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Archives for July 2022

The Higher Cost of Capital is Beginning to Erode CRE Asset Prices

July 18, 2022 by CARNM

A bid/ask gap has emerged between buyers and sellers and real estate investors attempt to navigate the shifting economic climate.

Commercial property prices that have been hovering at near peak levels are starting to slide lower, and with more interest rate hikes looming, it could turn out to be a slippery slope for some sellers.

“The higher cost of capital is resulting in a repricing of risk across the broader economy, and real estate assets are squarely in the middle of that,” says Bryan Koop, a vice president on the Boston Capital Markets team at Colliers International. “Asset values have already taken a hit with the cost of capital increases.”

Although the 10-year Treasury yield has receded since reaching a high of 3.5 percent in June, it is still running about 130 basis points higher than the start of the year at roughly 2.9 percent as of mid-July. “At current interest rate levels, those borrowing money can’t pencil out any returns based on cap rates that existed nine months ago, because it results in negative leverage,” says Koop.

Cap rates are climbing, and the market is still in the early days of repricing assets with more interest rate increases ahead. Markets are anticipating that the Fed will raise interest rates by another 75 or 100 basis points at its next meeting scheduled for July 26-27. The Fed is expected to move aggressively to curb accelerating inflation, which hit a four-decade high of a 9.1 percent annual rise in June.

Periods of repricing typically result in bid-ask gaps that can slow transaction activity and shift buyer and seller strategies, and the current marketplace is no different. “Sellers want yesterday’s pricing and buyers are looking for better pricing tomorrow, and the bid-ask gap is really being fueled on how quickly the market moved,” says Barbara Perrier, a vice chairman in Capital Markets at CBRE specializing in industrial and logistics assets.

Bid-ask gap varies

The bid-ask gap that is emerging is by no means one-size-fits-all. Many sellers are well aware of the new market realities and are adjusting expectations accordingly. “My perception of this point in time is that the sellers are in tune with what’s going on with the increase in interest rates, and we haven’t seen a tremendous amount of sellers digging in their heels and saying, ‘my price is the only price,’” says Lee Shapiro, executive vice president and director of retail brokerage at Kennedy Wilson Brokerage in Beverly Hills, Calif. “If they are genuine and want to trade, they are willing to move on pricing.”

Several months ago, well-located commercial properties in the Los Angeles market were selling at cap rates in the high 3 to low 4 percent range. There also was a narrow delta of perhaps 50 basis points for assets in tertiary markets as compared to the better quality markets, notes Shapiro. Rising interest rates coupled with uncertainty on where the economy is headed is putting upward pressure on cap rates in the L.A. market. Top submarkets, such as Rodeo Drive, have seen pricing remain very stable, while cap rates on commercial properties in the broader market have moved 25 to 50 basis points. “So, there hasn’t been a tremendous jump yet in the better quality product on the market,” he says.

Seller expectations are vastly different depending on their situation and financing structure. For example, if someone has owned a property for the past decade and has accrued good value appreciation, they are rushing to sell now before their gains erode. Some might be already too late as properties that are on the market or coming to the market are getting repriced with lower values almost across the board. Everyone is well aware of rising rates, and a lot of sellers are accepting the repricing because they think it is only going to get worse, says Koop. “I wouldn’t say that everyone has come to grips with it, but we’re trending towards seller expectations being reset because the headlines are on everyone’s radar and you can’t deny them,” he says.

There are not a lot of motivated sellers that are holding out for what properties were worth six to nine months ago, agrees Erik Foster, principal and head of industrial capital markets at Avison Young in Chicago. Sellers who had hopes of transacting at pricing that existed several months ago, are likely not going to list assets in the current market unless they have to for some reason. “I believe there could be a bit of a rush to transact in the third and fourth quarters of this year given the potential interest rate hikes that are forecast that could further impact the debt markets and erode buyer leverage,” he adds.

Cap rates are moving

Anecdotally, there are plenty of stories of assets on the for-sale market that were pulled from the market because bids fell short of expectations, or sales fell through because buyers dropped out or financing was not as expected. In many cases, the pricing a seller could have gotten 90 days ago no longer exists. That being said, the repricing that is occurring varies depending on the market and property with some assets seeing little or no movement, while others have seen bigger jumps.

