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Archives for January 2020

Lenders Enter 2020 Willing to Fund New Apartment Construction

January 2, 2020 by CARNM

Lower interest rates are helping offset rising labor and materials costs and helping sustain apartment construction levels.

As fears of a possible recession and overbuilding in the multifamily sector diminish, lenders are showing they still have an appetite for financing construction projects. The availability of mezzanine loans and lower interest rates are helping fuel this activity and helping to offset rising construction costs.  

Even if the economy shrinks sometime in 2020 or 2021, multifamily pros believe demand for apartments is still strong enough to prevent major damage to apartment properties in most markets—even with the thousands of new apartments recently opened by developers across the country. “There is clear evidence that multifamily is the asset class best equipped to weather a downturn,” says David G. Shillington, president of Marcus & Millichap Capital Corp., based in Atlanta, pointing to overall fundamentals in the sector that remain healthy.
“Occupancy rates continue to stay steady in the face of new supply,” adds Bill Leffler, senior vice president of equity and structured finance for CBRE, based in based Atlanta. “The strong economic conditions, job creation and population increases (in the southeast) still fill up the new product hitting the market.”
There are pockets where too much development may be occurring, but experts think it might be only secondary and tertiary markets that face that risk, says Jamie Swick, senior associate in the National Student Housing Group for Colliers International.

Rising construction costs eat into profits

Instead of overbuilding, the high price of building is likely to be the biggest challenge for apartment developers in 2020. Labor and materials costs are rising at a steady clip.
“For many projects, rising construction costs have reduced the potential profit to a level where it doesn’t make sense to build,” says Brandon Roth, senior director for JLL. “For those projects that are still moving forward, there is debt capital available, but the leverage is typically lower and more sponsor equity is required.”
Lower interest rates for construction loans have partially offset some of these rising costs, says Roth. However, lenders have not passed all of those lower rates onto borrowers. “Interest rates dropping by 20 or 40 basis points doesn’t really make or break a construction loan decision,” says Leffler. But when interest rates are falling for all deal types—including permanent financing and mezzanine financing—that encourages more lenders to move into the construction space in a search for yield.
Most construction loans for apartments are financed with floating rate debt tied to a spread over the 30-day London InterBank Offered Rate (LIBOR). For the first few months of 2019, LIBOR stayed at about 2.5 percent. That was its highest level in more than a decade, and experts and economists all expected the benchmark short-term interest rate to keep rising. However, in spring 2019, officials at the Federal Reserve began to cut their own benchmark interest rates as economic uncertainty grew. LIBOR dropped down to 1.7 percent by the beginning of December 2019.
Developers often look for mezzanine financing to help make up for construction loans that often cover as little as 55 percent of the cost of development.  “It’s typically in the form of a lender that will provide a higher leverage loan (for example 75 percent loan-to-cost), and then break their note into senior and mezzanine pieces post-closing,” says Roth.
Many lenders refuse to allow properties to squeeze mezzanine finance behind their senior construction loans. “Given the risk in a change in control tied to default on a mezzanine loan, most lenders will not allow it,” says Shillington. “Preferred equity structures can often be structured to accomplish the same task of increasing leverage but are more appealing to lenders.”

Suburban-style garden apartments are benefiting the most from this current financing environment.
Garden apartments are relatively easy to complete quickly. The wood-frame buildings usually rise just three or four stories. These construction projects can produce rentable apartments much more quickly than a project to build a concrete apartment tower. “Rents for these types of assets are affordable to the largest pool of potential renters,” says Shillington.
By: Bendix Anderson (NREI)
Click here to view source article

Filed Under: All News

Six Predictions for the Office Sector in 2020

January 2, 2020 by CARNM

What should office investors look out for in the year ahead?

Continued strong demand for office space should keep this property sector stable in 2020, according to industry experts. However, the sector will continue to experience disruption from proptech innovations, the growth of flex office space, new product deliveries and worries about a potential recession.
Here are six predictions for office properties in 2020:

  1. Technology tenants will continue to generate the most office demand in 2020, says Jason Burian, managing partner for the Chicago office and leader of the commercial real estate industry practice at CohnReznick, an advisory, assurance and tax firm. “This trend began in the first half of 2019 and will continue into 2020, given projected job growth figures in the technology space and number of tech tenants currently in the market.”
  2. Flexible office will continue to increase its share of total office inventory, but at a slower pace than in recent years, with flexible office providers strategically expanding their footprints, according to real estate services firm CBRE. WeWork’s troubles will significantly slow expansion from previous years. In fact, with WeWork active in so many major markets, the office sector’s outlook hinges on the WeWork fallout, says Jaime Sturgis, founder/CEO of Native Realty, a Fort Lauderdale, Fla.-based commercial real estate firm. Sturgis adds, however, that this will provide opportunities for homegrown co-working operators to enter some local markets or expand within them.
  3. Lease structuring will change to favor limited downside rather than unlimited upside, notes Brad Greiwe, co-founder and managing partner at Fifth Wall, a Los Angeles-based venture firm focused on “built world tech,” commonly known as PropTech. There will be movement away from the traditional lease model towards management contracts that offer office owners and flex office providers better long-term dynamics and more sustainable business models.
  4. “Expect to see further adoption of certain proptech platforms in the office sector, with more acceptance of these companies and their support of the commercial real estate industry in 2020 than in the past,” says Burian, noting that digital technology will likely be used to enhance occupant experience and artificial intelligence and drones will be utilized for due diligence and construction applications. Technology will also be leveraged to create a consumer-centric, hospitality-like office experience in co-working and flexible office environments, according to Brad Greiwe.
  5. Most investment capital to go to office assets outside central business districts (CBDs) in the new year, notes Burain. Investment capital will also continue to chase new product in core markets and tech hubs. According to Rhett Crocker, president of LandDesign, a design firm with offices throughout the country, office investors will focus on assets in suburban and smaller metros with live-work-play environments, as young creatives and techies are beginning to buy into these “Hipsturbia” markets.
  6. Burain also expects appreciation in office building values to slow in 2020, resulting in lower total returns than in previous years. But property income should remain steady, keeping U.S. commercial real estate an attractive investment option.

By: Patricia Kirk (NREI)
Click here to view source article

Filed Under: All News

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