Posts Tagged Commercial Real Estate
New Commercial Property Listings June 27, 2011
Posted by Tom Smith in Commercial Property Listings on July 1, 2011
These are my latest commercial property listings as of June 27, 2011. There’s appx. $40,000,000 in new commercial real estate listings now available. Click here for a full overview with details.
View This Week’s New Listings
Search all property listings by product type or geographic area by clicking here.
Search All SVN National Listings
Search all property listings by product type or geographic area by clicking here.
The Economic And Commercial Real Estate Outlook
This is a very interesting and informative video presentation by Dr. Sam Chandan given for the Speery Van Ness Investor Forum for June, 2011.
On the agenda for this presentation:
THE ECONOMY AND FINANCIAL MARKETS
- Economic Growth and the Labor Market
- Consumer Activity
- Inflation, Interest Rates, and Borrowing Costs
PROPERTY INVESTMENT
- Uneven Gains in Transaction Activity and Pricing
- Changing Intermediation of Distress
- Policy Issues Impacting Investment Trends
You may download the notes and slides from the presentation by Discussion Notes from the Economic and Commercial Real Estate Outlook Presentation.
Commercial Real Estate Markets Are Stabilizing, Demand Is Growing
Posted by Tom Smith in Commercial Real Estate News on June 8, 2011
Download the official Commercial Forecast for 2011, Q2 here.
The improving economy and job creation mean growing demand for commercial real estate, according to the National Association of Realtors®.
Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, said job creation will be the biggest factor moving forward. “Job growth creates demand for commercial space, and the economy should be adding between 1.5 million and 2 million jobs annually both this year and in 2012, with the unemployment rate falling to 8.0 percent by the end of next year,” he said. “Given the minimal new supply in recent years, the rising demand means vacancy rates will be trending down in the commercial real estate sectors. Individual markets are now stabilizing and in some cases rising.”
From the second quarter of this year to the second quarter of 2012, NAR forecasts vacancy rates to decline 1.0 percentage point in the office sector, 0.9 point in industrial real estate, 0.5 point in the retail sector and 1.1 percentage points in the multifamily rental market.
The Society of Industrial and Office Realtors®, in its SIOR Commercial Real Estate Index, an attitudinal survey of more than 360 local market experts,1 shows a firming up of market fundamentals.
The SIOR index, measuring the impact of 10 variables, rose 6.8 percentage points to 57.5 in the first quarter, the highest since the fall of 2008. The Northeast and South drove improvements in market conditions. Vacancy rates are improving, but concessions continue to make it a tenant’s market.
Although the SIOR index remains notably lower than a level of 100 that represents a balanced marketplace, this is the sixth consecutive quarterly improvement after almost three years of decline. The last time the index was at 100 was in the third quarter of 2007.
A separate NAR commercial lending survey shows 65 percent of Realtors® report lending conditions have tightened thus far in 2011, and six out of 10 failed to complete a transaction this year due to financing problems. Regional banks provide the majority of commercial loans, followed by private investors. National banks are a distant third.
“Just as in the residential sector, lending problems are the biggest issue impacting commercial real estate,” Yun noted.
The multifamily sector is the only area that has clearly turned the corner, resulting in consistently falling vacancy rates and rising rents. “Solid rises in apartment rents will force some renters to consider home ownership,” Yun said.
NAR’s latest COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK2 offers projections for four major commercial sectors and analyzes quarterly data in the office, industrial, retail and multifamily markets. Historic data were provided by CBRE Econometric Advisors.
Office Markets
Vacancy rates in the office sector are expected to fall from 16.3 percent in the second quarter of this year to 15.3 percent in the second quarter of 2012.
The markets with the lowest office vacancy rates currently are Honolulu and New York City, each with vacancies below 9 percent.
Office rents are projected to rise 0.3 percent this year and another 4.3 percent in 2012.
In 57 markets tracked, net absorption of office space, which includes the leasing of new space coming on the market as well as space in existing properties, is likely to be 26.6 million square feet in 2011.
Industrial Markets
Industrial vacancy rates are expected to decline from 13.9 percent in the current quarter to 13.0 percent in the second quarter of 2012.
At present, the areas with the lowest industrial vacancy rates are Los Angeles and Salt Lake City, with vacancies in the 7 to 8 percent range.
Annual industrial rent should decline 1.5 percent in 2011 before rising 2.0 percent next year. Net absorption of industrial space in 58 markets tracked is seen at 126.1 million square feet in 2011.
Retail Markets
Retail vacancy rates are forecast to decline from 13.1 percent in the second quarter of this year to 12.6 percent in the second quarter of 2012.
Markets with the lowest retail vacancy rates currently include Honolulu; Long Island, N.Y.; and San Jose, Calif., all with vacancies below 8 percent.
