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Archives for August 2021

Does It Make Sense to Turn Empty Retail Boxes into Short-Term Warehouses?

August 17, 2021 by CARNM

The strategy can help keep revenue coming in while the spaces are marketed to long-term users, according to some experts.

As struggling bricks-and-mortar retailers continue to downsize and close underperforming locations, they are also finding new ways to capitalize on their vacant spaces. They are offering them as returns drop-off sites for e-commerce sellers such as Amazon, as retail pop-up locations and in some cases, if zoning and other conditions allow, as storage facilities.

For example, Chunker is an online marketplace for short-term, on-demand warehousing. The company provides a platform for retail operators and other businesses to list their vacant or underutilized spaces for short-term storage use and helps them procure tenants.

“We are certainly seeing several of our landlords consider leasing out space to clients on a short-term basis for e-commerce storage and general storage to help maximize income on their vacancies,” says Jason Hurst, director of the retail leasing team with real estate services firm Colliers International in Gainesville, Fla. The strategy can be attractive to owners of both junior and big boxes with vacant spaces of 10,000 sq. ft. and more, because such short-term deals usually require little to no investment capital from the landlord, come with flexible lease terms and provide a dependable revenue stream.

“The challenge with this strategy is that there is a high-level of turnover to manage and the pricing expectation of the tenant is to land rates comparable to industrial rental rate pricing, which are generally about 40 to 60 percent lower than that of most retail spaces in each respective market,” Hurst adds.

A mid-year outlook report from real estate services firm Marcus & Millichap forecasts that by the end of 2021, retail vacancy on a national basis will reach 6.1 percent, a year-over-year increase of 50 basis points. The firm’s researchers also anticipate that although retail rent growth will be extremely limited, it will likely rise by 0.5 percent to an average of $20.06 per sq. ft.

Similarly, real estate services firm JLL has reported that the retail sector started seeing positive net absorption in the fourth quarter of 2020. In the first quarter of this year, 5.5 million sq. ft. of vacant retail space was absorbed, and retailers signed 16,300 leases totaling 50 million sq. ft.—a leasing volume similar to that seen in the three years preceding the COVID-19 pandemic.

Nevertheless, Chunker CEO Brad Wright says the platform already has a lot of space listed from big-box store closings and bankruptcies, including 10 vacant Sears stores (about 200 have closed nationally).

According to Brad Kaplan, senior associate for retail services with Transwestern based in Minneapolis, Chunker might be the only platform offering to connect retailers with companies looking for short-term warehouse space. That’s because most retailers with vacant stores are not interested in short-term leasing. “Institutional owners of retail real estate wouldn’t be interested in exploring this as an option—there are too many logistics involved. But local owners of class-C or -D retail centers might be willing to explore this option,” although their preferred temporary tenants tend to be local pop-up store operators that needs a location for the holidays and may have a pre-existing relationship with the center.

Colliers’ Jason Hurst, however, notes that listing vacant retail space opportunities to a broader market through syndicate sites like Chunker can be an attractive strategy to maximize income on these spaces while brokers market them to long-term tenants.

Wright claims that with current strong demand for temporary warehouse storage, users are willing to pay a 25 to 50 percent premium over prevailing industrial rents to access such space. A Cushman & Wakefield report for the second quarter puts the average U.S. industrial rent at $7.03 per sq. ft., but according to data firm the CoStar Group, industrial rents can range from $12 to $20 per sq. ft. in core urban markets.

Despite new vacant space coming on the market, retail rents have remained fairly stable or are increasing, according to JLL. The firm’s researchers note the average rent at neighborhood shopping centers rose by 0.9 percent year-over-year to $20.79 per sq. ft. in the second quarter. Asking rents at malls went down by only 0.3 percent to $29.72 per sq. ft.

While retail rates vary from market to market, Kaplan says that in Minnesota, for example, big box rents range from $10 to $12 per sq. ft., plus operating expenses, utilities and insurance. “If retailers are price-sensitive, then they (temporary tenants) are more likely to lean towards warehouse space.” He adds that when retailers close store locations they are more likely to terminate their leases than sublet the space, which means the landlord would focus on finding a long-term replacement tenant.

