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Archives for September 2020

Apartment Developers Scout Adaptive Reuse Possibilities

September 16, 2020 by CARNM

That math will become easier for developers if more distressed properties become available at a steep discount.
It’s too soon for most developers to sign a contract to buy a failed hotel—but apartment developers are watching and waiting for prices to drop to buy other property types damaged by the economic crisis to redevelop into multifamily buildings.
Even before the crisis, apartment developers were eager to buy well-located properties like old office towers and empty malls that they could transform into apartments. The chaos of the pandemic caused most of these developers to pause and wait for new opportunities, such as distressed hotels available at a discount.

“There is just little interest on the part of developers to jump into anything like that at the moment,” says Jim Costello, senior vice president for data firm Real Capital Analytics, based in New York City. “Assets are not being sold at substantial discounts … yet.”

Hotels may be the fastest conversions to apartment

However, at least a few redevelopers have leapt to buy hotel properties—6 percent of hotel assets bought in the second quarter of 2020 were acquired with the intent to redevelop or convert the properties to a new asset class, according to Real Capital. This rate of purchase for redevelopment was twice the average rate seen in a second quarter between 2014 and 2019.
For example, in June the Stanislaus Regional Housing Authority bought the Clarion Inn Conference Center in Modesto, Calif., to redevelop as workforce housing.

“A type of property that could be in play are hotels—there is talk about the ability to convert these to affordable housing or supportive housing fairly readily,” says Deborah VanAmerongen, strategic policy advisor in the affordable housing practice group at the law firm Nixon Peabody, based in New York City.
The simple math behind a conversion requires the income from the renovated property to justify the total cost the redevelopment, including the price to buy the property and the cost of construction.
“Renovation costs vary very substantially from building to building, but costs are typically high, and typically are only feasible in areas that are supply-constrained—think San Francisco—or have federal grant money available to help,” says Tony Lenamon, national practice lead for multi-housing for JLL Valuation Advisory.
Buyers and sellers are also uncertain what the demand will be for real estate once the dust settles from the forced closure of all non-essential businesses during the pandemic and the recession caused by the closure. “Tenant demand is impossible to judge in the middle of this forced error economic environment,” says Costello.
That math will become easier for developers if distressed properties like hotels become available at a steep discount. The hotel business has been savagely hurt by the pandemic. The percentage of rooms occupied across the U.S. has been cut in half, according to data firm STR, recently purchased by CoStar Portfolio Strategies.
Renovating an old hotel to become apartments can cost substantially less than building new apartment. For example, the cost of construction to transform an old hotel into apartments might cost as little as $30 per sq. ft. “The cost of renovation is clearly less than new construction,” says Mike Muldowney, executive vice president for CBRE, working in the firm’s Baltimore office. “You’ve already got a building out of the ground.”
A developer can also convert a hotel building to apartments relatively quickly—nine months would not be impossible, says Muldowney. In contrast, a deeper rehabilitation could take years.
For example, the Embassy Suites hotel in Baltimore has transformed multiple times. The 37-story building began as an apartment tower with some office space and became the boutique Tremont Plaza Hotel in the early 1980s. After the Great Recession, developers began plans to convert many of the rooms to apartments—but then the building sold again and those plans were aborted as demand for hotel rooms revived.

Office buildings become homes

Well-capitalized apartment developers also have their eye on office properties. Office developments have also been hurt by the pandemic—though it is not yet clear how badly.
These deeper rehabilitations can be much more expensive than hotel rehabs—often similar to the cost of building a new apartment building. “The cost to renovate or convert an empty building to apartment usage is consistently close to the cost to build new,” says Lenamon says.
For example, in downtown Baltimore, at 225 N. Calvert St., an old office building became 258 new apartments. But to do it, developer Monument Realty had to peel the exterior walls from the old office tower, which had been used as a data center with no windows.
Older buildings can also bring more costs, such as the cost to remove toxic materials like asbestos or the price of preserving architectural details like historic stonework or terra cotta ornaments.
“There are few deals of this type working now, and none that were caused by COVID-19,” says Lenamon. “The cost of conversion is not usually feasible financially without some government assistance, such as historic tax credits.”
Even with government subsidies, the existing building should be the right shape. If the floorplate of an office building is much more than 100 feet wide for example, then the apartments are likely to be long and dark, stretching from a central, double-loaded hallway more than fifty feet to the windows in the exterior wall.