In the industrial and logistics sector, interest rate increases have been more impactful on repricing assets with longer term leases. “On shorter term leases, we have seen less impact as the mark-to-market story is strong, and if investors can see a big bump in the net operating income, they will still be aggressive on pricing,” says Perrier. According to Perrier, cap rates on industrial and logistics facilities have increased between 25 to 125 basis points on average, with increases depending on the weighted average lease term.

Industrial continues to have a bit of a “favored nation” status, adds Foster. Industrial fundamentals are still at record low vacancy rates in almost every market and properties are experiencing healthy rent growth. The pricing gap did widen on industrial assets as interest rates started to move. However, it widened more precipitously with B buildings and secondary locations, whereas the gap did not move as much for core buildings in major locations, he says. “We have not seen is a lack of buyer demand for assets, but simply a repricing at a different level,” he notes.

According to CBRE, cap rates for multifamily assets have increased by up to 50 basis points, depending upon quality of the assets and specific market. “We are in a period of price discovery and bid-ask gaps for multifamily assets are deal-by-deal specific,” says Brian McAuliffe, president, Multifamily Capital Markets for CBRE. According to McAuliffe, any gap that exists seems to be bound by two things: 1) Buyers recognize that sellers are not willing to entertain requests for big discounts. 2) Sellers recognize there are significant embedded gains over the past few years that are enabling them to accept discounts.

According to the latest MSCI RCA CPPI Index, property prices as of May were up 18.8 percent year-over-year. Industrial led all sectors with gains of 28.6 percent, but even office prices had rallied with a gain of 12.2 percent. The one-month gains were more moderate at 1.1 percent for all property types.

Shrinking bidder pools

Although properties are still trading, rising debt costs are shrinking bidder pools. “Instead of having 15 to 20 offers on a deal, we may have only five or six,” says Perrier. Smaller deals are easier to sell than larger ones, because of the need for financing on the larger transactions. The 1031 exchange buyer with cash has a strategic advantage and is able to win deals that maybe traditionally they couldn’t a few months ago, whereas private equity groups and other more debt sensitive buying groups are having a tougher time in today’s market, she says.

“We’re seeing executions and good deals right now, but the depth in terms of the amount of buyers showing up is night and day to what it was last year,” agrees Koop. Highly leveraged buyers that have been transacting based on their ability to financially engineer levered returns are on the sidelines. Those buyers who have cash or are sitting on dry powder are in control, and they are being selective and dictating terms, he says.

In recent rising rate cycles over the past decade, investors were able to pivot to a variable rate debt strategy. However, in the current environment, floating rate strategies do not offer the same level of benefits as in recent years, notes  McAuliffe. However, rising debt costs are not the only factor contributing to shrinking bidder pools. “While we have seen a drop in the average LTV that certainly favors buyers with lower leverage requirements, there’s not enough data to conclude that rising borrowing costs are the primary driver,” he says. Uncertainty on the global economic outlook is weighing on both investors and lenders, and the recent inversion of the yield curve has created additional stress on market conditions.

Despite headwinds, market participants remain optimistic that the second half of the year will be active as both buyers and sellers eager to get deals done before year-end. “We’re as busy as ever,” says Koop. “Right now, we have people who are motivated and want to transact and get their deals across the finish line, but it will be interesting to see what comes in three months with liquidity pulling back is going to be interesting.”

Source: “The Higher Cost of Capital is Beginning to Erode CRE Asset Prices”

Filed Under: All News

Retail Sales Improved Last Week. Or Did They?

July 18, 2022 by CARNM

Meanwhile, consumer confidence remains low, supply chains face fresh problems, and some experts are wary.

When consumers spend, it makes most everyone in business and economics happy. That money drives almost 70% of GDP. There’s money for products and services, businesses do better, and CRE eventually gets its share.

When the news of better-than-expected retail sales in June—1.0% in June, compared to -0.1% in May—stocks took a jump. “Spending was broad based and not just boosted by more money spent on gasoline,” Jeffrey Roach, chief economist for LPL Financial, said in emailed comments. However, things are more complicated.

For one, the Census Bureau, which released the figures, noted, as it does in almost every similar type of release: “The 90 percent confidence interval includes zero. There is insufficient statistical evidence to conclude that the actual change is different from zero.”

Maybe there was an improvement, maybe not.

The numbers were “adjusted for seasonal variation and holiday and trading-day differences, but not for price changes,” the agency said. And price changes, which are part of inflation, have been particularly strong. Was the growth organic and additional things purchased or a result of everything becoming more expensive? Hard to tell.

