• 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 November 2020

What Family Offices, HNWIs Think of Retail Assets in the Current Market

November 11, 2020 by CARNM

Risk tolerance is a key differentiator determining who is willing to buy in the sector.
The U.S. retail sector has taken a beating due to lockdowns and social distancing and the continued acceleration of e-commerce sales during the COVID-19 pandemic. Much of the retail sector was already grappling pre-COVID-19, and investment sales have dropped significantly.
In spite of overall caution in the investment sales market, some family offices and high-net-worth investors (HNWIs) have been looking at this as a time of opportunity. So are they pursuing any retail investments with all of the added challenges during the pandemic? Are these wealthy investors looking for potential distressed deals, or are they sitting on the sidelines?
“It really depends on the family office,” says Michael Straneva, global transaction real estate sector leader for professional services firm EY. “Everybody has a different strategy. I don’t see a rush of people out there, but there are family offices that are taking a look at opportunities now in locations or product types that they think maybe this is a good time.”
For example, Straneva has seen select high-net-worth individuals and family offices eyeing high street retail. These may be multi-generational families, for example, he notes.
“We have seen some people look at opportunities in those [high street] areas, even though in some cases, we’ve seen rents dropping,” Straneva says. “But if some of those irreplaceable locations are up for sale, we’ve seen high-net-worth individuals looking.”

Part of it, he says, is simply availability. The idea of being able to buy a property on Los Angeles’ Rodeo Drive or Chicago’s Miracle Mile is attractive to select investors, he notes. In those cases, it would be smaller blocks that the family offices or HNWIs would look to control, according to Straneva.
“I’m not saying this is a rush and everybody is doing it, but I have seen some of that [interest] in those areas,” he notes. “They really see a value of owning these places that, frankly, only so many people can have those sorts of locations.”
On the other side of the spectrum Straneva also notes that there’s some interest in “coupon-clipping, very high-quality retail” for family offices, perhaps in 1031 exchange situations. “We’ll see whether that 1031 goes away or not under the new administration,” he notes. “But you do see people thinking about essential, single-tenant retail and how does that fit in their portfolio, given what’s out there.”
The assets that are getting interest in this category could be quick-serve restaurants or other property types with high-credit tenants.

Other perspectives

“With a few exceptions among the families that I deal with, no one is really looking at retail right now for a lot of the obvious reasons,” notes Scott Kapp, partner at global law firm DLA Piper. Kapp works in the firm’s real estate practice where he represents family offices, entrepreneurial clients and a diversified group of private companies, including private equity and venture-backed companies.
“There are a couple families I work with that are contrarian as they have had operating businesses,” Kapp adds. For example, it could be a family that founded and built up a grocery store chain, so they understand the grocery and retail business, or a family that has an operating business with a heavy retail component.
Kapp notes that the type of retail being pursued depends on where the family made its money. Families typically invest in the same areas where they have experience.
“I represent a family that made their money in pet food,” he notes. “They understand pet food sales and pet food retail, so that doesn’t fit into the grocery-anchored or Walgreens- or CVS-anchored centers, but it happens to be an industry that they understand. They can understand how the Petcos of the world might operate.”

Even those families, however, are looking ahead to what could happen over the next six to 12 months.
“Many tenants stopped paying rent,” Kapp says. “Maybe if you’re in a grocery-anchored center, the grocer is still paying rent, but the mom-and-pop shops are failing. They see retail as something that will continue, but there’s going to be a lot of restructuring. Their money is being parked on the sidelines to see what happens. Then they’re going to pick off some opportunities as they arise.”
One retail subsector that wealthy families have been attracted to during the pandemic is retail centers located around national, big-box retailers like Target or Costco, Kapp says. Even though these big, national retailers typically own their own real estate (and the families would not own the Target or Costco locations), they drive traffic and demand to the larger center, he notes.

Looking more at direct investing

One trend that Kapp has seen when working with families over the last decade is they have moved toward direct investing, and that trend continues.
According to a recent study released by data and research firm Fintrx, more than half of the approximately 3,500 to 5,000 family offices globally invest directly today.
“When family offices look at how they’re going to deploy some of their capital and where they can have more impactful investments, they’re looking to invest directly in companies that might be experiencing distress, but are otherwise good companies to invest in, own and operate,” Kapp notes.
“I have seen more of that,” he says. “It’s everything from manufacturing and healthcare to food and beverage and technology.”
When it comes to commercial real estate, rather than putting money into a Blackstone or an Apollo or some other large institutional fund, many wealthy families are making investments themselves, according to Kapp. Or sometimes they will create a fund or an investment vehicle that they form with other families that have the relevant industry knowledge.

