ET US2011.ashx
ET US2011.ashx
Emerging
Trends
in Real Estate
®
Emerging Trends in Real Estate® 2011
A publication from:
Emerging
Trends 20
in Real Estate
11
®
Contents
1 Executive Summary
72 Interviewees
Editorial Leadership Team
Emerging Trends in Real Estate ® 2011 Chairs PricewaterhouseCoopers Advisers and Researchers
Patrick L. Phillips, Urban Land Institute Adam Harvey James Pettigrew
Mitchell M. Roschelle, PricewaterhouseCoopers Allen G. Baker Jasen Kwong
Amedeo Prete Jason Palmer
Author Ami J. Patel Jeff Kiley
Jonathan D. Miller Amy E. Olson Jeff Nasser
Andrew Alperstein Jennifer A. Murray
Principal Researchers and Advisers Andrew Popert Katherine Billings
Stephen Blank, Urban Land Institute Anne Daniel Lois McCarron-McGuire
Charles J. DiRocco, Jr., PricewaterhouseCoopers Brandon Bush Lori-Ann Beausoleil
Dean Schwanke, Urban Land Institute Bruce Raganold Michael Chung
Chris Vangou Michael Epstein
Senior Advisers Christine Lattanzio Nadja Ibrahim
Christopher J. Potter, PricewaterhouseCoopers, Canada Claude Gilbert Nick Panagiotopoulos
Susan M. Smith, PricewaterhouseCoopers Court Maton Patricia Perruzza
Dan Crowley Reginald Dean Barnett
Emeritus Emerging Trends Chairs Daniel D’Archivio Rich Fournier
Patrick Leardo David E. Khan Rob E. Sciaudone
Richard Rosan David M. Voss Russell Goodman
Dennis Johnson Russell Sugar
Dominique Fortier Sandra Blum
Douglas B. Struckman Scott Williamson
Frank Magliocco Stephen Shulman
Holly V. Allen Susan Johnson
Emerging Trends in Real Estate® is a trademark of
Ian Nelson Timothy C. Conlon
PricewaterhouseCoopers and is registered in the United States
Jaclyn Paul Tori Lambert
and other countries. All rights reserved.
Jag Patel Yekaterina Kostyuk
“PricewaterhouseCoopers” refers to PricewaterhouseCoopers, a James A. Oswald
Delaware limited liability partnership, or, as the context requires,
the PricewaterhouseCoopers global network or other member ULI Editorial and Production Staff
firms of the network, each of which is a separate and independent James Mulligan, Managing Editor/Manuscript Editor
legal entity. This document is for general information purposes
Betsy Van Buskirk, Creative Director
only, and should not be used as a substitute for consultation with
Anne Morgan, Graphic Designer
professional advisers.
Craig Chapman, Senior Director, Publishing Operations
© October 2010 by the Urban Land Institute Karrie Underwood, Administrative Coordinator
and PricewaterhouseCoopers.
ISBN: 978-0-87420-149-9
ULI Catalog Number: E41
Notice to Readers
Emerging Trends in Real Estate is a trends and forecast publication now in its 32nd Private Property Company or Developer 43.1%
edition, and is one of the most highly regarded and widely read forecast reports in Real Estate Service Firm 20.5%
the real estate industry. Emerging Trends in Real Estate® 2011, undertaken jointly by Institutional/Equity Investor or Investment
the Urban Land Institute and PricewaterhouseCoopers, provides an outlook on real Manager 15.4%
estate investment and development trends, real estate finance and capital markets, Other (please specify) 10.0%
property sectors, metropolitan areas, and other real estate issues throughout the Bank, Lender, or Securitized Lender 4.9%
United States, Canada, and Latin America. Homebuilder or Residential Land Developer 3.2%
Publicly Listed Property Company or REIT 2.9%
Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 reflects the views of more than 875 individuals
who completed surveys or were interviewed as a part of the research process for Throughout the publication, the views of interviewees and/or survey respondents
this report. The views expressed herein are obtained exclusively from these surveys have been presented as direct quotations from the participant without attribution
and interviews, and do not express the opinions of either PwC or ULI. Interviewees to any particular participant. A list of the interview participants in this year’s study
and survey participants represent a wide range of industry experts, including inves- appears at the end of this report. To all who helped, the Urban Land Institute and
tors, fund managers, developers, property companies, lenders, brokers, advisers PricewaterhouseCoopers extend sincere thanks for sharing valuable time and
and consultants. ULI and PwC researchers personally interviewed more than 275 expertise. Without the involvement of these many individuals, this report would not
individuals and survey responses were received from 600 individuals, whose com- have been possible.
pany affiliations are broken down below.
Entering the
Era of Less
“The problems are obvious, but the solutions oblique.”
A
fter a hard crash, the real estate world reluctantly reaping excellent risk-adjusted returns. For lenders back in
enters a new “Era of Less” in 2011—encompass- the game and good-credit borrowers, the bottom of the cycle
ing a shrunken industry, lower return expectations, offers the best environment to employ leverage, especially on
restrained development prospects, reduced credit availability, high-quality assets, and low interest rates only magnify the
and crimped profits. Adding to unnerving short-term pes- opportunity for owners. Investment managers and real estate
simism, commercial lenders and borrowers finally accelerate investment trusts (REITs) with teams to lease properties and
recognition of substantial losses (30 to 50 percent haircuts on nurse asset income streams back to health can bulldoze
asset values) from frenzied deal making in the years before aside many operator-light opportunity-fund boutiques, which
the recent steep worldwide recession. Limping assets, suffer- had depended on cap-rate compression and leverage to
ing high vacancies and rolling-down rents, face problematic reap appreciation. “You can no longer make money off flip-
workouts and uncertain refinancing prospects as hundreds ping; you must be able to manage assets at the property
of billions of dollars of loans mature in each of the next four level,” an interviewee said.
years, according to Emerging Trends interviewees. Housing,
meanwhile, remains mired in a dead zone of reduced demand: Exhibit 1-1
many Americans cannot afford new homes even with record- NCREIF Capitalization Rates vs. S&P 500
low mortgage rates and slumping prices. But owners of the Inverse P/E Ratio
sliver of properties with healthy cash flows in prime gateway
— Cap Rate — Inverse P/E Ratio
markets enjoy significantly better outlooks—a capital flight to 15
15%
quality buttresses prices and balance sheets—and, not sur-
prisingly, everybody falls in love with rental apartments, the 12
12%
king of core-style income-generating investments.
Over the next year, some real estate players could gain 9%
9
significantly. The smart investors who sold near market tops,
avoided overleveraging, and kept powder dry are extremely 6%
6
well positioned to take advantage of legions of credit-starved
competitors who overborrowed and overpaid. Now, the
3%
3
haves can attract new capital, poach tenants, and lure talent
away from the have-nots. Cash-flush investors and reviving
0
0%
lenders should have plenty of opportunities to recapitalize
1978
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get 15 percent to 20 percent rates of return without more risk –3%
-3
and more leverage, and you can’t succeed on a sustained
–6%
-6
basis. Real estate is more about cash flow and keeping
buildings leased.” What’s wrong with delivering unlevered, –9%
-9
high-single-digit returns or low-teens performance for conser-
Sources: NCREIF, Moody’s Economy.com, Federal Reserve Board, PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP.
vatively financed assets? Well nothing, especially when you
* Ten-year Treasury yields based on average of the quarter; 2010Q2 average as of August 31, 2010.
consider the dismal record of the stock market over the past
decade.
Still, the overwhelming majority of Emerging Trends inter- corporations cut back on pensions, states grapple to reduce
viewees register doubts and uncertainty about the future public employee benefits, and just about everyone pays more
and, especially, the subdued outlook for the U.S. economy, for health insurance coverage. Again this year, Emerging
which not only flounders in consumer and government debt, Trends interviewees enter a familiar echo chamber, repeat-
but also struggles to create high-paying jobs in a more ing emphatically how real estate recovery “is all about jobs,”
competitive, technology-enabled global marketplace. “Our but turn silent when trying to identify America’s high-growth
problems are much bigger than real estate, and solutions are employment-creating industries of the future.
well beyond the scope of our industry.” Americans and their Homebuilding and commercial real estate construction
government have been living large off borrowing for several certainly do not offer much hope for jump-starting employ-
decades, and now the staggering bills have come due. The ment or the economy in the near term. “We really don’t need
housing debacle, precipitated by easy credit, shakes con- much new of anything.” Housing led the economy into the
fidence to the core, undermining personal wealth and the dumpster, and increasing home loan defaults and foreclo-
sense of a secure financial future. Consumption takes a nec- sures curtail any chance for a sudden rebound. Sobered
essary breather as people retrench to pay off sizable debts— lenders now expect homebuyers to make downpayments and
home mortgages, car loans, and credit cards—and increase have solid credit histories before they extend mortgages, but
savings rates from record-low levels. coming out of this recession, many Americans simply cannot
The unemployment picture appears more worrisome: even meet these basic requirements or turn too skittish to take a
before the recession, wages and benefits had stagnated for chance.
the average American. Manufacturing jobs have leached to Eventually population growth will absorb the overhang in
lower-cost overseas markets since the 1970s, slowly decimat- housing supply, but location preferences show signs of shift-
ing bedrock blue-color jobs. Now the internet and telecom ing away from bigger homes on the suburban fringe to infill
advances allow companies to outsource more professional locations closer to 24-hour markets. Reversing decades of
and service jobs to overseas locations at reduced wages, moving away from city centers, “more people will regroup in
and various computer applications eliminate office and areas where life is easier, more efficient, and less car depen-
administrative positions. Many corporate productivity gains dent”—that is, closer to shopping districts and workplaces. In
and enhanced profits come at the expense of damping down the approaching cycle, the industry can expect to see more
appetites for new hires, and now government belt tighten- high-rise and mid-rise apartments, as well as townhouse proj-
ing, especially at the state and local levels, eliminates more ects, built around shopping centers and commercial districts.
jobs as stimulus funding begins to run dry. At the same time, Failing retail space will be converted to other uses, often with
But buying time with extend and pretend may pay off for
Exhibit 1-3
other financial institutions, including larger money-center banks
U.S. Real Estate Returns and Economic Growth
and life insurers, as well as some commercial m ortgage–
backed securities (CMBS) special servicers. They will step
NCREIF GDP NAREIT Composite
up writedowns and workouts as a prelude to disposing of
40%
assets when loans mature, and likely can recoup some lost
30% value in slowly improving markets. Given the looming num-
20% ber of maturing loans up for refinancing starting in 2011, this
“painful” deleveraging to lower values and disposition pro-
10%
cess could take until mid-decade to complete. But with FDIC,
0% bank, and special servicer sales, substantially more proper-
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010*
–10% ties will hit transaction markets in 2011 and 2012, allowing the
market to begin clearing and prices finally to reset. The time
–20% approaches to “absorb losses, deleverage to the new value
–30% levels, adjust, and move on.”
–40%
No Way Out. In the meantime, compromised borrowers survive
Sources: NCREIF, NAREIT, Moody’s Economy.com.
on life support until they succumb finally to maturity defaults or
* 2010 data annualized from second quarter 2009.
raise new capital from eager investors taking preferred posi-
tions. Essentially, “they get squashed.” Most or all of their exist-
ing equity vaporizes (“If you can get back to par, it’s a grand
residential components, and more underoccupied suburban slam”), and some high-profile developers, who took recourse
office campuses will be transformed into mixed-use proper- financing, suffer even greater carnage (“It’s a personal wipe-
ties. “Coming years will focus on readapting real estate to out”). Sentiment grows among Emerging Trends interviewees
people’s revised goals, priorities, and expectations. We’ll be that odds improve for owners of properties with a reasonable
working longer, saving more, and looking for greater efficien- cash flow to overcome refinancing hurdles as liquidity returns to
cies in how we live and work.” debt markets. For investors in more commodity assets, whose
Simply put, an Era of Less replaces an era of bigger cost basis goes back to 2005–2007 pricing peaks, refinancing
and more. prospects “hardly look rosy” as long as leases roll down to mar-
ket rents and vacant space stays empty.
4
Despite widespread “extend and pretend” practices to avoid
taking balance-sheet losses and force foreclosure on belea-
2
guered borrowers, still-undercapitalized regional and local
banks totter with overweightings of failed land and construc- 1
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
tion loans. Several hundred of these banks have collapsed
1 = abysmal, 5 = fair, 9 = excellent.
into the hands of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC), a process that will continue through 2011. Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on U.S. respondents only.
Exhibit 1-5
Rational Returns. Emerging Trends surveys peg expected
Index Returns: Real Estate vs. Stocks/Bonds
returns for calendar year 2011 in the high single digits—7.5
percent for institutional-quality private real estate equity (unle-
S&P 500 NCREIF NAREIT Composite Barclays Capital
Government vered NCREIF) and 8.2 percent for REITs. These total returns
Bond Index comprise 5 to 7 percent from income and additional modest
40%
Barclaysand
appreciation, Capital Government
greater gains for Bond Indexproperties in
signature
30% prime markets. “After a 30 percent to 40 percent loss, it could
20% take aNAREIT Composite
long time to make up ground.” Opportunity inves-
tors may score on one-off deals, but will be hard pressed
10% NCREIF
to realize consistent mid- to high-teens performance, espe-
0% cially in
S&Pthe500
absence of ample financing to fuel gains. If fund
–10% marketers create pro formas with returns above 20 percent,
1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010* they either may be out of touch or trying to snow prospects,
–20% according to interviewees. Not surprisingly, survey respon-
–30% dents expect private equity real estate and public REITs to
outperform the overall stock and bond markets—the profes-
–40%
sional real estate crowd always does. But publicly traded
Sources: NCREIF, NAREIT, S&P, Barclays Group. homebuilders will lag, according to surveys (see exhibit 1-6).