There was also more. “The report was not all rosy,” Roach added. “The decline in department store sales may suggest that consumers are spending less at name brand places and going over to discount retailers as we have recently heard that major discount chains are expecting accelerating growth.”

Sal Guatieri of BMO Capital Markets also made the dismal observation that “padded by high savings and rising wages, American households are spending nearly as much money as they did earlier, but largely to keep up with higher prices, not to actually buy more stuff,” he said in a note that was reported by Bloomberg.

Then came other bits of news. “Industrial production was softer than expected in June, declining 0.2%, and output for May was revised lower,” wrote Oxford Economics. “Manufacturing output fell for a second straight month, with production of both durable and nondurable goods declining. … This report is another indication that the economy is losing momentum.”

“With consumer demand for goods softening and inventories much higher than in late 2021, many manufacturers are throttling back in preparation for weaker sales ahead,” Bill Adams, chief economist for Comerica Bank, said in emailed comments. “The dollar’s appreciation is also an increasing problem for manufacturers, since it makes it harder to price exports competitively. High shipping costs limited price competition from imported goods in 2021 but shipping costs are falling and delivery times accelerating, which will increase import competition in the next few quarters.”

The University of Michigan’s survey of consumer sentiment showed consumers still at lower levels of confidence, “remaining at near all-time lows,” wrote surveys of consumers director Joanne Hsu. “Current assessments of personal finances continued to deteriorate, reaching its lowest point since 2011. Buying conditions for durables adjusted upwards, owing both to consumers who cited easing supply constraints and those who believed that one should buy now to avoid future price increases, which would exacerbate inflation going forward.”

So, there are still significant signs that things are far from fine and better on happy and freely spending, consumers is premature.

Source: “Retail Sales Improved Last Week. Or Did They?”

Filed Under: All News

Seniors Housing Investors Brace for Rising Cap Rates

July 18, 2022 by CARNM

Exclusive research shows that investors expect rising interest rates and other pressures to push cap rates up over the next 12 months.

Rising interest rates and pressure on NOI are contributing to expectations for higher cap rates ahead in the seniors housing sector, according to respondents in the ninth annual WMRE / NIC Seniors Housing Survey.

A majority of respondents (71 percent) think seniors housing cap rates will increase over the next 12 months, while 11 percent anticipate no change and 18 percent believe cap rates could decrease. Expectations for rising cap rates have moved slightly compared to the 65.5 percent who held that view in the 2021 survey. However, respondents are expecting the overall change to be modest—an increase of 51 basis points, less than the expected rise in interest rates by economists.

In addition, some market participants argue that cap rates as applied to in-place income have been a more difficult market barometer with many properties that are battling near-term NOI challenges due to high inflation and lingering effects of COVID on occupancies. Instead, investors are focusing on other factors, such as per bed and per unit pricing, drivers of value, and top-line revenue, notes Ben Firestone, CEO and co-founder of Chicago-based Blueprint Healthcare Real Estate Advisors.

“Investors are stretching out their investment period and looking to other metrics than where cash flows are today at a static cap rate,” he says.

Pricing trends vary widely depending on the asset. For example, Blueprint recently closed on a single-private-pay seniors housing asset with 60 percent occupancy for a cap rate of approximately 5.95 percent on projected year-two EBITDAR (earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation, amortization, and rent.) At the time of sale, the in-place EBITDAR was only marginal. However, prices continue to soar for those types of assets in good growth markets, which is driven in part by higher replacement costs, notes Firestone. “The investors that are the most aggressive in bidding are the ones that are willing to be patient and have a multi-year strategy,” he says.

Lloyd Jones LLC, a firm that invests in multifamily and seniors housing, is targeting acquisitions with cap rates ranging between 6.5 and 9 percent. “We’re also seeing a lot of negative cash flow deals. So, it’s hard to put a cap rate on some of those deals,” notes Padron. In particular, Lloyd Jones is looking to buy value-add assets at $70,000 to $80,000 per door. There were a number of operators that were hit hard by COVID and have yet to come out of it, he says. “That’s where we think we can come in at value and take properties over and turn things around,” he adds.

Rent growth also could help shore up cap rates. Annual rental rates rose across NIC MAP’s Primary Markets by 3.3 percent in first quarter, and a majority 93 percent expect rents to increase further over the next 12 months. Overall, the average expectation is an increase of 304 basis points. Sentiment is more positive than in the 2021 survey where 87 percent of respondents thought rents would rise by an average of 261 basis points.

