As all of us in the retail market know, the past few years have been downright tough. It’s safe to say that we all felt a slight shift in mid-2011 where it seemed that we may — just may — have stabilized. With Tivioli’s success, Sportsman’s Warehouse re-entering the market and Hobby Lobby taking the plunge into Las Vegas, it seems we may have overcome the black “X” looming over our market. Our asking rent numbers are hovering around $1.50 per square foot, and retailers like Nima Accessories, Firestone Tires, Children’s Place, Winco and Dollar General are taking advantage of these rents and expanding valley wide. More than half of the leases completed in the past year were local retailers either relocating or expanding. The retail vacancy rate valley wide is about 11 percent, up from the fourth quarter of 2010. The Southwest submarket shows the lowest vacancy rate, about 9 percent, with the West Central submarket at the highest, about 15 percent. The market absorbed more than 119,000 square feet of retail product throughout the year. Two new Winco stores add 195,000 square feet to our retail inventory, and to the net absorption for 2012. Retail sales also picked …
Nevada
Multifamily development has come to a near halt in Las Vegas. In 2011, only two market rate properties finished their deliveries with a total of 682 units, most of which had already been completed in 2010. Only one market rate property was started in 2011. This 156-unit project was originally started as for-sale townhomes, but after a foreclosure, the development is being completed by Alliance Residential as a rental property. Other development is limited to affordable or senior housing. We are expecting a limited number of market rate starts this year, but at numbers that will not significantly impact existing inventory. The most active market rate developers in Las Vegas over the past years have been Picerne Real Estate Group, Alliance Residential, Fairfield Residential, Ovation Development, Trammel Crow Residential and Nevada West Development. Fore Property Company has been active in both the market rate and affordable sector, and Nevada Hand remains active in the affordable and senior sector. Between 2003 and 2007, 47 properties totaling 13,483 units were converted to condos. The combination of unsold units from these conversions, as well as the unsold units from properties built as condos during that time, has added 4,625 units to today’s rental …
The Las Vegas market has a total office inventory of 60.7 million square feet in 3,820 buildings. There were 13 buildings completed in 2011 totaling 724,535 square feet. An additional 550,000 square feet was still under construction at the end of the fourth quarter. Net absorption in 2011 was a positive 402,712 square feet, largely due to the Metropolitan Police Department moving into their new 390,000-square-foot facility during the third quarter. The total office vacancy rate valley wide was 19.4 percent at the end of the fourth quarter, which did not include shadow inventory. As this article was being submitted, Auction.com was completing another round of asset sales. Of the 25 property deed sales on the block in Las Vegas, four were office projects totaling about 204,000 square feet. Two of the14 non-performing notes were secured by office product totaling 103,000 square feet. The largest office project sold in the auction was the 124,082-square-foot Sahara Plazas. Sahara Plazas is located in the central portion of Las Vegas and consists of 10 individually parceled Class B buildings situated on 7.87 acres. The largest non-performing note secured by an office product was Charleston Valley View at 86,586 square feet. This property is …
While most of the country grows based on the birthrate, Las Vegas has grown at almost six percent per year based on the tremendous influx of new residents. That growth fueled retail development matching the pace until the growth suddenly stopped in 2008. But today, a different scenario is beginning to emerge. With many retail tenants going out of their spaces, beginning in 2008, the local retailers that had survived began a flight to quality. Key tenants in strip centers moved up to anchored centers. Other retailers that had been in the back of strip centers moved up onto pads. The addition of new space has been in waves, with the first starting in 2009, as the local retailers that survived the prior year and saw rents decreasing began adding second locations. The second wave of tenants began at the end of 2009, as strong regional retailers began seeking additional locations. The third wave, which has so far been quite small, is the national tenants. With so many choices around the nation, the national retailers are still trying to decide if Las Vegas, which was hit particularly hard, makes sense regarding expansion. The type of tenants that have been most …
The Las Vegas office market features a number of unique characteristics. For example, the Class A office market is not concentrated into a central business district. Office users in the downtown area consist almost exclusively of tenants that require proximity to the courts or government offices. Consequently, the tenant mix is limited to uses associated with litigation and government services. Other Class A tenants are spread around the valley at projects such as Hughes Center, a location favored by financial services, gaming interests and transactional law firms. The pool of Class A tenants is relatively shallow, measuring 6.2 million square feet or 13 percent of the overall office market. Reasons include a narrow economic focus — primarily gaming and tourism — and a lack of regional or national corporate headquarters. Consequently, speculative development and operation of Class A office space favors local players (i.e., developers, lenders and brokers). The speculative office pipeline for Las Vegas is dry except for one notable project. Tivoli Village, a 750,000-square-foot retail/office project, is anticipated to deliver its first phase in October. Despite office vacancy in excess of 20 percent, the developers, a partnership between IDB Group of Israel and local developer EHB Companies, have …
