Title: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS
1Economic and Commercial Real Estate Market
Trends and Outlook
- NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS
2Economy Growing
Source BEA
3Katrina Temporarily Cuts Jobs
Payroll job changes in thousands
Source BLS
4Job Gains/Losses 2001 to 2005
In thousands
Source BLS
5Job Gains/Losses in the Recent 12 months
In thousands
Source BLS
6Resilient Consumer Spending
Source BEA
7Corporate Profits are Strong
Source BEA
8Stock Market at 3-year High
9Dollar Recovering A Bit
Source Federal Reserve
10Accumulating Risks
- Oil Prices high but dropping
- Inflation Building
- Tax Reform
- Business Spending May Decelerate
11High Oil Prices
Source Department of Energy
12Inflation Building
change from a year ago
Source BLS
13Fed Nervous About Inflation Forced to Tighten
Credit
Forecast to 4.25 by Dec. 2005
14Narrow Spreads Suggest Further Short-term Fed
Rate Hikes Pushing up Long-term Rates
15Consumer Confidence
Source Conference Board
16Trade Deficit Swelling
Source BEA
17High Federal Deficit Persists
Largest Ever
Source CBO
18Economic Outlook
19Tax Reform Pending
- Commercial Market
- Simplified leasehold improvement no details
(currently 39 year cost recovery for commercial
property and 15 years for leasehold improvements) - No Federal Deduction for State/Local Property Tax
- Capital Gains Taxed as Ordinary Income
- No info on Recapture Rate
20Tax Reform Pendingcontinued
- Residential Market
- No Federal Deduction for State/Local Property Tax
- Limited Deduction for Mortgage Interest (2nd
homes) - Individual Taxes
- Alternative Minimum Tax Elimination
- Four Tax Brackets (15 to 33)
- Limited Deduction for Health Insurance
21Commercial Real Estate Market
22Commercial Outlook
- Moderate economic expansion
- Capital flow will continue to flow into
commercial real estate at almost record levels
(est. 200B) - Moderate increase in interest rates not yet
impacting long term investments - Respectable job growth
- Some market risks ahead
23Commercial Market Highlights
- Record level of commercial sales transactions in
2005 - Office buildings (? 30)
- Industrial buildings (?70)
- Retail buildings (? 10)
- Multi-Family (? 63)
- Port and major distribution hubs leading
industrial sector - Commercial lending volume up, delinquencies down
Source Real Capital Analytics
24Commercial Real Estate Loans Performing
Source Federal Reserve
25Commercial Multi-Family Mortgage Originations
billions
Source Mortgage Bankers Association
26Mortgage Originations Q2 2005
billions
Source Mortgage Bankers Association
27Commercial Property Rate of Return(Total
Annualized Return net operating income
capital appreciation)
Annual
Source NCREIF
28Commercial Property Rates of Return by Sectors
Industrial jumps to best performer
Source NCREIF
29Office Market
- Vacancy lowest it has been since 2001
- Greatest increase in rental growth of any
commercial sector - Institutional investors have returned to the
office sector - Avg. Central Business District selling price
223/psf _at_ 6.7 cap - Avg. Suburban selling price 167/psf _at_ 7.4 cap
30Office Job Creation Growth
In thousands
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton
31Vacancy Rate Falling
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton
32Office Rent - Gaining Traction
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton
33Whats happening in the South Florida Office
Market!
34Palm Beach County
- Vacancy 9.3
- New Construction 115,000 sf
- Net Absorption 797,780 sf
- Avg Ask rents A 26.67 (full)
- Avg Ask rents B 22.68 (full)
35CBD Ft Lauderdale
- Vacancy 9.2
- New Construction 0 sf
- Net Absorption 171,129 sf
- Avg Ask rents A 26.19 (full)
- Avg Ask rents B 23.26 (full)
36CBD Miami
- Vacancy 11.8
- New Construction 0 sf
- Net Absorption 79,560 sf
- Avg Ask rents A 30.70 (full)
- Avg Ask rents B 18.68 (full)
37Industrial Market
- Trade continue to impact industrial sector
- Trade with China boom to Southern California
- Central American Free Trade Agreement positive
impact on South Florida - Obsolescence still artificially keeping some
vacancy rates high - Build-to-suit activity is prevalent
- Local investors dominate industrial acquisition
activity - Port markets (both traditional and inland)
continue to outperform
38Industrial Vacancy Rate
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
39Industrial Rent Growth
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
40Whats happening in the South Florida Industrial
Market!
