CBRE Relocating Corporate HQ to Dallas

CBRE Group Inc. is moving its corporate headquarters from California to Dallas, according to multiple sources with knowledge of the deal. The company is already a major player locally with at least four offices in North Texas, including its main office at 2100 McKinney Avenue in Uptown. CBRE’s current headquarters is listed as 400 South Hope Street in downtown Los Angeles. Some of CBRE’s top executives are already based in Dallas, including the company’s CFO, Leah Stearns, and CBRE’s global CEO of real estate investments, Mike Lafitte. The company’s local operations are headed by Michael Caffey, president of advisory services for the South-Central Division and Latin America. CBRE’s top executive is president and CEO Robert Sulentic, a former Trammell Crow Company chief executive who was named CEO of CBRE after the Los Angeles-based firm acquired the Dallas-based development and property management company in 2006.

What’s Driving Distribution? CBRE Experts Weigh in on the Industrial Market

In the pre-pandemic world, e-commerce was already a giant. Industry observers predicted it would account for more than a third of all retail sales by the year 2030. Now, roughly a year since we first heard about COVID-19, the virus helped accelerate the growth of e-commerce in a way few could have predicted in 2019. “Even older Americans are now accustomed to buying things online, so it’s pervasive,” said Jack Fraker, vice chairman and managing director at CBRE. Now that threshold of 39 percent of retail sales is viewed as something e-commerce could reach by mid-2027. To meet that consumer demand, Fraker said, there is and will be a need for much more industrial real estate. Texas markets, such as Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, Austin, San Antonio and El Paso, are benefitting from that push because of their ever-growing populations. On the one hand, explained Fraker, manufacturers want to get distribution hubs closer to their customers to satisfy the existing demands. More than ever, customers expect to receive goods within days of ordering, if not the very next day. “All those retail products have to reside inside warehouses for a while,” Fraker said. Along with satisfying retail needs, warehouses and logistics hubs are essential for growing communities. Before the tub, shower head, curtains, washer, dryer, carpet paint, floor tiles and ceiling fans can be installed in a new home or apartment, they must take up space in a warehouse located nearby. The pandemic also revealed systemic flaws in the international supply chain, prompting manufacturers to relocate to the U.S. or Mexico. “A lot of real blue chip U.S. corporations like the low cost of labor in Juarez, for example. They can assemble products on the Mexico side of the border, ship them across to El Paso and to distribute into the United States from there,” said Jonathan Bryan, executive vice president at CBRE, adding that those goods might end up in a warehouse in San Antonio as well. On top of all that, Texas is an affordable place to set up shop compared to popular hubs on the east and west coasts. “We have freeways that crisscross the state, as well as a number of great railroads. It’s a friendly right-to-work state with a low cost of living and tremendous population and job growth. Not to mention it’s really flat. That makes it easy to build,” Fraker said. “There’s a whole list of Chamber of Commerce reasons companies want to be here and that’s why the Texas markets are exploding.” As much of a bargain as Texas industrial prices are, they’ve certainly increased in the past few years. Fraker points out that some of the new prototypes or big e-commerce companies are paying $200 per square foot or more. That isn’t a deal breaker these days, however. “The number one question the investor would ask us when we sell a property used to be ‘What’s the price per square foot?’” said Fraker. “It’s still asked, but it’s not the overriding question.” That, he emphasizes, is usually related to other fundamentals. Investors want to know how much space is already available in the market, what the tenant profile looks like and the range of lease rates. They’re also keenly aware of the value of location over just about any other factor. “A lot of users have realized they can’t only have three distribution centers that serve the entire United States. Just-in-time demand has created a need for more dots on the map, more locations,” Bryan said. “So we’re seeing a lot more demand in what we would categorize as secondary strategic markets.” As examples, he cites Indianapolis, Columbus, San Antonio, Savannah and Reno, which provide more touch points closer to the population base is key for companies to be competitive. Many of those companies have developed algorithms based on where the customers are and where they need to be to get the product to the customer quickly. “We like to say, ‘location trumps functionality’ or ‘location trumps age,’” Fraker said, explaining that many companies looking for an industrial footprint will take an older infill site over a shiny new building. “They sacrifice the clear height of the building. They don’t care as much about the length and depth of the truck court. What matters most to them is how long it takes to drive to the best customers.” While the huge industrial deals are the ones that usually make the headlines, CBRE’s experts say smaller tenants are the core of the market right now. “We all talk about the million-square-footers, which are happening left and right. But at the same time, 20 or 30,000-square-foot leases are signed,” said Fraker. “If you visualize the national inventory of industrial real estate as a pyramid, the million-square-footers are at the top. The base of the pyramid is all the smaller tenants, who represent the vast majority of the universe of industrial real estate.” The challenge now, besides fighting off the competition, is finding space for those small tenants. Most require infill interior sites, which are few and far between these days. Even when a site is located, it can be cost-prohibitive because you lose the economies of scale on a smaller building, resulting in higher rent. Fraker predicts that will prompt the industry to consider new prototypes, such as the multilevel industrial examples in Tokyo, Singapore and Hong Kong. “In those cities, it’s not uncommon to see a 10-story, 1-million-square-foot building,” he said. “However, the floor plan is only 100,000 square feet. The buildings go vertical.” That, Fraker added, isn’t something that’s necessary in a market like Dallas, where the topography is flat and there’s plenty of land. It’s more likely an option in urban markets such as Seattle, San Francisco or New York. While they expect the sector to evolve and change over time, Fraker and Bryan agree that the white-hot demand for industrial will continue for at least a decade, possibly more. “Some of these major e-commerce companies are trying to make sure they can have delivery to everybody within one or two days. That requires a very ambitious and long-term expansion plan,” Fraker said. If you have to choose between throwing money in a savings account or even the stock market, it’s hard to argue against industrial real estate, especially in the current market. “You get some very attractive returns,” Fraker said. “That’s what’s driving our asset class.”

