Sunday, November 13, 2022

Cap rates jump 72 basis points in 6 months

Dive Brief:

  • Data is backing up what many multifamily buyers and sellers already know —cap rates are rising in apartments around the country.
  • A new report from CBRE says that going-in cap rates rose 33 basis points to 4.09% in the third quarter. In the second quarter, they jumped 39 bps (their biggest increase in a quarter ever) — marking a 72 bps increase over six months. Still, they are below their fourth-quarter 2019 level of 4.16%.
  • Exit cap rates, or the rate used to estimate a property’s value at the end of the holding period, increased 21 bps in the third quarter versus 30 in the second quarter. However, the current 4.63% exit cap rate sits below pre-pandemic levels. Internal rate of return targets passed the pre-pandemic average, rising 35 basis points to 6.39%.

Dive Insight:

Investors are also becoming more pessimistic about rent growth as demand slows. They underwrote 3.6% annual rent growth over the next three years, compared to a 4.3% forecast in the first quarter. From 2014 to 2019, they underwrote 3.1% rent growth on average, according to CBRE.

This more tepid environment could attract buyers who are conservative when projecting rent growth.

“We’ve said, ‘If a deal doesn’t work with 3% rent growth, we’re not buying,’” said Stuart Zook, chief investment officer for Coconut Grove, Florida-based Monument Capital Management. “We're not assuming that we're going to get 5% on renewals. If we can, great.”

While gateway markets suffered during the pandemic, CBRE says investors are now optimistic about rent growth in those metros. Six months ago, anticipated gateway rent growth sat below other markets.

In Dallas, Philadelphia, and New York City, going-in cap rates were flat. In all other markets, they rose. In gateway markets, cap rates have only increased 58 basis points in six months — below the 82 average for other metros.

With this uncertain market, Matt Vance, America's head of multifamily research for CBRE, commented in the report that apartment investors are being selective. “While a bid/ask price gap exists for many assets, transactions are continuing to close,” he said. “This reflects buyers’ long-term confidence and sellers’ willingness to lower pricing modestly in light of the significant embedded gains in assets purchased over the past several years.”

But that isn’t universal. Some observers have seen transactions fall because buyers and sellers still haven’t totally come together on pricing.

“Price discovery is taking place right now,” Manus Clancy, senior managing director of applied data, research, and pricing for data and analytics firm Trepp, told Multifamily Dive. “People are trying to figure out where the market is.”

In some markets, underwriting apartment deals are more complicated than in others.

“In the Seattle region, it has been difficult for us to make it work from an underwriting standpoint,” Derek Graham, president, and principal of Hermosa Beach, California-based Odyssey Properties Group, told Multifamily Dive in August. “And it’s largely because the pricing hasn’t shifted very much — the same as in all these other markets. Sellers are resistant to adjusting their pricing and I don’t blame them.”

 

Source: Cap rates jump 72 basis points in 6 months

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/cap-rates-jump-72-basis-points-in-6-months/

Saturday, November 12, 2022

Commercial Real Estate Symposium October 25 2022 7 a.m. – 3 p.m. PT

Commercial Real Estate Symposium
October 25, 2022
7 a.m. – 3 p.m. PT

Hear from the industry’s top leaders, national economists and thriving entrepreneurs on the future of commercial real estate.

Register now for this FREE event.

Agenda

*All times are listed in PT.

7 a.m. 
Welcoming Remarks 
James Huang, President, eXp Commercial

7:15 a.m. 
Entrepreneurship and Small Business Financing
 
Charles Rho, President, VelocitySBA

8:00 a.m. 
Using AR/VR Technology to Attract Investors to Your Property
Matt Bonds, U.S. President, RealSee

8:30 a.m. 
The Future of Technology in Commercial Real Estate
Duke Long, Second Century Ventures
Obie Walli, CEO, Dealius
Ember Erickson, Co-Founder and Head of Revenue, Biproxi

9:00 a.m. 
Inclusion in Commercial Real Estate
Jessica Nieto, ONEeXp
Donnel Williams, President, Black Real Estate Professionals Alliance
Desiree Patno, CEO, NAWRB