While generally short-term storage uses do not create conflicts with other retailers at the center, Wright says that zoning laws and tenant rights restrictions prohibit using this type of space for e-commerce distribution, which generates a lot of undesirable traffic. Additionally, the space must provide a dock door for loading and unloading and 12-foot-ceiling height to accommodate a forklift to be suitable for temporary storage.

New York City-based Steve Bowler, executive vice president with Bowler Retail Team, who works with Chunker, agrees that there is currently strong demand for temporary storage space, and he wishes more vacant retail spaces were suitable for this use. He notes, however, that due to zoning laws very few can legally turn to this use unless the landlord can acquire a Special Needs Permit, which is a “hard sell to cities.”

In addition, despite the retail downsizing, Bowler says there aren’t that many vacant big boxes in the market anymore. “Two years ago there was a good amount of it, but not many are left now to reposition,” he notes, explaining that investors are buying up older, underperforming malls and retail big boxes for conversion to other uses.

Source: “Does It Make Sense to Turn Empty Retail Boxes into Short-Term Warehouses?“

Filed Under: All News

Here’s What Delta Means For The Global CRE Comeback

August 17, 2021 by CARNM

“The recovery is a lot stronger than what we originally thought in the beginning of the year.”

Despite continuing threats from the Delta variant, global commercial real estate markets are continuing to rebound, with overall leasing and transactional volume on the upswing. And that’s leading CBRE researchers to upgrade their forecasts for the US and Asia Pacific regions in particular.

In a recent discussion with Spencer Levy, the firm’s Global Chief Client Officer, CBRE Global Head of Investor Thought Leadership & Research Henry Chin said the recovery is “a lot stronger than what we originally thought in the beginning of the year.”

“The Americans (and) the Europeans are starting having their holidays during the summer vacations, that definitely gives us this extra boost of confidence,” Chin said. “The market’s going to track back and of course, the delta variant is a big uncertainty for us right now.”

And perhaps nowhere is that uncertainty most pronounced than in the office asset class.

Julie Whelan, CBRE’s Global Head of Occupier Thought Leadership, said office continues to struggle as tenants face lukewarm occupancy in their spaces. That, Whelan says, has in turn led to an inability for tenants to make long-term real estate decisions. For the most part, leasing activity has consisted of short-term renewals and flex space leases.

Employers have flocked to flex space in recent months: last week, Jamie Hodari, CEO of shared office provider Industrious, told CBRE’s Levy that his company⁠—which took a big investment from CBRE last fall⁠—said the company hit three times their pre-COVID sales average in June.

“We are in the heart of a moment right now where there’s an extraordinary rush to use flex,” Hodari said.

Whelan said that while the rush to alternative arrangements has pushed back certain elements of the recovery, leasing activity is nonetheless increasing, signaling some positive momentum in the market.

“What we would be hoping is that at the second half of 2021, we would start to see a more enhanced office occupancy, which would lead to longer term real estate decisions being made in the form of larger leases for longer term,” Whelan told Levy. But as the delta variant has thrown many employers’ return-to-work plans out the window, long-term leasing decisions are being delayed even further.

“Tenants just cannot understand what they’re going to need in the long term, given the fact that they don’t have observable trends today,” she said. “But we do believe that transaction activity is picking up. We see it in the numbers, we see it in the sentiment, and we see it in tenants touring the market. And that’s all positive at the end of the day.”

Source: “Here’s What Delta Means For The Global CRE Comeback“

Filed Under: All News

CRE Execs Optimistic About Present But Have Qualms About Future

August 16, 2021 by CARNM

One respondent said it’s not the fear of COVID keeping people out of the office, it’s that people are comfortable at home.

The Real Estate Roundtable’s Q3 Current Conditions Index has reached the highest level in its 13-year history with a rise of 7 points from the previous quarter to 85. But uncertainty about the recovery from the pandemic led the Future Condition Index to decline by 4 points to 71.

