Tuesday, July 5, 2022

Cost Segregation Deadlines for Tax Year 2021 Extensions

 

Did you file an extension for 2021?

If you filed an extension for 2021, you still have time to get a cost segregation study done before the September and October tax filing deadlines to mitigate some or all of what you owe.

September 15 Tax Deadline

Our Cost-Segregation partner's Internal Deadline is July 22, 2022 - All relevant data to complete the project must be received by this date in order to ensure timely delivery of the study for the 9/15 tax deadline. Relevant data needed include the site survey, building cost basis/depreciation schedule, blueprints (if available), appraisal (if available), and construction/improvement cost detail (if applicable). 

October 17 Tax Deadline

The Deadline is August 22, 2022 - All relevant data to complete the project must be received by this date in order to ensure timely delivery of the study for the 10/17 tax deadline. Relevant data needed include the site survey, building cost basis/depreciation schedule, blueprints (if available), appraisal (if available), and construction/improvement cost detail (if applicable). 

  • If you have a building that you have already filed on in 2021 or owned prior to 2021, you can file Form 3115 Change of Accounting Method. our Partner can prepare that for you. This will allow you to apply cost segregation and get "catch up" savings in 2021.

If you renovated your property in 2021 that was in service in 2020 or prior, you are eligible for additional tax savings with Partial Asset Disposition (PAD). This MUST be taken in 2021 or you lose the opportunity to write off the remaining depreciable basis of what you ripped out/removed. In other words, there is "Cash in the Trash"!

45L tax credits and 179d tax deductions are still available in 2021. If you made energy-efficient improvements to your property, please reach out and we will let you know if you qualify.

Do you have W-2 employees and your business was impacted by COVID due to a government shut down, supply chain, or revenue drop of 20% or more? Ask more about ERTC or ERC (Employee Retention Credits). Up to 26K per W2 is available.

Do you have questions about the 100% Bonus and how that will change in the coming years? Please don't hesitate to ask.

Please Contact Us for further information regarding your Cost Segregation needs. 

 

 

 

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/cost-segregation-deadlines-for-tax-year-2021-extensions/

Monday, July 4, 2022

eXp Commercial Explained with Randolph Taylor

 

Every Thursday at 8 a.m. PT eXp Commercial eXplained highlights exceptional Agents, Brokers, and Partners of eXp Commercial. The event is hosted by Commercial President James Huang and Director of Operations Stephanie Gilezan.

On June 2nd, 2022 Randolph Taylor, Senior Associate and Multifamily Investment Sales Broker with the Chicago-Naperville eXp Commercial office was featured to speak about his Commercial Real Estate practice servicing Multifamily Buyers and Sellers throughout the Chicagoland area and Suburbs. As well, Randolph spoke about his recent experience joining eXp Commercial and how this has benefited his practice and service to his clients. 

Below is a recording of this discussion:

How Can We Help You?

Are you looking to Buy, Sell, or Finance/Refinance Multifamily Property?

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/exp-commercial-explained-with-randolph-taylor/

Sunday, July 3, 2022

May Apartment Rents Posted Largest Increase for 2022

 

Still, the longstanding upward trend might have plateaued.

Apartment rents are growing more slowly than they did in 2021, but at a pace faster than the years immediately preceding the pandemic, according to the latest national rent report by Apartment List.

Year-over-year rent growth currently stands at a “staggering” 15.3 percent, according to the report, but is down from the 17.8 percent peak it showed at the start of the year.

In May, rents rose 1.2 percent—the largest monthly increase of the year—and through May they are up 3.9 percent. That lags last summer’s scorching pace, but it’s ahead of the pre-pandemic norm. Five months into 2021, rents rose 6.1 percent.

The national vacancy rate stands at 5 percent, up from the low of 4.1 percent last fall.

Rents increased last month in 96 of the nation’s 100 largest cities, though 70 of these cities have seen slower rent growth in 2022 so far than they did last year. Some of the hottest Sun Belt markets are signaling that their growth has plateaued.

