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Archives for February 2021

Global CRE Investment Has Rebounded Dramatically

February 3, 2021 by CARNM

Although capital began to return to the market in the fourth quarter, global investment was down 26% for the year.

Global investment in commercial real estate rebounded at the close of 2020, up 84% from the previous quarter and totaling $290 billion, according to new research from CBRE. The activity was a good sign for recovery of the industry and returning demand; however, it wasn’t enough to offset the market dislocation for the year. Global capital was down 26% at the close of 2020.
South Korea, Japan and Germany helped to drive global investment activity. Notably, these countries have also been commended for their ability to handle the coronavirus pandemic with little economic impact. Outbound investment from these countries was on par with 2019 activity. Interestingly, capital flooded into harder hit countries, including the US and the UK, which had strong inbound investment volume at the close of the year. Germany was also on the list for strong investment activity. The announcement of a vaccine also helped to revive investment demand at the end of the year.
Investment activity in the Americas was particularly robust. Global investment in the US increase 97% in the fourth quarter with a total of $135 billion in transactions. While this was a 21% decrease year-over-year from 4Q19, it showed a significant rebound in the US commercial market. The activity accounted for nearly half—47%—of total global investment in the fourth quarter. However, US global investment volumes fell below international trends, down 34% for the year, a notable percentage compared to the 26% drop globally.
Multifamily, with investment volume down only 1% for the year, followed by industrial with investment volumes down only 4% were the top performing asset classes. Office sector investment was down 35% for the year, while retail and hospitality investment was down 5% compared to 2019.
There was also significant interest in the life science sector. In December, Saudi Arabia-based Sidra Capital has acquired a 90% stake in Arborcrest Corporate Campus, a five-building, 855,600-square-foot suburban office campus in Philadelphia, illustrating a rebound in US foreign investment that began in October. At that time, foreign investment inquiries were up 90%, giving many hope that inbound capital was returning to the market. While multifamily and industrial were the top picks among this group of investors—as the CBRE research shows—there was also an increase in interest for life science and data center properties.
This year, CBRE has a positive outlook for most global economies; however, this outlook is dependent on accommodative monetary policies, additional fiscal stimulus and vaccine deployment. Provided these factors are achieved, CRE investment should normalize this year with office workers returning to work and travel resuming, and investment volume will increase by 15% to 20%.
Source: “Global CRE Investment Has Rebounded Dramatically“

Filed Under: All News

Think 2020 Was Bad for Retail? 2021 Will Be Even Worse

February 2, 2021 by CARNM

Moody’s Analytics REIS predicts that most of the decline in retail rents and increased vacancies will happen this year.

The fourth quarter of 2020 saw tepid declines in retail fundamentals that were seemingly out of step with the dire realities of the retail market nationwide, as COVID cases surged and every day brought news of another brand’s imminent bankruptcy or store closures.
Research released by Moody’s Analytics REIS showed that despite a waning appetite for indoor shopping among consumers, the latest numbers aren’t as precipitous as you’d think. The firm’s outlook predicts that most of the decline in retail rents and increased vacancies will happen in 2021, a forecast bolstered by the expectation that many struggling brands may close in the wake of the holiday shopping season.  And while the recent stimulus measures will pump up consumer spending, cold weather and a new surge in COVID variants have already led to stricter shutdowns.
The retail vacancy rate increased to 10.5% in Q4, a slight uptick from 10.4% in the third quarter and the highest level since 2013, while mall vacancies also jumped another 0.4% to 10.5%, the highest level in more than two decades. New Orleans led the roster of metro areas with the largest increase in vacancy, followed by Providence, Albuquerque, Cleveland and Richmond. On the flip side, Rochester, Charleston, Fairfield County and Greenville were among those areas with the biggest decline in vacancy.
Average mall asking rents slumped 0.8% in Q4 and 1.8% over the course of the year, and Moody’s expects malls will suffer more than neighborhood and community shopping centers as they bear the ongoing weight of department store anchors closing and the slow struggle of “experiential” tenants like trampoline parks or entertainment companies to rebound in the wake of the COVID-19 crisis. Metro areas with positive effective rent growth during the fourth quarter include Boston, Greensboro/Winston-Salem, Tacoma, Rochester and Memphis, while areas with the biggest decline in effective rent were San Bernardino/Riverside, Denver, Fort Worth, Richmond and Indianapolis.
Net absorption, though dismal at negative 2.13 million square feet, was still an improvement over the lowest quarterly absorption of 4 million square feet in the second quarter of 2018. Of the 80 metro areas surveyed by Moody’s, 23 saw positive absorption, and 62 metros have a higher vacancy rate.  Seventy-six percent saw a decline in average asking rent over the year.
Average neighborhood and community shopping center asking and effective rents declined 0.3% to $21.34 per square foot and 0.4% to $18.61 per square foot, respectively, but 20 metro areas posted a rent increase while another eight saw no change. While construction in these types of centers dropped to 623,000 square feet in the fourth quarter (as compared to the previous quarter’s 874,000 square feet), both Q3 and Q4 put up numbers well below the average new supply built during the same periods in 2018 and 2019.  Fort Lauderdale, San Antonio, Dallas, Orange County, and Austin led the only eight metros that saw new construction in the quarter.
As retailer bankruptcies continue to stack up and the pandemic continues, Moody’s predicts even steeper declines in 2021, saying many retailers could get “crushed” with the surge in COVID cases. Retail and restaurant sales nosedived over the summer and into the fall and showed a year-over-over growth of a mere $1 billion, according to the Census Monthly Retail and Food Services Sales, and Moody’s notes that the steepest decline was in restaurants (decline of $123.7 billion year-over-year), followed by gasoline sales (down $68.1 billion) and clothing stores (down $61.5 billion). These trends are likely to continue at least in the near term, as e-commerce and online purchasing remain consumers’ shopping method of choice.  Already, many retailers are decreasing their physical footprints due to declining fundamentals—a trend experts predict will continue as the COVID crisis deepens.
“Indeed, the pandemic will continue to hurt the retail sector significantly and perhaps more so than other property types given the added pressure from the growth in e-commerce that have and will continue to eat into the brick-and-mortar retail sales,” the report states.
Source: “Think 2020 Was Bad for Retail? 2021 Will Be Even Worse“

