Study: California is Building Once Again
LOS ANGELES – Central
Valley Business Times
July 24, 2014 6:48am
July 24, 2014 6:48am
New commercial space
is expected to increase through 2017 across most California real estate
markets, thanks in part to job growth and goods moving through the state's
ports, according to a report Thursday from the recent Allen Matkins/UCLA
Anderson Forecast Commercial Real Estate Survey.
The
report describes itself as an indicator of future commercial construction in
California that analyzes the three-year outlook for real estate development
activity and provides insights into new, not yet on the radar, building
projects.
"The
optimism about 2017 in the surveys, broad-based across all markets, is an
important indicator of both the probability of new additions to stock being
started over the next two years and of opportunities for new investment in
multi-family, office and industrial space," says Jerry Nickelsburg,
adjunct professor of economics at UCLA Anderson School of Management and senior
economist with UCLA Anderson Forecast. "This optimism, supported by job
and income growth on the demand side and a lack of sufficient building on the
supply side, reflects what we expect to be another good run of building in the
California non-residential space, activity that should continue through the
next phase of the economic recovery."
Office
Development to Remain Steady
Previously,
uncertainty about the effects of the 'fiscal cliff' and weakened vacancy rates
in 2012 and 2013 caused office market developers in the Bay Area to view the
existing stock as well as new construction in the pipeline to be sufficient to
meet demand. In the latest survey, half of the panel plans to start one or more
new projects in this market within the next 12 months showing an expectation of
improving markets.
Developers
in the San Diego, Orange County and Los Angeles markets are viewing 2016 and
2017 positively and expect office markets in Southern California to be better
in both rental and occupancy rates. However, developers in all three markets
are cautious about new office space development, as demand catches up with
supply. Fewer than 30 percent of the panel surveyed indicated plans to develop
new office space by mid-2015.
The
Multi-Family Sector Poised for Activity
Multi-family
housing development continues to climb in the San Francisco and Silicon Valley
areas as economic growth results in new household formation. Forty-four percent
of the Bay Area Panel said that they will be starting one or more new
multi-family projects in the coming year, the same percentage of previously
surveyed Panelists who started one or more projects last year. This is further
evidence that the Bay Area is leading the way in new multi-family housing
construction, the report contends.
In
Los Angeles, where little multi-family housing has been built since 2006, a
healthier job market and income growth are driving greater demand for rental
housing. The latest survey indicates that developers see this trend continuing
for the next three years and are engaging in new multi-family housing projects.
Industrial
Sector Remains Confident
There
is a renewed sense that the rapid pace of growth in coastal California and the
steady increase in imported goods will continue to create more industrial space
requirements in the coming three years. This bright outlook in the Bay Area,
Inland Empire, Los Angeles and Orange County markets will engender new
construction to support the California industries, exports to Asia and Mexico
and imported consumer goods.
Sentiment
across markets in this sector has remained consistent for the past six months.
Since mid-2013, one half of the panel of developers started a project and fully
70 percent will begin one or more industrial space projects in the coming 12
months.
About
the Survey
The
Allen Matkins/UCLA Anderson Forecast California Commercial Real Estate Survey
and Index Research Project polled a panel of California real estate
professionals in the development and investment markets, on various aspects of
the commercial real estate market. The survey is designed to capture incipient
activity by commercial real estate developers.
To
achieve this goal, the panel looks at the markets three years in the future,
and building conditions over the three-year period.
The survey was initiated by Allen
Matkins and the UCLA Anderson Forecast in 2006, in furtherance of their
interest in improving the quality of current information and forecasts of
commercial real estate.
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. www.PacificCoastCommercial.com
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