“Based on what we’ve seen so far this year, rent growth in 2022 seems likely to continue exceeding the pre-pandemic trend, even as it moderates substantially from 2021 levels,” Apartment List said in a release.


Source: May Apartment Rents Posted Largest Increase for 2022
https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/may-apartment-rents-posted-largest-increase-for-2022/

Saturday, July 2, 2022

Multifamily Still Holds Top Perch Despite Supply Household Formation Concerns

 

Despite inflation and rising rates, multifamily maintains many of the same strong fundamentals as it did at the end of 2021.

Apartment rents have surpassed pre-pandemic levels in many cities across the US, pushing investment sales numbers in the segment to historic highs. And they are expected to remain strong despite increasing concerns about household formation numbers and the lure of single-family rental home investments.

According to Walker & Dunlop’s new multifamily outlook, nearly $290 billion in transactions were logged in 2021, more than double the total from 2020. That activity centered most in the first quarter of this year in Atlanta, Houston, Dallas-Fort Worth, and Phoenix, as interest “firmly” shifted away from coastal markets to the Sun Belt, following pandemic-era trends. Cap rates for the sector are also at record lows, with per-unit pricing rising 11 percent over the past four quarters to $239,000.

“Part of the rebound in the multifamily market reflected a return by many renters who had vacated their urban apartments during the height of the pandemic, but vacancy levels were also flattened by the lack of new multifamily completions,” Walker & Dunlop notes in the report, adding that data also suggests that new completions are likely to be higher in 2022 than last year. “This sets the stage for more multifamily completions over the next three years than any comparable period dating back to 1988, with an above-average concentration in the suburbs,” analysts note.

But as supply ticks up, so do concerns over household formation numbers, which could weigh on absorption. Home sales are also predicted to slow due to rising mortgage rates; according to Fannie Mae’s housing market forecast in April, total home sales are expected to slump by 7.4 percent in 2022 and by another 9.7 percent in 2023.

Walker & Dunlop also pointed to data from Zelman & Associates noting that annual population growth is forecast to increase by just 0.39 percent growth per year for the 2020-30 decade as opposed to a prior decade average of 0.71 percent per year.

Still, Walker & Dunlop goes on to note that even with institutional investors absorbing an increasing share of single-family home purchases, multifamily fundamentals have outperformed Zelman’s recent forecasts, leading them to increase 2022 economic revenue growth to 7.8 percent from 5.8 percent.  “Despite inflation, rising rates, and war in Europe, the multifamily industry maintains many of the same strong fundamentals as it did at the end of 2021 and remains the top-performing commercial real estate asset class.”


Source: Multifamily Still Holds Top Perch Despite Supply Household Formation Concerns
https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/multifamily-still-holds-top-perch-despite-supply-household-formation-concerns/

Friday, July 1, 2022

THE IMPACTS OF HIGHER INTEREST RATES ON THE RENTAL HOUSING INDUSTRY

 

According to Freddie Mac, in April 2022, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate averaged 5.11%, reaching its highest level in a decade. The past two years of economic news show a domino effect of the pandemic, shutdown, stimulus, recovery, supply chain disruption, inflation, and now higher interest rates prescribed to cool the fever.

When interest rates are discussed in broad terms, mortgage rates are the main lens, but the hikes are also spilling onto all segments of the housing industry, including multifamily.

Having an Effect or Not?

For John Tomlinson, Chief Financial Officer, Bell Partners, based in Greensboro, N.C., it’s a good news/bad news situation. “On the positive side, rising mortgage rates increase the cost of financing a home purchase,” he says. “The result is increased demand for renter housing. With high occupancy rates, the increased demand results in higher effective rent growth. On the negative side, the higher cost of debt forces buyers to sharpen their pencils and be more selective. Given the significant impact of debt related to total capitalization, some deals previously viewed as attractive become marginal opportunities.”

