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I live
near Boston,
and my bicycle is my primary means of transportation. For those of you
not familiar with Boston,
the city proper is actually quite small, and is surrounded by a number of
other small towns that make up the Greater Boston area. I live in a
suburb called Arlington, just up the road from
neighboring Cambridge,
home to both MIT and Harvard. Arlington
is a very nice (if sleepy) town, but was once the site of the bloodiest fighting on the
first day of the American Revolution.
At least a
few times every week, I ride my bike from my home in Arlington
down the main arterial called Massachusetts
Avenue (Mass Ave), into Cambridge to run errands. Over the
past few months I’ve noticed more and more “For Lease”
signs cropping up among the businesses on the main drag.
Yesterday
afternoon, with the Dow pushing 14,000, I decided to take the afternoon off
and go out and document what I’ve been seeing with my camera. You’d
think that with stock markets pushing all time highs that the economy would
be booming. But as many observers have amply noted, fundamentals
don’t back up the strength in the financial markets.
Citing fundamentals, Mish issued a market-top call last week. Yesterday Robert Prechter, in a special note to
subscribers, issued a warning as well. In his report, he notes that
breadth during the latest rally has been weak, and advised, “Aggressive
speculators should return to a fully leveraged short position
now…” In other words, the end of this rally is nigh. (You can read the
report as well as three months of back issues during EWI’s special free
week, until July 25).
Below are
the pictures I took, investigating the “fundamentals” of my local
economy. All of these pictures (aside from the last one) were taken on
a stretch of road that I travel regularly, and would estimate to be about
2-1/2 to 3 miles
long. Consumers may make up 70% of the economy, but they need
jobs from business in order to keep spending. Businesses need places to
do business, and this excess capacity shows that something is wrong with the
real economy in Boston.
Commentary On The Pictures
- Formerly an
independent video store. The sign says it has “moved”
but I’ve noticed that other branches of this particular store have
closed down as well. 2200 SF for lease, and vacant for the past six
months.
- A Chinese
Restaurant that’s gone out of business. Granted, the food
was terrible - I had the misfortune of eating there once. This spot has
been empty for the past three months.
- The Movie
Café – Books, DVDs & a café. Empty for about two
months.
- A Dry
Cleaner – just went under about a week ago. I had cleaning
there that I’d forgotten about – the owner called me up to
say come get your stuff because we’re going out of business!
- This was a
big, fancy stand-alone Italian restaurant that has been sitting empty
for about six months now.
- Nondescript
office space – I don’t know what was there before.
- The sign
says Office, R&D, Warehouse – 40,000 square feet.
I would imagine that it is an erstwhile American manufacturer losing out
to globalism.
- New
construction – this is the first floor of a brand new condo
project. This retail space has been sitting vacant for over 6
months now. They couldn’t sell the condos, so they’ve
been converted into apartments “for now.”
- A sleepy insurance office.
- More
nondescript office space…not sure what was there before.
- Previously
(surprise) a real estate office.
- A vacant
KFC/Taco Bell. You’d think that in hard times people would
need cheap food, but maybe this has something to do with the rats at KFC/Taco Bell in NYC. I
don't know if you can tell from the little picture, but it is a real
piece of urban blight - the kind of which we're likely to see more of.
- Formerly a
New Age bookstore. Okay, so you might think that’s a hokey
business to begin with, but the store had been in business for 15 years
prior to its closing! This has been sitting vacant for at least
nine months.
- Office
space above the Post Office. I just noticed it – not sure
how long it has been vacant, or what was there before.
- Another
fancy Italian restaurant. Business always seemed decent (not
great), and the sign says they’ve moved downtown. But they
haven’t been able to sell the existing location, and it has been
sitting empty for 9 months.
- The Gap
– this is right next door to the fancy restaurant described
above. The Gap closed down
a few months ago.
- Random
office space between Porter
Square and Harvard Square.
- This was
formerly a health food store (Cambridge Naturals) that moved about half
a mile away to a place with better (free) parking. Business seems
to be doing fine at the new location, but this old location has been
sitting empty for about a year.
- Kabloom was
a flower shop next door to the health food store. It looks like
the whole chain has gone out of business – I’ve seen other
stores around town shuttered. I would say fresh flowers are a
luxury item for good times – they’re expensive!.
- Tower
Records. Out of business – a victim of the new economy, and
the rigid recording industry. The building is up for sale. This
has also been empty for about nine months.
- Some random
office space next to Tower records in Harvard Square. Also has been vacant for several months.
- New
construction in Harvard
Square.
- I’m
told this used to be a great big used book store, but this space has
been sitting empty since I moved to Boston two years ago! If a used
bookstore can’t survive in a city with 50+ colleges (that’s
right!), in the middle of Harvard
Square…Well, the rent is too high.
There is a lot of space for rent in Harvard Square. The only
one’s who can afford it are the big corporate chains, which makes
it kind of a boring place. You may as well just visit the mall for
all the character you’re going to get there.
- Office space
in new construction in Harvard
Square
- A former
restaurant in Harvard
Square
- A former
café in Harvard
Square
- A huge
piece of office space / first floor retail in Harvard Square
- A former
Japanese Restaurant between Harvard
Square and Central Square that has been empty
since I moved to Boston
two years ago!
- 5,800 SF of
Non-divisible space. I’ve seen this sign here for the past
year and a half.
- Office
space in Central Square.
I don’t come to Central
Square too often, so I’m not sure how
long this has been vacant, or what was there.
I know
that it is natural for businesses to go out of business, but the key point
with these properties is how many there
are, and how long they've
been vacant. It was really kind of depression, and I couldn't
help but think that if the Dow weren't hovering at 14,000, there would be
more talk of how bad the economy really is.
By :
Michael
Nystrom
Bull not Bull
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