CCIM and RERC Report sees upturn in retail and apartment real estate
Commercial real estate is positioning itself to be an attractive investment on a risk-adjusted basis in 2010 and 2011, according to the CCIM Institute and the Real Estate Research Corporation (RERC). Property prices in the retail and apartment sectors showed moderate increases in fourth quarter 2009, breaking the string of significant price declines throughout the previous 12 months.
"The latter part of 2008 and all of 2009 were definitely the shock years, and we're looking to 2010 as the recovery year," said Richard Juge, CCIM, the 2010 president of the CCIM Institute. "We will see more activity, perhaps not in gross dollar levels, but in the volume of deals that close in 2010. This is the time to buy."
Additionally, CCIM and RERC say that weighted average capitalization rates for the office, industrial, retail, and apartment sectors increased by 20 to 30 basis points in the fourth quarter.
"This is also part of the market re-pricing of risk, as cap rates expand to provide a more attractive income component to the investment," said Juge. "This is in contrast to the cap rate compression era several years ago."
The groups' RERC/CCIM Investment Trends Quarterly Report also shows that 12-month trailing transaction volume increased slightly in the apartment and retail sectors, hinting that volume also may be starting to bottom out for these property types. However, transaction volume for the office and industrial sectors continued to decline, but at a much slower rate in the fourth quarter than in the previous three quarters.
"This is the first step toward recovery, and the market is ready to move on and prepare for the next phase," said Kenneth Riggs, CCIM, president and CEO of Real Estate Research Corp.
Wallingford, CT O,R&L Commercial has completed the $3.8 million sale of a mixed-use investment property located at 33-39 North Main St. and 24-25 Wallace Ave. in the town center.
Now what? As the year comes to a close, the state of retail is always in the news. The answers vary greatly depending on who in the various related industries you ask, each offering a unique lens on the challenges and opportunities ahead.
This may seem self-serving, and I’ll be the first to admit it. But unlike some of the artificial intelligence tools now reshaping our industry, I am fully aware of my own bias. So, hear me out. The rise of AI in commercial real estate is not a distant threat or a speculative headline.