Dallas-based SPI Advisory Acquires Newly Constructed, Class-A Apartment Complex in the North Austin MSA

SPI Advisory (SPI) finalized the acquisition of Skyview North, a 336-unit, Class A institutional quality garden-style apartment community built earlier this year in the growing North Austin suburb of Hutto, Texas. This acquisition serves as the Texas-based firm’s sixth acquisition in the Austin MSA.

Conveniently located North of Austin with direct access to Hwy 130, Skyview North offers residents affordable luxury with 336 modern, spacious one- to two-bedroom floor plans fitted with upscale amenities such as nine-foot ceilings, stainless steel appliances and quartz countertops. In addition, the apartment community shares close proximity to major retailers & employers in the Central Texas tech industry like Samsung, Amazon, Tesla, Apple, Google, Facebook, Micron, & Dell.

Interest-rate Hike Means a Slowdown in Commercial Deals is Inevitable

In its efforts to curb rising inflation, the Federal Reserve on Sept. 21 raised its benchmark interest rate by three-quarters of a percentage point. The Fed also said that it plans to boost this rate in the future to fight inflation.

The Fed also said it will continue to enact hikes until its benchmark rate hits 4.6% in 2023.

This move, of course, sent another ripple of concern through the commercial real estate industry, with CRE professionals wondering how many commercial deals the higher interest rates might scuttle.

We spoke to commercial financing professionals about the Fed’s move and what it might mean for their business. The consensus? Expect a slowdown in activity as investors determine how best to operate in an environment of higher interest rates.

Chad Kiner, Managing Director, Walker & Dunlop, Columbus, Ohio

Let’s start by addressing the big question: What impact has rising interest rates had on the demand for commercial financing?

Chad Kiner: It has certainly impacted demand. Everything rolls downhill. You have the rising interest rates along with the higher costs of construction materials and labor. Everything has bubbled up to a point where it is now starting to affect the liquidity of banks and life insurance companies.

Last December was our first real taste of construction costs going up. But interest rates were still low at that point. When you add in the complexity of an environment in which rates are rising, the uncertainty of what tomorrow looks like, you start to see a pullback in liquidity.

Even with rising rates, are investors still interested in commercial real estate?

Kiner: Rising costs, rising rates and compressed cap rates are all the ingredients from an investor perspective in which you should stay away from real estate. But for the right asset classes, mainly multifamily and industrial, there is still a lot of investor appetite. There is uncertainty in the stock market, too. The stock market has performed poorly this year. That makes commercial real estate an investment opportunity that is still attractive.

From an institutional perspective, the funds, endowments and life insurance companies, real estate will remain a part of their portfolios. We see the appetite for those investment vehicles continuing to grow. It is sort of counterintuitive to what is happening in the market, but we still see a lot of appetite for investment dollars coming into the right asset classes.

Not all commercial real estate assets, though, are viewed as favorably by investors, especially today, right?

Kiner: Hotels, retail and certain portions of office are still looked at as very challenging asset classes today. We were starting to see more activity in these classes before interest rates started rising. We were seeing some capital shift into those sectors. But now that rates are rising, we are starting to see a slowdown again in investor activity in alternative sectors such as office, retail and hospitality.

Overall, though, multifamily and industrial remain very attractive investments. Those sectors are like a bond alternative. Multifamily today, even more than industrial, is viewed as an alternative to investing in bonds. It’s a coupon-clipper investment.

Taking a look at your own local market, how strong is financing activity in Columbus?

Kiner: We are fortunate to be in a market like Columbus. The population here is growing. We are the state capital. We have one of the top universities in the country. There are a multitude of industries here. We don’t rely on just one industry here.

The announcement by Intel that they are going to develop a $40 billion facility in Columbus is another plus. There will be a lot of growth spurred on by that Intel announcement that we weren’t expecting. People are moving here, which will create housing demand. Rents are growing on the multifamily side. Our single-family housing stock is always stressed. Columbus is like a blue-chip stock. We are never going to see our real estate activity rise as fast as it does in some of the southern cities. But in a downturn, we are steady-Eddie stable.

What are the most common types of financing requests that you are seeing today?
Kiner: Multifamily, mixed-use and industrial are the big three. We are doing a financing in Dayton, Ohio, right now. It’s a mixed-use project with a major multifamily component.

When you do receive a financing request, what factors do you consider when deciding whether to take it on?

Kiner: We look at the strength of the market and the strength of the sponsor. Where the property is located is much more important today. The old adage of “location, location, location” will never change. In down times, banks and lenders are also paying close attention to the strength of the sponsor. A lender today might be more likely to do a deal in Columbus because it is such a strong market. It has performed well over a long stretch of time. Lenders also look at where a market has been and where it is today. What is the job growth like?

When it comes to the sponsor, we’ll look at whether we’ve done business with the sponsor before. Can we trust them? What are their strengths? If something goes wrong, can they still write a check? Is the project they are bringing to us sustainable?

It’s difficult to predict, but what do you see in the near future when it comes to the demand for acquisition financing?

