Monday, February 28, 2011

Industrial Insight - Sustained Double-Digit Rent Growth is on the Horizon


February 24, 2011

Sustained Double-Digit Rent Growth is on the Horizon

By Rene Circ, Vice President, National Director of Research, Industrial

It is difficult to come out and predict two to three consecutive years of near or above 10 percent rent growth following the three worst years in most people’s memories. However, this is precisely the time to start considering the possibility.

Most of the shadow space has already been absorbed

Industrial real estate has been slow to come out of its recession. Aggregate demand, measured by net absorption, did not turn positive until three quarters after the official end of the recession. The slow recovery can be attributed to the unprecedented amount of shadow space – space that is occupied, but not utilized – that needed to be absorbed before companies started to need new space. Grubb & Ellis calculates that total industrial shadow space, at its peak, exceeded 100 million square feet. Three recorded consecutive quarters of positive net absorption demonstrate that the above-equilibrium shadow space has been absorbed and business growth is driving demand for new industrial real estate.

U.S. economy is expected to grow at above its potential

The U.S. economy grew 2.8 percent in 2010 and currently stands just above its pre-recession high. From the total output perspective, the economy is officially out of recovery and in a new expansionary cycle. Most recent indicators suggest that economic growth will accelerate in 2011 to between 3.5 and 4 percent. Growth of this magnitude will translate into stronger job creation and consumer confidence. Also, near record-high corporate profits and cash positions will spur business investment as revenue-growth driven profits replace cost-cutting driven ones. Economic risks, such as rising oil prices due to the unrest in the Middle East, exist, but the current outlook for 2011 remains positive.

Net effective rents are down 30 to 50 percent across the nation

On a national level, net effective rents are down 30 percent from their peak. In some markets, rents have fallen as much as 50 percent over the past two to three years. The total decline is the aggregate of lower face rents and rising landlord concessions. New, longer-term tenants still receive one month of free rent per year of term, which alone reduces the effective rate by approximately 8 percent. Additional concessions, such as moving allowances and larger tenant improvement packages, push the effective rates still lower. Meanwhile, Grubb & Ellis statistics show that the national vacancy rate has declined 50 basis points from its peak and net asking rents are stabilizing. The two-year downward pressure on rents is easing across the nation and landlord concessions can tightened very quickly as new tenants absorb key vacancies.

New construction is not profitable without significant rent growth

At the end of fourth quarter of 2010, only about 12 million square feet were under construction. At this rate, 2011 may be the year with the lowest new deliveries on record. Yet, current rent levels do not justify new construction. If developers require a 10 percent unleveraged return, assuming zero cost of land and $47 per square foot total soft and hard costs, tenant improvements and leasing commissions, they need a triple net rent of $4.32 per square foot. The table below shows the required net rents assuming land costs are $2 per square foot, keeping the other costs unchanged. 

Exit Cap / IRR           10%          15%          20%
7.0%                          $4.47        $4.75       $5.05
7.5%                          $4.78        $5.09       $5.40
8.0%                          $5.09        $5.42       $5.76

Today, market net effective rents are below these rent figures, preventing most developers from starting projects on a speculative basis – only 2 million square feet are currently under construction on a speculative basis across the country.

Net effective rents must rise considerably

The next three years will see strong tenant demand and Grubb & Ellis expects vacancies to fall into the single digits by the end of 2011. It is difficult to generalize the industrial real estate market, as rents and land prices vary considerably market-to-market. However, on average, net effective rents are 20 to 30 percent below rents necessary to justify investments in new, speculative industrial projects. The combination of strong demand and profit-constrained supply will create a space scarcity and push rents up quickly and considerably. Rent declines were unprecedented over the past two years and the experienced double-digit declines will need to be reversed at similar speeds, if market equilibrium is to be achieved.