Average retail rent is expected to decline 1.4 percent in 2011, and then rise 0.7 percent next year. Net absorption of retail space in 53 tracked markets is projected to be 5.4 million square feet in 2011.
Multifamily Markets
The apartment rental market – multifamily housing – is continuing to tighten as household formation grows. Multifamily vacancy rates should drop from 5.8 percent in the current quarter to 4.7 percent in the second quarter of 2012.
Areas with the lowest multifamily vacancy rates presently are Pittsburgh; San Jose, Calif.; and Portland, Ore., with vacancies below 3 percent.
Average apartment rent is likely to rise 3.4 percent this year and another 4.3 percent in 2012. Multifamily net absorption is forecast at 250,800 units in 59 tracked metro areas in 2011.
The COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK is published by the NAR Research Division for the commercial community. NAR’s Commercial Division, formed in 1990, provides targeted products and services to meet the needs of the commercial market and constituency within NAR.
The NAR commercial components include commercial members; commercial committees, subcommittees and forums; commercial real estate boards and structures; and the NAR commercial affiliate organizations – CCIM Institute, Institute of Real Estate Management, Realtors® Land Institute, Society of Industrial and Office Realtors®, and Counselors of Real Estate.
Approximately 79,000 NAR and institute affiliate members specialize in commercial brokerage services, and an additional 171,000 members offer commercial real estate as a secondary business.
The National Association of Realtors®, “The Voice for Real Estate,” is America’s largest trade association, representing 1.1 million members involved in all aspects of the residential and commercial real estate industries.
# # #
1 The SIOR Commercial Real Estate Index, conducted by SIOR and analyzed by NAR Research, is a diffusion index based on market conditions as viewed by local SIOR experts. For more information contact Richard Hollander, SIOR, at 202/449-8200.
2 Additional analyses will be posted under Economists’ Commentary in the Research area of Realtor.org in coming days.
Information about NAR is available at www.realtor.org. This and other news releases are posted in the News Media section. Statistical data, charts and surveys also may be found by clicking on Research.
REALTOR® is a registered collective membership mark which may be used only by real estate professionals who are members of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® and subscribe to its strict Code of Ethics. Not all real estate agents are REALTORS®. All REALTORS® are members of NAR.
Download the official Commercial Forecast for 2011, Q2 here.
New Commercial Property Listings June 1, 2011
Posted by Tom Smith in Commercial Property Listings on June 1, 2011
Here are my newest commercial property listings as of June 1, 2011. There’s $33,402,800 in new commercial real estate listings now available.Click here for a full overview with details.
View This Week’s New Listings
Search all property listings by product type or geographic area by clicking here.
Search All SVN National Listings
Search all property listings by product type or geographic area by clicking here.
Contact me for more information on any of these properties.
Will Commercial Real Estate Provide a Good Hedge Against Inflation?
Posted by Tom Smith in Commercial Real Estate News on April 13, 2011
It seems to be only a matter of time before higher inflation makes its way into official U.S. figures. Countries like Brazil and China are already struggling with it, and even countries with unused capacity like the United Kingdom have to deal with faster than expected price increases.
Food prices are spiking, and the price of oil had been inching upward even before unrest in the Middle East sparked fears of shortages.
Moody’s Economy.com predicts that the headline Consumer Price Index, which counts food and energy prices, will rise at a relatively modest rate of approximately 2% per year in 2011 and 2012, up from 1.6% in 2010.
But when Wal-Mart CEO Bill Simon warns that “inflation is going to be serious,” citing “cost increases that are coming through at a rapid rate,”1 it seems prudent to add a percentage point or so to inflation forecasts and pick investments accordingly.
Standard textbooks say that commercial real estate offers a good hedge against inflation. Will this hold true given the current environment?

The Basis Of Received Wisdom
When the returns from investing in an asset exceed the rate of inflation, it is considered to be a good hedge. In the 1980s, a slew of papers2 examined the rate of return on various property types and concluded that commercial real estate investors were in fact compensated for inflation risk.
Indeed, The National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries’ total return index, which attempts to capture the gain from both net operating income as well as increases in asset value, generally posted higher returns than inflation in most of the 1980s. The index tracks a large pool of institutional quality commercial real estate held mostly by pension funds.
But what happened in the early 1990s? Shortage in credit from the savings and loan crisis resulted in a sharp dip in commercial real estate income and values. It wasn’t until the mid-1990s that the asset class began posting returns above inflation.
Expect 2011 To Be A Robust Year
The key issue therefore is what determines returns from commercial real estate. With the unemployment rate expected to remain high for another few years, Reis projects only a measured increase in the demand for space.
Income returns have begun to rise from the troughs of 2009 as occupancies and rent growth stabilized, but property types are recovering at different rates.
Read the rest of this excellent article by Victor Calanog, head of research and economics for New York-based research firm Reis.


