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Archives for January 2015

Slippery Situation: Oil's Potential Impact on Real Estate

January 28, 2015 by mcarristo

With oil prices down, some commercial real estate may be exposed.

North Dakota oil field. (Photos by Sebastiano Tomada)

While it’s certainly good news for the majority of consumers, the sliding cost of oil and gas could gum up the works for some real estate owners and investors.
With crude oil prices hovering around $50 a barrel since the beginning of the year, industry watchdogs are voicing concerns about the threats to particular real estate markets and CMBS transactions.
Oversupply and weak demand have pushed crude oil down more than 55 percent from its recent peak of $107 a barrel in June 2014. For the regions and commercial assets that are fueled by the petroleum industry—including parts of Texas, Colorado and North Dakota—sustained low oil prices could lead to vacancies and reduced property incomes, several real estate observers cautioned.
That, in turn, could bring on a new wave of delinquencies on highly leveraged properties, as well as increased volatility in high-yield bonds, some said.
“What people are most worried about is exposure to real estate markets with a lot of oil-services tenants,” Trepp Senior Managing Director Manus Clancy told Mortgage Observer in mid-January, noting that so far the impacts are largely theoretical.
“Upon re-leasing, the office tenants in those spaces would look to either give up space or spend less money,” he said. “Houston seems to be ground zero for that concern.”
Mr. Clancy said the submarkets at greatest risk are the oilfield “man camps” in West and South Texas and North Dakota’s Bakken shale region, where oil workers drill for fresh supply.
“These are places where there may be a couple of limited-service hotels and multifamily properties and everyone is there just to drill,” he said. “Those will be the first places to close up and die if oil remains in the $40 to $50 range.”
Jana Partners, an activist hedge fund that once held a major investment in the recently spun-off oilfield lodgings company Civeo Corp. sold its entire $51 million stake in the Houston-based firm on Dec. 30, 2014, regulatory filings show.
The New York-based fund dumped its 12 million shares after Civeo announced plans to severely cut its 2015 spending to between $75 million and $85 million, from $260 million and $280 million in 2014, as previously reported. Civeo plans to close sites and further reduce its North American workforce.
Civeo’s stock closed at $3.14 a share on Jan. 21, down from about $25 a share in October 2014. Representatives for Jana and Civeo declined to comment.
Several other Houston-based companies that specialize in oil and oil services, including Baker Hughes and Schlumberger, have announced budget cuts and layoffs. Overall, oil company analysts have said they expect 500 to 800 U.S. drilling rigs to come out of service in 2015, theHouston Chronicle reported in late December.
Likewise, CMBS deals backed by properties with heavy oil-related tenant bases could also take a hit if oil prices remain at a sustained low for several months or more, according to Trepp and other industry sources.
“For the Houston market, the concern is that if you just took out a $100 million loan on an office property where you have three big energy tenants, your grade-A tenants may start to look like grade-B tenants,” Mr. Clancy said. “If oil prices remain low, the securitizer may wonder, ‘Will they shrink their square footage? Will they go out of business?’ he added. “Nobody can say for sure what will happen to these guys, so that’s where all eyes will be.”
One prominent B-piece buyer who spoke at CRE Financial Council’s January 2015 conference in Miami Beach said that some recently issued securitizations for non-prime Texas developments are in jeopardy with oil and gas prices down. That buyer, who could not be named due to a strict conference policy on attribution, said those CMBS loans had been originated with high loan-to-value ratios and that the properties’ projected revenue streams relied on continued oil sector growth.
Now that that growth has been stymied, the panelist said he fears the loans may be headed to special servicing in the near future. That speaker and other industry representatives at CREFC declined to go on the record with their comments.

