Title: Smooth Sailing Ahead
1Smooth Sailing Ahead
The Commercial Real Estate Market
Lawrence Yun, Ph.D. Senior Economist NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS
Economic Issues Commercial Real Estate
Business Trends Forum Washington, DC -- May 2007
2Commercial Real Estate Normalizing
- Record-high 306.8 billion commercial investment
activity in 2006 continuing strong figures in
2007 Q1 - Residential Down Commercial Up
- Slowing Economy Weakens Commercial Outlook
- Property Prices Maxed Out
- Vibrant Office Market Cool Retail Market
3Improving Commercial Fundamentals
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton
4New Supply Impacting Commercial Fundamentals
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton
5The Economy
6Sub-Par Economic Growth
Source BEA
7Residential Construction
Source BEA
8Commercial Construction
Source BEA
9Construction Jobs
Source NAR
10Consumer Spending Still Healthy
Source BEA
11Wage Growth Picking Up
Source BLS
12No Savings
Source BEA
13Record Household Wealth
trillion
Source Federal Reserve
14Business Spending Weakening
Source BEA
15Record Corporate Profits
Source BEA
16Corporate Profits by Industries
billion
Source BEA
17Record Dow JonesIndustrial Average
Source NYSE
18Government Showing Discipline
change from a year ago
Source BEA
19Government Deficit
change from a year ago
Source BEA
20Net Exports - Stabilizing
billion (2000)
Source BEA
21Growing International Trade
billion (2000)
Source BEA
22Expanding World Economy
Source World Bank
23U.S. vs Foreign Currencies
Source Federal Reserve
24Steady U.S. Job Gains2 Million in Past 12 months
Payroll job changes in thousands
Source BLS
25Top Job-Creating Markets in Last 12 months
In thousands
Source BLS
26Unemployment At or Below Natural Rate
Source BLS
27Stubbornly High Oil Prices
Source Department of Energy
28Core Inflation Still Worrisome
change from a year ago
Source BLS
29Fed Policy
30Construction Cost Inflation
change from a year ago
Source BLS, Census
31Stable Interest RatesKeeping Cap Rates Low
32Economic Outlook
The Fed cuts rate in early 2008
33Commercial Real Estate Market
34Commercial Market Highlights
- New supply impacting many markets
- Office continues to be the sector of choice for
real estate investors - Retail demand is still soft
- Distribution/Warehouse space still fueling
industrial markets - Commercial lending volume up, delinquencies down
35Major Events in Commercial Real Estate so far
into 2007
- Equity Office Properties (EOP) sale to Blackstone
for 39 billion - Blackstones EOP spin offs
- Pricing continues to go up and cap rates fall
- Condo conversion market -- a by-gone
- Stock market perspective
- SP500 up 13.9 from May 06 to May 07
- Commercial real estate stocks up 29.9 over same
time
36Commercial Real Estate Delinquency Rates Edging
Up
Source Federal Reserve
37Commercial Property Rate of Return
()
Source NCREIF
38Commercial Property Rate of Return by Sectors
Moderating
The Fall of Retail
Source Haver Analytics, NCREIF
39Property Price Index
Source MIT Center for Real Estate
40Office Market
- Vacancy rates in most major markets continue to
fall but rise overall nationally - A record 71 billion worth of office properties
traded in first quarter - New supply impacting markets
- Investors like office properties in New York,
Boston, Los Angeles and Chicago
41Office Market Absorption Lagging New Completions
In thousand square feet
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton
42Vacancy Rate Edges Up
13.2
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton
43Office Rent - Still Positive
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton
44Industrial Market
- Markets near major ports continue to have lowest
vacancy - Los Angeles 4.6
- West Palm Beach 4.7
- Orange County (Long Beach) 5.0
- New state-of-the-art facilities being built
supply of older buildings boosting availability
in some markets - West and Midwest most active for industrial
investment - Sales of industrial properties up 10 from last
year.
45Low Retail Inventory/SalesNeed to Restock Need
More Space
Source Census
46Same for Wholesale Inventory
Source Census
47Orders for Durable Goods Halted
million
Source Census
48Industrial Market Impacted by New Supply
In thousand square feet
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
49Industrial Vacancy Rate
9.6
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
50Industrial Rent Growth
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
51Retail Market
- Sluggish retail sales means less demand for
retail space. - Only sector experiencing significant increases in
vacancy and declining rental rates - Investment volume up 22 as retail portfolios
trade hands
52Consumer Confidence Falling
Source Conference Board
53Retail Sales Decelerating
Source BEA
54Retail Rent Slow Growth
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
55Multi-Family Market
- Slowing housing market keeping some in rentals
- Planned condo conversions being returned to
rental markets - Investor interest in multi-family waning down
29 so far in 2007 - Condo conversions no longer popular
56Tumbling Home Sales (Existing-Home Sales 2006
Q4 vs 2005 Q4)
Source NAR
57Renters Beginning to Get Squeezed U.S.
Source Torto-Wheaton Research
58Markets Like Phoenix Strong in Jobs but Weak
in Housing Really Feel the Squeeze
Source Torto-Wheaton Research
59Multi-family Market Fundamentals
In number of units
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
60Multi-Family Vacancy Rate
5.9
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
61NARs Commercial Leading Indicator
Source NAR
62Commercial Market Outlook Net Absorption
Source NAR
63Commercial Market Outlook Vacancy Rate
Source NAR
64Commercial Market Outlook Rent Growth
SourceNAR
65Smooth Sailing Ahead
The Commercial Real Estate Market
Lawrence Yun, Ph.D. Senior Economist NATIONAL
ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS
Economic Issues Commercial Real Estate
Business Trends Forum Washington, DC -- May 2007