Filed Under: All News

January 2021 Commercial Market Trends

February 2, 2021 by mcarristo

View a New Mexico Market Trends Summary Report, which includes January 2021 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

CARNM Education: 2021 Courses

February 1, 2021 by CARNM

Commercial Property Management
February 25, 2021 | 8:00 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. | Register Online | 6 CE Credits
Qualifies for Property Management Requirement
Instructor: Debbie Harms CCIM, SIOR, CPM

November 11, 2021 | 8:00 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. | Register Online | 6 CE Credits
Qualifies for Property Management Requirement
Instructor: Debbie Harms CCIM, SIOR, CPM

This course is designed as a 6 hour “core course” for property management. This class teaches the requirements under the NM law, as well as overall best practices. It will help you understand why the law changes, what is the process, and who you work for. You will learn how to apply and utilize the process to be a better manager while gaining insight on what works, what should we be doing, and what should we not be doing.

2021 NMREC Core Course Offerings

March 4, 2021 | 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. | Register Online | 4 CE Credits
Instructors: Josephine Graf and Amanda Velarde

April 1, 2021 | 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. | Register Online | 4 CE Credits
Instructors: Dave Hill CCIM and Bob Arguelles

June 3, 2021 | 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. | Register Online | 4 CE Credits
Instructors: Todd Clarke CCIM and Vic Bruno

August 12, 2021 | 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. | Register Online | 4 CE Credits
Instructors: Dave Hill CCIM and Bob Arguelles

October 7, 2021 | 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. | Register Online | 4 CE Credits
Instructors: Dave Hill CCIM and Bob Arguelles

November 4, 2021 | 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. | Register Online | 4 CE Credits
Instructors: Josephine Graf and Amanda Velarde

December 9, 2021 | 9:00 a.m. – 1:00 p.m. | Register Online | 4 CE Credits
Instructors: Todd Clarke CCIM and Vic Bruno

The NMREC Core Course is a requirement to be completed annually to maintain your license. Here’s what you will learn: E&O claims review and how to reduce them * Interactive case study of broker duties * Latest legal updates on federal, state & local level * NMREC Rule changes * QB/AB relationship via the independent contract agreement.

Business Ethics in Real Estate
Complete ALL Ethics Requirements (NMREC & NAR) with ONE course!

March 18, 2021 | 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon | Register Online | 4 CE Credits
Instructor: Bob Treece

December 2, 2021 | 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon | Register Online | 4 CE Credits
Instructor: Bob Treece

At some point, everyone is faced with making the decision on how to handle a situation ethically. This course examines the process of ethical decision making in a variety of business and real estate situations. You will also find new ways of dealing with those who choose not to behave ethically. This course meets the NAR REALTOR® Code of Ethics (due 12/31/2021) and the NMREC Ethics requirements (due each licensing cycle) NOTE: The NAR REALTOR® Code of Ethics and the NMREC Ethics requirements are separate requirements.

Commercial Leases
August 26, 2021 | 8:00 a.m. – 12:00 noon
Register Online | 4 CE Credits | Qualifies as Core Elective or Property Management
Instructor: Debbie Harms CCIM, SIOR, CPM

Content Includes: Understanding the different facets of the lease agreement, preventing misunderstanding and avoiding conflicts, and learning to easily explain eminent domain, subordination, and estoppel.

APOD/LOI
December 2, 2021 | 12:30 – 4:30 p.m. | Register Online | 4 CE Credits | Qualifies as Core Elective
Instructors: Dave Hill CCIM and Scott Whitefield
Two-part course: APOD (Investment Analysis) – Learn the tools and jargon used in doing a preliminary analysis (underwriting) of an investment property. By applying these tools, an individual will have a better understanding of the “numbers” that determine the value of a property and many variables that impact the process. Instructor: John Henderson III, CCIM; LOI (Letter of Intent) – Review the function and anatomy of the Letter of Intent and the process of arriving at a “meeting of the minds” with respect to leasing or purchasing real property.

Filed Under: All News

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