To be sure, others see the drop in oil prices as a minor concern in the context of a stable economy and rejuvenated real estate industry.
“The geographic diversity of other assets in multi-borrower deals will mitigate oil price exposure for CMBS,” Mary MacNeill, managing director of U.S. CMBS at Fitch Ratings, told Mortgage Observer.
There are no records of a single-asset securitized loan on a property in Texas, according to Fitch. However, the loan could still bring down the cash flow of securitizations that hold other mortgages.
“Vacancies in certain markets will rise over time if oil prices stay low for a more protracted period,” said Ms. MacNeill. “Particularly for office properties in Houston or other oil-dependent markets.”
The city of 2.1 million people, which is commonly referred to as the “energy capital of the world,” houses more than 5,000 energy-related firms, according to city government data.
Among several buildings in Houston that could be exposed are two office properties: Two Westlake Park at 580 Westlake Park Boulevard, owned by Houston-based Hicks Ventures, and Two Allen Center at 1200 Smith Street, owned by Brookfield Office Properties, loan documents provided by Trepp show.
Two Westlake Park is 80 percent leased to ConocoPhillips and BP, while Two Allen Center is 52 percent leased to U.S.-based natural gas and oil producer Devon Energy Corporation. Civeo is based in nearby Three Allen Center at 333 Clay Street, also owned by Brookfield.
The Devon Energy lease does not expire until 2020, which gives the space “minimal near-term exposure,” according to a Brookfield spokesperson.
“While Houston is considered a resource market, its economy is clearly more diversified now than it was during the ’80s and ’90s,” said Paul Frazier, head of the real estate giant’s Houston region. “Furthermore, the mid-stream and down-stream sectors of the energy space are also prominent in our economy, which gives us a hedge against lower commodity prices.”
Tom Fish, co-head of real estate investment banking in JLL’s capital markets group, also said that Houston’s economy and real estate market are adaptable enough to handle a shock to the oil industry.
“I don’t expect developers and projects to be going bankrupt or for there to be a string of foreclosures because of over-leveraged debt,” said Mr. Fish, who is based in Texas’ most populous city. “The capital markets for new development are efficient enough to withstand distress in the market,” he said. “I was here during the oil downturn of the ’80s and I don’t think we’re there again.”
Still, Mr. Fish said that there are concerns about the future of office and high-end multifamily properties in Houston with crude oil prices at such a low.
“Those have been the two most active sectors of construction in our city for the past few years,” he said. “If oil prices were to stay below $50 a barrel for several years, it would take its toll, but we are a long way from reaching a point where we see a lot of defaults.”
For the time being, low oil prices create a boon for retail companies, medical facilities, technology firms, and low- to moderate-income residences, Mr. Fish said.
“We’re a consumer-driven economy,” he told Mortgage Observer. “There’s no better way to turbocharge that than to put money back into consumers’ pockets.”
By: Damian Ghigliotty (Commercial Observer)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

