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Commercial Association of REALTORS® - CARNM New Mexico

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Archives for October 2021

In Positive Sign for Sector, Investors Continue to Favor Full-Service Hotels

October 4, 2021 by CARNM

Buyers pulling the trigger on full-service hotels indicate confidence that business and convention travel will rebound in 2022.

Blackstone Inc.’s big announcement last week that it was selling its Cosmopolitan of Las Vegas resort and casino for $5.65 billion—a price tag nearly $4 billion more than it paid back in 2014—was the latest signal that investors are confident that the hotel sector’s future remains bright despite the massive hits the industry took from the pandemic.

“The sale is probably the most profitable sale of a single lodging property ever,” says Jan Freitag, senior vice president of lodging insights for STR and national director of hospitality analytics for CoStar Group.

It’s just the latest deal in the full-service sector (hotels with restaurant and meeting space in destinations favored by business travelers and conference attendees). The iconic Venetian casino resort and the Sands Expo and Convention Center also announced its $6.25 billion sale in March 2021.

These properties are trading at strong prices as investors looking past the below average occupancy rates across the U.S., betting these hotels will once again fill with guests as the recovery from the pandemic continues to unfold.

“These are long-term investors with long-term horizons,” says Freitag.

Investors spent $1.0 billion to buy full-service hotels in August 2021. That’s more than four times (a 442 percent increase) the amount they spent the year before, during the depths of the pandemic, according to data from Real Capital Analytics (RCA), based in New York City.

The amount of money spent by investors to buy these hotels has been gradually getting back to a healthy level over 2021. Over the first eight months of 2021, investors spent $11.1 billion on full-service hotels, more than double (a 244 percent increase) from the same, eight-month period the year before, according to RCA.

Prices for these properties has remained strong—especially relative to the income produced by the hotels, which still suffers with many empty rooms and silent meeting spaces as the Delta variant of the coronavirus continues to spread in parts of the U.S.

“Values have been holding because owners are optimistic about the recovery, although I think there’s a wide bid-ask spread for full-service assets currently,” says Amit Govin, principal and CEO at Everwood Hospitality Partners, based in New York City. “We haven’t observed a significant discount to ask prices from what we experienced pre-pandemic.”

Fundamentals still rough for conference and convention hotels

The “upper upscale,” full-service hotels that serve many conference and convention attendees still had a lot of empty rooms this summer. In August 2021, just 55.6 percent of these rooms were occupied, according to STR. That’s a long way from a healthy occupancy rate—though it is a big improvement compared the first eight months of 2021, when an average of just 47.1 percent of these rooms were occupied.

“You can make the case the we are in the middle of a recovery that started after April 2021,” says Freitag.

Many other kinds of hotel are recovering much more quickly from the pandemic—especially limited service hotels located in vacation destinations. On average, among all types of hotels, 63.2 percent of rooms were occupied in August 2021, up from an average of 57.1 percent over the first eight months of 2021, according to STR.

Economists also measure the lost income at conference and convention hotels in terms on group sales of hotel rooms, when more than 10 rooms are reserved at once, often for conference attendees. Group sales totaled roughly 3.8 million room nights a month in both July and August 2021. That’s a huge improvement from just 840,000 room nights bought in group sales in July 2020 and 1.2 million in August 2020. But it’s still a long way from the healthy level of well over six million room nights sold in group sales a month in July and August of 2019.

Of those group sales of hotel rooms, relatively few were bought for conference attendees.

“There is a lot of group demand on weekends for leisure travelers attending weddings and family reunions,” says Freitag. “What is missing is the Tuesday and Wednesday stays for people attending city-wide conventions.”

Investors don’t seem to be worried—even though demand is still terrible for conference and convention hotels. “Anecdotally… negotiations for high-end hotels all start with the 2019 results,” says Freitag. “They omit 2020 and 2021 as negative outliers.”

Source: “In Positive Sign for Sector, Investors Continue to Favor Full-Service Hotels“

Filed Under: All News

RPAC: Your Best Investment in Commercial Real Estate

October 4, 2021 by CARNM

Since 1969, the REALTORS® Political Action Committee (RPAC) has promoted the election of pro-REALTOR® candidates across the United States.

The purpose of RPAC is clear: voluntary contributions made by REALTORS® are used to help elect candidates who understand and support real estate interests. These are not members’ dues; this is money given freely by REALTORS® in recognition of the importance of the political process. The REALTORS® Political Action Committee and other political fundraising are the keys to protecting and promoting the real estate industry.

Learn more about how RPAC helps you: RPAC: Your Best Commercial Real Estate Investment Brochure.

RPAC & CARNM

The Commercial Association of REALTORS® New Mexico was presented with the 2020 Corporate Ally Program’s Digital Investor Pin. This program was launched in 2015 as a campaign to promote mutual business interests and strengthen the industry. The program provides funding for federal, state, and local advocacy campaigns and supports public policies that are important to real estate. Learn more.

70% of each contribution is used by NMAR PAC to support state and local political candidates and issues. The remaining 30% is contributed to the National Association of REALTORS® in order to support national politicians sympathetic to the ideals of the real estate industry. Your voluntary investment to support legislation on the issues that are important to the growth and stability of the commercial real estate industry is needed now more than ever! This type of legislation contributes to the commercial real estate industry and ultimately supports YOU! This is great insurance protection for you and your business.