Research finds increasing appetite for real estate

Meanwhile, a May survey by investment bank UBS found that 45 percent of family offices were planning to increase their real estate allocations. That finding aligns with the research NREI has conducted on the topic.
“The appetite for real estate investing is absolutely there,” says Jonathan Tunner, director of private investment opportunities at Family Office Exchange LLC (FOX), a peer-to-peer network for ultra-wealthy families and their family offices.
When it comes to retail, Tunner says there are two mindsets: One, is the investor who’s concerned about the future when it comes to the duration of factors like reduced occupancy, rent roll, and ultimately, NOI.
“If you’re getting into a retail property that’s underperforming, you have to look at how long are you willing to own the asset while it’s underperforming? Is it a 12-, 18- or 24-month window of decreased financial performance?” Tunner says. And then you make the decision on whether or not to invest in that asset with the uncertainty around ultimate duration and level of financial underperformance.
The other mindset is for buyers with meaningful dry powder who can buy cheap and hold onto the investment while it’s still financially underperforming, Tunner notes. These buyers see bargains within distressed retail assets.
“That mindset begins to shift into looking at the asset price dislocation or the discount vs. from what the price would have been a year ago, for example.”
“If you’re getting into a piece of property that’s trading at, for example, 25 percent less from where it was—and if you have the capital and the reserves of dry powder—you’re saying, ‘Yeah. I’m happy to weather 12, 18, 24 months of lower NOI coming out of a property in exchange for this deeper discount.”
Tunner says many family offices and high-net-worth investors still see the value in bricks-and-mortar retail despite the acceleration of online retail sales, because not everyone wants to shop via Amazon or Walmart.com. People still like the experience of going to the store and buying products in person, he notes.
“In retail, a lot of people have come to the conclusion that yes, it might be a little bit scary right now, and there may be some long-term impacts with COVID still to come, but I think people still want to get out. They want to go to local restaurants, local shops… and buy stuff.”
Family offices are also long-term investors, Tunner points out.
“The big takeaway is that families tend to think much more long term,” he notes. “I think families that are in the retail space say, ‘You know, we see that it will turn back around.’ We will probably see some twists and turns that we weren’t expecting, but long term, they see it as a valuable part of the overall real estate ecosystem.”
Source: “What Family Offices, HNWIs Think of Retail Assets in the Current Market”

Filed Under: All News

We’re On Track to be a Renter Nation Again

November 11, 2020 by CARNM

RENTCafe.com projects that an estimated 45 million Gen Z-ers will have entered the housing market by 2025 and they will be more likely to rent.

When the Great Recession sent scores of Americans out of their homes and Millennials began to move out on their own, renting took off in the early 2010s.
By the mid-2010s, 111 million people were renting in the US, according to RENTCafe.com.
Then, for the first time since 2004, the number of renters declined in 2016, ticking down 0.1%, according to RENTCafe.com. Since then, the renter population has been on a downward trend, decreasing by 1% in 2019.
That year the number of renters fell to 107 million, as many millennials began to purchase homes. Homeownership increased to almost 213 million at the close of the decade, according to US Census data.
Now, new demographic trends point to another reversal.
RENTCafe.com projects that an estimated 45 million Gen Z-ers will have entered the housing market by 2025. Most of those young adults will be more likely to rent. “And, if the current behavior patterns of young Millennials and adult Gen Z-ers continue, the renting lifestyle is poised to regain some ground in the next decade and maintain a solid footing in urban areas,” according to RENTCafe.com.
One factor that could make it even more difficult for young adults to become homeowners is dramatic increases in home prices during COVID.
The last time that S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller’s National Composite Index matched August’s 5.7% growth rate was 25 months ago, in July 2018. If it grows at similar rates in the following months, S&P Dow Jones Indices is ready to conclude that the COVID-related deceleration is behind us.
“A trend of accelerating increases in the National Composite Index began in August 2019 but was interrupted in May and June, as COVID-related restrictions produced modestly-decelerating price gains,” Craig J. Lazzara, Managing Director and Global Head of Index Investment Strategy at S&P Dow Jones Indices said in a prepared statement.
Overall, renters still make up 33.6% of the US population, increasing from 33% in 2010. At the beginning of the decade, homeowners made up 67% of the population. Now, they represent 66.4% of all Americans.
Certain cities, though, have been outliers in recent years. For instance 23 markets with more than 100,000 residents gained a renter-majority last decade, even though the numbering of renters was declining overall, according to RENTCafe.com. Texas has four of RENTCafe.com’s 10 cities with the highest renter share. Those include Frisco, Plano and McKinney and The Woodlands.
Owners were the majority in only 12 of the cities analyzed by RENTCafe.com in the same timeframe. Notably, Baltimore, Chicago and Sacramento, Calif., have transitioned to an owner majority since 2010.
Source: “We’re On Track to be a Renter Nation Again”