Rent growth is cited as the strongest buffer to higher capital costs. “We’re seeing very high rent growth,” says Chris Bruen, Research Director for the National Multifamily Housing Council, based in Washington, D.C, “The rent growth has more than offset the increase in the cost of capital. As of the fourth quarter of last year, cap rates are decreasing despite rising interest rates. Going forward, if rent growth continues to compensate for those higher interest rates, it’s somewhat of a wash for builders.”

Not all loans are created equal. Long-term, fixed rates remain mostly stable. “Adjustable-rate loans is where we’ve really seen a run-up over the last month in anticipation of the Federal Reserve’s news,” says Jamie Woodwell, VP of Commercial Real Estate Research at the Mortgage Bankers Association, based in Washington, D.C. “Those increased rates transfer directly to a builder’s bottom line.”

Shawn Townsend, Managing Partner of Chicago-based Blue Vista Capital Management, doesn’t believe anything is going to stop the multifamily development juggernaut. “From a development perspective, the pace of new development is continuing in spite of interest rate movement,” he says. “There’s an incredible capital momentum behind housing products. Not just multifamily, but the build-to-rent space, townhome, and the single-family hybrid. There’s still a supply-demand imbalance due to housing inventory in general, and the migratory patterns domestically have shifted demand in specific markets.”

The Yield Curve Inversion (Again)

In 2019, before anybody ever heard of COVID, the yield on the two-year and 10-year Treasury bonds inverted, meaning the rates on a two-year note was higher than a 10-year note. Economists point to inversions as a harbinger of a coming recession. The news typically generates a lot of headlines. It happened again on March 31 of this year, and the warning bells were rung. Are we headed to a triple whammy of higher rates, inflation, and a recession at the same time?

“Near-term inflation and recession go hand-in-hand,” says Townsend. “There are more distractions in the current cycle taking the investment momentum out of the equation, especially in the real estate space, which has been built up over the years. A lot of the narrative has been around the evolution of the post- pandemic fundamentals.”

Tomlinson notes the surprise of the 2019 inversion, but he’s not shocked about the current one. “I think the inversion in 2019 was more unusual because there were no other signals at that time suggesting an increased risk of recession. Unemployment was low, incomes were rising and inflation was muted. Today, expectations of higher interest rates to fight inflation as well as increased geopolitical risk have led many to conclude that the risk of recession has increased. Hence, last month’s yield curve inversion was not surprising.”

The other issue that may be sliding under the radar is what happens when the kinks in the supply chain finally get ironed out. “It is difficult to separate out organic inflation from supply chain issues, which initially sparked inflation, the Fed reaction, and pressure on the yield curve,” says Tomlinson. “The Fed’s actions and messaging have moved the market on the short end meaningfully. Absent this action, the yield curve would probably be a more indicative leading indicator.”

Inversion is an indicator of what is expected to happen, but it’s not always right. Larry Jacobson, President, and CEO of Los Angeles-based The Jacobson Company says, “While an inverted yield curve has often preceded a recession, this is not a given. In fact, a recession did not occur when the yield curve was inverted in 2019. Investors have seen that it can often take some time for the effects of yield curve inversion to reach equities; therefore, it’s wise not to act impulsively. We may or may not be headed towards a recession, but criteria such as how the Federal Reserve manages its interest rate increases will really be the determinative factor in my view. We just don’t have enough information at this point to know whether they will get it right or not.”

The Affordability Question

Pre-COVID, housing affordability was a hot-button issue that is now making a return to the spotlight. Greg Curci, EVP at Morgan Properties based in King of Prussia, Pa., doesn’t see higher rates alone pushing more people into rentals. “Down payments are as much a factor as borrowing costs, particularly with regards to first-time homebuyers,” he says. “The rapid rise in home price values over the past year put homeownership temporarily out of reach for many and has helped fuel the unprecedented demand for apartments. It remains to be seen if the recent rise in mortgage rates will trigger a meaningful enough decline in home prices such that renters are able to convert to homeowners.”

