Las Vegas investors remain risk averse, favoring Class A and B properties. Increased buyer demand and a lack of inventory will support more aggressive pricing, with the sellers capitalizing on improving property performance. With stronger operations, Class C owners are encouraged to bring assets to market, pushing deal flow for the properties. The location of the asset is crucial to investors searching for higher returns, which is expected to exceed 8 percent. With an improving local economy, new construction, strengthening job market and a new “downtown,” we can expect a lower apartment vacancy and higher rents in Las Vegas this year. The improving local market and strengthen job market is being driven by some noteworthy construction and openings this year. They include the Linq, SLS Hotel (formerly Sahara Casino), the Downtown Summerlin Mall, the Grand Bazaar Shops, the Malaysia-based Genting Berhad’s $4-billion Resorts World Las Vegas (formerly Echelon) and the announcement of the $2.5-billion renovation of the Las Vegas Convention Center. These projects will create more than 15 million direct and indirect jobs. On top of this, occupancy rates keep rising. The Las Vegas market absorbed more than 3,000 units in 2013. It has absorbed another 760 net-leased units so …
Nevada
Investor money has returned to the industrial market in Las Vegas. Compressing cap rates continue to result in rising values on properties even in the hardest-hit areas of Las Vegas. Couple that with limited available industrial product, and the result is the need for today’s buyers to act quickly and competitively if they want to acquire quality properties that will deliver attractive yields. MCA Realty initially entered the Las Vegas market in mid-2011 to acquire incubator/mid-bay, multi-tenant industrial properties significantly below replacement cost. Since that time, the firm has seen a substantial shift in the number of buyers competing for this product type in this market. This increasing competition will continue to drive values up, and investors will need to rely even more heavily on their local brokerage relationships to make deals work. On the leasing side, vacancy rates continue their downward trend. Occupancy is up on all industrial product types, and confidence from business owners continues to rise. The result is increased stabilization throughout the market. A key component driving the tenant demand for multi-tenant industrial is the resurgence of hotel construction and renovation in the works on the Las Vegas Strip. This activity has created a surge of …
The Las Vegas multifamily market is back with a vengeance. The market went into a meltdown in 2009 while the financial crisis was in full swing, delivering the biggest blow to the local economy in Vegas’ history. What had been low unemployment and a development boom to rival all past development cycles quickly turned into a downward spiral. Construction came to a standstill and workers fled the city in search of work elsewhere. Apartment fundamentals dropped to record lows. Asking rents dropped 19.25 percent between 2009 and the second quarter of 2012, while concessions stood at 8.5 percent. Even with all this in play, the Las Vegas market is known for reinventing itself. The market recovery was in full swing last year. Stalled projects were restarted with a whole new set of players, and employment was picking up speed. An exodus from California to Nevada is currently underway, with Penske Truck Rental citing Las Vegas as one of its top 10 places where new residents are moving. Unfortunately, unemployment is still above the national average, but that is changing fast. Fundamentals are improving with concession shrinking to 5.25 percent compared to a high of 8.5 percent in 2009. Asking rents …
The Las Vegas multifamily market is back with a vengeance. The market went into a meltdown in 2009 while the financial crisis was in full swing, delivering the biggest blow to the local economy in Vegas’ history. What had been low unemployment and a development boom to rival all past development cycles quickly turned into a downward spiral. Construction came to a standstill and workers fled the city in search of work elsewhere. Apartment fundamentals dropped to record lows. Asking rents dropped 19.25 percent between 2009 and the second quarter of 2012, while concessions stood at 8.5 percent. Even with all this in play, the Las Vegas market is known for reinventing itself. The market recovery was in full swing last year. Stalled projects were restarted with a whole new set of players, and employment was picking up speed. An exodus from California to Nevada is currently underway, with Penske Truck Rental citing Las Vegas as one of its top 10 places where new residents are moving. Unfortunately, unemployment is still above the national average, but that is changing fast. Fundamentals are improving with concession shrinking to 5.25 percent compared to a high of 8.5 percent in 2009. Asking rents …
We all know the recent recession was hard on the Las Vegas commercial market. The good news is that a recovery is now well underway. End users are moving quickly to take advantage of historically low interest rates, which are coupled with potential rental income streams in buildings and office projects that are mostly vacant. The overall market vacancy rate is currently estimated to be at about 25 percent. For tenants that need larger spaces, however, that number can be misleading. Smaller tenants have more options, and Downtown Las Vegas continues to outperform the rest of the market, with only a 10 percent vacancy rate. Although it’s still a tenant’s market, they no longer have the leverage they once had during the middle of the downturn. Landlords are tightening concessions and seeking stronger tenant commitments, though many investors have budgeted tenant improvement dollars during acquisition and underwriting. Investors are now willing to spend these dollars to acquire quality tenants, which previously would have presented a tough sell to banks, receivers and servicers. Most other concessions remain similar to other years, with landlords standing somewhat firmer in the negotiating process. Given these conditions, Las Vegas is now seeing activity in all …