* 2010 data annualized from second quarter 2009.
States less competitive against the rest of the world. The Interest
Tax rates
policies
Interest rates 3.91
Tax policies
Various
Issues/PrT
country has lost high-paying manufacturing jobs since the State and local budget
Taxproblems
policies 3.90
1970s to Asia and Mexico, and many remaining factories State and local
Statebudget
andGlobal problems
local economic
budget growth
problems 3.65 Issues/Pr
Real Esta
have shifted from union bastions, mostly in the Midwest and Global economic
Federal fiscal
Global growth
deficits/imbalances
economic growth 3.59 Real
mentEsta
an
Federal fiscal Federal
deficits/imbalances
Northeast, to lower-wage, right-to-work states in the South
New federal
fiscal financial regulations
deficits/imbalances 3.54
ment an
ment 20
New federal financial regulations
New federal financial Inflation
regulations 3.52
and Southwest. ment
Inflation
Energy prices
Inflation 3.46 Exhibit201
n Vaunted advances in technology improve productivity while
Energy prices
European financial instability
Energy prices 3.12 Exhibit 1
taking away domestic jobs. U.S.-based companies can easily
European financial instability
Trade deficits/imbalances
European financial instability 3.01
move operations overseas—call centers, financial analysis,
Trade deficits/imbalances
Trade deficits/imbalances
2.85
software development, accounting, X-ray reading, etc. The
internet and telecommunications make transferring informa- Social/Political Issues
Social/Political Issues
rates here.” In short, what happened to manufacturing now Real Estate/Development Issues
Real Estate/Development Issues
Future
Futurehome price
homeFuture
price inflation
home price inflation
stagnation/deflation 3.63
secretaries, file clerks, telephone operators, bookkeep-
CMBS Future
market
CMBS recovery
market
home price recovery
inflation 3.62
ers, order takers, travel agents, messengers, typesetters,
Transportation funding
Transportation
CMBS market funding
recovery 3.48
newspaper reporters, and on and on. An executive with a
Urban redevelopment
Urban redevelopment
Transportation funding 3.31
Blackberry and a laptop needs a fraction of the office support
Affordable/workforce housing
Affordable/workforce housing
Urban redevelopment 3.16
he or she once did.
Growth controls
Growth housing
Affordable/workforce controls 3.15
These same trends directly affect real estate owners, as
ConstructionConstruction
materials costs
materials
Growth costs
controls 3.10
do the following: Construction labor
Construction
Construction costs
labor
materials costs 3.07
n Midwest factory markets have been savaged by manufac- Land costs
Land costs
Construction labor 3.05
turing declines, stagnating and shrinking through a chronic ResponsibleResponsible
property investing
property investing
Land costs 3.00
slump. Sustainable development
Sustainable
Responsible development
property investing 2.95
n Internet shopping allows for more direct factory-to- NIMBYism
NIMBYism
Sustainable development 2.87
consumer distribution without as many supply-chain links, Green Green
buildings
buildings
NIMBYism 2.81
leading to less need for warehouse space and fewer and/or Land availability
Greenissues
Land availability issues
buildings 2.77
smaller retail outlets. Land availability issues 0 1 2 3 4 5
00 1 2 3 44 55
Supply Side: Development many interviewees complain businesses “can’t move aggres-
sively on expansions and growth strategies,” which might
Stall-Out help fill buildings. “There are too many unknowns to make
any decisions.” Federal agencies scramble to write new
Absence of demand, rather than overdevelopment, has
banking rules—“the devil is in the details”—while lobbyists
spurred record or near-record vacancies across many mar-
angle to gain favorable language (read: protect industry
kets and asset sectors. “Fortunately, no new anything is
profits). Among the biggest outstanding issues will be how
coming on line, so when the economy improves, rents can
reserve requirements are meted out. Must CMBS loan origi-
start to increase more quickly.” Overall, developers have
nators retain a certain percentage of junior B tranches to
little chance to obtain construction financing: most bankers
ensure underwriting vigilance, or will CMBS 2.0 operate like
assume the fetal position if a builder heads their way. But
CMBS 1.0 off moral hazard? Investment banks, meanwhile,
life insurers consider construction take-outs for apartment
position themselves to shed asset-management funds if
projects, if developers can provide enough equity—40 to
reserve requirements seem too burdensome on co-invested
60 percent of cost. “Joint venture investments in apartment
house money.
development can be better than buying,” says an insurance
executive. “Land is a quarter of peak value; construction
Changing Tax Rates. Tax policy presents another investor
costs are down 25 to 30 percent. You can make attractive
conundrum, especially capital gains treatments. Investors
investments in development on high-quality apartment or
want to keep long-term rates at current low levels, but the
industrial properties, even with lower rents.” A handful of
government desperately needs enhanced funding sources.
singular office projects in site-constrained 24-hour markets
Everyone grapples to secure new advantages or keep exist-
can be expected to get funding, too, by year-end 2011, if the
ing ones. “We need a tax policy to encourage long-term
economy appears to be on sounder footing. These first-out-
investing,” says an exasperated developer/owner. “We
of-the-ground projects always score well early in sustained
should think about increasing shorter-term capital gains
recoveries. Otherwise, the few office developments nationally
taxes and lowering long-term gains below current levels for
will be limited to build-to-suit/net-lease deals and government
extended holding periods. Right now there are no advan-
buildings. “Rents just don’t justify doing anything. It’s dead.”
tages to long-term investing, and assets like real estate are
marginalized as a result. We trade and flip rather than build
value over time.”
Exhibit 1-9
Firm Profitability Forecast 2011
Very Poor 7.6% Modestly Poor 11.2% Modestly Good 13.0% Very Good 5.3%
Abysmal 6.1% Poor 12.5% Fair 27.8% Good 15.5% Excellent 1.1%
Abysmal 0.8% Poor 6.3% Fair 26.3% Good 22.5% Excellent 2.9%
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on U.S. respondents only.
Fannie/Freddie’s Fate. At some point, Congress must Survival of the Fittest. There is a shakeout among invest-
come to grips with the future of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, ment managers and private equity firms: poor perform-
the mortgage-market black holes, which prop up single-family ers flunk and lose business to stronger firms with broader
and multifamily housing with hundreds of billions of dollars in asset-management and service platforms. Many opportunity
federal infusions. Expected changes could make borrowing investment managers leave the scene: they cannot wring
more expensive in the residential sector, and given the recent promotes from legacy disasters, and their prospects for new
debacle, that may be a good outcome. investments remain limited without a bubble market and
easy financing. Banks and special servicers still have trouble
“building teams of experienced workout specialists”; if acqui-
Real Estate Industry: Chastened sitions pros want jobs, that is the place to go. Lawyers always
Property Sectors Buy Select Hotels. Always the most volatile property sector,
hotels should be excellent buys at or near bottom. “They’re
Buy or Hold Multifamily. Rental apartments will outperform the cheapest and will come back the fastest.” Target down-
everything else. In addition to positive demographic trends, town full-service hotels in major markets: many owners over-
even the dampened recovery and housing market shambles leveraged late in the market cycle and are vulnerable. No
are pluses because more people cannot afford to buy or stay one gets excited about high-capex resorts or limited-service
in homes. “Subsidized” financing from Freddie and Fannie brands in commodity areas.
just ices the cake. Institutional buyers push up prices close
to peaks in prime infill areas, and interviewees expect rent Buy Condos and Single-Family Housing. Markets have
spikes by 2012. collapsed, the population will increase, and demand will
return eventually. Now is the time to buy your dream house, if
Buy or Hold Select Retail. Infill shopping centers with top you have enough cash. But this is not a speculator’s market:
supermarket chains and fortress malls sustain performance do not expect a sudden future ramp-up in prices, except in
through the consumer pullback. Darwin rules everywhere else the choicest urban neighborhoods and waterfront locations
in the oversupplied retail universe. where values also tend to hold up better anyway. Avoid com-
modity, half-finished subdivisions in the suburban outer edge
Buy or Hold 24-hour, Gateway Office. Premier down- and McMansions; they are so yesterday. For good-credit bor-
town buildings remain investor mainstays in New York City, rowers, now is also the time to finance at locked-in, long-term
Washington, D.C., and the select few 24-hour markets situ- rates.
ated along global pathways. Suburban office space outside
urbanizing nodes gets a big thumbs-down in Emerging
Trends surveys.
Real Estate
Capital Flows
“If you have a trophy property, lenders will come after you out of the
woodwork. If you have a dog, you get foreclosed.”
I
n the capital markets, the gulf between the haves and at-the-bit equity players to launch into buying or recapitalizing
have-nots will become more apparent during 2011. The more challenged properties.
cash rich and well capitalized should feast off the cash
poor and overleveraged. Big lenders should capture more Filling the Void. “Absent a major economic speed bump
market share, while more small banks nosedive into oblivion. (like the dreaded double dip), there may be enough capital
If you are a borrower with bad credit, you’re fried. If you are a
buyer with dry powder, you should have plenty of options.
Exhibit 2-1
In 2011, the “huge spin game” of extend and pretend also
finally starts to run its course. “We’re deferring losses to build
Sales of Large Commercial Properties
up capital, and we want to keep regulators off our backs
120
120
by maintaining manageable capital ratios,” says a leading Billions of
lending executive. “Regulators know what is going on; [they]
just don’t want events to force them to notice. But at some 100
100 Exhibit 2-19 Sale
point we will be able to take the losses and pull the trigger Large Commercial
ties
on writedowns, either when foreclosures can’t be avoided or
Exhibit 1-6 last yea
when it’s time to refinance.” 80
80
Billions of Dollars
More Realistic 60
60
8
8%
6%
6 20.0% Moderately 10% In Balance 32.7% Moderately Oversupplied
Undersupplied
4%
4
Debt Capital for Acquisitions
32.8% Moderately Undersupplied 5.7% Moderately Oversupplied
2%
2
0%
0
2010*
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
Cross-BorderCross-Border
Investors Investors 2.23
Commercial Banks 3.07
Institutional Investors/
Institutional Investors/Pension Funds 2.45
Pension Funds Securitized Lenders/CMBS 3.08
0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 0.00 0.5 1
1.0 1.5 2
2.0 2.5 33.0 3.5 4 5
0 1 2 3 4 5
1 = strongly agree, 2 = agree, 3 = undecided, 4 = disagree, 5 = strongly disagree 1 = strongly agree, 2 = agree, 3 = undecided, 4 = disagree, 5 = strongly disagree
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on U.S. respondents only. Note: Based on U.S. respondents only.
intensive care—a likely prospect—more small-fry banks could indicator of the depth of sidelined equity “poised to pounce”
flatline, straining government agencies like the FDIC, limiting back into the market, though they question the eagerness to
refinancing opportunities for their borrowers, and undermin- pay up for properties so early in the cycle. But debt capital
ing chances for recovery. for both refinancing and acquisitions will continue in under-
supply, according to surveys, a result that underscores an
Market Schizophrenia. Emerging Trends surveys capture unsettling reality: there are many more troubled borrowers
the essence of market disconnect and bifurcation. More than with “crappy assets” than rationally leveraged owners with
55 percent of respondents see equity capital moderately to solid properties. In 2011, REITs and well-capitalized private
substantially oversupplied for 2011—a reaction to the recent investors should have the best opportunities to take advan-
investment surge into a few 24-hour cities and the multifamily tage of market imbalances (see exhibit 2-4). Life insurers are
sector (see exhibit 2-3). They view this activity as a leading best positioned on the debt side.
Less Rigorous 32.8% Remain the Same 40.6% More Rigorous 26.6% Less Rigorous 41.0% Remain the Same 29.2% More Rigorous 29.8%
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on U.S. respondents only. Note: Based on U.S. respondents only.
77 In Foreclosure
Extend without Mortgage
Modification 7.1% 66 Exh
U.S.
Mo
55 In-F
Percentage
44
Sell to a Third Party 13.5%
33
22
Foreclose and Dispose 16.2%
11
00
1988Q1
1988Q4
1989Q4
1990Q4
1991Q4
1992Q4
1993Q4
1994Q4
1995Q4
1996Q4
1997Q4
1998Q4
1999Q4
2000Q4
2001Q4
2002Q4
2003Q4
2004Q4
2005Q4
2006Q4
2007Q4
2008Q4
2009Q4
2010Q2
own large CMBS portfolios with plenty of bonds backed by start buying, but first you need properties to go through the
thousands of assets “destined for distressed debt funds.” washing machine and take losses. The game has started.”