Woodwell thinks there are bigger forces at work regarding homeownership and affordability besides interest rates. “There’s a lot of focus and discussion on rent vs. buy,” he says. “Both markets are driven by the supply of housing and the overall number of households out there. Interest rates flow through to the rental market. I look more to the demographics and supply and demand shortage as the key drivers for what’s pushing people into different types of housing right now.”

The Housing Shortage

Check out the price of lumber and the lead time for appliances. Assess the threats of inflation and recession. Add in the rate hikes and yet, the building goes on. “While the cost of construction has certainly increased over the past couple of years, there is simply not enough apartment supply to meet the demand,” says Curci. “As a result, multifamily development projects in under-supplied markets still pencil out quite well as developers and their capital partners are willing to inject considerable optimism in their future rent growth projections.”

Tomlinson is looking at new projects coming out of the ground which is always a safe place to start an analysis. “Multifamily construction starts will remain attractive until the spread between development and acquisition yields no longer justifies the added risk,” he says. “We’re seeing delays in development, but construction starts nationwide remaining at elevated levels. With higher financing costs, some developers may choose to adjust their projects with fewer amenities and other cost-saving measures.”

Biggest Concerns

With all that’s going on, are interest rates the biggest headache affecting developing or operating multifamily buildings? It depends on who you ask. Townsend says, “As we assess lending opportunities in the asset class, we’re increasingly concerned about aggressive operating assumptions. We’re seeing a very aggressive year-over-year rent growth opportunity in the first 12 to 24 months before they settle into a benchmark that they grow with CPI. Obviously, if you don’t reach those aggressive rents, it becomes a problem.”

Woodwell points to what’s happening in key markets and the basic rules of supply and demand. “For the construction of multifamily, it’s often not easy. It can be affected by local laws that affect the ease of building, local market conditions – just a host of things can affect it,” he says. “The builder and the lender are always looking at the market in which the property is being built and the market to which it will be delivered.”

Bruen sees the supply chain issues as the main cause and probably the most solvable solution. “It was the pandemic that originally caused the supply chain issues which caused inflation and higher rates so I think if new strains prolong supply chain issues, that could have an indirect effect on rates,” he says. “They’re not totally unrelated but we keep coming back to the supply chain being a catalyst for a lot of it. Right now, the increased cost of capital is being offset by high rent growth. So, I think there are still profits there to make construction worthwhile. The question is, will this rent growth continue to compensate for the higher costs of capital?”


Source: THE IMPACTS OF HIGHER INTEREST RATES ON THE RENTAL HOUSING INDUSTRY

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/the-impacts-of-higher-interest-rates-on-the-rental-housing-industry/

Thursday, June 30, 2022

Long-Term Demand Drivers Will Keep CRE Correction At Bay

 

With demographics driving property demand, the bigger picture points to generally strong drivers across the real estate spectrum.

The US economy is “still strong” and will support commercial real estate space demand, though inflation will remain a multi-year headwind, forcing the Fed to tighten monetary policy. And though rising interest rates may restrain CRE transaction activity, it won’t be on a broad basis, with effects most visible in the property types and markets with the most aggressive pricing run-up over the last few years.

That’s according to Marcus & Millichap’s John Chang, who says CRE will continue to see strong investor demand in the near term. He also says investors shouldn’t expect a real estate bubble, not in housing or in commercial real estate more generally.

“There are too many long-term demand drivers at play for any of the sectors to face a significant correction,” Chang says.

He notes that the self-storage sector will get a boost as millennials age: the demographic “over-indexes” as users of storage with just 28% of the population renting 9% of the storage units. That bodes well for storage demand but there are some development risks for the property type on the horizon, he says.

“As we exit lockdowns, and as demographics drive property demand, the bigger picture points to generally strong drivers across the real estate spectrum,” Chang says. “Some segments like urban office and seniors housing still face some challenges but it looks like most other segments are in a growth stage of the cycle.”

