequency.

      It’s possible their email provider has marked your blog post notifications as spam. They can check their spam or junk folder, and then make sure to flag the notification as not spam so future notifications are sent to their inbox.

      Ask your other subscribers if they received the email notification of a new blog post. This will let you know if the issue is specific to a single subscriber, or if there’s more you need to investigate. Check for common themes if it’s more than one subscriber. Are they all using the same email provider? Do they show up under followers? Have they confirmed their subscription delivery preferences?

      Check that they’ve signed up to receive email notifications, and at what frequency they’ve set up to receive them.
      They can visit https://subscribe.wordpress.com/ to manage their subscriptions (a WordPress.com account is not required), along with their delivery frequency.
      It’s possible their email provider has marked your blog post notifications as spam. They can check their spam or junk folder, and then make sure to flag the notification as not spam so future notifications are sent to their inbox.
      Ask your other subscribers if they received the email notification of a new blog post. This will let you know if the issue is specific to a single subscriber, or if there’s more you need to investigate. Check for common themes if it’s more than one subscriber. Are they all using the same email provider? Do they show up under followers? Have they confirmed their subscription delivery preferences?

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