Industrial Age: Texas Cities are Drawing Investors Looking to Capitalize on the Industrial Boom

Industrial is far and away the hottest sector in commercial real estate right now and the hottest industrial markets are scattered throughout Texas, each one creating a unique draw for investors and developers.

Houston
The largest city in the Lone Star State also boasts the most absorption of industrial space so far in 2020: just more than 6.4 million square feet. According to CBRE research, nearly 3.9 million of that got leased up just in Q2. In that same period, though, about 8 million square feet came on the market, which boosted vacancy rates to 6.9 percent. About 18 million square feet of new industrial is under construction in the Houston market with the southwest (8.5M SF) and northwest (4.8M SF) sectors bringing in the most space. “Houston is very competitive,” said Alfredo Gutierrez, president of industrial-focused investment firm SparrowHawk Real Estate Strategists. “Because of the setback in oil prices, some investors are perceiving a pullback in real estate by some of the energy companies. That provides a window of opportunity to invest in industrial real estate in Houston.” He predicts this window will close in late 2021 as the energy sector rebounds, e-commerce increases and the benefits of trade with Mexico expand in Houston.

Dallas-Fort Worth
When it comes to new construction, it’s hard to beat the numbers coming out of the Dallas-Fort Worth area. CBRE reports that in Q2, more than 23 million square feet was underway. Thing is, that space is getting eaten up as soon as it hits the market. For example, DFW had about 3.4 million square feet in completions and 2 million square feet of net absorption this spring, marking 39 consecutive quarters of positive net absorption. “I think Dallas is the strongest market in the United States right now,” Gutierrez said. “Dallas is just screaming hot.” Two of the three largest leases signed in Q3 are distribution-focused companies. FedEx scooped up about 750,000 square feet of available space, opening a new distribution center in South Dallas, while packaging and fulfillment firm AmeriPac expanded to a new 400,000 square-foot facility near DFW Airport.

El Paso
Experts agree El Paso is the market to watch as near-shoring adds production to Mexico and manufacturers are looking for convenient locations to store their goods before they’re shipped across the U.S. That’s why vacancy rates are some of the lowest in the country. Right now, only 2.9 percent of industrial space (a record low) is available in El Paso, boosting the asking rate to a record high: $5.38 PSF. To answer demand, CBRE reports 3.4 million square feet of space is currently under construction, including a new three-story industrial build-to-suit project. Another project is a 370,000-square-foot warehouse/distribution complex from Hunt Southwest Real Estate Development Co. Hunt Southwest president, Preston Herold, told the El Paso Times the company picked the border town because of its low vacancy rates, calling them “market fundamentals you want to see as an investor and developer (in real estate).”

Central Texas
While they’re not making the headlines of the other Texas markets, Austin and San Antonio are holding their own in the industrial sector. CBRE reports that strong tenant demand for distribution space contributed to Austin’s 25th consecutive quarter of net absorption. Vacancy in the capital city is down to 9.7 percent as Q3 saw no new projects delivered. The opposite is the case in San Antonio, where more than 800,000 new square feet came to market in Q3. As a result, vacancy bumped up to 14.2 percent. And more projects are on the way. Per CBRE, a whopping 1.8 million square feet are under construction.