Friday, December 6, 2024

Industrial sales power Pennsylvania capital's real estate market

 


By Brenda Nguyen CoStar Analytics

Pennsylvania's capital has experienced significant growth in its commercial real estate market over the past decade, with total commercial sales volume increasing from approximately $501 million in 2014 to $861 million so far this year. After adjusting for inflation, this represents a growth of over 30% during this period for Harrisburg.

However, the industrial sector continues to dominate the local landscape. That area has led sales totals over the past decade, averaging more than $300 million annually. In contrast, retail sales have averaged $158 million, office sales at $147 million and multifamily sales at $82 million.

Already this year local industrial sales hit an annual record, partly thanks to EQT Exeter’s acquisition of Building 1 at Core5 in Middletown for $170.5 million — the highest single-building transaction in Harrisburg’s history. Institutional players like EQT Exeter have played a pivotal role in the city's industrial rise. Other prominent national players, such as Prologis, GIC, Blackstone, Brookfield and XPO, are among the most active buyers in the traditionally tertiary market.

Meanwhile, private buyers and owner-users have led retail, office and multifamily transactions. While institutional investors can access vast pools of pension funds, endowment money and other institutional capital at relatively low costs, private buyers typically rely on traditional bank financing and personal wealth, which comes with higher interest rates and more stringent lending requirements. Subsequently, private buyers typically need more upfront capital to close on nine-figure deals.

For instance, in Harrisburg’s retail market, the highest-valued transaction in the last five years was locally based Prasavi Group’s mid-2021 acquisition of the Camp Hill Shopping Center, valued at $89.7 million — only 53% of the value of EQT’s recent industrial purchase.

For the office market, the highest-valued sale was the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center’s acquisition of the Tech Park Office Center in Mechanicsburg, valued at $45 million.

And for multifamily, Philadelphia-based Westover Companies’ $23 million acquisition of Shippensburg Village Townhomes, a 174-unit garden-style student housing complex, was the largest apartment sale in the last five years.

As investment continues to flow into this tertiary market, Harrisburg has an opportunity to highlight its retail, multifamily and office segments. The adage "location, location, location" is particularly relevant here, as the city's placement between major Northeast markets has the potential to draw more attention from national retailers, white-collar companies and prospective residents.

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Thursday, December 5, 2024

Universe Holdings enters greater Philadelphia apartment market

 By Jon Leckie CoStar News

A Los Angeles-based multifamily investment firm is reaching beyond its West Coast roots with a deal that expands the company’s portfolio into the greater Philadelphia market for the first time.

Universe Holdings has purchased Mi-Place at West Rancocas in Mount Holly, New Jersey for $33.6 million from Fernmoor Homes, the first of a two-property deal valued at $93.5 million. The second half of the transaction is expected to close in early 2025; details of that property weren't disclosed.

“We have been in the New Jersey market for several years and believe in its stable long-term viability,” Henry Manoucheri, chief executive at Universe Holdings, said in a statement. “We have boots on the ground … and our plan is to acquire additional assets that will fortify our position in the market.”

Mi-Place at West Rancocas consists of 108 units including 12 three-bedroom townhouses with the remaining units evenly split between one- and two-bedroom apartments with individual balconies, according to news release announcing the sale. The project was completed in 2022, the statement said.

Universe Holdings cited a small-town environment, strong school system, and proximity to job centers in Philadelphia that are reachable by commuter train or car as consistent demand drivers in the area.

Under the terms of the deal, Universe Holdings will assume a $24.25 million bridge loan from Dwight Capital that it plans to refinance into a fixed-rate loan through the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development.

The deal comes as overall multifamily investment in the Philadelphia area has declined 96% since the third quarter of 2022 as institutional buyers have shied away from the market due to decelerating rent growth and elevated interest rates, a CoStar analysis showed.

“We believe that the best time to buy is on weakness while everyone else runs for cover,” Manoucheri said.

Expanding portfolio

The acquisition also marks Universe Holdings' third acquisition on the East Coast.

In December 2023, the firm purchased a 250-unit multifamily property in Tampa, Florida, built in 2016 for $66 million from Passco Companies. It made its first East Coast purchase in May 2021 with the $60 million acquisition of 226 units in Toms River, New Jersey, roughly an hour east of Philadelphia from Morgan Properties.

In addition to one property in Las Vegas, Nevada, the remainder of Universe Holdings' 72 properties run from Ventura to San Diego in California, according to CoStar data.

Since its founding in 1994, Universe Holdings has completed multifamily transactions involving more than 7,500 units. The privately held investment and management firm focuses on value-add and off-market transactions aimed at long-term appreciation.

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Tuesday, December 3, 2024

Industrial Real Estate Investor's Thoughts on the Market (Video)

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What's in store for CRE investment in 2025

By Joshua Mann – Editor, The National Observer, The Business Journals

Welcome to The National Observer, a roundup of top business news and actionable insights from across The Business Journals' network of publications. Today we're looking at what Walmart's CEO had to say about expansion plans, a $1.4 billion deal between two lenders and a multibillion-dollar federal loan to support a new manufacturing plant in Georgia. First, however, we'll dig into the cautious optimism being felt in the commercial real estate sector.