Housing demand set an all-time high in 2022 with total unit absorption hitting 660,000 units, nearly doubling the prior high set in 2000. Demand also carried into 2022 to deliver the strongest first quarter on record.

“The record demand reflects an unbundling of households as vaccines became readily available and states ended lockdowns,” Chang says. “A lot of marriages and other household formation events have been delayed by the pandemic and we saw the release of that pent-up demand over the last year.”

The result was a record-low vacancy rate at the end of the first quarter at 2.4% and a dramatic surge in rents. Average rents in the first quarter were up by 17.3% year-over-year, another record. And while those numbers may seem eye-popping, Chang says they should be contextualized against the backdrop of eviction moratoria and other rental relief programs ending, and notes that rents actually went down by 0.8% between the first quarter of 2020 and the first quarter of 2021.  Between Q1 2020 and Q1 2022, rents went up by a little more than 16%, an average of 8% per year.

“That’s still high, but not shockingly so,” Chang says, adding that single-family home prices increased twice as fast during the same period. “At the heart of the problem is a housing shortage. Even though a record 400,000 apartment units are scheduled for completion this year we will still fall short of demand.”

Marcus & Millichap is forecasting vacancy to remain at 2.4% through the end of the year and says rent growth will subside to 9.4% in 2022.

“We have a demographic wave right on the cusp of moving out on their own,” Chang says. “That’s why I don’t think the housing market is due for a correction. There is a housing supply shortage and it won’t go away for several years.”

Self-storage is another market strongly impacted by demographics, much like multifamily. Chang says that at the onset of the pandemic self-storage properties pulled back on rents, but demand surged as households doubled up and college students moved home.

Although there was a self-storage supply overhang going into the pandemic, Chang says, most of the vacant space was rapidly absorbed, with vacancy declining from 9.5% at the onset of COVID to 6.6% by year-end 2021, a record low.  That translated into 7.6% rent growth last year.

“We’re seeing demand ease back a bit and construction is starting to ramp up so vacancy rates may begin to push up again,” Chang predicts, noting that Marcus & Millichap forecasts vacancy to rise to 6.9% by year-end with rent growth in the 4% range for 2022.

As for industrial, demand surged to record levels in 2021, pushing vacancy to a record low as well. Construction will likely set a record in 2022 as well, with the addition of 420 million square feet, but M&M expects vacancy to continue to decline.

“The most significant force driving industrial demand is a snarled supply chain,” Chang says. “Companies are facing big challenges in sourcing internationally made products, particularly those made in China.” And for that reason, Chang says reshoring and near-shoring of manufacturing will be something to watch over the next few years, as many companies consider moving manufacturing operations to Mexico from China.

Industrial demand has been driven primarily by retail sales, which have been “off the charts,” up 27% since the onset of COVID. But while e-commerce sales, which pushed core retail sales early on in the health crisis, are moving back into their pre-pandemic growth trajectory, in-store retail sales have surged more than 19% over that time.

Necessity retail, like grocery-anchored centers, performed best, but restaurants and other service-based retail have already bounced back in states that ended lockdowns the earliest.  Outsized may still exist for those subsectors in states that ended lockdowns later, Chang says. Nationally, the multi-tenant retail vacancy rate is expected to push below 6% this year.

And as for office, significant variations exist depending on location, type of building, and type of tenant.  Vacancy hit a peak of 16.1% in Q2 2021 and has eased to 16% since then. However, suburban office vacancy rates peaked at just 15.8%.

“Perceptions of office space demand tend to be worse than the reality,” Chang says. Although many think that working from home will be the death of the office space, we have actually seen four continuous quarters of positive space demand. Based on the corporate messaging I’m hearing, there will be some flexibility on where staff members work but major companies are slowly pushing toward a substantial return to the office. It will likely take a few years for the office sector to fully recover, especially in markets that opened later…but the momentum is beginning to build.”


