Showing posts with label Situs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Situs. Show all posts

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Commercial real estate market getting overpriced


The commercial real estate market is shifting to an overpriced market, especially for core properties in the top markets, said real estate research firm Situs RERC, in a second-quarter report issued Tuesday, August 18, 2015.

“In the previous cycle (that ended in 2008), prices increased over true values by more than 50%, and it would not be surprising to see something similar in the current cycle,” the report said.

Commercial real estate transaction volume rose 23% for the year ended June 30, the report said, citing data from research firm Real Capital Analytics. Prices increased on a year-over-year basis for four out of five property types: up 10% for the industrial sector, 11% for both retail and apartments, and 19% for the hotel sector. Office prices were flat during the period.

Overall, commercial real estate value was higher than property prices in the second quarter, with a rating of 5.2 on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 indicating excellent value compared to the price. Apartment and hotel sectors are somewhat overpriced with price ratings below 5, with apartments at 4.6, the same rating as in the first quarter and the second quarter of 2014, and hotels at 4.8, down from 5.4 in the first quarter and 5.7 in the second quarter of 2014. Retail was the only sector with an increased value vs. price rating in the second quarter, up to 5.5 from 5.1 in the first quarter and 4.9 in the second quarter of 2014.

Thursday, December 25, 2014

2015 Real Estate Forecast

Improving commercial property fundamentals, a steady stream of offshore capital and an accommodating Federal Reserve interest rate policy will sustain robust property investment in 2015 as buyers keep seeking yield and safe havens in the U.S.

But rising interest rates, the cooling of energy markets amid oil's price plummet, and other variables threaten to thwart those expectations. What's more, 2015 could be the year that reveals whether escalating property prices are sustainable, especially as underwriting becomes more aggressive.

Among other trends, buyers are building more ambitious rent-growth assumptions into their underwriting to make increasingly expensive deals pencil out, says Kenneth Riggs Jr., CEO of Houston-based Real Estate Research, a national commercial property valuation and consulting firm. That's a departure from the more recent conservative practice of pegging rent growth to inflation, he adds.

Up to this point, I think value and price have been in alignment," said Riggs, whose firm was acquired in February by global commercial real estate and loan advisory Situs. "But I think we're at an inflection point and may be getting ahead of our skis. Next year we may see price outpace value."

Momentum Continues
Through November, commercial property buyers and sellers had completed nearly $366 billion in U.S. deals in 2014, topping dollar volume for the full year of 2013 by almost $5 billion, according to Real Capital Analytics, which tracks sales of more than $2.5 million.

Capitalization rates have been trending down for most major property types over the last several quarters, indicating more aggressive pricing in anticipation of continued strong investment demand and low cost of capital. The rates measure a property's initial yield for the owners, and they fall as prices rise.

The average cap rate for office and industrial buildings in November marked a year-over-year decline of 50 basis points for each property type, to 6.6% and 7.1%, respectively, Real Capital says. Apartment properties fell 50 basis points to 5.8%.

Hessam Nadji, chief strategy officer for property brokerage Marcus & Millichap (NYSE:MMI), anticipates that vacancies in 2015 will keep tightening for most property types.

Retail properties could see the most pronounced improvement, Nadji says, with average vacancy rates dropping by 60 points next year to 6% nationally in light of growing small-business confidence. In November, the National Federation of Independent Business' small-business optimism index surged 2 points over October to 98.1, a slightly higher reading than the 40-year average. Apartments, however, may see vacancies rise nationally from a current average of around 4.5% amid increased supply, Nadji adds.

From an individual-markets viewpoint, the plunging price of sweet crude oil to less than $60 a barrel from around $100 six months ago could dent investment in cities tied to the energy sector, which along with technology markets have led the nation's commercial property recovery.

Much of the focus will be on Houston, where some 17.3 million square feet of office space was under construction in the third quarter, according to brokerage CBRE Group (NYSE:CBG). In a Houston report this month, CBRE noted that a "steep fall in oil prices" would have to last a couple quarters before energy companies would alter drilling and production projects, which are planned on a long-term horizon. But it said eliminated or scaled-back projects would ultimately reduce office demand in the market.

While Houston's average office rental rate climbed 4.4% to $26.81 per square foot in the third quarter from a year earlier, the average vacancy rate ticked up 20 basis points to 14.4% over the same period, Reis says. The fall in oil prices has caught the attention of Riggs, whose firm ranks the city as one of the top-performing property markets in the country.

"Houston's economy is more diversified than it used to be," he adds, "but falling oil prices will definitely slow the momentum."

Interest Rate Question

Rising interest rates could derail property investments on a broader scale. Yet observers who expected rate increases over the past few years now say that they wouldn't be surprised if interest rates begin and end 2015 without much change.