“Nobody underwrote this stuff.” Various interviewees affirm outlooks for a revived $75 bil-
lion to $100 billion bond market “within a few years”—still
far short of its $250 billion zenith in 2007. In the early going
Wall Street at least, loans will settle in the 70 to 75 percent LTV range,
based on well-underwritten fundamentals. Major banks and
The big Wall Street investment banks look to regroup after
investment banks will lead the way in putting together loan
taking the brunt of blame for directing capital into overheating
pools. New regulations will mandate greater disclosures to
property markets through complex securitized loan structures
investors, who will “require originators to retain stakes in offer-
in what turned out to be a value mirage–inspired fee fest.
ings.” The big open regulatory question is whether federal
Interviewees expect these firms to return in force once they
agencies will mandate issuers and originators to retain stakes
figure out how to navigate federal regulatory reform. “Real
in B pieces, and how big those stakes will be. The industry
estate needs capital, and the Street provides it.” For starters,
argues that the market can dictate the process, but “obvi-
bankers structure new CMBS deals to kick-start the moribund
ously that didn’t work” going into the crisis. “The only way to
mortgage securities market and watch for opportunities to
head off a repeat of the recent debacle is to require issuers
take struggling private operators public. “They’re resilient and
to retain a percentage of each securitization and force under-
will find a way to get their noses under the tent.”
writing discipline,” argues an interviewee. “Rating agencies
can’t do the job”: they were overwhelmed by the sheer vol-
CMBS—Conduits and Special ume of assets in offerings and have conflicts because spon-
sors pay their fees. Early next-generation CMBS offerings
Servicers have focused on single-borrower portfolios, the same way
Make no mistake: CMBS markets have begun to resuscitate. “CMBS got kicked off in the mid-’90s.”
“They will come back slowly and gradually,” says a leading Interviewees disagree over the impact of maturing CMBS
workout specialist. “Teams are in place to begin originations loans on debt markets. Views range from “CMBS is the single
and refinance, and there are plenty of dollars out there to biggest disruption” and “the black hole of refinancing,” to
the “wall of loans is overstated.” But consensus reigns that
“virtually any loan underwritten five years ago can’t be refi-
Exhibit 2-10
U.S. CMBS Issuance nanced at par.” Borrowers complain that inundated special
servicers will not address workout solutions for problem loans
250 until a default, and “then it’s too late” because tenants often
$250
have left and cash flows plummet further. While workouts
happen, “special servicer hands are largely tied by what’s
200
$200
in loan documents.” They do not want to open themselves
up to lawsuits. “Without a default and sale, it’s very hard for
them to take a discount on a securitized loan. What you’ll
150
$150 see is increasing numbers of loans foreclosed and sold in an
Total (Millions)
1000
U.S. Real Estate Capital Sources Pension Fun
Exhibit 2-11
U.S. Real Estate Capital Flows 1998–2010
$600 — Equity
— P(Larger
rivate Investors
— Pension Funds
$400 —
— Foreign Investors
— PInstitutions
Billions
rivate Financial
$300 — (REO)
— Companies
L
ife Insurance
$200 —
— PFunds
ublic Untraded
2000 Pension F
— BSavings
$2,000 —
Debt anks, S&Ls, Mutual
Banks
— CSecurities
Equity
ommercial Mortgage
Mortgage
1500
$1,500 —
— Companies
L
ife Insurance
— REIT UnsecuredGovernm
Debt
— Agencies
G
overnment Credit
Billions
1000
$1,000 —
— Mortgage REITsREIT Unse
— Pension Funds
500
$500 —
— Public UntradedLifeFunds
Insura
Commerc
0
$0 —
1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010
Banks S&L
Sources: Roulac Global Places, from various sources, including American Council of Life Insurers, Commercial Mortgage Alert, Federal Reserve Board, FannieMae.
com, IREI, NAREIT, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Real Capital Analytics.
Note: Excludes corporate, nonprofit, and government equity real estate holdings, as well as single-family and owner-occupied residences.
*2010 figures are as of second quarter, or in some cases projected through second quarter.
Exhibit 2-12
U.S. Real Estate Capital Sources 2010
n Private Debt
$2,153.7 Billion
U.S. Real Estate Capital: n Public Debt
$4,058.9 Billion $790.3 Billion
n Private Equity
$804.8 Billion
n Public Equity
$310.1 Billion
Sources: Roulac Global Places, from various sources, including American Council of Life Insurers, Commercial Mortgage Alert, Federal Reserve Board, FannieMae.com,
IREI, NAREIT, PricewaterhouseCoopers, and Real Capital Analytics.
Note: Excludes corporate, nonprofit, and government equity real estate holdings, as well as single-family and owner-occupied residences.
*2010 figures are as of second quarter, or in some cases projected through second quarter.
prices.” Dealing with these issues demands “sophisticated Strategic Investment Allocation Preferences
analysis,” and most tranche holders “don’t know what to do” for 2011
with impaired assets. “They can take a loss or hire a lawyer,” Core
says a distressed loan specialist. The best solution probably Investments
means selling out to a bond holder with a major position and Development 27.1%
getting something back.” 10.5%
Core-Plus
Mezzanine Debt Investments
15.6%
Opportunistic
Investments
Filling the recapitalization gap looks ready-made for mez- 24.9%
zanine debt investors, who can claim less-risky positions in
Value-Added
the capital stack or angle for loan-to-own deals. “We’re com- Investments
fortable going up and down the stack, including doing high- 21.8%
leverage loans again,” says a mezz specialist. “The bottom of
the market is when you’re best positioned to take more risk.”
Today’s mezzanine-player mix no longer includes financial Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
engineers; instead, they are typically real estate pros who Note: Based on U.S. respondents only.
either count on making a good return on their loan or can
take over and manage the assets if necessary, counting on in the face of no tenant demand. “It’s hard to find deals that
improving fundamentals. Mezz lenders will concentrate on make any sense.” They can only hope banks and the FDIC
borrowers, who negotiate with banks and special servicers become more active sellers—soon. Most interviewees agree
to bring new dollars into their assets and write down values. that “distressed debt pools have the biggest upside poten-
Mezz debt comes to the rescue at a reduced cost basis, tial,” but they will be highly risky, too, with plenty of assets
injecting funds to stabilize and lease up half-empty build- that have no chance of recovery. “The jury is out on whether
ings. “The alternative for banks and servicers is to let assets buying large loan pools will produce outsized returns.”
waste.” But interviewees warn about “ruthless” mezzanine Extremely well positioned are a few core real estate manag-
lenders, who “don’t want to work with borrowers. They just ers with relatively low-leverage, open-end funds, which attract
want the property.” money not only from pension plan sponsors and endowments,
but also foreign investors. These core accounts are loaded
with cash-flowing, leased properties and look like they have
Opportunity and Core Funds nothing but cyclical upside ahead because they already
Investment banks and boutique firms bulge with leftover took large, mark-to-market writedowns. Interviewees suggest
commitments for opportunity strategies, marketed to inves- returns are probable in at least the high single digits, mostly
tors before the crash. Others raised money more recently in from income, but additional appreciation kicks in from upticks
anticipation of buying into widespread distress, and a raft of of holdings in favored gateway markets. Investors also know
managers troll for dollars to execute high-return strategies. what they are buying; these are not blind pools.
Many marketing pitches claim they can deliver 20 percent Some advisers push so-called “core-plus” strategies, sug-
annualized returns, fearing they will not attract capital at less. gesting somewhat higher returns, but distinctions in strate-
“In this market, the old opportunity model doesn’t fit since you gies get fuzzy. “What does [core plus] mean?” Value-add
don’t have the leverage and won’t be able to make money managers will begin selling prospects on funds that buy Class
pay back in three to five years.” Return expectations must B/B– apartments for upgrades to take advantage of renewing
ratchet down: “12 to 15 percent is the new 25 percent. Get multifamily demand and expected rent bumps.
used to it.” New funds should “shoot for 14 to 16 percent,
and hope inflation eventually brings up performance.”
Those opportunity managers in investment mode rational- REITs
ize paying core-style prices in primary markets or take big Most public REITS have skated through the downturn, emerg-
risks in secondary and tertiary locations to buy really cheap ing in better shape than many capital market competitors.
Commercial
2.2 4.26
Latin
LatinAmerica
America Mortgage–Backed Securities
4.5
Germany
Australia
Canada
downtown office property, they like retail and hotels (need- –-1000
$1,000
ing a place to stay on visits), and some consider industrial Source: Real Capital Analytics.
properties at primary seaports. Highlights of interviewee com- Note: Net capital flows from second-quarter 2009 through second-quarter 2010.
ments about foreign capital flows include:
Exhibit 2-18
Foreign Net Real Estate Investments in the United States by Property Type
1000
$1,000 n Apartment
n Industrial
n Office
800$800 n Retail
n Hotel
600$600
400$400
Millions of Dollars
200$200
0 0
Canada Asia Americas Middle East Other Australia Europe (except United Germany
Germany) Kingdom
–$200
-200
–$400
-400
–$600
-600
Source: Real Capital Analytics.
Note: Net capital flows from second-quarter 2009 through second-quarter 2010.
Exhibit 2-19
U.S. Buyers and Sellers: Net Capital Flows by Source and Property Sector
$800
800
$600
600
Exhibit 2
Net Capi
$400
400 Property
Exhibit 2
Dollars
$200
200
Total (Millions of Dollars)
00
Cross-Border
Cross-Border
Cross-Border
Cross-Border
Equity Fund
Equity Fund
Equity Fund
Equity Fund
Institutional
Institutional
Institutional
Institutional
–$200
-200
User/other
User/other
User/other
User/other
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Unknown
Private
Private
Private
Private
Public
Public
Public
Public
–$400
-400
–$600
-600
Apartment Industrial Office Retail
–$800
-800
–$1,000
-1000
Source: Real Capital Analytics.
Note: Net capital flows from second-quarter 2009 through second-quarter 2010.
Markets toWatch
“Gateway 24-hour cities will always dominate and outshine
secondary markets.”
E
conomic doldrums bring the reality of the nation’s real ratings improved over 2010’s results for markets from coast
estate markets into sharper relief, “dominant institu- to coast, the gap between top and bottom continues to
tional buyers concentrate on only eight or nine mar- widen, and more than 50 percent of surveyed cities still fall
kets,” and investors question the future of some secondary below “fair” ratings for commercial/multifamily investment
and tertiary metropolitan areas. If big corporate space users prospects. “If you look market by market, you see some win-
are any guide, “they’re focusing on the places where they ners and more losers.”
need to be,” says a leading tenant rep. “They want the global
gateway cities for headquarters and lower-cost Sunbelt cities The Pittsburgh Scenario. “We’re going to see a lot more
with international airport access for back office.” Strategically, places end up like Pittsburgh, if they’re lucky,” says a senior
they eliminate most everything else. Those cities left out will investment executive. “Here’s a city that used to be a major
depend increasingly on government facilities, health care manufacturing center with many corporate headquarters.
complexes, and education centers to secure economic pros- Now it’s cleaned up, the high-paying factory jobs have
pects. “Accessibility and workforce are key. It’s the yin and diminished dramatically, and a high ratio of workers have
yang of links to global pathways—big airports, good labor government or quasi-government jobs in education and
pools, and company operations centers.” Other interviewees medical fields.” Forbes magazine ranked it as America’s
suggest investors should “follow where educated, energetic, most livable city in 2010. However, “Property values and
creative young people want to be.” Inevitably, that path leads rents have essentially been flat and development has been
to the same group of highly favored metropolitan areas with sporadic.” Pittsburgh ranks near the bottom on Emerging
24-hour attributes. Trends surveys for investment and development prospects.
Adds another interviewee, “Pittsburgh is a tight market, but
stagnant. You can get decent, steady returns without much, if
No Surprises, Gaps Remain any, upside.” And in the Era of Less, modest, boring income
returns should become more expected, accepted, and nec-
Top Emerging Trends markets offer no surprises: Washington,
essarily embraced in more markets.