9:30 a.m. 
Comparing Business & Real Estate Brokerage
Kylene Golubski, Executive Director, IBBA
Neal Isaacs, VR Business Brokers

10:00 a.m. 
Corporate Services, RELO and Commercial REO
Dawn Conciatori, Vice President Referral Generation, eXp Realty
Eric Powers, CEO 7LCRE
Fred Schmidt, Managing Partner, Valuation Alliance

10:30 a.m. 
State of the Commercial Real Estate Industry
KC Conway, Founder and President, Red Shoe Economics 

11:30 a.m. 
Global Opportunities in Commercial Real Estate
Meghan Kelley, VP Global Operations, eXp Realty
Renata Sujto, Broker of Record – International, eXp Realty
Samuel Caux, Managing Broker, France, eXp Global
Andrew Thompson, Designated Managing Broker, South Africa, eXp Global

12:00 p.m. 
The Coming Digital Asset Disruption and How it Impacts Commercial Real Estate
Olivier Manuel, President, Rich Devices

12:30 p.m. 
Vylla Title
John Tavarez

1:00 p.m. 
JTC Americas
Justin Amos

1:30 p.m. 
O’Connor Tax Reduction Experts
Shalonda Marshall

2:00 p.m. 
TransGlobal
Philip Hu

2:30 p.m. 
CommLoan 
Jonathan Mangiapane

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/commercial-real-estate-symposium-october-25-2022-7-a-m-3-p-m-pt/

Friday, November 11, 2022

Chicago Multifamily Investors Pushing Deals Forward As Economic Conditions Worsen

 

Chicago Multifamily Investors Pushing Deals Forward As Economic Conditions Worsen

Chicago’s once-red-hot multifamily investment market has chilled a few degrees amid higher interest rates, rising inflation and more big investors sitting on the sidelines to see how it all plays out.

But there are still deals to be had, money at the ready, and fundamentals like a gaping housing shortage that had panelists at Bisnow’s Multifamily Annual Conference in Chicago confident any lull in the action will be temporary.

“I think there's sort of the pig-going-through-the-python [situation] here that we're going to eventually digest,” National Equity Fund President and CEO Matt Reilein said at the Oct. 6 event, held at Loews Chicago Hotel. “I do think we will move into smoother territory, probably the end of '23 and into '24.”

Tenant demand for apartments turned negative in the third quarter after several quarters of strong rent growth, the first time it has done so in three decades, according to RealPage Inc., which clocked 82,000 units returned to the market across the U.S. for the quarter.

That hasn’t completely spooked investors, though it is giving them some pause.

While the spigot is still flowing, albeit less forcefully, KeyBank Senior Vice President Todd Linehan said many are awaiting more tempered inflation numbers, a better understanding of how high the Federal Reserve might go in raising rates, and more capital markets activity on the investment sales side to gauge what’s happening with real transactions.

In the short term, that has increased multifamily cap rates nationally and led to a slowdown in deals, Linehan said.

“It's a challenging, challenging market,” he said. “You just can't solve for a 300-basis-point increase, roughly, or 250 over 12 months.”

McCaffery Interests Director of Investments Brian Munin said the pace of the volatility has been the biggest pain point, one that has already killed a few deals he was working on.

“There was just brutal timing where the 10-year [Treasury yield] would bounce 25 basis points in the course of a few days,” Munin said. "And we're seeing that this week as well."

McCaffery Interests' Brian Munin, National Equity Fund's Matt Reilein, KeyBank's Todd Linehan, West Loop Community Organization's Damone Richardson, Ryan's Greg Salter, and CliftonLarsonAllen's Jim Milliken

Yet there is still optimism capital won't rest for long — not least due to a major supply-demand imbalance that has resulted in a national housing crisis. There are approximately 6.8 million fewer housing units than needed due to underproduction and the loss of existing units, according to a national estimate prepared by Rosen Consulting Group for the National Association of Realtors.

Multifamily also remains a favored asset class among banks and life insurers and is supported by government-sponsored enterprises like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. And multifamily is in a unique position of easily adapting to an inflationary environment, thanks to constantly evolving rents and leasing that can move with the market, Linehan said.