“While operational challenges are a factor, investors are accounting for those challenges accordingly. Spreads/yields continue to be attractive and the intermediate to longer-term outlooks look robust,” says Sweeney. “Given seniors housing has performed well during previous recessionary cycles, capital continues to be interested in putting dollars to work in the sector in the right locations.”

Investors are concerned that access to both debt and equity could be more limited in the coming year. Nearly half of investors (53 percent) believe debt will be more difficult to access over the next 12 months. Fears are not as great as in 2020 when 57 percent thought access to debt would tighten, but it is significant that those views on more limited debt are at the second-highest level in the history of the survey. Opinions on access to equity also are more pessimistic. Roughly one-third of respondents (32 percent) said access to equity could be tighter over the next 12 months. Similar to debt,  2020, views on less availability of equity ahead are the second-highest level in the history of the survey.

That being said, a majority of respondents do think equity will remain the same (45 percent) or improve (23 percent.) “There is an abundance of capital that has been raised that these institutional groups need to put to work,” says Cary Tremper, managing director and head of Senior Housing Capital Markets at Greystone. “I wouldn’t say that everyone has the same access to capital across the board, but typically for the ones that have the ability to execute and have the track record, capital is there on the equity side,” he says.

Source: “Seniors Housing Investors Brace for Rising Cap Rates”

Filed Under: All News

Business Incubator to Open in Valencia County

July 16, 2022 by CARNM

Entrepreneurs in Valencia County will soon have another resource to help launch their businesses as the Valencia County Business Incubator prepared for its soft launch this weekend.

Co-founder and interim director Ben Romero said the goal is to grow new businesses throughout the county.

“Do you have a business idea and you’re motivated to create a business? We’re here to support you and we’re here to guide you,” Romero said. “We’re here to make sure that you’re successful because at the end of the day … we want our entrepreneurs to stay here.”

Spearheaded by the Village of Los Lunas and City of Rio Communities, the incubator is available to anyone in the county. It will be housed at the Rio Communities City Hall complex and use space at the University of New Mexico-Valencia campus’s Workforce Training Center in Los Lunas for client intake meetings.

The concept of a county-wide business incubator surfaced in 2017 and, with the assistance of Incubation Operations, Training and Applications, a USDA-funded feasibility study was completed in early 2018. The study found a small business incubator was feasible in Valencia County, especially in the area of edible products, and indicated the county would eventually need a mixed-use, kitchen incubator.

The VCBI received its 501c3 status from the IRS last year.

“We got very lucky with the city of Rio Communities,” Romero said. “They’ve been very helpful in our mission and helping us get our feet underneath us. They’ve also done tons of working themselves to increase business in Rio Communities.”

While it was a soft opening, the incubator is now accepting clients, Romero said.

“We’ve already had seven local businesses in the last couple weeks reach out who are interested in becoming clients,” he said.

A business incubator is a home for entrepreneurs, Romero said, with staff and experts who provide consulting and mentorship training for new business owners, as well as programs to make sure the fledgling businesses succeed.

“In this first year, we’re looking at 10 to 15 clients, and we will make sure we hold their hand and guide them, but at the end of the day, it’s their business, their ownership,” Romero said. “We’re there to push them and guide them basically.”

Potential clients will pitch their business plan to an admissions committee made up of VCBI board members and community members. Romero said the board isn’t looking for specific types of businesses but rather specific types of people.

“The most valuable thing is they are coachable; they’re willing to learn and they are passionate about what they want to do,” he said. “We love hobbies but we don’t want them to come and think of this as a hobby. It’s a business. We want to increase entrepreneurship.”

Once accepted, clients will be charged a fee, Romero said, but the board hasn’t set it just yet.

Following the guidance of the feasibility study, the incubator will begin small. By 2025, the plan is to grow into a hybrid of mixed-use and kitchen incubator, assisting 30 to 40 clients. The average client will be at the incubator two to four years, Romero said.

Fellow board member and local real estate agent Loedi Silva said the incubator will be a great resource.

“It would have been great to have some of these resources in my business startup,” Silva said.

For more information, visit vcbi.org, or contact Romero by phone or text at 505-514-5555 or email at ben5romero@gmail.com.

Source: “Business Incubator to Open in Valencia County“

Filed Under: All News

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