D.C., and New York City pull away from the pack, followed
by San Francisco, Boston, and Seattle. All qualify as preemi-
nent gateway cities with attractive coastal (or near-coast) Better to No Prospects. Interviewees contend traditional
locations, barriers to entry, superior transportation hubs interior, hot-growth cities can bounce back faster than many
linked directly to global business centers, and concentra- observers think, thanks to lower business costs and airports;
tions of brainpower jobs. Houston and Denver also solidify Houston, Denver, and Dallas rate frequent mentions. Atlanta,
rankings near the top, and respondents show faith in south- another typically favored fast-growth center, draws less enthu-
ern California’s resilience, despite recent setbacks. While siasm this year, despite its preeminent airport. Concerns grow
Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C. 7.01 Westchester/Fairfield, CT 5.18 Sacramento 3.99
Westchester/Fairfield, CT Sacramento
New York
New York 6.56 Chicago 5.14 Albuquerque 3.95
Chicago Albuquerque
San Francisco
San Francisco 6.34 Salt Lake City 4.93 Kansas City 3.84
Salt Lake City Kansas City
Austin
Austin 6.29 Baltimore 4.88 Indianapolis 3.82
Baltimore Indianapolis
Boston
Boston 6.20 Minneapolis/St. Paul 4.85 Oklahoma City 3.74
Min eapolis/St. Paul Oklahoma City
Seat le
Seattle 6.09 Charlotte 4.82 Tucson 3.72
Charlot e Tucson
San Jose San Jose 6.08 Orlando 4.58 New Orleans 3.54
Orlando New Orleans
Houston
Houston 6.02 Philadelphia 4.53 St. Louis 3.45
Philadelphia St. Louis
Los Angeles
Los Angeles 5.84 Nashville 4.51 Las Vegas 3.44
San Diego Nashvil e Las Vegas
San Diego 5.63 Miami 4.49 Providence 3.44
Denver Miami Providence
Denver 5.58 Honolulu/Hawaii Honolulu/Hawai 4.43 Pittsburgh Pit sburgh 3.43
Dal as/Fort Worth
Dallas/Fort Worth 5.50 Tampa/St. Petersburg
Tampa/St. Petersburg 4.41 Cincinnati Cincin ati 3.25
Northern New Jersey
Northern New Jersey 5.45 Virginia Beach/Norfolk
Virginia Beach/Norfolk 4.32 Milwaukee Milwauke 3.25
Orange County, CA
Orange County, CA 5.42 Atlanta Atlanta 4.32 Memphis Memphis 3.22
San Antonio
San Antonio Portland, OR 5.39 Inland Empire,InlandCA Empire, CA 4.11 Columbus Columbus 3.14
Portland, OR Raleigh/Durham 5.30 Phoenix Phoenix 4.10 Cleveland Cleveland 2.65
Raleigh/Durham 5.20 Jacksonville Jacksonvil e 4.03 Detroit Detroit 2.00
1 5 9 1 5 9 1 5 9
Abysmal Fair Excellent Abysmal Fair Excellent Abysmal Fair Excellent
Exhibit 3-2
U.S. Markets to Watch: Commercial/Multifamily Development
Inland Empire, CA
Washington, D.C.
Washington, D.C. 5.59 Dallas/Fort Worth 3.64 Inland Empire, CA 2.84
New York
New York 4.82 Orange County, CA 3.58 Miami
Miami 2.80
Austin
Austin 4.63 Baltimore 3.53 Jacksonvil e
Jacksonville 2.78
San Francisco
San Francisco 4.55 Philadelphia 3.52 Indianapolis
Indianapolis 2.70
San Jose
San Jose 4.54 Nashville 3.48 Kansas
Kansas City City 2.65
Boston
Boston 4.46 Honolulu/Hawaii 3.39 Columbus
Columbus 2.63
Seattle
Seattle 4.23 Charlotte 3.36 Tucson
Tucson 2.54
Houston
Houston 4.19 Minneapolis/St. Paul 3.33 Sacramento
Sacramento 2.54
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
LosLosAngeles
Angeles 4.17 Chicago 3.33 Memphis
Memphis 2.53
Raleigh/Durham
Raleigh/Durham 4.16 Albuquerque 3.24 Atlanta 2.49
Atlanta
Westchester/Fairfield,
Westchester/Fairfield, CT
CT 4.13 Virginia Beach/Norfolk 3.20 Cincinnati 2.43
Cincinnati
NorthernNorthern
NewNewJersey
Jersey
4.09 Orlando 3.07 Milwaukee 2.43
Milwaukee
Portland, OR 4.03 Oklahoma City 3.05 St. Louis 2.42
Portland, OR St. Louis
San Diego 3.99 Tampa/St. Petersburg 3.01 Phoenix 2.33
San Diego Phoenix
Denver 3.96 New Orleans 3.00 Cleveland 2.17
Denver
Cleveland
San Antonio 3.90 Providence 2.97 Las Vegas 2.04
San Antonio
Las Vegas
Salt Lake City 3.66 Pittsburgh 2.85 Detroit 1.59
Salt Lake City
Detroit
0 11 2 3 4 55 6 9 1 5 9 1 5 9
0.0 0.5 1.0Abysmal
1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 Fair Excellent
Abysmal Fair Excellent Abysmal Fair Excellent
Exhibit 3-3
U.S. Markets to Watch: For-Sale Homebuilding
Washington,
Washington, D.C.D.C. 5.86 Orange County,
Orange County, CA CA 4.08 Indianapolis 3.00
Austin
Austin 5.39 Charlotte
Charlotte 3.92 Inland Empire, CA 2.97
New
New YorkYork 5.33 Philadelphia
Philadelphia
3.80 Pittsburgh 2.94
Houston
Houston
5.00 Salt Lake City 3.73 Miami 2.94
Salt Lake City
Boston 4.82 Minneapolis/St. Paul 3.72 New Orleans 2.92
Boston Minneapolis/St. Paul
San Francisco 4.78 Honolulu/Hawaii 3.71 Tucson 2.90
San Francisco Honolulu/Hawaii
San Jose 4.57 Baltimore 3.66 Atlanta 2.87
San Jose Baltimore
Northern New Jersey 4.53 Orlando 3.55 Phoenix 2.87
Northern New Jersey Orlando
San Antonio 4.52 Chicago 3.53 Columbus 2.76
San Antonio Chicago
Raleigh/Durham 4.49 Virginia Beach/Norfolk 3.50 Sacramento 2.69
Raleigh/Durham Virginia Beach/Norfolk
Los Angeles 4.41 Nashville 3.49 St. Louis 2.65
Los Angeles
Dallas/Fort Worth 4.35 Nashville
Albuquerque 3.40 Memphis 2.62
Dallas/Fort Worth
Seattle 4.28 Albuquerque City
Oklahoma 3.29 Milwaukee 2.58
Westchester/Fairfield,
Seattle CT 4.28 Oklahoma
Tampa/St. City
Petersburg 3.22 Cincinnati 2.47
San Diego
Westchester/Fairfield, CT 4.25 Jacksonville
Tampa/St. Petersburg 3.22 Las Vegas 2.41
Portland,
San Diego OR 4.16 Kansas City
Jacksonville 3.11 Cleveland 2.36
Denver
Portland, OR 4.13 Providence
Kansas City 3.06 Detroit 1.63
Denver 1 5 9 Providence 1 5 9 1 5 9
Abysmal Fair Excellent 0 1 Abysmal
2 3 4 Fair
5 Excellent Abysmal Fair Excellent
0 1 2 3 4 5 6
about oversupply and inadequate road, ers have no choice but to raise taxes “that doesn’t compute,” and for com-
transit, and water infrastructure. Overall, and cut services in already high-cost mercial owners, larger tax bites crimp
respondents remain negative about environments. Mass transit faces cut- bottom lines even further. Interviewees
housing-bust markets in Florida and in backs while even police and fire pro- point to “real estate taxes mushrooming
the desert Southwest. And the Midwest’s tection and sanitation cannot escape well ahead of inflation,” but “the prob-
slow- to no-growth metro areas draw the budget knife. “Every place has lems are hard to fix.” With federal stimu-
virtually no attention. Many secondary negative issues,” “municipal risk over lus funds running out, politicians look to
cities and most tertiary markets just do possible defaults is a growing con- avoid voter backlash. “We’ll see more
not appear on investor radar screens. cern,” and “people will move away to consolidations among local govern-
“You see no demand, no capital, and lower-cost places.” Twenty-four-hour ments,” more government-worker lay-
no interest. There’s no near-term growth cities rebounded in the 1990s when offs, outsourcing to private companies
in office or retail and no need for new crime rates came down and streets at lower wages, and pressure to reduce
development.” Local operators disagree, got cleaner. Shrinking coffers signal public pensions. It all adds up to more
managing assets as long-term holds trouble and possible regression if qual- job losses and could put “more down-
and focusing on owning the best proper- ity of life in these premium locations ward pressure on living standards.”
ties in their markets. Inevitably, investor suffers significantly.
appetites will extend beyond the safest, Infill Gains over Suburbs. Some
major markets as economic recovery Rising Taxes, More Layoffs. Govern interviewees suggest higher taxes in
gains traction. ments and taxpayers in places where cities and urbanizing suburbs could
property prices have declined signifi- stall the trend of people returning
Budget Cuts. The nasty economy cantly confront even greater challenges. to these higher-cost areas. But the
raises yellow flags for even dominant Local officials squirm over raising prop- overall residential tide is moving from
24-hour markets. States and cities erty and sales taxes after real estate fringe suburbs to urbanizing suburban
wallow in red ink; government lead- values dive. For the average taxpayer, nodes, and 24-hour downtown cores
Sacramento
San Francisco
Salt Lake City
San Jose
Denver
Las Vegas
Los Angeles
Orange County Inland Empire
Albuquerque
San Diego Phoenix
Oklahoma
Honolulu City
Tucson
Dallas/
Fort Worth
Austin
San Antonio
Houston
Montreal Halifax
Ottawa
Minneapolis/
St. Paul
Toronto
Milwaukee Boston
Detroit Providence
Cleveland Northern New
Westchester/Fairfield
Chicago Jersey New York City
Indianapolis Pittsburgh Philadelphia
Columbus Baltimore
Kansas
Washington, D.C.
City Cincinnati
St. Louis
Virginia Beach/Norfolk
Charlotte Raleigh/
Nashville Durham
Memphis Atlanta
Jacksonville
New Orleans
Orlando
Tampa/
St. Petersburg
Miami
Values “stayed within 10 percent of as rents trend up with more shadow help attract brainpower, and sustain
peak,” so owners and lenders suffered space absorbed. Higher taxes to deal expensive regional living standards.
“less pain,” and no market benefits more with budget shortfalls raise more shrugs Finance, international trade, and tourism
from core buyers’ recent flight to quality, than concerns from locals. “Everyone further diversify an estimable business
driving prices back up. But interviewees knows this is an expensive place to base. Office vacancies need to track
warn the window for acquisitions has operate from, but they need to be down from the midteens, and veteran
closed. “Pricing has been driven by here.” Apartment rents rebound along investors complain that current office
false positives, too much money, and not with coop/condo prices, which regis- rents stand about where they were in
enough fundamentals.” In the survey, the tered only minor drops in the choicest the 1980s. “You’ve got to be a mar-
District and environs also rank as the top neighborhoods, and retailers begin to ket timer” to take advantage of boom/
development and homebuilding market, fill in gaps in empty streetscape store- bust rent spikes. High for-sale housing
the top retail buy location, the third-best fronts. New hotel completions could costs make apartments an extremely
buy for office and hotels, and fourth best temper a recovery in occupancies and desirable investment. Hotel occupan-
for apartments. room rates, but tourists and business cies improve and revenue per available
travelers are back in droves. Suburban room (RevPAR) should follow. San Jose
New York City. Who says bailouts markets generally lag well behind struggles with oversupply, especially of
and stimulus don’t work? Troubled Manhattan; some catch-up will occur in new condos.
Assets Relief Program (TARP) and Fed 2011. The large northern New Jersey
funds directed at banks helped mar- industrial market also strengthens with Boston. This venerable 24-hour city
kets with financial services businesses net absorption gains. registers high marks for livability,
and eased job cuts, benefiting New controlled development, and a highly
York City, which shows the biggest rat- San Francisco. The country’s most educated labor force, but lacks eco-
ings jump in the survey over last year. volatile 24-hour market, the City by the nomic vibrancy. So join the club: that’s
Foreign investors remain active, “boost- Bay now offers investors excellent near- the case for most markets after D.C.
ing market liquidity,” and lenders loosen market-bottom buying opportunities, and New York City. Office rents did not
purse strings for owners of trophy office particularly in apartments and hotels precipitously drop off precrash 2007
space. “You can get positive leverage (ET survey number-one buy), office (ET highs, but remain well below 2000
on cheap debt.” But sudden cap-rate number two), and retail (ET number peaks, and local brokers predict only
compression “looks overdone,” raising three). The market also sidesteps some a slight turnaround in 2011. Apartment
concerns of a forming pricing “bub- of its state’s fiscal mess, performing rents will track back up—expensive
blette.” Tenants move to lock in rents better than southern California. Tech for-sale housing keeps tenant demand
before landlords get any pricing power: and life science industries flourish high for multifamily units—and hotels
“They realize the market has turned.” around top-flight universities (Stanford, show life. For the future, Boston should
Office owners pull back on concessions University of California–Berkeley), offer steady core returns with enough
8 8 8
7 7 7
6 6.6 6 6.3 6
6.2
5 5 5 Boston
4
San Francisco
4 4
3 3 3
2 New York 2 2
1 1
1
0 0
'94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '11 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '11 0
'94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '11
time, “rents don’t do well” because of San Diego San Diego 35.6 51.1 13.3
the constant new supply.
