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Archives for May 2021

Latest Tax Report Gives Santa Fe’s Economy a Boost

May 10, 2021 by CARNM

Things are looking up for the city of Santa Fe, at least financially speaking.

For the first time since before the pandemic hit, the city’s monthly total of gross receipts tax revenue grew compared with the same month last year. February GRT revenues climbed by 9% over those of the same month in 2020, totaling more than $261 million.

“I think it’s very good news,” Budget Officer Alexis Lotero told reporters Monday.

City officials said it’s an especially encouraging sign because businesses didn’t start closing until March 2020. GRT reports are released on a two-month delay, and city officials are expecting even better news when data for March and April is released.

February is also Santa Fe’s lowest-performing month for GRT every year, City Financial Planning Officer Bradley Fluetsch said, meaning total revenues will probably rise over the coming months.

Retail, recreation and manufacturing industries all posted huge increases in sales. Fluetsch said an increase in tourism and shopping is a positive sign as the number of fully vaccinated people continues to grow.

It’s a stark contrast from the city’s position last year, when the COVID-19 pandemic brought tourism and other industries to a halt, rapidly shrinking the city’s revenue.

Gross receipts tax revenue accounts for about 70% of the city’s total budget, a huge number typically filled by Santa Fe’s large tourism industry. But when New Mexico shut down in the first weeks of the pandemic, that revenue dried up, seemingly overnight.

Now, it appears that Santa Fe’s fortunes might start improving. But Mayor Alan Webber said Santa Fe must remain cautious, because the county has had a slight increase in COVID-19 cases in recent days.

“All of this is contingent upon not having another spike,” Webber said.

Source: “Latest Tax Report Gives Santa Fe’s Economy a Boost“

Filed Under: All News

Office Will Remain CRE’s ‘Wildcard’ As Economy Recovers

May 10, 2021 by CARNM

As the crisis winds down, the competition for assets will begin to rise as confidence returns.

The overall outlook for CRE investment remains strong and is getting stronger for 2021, though office will remain the “wildcard” as companies and workers continue to grapple with how, where, and when to return to physical office space, according to a new analysis by Marcus & Millichap senior vice president John Chang.

“In general, the outlook is strengthening,” Chang said in a recent video. “We’re still not out of the woods yet.  There are still many variables in play. But the accelerating pace of vaccine distribution is promising and it brings with it a strengthening commercial real estate outlook.”

He noted that economists keep raising their 2021 forecasts, with Morgan Stanley bumping their 2021 GDP forecast to 8.1%—potentially the strongest growth since 1950. Goldman Sachs also predicted 6.8% growth, and Chang noted that others are forecasting at least 5% growth this year as well.

“Of course, all this hinges on the most recent round of stimulus and the US getting enough people vaccinated to fully reopen,” Chang said.  He notes that the addition of the J&J vaccine will speed up the pace of vaccination, bolstering predictions that the US will hit herd immunity by July or August of this year.

That means economic growth could ramp up in the next few months. Jobs will recover, Chang says: while total employment was about 9.5 million jobs lower in February than it was last year, about a third of those jobs were in the hospitality sector. As states reduce restrictions and people begin to feel safer, job creation could accelerate quickly.

Hotel occupancy rates could rise substantially this summer, Chang says, and while the increase won’t hit pre-pandemic levels, it will probably increase to the 60% range depending on location and tier status.

“We could also see a revitalization of retail properties,” Chang said. “Absorption from last year ran negative 26 million square feet, pushing the overall vacancy rate to 5.6% in December. But we could see that trend begin to stabilize.”

Industrial momentum should remain sound as well, with the key risk centering more on new supply than demand. And household formation, which is expected to increase this year as COVID-era households “unbundle,” will also support apartment demand.

“I don’t expect a big change in vacancy rates, because this new demand will be partially offset by tenant churn as eviction moratoriums burn off, Chang said.

And for the office sector, the question, Chang says, is whether lifestyle changes—including relocations to the suburbs—will reverse course. Office could come back relatively quickly or it could take awhile, especially in the urban core.

“As the crisis, hopefully, winds down, I want to reiterate: the competition for assets will begin to rise as confidence returns,” Chang said. “Investors need to closely consider the complications of a strengthening outlook and keep their eyes on the horizon.”

Source: “Office Will Remain CRE’s ‘Wildcard’ As Economy Recovers”

Filed Under: All News

The Suburban Office Could Blur the Lines of Residential, Commercial

May 5, 2021 by CARNM

Remote work is likely going to continue in some form, but that doesn’t mean workers never want to head into an office again. Investors are betting on a post-pandemic surge in interest in workspaces located in suburban neighborhoods. To get ahead of what they foresee as a trend, they’re eyeing suburban residences and empty retail, with the thought of turning them into smaller office spaces that can be rented out.

Some startups and property management owners are offering flexible office spaces in the suburbs for remote workers who need a break from working from home. They’re touting furnished office space that can be booked by the day or month. For example, one such startup called Daybase is turning retail spaces into furnished offices that can be rented out in suburban locations. The company doesn’t want to replace corporate headquarters but rather to create a network of smaller offices.

“A proliferation of new suburban office spaces could help fill empty retail space,” The Wall Street Journal reports. “They could also further blur the distinction between residential and commercial neighborhoods and help remake metropolitan areas.”

Many cities were built around central business districts. Urban planners say cities could undergo a transformation as an increased number of smaller offices open in the suburbs and lower the commute times for workers.

However, analysts in the office sector predict that many companies won’t shy completely away from brick-and-mortar even if remote work grows more commonplace permanently. The physical presence of an office, big or small, still helps to maintain visibility in the community and serves a place for staff members to meet and collaborate with each other or with clients.

Demand for flexible office space nationwide grew by 21% in the second half of 2020, according to a report by The Instant Group. The transactions tend to be mostly for smaller buildings with fewer spaces.

Some companies believe it’s because workers may still want to work from home but need a break from their own home. As such, AvalonBay Communities Inc., which owns more than 85,000 rental apartments nationwide, is launching a private workspace option called Second Space that its residents can book by the month.

“It would be kind of an add-on, just like you might pay extra for a parking space or storage space,” Matt Birenbaum, the company’s chief investment officer, told The Wall Street Journal.

Read more

The Real Estate Office of the Future

ULI: Visions for Post-Pandemic Workspaces

Ground-Floor Offices Grow More Popular

Source: “The Suburban Office Could Blur the Lines of Residential, Commercial“

Filed Under: All News

May 2021 CCIM Deal Making Session Properties

May 5, 2021 by CARNM

Thanks to all of the brokers, sponsors, and guests who attended the May 2021 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 Clarke, CCIM 919 Paseo Del Pueblo Sur, Taos Multi-Family $1,300,000
2. Larry Harvey

Alex Pulliam

701 Central Ave NW, Albuquerque Retail  

$1,099,000

3.

 

Dave Hill, CCIM, SIOR

DJ Brigman

6400 Coors Blvd NW, Albuquerque Office $3,500,000
4.

 

Austin Tidwell

Daniel Kearney

1109 Rhode Island St. NW, Albuquerque Office

 

$450,000
5. Keith Meyer, CCIM, SIOR

Jim Wible, CCIM

4201 Crestview Dr. Se, Rio Rancho Retail Sealed Bids

Filed Under: All News, Meetings

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