“Certainly, we're seeing it seems to be a smaller world, the acquisition market has slowed down as buyers and sellers need to feel out what the proper level is based off new interest rates,” Linehan said. “But transactions are still occurring, and we're still fairly active, just maybe off of the crazy high of this time last year.”

“Deals can still pencil,” Munin said, adding rising rates would weed out deals that shouldn’t have happened in the first place “and put some more focus on really good deals, the ones that should be funded.”

 

P3 Markets' Phillip Beckham III, Project Management Advisors' Jeffrey Zogby, Skender's Joe Pecoraro, JDL's James Letchinger, Oak Park Economic Development's John Lynch, Luxury Living Chicago Realty's Aaron Galvin, and Thomas Roszak Architecture's Thomas Roszak

Conditions are changing how deals are put together.

Munin said his firm is building in extra time to assess the market and lock in rates during the due diligence period of negotiations. McCaffery Interests is also seeing the return of land contributions, “sellers wanting to stay in the deal with us and contribute and be a partner for the long term versus just selling to get out.”

That is happening in the affordable housing space as well, Reilein said, as localities kick in land or soft dollars to get projects built. More deals are making use of American Rescue Plan funding, which can now be directed to affordable multifamily developments as a result of legislative and regulatory changes this year.

“And I'm not advocating for this necessarily … but looking at short-term versus long-term rates, look at hedging specific to the interest rate risk on your portfolio and/or new projects — not looking just at individual projects, looking at your global debt position,” Reilein said. “Given the volatility, there are a lot of opportunities out there, and we're seeing a number of our larger developers start to have those conversations where they haven't had to literally in 15 years.”

Affordable Housing Investment Brokerage's Kyle Shoemaker, Preservation of Affordable Housing's Kathleen Day, DL3 Realty's Tania Kadakia, and Red Stone Equity Partners' Cat Vielma

West Loop Community Organization President Damone Richardson said developers need to be more flexible in how projects are financed going forward, taking note that those who took on floating rates are likely in for short-term pain

“I'm seeing folks look to alternative sources for funding,” Richardson said. “People are trying to access [property assessed clean energy] funds to help offset some of those costs in lieu of, say, mezzanine financing. Nobody knows what's really going to happen next. So I think that there are sources, but right now, we are in kind of a wait-and-see mode.”

Ryan Cos. Vice President of Capital Markets Greg Salter said many national banks have explicitly told him they are out of the market on making construction loans until next year. But super-regional banks like Linehan’s KeyBank are very much open for business.

Large national banks are requiring 9% debt yields that bring leverage on construction loans into the high 50% to 60% range, he said.

33 Realty's Mary Gibala, McCaffery Interests' Kimberly Williams, Magellan Development's Renee Wersching, Greystar's Colleen Darken, Daniel Management Group's Roger Daniel, and Xfinity Communities' Javier Jugo

"One of the great things actually about the regional banks is they'll make policy exceptions and go sort of around the credit committee and, if they believe in the deal, get you up to 65%,” Salter said. "So the debt is still there, it’s just tougher underwriting and lower leverage.”

Linehan said things get murkier for deals that involve three or four banks, but the market is robust for projects in the $20M to $40M range and involves a single bank lender.

“There's no rosy investment opportunity in this rising interest rate environment, so multifamily continues to be a strong investment opportunity,” Linehan said. “It just might not match the yields of the past 10 years."

 

Source: Chicago Multifamily Investors Pushing Deals Forward As Economic Conditions Worsen

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/chicago-multifamily-investors-pushing-deals-forward-as-economic-conditions-worsen/

Thursday, November 10, 2022

Multifamily Proposal Activity Stays Hot Single-Family Flattens

Multifamily Proposal Activity Stays Hot, Single-Family Flattens

Architecture, engineering, and construction firms express a telling forecast, according to PSM

Proposal activity for single-family homes and residential developments plummeted in the third quarter but remained solid for multifamily-for-rent and senior/assisted living properties, according to PSMJ Resources’ Quarterly Market Forecast (QMF) survey of architecture, engineering, and construction (A/E/C) firm leaders.

David Burstein, PE, director and senior consultant at PSMJ, an A/E/C industry consulting and publishing firm said he’s seeing a divergence in the A/E housing markets.