Dallas
Dallas 35.1 53.2 11.70
7 7 7
4 4 Denver 4
Dallas/Fort Worth
3 3 3
2 2 2
1
San Diego 1 1
0 0 0
'94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '11 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '11 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '11
the negatives involving government retail front, put a hold on any more life- prices never got out of control in the
gridlock and high cost of living, “people style centers. recent cycle. “The recession was not
still want to live here.” And don’t forget nearly as devastating here, and we’re
that southern California remains the Denver. The city makes progress better off, but everything is soft.” Dallas
country’s most important gateway to the positioning for 21st-century growth is always about strong demand and
Pacific Rim and Latin America. by strengthening its downtown core even bigger supply. “Every developer
through a new light-rail and railroad on the continent has an office there,
San Diego. Ditto, ditto, ditto. San hub to serve surrounding suburban so the market always has too much
Diego’s story largely copies that of nodes. As a result, the central business space.” Companies like low costs,
Los Angeles. These two markets, not district becomes “the place to be,” and low taxes, and “a sizable labor pool”
surprisingly, can track closely together. mixed-use, transit-oriented development attracted to an area with an afford-
But San Diego does not rate L.A.’s helps anchor suburban districts. This able cost of living. “You see many
gateway status, lacking a major port metro area also has one of the nation’s companies moving operations from the
or international airport hub like LAX. most modern airports, an attractive West Coast, getting away from a high-
“Traditionally, the local economy cre- Rocky Mountain backdrop, relatively expense environment.” Office vacan-
ates startup jobs, but doesn’t retain low business taxes, and a broad-based cies have not dipped below 20 percent
headquarters. When companies get economy anchored by oil and gas, in more than a decade; perhaps with
large, they leave.” For global and alternative energy, and defense compa- relatively tempered construction today,
domestic business, the city sits just out- nies. “We can weather the storm better they have a shot to drop into the high
side primary jet ways, making travel a than most, and quality-of-life attributes teens over the next few years. Industrial
pain. As is the case everywhere else in will continue to attract people.” In fact, space seems “okay, but never does
southern California, housing prices have the office market has stabilized, with well for long,” once construction starts
dropped from stratospheric levels, sav- overall vacancies in the mid- to high in earnest. Retail is more of the same:
aging mortgage holders. In particular, teens, and “larger blocks of space “been bad for a long time.” Apartment
downtown condos are badly oversup- are (relatively) scarce.” But it remains builders can do well, constructing into
plied. Demand builds back for housing very much a tenant’s market for users growth waves, but investors in existing
in better neighborhoods: more buyers of smaller space: “10,000 square feet properties always face new competition.
with cash want to take advantage of and below is a sweet spot for making Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport
market bottom near Pacific coastlines. deals.” Apartment owners should see remains this market’s greatest asset,
What’s not to like about arguably the vacancies decline and rents tick up. ensuring that Dallas remains an impor-
country’s most desirable climate? tant intersection for global commerce.
Public-company homebuilders buy rela- Dallas. Local developers learned from
tively cheap residential land to prepare hard experience in the early 1990s not Chicago. “We’re struggling.” Twenty-
for an eventual upturn. On the wobbly to take out recourse loans, and housing four-hour dynamics and O’Hare
7 7 7
6 6 Atlanta 6
5 4.5 5 5
4.3 4.1
4 4 4
3 3 3
Phoenix
2 2 2
Miami
1 1 1
0 0 0
'94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '11 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '11 '94 '96 '98 '00 '02 '04 '06 '08 '10 '11
who gravitate to warmer climes. “This class airport adding a fifth runway; by deep recession. “It’s a double
market has gone through cycles before the lower-cost business environment whammy and will take time to recover.”
and will attract a lot of people.” In fact, of a right-to-work state; and a bevy of Everything is priced at “substantial
South Americans and Europeans look excellent universities, including Emory discounts to replacement cost,” and
for obvious bargains among the surfeit and Georgia Tech. The trend of people snowbirds can buy “ridiculously cheap”
of near-empty, beachside condo tow- moving back to the cities is also alive homes “where you can live like a king.”
ers. Buyer demand for rental apart- and well, with more empty nesters and Local investors count on people and
ments actually skyrockets, boosting young adults relocating into urbanizing, businesses relocating from expensive
values in expectation of meaningful infill districts—notably Midtown and coastal areas: “We’re the first stop
rent increases. Some multifamily sub- Buckhead, as well as downtown neigh- on the wagon train for people leaving
markets enjoy sub–5 percent vacancy, borhoods. “We’re finally achieving a California.” But interviewees expect a
and landlords will be able to hike rates. critical mass of in-town living, and future “further downdraft in office,” while the
Hotel occupancies and room rates growth will be concentrated toward the important lodging industry will be hurt
have also climbed off the mat, but a center.” Unfortunately for many under- by the ongoing “immigration imbroglio.”
moribund office market struggles with water developers and owners, these Boycotts hit the convention business,
20 percent–plus vacancy rates and buyers and renters have too many and the area’s low-cost immigrant labor
declining rents, and housing remains a cheap condos and apartments from pool runs for cover; “a major growth
disaster area. Locked in by the ocean which to choose. “There was too much driver has been curtailed.” New town
and the Everglades, built-out south in the pipeline when demand turned off” centers “in every direction eat into mall
Florida markets will have no choice in every property sector. State and local shares.” Like everywhere else, apart-
but to build up and urbanize when governments “finally address” traffic ment rents should increase. For the lon-
expected population growth resumes. issues, looking to expand highways with ger term, the city wrestles with how to
funding from increased sales taxes. The manage hoped-for growth and limited
Atlanta. Never your quintessential area also needs new reservoirs to sus- water resources.
barriers-to-entry market, the metro area tain future growth. “We’re trying to find
suffers from “overbuilding everywhere.” a balance between funding infrastruc-
Institutional investors “hold back for ture and keeping taxes down.”
now; we’ve taken a hit and do not com-
pare well against gateway markets.” Phoenix. This growth-based desert
But boosters count many positives—a city must rise from the ashes of another
temperate Sunbelt climate; a world- overbuilding spree, compounded
Houston
Houston 25.5 56.9 17.7
Philadelphia
Philadelphia 18.4 44.9 36.7
Phoenix
Phoenix 18.0 44.3 37.7
Atlanta
Atlanta 14.3 42.9 42.9
0 20
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. 40 60 80 100 120
Property Types
in Perspective
“After apartments, it’s slim pickings.”
F
or 2011, investment and development prospects
improve across all property sectors after a hard land- Exhibit 4-1
ing in 2010 (see exhibit 4-1). Hotels actually show Prospects for Major Commercial/Multifamily
the greatest improvement over last year’s dismal invest-
Property Types in 2011
ment ratings, but only apartments register a good outlook.
n Investment Prospects
Highlighting the ongoing rush to income-producing core n Development Prospects
assets, survey respondents see modest recovery tracks for
warehouses, downtown office properties, and neighborhood Exhibit 4- Prospect
shopping centers, but more limited gains for malls, power Apartment 6.19 Major
centers, and especially suburban office property. Builders Commercial/Multif
4.85
should take little solace from better—but generally poor— Property Types in 2
development ratings: only apartments warrant any possibility Industrial/Distribution 5.07 Exhibit 4-1
for new construction during the year, according to surveys. 3.12
Hotels 4.78
Prospects Improve 2.33
Holding Tenants Office 4.72
In general, new leasing activity will occur “at substantially
lower rates” than precrash levels, and rents will decline on 2.06
average, except for multifamily. In the immediate future, Retail 4.50
“job number one is keeping properties leased and retain-
ing tenants at almost any cost.” Owners and managers must 2.26
concentrate on cementing tenant relationships. Noted one
1 5 9
interviewee: “The last thing you want to do is create a situ- Abysmal Fair Excellent
ation where the tenant isn’t satisfied with the building. If the
tenant is happy, then you can get down to economics.” More Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
tenants “renew and extend, which is good news, signaling Note: Based on U.S. respondents only.
confidence they can sustain their businesses and want to
take advantage of lower rates.” Expect some firming of rents
in certain warehouse and downtown office markets during the
year, but until then, many leasing efforts could end in land-
3.99
Suburban Office Office
Suburban
1.83 What Is Core?
Perennially higher survey ratings for apartments and industrial
1 5 9 space reinforce interviewee contentions that these property
0 1
Abysmal2 3 4 5
Fair 6 7 8
Excellent
types are “the only reliable” cash-flowing real estate asset cat-
egories suitable for core investors. “Other sectors have more
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
volatility than people want to admit.” Class A office buildings
Note: Based on U.S. respondents only.
in top gateway markets, dominant fortress malls, and prime
neighborhood shopping centers in solid infill neighborhoods
might also qualify as dependable core real estate. However,
other property subsectors miss the cut, including commodity
suburban office buildings, the average shopping center strip,
the typical power center, and lower-quality regional shopping
malls. Hotels never make the list: they have always been rated
too volatile to fit into core portfolios.
Exhibit 4-3
Fits and Starts
Prospects for Capitalization Rates Relatively short-term holding periods and profit imperatives
deter some investors and corporate owners from making
Expected Expected green enhancements. “Waiting ten years for a full payback
Cap Rate Cap Rate Cap Rate to green investment can be a turnoff.” But the cost of retrofit-
August 2010 December 2011 Shift ting buildings could be repaid from energy savings, possibly
(Percent) (Percent) (Basis
aided by some form of government tax credit tied to creating
Property Type Points)
new jobs. Many owners find they can “game” the Leadership
Apartment Rental: Moderate Income 6.71 6.36 -35 in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) rating system
A partment Rental: High Income 6.39 6.65 +26
“without spending too much” through cosmetic changes like
Central City Office 7.10 7.09 -1
Regional Malls 7.21 7.20 -1 adding bike racks and simply changing to more energy-
R&D Industrial 8.26 7.59 -67 efficient lightbulbs. But tenants become more sophisticated
Neigh./Community Shopping Centers 7.70 7.61 -8 in identifying the “window dressing.” Although it is hard to
Warehouse Industrial 7.75 7.75 0 quantify green benefits, when tenants see them, they recog-
Power Centers 8.11 8.12 +2
nize them and want the associated productivity, efficiency,
Suburban Office 8.40 8.32 -8
Full-Service Hotels 8.73 8.67 -6 and image enhancement. “It’s like buying a 25-year-old car
Limited-Service Hotels 9.21 9.00 -21 versus a new model.” On the residential side, investors and
owners express more interest in reducing and managing
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. energy costs than renters do. And so far, “formaldehyde-free
Note: Based on U.S. respondents only. cabinets” have not caught on in any marketing campaigns for
new condos.
Cap Rates
Expected cap rate moves through year-end 2011 indicate Mixed Use
an overall stable to downward shift as demand strengthens During the building hiatus, developers also consider the
across most property sectors in a slow recovery (see exhibit future of mixed-use projects. Many stand-alone developments
4-3). Not surprisingly, apartments score the lowest rates, fol- in car-dependent suburban areas have had problematic out-
lowed by central city office, research and development indus- comes. For mixed-use development to work, projects must be
trial, neighborhood retail, and warehouse industrial. At the part of larger town centers or urbanizing districts. “Just build-
high end are limited-service and full-service hotels, followed ing residential over retail can be difficult, but works better in
by suburban office. infill locations.” In more suburban office districts, office/hotel/
retail developments gain a significant advantage over stand-
alone office parks. “Younger professionals want walkable
More Green
centers where they don’t have to get into a car to have lunch
While office developers and owners hunker down, they come
or do errands,” says a Sunbelt developer. “Typical office
to accept that sustainable building concepts will become
parks have a commodity flavor where it’s hard to distinguish
standard in next-generation projects and that many existing
between them.” Probably the most significant mixed-use
buildings will need to increase efficiencies and retrofit new
trend involves building more mid- and high-rise residential
systems in order to compete effectively. “Green is here to
around established regional shopping centers, as well as
stay since large corporations and government operations
incorporating office space and hotels. What were billed in the
now demand it” and more cities build requirements into local
1970s and 1980s as America’s new town centers finally trans-
codes. “Every owner needs to be on top of the issue.” “If it’s
form into pedestrian-friendly urban cores.
a green versus brown building, green has the edge.” For
now, many overstretched landlords with compromised asset
structures cannot afford to address green issues, and most
tenants, looking for rent concessions, will not pay more for
sustainable systems even though they want them. “Over the
next five to ten years, green will turn into a major trend,” says
a developer. “The math and savings achieved will start to
make sense and bring landlords and tenants together, with
government regulations forcing the issue.”
—
8
8
Everybody loves “low beta” apartments—“the safest bet”
—
Apartment Rental: Moderate Income through the cycle.
Apartment Once
Rental: the
High province of “sleazy syndicators,”
Income
Apartment Rental: High Income multifamily investments morph into “the new gold standard”
7
7
for Apartment
institutionalRental: Moderate Income
property portfolios. All the stars begin to
align. Severely
Exhibit constrained recent development plus pent-up
4- U.S. Apartment
Investment
demand from Prospect Trends
the burgeoning young-adult population cohort
Exhibit 4-6 2004
and busted homeowners back in the rental market add up
Rating
6
6
to lowered vacancies and eventual rent hikes. “You sense
improving fundamentals with legs at least to mid-decade.” In
5
addition, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac effectively subsidize
5
financing. Ready leverage at or near market bottom could
turbocharge returns in the up cycle. “There’s no way you’d
4
pay [current] prices without low rates and available financ-
4
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 ing.” For the longer term, apartments appear well positioned
to adjust rents quickly if inflation kicks in.
4 = modestly poor, 5 = fair, 6 = modestly good, 7 = good.
