At the March 2022 LIN Meeting, 7 excellent properties were presented.
Thank you for presenting properties and attending the meeting!
View the March 2022 LIN properties here.
View the March 2022 LIN Thank Yous here.
Commercial Association of REALTORS® - CARNM New Mexico
by CARNM
by CARNM
Industrial developers would be wise to plan ahead—and carefully—as materials constraints continue to plague the building process and elongate delivery timelines. But one thing they shouldn’t do? Delay construction.
“Do not delay construction,” Cushman & Wakefield’s researchers say in a new analysis. “Demand will drive rents, which will mitigate construction and capital costs. Inflation is always a risk with labor and materials.”
The Cushman team advises developers to secure long lead items well ahead of time. That includes roofing, panels, structures, and piping. And once site plans are approved, developers should use design-build firms or experienced design pros to order steel based on their building’s layout: “scrap steel does not typically work for new construction and will waste time and resources,” they note.
Soil investigation to determine the weight bearing capacity and settlement rate of soil, as well as the position of the water table, is also recommended early on in the process, as it allows developers to better estimate costs and assess risks. Cushman also recommends maximizing impermeable surface/building on speculative development plans.
“Building size can always be reduced to improve circulation and parking,” the analysis says. In addition, developers should “evaluate prefabrication and/or modular construction to expedite the off-site construction, reduce waste and improve field labor productivity.”
Cushman’s forecast for industrial absorption in the US from 2022 to 2023 is 814 msf, and supply is expected to again surpass demand slightly by the end of next year. And while deliveries should reach 880 msf between this year and next, vacancy will still remain low, at 4.2%.
Cushman & Wakefield researchers predict construction bottlenecks may put completions this year and next at “minimal risk” of delays. If a quarter of new supply shows delays by three or six months, the decrease in new supply through 2023 would amount to 3.1% or 6.3%, respectively. Vacancy would post a more constrained projected uptick, ranging from -6 to -32 basis points by the fourth quarter of 2023.
“If that were to occur, vacancy would likely stay around 4.0%,” the report notes. “Either way, vacancy will hover at uncomfortably low levels.”
Supply has continued to trail demand for the industrial sector this year, with the National Association of Realtors recently reporting data through March 4 showing that the vacancy rate fell to 4.1% from 6.8% at the close of Q4 2021. Specialized space, manufacturing and all other properties that are neither logistics nor flex space (such as telecom and data housing centers) saw availability rates decline to a low of 4.5%. Logistic space and flex space fell to 7.3% and 8.4%, respectively.
Cushman’s analysts say the industrial construction pipeline will continue to grow “even as new buildings come online as quickly as they can be built.”
“We anticipate demand to remain strong for the foreseeable future and new construction to remain above pre-pandemic norms for the years to come,” they conclude.
Source: “Industrial Developers Shouldn’t Delay Construction As Demand Rages“
by CARNM
It appears that the CRE industry is entering a period of high volatility with the Fed promising to raise interest rates beginning in March, soaring inflation, the war in Ukraine, and a possible recession occurring later this year due to this high inflation, especially in food and gas prices.
The CRE investment process is a multifaceted procedure to analyze, acquire, finance, manage, lease, and sell a commercial property. There are many steps in the process from evaluating a broker sales package, to analyzing the market in which the property is located, touring the property, raising the appropriate amount of debt and equity capital, closing the acquisition, and managing and leasing the property. Each of these steps is critical to a successful CRE property investment. CRE investment is subject to many risks that were ignored during the last six or seven years due to the buoyant market. However, in this tumultuous environment, there are several concerns that investors should reevaluate to assure a successful investment.
Acquiring CRE at low cap rates is one of the biggest sins that an investor can commit. Today, many apartment and industrial properties are trading at sub 4.0% cap rates. This is due to artificially low interest rates, an abundance of capital looking for CRE investments as an inflation hedge and strong fundamentals. In acquiring commercial real estate assets, it is more important to buy a good asset at a great value than a great asset at a good value. The most important criteria in a successful real estate acquisition are to buy the asset below its intrinsic value. Buying a CRE asset above its value or at a low cap rate, is rarely, in the long term, a route to a successful transaction.