Clouds Lifting From Commercial Real Estate

January 26, 2015 by mcarristo

Commercial real estate in the Albuquerque metro area – basically the bricks and mortar of the business community – showed improvement in 2014, with the industrial and retail property types almost starting to look normal, according to the latest market reports from Colliers International.
The year-end vacancy rate for the industrial market, which includes warehouses and assembly plants, was 6.9 percent in the fourth quarter, down from 7.1 percent in the third quarter and 9.3 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013.
For the retail market, the year-end vacancy rate was 6.6 percent, down from 6.9 percent in the third quarter and 7.6 percent in the fourth quarter of 2013. Colliers, a commercial real estate services firm, only tracks retail buildings 10,000 square feet and larger.
The office market, which was especially hard hit by the recession, ended 2014 with a vacancy rate of 20.9 percent, down from a more than 20-year high of 21.5 percent in the third quarter but an increase from 19.3 percent a year earlier.
A common thread between the industrial and retail property types has been a low level of speculative construction of new space, said Ken Schaefer, director of research at Colliers’ Albuquerque office.
So-called “spec” space is built without being pre-leased and, as a result, carries the risk of hitting the market as vacant. Because of the risk, spec construction is common in an expanding economy, but rare in a flat economy like Albuquerque’s.
The upside is that the existing inventories of industrial and retail space have gradually filled up, thus driving down the vacancy rates. The downside is that the lack of a sufficient supply of new spec space can discourage expansions in the metro, particularly by national players.
While the retail real estate market is doing well, at a 6.6 percent vacancy rate in the fourth quarter, especially compared to the metro average of 8.9 percent during the 2004-07 boom years, the retail employment sector remains subdued.
Retail employment, which peaks each year during the holiday shopping season, has recovered from the lows of 2010-12, but is still short of the high-water mark of 46,200 jobs in the fourth quarter of 2007, according to state labor data. The sector registered 43,100 jobs in November, even with fourth quarter of 2003.
Industrial
For the first time in seven years, the industrial real estate market saw a net gain of nearly 1 million square feet of space fill up during 2014, driving the vacancy rate down to a pre-recession level of 6.9 percent, the Colliers Industrial Trends Report says.
The Albuquerque metro area has traditionally been a tight industrial market, spending most of the 1990s at around a 5 percent to 6 percent vacancy rate. In the 2000s, the vacancy rate ranged from a high of 11.2 percent in the third quarter of 2005 to a low of 5.7 percent in the second quarter of 2007.
Schaefer said half of the industrial space newly occupied in 2014 was at four properties in the metro:
• Nova Corp., a provider of information technology services, owned by the Navajo Nation, and United Poly Systems, a Springfield, Mo.-based plastic pipe manufacturer, moved into Schott Solar’s former 192,125-square-foot industrial campus at the Mesa del Sol master-planned community.
• Southern Wine & Spirits, a Miami-based wholesale distributor, occupied 163,475 square feet at the Montaño Distribution Center at 123 Montaño NW.
• Flagship Food Group occupied 78,803 square feet off Alexander NE in the Renaissance area, south of Montaño, in a move to consolidate and expand operations. The Los Angeles-based food manufacturer is best known locally for making products under the 505 Southwest name.
• Gastonia, N.C.-based U.S. Cotton, a manufacturer and distributor of cotton products, leased 63,428 square feet at the Fulcrum Building, 4321 Fulcrum Way NE in Rio Rancho.
Office space
Given that offices are used to house workers, not merchandise, like a store or warehouse, the problem with the office real estate market is the metro’s shrinking labor force.
The metro lost jobs on a year-over-year basis during the first nine months of 2014 before registering small gains in October and November, according to the state’s monthly Labor Market Review reports.
The biggest private sector user of office space in the metro, the professional and business services employment sector, had been shrinking for 14 consecutive months as of November. The sector’s employment count of 54,500 was 16 percent below the mid-2008 peak, according to state labor data.
The fourth quarter vacancy rate for the Uptown office submarket was 20.6 percent, roughly where it’s been since cracking the 20 percent vacancy threshold in the first quarter of 2012. Uptown’s availability rate was almost 30 percent. For comparison, in pre-recession 2006-07, Uptown’s office vacancy rate averaged 9.9 percent.
Available space is typically occupied on paper, but is either not used or soon to be vacated.
The North I-25 office submarket has shown some improvement at a 14.6 percent vacancy rate in the fourth quarter, roughly where it was in 2008-09, but the submarket’s availability rate was almost 22 percent at year-end. In pre-recession 2006-07, North I-25’s office vacancy rate averaged 9.7 percent.
The metro’s largest office submarket, North I-25 is a corridor that straddles Interstate 25 north of the Big I.
By: Richard Metcalf (Albuquerque Journal)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

LIN January 2015 Meeting Properties

January 26, 2015 by mcarristo

At the LIN January 2015 Meeting on January 21, twelve excellent properties were presented. Thank you for presenting properties and attending the meeting! Thank you to our host, 2420 Comanche Rd NE.
View January LIN properties here.
View PowerPoint presentation from the January LIN meeting here.

Filed Under: All News

State of the State: Martinez Urges 'Progress Over Politics'

January 22, 2015 by mcarristo

In her annual State of the State address on Tuesday, Gov. Susana Martinez outlined her wish list for the 2015 legislative session, including higher pay for new teachers, a large highway spending package, more money to help lure businesses to the state and more funds for job-training programs.
As she did in her inauguration speech Jan. 1, Martinez called for lawmakers to work in a nonpartisan fashion. However, her biggest applause lines from the newly assembled legislators came when she spoke about “red meat” Republican issues, such as efforts to adopt legislation that would ban compulsory union dues.

