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Archives for May 2021

CRE Recovery Will Likely Be Bifurcated

May 21, 2021 by CARNM

Moody’s cautions against relying on the old adage that CRE is a “hedge against inflation.”

CRE performance metrics will likely continue to improve this year, though analysts caution the recovery will remain bifurcated.  Research from Moody’s Analytics shows that while industrial will remain steady and multifamily family rents and vacancies will turn around in the short term, the future of office, retail, and some hotel subtypes is uncertain.

“Within specific sectors there is chatter about repurposing space: flex/R&D industrial space for life-science companies, with office space for hybrid workers; industrial space devoted to data warehousing; with companies like Convene and even WeWork positioning themselves as monetizing what has traditionally been considered a ‘fixed asset’ by finding alternative uses,” the report notes.

While multifamily performance metrics were slightly negative in Q1, “it is quite likely that the worst is over for the multifamily sector,” the report notes. “There is evidence from real-time data points coming in that year-over-year rent growths for new leases are up by over 5%—a tail that will likely wag the dog of the overall market with increasing momentum over the remainder of 2021.”

On the industrial front, quarterly rent growth for warehouse/distribution was positive nationally for every quarter throughout 2020. The national vacancy rate inched up slightly as well and ended 2020 at 10.7%, and Moody’s predicts industrial will post the strongest rent of all asset classes this year, with asking rents predicted to grow by 2.8% and effective rents estimated to increase by 3%.

But in struggling asset classes like office and retail, major rent and price declines are likely in 2021, Moody’s says. This is despite exceptionally strong GDP growth this year and predictions for similar growth in 2022: overall, economic activity is booming, with updated GDP growth estimates posting in the mid-6’s for all of 2021, the best since 1984. Moody’s predicts 2022 will be strong, with GDP growing by 5.3% and reflecting an expansion period stronger than any on record in at least fifty years.

Moody’s predicts vacancies for neighborhood and community shopping centers will hit a record high of 12.3% this year before declining, with asking rents expected to fall 5.2% for the year and effective rents dropping by 6.8%. Within the retail asset class, regional malls have struggled the most, with vacancies hitting 11.4% in the first quarter.

“Despite general malaise, retail represents an ecology going through a major evolution, and a strong economy bolstered by healthy consumer spending will likely produce winners that can take advantage of market disruptions,” the report says. “Warehouse clubs and large retailers that were successfully able to tailor their omni-channel strategies posted exceptionally strong results throughout 2020 and early 2021. It will be interesting to see how other brick-and-mortar retail operators adapt to the changing landscape.”

Hotels will likely undergo a two-pronged recovery: while occupancies grew in the first quarter to 50.8% (compared to 34.6% and the end of 2020), the average daily rate remains well below pre-pandemic levels.  Moody’s analysts suggest the personal travel segment will lead the recovery, while hotels serving business travelers will have a tougher road to recovery.

Against this backdrop, inflation remains a mounting concern for all asset classes—and Moody’s also cautions against relying on the old adage that CRE is a “hedge against inflation.”

“How much appreciation returns should we expect when cap rates have trended to such low levels (and have remained there)? Can we bank on significant income returns for properties outside multifamily and industrial? It is likely that CRE will benefit from the search for higher yield, at a time of low interest rates,” the report goes on. “But how will it fare at a time of rising inflation, when policy measures like the removal of 1031 exchange benefits are being floated by the current administration?”

Source: “CRE Recovery Will Likely Be Bifurcated”

Filed Under: All News

May 2021 LIN Properties

May 19, 2021 by CARNM

At the May 2021 Virtual LIN Meeting, 8 excellent properties were presented.
Thank you for presenting properties and attending the meeting!

View the May 2021 LIN properties here.

View the May 2021 LIN Thank Yous here.

Filed Under: All News, Meetings

Yun: Consumer Spending Likely to Spur Economy

May 14, 2021 by CARNM

The economy is at 99% of its pre-pandemic activity, and growth in Americans’ income and savings could propel housing in the second half of the year, Lawrence Yun, chief economist for the National Association of REALTORS®, said Thursday at the Residential Economic Issues and Trends Forum during the virtual 2021 REALTORS® Legislative Meetings. Yun offered his market predictions for the rest of the year during the session.

Personal income was up 10.7% year over year in the second quarter while personal savings soared an astonishing 302%, Yun said. Though COVID-19 vaccination rates are stalling, coronavirus cases are falling, creating the potential for people to go out and spend their pent-up savings, he added. Therefore, Yun predicted the economy would grow 4.5% over the rest of the year, and the gross domestic product could reach an all-time high. “Consumers have been saving their money and will unleash spending into the economy,” Yun said. “I believe the economy will reach a higher peak.”

Yun listed retail, restaurants, travel, and in-person house hunting as areas of the economy where activity is likely to increase.

Despite the surging economy, Yun noted that jobs continue to lag. As of January, the U.S. was still 8 million jobs short of pre-pandemic levels, yet job openings were at an all-time high—potentially indicating some friction in the job market, Yun said. “We still need to get some people back,” he added. “When schools aren’t open, it makes it very difficult for people to go back to work. And some people are still afraid of the coronavirus.” The higher-than-normal unemployment benefits also are contributing to the friction, Yun said.

Yun noted that consumer prices are up across the board as are prices for construction materials, such as lumber, plywood, and copper wiring. The rise in construction costs could put pressure on future home prices, he said.