Your investment makes a difference on the federal, state, and local levels of government and ensures:

  1. New and proposed legislation and regulations are evaluated based on how they will impact you, your clients, and your community.
  2. Government affairs representatives can effectively lobby lawmakers in Washington, D.C., and state legislatures throughout the U.S.
  3. We can defend critical commercial real estate-friendly policies like 1031 like-kind exchanges, Opportunity Zones, and programs providing relief to the small business clients commercial members serve.
  4. Ensure rental assistance continues to be available for struggling property owners and tenants.
  5. REALTORS® have a strong voice in new infrastructure investment and economic renewal policies, and in common-sense banking reforms such as the SAFE Banking Act.

DONATE ONLINE

Filed Under: All News

Warehouse Rents Exceeding $10 Per/SF in Some Markets

October 1, 2021 by CARNM

Topping the country are Northern New Jersey ($18.50), Puget Sound ($16.44), Los Angeles ($16.20) and Inland Empire ($10.20).

Rents for modern warehouse product are surging, a trend acutely felt in the most desirable logistics locations, or prime submarkets, across the country, according to a report from Newmark.

In at least six of the nation’s prime industrial warehouse submarkets, average taking rents for new construction are poised to cross the $10 per square foot mark—or have already crossed it.

A prime submarket is often centrally located within a metropolitan area and offers access to critical infrastructure, including airports and seaports, major highways and rail lines—fundamental attributes for tenants focused on reducing transportation costs and transit time.

Northern New Jersey ($18.50), Puget Sound ($16.44), Los Angeles ($16.20) and Inland Empire ($10.20) have exceeded the $10 milestone. Chicago and Miami are on the cusp.

Since 2019, taking rents for new construction have increased by an average of 24.3% across prime submarkets, with some observing almost double that growth.

C.J. Follini, Principal, Noyack Capital Partners, tells GlobeSt that “The current disruptions throughout global supply chains are furthering the ‘pull-forward’ of the industrial cycle in that procurement departments and buyers are doubling their product and supply purchases and storing them in domestic warehouses just to meet the holiday season’s anticipated demand.

“Pandemic-related growth of grocery e-commerce and same-day delivery alone compressed five years of the evolution of consumer behavior change into a single year. Not surprisingly, the controlled-climate area of the supply chain lacks sufficient infrastructure, so it is an area we will pay close attention to moving forward.”

Spreading Rent Growth 

The substantial savings on transportation costs achievable in these key locations allows occupiers to absorb escalating rents, which make up a smaller share of total operating costs. Given the combination of high rents and limited development, infill and redevelopment projects will become increasingly common in prime submarkets.

Tenants that cannot find suitable space or are unable to pay elevated rents will continue to spill over into adjacent submarkets, helping to drive rent growth across market geographies.

Source: “Warehouse Rents Exceeding $10 Per/SF in Some Markets“

Filed Under: All News

New Analysis Has Majority Returning to Office in Q1 2022

October 1, 2021 by CARNM

Herd resiliency rate and other safety factors will guide companies’ decisions.

Current data issued this week by Cushman & Wakefield suggests that most of the world will achieve herd resiliency—i.e., over 70% either vaccinated or infected—by Q2 2022 and that current trends suggest most office workers globally will be able to return to the office in the first quarter of 2022.

Cushman & Wakefield reported that 40% of the workforce had returned to the office as of September.

The report analyzed office return data from across the globe, as well as the trajectory of the virus and vaccination rates to predict when a large-scale return to office may occur.

The latest research finds that return to the office is directly correlated with high vaccination rates and low infection rates. Researchers also examined additional data, including government restrictions, school openings and public opinion regarding mass transit to project realistic return dates for industries operating in the Americas (U.S. and Canada), APAC (Asia-Pacific), and EMEA (Europe) regions.

“It’s important to remember that pre-pandemic, office buildings were never 100% occupied on any given day; 60% was generally the norm,” said Kevin Thorpe, Chief Economist at Cushman & Wakefield, in prepared comments. “Today, we are at 40% globally, but of course that varies greatly from city to city. Assuming no virus setbacks at this point, we see office buildings and cities reenergizing in early 2022.”

Employee Experience a Focus for Return to the Office

Michael Casolo, chief revenue officer at Unispace, a workplace interior design company, tells GlobeSt that his firm’s clients in the technology and media industries—which are overrepresented in the cities where office demand is increasing—are eager to get their employees back into the office.

“However, with an important caveat: Their employees don’t want to return to the office as it was before the pandemic,” Casolo said. “As a result, companies in these industries are prioritizing the employee experience in office design (such as building physical and digital immersive experiences). They’re looking for innovative ways to foster collaboration and camaraderie in order to better engage their workers. To create these types of spaces, organizations often need to relocate, expand or renovate.”

Tracy Brower, PhD, MM, MCR.w, principal, applied research + consulting for Steelcase, tells GlobeSt that she’s also hearing “early 2022” as the return date from a wide range of clients across industries, sizes and regions.

“They are making decisions trying to balance safety, attraction/retention, engagement and business needs,” Brower said. “They believe face-to-face work is critical to their business and engagement of their people, but also want to embrace flexibility and provide choice for employees.

“While businesses are expecting a range of return strategies (from all-back to all-remote), the vast majority are expecting a 3/2 model (three days in the office 2 days remote) with room for choices based on the nature of work, the needs of teams and the discretion of leaders.”

Safe Return More Important Than Timing

“Most businesses are hoping to get back as soon as possible,” said David Smith, global head of occupier insights and co-author of the study.

“This isn’t a conversation about never going back, it’s a conversation about when can we safely get back to the office because almost all employees and employers have indicated they want to go back—more flexibility, yes, but they want to go back. And based on surging tour activity, we know demand is there—so it’s not a matter of if office buildings will re-populate, but when. The leading data is pointing to Q1 2022.”

Source: “New Analysis Has Majority Returning to Office in Q1 2022“

Filed Under: All News

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