SANTA ANA, Calif., Jan. 3, 2012 /PRNewswire/ -- Grubb &
Ellis Company (NYSE: GBE), a leading real estate services and
investment firm, today released its 2012 National Real Estate
Forecast, which predicts a year of slow but continued growth for
all commercial real estate property sectors.
"Although a variety of economic and political factors, including
continued high unemployment, an upcoming U.S. presidential election
and the unresolved European sovereign debt crisis weigh on the
minds of real estate owners, users and investors, we anticipate
gradual improvement in leasing markets and a boost in investment
sales volume," said Robert Bach,
senior vice president, chief economist. "This is based on an
assumption of GDP growth in the range of 2.0 to 2.5 percent in
2012, still below the economy's long-term potential of around 3
percent, and an average of 125,000 net new payroll jobs per
month."
Specifically, Grubb & Ellis expects property sectors to
continue to move ahead in the following sequence, from
best-performing to worst-performing: multi housing, hospitality,
industrial, retail and office.
The report's analysis centers on two proprietary market indexes:
a Momentum Index measuring near-term momentum for major property
types heading into 2012 (U.S. baseline=100), and the Investment
Opportunity Monitor, which identifies metropolitan markets with
potential for investors over the next five years for specific
property types based on a set of 16 to 20 variables. (Complete data
follows release.)
Office Market Equilibrium Remains Elusive
In 2011, the office market recovery accelerated, but not to the
speed of prior expansions in the sector. Regions scoring highest on
the Momentum Index, which places them in the top quartile of
markets analyzed, include Northern
California/Pacific Northwest and Southern California, while Great Lakes/Ohio
Valley and the Southeast were in the bottom quartile.
The "flight to quality" remains common in virtually every market
across the U.S., and next year's continued recovery is highly
dependent upon progress in resolving the financial turmoil in
Europe. In the worst-case scenario, a reprise of the 2008
global financial crisis would impact New
York's financial sector, while a deep recession in
Europe and slower growth in
emerging markets would hurt exporters ranging from manufacturers in
the Midwest to technology companies in Silicon Valley. However, the
more likely scenario is that Europe will avoid a catastrophe and the U.S.
economy will muddle through one more year of subpar growth before a
stronger recovery takes hold in 2013.
The outlook for the office market is stronger for 2012 with an
expected national vacancy of 15.7 percent by year-end. Net
absorption is projected to reach 52 million square feet and new
deliveries will be minimal at 9 million square feet.
Rental rates are predicted to reach $31.38 per square foot for Class A space, up
$0.24 from 2011, and $22.86 per square foot for Class B space, a
$0.04 increase from 2011.
Landlord-pleasing increases are unlikely to occur prior to 2013 or
2014, when the market reaches equilibrium. Class A properties will
continue to outperform the general market, with only a small
handful of markets tightening to the point where opportunities
arise for owners of Class B properties to cut concessions, raise
rental rates or upgrade their properties' status.
According to the Investment Opportunity Monitor, technology
and/or biotech hubs offer the strongest long-term opportunities for
office investors. The top six markets on the list – San Francisco, Seattle, Austin,
Texas, and San Jose,
San Diego and Orange County, Calif. – fit this profile as
does No. 10 Boston. Also making the list were No. 7 Portland, Ore., and No. 8 Los Angeles.
New York, last year's top-rated
market, moved to the ninth slot as the eurozone crisis threatens
the city's financial sector. Washington,
D.C., last year's runner-up, didn't make the list this year,
penalized by its strong construction pipeline and the uncertain
outlook for federal spending.