There is roughly 61 million square feet of office space in the Las Vegas Valley. About 22 percent of that is vacant. That being said, leasing activity is picking up. Tenants nearing the end of their leases are looking for better deals elsewhere – and they’re finding them. Then there are the new players in the market, who are are kicking the tires, too. The tenant’s market has been a mainstay for the past few years in Las Vegas. But over the past 12 to 18 months, banks have shifted their philosophies in regards to how they handle their office portfolios and it’s definitely making an impact on the market. Lenders today are no longer dumping foreclosed properties back on the market at fire sale prices. Instead, they are choosing to add value to their assets by leasing space in the hopes of a better future return for investors. In general, banks are very aggressive with their terms and generous with tenant improvement allowances. Private owners have needed to follow suit in order to stay competitive. Some tenants that have considered buying are frequently steered back into leases. This is because rates and terms are far too attractive. Leasing offers …
The retail market in Southern Nevada in mid-2013 continues to mirror the broader economy, with some bright spots and some declines in performance. There appears to be a belief (or maybe a hope) by many market observers that if there hasn’t been enough improvement in Las Vegas to date, then it has to be occurring in the near future. It seems the effects of the Great Recession are still lingering and the economy hasn’t yet built up a sustainable head of steam as measured by true objective metrics. A good measure of the local economic health is unemployment statistics. The unemployment rate in Las Vegas has dropped from 9.8 percent to 9.7 percent from February to July of this year, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. On another bright note, an additional 1.83 million square feet of retail space was under construction at the end of the second quarter of 2013. More than 70.1 percent of this total space was preleased. General Growth Properties’ The Shops at Summerlin comprises 1.5 million square feet of current construction. It is expected to open in late 2014 and is already more than 85 percent leased to tenants like Dillard’s and Nordstrom Rack. …
The Las Vegas market, one of the hardest hit by the recession in the nation, is showing continued signs of economic recovery. Visitor volume is exceeding peak levels, hotel occupancy rates are averaging ±90 percent, unemployment levels continue their decline (9.5 percent in June 2013) and numerous renovations and new resort development projects continue to be announced. As recently as a year ago, experts were predicting that there would not be another major resort project in Las Vegas for at least 10 years. Then came the announcement by Malaysia-based Genting Group of its plans to construct a $7-billion, 3,500-room, Chinese-themed resort project on the Strip, and suddenly that prediction was put to rest. In similar fashion, the industrial market, which currently contains 103 million square feet, continues to show consistent signs of recovery. More than 1.6 million square feet of positive net absorption was reported as of the second quarter of 2013. This is more than we’ve seen in the past five years combined. Vacancy rates stand at 14 percent, a 1 percent decrease from the second quarter of 2012. Average asking rates for warehouse distribution product across the MSA are $4.68 per square foot, down about 50 percent from …
Economic conditions in Clark County and Las Vegas continue to improve with evidence of a slow and steady recovery finally emerging. Analysts from the UNLV Center for Business and Economic Research’s late summer survey noted respondents remained optimistic about general economic conditions in southern Nevada, with 82 percent expecting to see no change or improvement. Their Southern Nevada Business Confidence Index rose to its highest level in more than four years during the summer, echoing this positive sentiment. A couple of indicators highlight the emergence of a more favorable environment, with retail sales improving, McCarran Airport traffic on the rise and the gaming “take” on the rebound. Median existing home sale prices have jumped more than $12,000 compared to the same period a year ago. Furthermore, the labor market in Clark County has stabilized with more than 6,000 jobs added to non-farm payrolls since the spring. The overall county population has also increased to its highest level in five years, according to US Census estimates. In the multifamily market, the past two indicators carry the most weight for the region’s apartment market. A healthy apartment market requires significant population densities with a positive trend. This needs to be supported by …
Despite little commercial real estate development with the lowest rental rates in a decade, Las Vegas’ office leasing market has inched up in the positive direction. There are also indicators that the area’s commercial real estate market will continue to struggle, with vacancy rates remaining as high as 25 percent until the end of 2012. Las Vegas remains one of the most challenging real estate markets in the country with some submarkets showing vacancies as high as 32 percent, while others report vacancies as low as 16 percent. Still, there have been some significant developments recently impacting the office market. Zappos.com will occupy the former Las Vegas City Hall building in Downtown Las Vegas, which will house about 2,000 employees. This signals continued revitalization for the Downtown area. Those 2,000 employees will need housing and, with a younger workforce, will probably spend disposable income on entertainment, particularly in the area close to their place of employment. Along with Zappos, government-related entities occupying commercial space is on the rise, and traditionally those entities prefer to be centrally located. While there is noticeable activity taking place in certain Las Vegas submarkets like Downtown, other areas of Las Vegas are also improving — …