Kiner: There is going to be a lot more thoughtfulness from investors on where they want to put their money. We are going to see a lot more discernment. I think we’ll see a general pullback. Investors will still invest in real estate. What are the alternatives? But there will be some pullback as investors wait to see where rates will land.

Sam Miller, Senior Vice President, Bellwether Enterprise, Columbus, Ohio

Conor Lee, Sr Vice President, Bellwether Enterprise, Columbus, Ohio

How has the Fed’s latest hike in its benchmark interest rate impacted demand for commercial financing?

Sam Miller: Obviously, the Fed is going to continue to raise its rate. The Fed made it clear that its target is to get the benchmark rate to 4.6%. This is happening in real time right now, so everyone is feeling it. The rising rates are definitely slowing things down. The higher rates are making deals more challenging to close.

The saving grace for a lot of folks, especially in multifamily, is that rent growth has continued, too. That helps to absorb some of the shock from rising interest rates. The reality is that there is still a massive shortage of housing. There is a lot of demand for housing. And because of that, the demand for multifamily is growing, too, which means that owners can still grow their rents. That is helping to blunt some of the impact from interest rates.

Conor Lee: From a real estate perspective, supply and demand is still in great shape. There is a ton of demand for housing in general. The number of units being developed is not fulfilling that demand. Are there potential layoffs and a recession ahead of us? If so, we might see bad debt creep into collections. We might start seeing occupancy issues. People who are looking for one-bedroom apartments might start looking for two-bedrooms so that they can bunk up with roommates to lower their monthly costs.

Right now, we are still seeing multifamily assets performing well. But what does your capital stack look like? If you have a refinance event, if you have a certain debt load you are at, can you get out of that debt? Can you return equity to your investors? That is challenging when rates are high.

Does it look like multifamily is resilient enough to remain a good investment even during times of higher rates?

Miller: From a housing-market perspective, in some ways we are fortunate that it has been hard to build single-family housing for the last 10 years. When you look at the supply and what the vacant inventory was going into the great financial crisis of 2008 and 2009, it was so much more than it is today. There is not a huge glut of supply sitting there. Most people who own homes are possibly financed at 3.5% or lower. People don’t have to move now. If they don’t have to move, they won’t move. Why trade your 3.5% mortgage for a 6% mortgage? That further makes the case for multifamily. There are going to be more homes that don’t go on the market. That will increase demand for apartment units.

Are you seeing more multifamily supply coming on the market to help meet the high demand for it?

Lee: This is in flux right now. We are already seeing in Columbus developers pulling the plug on or pausing projects. That started because of the rising construction costs. Now with interest rates going up, that pause is going to continue. Couple construction costs with the cost of debt, that makes it more challenging to build anything. Construction lenders are starting to pull back. Underwriting metrics are more challenging. This environment is making it more difficult to get projects out of the ground.

I’ve asked others in the industry this, but even these rising rates are at historic low levels. Is there any acknowledgement of that in the commercial business?

Miller: We have been a little bit of doom-and-gloom here. At the end of the day, though, what is causing a lot of the pain right now is the uncertainty. A 3.75% 10-year treasury is not the end of the world. But expectations need time to reset. If we start to level off and find a place where the Fed stops raising rates and lets things take their natural course, I think everyone will feel better. Everyone will have to adjust, but they will do that. It’s just been a big change in a short period. I’m hopeful we will come out of it with a soft landing. It’s just difficult right now to know where the dominoes will fall.

Lee: Our strategy right now is to keep moving. We are trying to find ways to do deals. There is still a ton of capital out there. There are still a lot of debt providers in the market. As long as capital is still available, people will figure out how to do deals. If capital goes away, then we have a bigger problem.

We’ve talked a lot about multifamily. But how attractive of an investment is industrial real estate right now?

Miller: Industrial has a lot going for it. There is a massive need for more industrial product. From a development standpoint, though, industrial is a little trickier than multifamily. You might have one to three tenants in a typical industrial building. You are entering into long-term leases of five, seven or 10 years with these tenants. The challenge you’ve seen recently is with the increase in costs, both from construction costs that are rising and rising interest rates. You might agree to a 10-year lease with FedEx. You might have agreed to that lease in July, but you’re not able to build until October or November. Suddenly, you’re costs are up 10% because interest rates have gone up. Everything changes so fast now. That million dollars of profit that you were counting on as a builder might now be gone.

But from a fundamentals standpoint, there is still room for rent growth in industrial. The mechanics of getting deals built is changing. Everybody is going through that, but we are seeing it more in industrial.

What are you seeing right now in terms of deal velocity?

Lee: It is definitely slowing down. Things will slow. Velocity will slow. I don’t see how it doesn’t. But as long as capital is available, the market finds itself. We just need calmness. We can’t operate in this day-to-day volatile market. It’s hard to give guidance when things change so quickly.

Hal Collett, Chief Operating Officer, Agency Lending
Colliers Mortgage, Minneapolis

The big question is an obvious one: What impact will the Fed’s latest interest-rate hike have on the demand for commercial financing?