Industrial Sector Stable Thanks to Limited New Supply
Demand for industrial real estate accelerated significantly in
2011, with total net absorption of 110 million square feet, up from
only 34 million square feet absorbed in 2010. This trend is
expected to continue in 2012, but due to the uncertainty overseas
and the sluggish domestic economy, Grubb & Ellis researchers
expect an increase in total net absorption of only 15 percent to
130 million square feet. Regions scoring above the U.S. baseline of
100 on the Momentum Index include Southern California, Texas/Great Plains and Northern California/Pacific Northwest. Regions
with the lowest Momentum Index scores are Mountain/Southwest and
Great Lakes/Ohio Valley.
Industrial vacancy, which fell 90 basis points in 2011 to 9.5
percent, is projected to continue to decrease and hit 8.7 percent
by year-end 2012. New supply is expected to double to 40 million
square feet in 2012 after remaining constrained throughout
2011.
"The greatest milestone of 2011 was the lease-up of all the
space vacated during the recession," said Bach. "The lack of new
deliveries funneled demand to existing properties, giving the
market time to heal."
Large blocks of warehouse/distribution space should continue to
outperform, while general industrial and R&D/flex segments need
another year to recover before landlords begin raising rental
rates.
The price for warehouse/distribution space is expected to
increase to $4.44 per square foot in
2012 from $4.23 per square foot in
2011, while asking rental rates for R&D/flex space are
predicted to increase $0.02 to
$9.25 per square foot during the same
timeframe. Rates for general industrial space are expected to
remain flat at $4.94 per square foot.
As in the office sector, smaller, second-generation warehouse
spaces likely will continue to struggle despite aggressive
concession packages and depressed rent levels.
Although industrial investment opportunities do exist in local
and regional markets, according to the Investment Opportunity
Monitor, the top 10 prospects are those markets serving seaports or
inland ports that benefit from growing international trade.
Los Angeles, with the largest port
complex in the nation, took the top spot. The next eight markets
fit the port profile – Houston
(No. 2), Inland Empire, Calif. (No
3), Dallas-Fort Worth (No. 4),
Chicago (No. 5), Miami (No. 6), Oakland-East Bay, Calif. (No. 7), Atlanta (No. 8) and Philadelphia/Central Penn. (No. 9).
Phoenix made the list at No. 10
due to its success in attracting large tenants that historically
would have ended up in California.
Retail Will Lag until Consumer Confidence Returns
The struggling housing market, weak job growth and ongoing
consumer deleveraging caused the retail market to lag other
property sectors in 2011. Demand from mid-size tenants was limited
and the majority of transactions were smaller deals. Neighborhood
and community center vacancy rates were stable but not falling,
while vacancies in regional malls inched up slightly. Regions
scoring highest on the Momentum Index, which places them in the top
quartile of markets analyzed, include Southern California and Northern California/Pacific Northwest. The
bottom quartile included the Mountain/Southwest region, where the
housing bust was particularly severe, and the Great Lakes/Ohio
Valley.
Very little retail construction is occurring nationally. This
combined with moderate job growth and rising retail sales should
help sustain a recovery in 2012, although velocity will not be
strong enough to push lease rates higher. Struggling landlords will
continue to look for non-traditional retailers such as trampoline
facilities, nail salons and cooking schools to fill
space.
The majority of investment activity has been in larger, primary
markets, while tertiary markets have seen little capital for deals.
The results of the Investment Opportunity Monitor indicate that
this trend will continue. Los
Angeles topped the list, followed by Washington D.C. (No. 2), Boston (No. 3), San
Diego (No. 4), Seattle (No.
5), Portland, Ore. (No. 6),
San Francisco (No. 7),
Houston (No. 8), San Jose-Silicon
Valley, Calif. (No. 9), and Austin,
Texas (No. 10).
Multi Housing Sector Poised for Repeat Strong
Performance
The multi housing sector was among the strongest performers in
2011. During the year, effective rental rates and occupancy rates
increased, with only 38,000 units added to the market. Tough
qualifying standards for prospective home buyers and the growth of
the 18- to 34-year-old age group ensure that this sector will
continue to be one of the most popular and sought-after commercial
real estate investments in 2012.
