| RECORD
RETAIL REBOUND FUELS SURGE IN COMMERCIAL REAL ESTATE MARKET
Investment in All Property Types Jumps 12.3%
in 2002, Reports CCIM/Landauer Report
CHICAGO (March, 2003)
Faith in the spending habits of the American consumer helped drive
investors toward retail properties in the closing months of 2002,
resulting in a record dollar volume and the highest total reported
since third quarter of 1998, according to the CCIM/Landauer Investment
Trends Quarterly. Even with four quarters marked by economic sluggishness
and political turbulence here and abroad, retail properties captured
22 percent of all commercial property sales in fourth quarter, a
7 percent increase over the previous quarter.
Capitalization rates for retail properties averaged
8.97 percent, continuing a trend of stores commanding a price premium
compared to other real estate assets. One factor behind this trend
is retail sales-per-square-foot have been diluted by a large inventory
of store space across the country. This competitive risk required
a cap rate premium, even with relatively robust consumer spending.
Nationally, cap rates averaged 9.3 percent for all properties, a
slight increase over the previous quarter.
An analysis of buyers and sellers within the sector
reveals that real estate investment trusts (REITs) purchased 46
percent of retail properties, mostly in the upper bracket of the
market. For example, two retail center deals completed by REITs
each exceeded $400 million. Foreign sources were the largest sellers
of retail product, accounting for approximately 30 percent of the
deals.
With the consumer doing a lot of the work
in keeping the economy afloat in the early 2000s, it is natural
to find investors seeking to link their real estate allocations
to the broad-based spending power centered in retail properties,
said CCIM Institute President Barry Spizer, CCIM. Fourth quarter
results mark the return of some large traditional centers, and with
them the return of the million-square foot sale.
During a calendar year marked by a stubborn economic slump, job
growth stagnation, the continued threat of terrorism and the prospect
of war, the commercial real estate market displayed overall resiliency
and strength in the closing months of 2002. The Investment Trends
Quarterly, which debuted in 1995, reported a 12.3 percent increase
in dollar volume compared to 2001 and an 8.1 percent increase in
the transaction count. The average price per deal in fourth quarter
rose to $22.3 million, continuing a near two-and-one-half-year trend
where the mean deal price tallied above $20 million; the only exception
was the final quarter of 2001, the months that followed the September
11 attacks.
Understandably, some observers are concerned
that this investment behavior may prove the real estate version
of the irrational exuberance that led to the 1990s
stock market bubble and subsequent deflation in corporate asset
prices, said Hugh F. Kelly, CRE, author of the ITQ report.
Labor figures, however, look very much on schedule for recovery
at this point, if past business cycles are a reliable guide.
Other key findings reported in the fourth quarter
2002 issue of the Investment Trends Quarterly are:
Large-scale office investors concentrated in just
a few areas of the country in fourth quarter. Metro New York clearly
led all markets with 21 percent of the total investment volume,
and Chicago tallied 14 percent to take second place. The balance
of office investment centered in the major markets on either coast.
Investment in the Pacific region (Alaska, California, Hawaii, Oregon
and Washington) rebounded in fourth quarter to 28 percent from 23.9
percent in the previous quarter. This region led all others in 2002
in total dollars invested.
Economic uncertainty kept the hotel market in the
doldrums. The sector captured just 2.6 percent of the sales volume,
below the land category at 3.9 percent.
The CCIM/Landauer Investment Trends Quarterly represents
a broad-based sampling of fourth quarter 2002 transactions with
a total value of $13.79 billion, the majority of which have been
reported by Certified Commercial Investment Members (CCIMs). Since
the survey was initiated in 1995, 14,177 transactions valued at
more than $224 billion have been analyzed.
Members who wish to receive the completed online
reports should contact: Edward Bury at 312-321-4481 or ebury@cciminstitute.com,
or R. J. Sirois at 312-321-4494 or rsirois@cciminstitute.com. |