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Archives for October 2017

Taking the Plunge Into Real Estate

October 23, 2017 by CARNM


Huan Yang, co-founder of FreeRange Shared Workspace , CEAO Amber Terrasas, CEAO, Joe Pitluck, Co-founder and CEO, and Evan Duncan, Community Engagement Specialist, from left, outside of the FreeRange Shared Workspace at 12701 Candelaria NE on Monday, October 16, 2017.
While parts of Nob Hill, Downtown and Old Town have drawn strong interest from investors looking for residential and commercial real estate, some brokers say it’s actually in some of the city’s marginal neighborhoods where small investors are seeing potential and where prices are staggeringly cheaper.
Whether it’s a small office building that has clearly seen better days or a down-at-the-heels fourplex in need of a lot of TLC, these new owners are taking the plunge – finding properties to purchase, growing their net worth as owner-occupants and in some cases as landlords.
“People are seeing opportunities here (for investment) around the main arteries, and many are the regular Joe types,” said Todd Clarke, an expert in the local apartment-investment scene through his business, New Mexico Apartment Advisors. By purchasing a duplex, triplex, or fourplex, investors have the ability to put a roof over their own heads, generate monthly income and build their net worth.
When he works with clients, he said he runs them through a two-hour tutorial with spreadsheets that detail the investment upside and downside on a potential duplex, “so people will know what they’re getting into.”
“They (many times a husband and wife) started out small, and moved up the ladder into more and larger properties,” he said.
Bargains still exist, Clarke said, but they aren’t falling from the trees. Choosing his words carefully, he said they are usually in “difficult neighborhoods” light-years away from being gentrified. “The best deals now are in the $140,000 to $160,000 range,” Clarke said.
Nicer properties draw plenty of interest. He said he is expecting at least 25 potential buyers to show up for a duplex he has listed on Madison near Lomas NE, and that competition could “take the price over $250,000.”
Ambitions pay off

Will McMullen outside of the one of fourplex apartments that he has purchased and fixed up in SE Albuquerque. Tuesday,Oct. 11, 2017.
Clarke said a good example of a small-scale apartment investor getting his start is Will McMullen, an Albuquerque firefighter. “He fits the profile of someone who already has a good job, the mental resiliency and the physical energy” to step in and do a lot of the grunt work that’s involved in multifamily real estate.
Clarke said firefighters, police officers and nurses are good candidates for residential real estate investing. “Frequently, they work three days on and have four days off, so they have these stretches of time” to devote to their other ventures.

McMullen is in his early 30s, married to a schoolteacher and is the father of a 19-month-old son. He said his portfolio is pretty humble at the moment, but he has ambitions to add more properties and eventually branch into mixed-use development.
Since 2014, he has acquired 16 units, all in fourplexes, in Southeast Albuquerque’s International Zone. “I purposely bought distressed, bank-owned properties,” McMullen said.

The Eldorado High School graduate said he started out with private loans, drawing upon the investment circle he established through his previous business activity as a music and event promoter while still in college. “Once I had built up my cash flow and equity position – mainly through my own renovations – I switched to conventional bank loans” and paid off the backers, he said.
“We completely gutted them” McMullen said, sweeping an arm over his domain of 1960s-era, brick courtyard-style apartments. He renovated them unit by unit with the help of his father, David McMullen, a retiree who has a construction background.
While his family’s financial future is important, McMullen also sees an opportunity “for conscientious landlording” in southeast Albuquerque. If more got into the game, “a few good property owners” could make a big difference in distressed neighborhoods, slowly redeveloping them in an effort to reduce crime and build community, McMullen said. But he cautions investors to brace for the ups and downs. “Just collecting the rent is a fairy tale,” he said. “You have to have enough in reserves to carry you” when there are vacancies, or a refrigerator or water tank conks out.
While he’s had a few “bad apples” as tenants, McMullen said he looks for hard-working families and individuals who want a decent place to live, not the next hip place. His goal is to have long-term renters to help stabilize property values and build safe communities for their families.
“Southeast is a good place to cut your teeth … that’s for sure,” he said with a grin.
Commercial options
Upgrading formerly rundown – or vacant – commercial properties is also an option for small investors.

