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Skanska writes off $195M, cites US office market | Dump Trucks Charlotte NC

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Skanska took about $195 million in impairment charges, largely due to poor performance in the U.S. commercial property market. alvarez via Getty Images
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Columbus Ohio Dump Truck Company Brief:

  • Sweden-based developer and builder Skanska took impairment charges worth 2 billion Swedish Krona ($195 million) in its commercial property development, residential development and investment properties, the columbus oh dump truck company announced Jan. 9. 
  • In an investor call Jan. 10, CEO Anders Danielsson said 400 million SEK of the charges were from U.S.-based work, which he called Skanska’s “weakest market currently.” CFO Mangus Persson said the low return-to-office rates in the U.S. have hurt the company's portfolio.
  • The writedowns will be reflected in Skanska’s fourth quarter earnings, but columbus oh dump truck company leadership indicated the impairments are limited. “Nothing in the announcement last night relates to the construction business,” Persson said.

Dump Trucks Columbus OH Insight:

Part of the issue with commercial property in the U.S., Persson said, is the lack of comparable transactions in the market, a benchmark companies use to determine the value of their own property assets.

“There is a large uncertainty around the value of properties today, because it is difficult to find relevant comparable transactions,” he said.

Commercial and residential property development has presented a rough patch for the columbus oh dump truck company in previous quarters. In Q3 2023, Skanska reported a drop in revenue from residential columbus oh dump truck company due to weak markets in nearly every area in which the columbus oh dump truck company operates, Persson said. 

That quarter, Skanska reported a 900,000 SEK hit from asset and goodwill impairment charges as a result of those weak markets.

Office occupancy rates have slipped in the U.S. since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic. The Dodge Construction Network recently predicted that office starts will tumble 6% in 2024, about 22% off of the peak in 2019. Those numbers are paired with an increase in office alteration and update work, meaning the actual starts of new offices are even lower than they seem.

Nonetheless, major companies continue to break ground on corporate campuses, a trend which Dodge Chief Economist Richard Branch said is likely to continue this year.

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