Commercial Investment Real Estate July/August 2018 | Page 28

regulatory relief. The index was under 100 for four straight years until President Donald Trump was elected, and has remained in a bullish 103-107 range through 1H2018. Looking Ahead So, what could go wrong? Although everything appears copasetic and like the Lego movie (Everything is Awe- some), some bearish concerns are in the market. Positive momentum could be subject to disruption due to uncer- tainty surrounding potential Black Swan events that include: • Threatened tariffs and a resulting trade war with Asia and Europe; • November midterm Congressional elections; • A volatile Mideast with unresolved nuclear and chemical weapons threats from Syria and Iran; and • Federal monetary policy (interest rate hikes and selling down its balance sheet and extracting liquidity) along with market impacts from the rise in the yield for the 10-year Treasury Bond. If Democrats regain control of the House, Senate, or both, in the upcoming midterm elections, they could undo the tax bill and undo much of the regulatory relief occurring under the Trump administration. Likewise, the economic stimulus that we are starting to see kick in could be undone, Treasury already has started moving higher. At the end of April, the 10-year Treasury hit 3 percent for the first time in more than four years. The Federal Reserve raised the short-term bank lending rate 25 basis points in February (its sixth increase in two years), and I expect the Fed to raise interest rates three more times this year. The next 25-basis-point increase likely will come in the June meeting, followed by additional increases in September and December, for a total of 100 basis points, or a full 1 percent increase this year. In commercial real estate, cap rates have compressed, and values have gone up due to historically low interest rates. That gig is up. Now the way property values are going to go up is through increasing net operating income. Commercial real estate brokers and CCIMs will have to be much more tuned into NOI, lease maturities, and the potential to raise rents, to see if a particular property or market can absorb higher interest rates without the property declining in value as cap rates rise in response to higher interest rates. Industrial Engine Remains Strong Despite a potential trade war, the bulls are continuing to run in the industrial sector. E-commerce is fueling unprecedented demand for distribution and warehouse space handling virtually everything that people consume, from produce to paper products. All are being bought online in bigger and bigger quanti- ties. In the U.S., e-commerce sales now account for about 9.1 percent of total retail sales. And that percentage is much higher — upwards of 20 per- cent — when excluding sales from autos, gasoline, restaurant, and food categories. The next two big disruptors in online sales that will further benefit industrial are grocery and autos. Giants such as Amazon and Walmart are putting more competitive pressure on their peers as they continue to improve on e-commerce platforms and rapid delivery. Auto sales also are shifting to online sales, replac- ing the traditional model of showrooms and acres of park- ing on prime real estate. Today, consumers don’t walk acres of inventory in search of a new car; rather they click their way through online inventory stored in warehouses ready to be instantly financed/purchased and delivered overnight in much the same way as apparel is consumed today. A potential trade war would have a dampening effect on industrial, with tariffs that make imports and exports more expensive. Less shipping activity translates into reduced demand for warehouse space. However, trade wars are relatively short-lived, because they are not effec- tive. A trade war could disrupt the market for 12 to 18 months, but no one is interested in creating a prolonged, expensive trade war. THE 10-YEAR TREASURY ALREADY HAS STARTED MOVING HIGHER. AT THE END OF APRIL, THE 10-YEAR TREASURY HIT 3 PERCENT FOR THE FIRST TIME IN MORE THAN FOUR YEARS. which is why we are seeing a reintroduction of stock market volatility. Any or all of these Black Swan events quickly could reverse small business and consumer optimism and send us back to a sub-2 percent economy. Rising Interest Rate Environment We have been waiting for the economy to be strong enough to sustain wage and price growth, and the consequence of that is interest rates moving higher. The big focus for com- mercial real estate in the near term will be how to function in a rising interest rate environment. Interest rates have been incredibly low for the past decade. People have grown so accustomed to almost free money and low interest rates that they may not know how to function in a rising interest rate environment. Investors in commercial real estate need to adjust to those higher rates. The 10-year 26 July | August 2018 COMMERCIAL INVESTMENT REAL ESTATE