In 2009, John Bishop and his wife, Jacqui Van Horn, purchased a building at 630 Manzano NE, Suites A & B. The couple formerly ran their businesses at a leased space, which was costing them $30,000 a year. Anne Apicella, a senior associate broker with Colliers International, suggested that their businesses were stable and profitable enough to think about investing long-term in a commercial property, which would insulate them from future rent hikes and build a real estate portfolio.
Bishop said the couple pulled money out of their home to buy and rebuild the Manzano space. Bishop’s first action was very satisfying: He removed the ugly bars from the doors and windows.
Bishop’s business, Action Disability Representatives, now occupies four offices where staffers advocate for people seeking Social Security disability benefits. The Parent Infant Study Center, one of Jacqui’s businesses, uses one office. And a nonprofit, the New Mexico Association of Infant Mental Health, is a paying tenant. One vacant office is currently for lease.
“When we bought in 2009, there were many vacant buildings in the neighborhood, said Bishop. “Now all of those buildings are occupied, and we have medical facilities on three sides. While I have not checked property values recently, I think it is likely that our property’s value has appreciated significantly during the last eight years.”
Apicella has helped other clients make the transition from renters to property owners. She had an office building listed for sale on the 5100 block of Copper NE with a lot of issues. “One of the worst was the homeless camp that I had to clean up before every showing to prospective buyers,” Apicella said.
The property was purchased a year ago by a young couple who live in the general area and now have their offices there.
“The husband is an attorney, and his wife is a paralegal. They saw the potential and have invested over $100,000 in remodeling it – and it shows,” Apicella said. “They have been thanked by many of the neighbors for the work they have done to improve the area.”
It is one of several upgrades that have helped the neighborhood, said Apicella, who currently has a small Class C Nob Hill office building for sale at 126 Quincy NE for $130,000.
She also pointed to the folks who “transformed” the old Red Cross building at 142 Monroe NE into the Kadampa Meditation Center, and to a South Valley day-care operator took over a closed day-care center at 128 Jackson NE, quickly growing the new location to a business serving over 60 children.
Growing an empire
Growing their own commercial real estate empire while leasing to fledging business owners is the approach taken by the Albuquerque owners-founders of the FreeRange co-working spaces. Dentists by day, Joe Pitluck and Huan Yang started buying commercial real estate a few years ago to in order to generate passive income to help support their family.

“My wife (Huan) made me get a broker’s license,” said Pitluck, who eventually acquired properties on Central Avenue, at Washington and Lead SE and in the Northeast Heights at Tramway and Candelaria. The co-working concept clicked when the couple lost a potential tenant, a charter school, at the Central Avenue location. All three of their commercial properties have been transformed into FreeRange spaces where clients pay $99 to work at any available desk. Rents go up for a designated desk and semi-private work space. Co-working aims to combine the independence of freelancing with the structure and community of an office space.
“Many are solopreneurs, and 60 percent are female,” Pitluck said of the tenant mix. “They are great places to work, learn and socialize.” Pitluck books guest speakers and offers special events so co-workers can network with other business professionals. He said he’s looking to expand the FreeRange concept to other parts of the state in the next year.
By: Steve Sinovic (ABQ Journal)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

NM Dept. Secretary Matt Geisel Discusses the State's HQ2 Response to Amazon

October 20, 2017 by CARNM

New Mexico Economic Development Secretary Matt Geisel said the state submitted a proposal to Amazon on Wednesday that included proposals from Albuquerque and Doña Ana County.

“We all submitted it together. It went in in one package,” said Geisel in an interview with Albuquerque Business First on Friday.

He said the state followed Amazon’s nationally publicized RFP directions exactly and that the proposal was FedExed to the retail giant’s Seattle headquarters. Amazon put out an RFP for its second headquarters, which could reach 8 million square feet in office space and could eventually employ up to 50,000 workers.

He said the submitted proposal includes an introduction to the state, then splits off into discussing specific aspects such as workforce for cities such as Albuquerque and the Los Santos bi-national community, which includes Las Cruces. He said the proposal also included entities the state wanted to promote that were outside of those metropolitan areas, such as New Mexico Institute of Mining and Technology in south central New Mexico.

“Coming together for a state-level response, we’re fulfilling a request in the RFP,” said Geisel.

Though cities have been the focus of news coverage around Amazon’s HQ2, Amazon’s RFP encourages “states, provinces and metro areas to coordinate with relevant jurisdictions” to submit one RFP and that the RFP may contain “multiple real estate sites in more than one jurisdiction.”

Geisel said submitting one proposal with multiple sites offered as potential headquarters throughout the state also gave New Mexico a chance to tell a better story than one city or region could. He said submitting one proposal also ensured there would not be redundancy from cities in the state when referring to its specific workforce development programs.

“It’s easier for the reader, so I’m not reading about JTIP [Job Training Incentive Program] in two different proposals. I’m reading about them once and then I’m looking at the assets of each community,” Geisel said.

He said he was particularly proud that the state was able to submit one proposal with the help of Albuquerque Economic Development, Mesilla Valley Economic Development Alliance, the city of Albuquerque, the Sandoval Economic Alliance, Valencia County and the NM Partnership.

“Our team really came together and said OK. It required commitment, collaboration and in some cases compromise,” he said.

Davin Lopez, president and CEO of the Mesilla Valley Economic Development Alliance, said MVEDA and the Border Industrial Association in Santa Teresa put together a website that highlights how Amazon could reach a 2.7 million-person market with the region as its next HQ2.

