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Archives for February 2021

Land Poised to Become a More Popular Investment

February 12, 2021 by CARNM

A migration from cities could push growth in the land market.

In a Gallup survey conducted at the end of 2020, 48% of Americans said they would choose to live in a town (17%) or rural area (31%) rather than a city or suburb if able to live anywhere they wished. In 2018, 39% thought a town or rural area would be ideal.
People are also less interested in living in a suburb, with that percentage dropping down six percentage points to 25%.
If people really do want to leave cities and suburbs and they have a work situation that allows them to move, land prices could rise in exurbs and rural areas.
“I think the [land] market will grow at a much more rapid pace,” says Omar Eltorai, market analyst at Reonomy.
Land has traditionally been viewed as an alternative investment. While Eltorai doesn’t think the land market will necessarily go mainstream, he does believe it will get more attention. If institutions move into the space, it could speed up changes.
“The movement of institutions into this space are likely to speed up consolidation that’s already been underway,” Eltorai says. “The number of farm owners really has been declining, but that’s not a news story. It has been happening for decades.”
What hasn’t been happening for decades are advances in agricultural technology that will help increase yield. A lot of this technology centers around identifying the best soil for growing crops.
“It’s almost like portfolio optimization,” Eltorai says. “They’re doing a lot of optimization, whether it’s crop rotations or harvest schedules.”
The advances in agricultural technology and more institutions getting involved in land could mean less land is needed to produce food and more consolidation occurs in the land market.
“If institutional money managers want to get involved here, that rate of consolidation could accelerate even further,” Eltorai says.
Environmental concerns could make land even more attractive and provide investors with new ways to monetize the asset.
“There is a new potential income stream, and that potential income stream will ultimately be increasing the value of land and anything that’s essentially grown on it,” Eltorai says.
Eltorai expects to see the carbon markets grow as ESG factors increasingly come into focus. As this happens, businesses will more fully consider their environmental impact, either on their own or because they’re forced to by consumer demand or regulatory requirements.
“The growth of these carbon markets create new potential sources of income for productive land, such as cropland and forest, which plays a key role in capturing and storing carbon,” Eltorai says. “While this new potential income stream will likely not be enough to replace the primary use of the land, it will serve as yield enhancement for these properties.”
Regardless of what motivates the big money to get into the land market, Eltorai thinks its arrival is almost inevitable.
“Some of the big asset managers have been making rather vocal directional calls about what the new green economy would look like,” he says. “So, I think that the new market will form because more of the big money is going to be focused on it, requesting it and requiring it.”
Source: “Land Poised to Become a More Popular Investment“

Filed Under: All News

Remote Workforce Leaves New Mexico With More Vacant Office Space

February 10, 2021 by CARNM


ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (KRQE) – Since the pandemic hit New Mexico, many industries sent their employees home to work. A lot of those work-from-home setups will likely stick around for the foreseeable future. The changing workforce is impacting industries in New Mexico, and in turn, part of the state’s commercial real estate market.
“I’m getting very good at Zoom,” Anne Apicella laughed, during a zoom interview. By now, Apicella has mastered ‘working-from-home.’ The longtime real-estate broker for Colliers International has worked from her home office in Rio Rancho since before the pandemic. “For many years we’ve heard that working-from-home was a viable option when in fact, the technology didn’t really support it,” said Apicella. “Today, that’s very different.”
Today, home office set-ups like hers are common. So many industries, including KRQE News 13, sent at least part of their staff home to work remotely, to minimize in-person contact during the COVID-19 pandemic.
“Generally, 99.99% we are remote,” explained Demian Rubalcaba, Executive Director for Thrive Counseling Services in Albuquerque. His business and telehealth overall have picked up during the pandemic, with more people seeking counseling. “Sometimes home is safe, and sometimes home is not safe,” said Rubalcaba. “But when it is safe, they’re more comfortable. You know, who’s not comfortable in their pajamas?”
In March 2020, when COVID-19 hit the state, New Mexicans faced stay-at-home orders, an ebb and flow of businesses shutting their doors and reopening. Now the state is coming up on a year in the pandemic, and many employers have another consideration; do they still have a need for office space?
“We definitely let some of our real estate overhead, we just kinda let it go,” said Rubalcaba. He said for now, telehealth is here to stay.
His therapists all work from home on their own set schedules, so he decided against renewing the lease for their Rio Rancho location. It’s a trend Apicella expects to see more often.
“Once the leases are up, or lease terms have expired, I think we’re gonna see a lot more vacancy, unfortunately,” said Apicella. Insurance companies and attorneys’ offices are among industries that can work remotely. Thrive Counseling Services decided not to renew lease for its Rio Rancho location
“I’m a mom, I have a preteen and a teenager, and I’m running a law firm with multiple employees, and I’ve got multiple co-counsel across the country,” explained Deena Buchanan, President of the Buchanan Law Firm. “So we had to pivot very quickly and become a virtual law firm.”
With kids doing school at home, and no more work commute, Buchanan acknowledges the perks of her home-office. “I’ve been here to see them at lunchtime and on breaks. It’s a level of contact that I have with my kids during the school day that I’ve never had before, so that has been nice,” she said. “And then I’m also here for dinner.”
Even with the comforts of home a few feet away, like so many employers, Buchanan explained she also sees a need for staff team-building to return, and face-to-face relationships with employees and clients to return. Plus, the pandemic has highlighted broadband inequities. “I represent a lot of people who don’t have access to the same kind of technology that I do.”
“I think we’re seeing a lot of considering and reconsidering,” explained Scott Whitefield, President of Colliers International in Albuquerque. He’s been in real estate for 25 years and expects a drop in the commercial market.
“There are tenants out there that realize they don’t need an office, but I think there are a lot more in the way of tenants that just realize that their office has to change,” said Whitefield. “And what that looks like moving forward, again is one of those things that’s sort of an unanswered question.”
Seeing empty storefronts is nothing new for Terry Cosper, who works in a northwest Albuquerque strip mall as an independent contractor for Farmer’s Branch Insurance. While Cosper’s industry has adapted to doing more business remotely, he said his customers have too, which is another factor that could prompt companies to downsize their need for more office space in the future.
“We’re obviously seeing less traffic, floor traffic,” said Cosper. “We used to see quite a bit more with people making payments and making appointments, and now a lot of it’s done over the phone or online.”
Now as the COVID-19 vaccine makes its way through the state, a lot of workers will start settling back into their offices. However, not everyone will return to a traditional office setting. “I think at this point we’re looking at sort of moving into a hybrid situation over the next several months,” said Buchanan. Even if her firm expands down the line, she said it won’t necessarily mean she’ll need to rent more office space in town, with a mixture of staff continuing work remotely. “A lot of businesses will downsize because so many of their employees can work from home,” said Apicella. “They don’t need that overhead.”
“The short-term seems a little bleak right now, but I honestly know that is the short term,” said Whitefield. “And the long haul, we’ll come out of this thing just fine.”
According to Colliers, the Albuquerque metro area historically has about a 15% vacancy rate for office space. Whitefield said that could jump to close to 18-20% over the next couple of years, which could also decrease some asking rates.
Source: “Remote Workforce Leaves New Mexico With More Vacant Office Space“