41Palm Beach County
- Vacancy 4.2
- New Construction 116,100 sf
- Net Absorption 639,499 sf
- Avg Rents 6.83 psf
- Avg Sales 75-120 psf
42Broward
- Vacancy 4.8
- New Construction 434, 970 sf
- Net Absorption 1,641,450 sf
- Avg Rents psf 6.45
- Avg Sales psf 75-120
43Central Dade
- Vacancy 1.5
- New Construction 0 sf
- Net Absorption 86,166 sf
- Avg Rents 5.90
- Avg Sales psf 75-100
44North Dade
- Vacancy 5.3
- New Construction 163,100 sf
- Net Absorption 745,783 sf
- Avg Rents 6.96
- Avg Sales psf 70-90
45Airport
- Vacancy 4.6
- New Construction 193,200 sf
- Net Absorption 1,990,108 sf
- Avg Rents 6.75
- Avg Sales psf 75-125
46Retail Market
- Consumer spending holding steady despite modest
interest rate increases and higher oil prices - Retailing in coastal markets healthy due to
sizable housing wealth - Foreign investors very active - especially the
Australians - Merger of Federated Department Stores and The May
Department Store Chains up to 68 stores to
close
47Crystal Ball - Risks
- Rent increasing faster than sales
- Fallout from Katrina/Wilma Gas Prices, Consumer
Spending - Retailer Pull-Back???
- Long-Term FL is Ground Zero for Growth
- Its predicted that by 2020, Florida will be one
of the three largest states by Population in the
country.
48Retail Rent Growth
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
49Palm Beach County
- Vacancy 2.6
- Ave Rent psf 16.86 NNN
50Broward
- Vacancy 5.6
- Ave Rent psf 16.84 NNN
51Miami
- Vacancy 5.2
- Ave Rent psf 17.77 NNN
52Multi-Family Market
- Rising mortgage rates will boost renter demand
- Local concentrated job growth raises demand for
rental apartments - Condo Conversions (100,000 units converted in
first 8 months of 2005) - Tampa and Orlando have replaced San Diego and
Miami as top conversion markets
53Housing Affordability Slipping
Source NAR
54Multi-family Market Fundamentals
In number of units
Impact of conversions
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
55Multi-family Vacancy Rate
Seasonal
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
56Multi-family Rent Growth
Source NAR/Torto-Wheaton Research
57Commercial Market Outlook Vacancy Rate
Source NAR Forecast
58Commercial Market Outlook Rent Growth
Source NAR Forecast
59- Overseas
- Real Estate InvestorsSet Sights on U.S.
60Globalization
- The movement of countries, companies,
organizations and people toward a single market
environment - The world is getting smaller and smaller
61Immigration to U.S. By Decade
62Foreign Investment in the USA
- 1 out of 3 has foreign origin
- 1 out of 5 in residential loan
- 1 out of 10 in commercial loan
- Chinese holdings of US Treasury securities
currently at US230 billion, second only to Japan
63Investment Security
- Capitals safety
- Security of return on and of the initial capital
- Provides a safe, secure environment that other
countries may lack of due to - Governmental influences
- Government instability
- Currency fluctuations
64Who are the Buyers?
- German Funds
- Legislative changes increase the amount Germans
can invest outside EU - Seek secure investments that offer stable cash
flow with credit tenants with minimal rollover
65Who are the Buyers?
- British Funds
- Due to the currency play dollar still cheap
compared to the British pound, investors feel
they are getting more for their money
66Who are the Buyers?
- Israeli Funds
- Government recently relaxed restrictions that now
permit Israeli funds to invest up to 20 of their
assets overseas compared to 5 previously - Seek value-added opportunities, particularly in
the New York market
67Who are the Buyers?
- Australian Funds
- Limited domestic investment opportunities
- Seek stable, annuity-style returns over time
- Prefer JV with US operating companies
68What are Investors Interested in Buying?
(2004 AFIRE Annual Survey)
69Where are Investors Buying?
70(No Transcript)
71Where are Investors Buying NOW ?
- Prefer 2nd Tier Markets
- Atlanta
- San Diego
- South Florida
- Texas Cities (Houston, Austin, Dallas)
72Florida General
The state posted the nations highest job growth
last year, as baby boomers from the North poured
in to take advantage of the job market and
climate. Land scarcity will drive urban
growth KEY DEMOGRAPHIC SHIFT The 65-and-up
population will continue to swell, doubling by
2025. NEW GROWTH INDUSTRY Florida will lead
the nation in health care for the elderly
Scripps Research Institute will seed a biotech
cluster with its new research center based in
West Palm Beach.
73Bubble????
- Occupancy High
- Demand gt Supply
- Improving Demographic
- International Influence
- No Bubble-just less inflated!!!!
74Economic and Commercial Real Estate Market
Trends and Outlook