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate surveys.
Weaknesses
Swelling demand in the flight to core real estate compresses
Exhibit 4-5 apartment cap rates to uncomfortably low levels—down 200
U.S. Moderate-Income Apartments basis points in some markets. “Anything top quality gets
people frenzied.” Interviewees worry prices have increased
2011 Prospects Rating Ranking too much too soon, and cap rates could back up, especially
Investment Prospects Modestly Good 6.20 1st for high-income apartments in markets where more condos
Development Prospects Fair 5.03 1st
—
Moderate-Income
Apartments
n Completions
Exhibit 4-4 Vacancy Rate %
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on U.S. responses only. 250
250 98
Vacanc
200 7
Completions (Thousands of Units)
200
Exhibit 4-6 Comple
150
150 6
Exhibit 4- U.S.
28.9% 52.4% 18.8% High-Income
Apartments
Exhibit 4-5
Source: REIS.
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
* Forecast.
Note: Based on U.S. responses only.
Best Bets
Sellers with established assets can reap big gains. But why Outlook
sell if you have a good income generator that should improve People need a place to sleep and look for greater econo-
when the economy gets untracked? Barrier-to-entry markets, mies. In the Era of Less, apartments fit the bill. Since couples
particularly the 24-hour metro areas, offer excellent opportu- marry and start families later, homebuying inclinations from
nities, but expect plenty of company in any bidding. Value- generation Y/echo boomers will not stir and intensify for
add investors can boost performance through classic fix-up another ten years. Until then, this large population cohort
strategies on older product as markets improve and tenant will rent as they build careers. More downsizing seniors will
demand intensifies. choose apartment lifestyles, too, living off proceeds from
house sales. As long as developers and construction lend-
ers check their appetites, apartment investors should benefit
Avoid “with the wind at their backs.”
Sidestep older apartments in commodity suburban districts
where developers can easily build new product. It is harder
to raise rents, and maintenance costs can eat into restrained
revenues.
Industrial
Strengths
Despite record-high vacancies and continuing rent drops,
warehouse properties sustain solid support from investors,
Exhibit 4-8
who believe in their long-term revenue-generating charac-
U.S. Apartment Property Total Returns
teristics. More than 90 percent of Emerging Trends survey
n NCREIF respondents favor buying or holding warehouses in 2011,
n NAREIT and the sector almost always garners higher ratings than any
40
40 other category except apartments. This capital support helps
35
35 shore NAREIT
up values and mitigates losses in downturns. Shipping
30
30 and trade activity show signs of modest improvement as
25
25 business inventories rebuild during the checkered recovery,
NCREIF
20
20 and occupancy rates should begin to improve, assisted by
15
15 extremely4-
Exhibit subdued development.
10
10 U.S. Apartment Property
Percent
55 Total Returns
Weaknesses
Exhibit 4-8
00
Vacancy heads down from uncomfortably high midteen lev-
2010*
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
-5
-5 els, but “we need a bunch of absorption to get to 8 to 10
-10
-10 percent.” Despite reduced concessions, landlords will not
-15
-15 gain pricing power again until late 2011 or into 2012 once
-20
-20 occupancies increase above 90 percent. “We’re dealing in a
-25
-25 more drawn-out recovery with not enough demand to push
-30
-30 rents.” Rolling five-year leases coming off peak rents during
Sources: NCREIF, NAREIT. the next two years will balance out any occupancy gains and
* Data as of June 30, 2010. tamp down net operating incomes, delaying a performance
upturn. Investors must watch evolving changes in distribu-
—
300 15
300 15
8
—
8 R&D Industrial R&D Industrial
Availability Rate %
Completions (msf)
Industrial/Distribution
Investment Prospect
Trends
Exhibit 4-11
Rating
6
6 150
150
100
100 99
5
5
50
50
4
4 66
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 00
2010*
2011*
2012*
2013*
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
4 = modestly poor, 5 = fair, 6 = modestly good, 7 = good.
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate surveys. Source: CBRE Econometric Advisors.
* Forecasts.
Hold
Returns
-20
-20 elevators,
Exhibit 4-13you name it. “After the worst slump in decades,
2010*
1984
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
-30 2009
-30 the outlook can only get better.” Business-center hotels in
-40
-40 gateway destinations enjoy the best prospects. “You can get
-50
-50 some pop.” The construction pipeline has mostly run dry, so
-60
-60 new supply will not hamper recovery.
-70
-70
-80
-80
Weaknesses
Sources: NCREIF, NAREIT.
Highly leveraged owners who bought late in the cycle get
* Data as of June 30, 2010.
weeded out and many properties change hands. Deferred
maintenance and capital expenditures leave facilities thread-
nology gets better.” Depending on oil prices, more long-haul, bare, tired looking, and needing upgrades. New owners must
cross-country distribution could shift from trucks to railroads. factor necessary and often costly improvements into budgets.
“This could mean new distribution centers served by trains and Five-star properties struggle to attract enough profitable busi-
shorter truck trips.” The longstanding trend toward “fewer and ness to sustain substantial overheads; luxury lifestyles pare
bigger distribution centers may be in for a change.” back, too. At the other end of the spectrum, extended-stay and
roadside motels face oversupply. Better-capitalized owners
Development can reduce rates and knock out competitors. Skittish lenders
Hammered rents cannot “justify development, except for the show little interest in providing financing to buyers. “There’s no
odd build-to-suit.” Until leasing rates spike 20 to 40 percent, such thing as a safe loan on a hotel,” says an insurance exec-
depending on the market, new construction will continue to utive. “If you want to play, you might as well just own them.
hover at or near record lows. Developers resign themselves They are businesses, not property investments.”
to waiting until 2012 or 2013 before much activity resumes.
Exhibit 4-14
U.S. Hotel Investment Prospect Trends
Outlook
Warehouse markets will bump along the bottom, firming
slowly in a tepid recovery. Lukewarm consumer demand will
8
8
—
—
Full-Service Hotels
Limited-Service Hotels
Limited
Avoid
Hold
28.9% 52.4% 18.8% Buyers could overpay if they base pricing on a rapid return
Exhibit 4-15
U.S. Hotels: Full Service
Exhibit 4-26
Development Hold
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. get about a construction loan for a new hotel in the current
Note: Based on U.S. responses only. environment: (virtually) no way.
80
80
n Occupancy
— RevPar ($)
80
80 80
80 n NCREIF
Occupancy () NAR
70
70 n NAREIT
70
70 Exhibit 4-17
60
70
70 60
U.S. Hotel Occupancy
Rates and RevPAR
NCR
60 50
Exhibit 4-30
60 50
40RevPAR ()
50
50 40
30 Exhibit 4
Occupancy (%)
60
60
RevPar ($)
30
20 U.S. Hot
Percent
40
40
20
10 Total Re
50
50
30 00
30 Sell
Exhibit 4
2009*
2010*
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
Hold
-10
20 -10 Buy
20 40 -20
40 -20
10 -30
10 -30
-40
0 30
30 -40
0 -50
2010*
2011*
-50
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
-60
Office 3
3
Strengths 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011
“Not all office is created equal.” Class A buildings in primary
3 = poor, 4 = modestly poor, 5 = fair, 6 = modestly good, 7 = good.
24-hour markets remain highly coveted by tenants and inves-
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate surveys.
tors. Corporate heavyweights and white-glove service firms
still want the prestige and visibility provided by signature
space. Cash-flush, high-net-worth investors and foreign buy-
ers may gravitate to familiar skyline landmarks for ego ben-
Exhibit 4-20
efits or out of familiarity, but these high-profile properties can
U.S. Central City Office
hold values and sustain cash flows as well as any real estate
subsector. Well-capitalized owners will continue to keep 2011 Prospects Rating Ranking
rollover tenants in place and lure existing tenants away from Investment Prospects Fair 5.08 4th
debt-ridden competitors, using improvement packages and Development Prospects Very poor 2.35 7th
free rent periods. “But some concessions begin to shrink—a
good sign” for the overall market. Expected Capitalization Rate, December 2010 7.1% Sell
Hold
Ugh. Where to begin? Outside of New York City, Washington, Exhibit 4-14
more obsolescent space.” Renewing firms rarely expand and U.S. Suburban Office
either take the same amount of space or less, “not as a func-
2011 Prospects Rating Ranking
tion of recession or one-time downsizing, but reflecting a new
way of doing business and a focus on expense levels.” More Investment Prospects Modestly Poor 3.99 11th
Development Prospects Very poor 1.83 11th
companies outsource and move jobs around on a global
playing field to gain productivity advantages. “It’s pervasive.”
Expected Capitalization Rate, December 2010 8.3% Sell
Meanwhile, concessions eat into returns: “Face rents don’t tell Hold
the story.” Investors turn more wary, especially about commod- Buy Hold Sell
Buy
Exhibit 4-21
ity assets. “Office outperforms only at peaks; you need to time Exhibit 4-15
the market.” They grow especially weary of inconsistent cash Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
flows, high capital expenditures, inevitable concessions in Note: Based on U.S. responses only.
market troughs, exposure to lumpy tenant rollovers, and “only
narrow windows of profitability.”
120
120
n Completions
— Net Absorption
120
120
Net
50
60
60
Absorption (msf )
n NCREIF
n NAREIT N
100
100 50
100
100 8080 40
40
Completions (msf )
N
6060 Exhibit 4-2230
30
Exhibit
2020 New Supply
Percent
10
10 Office P
60
60
and Net Ab- Total Re
00
sorption 00 Exhibit
2010*
-20
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
-20
40
40 Exhibit 4-17
-10
-10
-40
-40
-20
-20
20
20 -60
-60
-80
-80 -30
-30
00 -100
-100 -40
-40
2010*
2011*
2012*
2013*
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
-50
-50
Avoid
Exhibit 4-23 Suburban markets “could take years to recover” as occupan-
U.S. Office Vacancy Rates cies slump in the low 80s “with no material demand driv-
ers.” Cutthroat leasing economics give away free rent and
25
25
—
—
Downtown
Suburban Office
tenantSuburban
improvements, slicing into net rents. “I can’t imagine
why anyone would want to own a suburban office building.
It used to be back offices went to the suburbs. Now they go
Downtown
2020
to India, Guatemala, Warsaw, or wherever.” These “easy-to-
build assets” turn into a “trading commodity.” Owners have
1515 “no pricing power” over a cycle. The best you can hope for is
“stabilized vacancies in the 10 to 15 percent range.”
Exhibit 4-23
1010 U.S. Office
Development
Vacancy Rates
Exhibit
On 4-18
a market-enforced siesta, developers must carefully cali-
5 5
brate locating and timing their next buildings. History shows
2009*
2010*
2011*
2012*
2013*
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
Outlook
Exhibit 4-25
How much office space do we really need? Companies seem
U.S. Retail Investment Prospect Trends
to “figure not as much.” Expect only pockets of improvement,
mostly in and around the global gateways. “Without employ-
ment growth, it’s a zero-sum game. Somebody is winning at —
—
Neighborhood/Community Centers
—
Power Centers
somebody else’s expense.” “Better buildings in better mar- 8
8
Region
Regional Malls
kets will fill up [vacancies] first,” while B and C assets strug-
7
7 Power C
gle and any “obsolescence deters leasing.” Through 2011,
tenants will look to trade up from Class B to A space and Neighb
6
6
Rating
retain the upper hand in any lease negotiations. Inevitably,
Exhibit 4-
concession packages become less generous. 5
5 U.S. Retai
Investme
Prospect
4
4
Retail
Exhibit 4-
2004
3
3
—
2011 Prospects Rating Ranking
Investment Prospects Fair 5.05 5th n Completions Vacancy Rate %
Development Prospects Poor 3.05 4th
35
35 12
12
Expected Capitalization Rate, December 2010 7.6% 30
Sell
30
Hold
25
25
Exh
Exhibit 4-26
10
10
Completions (msf)
U. S. Neighborhood/Community
Vacancy Rate %
41.5% 41.8% 16.7% Centers
Exhibit 4-20
20
20 Sell
U.S
and
Hold
15
15 50
Note: Based on U.S. responses only.
88 Exh
10
10
Exhibit 4-27 55
U.S. Regional Malls 66
00
2008*
2009*
2010*
2011*
2012*
2013*
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2011 Prospects Rating Ranking
Source: REIS.
Investment Prospects Modestly Poor 4.06 9th
* Forecasts.
Development Prospects Very poor 1.84 10th
Hold
Exhibit 4-27
12.6% 61.0% 26.3%
Buy
U.S. Regional
Malls
Exhibit 4-21
0 U.S.
2011 Prospects Rating Ranking
2010*
-10 Prop
1985
1986
1987
1988
1989
1990
1991
1992
1993
1994
1995
1996
1997
1998
1999
2000
2001
2002
2003
2004
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
-10
Investment Prospects Modestly Poor 4.04 10th -20 Tota
Development Prospects Very poor 2.13 9th -20 Exh
-30
-30
Expected Capitalization Rate, December 2010 8.1% -40
-40
Sell
Hold
Hold
U.S. Power
Centers
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. * Data as of June 30, 2010.
Note: Based on U.S. responses only.