“We feel we all worked very well with the state of New Mexico in this submission process and believe this provides the state with additional opportunity,” Lopez said of the site.

By: Rachel Sapin (ABQ Bussiness First)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

NM Biotech Industry Gaining Momentum

October 18, 2017 by CARNM

New Mexico biotech startup Viome Inc. is barely a year old, but it’s already raised $15 million in venture investment and employs 54 people in New Mexico and other states.
The company launched in October 2016 to do personalized microbiome testing to build individual health regimes that can help prevent chronic disease. It uses advanced analytics technology developed at Los Alamos National Laboratory.
It now operates a 21,000-square-foot lab in Los Alamos for clinical testing and product development, and it introduced its first product for customers last spring, Momo Vuyisich, Viome’s chief science officer, said during the Bioscience and Tech Knowledge Fair and Expo on Wednesday at the University of New Mexico.
“We’ve been very successful,” Vuyisich said in a keynote presentation. “It’s like one in a thousand biotech startup companies that achieve this much in so little time.”
The New Mexico Biotechnology Association, which organized the conference, touted Viome’s success as an example of the state’s potential for building a thriving life sciences industry. The association is one of the key drivers behind New Mexico’s Growbio initiative, which began in December to unite business leaders, government officials and economic development professionals in promoting biotechnology as a force for the local economy.
About 200 people registered to participate, association Executive Director Greg Byrnes said.
“We’re trying to expose more people to the biosciences and all the different technologies being developed or commercialized in New Mexico,” Byrnes said. “We have scientists, engineers, businesspeople, technology transfer professionals and others from across the state presenting at the conference.”
That includes representatives from the state’s research universities and national labs, which provide a steady stream of new technology that investors and entrepreneurs are working to take to market.
Dr. Richard Larson, executive vice chancellor at UNM Health Sciences Center, said the state’s research institutions provide rich fodder for industry. UNM alone has pumped about $1.5 billion into life sciences research in the past decade.
“That includes drug development, cancer therapies, molecular imaging, new medical devices, diagnostics, software development, genetics and more,” he said. “New Mexico has companies operating in all those areas, and the industry continues to grow.”
New Mexico Tech in Socorro, which has traditionally focused on mining and engineering, also has bustling research  programs underway. That includes a biotechnology doctoral program that began two years ago.
At Wednesday’s conference, Tech researchers showed three new life science inventions now under development: a topical cream to kill antibiotic-resistant bacteria in skin infections, a method for using ultrasound to guide cancer drugs to targeted zones in the body and a robotics-based tool to train and evaluate orthopedic surgeons’ surgical skills.
By: Kevin Robinson-Avila (ABQ Journal)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

CBRE Research Head: Talent Pool is Key to Growth

October 18, 2017 by CARNM

Spencer Levy, Americas head of research for real estate firm CBRE, says talent is the big driver in fostering greater economic development and that emphasizing a market’s low cost of living or its inexpensive labor pool is not a winning strategy.
He doesn’t advise any metro area to lead with this approach, including Albuquerque, Levy said in a phone interview ahead of his appearance Thursday at  the Intersections 2017 commercial real estate conference at Sandia Resort & Casino.

“The future of real estate growth is not based in countries; it’s based on cities, especially those working hard to diversify their economies,where unique industry clusters can be fostered,” said Levy.
Spencer Levy will be the keynote speaker at the Intersections 2017 commercial real estate conference. COURTESY OF CBRE ALBUQUERQUE.

Levy was expected to weigh in Thursday on how changing political and social issues are shaping commercial real estate, and also on ways that Albuquerque can stand out more from the pack.
“You don’t want to cast yourself as the low-cost alternative,” he said.
Levy emphasized that top concerns across various industries relate to talent — finding talent, keeping talent and developing talent.
“The  most important piece of infrastructure is education. You have to have good public schools or people will leave,” he said.
Universities and community colleges need to have the kinds of “robust offerings” to train and educate the future workforce for marketable jobs in healthcare, technology and anything that supports and advances Albuquerque’s strong military/government base.
Instead of recruiting call centers and back office operations, a better strategy, he said, is to increase service jobs, led by healthcare and education, especially on the research and development fronts. “I expect health care will exceed technology as the No. 1 user of office space in the U.S. soon,” said Levy.
Levy said co-work spaces play an important entry level role by offering “short-term incubator spaces” before businesses move up the real estate ladder to permanent digs.  “Traditional leasing is never going away,” he said. He said he’s also a fan of “cool local stuff,” such as Albuquerque’s burgeoning craft beer industry, an economic activity that drives the use of commercial space, utilizes unique skill sets, creates jobs and benefits a host of vendors.
Levy said he hopes President Trump creates as many jobs as he has promised but doesn’t think he will be able to deliver on plans to boost manufacturing employment. A lot of production could come back to the U.S. with reshoring, but it will be mostly automated, he said.
By: Steve Sinovic (ABQ Journal)
Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

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