“The homeownership markets – new single-family homes, condos, and subdivisions – are feeling the effects of higher interest rates and tighter lending policies,” Burstein said. “The rental markets aren’t feeling the same pinch, at least not yet.”

Even Multifamily Index Cooling Some

Burstein often highlights the influence that the housing sector has on all markets served by A/E/C firms, estimating that it directly or indirectly impacts approximately 80 percent of the industry’s total revenue.

Even though multifamily proposal activity continues to be relatively strong, the index has cooled somewhat, likely due to the rising cost of borrowing money to finance new projects, says Burstein.

PSMJ created the net plus/minus index (NPMI) to measure proposal activity and assess the A/E/C market outlook when it began its QMF survey in 2003. The NPMI is the delta between the percentage of respondents in a given category seeing an increase in proposal activity for the quarter, and those experiencing a decrease.

For several quarters after the initial rebound from the COVID-19-related downturn in late 2020, all segments of the housing market reported proposal activity at elevated levels rarely seen in the history of the QMF.

In Q1 2020, the overall housing market’s NPMI fell well into the negative (minus 19.3), but rebounded to set its record-high index score of 77.4 one year later.

Single-Family and Condo Proposal Activity Sinking

Activity remained robust across the board in the first half of 2022, but the Q3 report saw housing’s NPMI fall 33.6 index points (from 55.0 to 21.4), quarter over quarter, and 49.1 points, year over year.

More telling are the results from the five submarkets measured in the survey. While multifamily (NPMI of 44.8) and senior/assisted living (17.0) remained positive in Q3, proposal activity for single-family individual homes (-2.4), single-family developments (-3.9), and condominiums (-6.8) all sank into negative territory.

PSMJ chose proposal activity because it is among the earliest stages of the design and construction project lifecycle, thereby offering a look at the longer-term outlook for markets, submarkets, and the overall industry.

 

Source: Multifamily Proposal Activity Stays Hot Single-Family Flattens

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/multifamily-proposal-activity-stays-hot-single-family-flattens/

Why Sell

Why Should I Sell My Multifamily Property? There are a number of reasons why people decide to sell their multifamily property, but most can be categorized into three groups: Problems, Opportunities, and Changes. With this decision though comes the consideration of capital gains tax and how to ensure you are getting the most for the sale of your property. https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/why-should-i-sell-my-multifamily-property/ Randolph Taylor MBA, CCIM Multifamily Investment Sales Broker (630) 474-6441 | rtaylor@creconsult.net https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/why-should-i-sell-my-multifamily-property/

Why Should I Sell My Multifamily Property?

Why should I Sell My Multifamily Property?

There are several reasons why people do sell:

Problems:              Management, Vacancy, Maintenance, Stress, Health, Debt, Neighborhood, Interest Rates
Opportunities:   Strong Market Values, Alternate Investment, End of the Hold Period, Tax Savings
Changes:                Divorce, Death, Retirement, Partnership Split, Relocation, Consolidation, Diversification

What do I do with the sales proceeds? I don't want to pay Capital Gains Tax!

There are several options for sellers to defer or minimize capital gains taxes:

  • 1031 Exchange
  • Delaware Statutory Trust/Deferred Sales Trust  (DST)
  • Tenancy in Common Investment (TIC)
  • Installment Sale

How do I know I am getting the most money for my property?

We not only market properties for sale. We make a market for properties we represent. Each offering is thoroughly underwritten, aggressively priced, and accompanied by loan quotes to expedite the sales process. We leverage our broad national marketing platform syndicating to the top CRE Listing Sites with direct outreach to our investor database and an orchestrated competitive bidding process that yields higher sales prices. 

What is my property worth?

Contact Us to discuss what information is needed to complete a Complimentary Commercial Broker Opinion of Value (BOV). 

I’m not interested in selling at this time.

This is understandable as only about 5% of the market trades in any given year. We are also happy discuss any purchase or refinance interests and recommend some physical and operational changes you can make to add value to your property you will appreciate when you eventually sell.  