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CRE investors express cautious optimism

As 2025 fast approaches, executives are zeroing in on possible targets for their respective businesses in the coming year. For commercial real estate investors, there’s an expectation new opportunities might come available despite a slowdown in transaction activity year-to-date this year.

Ashley Fahey, editor of The National Observer: Real Estate Edition, reports the national commercial real estate market saw $40.1 billion in transactions in the third quarter, down from $43 billion in Q2 and $44.4 billion in Q3 2023, according to Altus Group research. While transaction activity slowed, the rate of the slowdown has moderated, especially on a yearly basis. Additionally, 10 of the 15 property types tracked saw a quarterly uptick in Q3 in price per square foot, including mixed-use, manufacturing, automotive and office properties.

QUOTABLE: "Transaction activity effectively begets transaction activity," said Cole Perry, associate director of research at Altus Group. "What I’m seeing is really more of the same: There is still slow transaction activity, it's declining year over year, price discovery remains pretty challenged — but I think it’s picking up a bit."

Perry said the market is in a new normal of transaction activity, with buyers and sellers learning how to deal with a lack of comparable sales. Industry players also are trying to anticipate what President-elect Donald Trump's policies and a Republican-controlled Congress could mean for the economy. While most are optimistic the incoming White House administration will mean deregulation or tax cuts, there's also concern policies around immigration and tariffs that were signature aspects of Trump's campaign will result in more inflation and economic uncertainty.

Walmart CEO on expansion plans, new-look Black Friday

Black Friday will be a lot different for Walmart Inc. this year than in years past. The retail giant’s stores will be different, too.

Chandler France of the Houston Business Journal reports that Walmart made a significant financial investment to renovate 650 locations this year and build or convert an additional 150 stores over the next five years. That follows the company in October 2023 reopening 117 remodeled stores across 30 states — an investment of more than half-a-billion dollars.

But as Walmart U.S. President and CEO John Furner told France during a site visit Tuesday, customers who visit one of those remodeled stories on Black Friday won’t be the only ones seeing a new-look Walmart. The company also has worked to enhance its online-shopping service — with the growth of e-commerce having “bifurcated” the traditional Black Friday experience, Furner said.

QUOTABLE “Competition makes you better,” Furner said. “A phrase I think about a lot is, ‘Loyalty in retail is the absence of something better.’ If we’re not the brand that’s providing the best choice for our customer, then someone else will happily come serve them for you.”

Full story: https://tinyurl.com/2s3sesms

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Which U.S. Cities Are Best Positioned for Commercial Real Estate Investment? (Video)

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Empty office space is costing Philadelphia big money

By Joanne Drilling – National Data Reporter, The Business Journals

Office vacancy rates are at their highest point in 45 years. Commercial real estate insiders predict one-quarter of existing American office space could be vacant by early 2026. And currently, 11 major metros have at least $1 billion worth of empty space.

Philadelphia falls just outside of that $1 billion group. Locally, 27.6 million square feet of office space was vacant as of mid-year, with an expected lost rent value of $801 million.

That’s according to a new report by insight firm Switch On Business, which compared second-quarter occupancy data against market rates provided.

Philadelphia's office vacancy rate has hovered around 20% throughout 2024.

While companies are settling into their post-pandemic office plans and long-term hybrid schedules, industry insiders expect more clarity to come in 2025 when a larger number of leases are set to expire. The trends that emerge could chart the course of Philadelphia's office market for years to come.

For now, the office vacancy rate has stabilized in large part due to chunks of space being repurposed for other uses. Still, there's a significant portion of Philadelphia's office supply that's going unused — and it's costing the market hundreds of millions of dollars in potential leasing revenue.

A bite out of the Big Apple
While plenty of Fortune 500 companies have called workers back to the office full time, at least 28.6 million workers — approximately 20% — are working hybrid or remote schedules.

New York has felt that shift more strongly than any other metro in the country. Earlier this year, 105.8 million square feet of office space was sitting empty in the city — an estimated rent loss of $7.61 billion per year.

While New York has seen similar declines in the past, some see the current trends as part of a long-term, broader cultural shift. Much like office-vacancy peaks in the 1970s and 1980s, overbuilding may also be to blame.

“What happens to New York City from here on out depends on the actions we take and the policy decisions that are made,” said Stijn Van Nieuwerburgh, the Columbia Business School professor who coined the term “urban doom loop,” in a statement that accompanied the report.

“In a best-case scenario, we remove 30% or 40% of the office stock in New York City and turn it into wonderful housing," he said. "New York City has all these great amenities, it’s a wonderful place where young people want to live, regardless of where they work."

Of course, those office-to-residential conversions have proven to be easier said than done — in New York and elsewhere.
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