The Las Vegas retail market has taken a significant hit during the economic downturn, but amid the doom-and-gloom the city continues to attract retailers and visitors that eventually will help restore stability to the region. Much of the declines are being driven by the general economy and, subsequently, joblessness throughout greater Las Vegas. According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the metropolitan area reported an unemployment rate of 13.8 percent in January 2010, compared with 10.3 percent in January 2009. With nearly 136,000 people out of work in metro Las Vegas, it has been difficult for the market to achieve consumer spending levels that could help turn the market around. Recent retail statistics show worsening conditions for metro Las Vegas. According to a December 2009 survey conducted by Applied Analysis, the Las Vegas retail market had a vacancy rate of 10 percent, which is up from 7.5 percent in December 2008 and more than double the market's historical 10-year vacancy rate of 4.5 percent for anchored retail centers. Meanwhile, average retail property rents reportedly declined to $1.84 per square foot, down from $2.13 just 1 year prior. New development virtually stalled for retail properties in the market during 2009. …
The key indicator in the retail market in Reno/Sparks is that vacancy rates have increased and are expected to continue increasing for the remainder of 2009. Vacancy rates have reached nearly 15 percent at the mid-point of 2009 and net absorption continues to be negative. The amount of space available continues to increase due to unemployment, bankruptcies, relocations and acquisitions. Area home prices continue a downtrend with the majority of sales coming from distressed properties. The good news is that unit sales are up year over year, and home affordability has never been better. Retail lease rates continue to decrease as an estimated 2.4 million square feet of space is currently available in Reno/Sparks. Cap rates have increased steadily since a low in 2007, but the increase appears to have slowed down. The Legends at Sparks Marina held a grand opening in June 2009 and will be one of the major retail locations in the Reno/Sparks metropolitan area when it is completed. Developed by RED Development, the 2 million-square-foot shopping and entertainment destination is located on 147 acres in Sparks fronting Interstate 80 and will be highly visible to out-of-state travelers passing through the area. Because the project is estimated …
The Reno-Sparks apartment market will continue to face occupancy challenges due to job losses at local casinos, hotels and other gaming-related companies due to the current recession. Effective rents will remain flat in 2009 and in some cases decrease, while occupancies are expected to decline, building on a trend established in second half 2008. Landlords will be forced to offer concessions as they compete for new and existing tenants. Apartment owners across the market are vying to attract new tenants and retain existing ones. As a result, concessions are ranging from reductions in deposits to a full month of free rent, especially at properties with management issues. Remaining flat, the local economy was experiencing unemployment of approximately 8 percent in November 2008 due to layoffs in many sectors, including the leisure and hospitality industry. In the 1970s, 30 percent of the employees in Reno worked in the gaming industry, but today only 17 percent are involved in that sector. In fact, the leading employers of Reno’s increasingly diversifying economy are the Washoe County School District, IGT, Catholic Healthcare West and the gaming-hospitality industry. Looking at fundamentals, fourth quarter 2008 vacancy was 9.4 percent in the Reno-Sparks MSA, reflecting an increase …
The northern Nevada office market remained weak in 2008 with all four quarters recording increased vacancy and negative net absorption, a continuation of a trend that began in 2007 when three out of four quarters finished with negative net absorption. Last year finished with negative 116,000 square feet of leased office space and vacancy exceeding 20 percent. Directly related to the drastic downturn in the residential real estate market, Reno’s office performance had been fueled by the national homebuilders, mortgage companies and title companies, who saw their requirements for office space drop as quickly as the demand for their products and services. The area’s office sector quickly changed from growth and high demand to nearly non-existent demand and increasing vacancy, thus leaving investors and developers scrambling for tenants. With rising vacancy and demand declining, many office property owners are willing to slash effective lease rates to secure tenants. The average asking rate for Class A properties at year-end 2008 was $22.08 per square foot, a $1.56 less than a year earlier, and Class B was down to $16.68 per square foot. During the highs of late 2006, the effective rates for class A product exceeded $27 per square foot. With …
Odds are that Las Vegas developers, landlords and brokers did not mind putting 2008 in the rear-view mirror. Unfortunately, odds are also good that 2009 will be even more challenging. Commercial real estate certainly finds itself in unprecedented times. At the end of 2008, the Las Vegas office market had about 5.5 million square feet of vacant space, with the vacancy rate rising to 17.24 percent. This number doesn’t include the increasing amount of sublease space on the market or what is even harder to track, shadow space — unused space not being marketed. Even with the amount of vacant space on the market, there is roughly 2.2 million square feet under construction, most of which will hit the market in 2009. Based on historical absorption averages, the estimated supply of existing vacant space now would take about 5 years to absorb. The average asking lease rate ended 2008 at $2.40 per square foot, but is expected to decrease during first quarter 2009. Landlords have tried to maintain their face rates, but will generally bend significantly to make a deal. Available shell space on the market has more leasing challenges than second-generation space. With the cost of construction exceeding the …