BPM Real Estate Insights: Spring 2018 Volume 01 | Page 8

8 BPM Real Estate Insights Real Estate Executive, Tom Engberg, Shares 2018 Trends By Jackie Matsumura E arlier this year, we had a chance to catch up with Tom Engberg, the CEO of Loja Real Estate, LLC. The private equity real estate company based out of the East Bay is one of BPM’s real estate clients, specializing in shopping center investment. Below is a summary of the interview and a few of Tom’s thoughts on the real estate industry coming into 2018. How Do You See the Overall Real Estate Industry at the Moment? Well, first of all, I tend not to think of the real estate “industry” as a monolithic thing. Real estate is made up of many subsets and lives in many geographies and movements in these subsets and geographies are not often in parallel. That said, there are indeed macroeconomic factors that affect all real estate sectors, rising or lowering tides that can raise or lower all real estate boats. Job growth and interest rates are two, by way of example. At the risk of overgeneralization, it is my sense that most sectors of the commercial real estate business are presently fully priced. I think this is true primarily for two reasons. One, fundamentals are solid across most sectors, with some exceptions I will mention later, and, two, there is clearly a flood of capital in the markets holding cap rates down for quality assets and values up. This is especially true in places like the Bay Area where supply is limited, demand seems infinite (it is not) and investment risk is therefore viewed as very, very low. Are There Any Clouds on the Horizon for Any Sector? Let’s talk first about where the skies are clear. The strongest commercial real estate sector in most markets right now is industrial. Growth in the sector is driven by what you would expect, namely, the tidal wave of growth in e-commerce, led by Amazon, and the need for warehouse facilities and logistics operations to support it. I was at a conference recently and heard about cap rates for single-tenant industrial properties in the 4s and even 3s in some instances. That stratosphere has heretofore only been occupied by the apartment sector. People think that Amazon is taking over the world, and it may very well one day, but right now internet sales represent only approximately 11% of total retail sales in America. That means there is a lot of room to grow, which is good news for the industrial sector and to some extent, bad news for bricks and mortar retail.