• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content

CARNM

Commercial Association of REALTORS® - CARNM New Mexico

  • Property Search
    • Search Properties
      • For Sale
      • For Lease
      • For Sale or Lease
      • Start Your Search
    • Location & Type
      • Albuquerque
      • Rio Rancho
      • Las Cruces
      • Santa Fe
      • Industry Types
  • Members
    • New Member
      • About Us
      • Getting Started in Commercial
      • Join CARNM
      • Orientation
    • Resources
      • Find A Broker
      • Code of Ethics
      • Governing Documents
      • NMAR Forms
      • CARNM Forms
      • RPAC
      • Needs & Wants
      • CARNM Directory
      • REALTOR® Benefits
      • Foreign Broker Violation
    • Designations
      • CCIM
      • IREM
      • SIOR
    • Issues/Concerns
      • FAQ
      • Ombuds Process
      • Professional Standards
      • Issues/Concerns
      • Foreign Broker Violation
  • About
    • About
      • About Us
      • Join CARNM
      • Sponsors
      • Contact Us
    • People
      • 2026 Board Members
      • Past Presidents
      • REALTORS® of the Year
      • President’s Award Recipients
      • Founder’s Award Recipients
    • Issues/Concerns
      • FAQ
      • Ombuds Process
      • Professional Standards
      • Issues/Concerns
      • Foreign Broker Violation
  • Education
    • Courses
      • Register
      • All Education
    • Resources
      • NMREC Licensing
      • Code of Ethics
      • NAR Educational Opportunities
      • CCIM Education
      • IREM Education
      • SIOR Educuation
  • News & Events
    • News
      • All News
      • Market Trends
    • Events
      • All Events Calendar
      • Education
      • CCIM Events
      • LIN Marketing Meeting
      • Thank Yous
  • CARNM Login
  • Show Search
Hide Search

Archives for September 2020

Building a Broader Network of Investors

September 8, 2020 by CARNM

It is now possible to quantify and qualify a target audience more finely than ever before.
One of the first things you will learn in an Introduction to Marketing Class is the importance of defining your target audience. If you don’t know much about the people you are trying to sell to, naturally, it will be difficult to know which selling strategies will likely be most effective. This is something that is true in seemingly every industry, from real estate syndication to selling bananas to everything in between.
In this context, “knowing” someone likely means putting them in the smallest basket possible. Knowing their basic demographics—age, income, location, race, gender, etc.—will help you begin crafting an effective marketing strategy. With the rise of social media and other data-gathering technologies, knowing other things—such as their favorite musicians, their political views, their interests, their hobbies, etc.—is also now within reach of most digital-savvy marketers. Essentially, it is now possible to quantify and qualify a target audience more finely than ever before.

The importance of clearly identifying a target audience has not gone away. A company that put television advertisements on every channel, for example, would be allocating their finite resources in an incredibly inefficient way. However, one of the risks of creating a very narrow target market—particularly within the syndication and other crowdfunding spaces—is that you might be leaving some very valuable people outside of the conversation. No matter what your market research, surveys, and other studies might tell you, you should never discount the potential value of conducting a broad campaign.

Reaching out, reaching in

The passage of the JOBS (Jumpstart Our Business Startups) Act, which was first signed into law in 2012, enabled businesses of all kinds to begin raising funds through the public—the “crowd” —without needing to do an IPO. The introduction of crowdfunding, both in the commercial real estate industry and elsewhere, was revolutionary not only in the sense that it helped “democratize” capital investment, but it also helped enable project organizers (the sponsors) to access otherwise unreachable new investors. In other words, the Act was mutually beneficial for all parties involved.
Before the passage of the act, syndicate sponsors that needed to raise funds likely had a very specific image of who their target audience (which could very easily be an audience of one) might be. If targeting an individual, the individual was likely very wealthy, familiar with real estate investment, and had a highly diversified financial portfolio. These would be the people that a sponsor would target and, in general, these investors would be rather reliable. However, because the market was yet to be “democratized,” the pool of available investors was extremely limited.
Following the introduction of real estate crowdfunding, this traditional definition of a “target investor” proved itself to be less and less useful over time. Real estate investors didn’t need to be members of a specific club or within a narrow social circle of friends or business acquaintances—investors could be anybody in the country who was looking to invest their savings and who maybe had never had the opportunity to invest in real estate before.
Suddenly, rather than reaching inwards to a very small group of people, those who were looking to raise funds for a project were finding themselves needing to reach outwards and consider the public as a whole. Social media, which was essentially an afterthought for real estate sponsors, suddenly became one of the most effective tools available for broadening a network and increasing access to available investors.
On social media, a sponsor might not necessarily think “I am making this post to appeal to a property-minded physicians in New England hoping to get a 10 percent annualized return on their investment,” rather, their appeal might be to anyone who might have even a remote interest in real estate. The public’s range of knowledge regarding real estate syndication varies vastly (with the average person probably having very little familiarity), meaning that introducing content for both beginners and experts will better position a sponsor to achieve their fundraising goals. No longer is the investment space dominated entirely by well informed, knowledgeable investors; everyone has the possibility of becoming an investor, meaning no level of content should be considered a waste.
As social media, such as LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook and YouTube, as well as other platforms, become more and more sophisticated, the number of possible inroads that convert a prospective investor will continue to expand. People use social media to be suggested to, to learn new things, to connect with other people, to solve their problems, and to feel good about themselves. Each of these desires, when properly utilized, can convince someone that investing in a given project will be worthwhile. At the beginning of the day, a given individual might be a total stranger. At the end of the day, this very same person might be the one that causes a project to become feasible.
Source: “Building a Broader Network of Investors”