Outlook may be afraid to take the plunge given the unsettled jobs out-
Shopping center owners could sustain a painful one-two look, but many others have limited savings and debts to pay
punch. As a retrenching America buys less, more technologi- off—credit card, car loan, and mortgage. Trading-up buyers,
cally enabled consumers also will reduce visits to traditional a mainstay of transaction activity, cope with underwater mort-
retail formats. Chain stores will morph into and be recon- gages on their existing homes, and lenders shut out specula-
stituted with different concepts and looks, harnessing web tors. “You can’t get blood out of a stone.”
innovations to drive more sales, whether online or in malls.
Smaller stores in high-visibility, central locations—urban and
suburban nodes—fit their parameters. Just like premier city
Best Bets
For buyers with cash and sound credit, make no mistake:
shopping districts survived the post–World War II move to the
the time is right to acquire dream homes in dream locations.
suburbs, well-situated fortress malls and community retail will
Market-bottom prices and record-low mortgage rates provide
prosper in denser 21st-century suburbs. Probably more than
a unique opportunity to acquire assets at attractive discounts.
any other property sector, retail braces for significant change.
You can have your pick of the right resort golf course haci-
enda or oceanside condo. Empty-nester parents can buy city
Housing digs for kids in preparation for downsizing out of suburban
homes when markets look better. If you have money, you
Strengths have plenty of options.
Housing markets may offer lessons for other real estate
sectors: prepare for a long slog back to equilibrium after
bouncing around on the bottom. Time and ongoing delever- Avoid
aging will cure current imbalances, while forecast population Steer clear of tract mansions, “the Hummers of real estate.”
growth will eventually sop up excess inventory so prices can They never made much economic sense, given big heating
advance (modestly). Low interest rates keep markets from bills, high property taxes, and large maintenance costs. “Now
getting worse and let high-credit borrowers reduce their they’re as obsolete as the cars.” Housing in commodity sub-
mortgage costs. Not surprisingly, upscale neighborhoods in divisions and more car-dependent areas may take decades
24-hour cities and fashionable suburbs generally sustain val- to recover peak pricing.
ues. Sound familiar?
Development
Weaknesses Good luck!
Misery engulfs many U.S. homeowners who overleveraged in
a fantasy of ever-escalating values. The market crash erases
not only “cash equity on which they were depending” to sus- Exhibit 4-31
tain lifestyles, but also (American) dreams of secure financial U.S. Single-Family Building Permits
futures. “It takes a long time to recover lost value in a nor-
malized market,” let alone in an abnormally depressed one. 2500
2,500 Thousa
Absent cheap credit, low early-year payments, and lackadai-
sical underwriting, many borrowers at all income strata could 2,000
2000
not really afford their homes and paid too much at inflated
Thousands of Units
prices. “Perversely,” people with bad credit who need help 1,500
1500
5.44
200
200 Seniors’ Housing Buy
Exhibit 4-32 4.79
Index
The S&P/Case-Shiller
HomeStudent
PriceHousing Invest5.30
ment
4.71
Composite-20 Index
150
150
Exhibit 4-33 5.22
Infill and
In-Town Housing 4.30
5.10
Sell
100
4.58
Buy
1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010*
Detached Single-Family: 4.40
Source: Standard & Poor.
Moderate Income 3.15
* Data as of June 30, 2010. 4.18
Manufactured Home
Communities 3.42
happens to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, mortgage spreads Communities 1.71
should widen and rising interest rates eventually will lead to
higher borrowing costs. Underwriting standards will loosen, 1 5 9
Abysmal Fair Excellent
but purchasers will still need significant equity stakes and
solid credit histories in the new world order. Developers have Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on U.S. respondents only.
less success with greenfield subdivisions and concentrate
on infill areas. Attached homes (townhouses) and other forms
of in-town housing become more favored. Don’t be sur-
prised if more families rebond into intergenerational units— Niche Sectors
grandparents, parents, and grandchildren all living under one
Retirement Housing
roof to share costs.
The common wisdom posits that bulging numbers of graying
baby boomers will soon populate seniors’ housing develop-
ments, which should be a major growth sector for builders.
Indeed, seniors’ housing registers relatively high scores for
residential investment and development prospects in Emerging
Trends surveys (see exhibit 4-33). But new realities may tem-
per demand for retirement housing. “People wait longer to buy
into seniors’ facilities,” says an interviewee. “Living longer and
staying healthier, they enter retirement communities toward the
end of life” when they have no choice “and don’t stay as long.”
Now the economy pushes decisions further off. Compromised
Exhibit 4-34
Medical Office
As baby boomers age, physician visits will soar. Building and
Prospects for Niche and Multiuse Property
Types in 2011 owning medical offices plays well into the expected demand
wave. Investors concentrate activity around major hospital com-
plexes. But this niche sector offers only a shallow pool of oppor-
n Investment Prospects
tunities—more for local owners than institutional investors.
n Development Prospects
Development
5.62
Medical Office
4.80
Student Housing
Echo boomers boast their own growing influence not only in
Infrastructure
Investment
5.21
multifamily, but also in student housing. Overflowing college
4.84 campuses cannot handle demand in existing dorms, and
4.92 older students prefer off-campus residences. Developers
Data Centers Exhibit 4-34 Prospects for
Niche and Multiuse4.18
Property and investors should hurry: in about ten years, the number of
Urban Mixed-Use Types in 2011 4.63 college-age kids sharply declines.
Properties Exhibit 4-34 3.42
4.49
Self-Storage Facilities Infrastructure
3.56
Sell
Considering compromised outlooks for commercial and resi-
4.28
Hold
Mixed-Use Town Centers dential sectors, many investors and developers contemplate
3.09 possible growth schemes and take interest in infrastructure.
Buy
Lifestyle/ 3.81 More than 30 years of government underfunding and large
Entertainment Retail 2.63 deficits leave the United States in a major quandary for how
3.54 to revamp and finance obsolete systems. Officials come to
Resort Hotels
1.99 understand that a longstanding disconnect between local
3.48 and regional planners, as well as a nonexistent national
Master-Planned
Communities 2.53 infrastructure strategy, leaves many metropolitan areas with
inadequate roads, mass transit, and water resources to
Master-Planned 3.04
sustain future growth. Anticipate government leaders and
Resorts 2.01
institutional investors joining forces in trying to find solutions
for the infrastructure dilemma through public/private partner-
1 5 9
Abysmal Fair Excellent ships. A national infrastructure bank, patterned on the post–
World War II European model, and tax incentives for public/
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on U.S. respondents only.
private partnerships could be among necessary initiatives.
Emerging Trends in
Canada
“In Canada, real estate behaves as advertised, producing steady cash
flow–oriented returns without much volatility, but an ownership
hold mentality frustrates investors looking for opportunities to buy.”
C
anada barely experienced recession and jolted into “We have no distress—no distressed banks, no distressed
a V-shaped recovery. Now, 2011 promises slowing, owners, no distressed sales.” Now, rising interest rates cou-
steady growth and decent prospects for real estate pled with tight bank requirements tamp down a recent home-
investors as long as the U.S. economy does not drag them buying spurt, particularly in Ontario and British Columbia,
down. “Relieved” Canadian property owners and financial where purchasers stepped up activity before a new sales tax
institutions cannot help contrasting their reasonably healthy went into effect.
condition with parlous U.S. markets. Fundamentals trend near
Exhibit 5-1 Firm
equilibrium, “employment bounces back,” and banks boast Exhibit 5-1
sound balance sheets. Most industries experience growth,
including finance and energy, which helps support the ser-
Exhibit 5-1
vice sector. “The domestic consumer has been pushing the
Firm Profitability Forecast
economy, and jobs levels bounced back to prerecession lev-
els. It’s been phenomenal compared to the U.S.”
Prospects for Profitability in 2010 by Percentage of Respondents
Prospects for Profitability in 2010 by Percentage of Respondents
Modestly Poor 4.1% Modestly Good 22.5% Very Good 10.2% Exhi
Investment Prospects Exhi
7
7 Public
PublicEquity
Hold EquityREITs
REITs 5.80
Private Local Real
Private Local RealBuy
Estate
EstateInvestors
Investors
5.80
6
6 Private
PrivateEquity
EquityREITs
■ Buy REITs ■ Hold ■ Sell
5.79
Pension
PensionReal RealEstate
EstateFunds
Funds 5.76
5
5
RealRealEstate
EstateInvestment
InvestmentManagers
Managers 5.66
Private
PrivateReal
RealEstate
EstateEquity
EquityFunds
Funds 5.65
4
4 Real Estate Consultants
Real Estate Consultants & Attorneys
and Attorneys
5.60
3
3
Real
RealEstate
EstateBrokers
Brokers 5.30
okay, not great.” Capital is back—“all the savvy players have FAKE 1 1 5 9
FAKE2 0
dry powder”—and (as usual) investment opportunities will be Absymal 2 4 Fair 6 8 Excellent10
limited; institutions dominate the major central city markets,
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
holding on to assets for steady income instead of trading.
Note: Based on Canadian respondents only.
Emerging Trends respondents exemplify the hold-on men-
tality: they think it is a good time to buy, but do not want to
sell (see exhibit 5-2). “Bids are strong,” says a broker, “but
nothing’s for sale.” Investors “go crazy because there isn’t Restrained Development. Except in Calgary, Canada’s
anything to buy,” and try to show discipline by walking away version of Wild West hot growth, builders have not over-
rather than overpaying for what is available. They have only stepped. Imagine: “no large developers have gone bankrupt”
slim chances to land discounted bargains—maybe off market in the country. North America’s largest condominium market,
in a fringe suburban district or a hotel where the owner has Toronto keeps erecting high rises, but a greenbelt boundary
cash-flow problems. In this “compressing cap rate” environ- to encourage denser neighborhoods helps support urban
ment, many deal-starved Canadians will be active in the residential development. Toronto probably needs to take a
United States, where they should have greater opportunity to breather in new office construction: four major new build-
spend their bankrolls and find higher yields. ings come on stream. And the country does not need much
additional retail space. Ontario typically provides good indus-
trial development opportunities, but until the U.S. economy
strengthens, sluggish demand does not support much new
building. Pushed by municipal policies and code changes,
Canadian developers increasingly buy into green building
trends: “Anyone who doesn’t embrace it will be economically
imperiled.”
Substantially Oversupplied
Moderately Undersupplied2.0 26.5 Substantially Moderately
Debt Capital for Refinancing Responses
In Balance 53.1 0 20 40 60 80 100
Moderately Oversupplied 6.1 Undersupplied 12.2% Oversupplied 6.1% Substantia
Capital in Balance
Moderate
Substantially Oversupplied 2.0
In Balance
Moderate
Commercial
Commercial
More Banks
Banks
Rigorous 2.38
Insurance
InsuranceCompanies
Companies 2.52 Sell
Securitized
Securitized Lenders/
Lenders/CMBS 3.41
CMBS
Exhibit 5-7 0.00 0.5 1.01 1.5 2.02 2.5 3
3.0 3.5 4 5
Debt Underwriting Standards Forecast for Canada
More Rigorous 52.1% Will Remain the Same 31.3% 1 = strongly agree, 2 = agree, 3 = undecided, 4 = disagree, 5 = strongly disagree
Cross-border
Cross-borderInvestors
Investors 2.62 Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on Canadian respondents only.
0 11 2 3 4 55 6 7 8 9
Absymal Fair Excellent
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. businesses, as well as immigration flows to support growth.
Note: Based on Canadian respondents only. “We’re hard to slow down.” Some softness creeps into the
office market as major tenants “play musical chairs” and move
into new Class AAA development projects. No one gets too
worried about vacated buildings because institutional owners
Markets to Watch will spend the necessary money to upgrade, reposition, and
For 2011, major Canadian real estate markets settle in a release space into future demand. Market vacancy will not
fair to good investment range, with only modest investment increase materially above the current mid-single digits, and
prospects and constrained development potential. Toronto any near-term additional office development will be “small and
bumps Vancouver from the top ranking in the Emerging niche.” Observers wonder how the condo market just keeps
Trends survey, while Calgary must hope to recuperate expanding: new apartment projects pop up in all directions,
from cooled demand and a touch of development binging. fashioning one of the world’s most expansive vertical skylines.