Source: Grubb & Ellis

Friday, February 25, 2011

Good News Friday 2/25/2011


Inflation’s Silver Lining


A gap is opening between Main Street and Washington (yet another gap, I guess you could say), and this one involves inflation expectations. Federal Reserve officials have repeated again and again that they don’t think inflation will take hold anytime soon because there is so much excess capacity weighing down the economy in the form of unemployed workers, too many houses, low rates of factory utilization and vacant commercial space. Most mainstream economists agree with that assessment. Yet when I speak with individual investors, I always ask for a show of hands on whether they think inflation will become problematic in the next year or two, and nearly everyone in the room raises a hand. Households are feeling inflation in the form of higher gas and food prices, and businesses are seeing it in higher input prices for their products.

The silver lining for property owners is that commercial real estate functions as an inflation hedge. Leases usually are written with annual rent bumps often tied to the consumer price index or a fixed rate of increase. And as construction costs rise, as they have been lately, the cost to replace existing properties also rises. During the last serious bout of inflation in the U.S. thirty years ago, commercial real estate returns as measured by the National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries (the red line in the nearby graph) handily beat the CPI (the blue line) even though the early 1980s saw back-to-back recessions, the second of which in 1981 and 1982 was severe. Real estate lets investors hedge against inflation, which could be one reason for the 120-percent gain in the dollar volume of commercial property sales transactions last year compared with 2009.

Have a great weekend.

Best regards,
Bob

Robert Bach
SVP, Chief Economist
Grubb & Ellis
312.698.6754

Friday, February 18, 2011

Good News Friday 2/18/2011





Silver Lining


The chatter on the economic front lately has been about inflation. We’re feeling it in the form of higher energy and food prices in the U.S. while other countries, particularly fast-growing emerging markets such as China and Brazil, are feeling it across the board. Some say it’s no coincidence that the demonstrations in Egypt and other Middle Eastern countries come at a time of high food prices.

Will broad inflation take root in this country? Most mainstream economists think the answer is no, at least not in the next couple of years, because so much slack remains in the form of unemployed workers, empty homes, high vacancy rates in commercial properties, low factory utilization rates, and so on. The Federal Reserve expects headline inflation to remain “subdued” this year, and private economists largely agree. Economists at Wells Fargo, for example, think that core consumer prices, which exclude food and energy, will rise 1.1 percent this year and 1.7 percent next year – still within the Federal Reserve’s informal target range of 1.5 to 2.0 percent.

Although it’s rare for inflation to flare up when there is a lot of excess capacity in the economy, it’s not impossible. “Stagflation,” a hard-to-fight combination of sluggish growth and high inflation, plagued the economy in the 1970s.

If legislators can develop a long-term plan to reduce budget deficits and control debt, it would go a long way toward reassuring the financial markets than inflation can be controlled even as the recovery gains momentum and the excess capacity is put back into production. Being an optimist, I think it will happen before the 2012 elections.



Have a great weekend.

Best regards,
Bob

Robert Bach
SVP, Chief Economist
Grubb & Ellis
312.698.6754

Good News Friday 2/11/2011





200 Years of Good News

Sometimes you can’t see the forest for the trees. I’ve always felt that the overarching reason for optimism is that the long-term trend for mankind has been up. I’m fortunate to be on the distribution list of Bill Dunkelberg, Professor of Economics at Temple University and an expert in small business, who recently sent a four-minute YouTube video from the BBC that proves the point. The video chronicles 200 years of progress in the health and wealth of mankind. Recessions? Financial crises? Wars? They’re all temporary setbacks, nothing more than a blip in time. This is why your kids will be better off than you despite the economic challenges ahead of us. Click here to view the video.

Back in the middle of the forest, the view is looking better. Weekly initial jobless claims fell by 36,000 to 383,000 for the week ending February 5th. It was the second sharp weekly drop in a row. The level of initial claims has not been this low since the week ending July 5th, 2008 – before the bottom dropped out of the labor market in September of that year. The two consecutive sharp drops could be weather-related, but the trend is in the right direction.

Have a great weekend.

Best regards,
Bob

Robert Bach
SVP, Chief Economist
Grubb & Ellis
312.698.6754