The perspectives come from CEOs, presidents, and other top commercial real estate industry executives.

In the poll, the leaders cited a continued abundance of available debt and equity capital, which has led to significant amounts of capital sitting on the sidelines waiting for attractive deployment opportunities. One of the executives quoted in the report said industrial is going gangbusters on both sides—tenant and investor—with absurd amounts of capital seeking any quality asset. Another C-suite member expressed surprise that industrial cap rates have gotten tighter and lower, forming a bubble from capital that is available, but fundamentals seem to back it up. For office, respondents noted there was investment demand but a long-standing issue was in the way of sales. “In the office sector, if sellers would give a little, there would be a lot of activity, however we see separation between bid and ask,” one respondent said.

Their optimism about the present comes as asset classes with durability or the perception of durability such as high-quality multifamily, long-term net lease office, and industrial have all hit record levels, while certain sectors and regional markets (in particular, those relying heavily on mass transit) have yet to fully recover, the report said.

The speed of the economic recovery compared to only six months ago has provided more clarity and certainty for specific asset classes including industrial, multifamily and single-family suburban with the biggest looming question marks being the impact of employees returning to the office and rising inflation risk, the survey noted

Looking at residential, an executive gushed: “The housing market—everywhere from single-family to multifamily—has never grown faster than it is growing right now. The strength is broad-based across sectors and includes urban areas that were affected heavily by COVID but are rapidly recovering and even surpassing pre-pandemic 2019 rent occupancy levels.”

Expressing some of the qualms about the future because of the uncertainty about the long-term impact of Covid in the recovery, a respondent to the poll said it’s not the fear of COVID keeping people out of the office, it’s that people are comfortable at home.

Viewing the performance of asset classes, a manager reported deals are continually going above the brokers’ initial price with multifamily continuing being the most attractive alongside industrial, but hotel auctions have shown rising pricing.

Source: “CRE Execs Optimistic About Present But Have Qualms About Future“

Filed Under: All News

Malls Have Hit Pre-Pandemic Foot Traffic Levels

August 16, 2021 by CARNM

“It turns out that malls are much more resilient than many expected.”

Malls “have essentially fully recovered” to post-pandemic levels, according to a new analysis of the top performing indoor and outdoor shopping centers across the US.

Outdoor shopping centers posted a 2.1% increase in monthly visits in July as compared to the same period in 2019, while indoor malls narrowed that gap to -0.1%. And month over month visits are also either increasing or remaining steady: foot traffic in outdoor malls grew 20.8% in July from June, while visits to indoor malls went up 10.6%.

“It turns out that malls are much more resilient than many expected, and shoppers’ forced separation from these emblems of American retail seems to have rekindled an old flame,” Placer.ai’s Shira Petrack says in a report breaking down the data. “Visit recovery patterns also emphasize that the ‘one-size-fits-all’ narrative surrounding malls is fundamentally flawed. Top performing centers are regional retail landmarks, and even if there are cases of ‘over-malled’ landscapes, the leaders are still well positioned for long-term success.”

Some standout malls include the Westfield Garden State Plaza in New Jersey, the Galleria in Texas, and the Scottsdale Fashion Square Mall in Arizona, which recorded increases over 2019 numbers of 3.0%, 6.9%, and 15.9%, respectively. July was a turning point for other struggling malls, according to Placer.ai, and the next few months will be determinative of whether those centers can continue to attract shoppers in greater droves.

Malls’ true trade areas—a measurement of how far shoppers are willing to travel to visit a certain location—are also inching toward pre-pandemic dimensions.

“As customers are willing to drive further if it means visiting a ‘better’ shopping centers, malls will need to step up their offerings if they wish to stay in the game and continue to attract customers who are increasing expecting their malls to provide not just shopping, but also a diverse array of dining options, entertainment choices, and services,” according to Petrack.

Source: “Malls Have Hit Pre-Pandemic Foot Traffic Levels“

Filed Under: All News

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