Population continues to concentrate in and around a handful Provincial policies encourage density in high-rise development
of major 24-hour cores scattered from coast to coast, leav- south of a legislated greenbelt, which pressures demand.
ing extremely limited investment opportunities in small cities “We need approximately 40,000 new housing units to keep
and rural areas in between. Shut out of primary cores, some pace with population growth, but new projects provide less
investors scrounge for product in select secondary and sub- than 20,000.” Smart money figured out “you can make a ton
urban markets. on infill land parcels,” and anything near transit stations looks
like gold. However, opportunities are few: “If you’re already
Toronto. Canada’s “where-to-be market,” Toronto stands out in the game and own, you can make a lot of money; if you’re
as a primary North American gateway and the country’s most not, it may be impossible to get in.” Some interviewees worry
important economic engine. This vibrant metropolitan area about flattening apartment rents as a surfeit of condo inves-
radiates “lots of positives”—the rock-solid Bay Street finan- tors lease out units. High housing prices and immigration flows
cial sector and diverse manufacturing industries and service help make apartments a good bet. Investors retain interest in
Montreal 33.3%
Montreal 51.9% 14.8% Buy Montreal 29.0%
Montreal 54.8% 16.1%
Toronto 46.3%
Toronto 43.9% 9.8% Toronto 40.9%
Toronto
47.7% 11.4%
Vancouver
Vancouver
Vancouver 40.4% 40.4% 19.2% Vancouver 38.0% 52.0% 10.0%
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
0%
0 20%
20 40%
40 60%
60 80%
80 100%
100
n Buy n Buy
Calgary 25.0%
Calgary 50.0% 25.0% Calgary
Calgary
4.4% 56.5% 39.1%
n Hold n Hold
n Sell n Sell
Montreal
Montreal 20.0% 46.7% 33.3% Montreal
Montreal 22.2% 44.4% 33.3%
Toronto
Toronto 41.9% 44.2% 14.0%
Toronto
Toronto
32.1% 46.4% 21.4%
Vancouver 41.7%
Vancouver 41.7% 16.7%
Vancouver
Vancouver 14.3% 62.9% 22.9%
0 20 40 60 80 100 120
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% 0 20 40 60 80 100 120
0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on Canadian respondents only. Note: Based on Canadian responses only.
military/life sciences–related enterprises. A new convention to what happened with BP in the gulf.” Expect spreading hot
center opens next year and could provide a potential market growth to resume in coming years; voters rejected a high-
lift, especially for hotels and retail. density-development greenbelt modeled after the one in
Toronto.
Montreal. Investors tend to short-shrift “slow and steady”
Montreal in comparison with Toronto and Vancouver, but the Halifax. Off the radar screens of the big institutions, Halifax
market holds its own. “It’s a good value” with “better yields.” muddles along in slow growth mode. The Maritime Provinces
Besides mainstay Quebec provincial government offices, fail to draw much new population and industry.
the city features a fairly diversified economy, including aero-
space and financial services.
Property Types in Perspective
Edmonton. Edmonton “comes off a boil,” avoiding the level Reflecting modest expectations, property sector ratings
of oversupply that deflates Calgary. Oil services businesses improve over last year’s tepid forecasts, especially for apart-
thrive because Canada strengthens its position as a leading ments and offices. Retail and industrial hold up, but hotels
supplier of oil and gas to U.S. markets. Locals expect posi- suffer from reduced U.S. tourist travel. Commercial markets
tive impacts to filter through the economy, including employ- promise to deliver cash flow but not much appreciation, while
ment growth. housing prices could ebb after an unsustainable surge. Most
investors take heart in consistent metrics from markets, which
Calgary. This market behaves more like a U.S. Sunbelt metro linger in reasonable equilibrium; it beats writedowns, defaults,
area than the typical Canadian 24-hour city. Sprawl and over- and foreclosures.
building “temporarily” subdue outlooks, but “absorption will
come.” Developers retreat in the face of high vacancies and Apartments. Owners do not sell, and buyers bid up any
show no appetite for new office projects. Locals put faith in multi-residence deal that comes to market—even older
robust commodities markets and U.S. consumption of oil from product. “You can’t wrestle anything away from all the mom-
tar sands. “We may have a dirty process, but not comparable and-pop landlords.” Immigration fuels “high” tenant demand,
while operators “fatten bottom lines” with cost controls, and
overbuilding is a nonissue. Buying REIT stocks may be the
n Investment
Office. Occupancies trend well over 90 percent in all major n Development
markets except Calgary, where vacancies settle in the rela-
Apartment 5.90
Exhibit 5-6 Prospects for
Major Commercial/Multifamily
1 5 9
Retail. Shopping centers lease to capacity: “At 2 to 3 per- Absymal Fair Excellent
cent vacancies, they’re essentially full.” Low interest rates
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
encouraged higher-than-normal levels of consumer debt,
Note: Based on Canadian respondents only.
but most Canadians never caught credit fever and avoid
going into hock. After only a mild recession, “we have decent
consumer confidence and people feel good.” Several U.S. Exhibit 5-19
department stores consider expanding across the border— Prospects for Commercial/Multifamily
“reinforcing already-strong demand for space”—but find Subsectors in 2011
few pad options at potential mall sites. Development activity
focuses on small projects in infill areas; urban retail is under- n Investment
supplied with stores, but land is difficult to find. n Development
Apartment Rental: 5.86
Apartment Rental: Moderate Income
Moderate Income 4.50
Industrial. Until U.S. exports increase, expect only “marginal
improvement” in warehouse rents and occupancies, which Central City Office 5.68
Central
City Office 4.31
begin to stabilize after a slump. “Owners work hard to fill Apartment Rental: 5.37
empty space,” but most are not overleveraged and can Apartment
per- Rental:
HighHigh Income Income 4.12
severe through the turbulence. Seemingly insatiable investor Neigh./Community 5.26
Neigh./Community Shopping Ctrs.
demand appears unaffected by market softness. If owners Shopping Ctrs. 4.10
get in trouble, they have ready exits. In Ontario, some ware- Warehouse Warehouse Industrial 5.14
Industrial 4.18
house markets outside of Greater Toronto face greater chal-
lenges, particularly Windsor.
Power Power
CentersCenters 5.09
3.90
Regional Malls 4.86
Regional Malls 3.41
Hotels. Lodging-sector fundamentals show signs of life, but
need a bigger lift from American visitors, who stay closer to R&D Industrial 4.84
R&D Industrial 3.97
home. Some borrowers cry uncle and bail, giving cash inves-
Suburban Office 4.71
tors a rare opportunity for bottom feeding.
Suburban Office 3.64
Limited-Service Hotels 4.31
Limited-Service
Hotels 3.15
Housing. Interviewees expect house prices to level off
and soften, possibly slipping 5 to 10 percent, after a solid Full-Service Hotels 3.97
Full-Service
Hotels 2.90
run. Rising interest rates and higher sales taxes in Ontario
and British Columbia douse buyer fervor. The market had 1 5 9
taken advantage of “free money”; now it’s time to back off. Absymal Fair Excellent
FAKE 1
Overseas purchasers buoy Toronto and Vancouver condo
markets. Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
FAKE 2
Note: Based on Canadian respondents only.
0 2 4 6 8 10
64 Emerging Trends in Real Estate® 2011
Chapter 5: Emerging Trends in Canada
FAKE2
will continue to grow vertically as planners seek to encour- 2002 13.3% 11.3%
2003 12.3% 9.6%
2004 7.4% 6.0%
2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 1Q09 2Q09 3Q09 2Q10
2Q10 5.6% 15.7%
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on Canadian respondents only. Note: Based on Canadian respondents only.
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on Canadia respondents only. Note: Based on Canadian respondents only.
Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey. Source: Emerging Trends in Real Estate 2011 survey.
Note: Based on Canadian respondents only. Note: Based on Canadian respondents only.
Exhibit 5-31
Canadian Suburban Office
Emerging Trends in
Latin America potential in two primary
Offshore investors see plenty of
emerging markets, but various hurdles limit opportunities.
W
here the United States has gone boom-bust and tending with difficult domestic issues distracts from consider-
Canada offers only modest growth, Latin America’s ing emerging market investments. But for those who do, the
story centers on the enormous potential of two action is all about two countries: “They take the oxygen away
emerging markets—Brazil and Mexico. Together they from all other Latin American markets.”
account for two-thirds of the region’s population “and most
of its growth dynamics.” But amid the swirl of young popula-
tions, an energized middle class, and the immense promise Brazil: Opportunities and Limits
of expanding industries, investors deal with inevitable cor-
Emerging Trends interviewees express few doubts: “The boom
ruption and lack of transparency, the need to sort out the
period has legs, the cat is out of the bag, people want to be
reliability of local partners, and—in the case of Mexico—the
where the action is, and that’s Brazil.” The country is self-
scourge of drug violence. Enticements and obstacles leave
sufficient in agriculture and energy, and expands its high-tech
most North Americans intrigued by the possibilities, but not
manufacturing. More offshore institutions “get their feet wet,”
straying off home turf. In the United States, particularly, con-
but find limited opportunities in existing real estate because
only a handful of buildings meet investment grade. Then they
confront hurdles from Brazil’s transaction culture of “group
Exhibit 6-1 ownership,” which makes deal making difficult. “It’s hard to get
Latin America General Indicators all parties to sell.”
Development may be where the real action lies. “There’s
Unemployment (%) Inflation (%) a ton of demand for a ton of new space. You can build hous-
Argentina 8.8 10.1 ing forever, and people will want it.” Plus, shopping centers
Brazil 6.8 5.1 are few and far between, and distribution warehouse facilities
Chile 9.1 2.0 are in short supply to serve growing consumer appetites. “The
Colombia 13.5 3.5 middle class is huge and dramatically increasing; populations
Ecuador 8.3 4.0 concentrate in urban areas, creating intense demand for high-
Mexico 5.2 4.6 rise residential and retail.” Again, local companies with big
Peru 8.8 1.5
development platforms and insider connections have “a tre-
Uruguay 7.4 6.2
mendous advantage and try to maintain a stranglehold; outsid-
Venezuela 6.6 29.7
ers can’t compete” and must make alliances. “Brave investors”
Source: International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook database, April 2010; enter secondary markets to develop malls, and strip centers
Moody’s Economy.com. will follow next.
US$ (Millions)
2,000
2000
Colombia 7.5 2.4 0.1 2.3 4.0 5.0 5.0
Uruguay 7.6 8.5 2.9 5.7 3.9 3.9 3.9
1,500
1500
Argentina 8.7 6.8 0.9 3.5 3.0 3.0 3.0
Ecuador 2.5 7.2 0.4 2.5 2.3 2.0 2.0
1,000
1000
Venezuela 8.4 4.8 -3.3 -2.6 0.4 0.5 1.6
500
500
Source: International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook database, April 2010.
* Projections.
00
2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010*
City, but offer “negligible investment opportunities” because Locals lament “too much distraction from drug issues,”
mostly domestic owners do not sell. Lenders require ten- which torpedo revenues for some resort hotels already feeling
ants in place for financing new construction, so “speculative the effects of U.S recession. “We need to deal with percep-
development won’t happen.” tions; it’s our biggest hurdle to overcome.” Other interviewees
Most multifamily housing is owner occupied and heavily admit to “grim” security concerns, particularly in northern cit-
government subsidized. Developers receive a guaranteed ies like Tijuana, Juárez, and Monterrey. “Business goes on,
return over ten-year periods without much upside. For-sale but not many relocations.”
housing remains supply constrained by lack of construction Government planners encourage future development to
financing, while the second-home market “went off the cliff” focus on more urban concepts and city centers, getting away
when U.S. retiree demand evaporated. Canadians fill some of from expanding suburban envelopes. The road-dependent
the void, gaining buying power from their stronger dollar and sprawl model, copied from the United States, reaches the
the weaker peso. In favored coastal Baja and resort markets, point of diminishing returns, creating hardships for many
cheap land could be a bargain. “The second-home market Mexicans who cannot afford cars or cannot support multicar
will come back.” households. Serious congestion and pollution, especially
around Mexico City, must be addressed, too.
PricewaterhouseCoopers real estate practice assists real estate The mission of the Urban Land Institute is to provide leadership in
investment advisers, real estate investment trusts, public and private the responsible use of land and in creating and sustaining thriving
real estate investors, corporations, and real estate management communities worldwide. ULI is committed to
funds in developing real estate strategies; evaluating acquisitions n Bringing together leaders from across the fields of real estate
and dispositions; and appraising and valuing real estate. Its global and land use policy to exchange best practices and serve commu-
network of dedicated real estate professionals enables it to assemble nity needs;
for its clients the most qualified and appropriate team of specialists n Fostering collaboration within and beyond ULI’s membership
in the areas of capital markets, systems analysis and implementation, through mentoring, dialogue, and problem solving;
research, accounting, and tax. n Exploring issues of urbanization, conservation, regeneration, land
use, capital formation, and sustainable development;
n Advancing land use policies and design practices that respect the
Global Real Estate Leadership Team uniqueness of both built and natural environments;
Barry Benjamin n Sharing knowledge through education, applied research, publish-
Global Asset Management Leader ing, and electronic media; and
Luxembourg, Luxembourg n Sustaining a diverse global network of local practice and advisory
efforts that address current and future challenges.
Kees Hage
Global Real Estate Leader Established in 1936, the Institute today has nearly 30,000 mem-
Luxembourg, Luxembourg bers worldwide, representing the entire spectrum of the land use
and development disciplines. ULI relies heavily on the experience
Uwe Stoschek of its members. It is through member involvement and information
Global Real Estate Tax Leader
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Timothy Conlon of the world’s most respected and widely quoted sources of objec-
United States Real Estate Leader tive information on urban planning, growth, and development.
New York, New York, U.S.A.
Mitchell M. Roschelle
United States Real Estate Business Advisory Services Leader
New York, New York, U.S.A. Urban Land Institute
1025 Thomas Jefferson Street, NW
K.K. So Suite 500 West
Asia Pacific Real Estate Tax Leader Washington, DC 20007
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