Filed Under: All News

Net Lease Grabs More Volume

September 8, 2020 by CARNM

Investors flock to long-term leases and creditworthy tenants during the economic downturn.

While net-lease investment fell significantly in the second quarter, the sector also took its largest share ever of commercial real estate volume, according to the latest research from CBRE.
The net lease sector, which includes office, industrial and retail properties, posted 20.2% of total commercial real estate volume in Q2. In Q1, it secured 13.3% of total CRE volume, which is the sector’s highest percentage on record.
CBRE attributed the sector’s strength to “investors’ attraction to the long-term leases and creditworthy tenants considered safe attributes during an economic downturn.”
The second quarter wasn’t the only time that investors have flocked to net lease in periods of economic turbulence. In 2007, net lease took 6.9% of total commercial real estate volume. In 2009, that share increased to 14.9%.
“Similar to the GFC [Great Financial Crisis] trend we experienced over a decade ago, net lease investment continues to attract demand during this downturn as investors are seeking long-term dependable cash flows,” said Will Pike, vice chairman of Net Lease Properties for Capital Markets at CBRE in recent commentary. “We are seeing an uptick in capital requests for long-term net-lease assets and sale-leaseback financing opportunities.”
As the economic situation improved, other sectors gained a higher percentage of CRE volume. Since 2012, net-lease properties’ share of total commercial real estate investment volume has been in the 11% to 13% range.
While net lease gained a more significant share of CRE investment, overall volume still declined, dropping 61.8% year-over-year to $8.1 billion in Q2 2020 as the COVID-19 economic downturn stalled commercial real estate transactions. Still, the decline for total U.S. commercial real estate over the same period was more profound at 69.9%.
The average net-lease cap rate remained at 6.3% in Q1. CBRE attributed this to sellers’ and buyers’ pricing being too far apart. “COVID-19 led to a wider bid-ask gap, which stalled price discovery and slowed investment activity,” CBRE said in the report.
Overall, Chicago, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, the Inland Empire, Calif., and Dallas/Ft. Worth posted the most net-lease volume in the second quarter. CBRE noted that investors showed increasing interest in secondary and tertiary markets. Memphis (96%), Austin (68.5%), San Antonio (62.3%), Philadelphia (51%) and Cincinnati (50.5%) posted some of the largest quarterly gains.
With the increasing volume in e-commerce, the industrial sector has outpaced other CRE sectors during the COVID-19 pandemic. That’s why it shouldn’t be a big surprise that industrial’s share of total net-lease investment increased to 48% in Q2 2020.
Retail’s share of net lease volume fell from 28.7% to 25.4% YOY. CBRE noted that investors remained attracted to retailers that provide essential services, such as pharmacies and grocery stores. As many offices sat empty in the quarter, net lease office fell to 26.6% from 37.2% YOY.
Source: “Net Lease Grabs More Volume”

Filed Under: All News

Open-Ended: Office Space and Remote Working in the Age of COVID-19

September 2, 2020 by CARNM

With the worldwide spread of COVID-19, the property management industry has been thrust into the conversation about office layout best practices. This is a perfect opportunity to review how property owners and managers can use space planning to help tenants achieve their work goals and keep workers safe, and how changes in remote work policies can be best incorporated moving forward.
Workplaces around the world have been moving away from traditional cubicle design toward open plans and co-working-inspired designs. Among the reasons for this shift are technical progress and a growing need for more collaborative working environments. Another key driver appears to be the reduced cost of space per worker in open and co-working spaces. International studies have shown that direct real estate costs are second only to salaries and wages in the corporate operating budget, making office use an expensive undertaking.
Opponents of conventional office designs argue that these workspaces restrict users’ creativity due to limited opportunities for interaction, while supporters of flexible and open office designs argue that they boost creativity. Still, over thirty years of research has documented the negative impacts of open office layouts on users’ experience of their office space.