Defunct malls become new town centers

Vacant malls also continue to be a target for apartment developers. “Regional malls are perfect candidates for conversion,” says CBRE’s Muldowney.
The pandemic is likely to accelerate the trend, as more malls across the U.S. lose anchor tenants. J.C. Penney, an anchor tenant at many regional malls, is just the latest large retailer threatened with liquidation.
A classic conversion plan might peel to roof off of an old enclosed mall, creating a new, open-air town center, says Muldowney. At either end of the mall, large spaces that had been held by anchor tenants like J.C. Penney department store could be redeveloped into a new apartment building.
For example, AvalonBay Communities opened 332 apartments in 2016 at Avalon Hunt Valley. The apartments were just one piece of the redevelopment of the old enclosed mall at Hunt Valley, Md. The new Hunt Valley Towne Center includes AvalonBay’s apartments, now in one of the spaces occupied by one of the malls old anchor tenants, in addition to shops, restaurants, a Wegman’s grocery story and a Regal Cinemas.
Source: “Apartment Developers Scout Adaptive Reuse Possibilities”

Filed Under: COVID-19

NAR Updates Member 1031 Like-Kind Exchange Survey for 2016 – 2019

September 15, 2020 by CARNM

NAR has updated its survey on how REALTORS® and their clients use 1031 like-kind exchanges, looking ahead to the prospect of another round of debates over tax reform in 2021, along with the need to educate new Members of Congress and staff about the important tax provision. The survey, covering the years 2016 – 2019, provides a crucial snapshot of how important 1031s are to the real estate industry and the economy as a whole. Read the full survey results.

Filed Under: COVID-19

Landlord Statistics from the 2018 Rental Housing Finance Survey

September 15, 2020 by CARNM

Mom and pop landlords manage 77% of 2-4 unit properties

There is a wealth of publicly available information about renters, but there is relatively little data known about landlords who perform the important role of providing housing to the nation’s 48 million renter households. Understanding the profile of landlords is important because any policy pertaining to renters also impacts landlords and their ability to provide rental housing supply. Currently, there is a moratorium on evictions to assist tenants, but this moratorium also impacts the ability of a landlord to meet their own financial obligations and to continue operating viably.
One important source of information pertaining to landlords is the Rental Housing Finance Survey (RHFS) which is collected by the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). This survey collects data on rental loan origination volumes, property characteristics associated with these originations, and operating cost and revenue characteristics for the rental housing stock in the United States. The Rental Housing Finance Survey (RHFS) was first conducted in 2012 (included only multifamily rental properties), then again in 2015 (included single-family and multifamily rental properties), and in 2018 (included single-family residential and multifamily residential properties with at least one housing unit intended for rent). In the 2018 survey, the reference period of the survey was all 12 months of 2017.
Here are some landlord statistics from the 2018 Rental Housing Finance Survey.

48% of rental units are in properties with 1- to 4-units

Of the 48.3 million rental units in 2017, 48% of the units were in properties1 with 1-to 4-units, most of which are owned by individuals and run by the owners.

41% of rental properties are owned by individuals

Individuals are the main types of owners of rental housing, accounting for 41% of the owners of all rental units. However, in properties with 1-unit and 2-to-4- units, individual owners accounted for 72.5% of all owners.
Limited liability corporations, limited partnerships, and limited liability corporations account for more than half of owners in the properties where there are 25 units or more in a property.