Still, investors are aware of higher-interest-rate risks, says Gerry Trainor, executive managing director of capital markets for Houston-based property brokerage Transwestern.

"But all in all, they're moving forward because it's anybody's guess as to what happens," said Trainor, who is based in the company's Washington, D.C., office. "I don't think anybody anticipates a big, sudden rise."

The yield on the 10-year Treasury note, a benchmark for conventional commercial real estate loans, would likely have to jump more than 80 basis points to around 3% or higher before investment activity would slow materially, adds Riggs. But the yield will stay lower longer than what most people expect, he argues.

"There's a tremendous weight on keeping Treasury yields down because of global uncertainty," he said.

Nadji notes that oil's recent price decline, combined with slowing economies in Asia and Europe, prompted overseas investors to buy U.S. Treasury notes in a flight to safety that pushed the 10-year yield down some 50 basis points over the last three months.

"In addition, any substantive rise in interest rates would be accompanied by strong economic and employment growth," he added, "both of which will boost demand of commercial real estate."

Similarly, a greater cost of capital won't deter foreign real estate investors who pay with cash, notes Avi Benamu, managing partner of New York-based real estate investment manager Winchester Equities. Like offshore Treasury buyers, individuals and families in the Middle East, Russia and other areas seeing strife are buying properties in the U.S. to protect their wealth, he says.

"Even if property prices seem a little bit unreasonable they'll just park their cash in the U.S. because they know it will be safe here," Benamu said. "The money is just flowing in."

Amid the trends, CBRE and Jones Lang LaSalle (NYSE:JLL) — the two largest companies by market cap in IBD's Real Estate-Development/Operations industry group — have risen by 33% and 48% in the stock market this year, respectively.

Friday, October 10, 2014

Ranieri Group Puts Situs Holdings Up for Sale


Following persistent rumors that it was in play, Situs Holdings has hired investment bank Raymond James to find a buyer.

Situs will entertain bids for either the whole company or a partial interest, according to people familiar with the matter. Market pros estimate the real estate-services shop is worth $150 million to $200 million.

Situs is owned by Ranieri Partners of Uniondale, N.Y., Brookfield Investment Management of New York, South Carolina Retirement and members of its own management team. After fielding multiple unsolicited offers, the company’s board of directors recently voted to formally seek bids, the sources said.

Houston-based Situs, which was founded in 1988, has an array of business lines, including due diligence, loan underwriting, primary servicing, special servicing and real estate advisory services. It also operates a big outsourcing business, which is the dominant supplier of contract workers to commercial MBS lending shops.

The list of prospective buyers could be long and diverse. Logical candidates include competitors in the due-diligence and special-servicing arenas, as well as broader-based real estate companies looking to add compatible operations. Several companies are seeking to build out full-service national commercial real estate brokerages, including a TPG partnership that has agreed to buy brokerages DTZ and Cassidy & Turley.

Situs could also appeal to firms looking to increase their presence in Europe. The company lays claim to being one of Europe’s largest third-party loan servicers and one of only a few firms that manage loan portfolios in both the U.S. and Europe.

Situs has also been expanding beyond the commercial mortgage sector. In August, the Federal Reserve tapped the firm to conduct a portion of its annual comprehensive capital analysis and review, an exercise to determine whether the largest U.S. bank holding companies have sufficient capital. Situs was awarded a contract to review nearly 7,000 of residential loans totaling $5 billion.

Rumors that Situs would be sold have circulated for more than a year. The speculation, denied by the company, was fueled in part by the fact that Ranieri Partners sold two other pieces of its platform this year: agency lender Berkeley Point Capital and distressed-asset investor RREP Recovery Partners. Cantor Commercial Real Estate acquired Berkeley Point, and affiliate Cantor Fitzgerald purchased RREP.

Ranieri Partners, headed by securitization pioneer Lewis Ranieri, began amassing a commercial real estate advisory, servicing and origination platform several years ago, teaming up with private equity partners. Ranieri gained control of Situs in 2011 and merged it with Helios AMC, a special-servicing firm in which Ranieri owned a stake. The merged company retained the Situs name. In 2012, Ranieri teamed up with billionaire

Wilbur Ross to buy Berkeley Point from Deutsche Bank, which operated the multi-family lender under the name Berkshire Mortgage. Ranieri also operates a registered broker-dealer, Ranieri Real Estate Advisors, which places debt and equity, and advises commercial real estate firms.

Many market pros think that Ranieri and its partners are simply ready to take profits after a big run-up in valuations for real estate companies that provide fee-based services. A spokesperson for Ranieri Partners didn’t return a call seeking comment.