Source: Long-Term Demand Drivers Will Keep CRE Correction At Bay
https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/long-term-demand-drivers-will-keep-cre-correction-at-bay/

Wednesday, June 29, 2022

Cost Segregation: Ideal for Multifamily Properties

 

In a cost segregation analysis, your client’s property elements are divided into two categories: real property, which includes permanent and immobile objects, like their building’s foundation, and personal property, which includes objects like a kitchen ...

If you’re a Broker with clients who own or manage multifamily properties, cost segregation might be the biggest source of tax savings that they’ve overlooked.

Like any building, multi-family properties depreciate, or lose value, over time, due to everyday wear and tear that accumulates. But rather than calculating an apartment building’s depreciation via the traditional method of dividing the improved value by 27.5 years, a cost segregation study analyzes a property’s distinct components, so owners can depreciate their property over a shorter time period. A study sorts these components into different categories, which are depreciated at various rates. The accelerated depreciation schedule can reduce taxable income and increase after-tax cash flow substantially.

In Multi-Housing News, Mark Ventre, a senior vice president at Stepp Commercial, made this observation in his article “Why Cost Segregation Is So Important”: “Cost segregation studies [for multifamily properties] range from around $5 to $15,000.  If a study costs $10,000 and yields a net present value benefit of $250,000, that’s a 25x return on investment. Sounds worth it to me.” Who would disagree?

What Can You Depreciate?

In a cost segregation analysis, your client’s property elements are divided into two categories: real property, which includes permanent and immobile objects, like their building’s foundation, and personal property, which includes objects like kitchen cabinets and flooring. While the real property components depreciate over a period of 27.5 years, the personal property components depreciate over shorter periods — five, seven, or 15 years, depending on the specific element. By taking stock of your client’s property’s individual assets, cost segregation speeds up depreciation so they can deduct more from your taxes

In a Forbes article entitled “What Multifamily Investors Should Understand About Cost Segregation,” real estate investor Rod Khleif broke down how a cost segregation study categorizes a property’s components into four classes; each is depreciated over a different time period that reflects the asset’s useful life: 1.    Personal property: includes items such as furniture, carpeting, fixtures, and window treatments. If you depreciate these over five or seven years using the double-declining method, you can significantly increase the depreciation expense for these items. 2.     Land improvements: includes items such as sidewalks, fences, and docks. Using the double-declining balance method, you can depreciate them over a 15-year period. It’s advisable to maximize the values attributed to this category.

3.     The building: includes the building’s components, such as the roof and plumbing systems. You should seek to allocate the maximum value you can to this category because any residual value is attributed to land.

4.     Land: You allocate any amounts not allocated to the previous three categories to land and depreciate them accordingly. Provide a Value-Added Service to Your Clients

In another Forbes article, “What Property Managers Should Know About Cost Segregation,” David Crown, CEO, and Founder of the L.A. Property Management Group and Crown Commercial Property Management, described how cost segregation saved him from a hefty tax bill when he was about to send an $80,000 tax payment check to the IRS: “I had already stamped the envelope and everything when I received a last-minute phone call from a colleague advising me to look into cost segregation. With one call to my accountant, I saved all that money.”

He saved a significant amount on taxes, he added, “simply because somebody in my circle had the know-how and the wherewithal to recommend looking into cost segregation. The money I kept because of that changed the trajectory of my whole year. [Emphasis added.] If you're a property manager, gaining a basic knowledge of these principles can immediately make you more valuable to the owners you serve. You can be the person in their circle who changes the trajectory of their whole year.” He stressed that property managers have a responsibility to do more than address everyday issues like maintenance, rent collection, and tenant placement. To improve their clients' returns, they’d be wise to learn more about tools like cost segregation to provide value-added service. A cost segregation study could save them a great deal of money and improve their cash flow. And your clients will be grateful to you for clearly demonstrating that you’re looking after their best interests, thanks to your superior financial expertise.

Source: Cost Segregation: Ideal for Multifamily Properties
https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/cost-segregation-ideal-for-multifamily-properties/

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