The 50-minute speech swung between sounding like a campaign speech (boasting of past accomplishments) to almost poetic language (“Because education is what plants the seeds of wonder, of curiosity, of excitement in a child; points them to opportunities and goals, inspires dreams about careers, and about better days; gives them hope”).
She urged lawmakers to choose “progress over politics” and “courage over comfort, change over stagnation, reform over the status quo.”
The speech hit on some perennial issues for Martinez, such as repealing the law that allows issuance of driver’s licenses to undocumented immigrants. “It is time to repeal the dangerous law that gives driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants who come here from around the world,” she said, prompting loud applause from Republicans in the chamber.
She also once again urged legislators to end “social promotion” of third-grade students who can’t pass reading tests. “When children cannot read, and yet they are passed along anyway, we do them no favors,” she said. “We discourage them. We frustrate them. We hurt their chances for success in life. We hamper their ability to get a good job. My friends, that does not build self-esteem in a child!”
At one point, Martinez took a swipe at her Democratic predecessor, Gov. Bill Richardson, saying, “We have recovered over $29 million in taxpayer money that was squandered in the Richardson-era pay-to-play scandals.” Those funds are from settlements from some plaintiffs in a 2011 lawsuit filed by the State Investment Council against companies and individuals, some accused of politically motivated investments.
But there also were new proposals, some of them specific, including:
• Raise starting salaries for teachers by $2,000 a year.
• Allocate at least $180 million for road projects over the next three years.
• Create a $50 million “closing fund” for attracting businesses to the state.
• Spend more on programs under which the state pays a portion of salaries for new employees during their training periods.
• Offer a personal income tax break for small-business owners during the early stages after they start a business.
• Give public school teachers pre-loaded $100 debit cards to help defray the costs of school supplies.
• End the current system of choosing judges through partisan elections. The governor has rarely, if ever, spoken in public about this, though Appeals Court Judge Miles Hanisee, a Republican Martinez appointee, spoke in favor of the idea during his campaign for election.
The governor enthusiastically endorsed adoption of what supporters call a right-to-work bill, under which the state would prohibit union membership as a condition of employment. “I firmly believe that every person should be allowed to choose for themselves whether they want to join a union or contribute to one,” she said to thunderous applause from Republican lawmakers.
“This isn’t a complicated concept, and most people agree,” the governor continued. “If a worker wants to join a union, then they will. But it is fundamentally wrong to require membership or take money from the paychecks of our workers in order to get a job. For these workers, this is gas money, rent or a car payment.”
Opponents argue that right-to-work laws result in lower wages and lost insurance benefits for workers.
Martinez, in her speech, declared that “studies have shown that states where workers are allowed to make this choice for themselves have higher employment levels, and companies locate there more often.”
The Rio Grande Foundation, a New Mexico free-market research institution that is pushing for right-to-work legislation, has referred to studies that indicate the average right-to-work state has higher employment rates than states that do not have such a law.
However, adopting a right to work law doesn’t guarantee that unemployment will go down. U.S. Labor Department statistics from November show eight states with such laws — Mississippi, Georgia, Nevada, Tennessee, South Carolina, Arizona, Michigan and Louisiana — had higher unemployment rates than New Mexico.
As for the impact on efforts to lure out-of-state companies, Albuquerque Business First last month interviewed three site selectors in North Carolina, New Jersey and California who said right-to-work laws are not as important as they used to be for companies seeking new locations. Don Schjeldahl, a North Carolina site selection consultant, told the publication, “Since 1984, right-to-work has steadily become less and less important as a location factor for most companies to the point now that it hasn’t come up on my projects in probably 10 years.”
The most emotional part of the speech came when Martinez introduced two Roswell students — Nathaniel Tavarez and Kendal Sanders — who were wounded last year in a school shooting incident. In one of few truly bipartisan moments of the address, the two received a standing ovation from members of both parties.
“The last time we were gathered in this chamber together, in fact, they were both in the hospital receiving treatment for their injuries,” Martinez said. “You’ve thankfully seen their beautiful smiles on the news a few times since. … We are pulling for you.”
By: Steve Terrell (Santa Fe New Mexican)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

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