Hal Collett: The rate hike does make things more complicated. There are a lot of factors to consider. You have the rate environment and the Fed trying to catch up and curb inflation. The Fed was probably slow to react and is now trying to catch up, yet we are probably heading toward a recession now anyway. Then you have the general volatility in the economy. You have low cap rates and tremendous rent growth in the multifamily sector. The volatility with interest rates just adds more uncertainty to the commercial real estate market. Add in the geo-political risks and an election year, and you might see people put their pencils down for a while as they adjust.

At the same time, construction costs are rising. Does this increase the chances of a slow down in investment and development activity?

Collett: I think so. The rising construction costs and the delays in getting materials are contributing factors in slowing down development activity. People are more cautious about what they are going to do. Now the rate environment is increasing the cost of capital. That just adds more hurdles to getting deals done.

“Workers Crave Flexibility”: New CBRE Report Looks at Great Resignation Impacts on Office

It’s the one-two punch no one in commercial real estate is celebrating – and for good reason. The COVID-19 pandemic and shutdowns combined with the so-called “Great Resignation” that followed have generated a number of challenges for almost all CRE sectors.

“More U.S. workers are leaving their jobs than ever before, and job openings exceed willing workers,” CBRE points out in its recent report entitled The Great Resignation’s Impact on Office Users.

REDnews talked to Jessica Morin, one of the report’s authors and CBRE’s Head of U.S. Office Research, about her team’s findings.

REDnews: In putting the report together, did you learn anything that surprised you?

Morin: While overall levels of quits increased since the pandemic, the share of office-using positions slightly decreased from 24% on average in 2018-2019 to 21% of quits at the time of the report (January 2022).

REDnews: What was the biggest takeaway for you?

Morin: The great resignation was much more impactful on the retail and hospitality sectors. Still, office-using employers, particularly those with entry-level back-office and shared service positions, also felt the impact. Those office-using sectors also saw the highest wage growth over the last three years. Quits were less prevalent in higher-paying positions, like technology and financial services jobs, which are more likely to support remote working. Click to read more at www.rednews.com.

CBRE Sells 202-Unit Multifamily Property in Texas

CBRE negotiated the sale of Belle Grove at Custer, a 202-unit value-add multifamily community at 800 Custer Road in Richardson, Texas. ClearWorth Capital purchased the asset from RealSource for an undisclosed price.

Chris Deuillet, William Hubbard and Jaxx Davis with CBRE Capital Markets’ Investment Properties in Dallas represented the seller.

Belle Grove at Custer is located within minutes of Richardson’s Telecom Corridor, which consists of over 25 million square feet of office space and more than 130,000 jobs. Prior ownership had been in place since 2005 and implemented upgrades to approximately 127 units as well as the property’s two resort-style pools, two outdoor kitchens and workout facility. The new owners will continue to make renovations to all units, which already have features including in-unit laundry connections.

The transaction was completed in part to the buyer’s familiarity with the DFW multifamily market.

The property was 94% occupied at the time of sale.

JLL Capital Markets Sells 568,632 SF Industrial Building in Texas

JLL Capital Markets has closed the sale of HWY 114 Distribution Center, a newly completed Class-A industrial building totaling 568,632 square feet in Roanoke, Texas.

JLL represented the seller, Provident Realty Advisors, in the sale to Cohen Asset Management.

Delivered in 2021, the cross-dock building features 119 dock doors, 36’ clear heights and 229 parking spaces. HWY 114 is 100% leased to UNIS, a third-party logistics provider based out of Buena Park, Calif. with over 12 million square feet and 45 locations across 16 major U.S. markets.

Positioned on 68.6 acres at 1230 W Highway 114, the property is strategically located two miles east of the intersection of Interstate 35 and State Highway 114 in the North Fort Worth (Alliance) Industrial submarket. The area benefits from its accessibility to major highways, including Interstates 35 and 820 and State Highways 81 and 114.

As a result, tenants can reach the 25 million residents of the Texas Triangle, the area between Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin, San Antonio and Houston, within five hours. Furthermore, HWY 114 Distribution Center is 14 minutes from Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport and 10 minutes from Fort Worth Alliance Airport.

Led by John Bunten and his team, the Provident Industrial Portfolio currently consists of twelve projects totaling 1,535 acres for speculative and build-to-suit warehouse developments across the southern United States. PRA has an interest in an additional 347 acres in South Carolina, Tennessee and Texas.

The JLL Capital Markets Industrial team representing the seller was led by Senior Managing Directors Dustin Volz and Stephen Bailey, Directors Dom Espinosa and Zach Riebe and Analyst Matthew Barge.

How To Invest In Real Estate When The Bubble Deflates

Amid mounting evidence that the rapid rise in home prices is over, investors in rental property will have more options over the next few years as sellers outnumber buyers and prices deflate – slowly in most markets but very rapidly in others.

As has ALWAYS happened in the past, home prices and rents will eventually re-align with local income. This readjustment may take years but investors don’t need to wait that long to spot good opportunities.

In all real estate markets, some local areas do better than others, on the downside as well as in boom times. Investors can spot the differences using solid local data.

Local data can tell you if there will be strong or weak demand for housing, in what rent range you find the heart of the rental market, and what type of investment will fare best in the local housing mix. Then investors can decide if an available property is a good fit for the local conditions. Click to read more at www.forbes.com.