A close look at the Investment Opportunity Monitor reveals that
top markets in the multi housing sector have higher home prices due
to their coastal locations and other barriers to entry coupled with
stronger prospects for job and population growth. The San
Jose-Silicon Valley, Calif., region ranked No. 1 on this list,
followed by New York City (No. 2),
Boston (No. 3), San Francisco (No. 4), Orange County, Calif. (No. 5), Los Angeles (No. 6), San Diego (No. 7), Oakland-East Bay, Calif. (No. 8), Portland, Ore. (No. 9), and Washington D.C. (No. 10).
Across all property types, distress is expected to remain high
but the composition will shift with fewer such properties on offer
by banks and more from CMBS servicers.
"The wild card this year is the unresolved European debt crisis,
which has the potential to send lenders and investors to the
sidelines," Bach said. "If they stay in the game, expect overall
commercial real estate sales to rise 25 percent in 2012, generating
marginally lower cap rates for non-distressed assets."
For more information on these property sectors as well as
commentary on a number of select specialties, including healthcare
properties, senior housing, hospitality, data centers and others,
visit www.grubb-ellis.com/forecast2012.
About Grubb & Ellis Company
Grubb & Ellis Company (NYSE: GBE) is one of the largest and
most respected commercial real estate services and investment
companies in the world. Our 5,200 professionals in more than 100
company-owned and affiliate offices draw from a unique platform of
real estate services, practice groups and investment products to
deliver comprehensive, integrated solutions to real estate owners,
tenants and investors. The firm's transaction, management,
consulting and investment services are supported by highly regarded
proprietary market research and extensive local expertise. Through
its investment management business, the company is a leading
sponsor of real estate investment programs. For more information,
visit www.grubb-ellis.com.
GRUBB & ELLIS MOMENTUM
INDEX
Measures near-term momentum in the leasing and
investment markets heading into 2012.
baseline = 100
|
Office
|
Industrial
|
Retail
|
Investment
|
Northern
California/Pacific Northwest
|
132
|
112
|
117
|
133
|
Southern
California
|
124
|
135
|
128
|
156
|
Mountain/Southwest
|
91
|
86
|
85
|
109
|
Texas/Great Plains
|
113
|
114
|
98
|
96
|
Great
Lakes/Ohio Valley
|
77
|
89
|
87
|
66
|
Northeast/Mid-Atlantic
|
106
|
95
|
110
|
94
|
Southeast
|
88
|
95
|
95
|
83
|
GRUBB & ELLIS INVESTMENT
OPPORTUNITY MONITOR
Identifies metropolitan markets with potential for
investors over the next five years.
Rank
|
Office
|
Industrial
|
Retail
|
Apartment
|
1
|
San
Francisco
|
Los
Angeles
|
Los
Angeles
|
San
Jose-Silicon Valley, Calif.
|
2
|
Seattle
|
Houston
|
Washington, D.C.
|
New York
City
|
3
|
Austin,
Texas
|
Inland
Empire, Calif.
|
Boston
|
Boston
|
4
|
San
Jose-Silicon Valley, Calif.
|
Dallas-Fort Worth
|
San
Diego
|
San
Francisco
|
5
|
San
Diego
|
Chicago
|
Seattle
|
Orange
County, Calif.
|
6
|
Orange
County, Calif.
|
Miami
|
Portland,
Ore.
|
Los
Angeles
|
7
|
Portland,
Ore.
|
Oakland-East Bay, Calif.
|
San
Francisco
|
San
Diego
|
8
|
Los
Angeles
|
Atlanta
|
Houston
|
Oakland-East Bay, Calif.
|
9
|
New York
City
|
Philadelphia/Central Penn.
|
San
Jose-Silicon Valley, Calif.
|
Portland,
Ore.
|
10
|
Boston
|
Phoenix
|
Austin,
Texas
|
Washington, D.C.
|
SOURCE Grubb & Ellis Company