Is working from home about to spark a financial crisis?
That is the worry. But it is overblown
In midtown manhattan reminders of commercial property’s difficulties are everywhere. On the west side, near Carnegie Hall, stands 1740 Broadway, a 26-storey building that Blackstone, an investment firm, bought for $605m in 2014—only to default on its mortgage in 2022. Soaring above Grand Central station is the iconic Helmsley building. Its mortgage was recently sent to “special servicing” (it may be restructured or its owner may simply default). As the sun sets, the underlying problem becomes clear: working from home means fewer tenants. Floors bright with lights, where workers potter about, sit sandwiched between swathes of black.
Explore more
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “The financial crisis to come?”
Finance & economics February 17th 2024
- How San Francisco staged a surprising comeback
- Investing in commodities has become nightmarishly difficult
- How the world economy learned to love chaos
- The Ukraine war offers energy arbitrage opportunities
- Is working from home about to spark a financial crisis?
- In defence of a financial instrument that fails to do its job
Discover more
How China will strike back at Trump
Xi Jinping has set out his tariff red lines. What if America crosses them?
Russia’s plunging currency spells trouble for its war effort
Supplies from China are about to become more expensive
The great-man theory of Wall Street
Why finance is still dominated by bold individuals
Hong Kong’s property slump may be terminal
Demographics and geopolitics will make a recovery harder
Why everyone wants to lend to weak companies
An unanticipated side-effect of Donald Trump’s election victory
American veterans now receive absurdly generous benefits
An enormous rise in disability payments may complicate debt-reduction efforts