Yun expressed some concern about inflation, predicting that it could rise to 2.7% for the year.

Overall, he called the housing market “amazing,” noting that inventory is at a record low and average time on market has fallen to under 20 days. Inventory is especially tight in the market for starter homes: Listings in the price range of $100,000 to $250,000 have declined 5% year over year, Yun said. He partially blamed low inventory on slow housing production. “We have been underproducing for 13 straight years,” Yun said. The most single-family construction over the last year has occurred in the Sun Belt, with Houston, Dallas, Phoenix, and Atlanta leading the way, he added.

Here are some of Yun’s other 2021 housing predictions:

  • New-home sales will increase by 20%.
  • Existing-home sales will increase by 10%.
  • Home prices will rise 7%.
  • Mortgage rates likely will increase to 3.2%.

Even with a slight rise in mortgage rates, Yun predicted that the future was bright for the residential real estate sector. “There is no danger of a decline in home prices,” he said, “so industry revenue will be up solidly.”

Source: “Yun: Consumer Spending Likely to Spur Economy“

Filed Under: All News

Landlords Are Ready to Restart Evictions Amid Pandemic; 11th Circuit Weighs Arguments

May 14, 2021 by CARNM

“Our clients were able to file paperwork, but they can’t achieve any meaningful remedy while this eviction moratorium is going on,” said attorney Caleb Kruckenberg. “If they use state court systems to affect a lawful eviction under state law, that is a federal crime under the CDC eviction order.”

As the weather heats up, so too does the fight to end the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s pandemic-related eviction moratoriums and restore landlords’ ability to take legal action against delinquent renters.

And one of the groups driving the push is the New Civil Liberties Alliance, which presented oral arguments via teleconference before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in Brown v. CDC, an eviction moratorium lawsuit against the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Despite being able to file eviction paperwork in many state courts, NCLA litigation counsel Caleb Kruckenberg argued that his housing provider clients faced irreparable injury because they could not remedy the suits.

“The injury is that they cannot retake possession of their own property, because what is undisputed is that a state judiciary is forbidden by federal law from issuing an eviction order that can be executed to return … possession of the property to my client,” Kruckenberg said before the three-judge appellate panel via videoconference. “That is the text of the CDC eviction order. It says evictions are a federal misdemeanor.”

U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit in Brown v. CDC Oral Arguments May 14, 2021. Courtesy photo

Kruckenberg said his clients also endured the irrecoverable deprivation of the total value of their property, deeming it another irreparable harm.

“This is something that they can never recover,” Kruckenberg said.

Representing the CDC, Alisa B. Klein of the Civil Division of the Department of Justice in Washington, D.C., argued that $46 billion in congressionally appropriated funds for rental assistance provided directly to landlords mitigated Kruckenberg’s irrecuperable-rent argument.

“If we can consider, as you say we should, the rental assistance that Congress has offered, can we also consider the dramatic decline of COVID-19 in the United States?” asked 11th Circuit Judge Britt Grant. “I mean, I think it’s hard to have it both ways. Right?” Klein also highlighted that the CDC moratorium existed, in part, to help protect the general public from COVID-19 exposure by ensuring tenants had a place to self-quarantine, self-isolate and ensure social distancing as needed.

“We’re on a path that we hope to make the pandemic a thing of the past, but we’re not there yet,” Klein replied. “The CDC doesn’t want to undermine the improving trajectory by prematurely lifting this moratorium or other guidance for unvaccinated people.”

Judge Elizabeth “Lisa” Branch questioned a lack-of-insolvency argument by Klein, who said property owners might obtain judgments replacing unpaid rent in the future, pointing out that tenants had already declared under penalty of perjury that they could not pay any rent.

“What I see is you have such a lack of ability to pay; I don’t know why we are not in the insolvency arena,” Branch said.

While the panel called the CDC’s authority into question, juxtaposing its national moratorium authorization with its lack of power to order schools to close nationwide, the proceeding adjourned without a clear victor.

Other Litigation

The Eleventh Circuit case is just one battle in an ongoing war between the NCLA and the CDC over the eviction moratorium.

In New Jersey, NCLA has filed a reply brief in Kravitz v. Murphy in the Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division challenging Executive Order No. 128, which Gov. Phil Murphy issued on April 24.

Challenged is a provision of the executive order that allows tenants to pay portions of their rent with their security deposit. The document says, “A security deposit and the accumulated interest and earnings on the investment of such deposit remain the property of the tenant.”

But representing small property owners, NCLA said the executive order “interfered with the contractual rights and obligations of private citizens.”

By constraining residential housing providers to use their tenants’ security deposits toward rent payments, Murphy’s order subverted property rights through its deferral of existing laws governing residential leasehold contracts. As a result, NCLA said, property owners have been deprived of security against property damage caused by tenants.

“Governor Murphy made clear to the Appellate Division that he believes he has the power to do literally anything he wants, so long as he unilaterally decides that his executive actions are related to the pandemic and in the public’s interest,” said Jared McClain, NCLA litigation counsel. “But the governor’s emergency powers do not include the authority to waive statutory law and rewrite private contracts. Our clients are simply asking the court to rule that Governor Murphy is still bound by law during an emergency.”

Source: “Landlords Are Ready to Restart Evictions Amid Pandemic; 11th Circuit Weighs Arguments“

Filed Under: All News

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