Finding Opportunities in the Midst of Uncertainty
October 3, 2012
Concerns about the state
of the U.S. and global economies continue to mount while questions persist on
how policy decisions in Washington may affect San Diego commercial real estate leasing.
However, while these
concerns are casting a shadow over the sector and slowing activity, several
C-suite executives speaking on a panel at the Strategic Real Estate Investment
Conference held in New York this week highlighted that opportunities persist
amid the chaos.
“What we’ve been
doing is taking advantage of granular opportunities rather than going after
large portfolios of small loans,” said Stuart Boesky, CEO of the Pembrook
Group. The real estate investment management and development company provides
capital to developers and owners of real estate on a national basis through the
origination and/or acquisition of structured real estate debt and preferred
equity. “We believe there is tremendous uncertainty in the market. … You don’t
want to be the person taking a leap of faith on growth in secondary or tertiary
markets.”
Boesky was joined on the
panel by Alex Hurst, founder of Palatine Capital Partners; Tarak Patolia, chief
investment officer with Sterling American Property Inc.; Brian Block, executive
vice president and CFO of American Realty Capital and Arthur Mirante II,
principal and tri-state president with Avison Young.
Jonathan A. Schein, practice
leader for NREI set the tone for the discussion by talking about the
different constituencies in the room–commercial real estate pros and wealth
management experts as well as San Diego commercial real estate leasing –and how
the different sides could improve their efforts to collaborate. “What we’re
trying to do is create a conversation between the commercial real estate
industry and the wealth management industry,” Schein said. “The two sides
usually talk through an intermediary. … Many wealth management pros see real
estate as an alternative investment. … We’re trying to push the discussion
further.”
“We can make money in a
rising market and a declining market. But uncertainly causes business people to
stop,” Mirante said. “Right now we’re in a little bit of a pause. I trace it
back to [last fall] when our political leadership showed it could not lead
[when faced with the debt ceiling debate]. … It’s obvious that Washington is
still broken. At this point an explosive recovery in real estate fundamentals
that was manifested by declining vacancies and increasing rents has been put on
hold.”
The recent slowdown in
job growth hasn’t helped. And what that’s meant is that businesses are becoming
more conservative again when faced with decisions related to San Diego commercial real estate leasing. Mirante said that many tenants are opting to
renew existing office leases rather than move to new spaces. “It’s a safe
decision. It requires less capital,” he said.
Finding opportunities
The panelists laid out
how each of their firms is managing to find opportunities to generate returns
given the current conditions in San Diego commercial real estate leasing.
For
example, America Capital Realty Trust this week oversaw the listing of the
shares of Healthcare Trust of America. The entity had been a non-traded REIT
that had built a $2.5 billion portfolio of medical office buildings. It is now
listed on the New York Stock Exchange. The listing didn’t raise new funds for
the firm, but instead was aimed at providing liquidity to the REIT’s
shareholders.
Pembrook, meanwhile,
operates private equity funds and has been originated senior loans on assets in
core markets. “We have an opportunity to help developers and owners
recapitalize real estate that is inappropriately levered,” Boesky said. “We
have the ability to do it rapidly and to take risks and are getting
extraordinarily good returns on loans with average LTV ratios of 65 percent to
75 percent.”
Part of that strategy
stems from seeing a senior debt position as a better bet than an equity
position given the risks in San Diego commercial real estate leasing. “It’s a question of where do you play in the
capital stack,” Boesky said. “We want to be the senior debt.”
Hurst, meanwhile, talked
about how Palatine’s strategy has been to invest opportunistically in the
multifamily sector and to operate a distressed debt fund. “It’s about looking
for things on a block-by-block basis,” he said. “That’s the environment we’re
in. Opportunities exist on the micro level. You have to kiss a lot of frogs to
figure out where your princess is.”
Source: nreionline.com
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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