Commercial Property Makes Recovery
November 8, 2012
The latest Emerging
Trends in Real Estate report points to a continuing recovery for commercial property in San Diego in 2013, although people in the business are
fraught with uncertainty.
Investors, developers
and analysts say that signs are positive for a recovery, particularly in
gateway cities like San Francisco and New York, but heated pricing is expected
to shift some of the action to secondary markets.
The biggest gains are
expected in the apartment sector, while those surveyed predict that retail will
make the smallest headway. Regardless, a clear majority expects increases in
every sector and is optimistic that the recovery has begun in earnest. For more
on this, continue reading the following article from National Real Estate
Investor.
Commercial real estate’s
slow recovery will continue in 2013, according to the Emerging Trends in Real
Estate 2013 report released today by PwC and the Urban Land Institute at the
ULI Fall Conference taking place in Denver.
The report, generated by
surveys and interviews with 900 real estate investors, developers, service
providers and lenders, shows expectations that trends that have materialized in
recent years will continue in 2013. Namely, gateway cities like San Francisco,
New York, Boston and Washington, D.C. continue to be the best bets for investment
and development—although there are fledgling concerns that pricing has gotten
too heated. As a result, secondary cities may receive more of a boost in the
coming months. But growth everywhere will continue to be tepid with gradual
improvements in occupancies, rents and values for all property types, such as commercial property in San Diego.
“This is our recovery,”
said Jonathan Miller, a partner and co-owner of Miller Ryan LLC, a strategic
marketing communications consulting firm to the financial services and real
estate industries and the principal author of the Emerging Trends report. “It’s
just been a long, hard grind. … But the recovery is definitely happening and
we’re profiting from it.”
Despite slow job growth,
vacancy rates in the office, industrial and retail sectors should continue to
register improvements, the survey found, buoyed by limited new supply coming
online. The apartment sector of commercial property in San Diego remains strong as well, even as construction
there picks up.
In fact, Miller
described the survey responses as “a little schizoid” with scores rising across
the board, showing increasing optimism, but interviews with respondents
revealing a host of concerns. “The ratings express an optimistic sentiment for
next year,” Miller said. “But the interviews raised the ‘recovery in
uncertainty concept.’ So you have to take that into account. And it flows from
that we don’t know what’s going to happen in arenas beyond real estate.”
In terms of markets, San
Francisco jumped to the top of the list for 2013. The survey ranks markets
based on investment, development and homebuilding prospects. Washington, D.C.
had topped the Emerging Trends list in recent years, but fell seven spots this
year in part because of uncertainty over potential federal budget cuts.
By property type, survey
respondents remain the most bullish about investment in the apartment sector
(6.58 on a scale of 10) followed by industrial (6.17), hotels (6.02), offices
(5.72) and retail (5.30). Prospects are a bit dimmer for most sectors for
development with apartment again topping the list (6.87) followed by industrial
(5.29), hotels (4.85), offices (3.72) and retail (3.64).
Capital markets outlook
Survey respondents said
they expect investors in commercial property in San Diego to take greater risks in 2013 in chase of
higher yields. That means activity should pick up in secondary markets as cap
rates in core markets have compressed too much to meet target return levels for
some investors.
“In secondary markets,
you have to be linked with local operators,” Miller said. “If you’re not
working with local operators, you’re going to be in trouble. They are in the
best position to make money.”
However, generating
returns will take time. “It’s a get rich slow business,” Miller said.
According to the report,
investment capital’s interest in commercial real estate is expected to increase
as other asset classes continue to offer minimal returns or too much
volatility. The survey found that only six of the 51 markets covered exhibited
a decline in investment prospects.
On the financing front,
lenders are making more capital available, but refinancing properties that have
leasing risk or high occupancies remains a challenge. Respondents also expect
the CMBS sector to continue its slow recovery while also voicing concerns about
how little the sector has done to address issues exposed by the 2008 financial
crisis.
“A lack of confidence by
investors in the CMBS sector could push the recovery off the tracks,” said
Stephen Blank, a senior resident fellow for real estate finance with ULI.
“Hopefully some of the issues will resolve themselves. Overall, we expect
issuance to increase, but not that dramatically.”
Other findings
Respondents to the
Emerging Trends survey cite a number of best investor bets for 2013, which
include:
•Concentrate
acquisitions on budding infill locations: Top urban markets outperform the
average, bolstered by move-back-in trends and gen-Y appeal. Top core districts
in these cities have become too pricey, so look in districts where “hip”
residential neighborhoods meet commercial areas. Construct new-wave offices on commercial property in San Diego and build to core in primary coastal markets:
Major tenants willingly pay high rents in return for more efficient design
layouts and lower operating costs in LEED-rated, green projects.
•Develop select
industrial facilities in major hub distribution centers near ports, rail
corridors and international airports: In these markets, the industrial sector
is driven by tremendous demand from large-scale users looking for specialized
space and build-to-suit activity.
•Use caution investing
in secondary and tertiary cities: Focus on income-generating properties and
partner with local operators who understand tenant trends and can leverage
their relationships. Markets grounded in energy and high-tech industries show
the most near-term promise, while places anchored by major educational and
medical institutions should perform better over time.
•Begin to back off
apartment development in low-barrier-to-entry markets: These places tend to
overbuild quickly, softening rent growth potentially and occupancy levels
probably by 2014 or 2015.
•Consider single-family
housing funds: Housing markets finally get off bottom and major private capital
investors make a move into the sector. Concentrate investments in commercial property in San Diego with local players who know their markets and
can manage day-to-day property and leasing issues.
•Repurpose the
oversupply of obsolescent properties: Whether abandoned malls, vacant strip
centers, past-their-prime office parks, or low-ceilinged warehouses, an
overabundance of properties requires a rethink, a tear-down and, in many cases,
a new use.
Source: NuWire Investor
DISCLAIMER: This blog has
been curated from an alternate source and is designed for informational
purposes to highlight the commercial real estate market. It solely represents
the opinion of the specific blogger and does not necessarily represent the
opinion of Pacific Coast Commercial.
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