The due diligence process conducted before the closing of a real estate acquisition includes all the procedures to make sure the property, financial and market data provided by the seller and broker are accurate and form the basis upon which the purchase price is based. During the booming CRE market of the last few years, the due diligence process has been condensed and, in some cases, not even performed. Sellers have compressed the time to close a transaction, which leaves the buyer with less time to complete a thorough due diligence program. This is especially true of large portfolio transactions with dozens of properties. Shoddy due diligence can result in poor financial proformas, missed negative lease provisions and critical issues with the property’s physical condition and can lead to lower investment returns and reduced cash flow for the property.
One of the key procedures in the due diligence process per above is a detailed analysis of the market the property is situated. This involves looking at property data such as supply and demand for space, rents, vacancy, new construction, cap rates, competition, and a highest and best use review. As many of you know, technology is changing consumer behavior, which is affecting the CRE industry, both positively and negatively. Many class A properties that were once tops in their local market and in great locations are finding that the local real estate market has changed and demand for the property has waned or changed substantially. A proper market analysis should uncover these key market issues and reduce the risk of market changes that will negatively affect the value of the property.
These are the most dangerous four words in the investment world and are associated with every market bubble and financial crash in U.S. history. CRE investors that overpay for a property by buying at low cap rates will often utter these four words to justify their investment. They will comment that the real estate market is changing and if we don’t buy this asset at a low cap rate, somebody else will and our investors will redeem their funds. Or we think we can raise the rents substantially during the next few years and that justifies the high price and low cap rate, or the cost of debt is so low even borrowing at floating rates, we will be able to flip the property for a nice profit before interest rates rise. This perverse thinking is occurring right now in the booming industrial and apartment markets, where space demand is very strong and cap rates have declined below 4.0% in the last few years.
Acquiring CRE assets with high leverage is one of the most common investment risks. This was particularly common during the early 2000s and up to the middle of the Great Recession in 2010. Many properties bought during that period had a securitized first mortgage, several levels of mezzanine debt, preferred equity and finally the owner equity. Excessive leverage is nirvana when the market is booming, inflation is high and prices are rising, but is persona-non-grata, when the economy and markets tank. Thankfully, the regulated lenders have been very conservative with their real estate underwriting and lending structures, often limiting loan to value ratios of 65% or less.
As is any industry or business, there are good owners and managers and bad owners and managers. This is very apparent in the CRE industry, especially with apartments. Apartments are the most management-intensive of all real estate assets due to the large number of tenants and leases, high levels of employee turnover and poor management policies. With 27 million apartments in the U.S., there are a large number of bad apartment managers whose shoddy policies and procedures lead to low occupancy and subpar net operating income and cash flow. There are also bad owners in the CRE industry, whether they are incompetent, lack serious experience and expertise, or are naïve about owning and operating CRE assets. This includes some of the largest and most prestigious real estate investment managers. As real estate private equity firms grow to immense size with billions of CRE assets under management, they become marketing machines and asset gatherers instead of real estate managers. The unwritten goals of a lot of these firms are to just raise more and more capital, increase the 1.5% to 2.0% asset management fee and acquire more and more assets regardless of the price and performance.
In today’s frothy CRE market, there is an abundance of unused powder or cash that needs to be invested. Per industry data, there are over 200 real estate private equity funds in the U.S. with more than $250 billion in capital looking for deals. The pressure on the sponsors of these deals from their investors to use the funds and justify the 1.5%-2.0% annual asset management fees on these funds and generate the projected internal rates of return is immense. Many of these sponsors will overlook the risks above and make bad investment decisions, just to place the capital to work. Sometimes the best deal in CRE is the one that you don’t do.
Source: “7 CRE Risks To Avoid in the Current Volatile Environment“
by CARNM
For commercial real estate pros, global ambition is all about bringing more investment dollars home. Learn how brokers are catapulting their small, and mid-size businesses onto the global stage. Also in this issue: Hear from startups bringing blockchain to commercial transactions and brokers discussing the pros and cons of national affiliation, Plus, Inland Real Estate’s Joe Consenza talks with Moses Hall about his journey from high-school teacher to principal of a multibillion-dollar real estate business—and explains why he keeps a barber chair in his office.
View the full issue here.
Source: “NAR Commercial Connections, Spring 2022: Global Ambition“



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