Filed Under: All News

Grocers Could Face Tough Years Ahead

November 10, 2020 by CARNM

Once things return to normal, grocers pandemic-related momentum could be lost unless they retool for the strategic challenges ahead.

As people avoided in-restaurant dining during COVID-19 and stayed at home, grocery stores have been the beneficiaries.
Once things return to normal, this momentum could be lost unless they retool for the strategic challenges ahead, according to a report from Bain & Co. In fact, the sector could be facing several challenges in the year.
“The dilutive shift to online grocery has accelerated, and omnichannel leaders are locking in shoppers to subscription services,” according to the Bain report. “Discounters continue to build stores, lowering prices and squeezing margins. Consumers still want more convenience, more value, more environmental and social impact. Restaurants—such an easy alternative to eating in before Covid-19—will regain traction at some point.”
Bain projects that online grocery penetration in the US could rise from 5.1% at the end of 2019 to 11% in 2025 and 15% in a 2030 base case.
Without concerted strategic action, Bain modeling suggests grocery profits will only increase  1.2%—from just over $34 billion to $39 billion–between 2019 and 2030, in the absence of concerted strategic action.
The problems could start next year. If there is a vaccine, Bain thinks diners could rush back to restaurants and annual revenues could fall by 4% to 7%. If the pandemic lingers and restaurants struggle, US grocery revenues could rise 2% to 5% in 2021. In Bain’s base-case scenario for 2021, restaurants begin to recover and grocery sector revenues stay flat or decline slightly. In comparison, grocers posted 2.6% annual sales growth between 2014 and 2019.
Bain thinks grocers could mount a “value-led counterattack” by doing things like stressing the cost of their ready-to-eat rotisserie chicken and roasted potatoes versus going out to eat or ordering in.
Despite their success during the pandemic, some landlords avoid grocery-anchored retail.
Brian Capstick, EVP of Operations for Baceline Investments, which has 75% of its portfolio in non-anchored shopping centers across America’s heartland, has seen non-anchored shopping centers perform better, given the price, in his portfolio.
Baceline runs 80 of these shopping centers with 850 tenants, including national chains and mom-and-pop stores, such as beauty salons, pet stores, optometrists, liquor stores, restaurants and wireless stores.
Capstick says there is a high risk if the grocery store leaves. “No one likes going to the shopping center with the empty grocery store,” Capstick says. “No one wants to be in a tenant lineup with a big empty grocery store. Then all your tenants leave after the grocery store closes. So that’s one of the reasons why I like the unanchored centers.”
Source: “Grocers Could Face Tough Years Ahead”

Filed Under: COVID-19

November 2020 CCIM Deal Making Session Properties

November 10, 2020 by CARNM

Thanks to all of the brokers, sponsors, and guests who attended the November 2020 CCIM NM Deal Making Session & Forum, and to those who shared their properties.
Click here to view source PDF.
Click here to view the Thank Yous.

Name Property, City Type Price
1. Todd Strickland
Dave Hill, CCIM
2301 Candelaria Rd NE
Albuquerque
Industrial $1,200,000
2. Shelly Branscom, CCIM
Larry Harvey
2116 Vista Oeste NW
Albuquerque
Office $615,000
3. Ed Anlian, CCIM
David Kleinfeld
7301-7309 Indian School Rd NE
Albuquerque
Office $2,100,000
4. Ed Anlian, CCIM 5203 Juan Tabo Blvd NE
Albuquerque
Office $129,000
5. Martha Carpenter
Lisa Mercer
4325 Carlisle Blvd NE
Albuquerque
Office $460,000
6. Steve Kraemer, CCIM 1109 Rhode Island St NE
Albuquerque
Office $441,750

Filed Under: All News

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 7
  • Page 8
  • Page 9
  • Page 10
  • Page 11
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 14
  • 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