Filed Under: COVID-19

Commercial and Multifamily Lending Markets Set Up for Growth in 2021

February 10, 2021 by CARNM

New reports from MBA predict lending and mortgage maturities to increase this year.

Commercial and multifamily lending markets are poised for strong growth in 2021. According to a new report from the Mortgage Bankers Association, mortgage maturity volumes are likely to increase 36% this year, while commercial and multifamily lending are forecasted to increase 11%.
Commercial and multifamily mortgage bankers are predicted to close $486 billion this year—an increase from the $440 billion in loan volumes closed in 2020—with multifamily lending driving the growth. The sector alone is set to increase 7% this year, up $323 billion in 2021. By comparison, multifamily lending activity totaled $302 billion in 2020.
This is likely the beginning of recovery for the lending markets after a paltry performance in 2020 due to the pandemic. “The steep declines in mortgage borrowing and lending seen in 2020 should partially reverse in 2021. The economic rebound MBA anticipates in the second half of the year should bring greater stability to the markets, but with continued differentiation by property type,” Jamie Woodwell, MBA’s VP for commercial real estate research, said in the firm’s forecast report.
Maturities will also increase this year. This year, 10% or $223 billion of the total $2.3 trillion of commercial mortgage debt is scheduled to mature this year. This is a 36% increase in loan maturities compared to 2020, when maturities totaled $163.2 billion.
There is no clear trend in which capital segments will see the bulk of these maturities. Multifamily and health care mortgages held by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHA and Ginnie Mae represent 1% of the total maturities; life insurance companies hold a total of 6% of maturities or $39.8 billion; and 16% of CMBS loans are coming due. “Commercial and multifamily mortgage maturities among non-banks lenders are the highest since at least 2009,” said Woodwell. “Many life company, GSE and FHA loans that would have been coming due this year were instead refinanced or prepaid early. Those declines have been more than made up for by shorter-term loans with 2021 maturity dates made by CMBS and investor-driven lenders.”
This is a bright outlook considering the low bar the market set last year. In December, CMBS delinquencies were still on the rise, according to an end-of-the-year report from MBA, with 5.7% of commercial mortgages delinquent in November, increasing from 5.4% in October.
Source: “Commercial and Multifamily Lending Markets Set Up for Growth in 2021“

Filed Under: All News

Office Pipeline Still Alive Despite COVID-19

February 10, 2021 by CARNM

Charlotte, Austin lead the way for new deliveries

Despite unknowns stemming from work-from-home trends, a slowdown in new leasing, declining job growth and an uptick in real interest rates, the pipeline for the office asset class remains viable, according to a new report from CommercialEdge.
Nationally, approximately 153.8 million square feet of Class A+ or Class A product is under construction, and another 10.3 million square feet of Class B is underway. There are no Class C projects in the works.
CBDs have a total of 34.4 million square feet under construction, with urban areas totaling 79.6 million square feet and suburban office product construction clocking in at 50.4 million square feet.
Charlotte and Austin are leading the pack for new office stock, with Charlotte showing the highest level of square feet under construction as a percentage of stock (11.5%) and Austin not far behind at 10.8%. Together, the two cities account for nearly 10% of all new office square footage under construction. Both markets have experienced explosive growth over the past few years, particularly thanks to domestic in-migration and a growing number of relocations by financial firms from urban centers like New York City.
Last year saw the delivery of 67.6 million square feet of new office, even as stay-at-home orders halted development during the second quarter. Those new projects were almost exactly split between suburban (32.2 million square feet) and CBD/urban submarkets (35.4 million square feet).
These numbers are in stark contrast to recent dire projections about the future of the sector, most recently from Green Street, which predicts office demand will decline by up to 15% post-pandemic.  In a recent report, the firm forecasts that the average daily occupancy of office may fall as much as 20%, especially if “hot desking” and shared arrangements continue to accelerate in popularity. Green Street also predicts that a rise in real interest rates will dampen value in the sector, since longer lease terms function as a relatively ineffective hedge against inflation. And if supply grows faster than expected, rent growth will also decline.
Source: “Office Pipeline Still Alive Despite COVID-19“

Filed Under: COVID-19

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