I've said this before, but the car I currently have will certainly be the last internal combustion engine vehicle that I own. I truthfully even felt a bit weird buying it 6 years ago, but at the time, there weren't that many options other than a Tesla. And I didn't want a Tesla.
Today, there are lots of EV options, and the numbers are starting to show that. When the final figures come in, it is estimated that the US will have sold 15.5 million new cars last year. And of these, about 1.44 million units are expected to have been electric.
This means that we are just under 1 out of every 10 new cars sold in the US. The trend line is also working in the right direction. 1.44 million new EV units is roughly the total number of EVs sold between 2016 and 2021 in the US.
So things are accelerating. And presumably there are other people like me waiting on the sidelines. I am deliberately roughed in for an EV charging station in my new parking spot and, if/when it comes time to purchase a new car, that's exactly what will get installed.
(I added "if" because, depending on how mobility evolves over the next 5-10 years, there's a chance I may no longer want to own a car.)
Yesterday we looked in the rear-view mirror. Today we're looking forward:
The market consensus right now is that this cycle of interest rate increases has come to an end, and that we should see rates start to come down next year. Having confidence that rates won't go any higher in the near future is what markets need in order to start making more decisions. So this is, of course, positive. At the same time, I don't think anyone should expect a return to ultra-low rates. Rates today are still low when viewed historically.
Lower rates are good for levered assets such as real estate, but I don't think that our industry has fully felt and processed the impacts of higher rates. Unfortunately, I think that things will get worse (in 2024) before they get better (maybe toward the end of 2024 or perhaps in 2025). This is when a "risk-on" approach will return in commercial real estate. A year ago today, I thought 2023 would be the year for this, but as