What the research says

Longitudinal studies have shown significant deterioration in workspace satisfaction with the rise of open offices. The studies find that open-plan layouts increase distraction and eliminate privacy.
In a 2018 report titled “The impact of the ‘open’ workspace on human collaboration,” Ethan S. Bernstein and Stephen Turban investigate the pattern of human interaction when workers transition to open-plan spaces. This is what they report:
“Contrary to common belief, the volume of face-to-face interaction [in open office spaces] decreased significantly (approx. 70%) in both cases, with an associated increase in electronic interaction. In short, rather than prompting increasingly vibrant face-to-face collaboration, open architecture appeared to trigger a natural human response to socially withdraw from officemates and interact instead over email and IM.”
Remote working can lead to weakening connective capital. This concept, developed by Casey Ichniowski and Kathryn Shaw of Columbia and Stanford Universities, respectively, refers to the phenomenon by which a worker’s ability to solve a problem depends not only on their own skills but also on the skills and competencies of the team to which they belong. This is because “spillovers of knowledge among co-workers serve as a way to multiply the expertise of skilled workers.”

The rise of remote working

Remote working had been on the rise thanks to developments in mobile computing. This was before the coronavirus struck, spreading so rapidly that companies shuttered and “social distancing” became a requirement. The sometimes frowned-upon notion of remote working has become normal and accepted.
The conditions for remote work vary based on country. In countries like Sweden, mobile computing is allowed under strict conditions—the employer is required to ensure the employee’s home workspace passes health and safety checks and the employee has the right equipment to work from home.
Spain tried to buck the trend toward greater remote working when they put in place in May 2019 a requirement for employers to record the length of employees’ working hours. Some employers responded with a “face time” requirement by asking workers to physically check in and out of work using biometric systems. With COVID-19, Spain moved to facilitate remote working.
In places such as South Africa, a move toward increased remote working is likely to be a challenge. In addition to cybersecurity, unstable energy supply remains an ongoing problem. Paternalistic work cultures, like the one that persists in Spain, will also conflict with remote working. In countries around the world, laws will need revision, and management culture will have to undergo drastic change.
Remote working, by its nature, reduces chances for accidental meetings that lead to strong bonds and the discovery of the skills and talents of the people we work with. Dealing with this requires the installation of strong technological infrastructure that facilitates information sharing and remote teamwork. This infrastructure must be highly protected from cyber-intrusion as well. The role of property managers in the maintenance and security of IT installations will only grow as a result.

An unclear future, a certain responsibility

It is unclear where workspaces are going once the pandemic dies down. Will we revert to cubicles or highly-partitioned spaces with greater space per worker because of the health benefits of distancing? Occupant demands may hold the clues. For example, a recent survey conducted by Bospar shows that 52.9% of Americans believe open offices will lead to an increase in coronavirus infections. What other opinions do workers have about their spaces in this new normal?
What is clear is that property managers and their employers must strengthen health and safety protections. Property managers will need to maintain the sanitation stations that were hastily installed at the onset of the pandemic and continue tenant education programs. Flu season immunization programs and other health and wellness efforts will now be a value-add service that property managers can offer in their buildings.
Building systems may also need rethinking. For example, touch-based biometric systems were among the first to be disabled at the University of the Witwatersrand, where we work, to limit the risk of infections while entering the university.
We also need to be mindful that long periods of isolation may have left some psychological damage among our tenants’ employees. Employers must stand ready to provide psychosocial support, and property managers may need to allocate space for that as part of their management service.
These issues are all at the forefront as we reconsider open-plan spaces, co-working arrangements and remote working. The future of the office is happening now, and property managers’ roles are evolving with it. We must watch these developments carefully to provide the best solutions for our tenants.
Source: “Open-Ended: Office Space and Remote Working in the Age of COVID-19“

Filed Under: COVID-19

August 2020 Commercial Market Trends

September 2, 2020 by mcarristo

View a New Mexico Market Trends Summary Report, which includes August 2020 Commercial Market Trends. This report includes the total number of listings, asking lease rates, asking sales prices, days on the market and total square feet available.

Disclaimer: All statistics have been gathered from user-loaded listings and user-reported transactions. We have not verified accuracy and make no guarantees. By using the information, the user acknowledges that the data may contain errors or other nonconformities. Brokers should diligently and independently verify the specifics of the information you are using.

Filed Under: Market Trends

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Go to Next Page »
  • Search Property
  • Join CARNM
  • CARNM Login
  • NMAR Forms
  • All News
  • All Events
  • Education
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • FAQ
  • Issues/Concerns
6739 Academy Road NE, Ste 310
Albuquerque, NM 87109
admin@carnm.realtor(505) 503-7807

© 2026, Content: © 2021 Commercial Association of REALTORS® New Mexico. All rights reserved. Website by CARRISTO