Commercial Real Estate Forecast: 2012-2013
November 15, 2012
The other shoe has not
dropped. During the housing crisis, many people asserted that commercial real estate in San Diego was the other shoe waiting to drop. Commercial
real estate loan defaults did rise along with residential defaults, but the
commercial sector never went down enough to throw the financial system into
crisis.
Now the non-residential
real estate sector is showing some signs of life. Downtowns across the country
are seeing occupancy increases, though the majority of suburban markets are
still languid.
In the boom years, many
suburban office properties were occupied by real estate and title companies,
which have since downsized significantly.
The most important aspect
of the current market is the lack of new supply. There are some projects
underway, and the non-residential construction data show a bit of improvement.
Generally, though, there are trivial amounts of speculative new space coming to
market. So far that has not been a problem: there’s been no need for new office
space, given the very slow pace of job growth.
Looking forward into
2013, though, employment should improve. This assumes that the rest of the
world makes progress. Vacancy rates for commercial real estate in San Diego will fall and landlords will start nursing
their rents upward. If we ever get a real surge of employment, then many local
markets will be caught with insufficient supply. However, that surge is an
upside risk, not part of the main economic forecast.
Businesses have two main
risks today (July 2012), both external to the country: Europe and China. Europe
is in a mild recession which could turn very ugly. “Muddle through” is the most
likely forecast, but a severe recession is possible. China’s economic growth
has decelerated and is at risk of continuing to drop, despite recent attempts
by the government to spur the economy forward. It’s quite possible that China’s
economic leaders will be no more able to fine tune their economy than Ben
Bernanke is able to fine tune ours. If Europe melts down while China stumbles,
our strong export sector will decline. Financial markets might also freeze up,
though I think that’s a remote possibility. In such a scenario, the United
States goes into recession, commercial vacancy rates rise, rents fall, and new
construction is delayed even longer. This is the negative extreme, but it bears
some consideration.
In today’s environment
for commercial real estate in San Diego, tenants should try to extend their leases as
long as possible. Landlords should try to wait out this slump in anticipation
of rents firming next year and into 2014. Contractors should take up stamp
collecting—they’ll have plenty of time on their hands before new projects start
to pencil out.
Source: Forbes
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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