42% of rental properties are run day-to-day by the owners

In 42.3% of all rental properties, the day-to-day managers are the owners. This is then an estimate of the share of housing units run by ‘mom and pop’ landlords, which is generally understood as an owner who mainly does the day-to-day management of the business.
Mom and pop landlords are more prevalent in properties with 1-to 4-units. In properties with 1-unit, 71% of those doing the day-to-day management were the owners. In properties with 2- to 4-units, 77% of the those doing the day-to-day management were owners.  Nearly half (48%) of rental housing units are in properties that have 1-to-4 units.

59% of properties have a mortgage or similar debt

More than half of properties have a mortgage or similar debt on them. The share of 1-unit properties with debt is lower, at 39.2%. The more units in a property, the higher is the fraction with a mortgage on them. Of properties with 150 or more units, 80.7% of the units have a mortgage.

16.3% of tenants received Section 8 assistance in 2017

Landlords help provide affordable rental housing. Of all rental units, 16.3% had tenants that received rental assistance in 2017. In properties with at least 5 units, more than 25% of tenants receive Section 8 rental assistance.

Average Annual Operating and Capital Expenses Per Unit: $830 in 2020 dollars

Landlords have operating and capital expenditure costs needed to maintain their buildings to keep them safe and decently livable for their tenants. These costs are passed on to tenants, but when tenants are not able to pay rent, the landlords have to spend for these costs, creating a cash flow problem. In 2017, the average annual operating expenses per unit was $ 5,270. The average annual capital expenditure was $3,856, or a total of $9,126 per unit per year, or $760/month. If that is inflation to 3% inflation cost per year, that is equivalent to $830 in 2020 dollars.
View charts here.
Source: “Landlord Statistics from the 2018 Rental Housing Finance Survey”

Filed Under: COVID-19

Situations Where REALTORS® Feel the Most Unsafe

September 14, 2020 by CARNM

On the heels of two recent incidents—one involving an armed man hiding in a vacant home and the other involving the attempted abduction of an agent—it’s important for real estate professionals to understand the types of situations in which they are most vulnerable and how to protect themselves. As September is REALTOR® Safety Month, the National Association of REALTORS® has released its 2020 Member Safety Report, showing that practitioners feel most vulnerable when meeting with unknown clients at vacant properties. “Being aware of potential dangers and empowering themselves with precautions and preparations will help REALTORS® avoid risky situations on the job—and could mean the difference between life and death,” according to NAR’s report.
This year’s survey revealed the situations where real estate professionals feared the most for their personal safety:

  • During an open house: 31%
  • During a showing: 31%
  • While meeting a new client for the first time at a secluded location/property: 27%
  • After receiving a threatening or inappropriate email, text message, phone call, or voicemail: 27%
  • While meeting a new client for the first time in a public place: 8%
  • While driving in a car with a client: 3%

While open houses were listed as one of the top scenarios where agents feel vulnerable, 51% say they have hosted an open house alone, the survey shows. Thirty-nine percent of pros say they have met a new or prospective client alone at a secluded location or property, and 40% say they’ve shown vacant properties in areas with poor or no cell phone signal.
NAR’s report highlights the core components of safety on the job—knowledge, awareness, and empowerment—and many real estate pros have adopted important safety measures:

  • Participated in a self-defense class: 38%
  • Taken a REALTOR® Safety course: 29%
  • Carry a self-defense weapon: 49%

Nineteen percent of real estate pros carry pepper spray, 14% carry a firearm, and 7% carry a pocket knife. Many also say they use smartphone safety apps enabling them to instantly alert colleagues in case of an emergency. The most common apps used are the Find My iPhone feature, GPS Phone Track for Android, and SentriKey Real Estate App’s agent safety feature.
More REALTORS® this year (72%) say they have not experienced a situation that made them fear for their personal safety or the safety of their personal information than last year (67%). But the data was collected from July 20 to August 10—after the COVID-19 outbreak had mostly curtailed showings during the typically busy spring season.
Source: “Situations Where REALTORS® Feel the Most Unsafe”

Filed Under: All News

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