 

Author:
Randolph Taylor MBA, CCIM
(630) 474-6441
rtaylor@creconsult.net

Randolph Taylor MBA, CCIM is a Multifamily Investment Sales Broker in the National Multifamily Division with eXp Commercial. Randolph focuses on the Listing and Sale of Multifamily Properties in the Greater Chicago area and Suburbs. Randolph has over 24 years of Commercial Real Estate experience including Corporate Real Estate, Asset Management, and Commercial Real Estate Brokerage. Randolph’s broad knowledge of the Commercial Real Estate Industry, financial analysis, marketing, and negotiating skills uniquely position him to provide a superior level of service to his clients.

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/why-should-i-sell-my-multifamily-property/

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

The Keys to Multifamily Transactional Success This Year

During a quick-fire session geared towards the experienced transactional investor at the GlobeSt. Multifamily national conference Monday morning, a panel of experts examined current multifamily transactions and deconstructed various challenges and opportunities given the current state of the market. 

LOS ANGELES—“We are going through a tricky time. It has never been more important to focus on the basis when looking at a transaction.” Those thoughts are according to panelist Bobby Khorshidi, president and chief credit officer at Archway Capital.

Khorshidi joined other multifamily experts during a transactions panel Monday morning at the GlobeSt. Multifamily national conference event here at the JW Marriott LA LIVE. Moderator Laurie Lustig-Bower, an EVP at CBRE, began with asking panelists what is happening with bridge debt.

Interest rates have gone up and there will be some uncomfortable conversations between lenders and their borrowers and between investment sales and their clients, explained Khorshidi. “In underwriting, we have to apply a stress test because we don’t know where things are going to go. It is hard to find deals that will pencil.”

UNDEWRITING, WHAT ARE THE METRICS?

His company is using 7% as the exit on transactions. “We are looking at construction loans that are coming due or over budget and they are looking difficult to find exit financing,” he explained. “This is a transitional period where we are going to find new footing… It will just take time to figure out the new normal.”

When underwriting deals today, James D’Argenio, senior principal of acquisitions at The Bascom Group, said that what hasn’t changed is understanding a property’s characteristics, strengths, and weaknesses. “Something that has changed is maybe the metrics, but we are really trying to stick to the basics and the stuff that we can control.”

When asked at a class A building versus a B-minus fixer-upper, and what cap rates would be looked at for each, D’Argenio said that they don’t make any money off the cap rate and are return focused. “We are trying to focus on levered versus unlevered returns…not just what is our cap rate to our coupon is because then you will be waiting a long time to transact… I don’t think that is an important metric when you are looking at the total success a project can have.”

BUYERS AND SELLERS ADJUST

Buyers and sellers have to adjust to the new normal, say panelists. Panelist Otto Ozen, executive vice president at The Mogharebi Group, said that the rapid interest rate increase created a bit of dysfunction. “Sellers historically have been relatively slow to respond to these kinds of shifts,” he said. “That is where you have the gap between buyers and sellers.”

He continued that buyers are quick to adapt their response and continue to adjust. “What is happening though is that a year ago, assumption of debt was really not an attractive option,” Ozen said. ‘What looked unattractive a year ago is being revisited.”

David Harrington, EVP and managing director of Matthews Real Estate Investment Services added that the profile of buyers right now are the ones who are able to stomach the long-term horizon.

LENDING OPTIONS

Switching gears, Lustig–Bower asked panelists about lending and what options look like for the buyer on bridge debt. Khorshidi explained that the goalpost is shifting. “We are in the business of lending and are going to lend.”

Having said that, he explained that his company needs to anticipate where the market is going. “Fundamentals and the economy feel like business as usual other than the fact that rates have moved,” he said. “Everyone will use the same criteria and the same underwriting.”

This is eerily familiar to the beginning of Covid, he continued, but then, the issue was valuation.” It is similar now. We just need to figure out the bid/ask. That is the way that we are underwriting things. The challenge is to figure out how someone is going to refinance.”

Khorshidi noted that it is a weird transitory time and it will take some time for these conversations to flush out. The pace that rates have been going up have been really extreme and has put some uncertainty in the markets and without trust in the Fed, it is hard to know where things are going. “We were told that all of this was transitory. That is not how it has played out. As lenders, and you all out there as investors, you have to guess, and whoever guesses right wins.”

 

Source: The Keys to Multifamily Transactional Success This Year

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/the-keys-to-multifamily-transactional-success-this-year/

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