Commercial Investment Real Estate March/April 2019 | Page 27

T he good times have been rolling along in the office investment sales market. An ample supply of equity and debt has fueled a steady level of sales activity over the past year, and many expect that momen- tum to continue in the first half of 2019. “Even though we might be near the end of the cycle, or at least having a leveling off in our cycle, globally there is a ton of money still searching for a home,” says Rebecca Wells, CCIM, senior vice president of investment sales at Lee & Associates in Indianapolis. Despite signs that occupancy and rent growth may be slowing, buyers are exhibiting a healthy appetite to acquire office properties. Sales for 2018 (exclud- ing entity-level transactions) dipped 3.1 percent compared to $130.3 billion in 2017, according to Real Capital Analytics. Transaction volume was spurred by what continues to be a very liquid market. At the beginning of December 2018, the amount of investable capital, also known as dry powder, held by global private equity real estate funds reached a record high of $295 billion, according to Preqin, a London-based research firm specializing in supplying data and analysis to the alternative assets industry. Most of that capital remains firmly targeted at the U.S., where global investors see a haven for real estate investment. Institu- tions are maintaining, if not increasing, allocations to real estate, and many expect the creation of opportunity zones to fuel more sales activity. “We have not seen any pullback, and even smaller investors want to place money somewhere and lock in historically low interest rates while they can,” Wells says. The big question is where that capital will be flowing in a maturing market cycle where opportunities for rapid appre- ciation are disappearing and occupancy and rent growth are slowing. Investors also are cognizant of transforma- tional changes ahead that are likely to impact future office investment, such as new technologies and growing demand for coworking space, Wells says. “We are seeing investors that are being very careful with their exit strategy, upside potential, and anything that could transform the market for them in the coming year,” she says. March | April 2019 25