Commercial Investment Real Estate Winter 2020 | Page 10

MARKET TRENDS Some prognosticators have chattered about an impending market correction for a while now. But the multifamily sec- tor is holding steady, accord- ing to CBRE Research’s analy- sis of U.S. Census Bureau data. Through September 2019, 340,600 units were approved, a 7.6 percent bump from a year before. In all, 121,900 units were approved in 3Q2019, a year-over-year increase of 19.7 percent. Through 3Q2019, 622,000 multifamily units were under construction, according to the U.S. Census Bureau. That total topped 600,000 in 3Q2016 and re- mained steady since, point- ing to high demand without continued acceleration. Another metric of growth, construction starts, totaled 278,000 through 3Q2019. This figure represents a high level for this economic cycle, but it pales in compari- son to the booming growth of the 1970s, which often topped 600,000 starts a year. 8 The trend of employers opting for urban office locations over suburban alternatives isn’t new, but recent research measures the effect accessibility to public transportation has on office val- ues. The report, from the Amer- ican Public Transportation Association and the National Association of REALTORS®, examined five regions between 2012 and 2016. Four saw me- dian sales “increase between 5 and 42 percentage points more in transit-proximate ar- eas when compared with areas farther from public transit.” Boston (38 percent growth in transit sheds to 4 percent loss in non-transit areas) and Los Angeles (85 percent to 48 per- cent) saw the biggest gains. Se- attle was the only market where non-transit areas (59 percent growth) outpaced transit sheds (14 percent contraction). Of all the households in- volved in the study, one in four did not own a personal vehicle, which translated to house- holds saving between $2,500 and $4,400 per year. COMMERCIAL INVESTMENT REAL ESTATE MAGAZINE “Emerging Trends in Real Es- tate,” a recent report by PwC and Urban Land Institute, pointed to structural transfor- mations in the industrial sec- tor, with demand, supply, and capital markets driving value in warehousing. “[T]he value propo- sition of logistics real estate surged, just as availabili- ty reached its lowest point in recorded history,” the report states. According to ULI/PwC, current opinion of industrial pricing leans toward overpriced than under. While 1.2 percent saw warehouse as being under- priced, another 45.6 percent said it was overpriced. In ful- fillment, 5.9 percent said the market was underpriced, while 46.4 said it was overpriced. Much of the industrial growth has been concentrated in six markets, with Dallas, California’s Inland Empire, Pennsylvania, Atlanta, Chica- go, and Houston accounting for 45 percent of new comple- tions and half of all space un- der construction after 2Q2019. COMMUNITY AREAS GAINING SPACE IN HOTELS EXPERTS THINK INDUSTRIAL IS (BARELY) OVERPRICED industryview OFFICES NEAR TRANSPORTATION HUBS DRAW INTEREST MULTIFAMILY HOLDS STEADY AMID FEARS OF SLOWDOWN Generational change is com- ing to hospitality, specifically in how hotels approach the designs of their shared space. “Hotels have always had lob- bies, pools, bars, and restau- rants,” says Lauro Ferroni, JLL’s Global Head of Hotels & Hospitality Research, to The Hotel Conversation. “But now the design and features of these communal spaces are being driven by hotels wanting to appeal to younger travelers.” Along those lines, Moxy, Marriott’s boutique brand, and Tru, Hilton’s line of affordable midscale hotels, aim to recapture customers who have opted for firms like Vrbo and Airbnb. Facing competition from home rental companies, hotels are ways to appeal to larger groups, including friends and families traveling together, according to David Black, managing director with JLL Hotel Project and Devel- opment Services. WINTER 2020