With the third quarter results in, all signs point to continued incremental improvement of the Charlotte office market. Vacancy rates have fallen to a four-year low and investment sales activity continues to strengthen as new capital sources enter the market. On the economic front, unemployment in Charlotte continues to lag behind some other North Carolina cities at 9.5 percent, but the city is experiencing positive economic movement in other measures, particularly single-family housing and retail sales. For some long-term perspective, the labor force in Charlotte has grown 22 percent during the past 10 years, nearly three times the national rate. Additionally, in August, the population of Mecklenburg County reached 1 million people. With a population of approximately 2.3 million, Charlotte maintains its position as the largest MSA in the Carolinas. Office Market Conditions With a reported 460,000 square feet of positive net absorption in the third quarter, the overall office vacancy rate has fallen to approximately 15.7 percent, the lowest rate since 2008. Correspondingly, rental rates have continued to increase, with overall average rates reaching $22.55 per square foot ($23.59 for Class A space), the highest rates in the past four years. While much of this tightening has occurred in …
Office
In 2013, Washington’s office market has been characterized by tenant-favorable conditions, lower-than-average deal volume and absorption reliant on a handful of major transactions. The metropolitan area has recovered its pre-recession employment levels; however, with the federal government being the region’s major economic driver, there has been considerable impact on the office market from BRAC (Base Realignment and Closure), sequestration, the recent government shutdown and the failure of Congress and the President to permanently resolve budget and debt-ceiling issues. And while sequestration technically took effect in 2013, many major tenants, in anticipation of cutbacks, began right-sizing their occupancy well in advance. Obviously any tenant whose revenues depend on government contracts led the charge in this proactive right-sizing movement. At the same time, federal tenants face a mandated reduction in their utilization rate, and private-sector tenants are looking for more densely packed, open-workspace floor plans as demonstrated by tenants leasing less space as they relocate. Notwithstanding the apparent economic headwinds, it is a remarkable time for confident tenants to lock in favorable terms. Concession packages, which comprise improvement allowances and rent abatement periods, are at all-time market highs, and landlords have demonstrated a willingness to restructure leases considerably in advance of expirations. …
While much of the suburbs, as well as pockets in Boston and Cambridge, continue to have a high inventory of office space, rents keep rising as vacancy is dropping in the area’s hottest submarkets — Boston’s Back Bay and East and Mid-Cambridge. Class A vacancy in the Back Bay now averages 6 percent while it’s even lower for Class A space in Mid-Cambridge and East Cambridge (1 percent in Kendall Square and 1.5 percent in Central Square). Average rents for Class A office space in the Back Bay are over $57 per square foot and almost $78 per square foot for high-rise space. In Cambridge, average Class A office and lab space rents are in the high $50s. Other Boston Trends • With demand increasing in the Seaport and even the low-rise tower space, many tenants from Cambridge are looking in other submarkets. In fact, Downtown Crossing has become the new Seaport, and North Station is seeing an uptick of activity as well. Average Class A rents in the Seaport are up to $52 per square foot, with much better value available in Downtown Crossing and North Station, where rents are in the mid-$30 range per square foot. • Demand …
Dallas/Fort Worth’s office market has experienced some of the strongest leasing activity in its history and will continue to tighten through 2013 as job sectors that demand space lead to record expansion. Additions to local office inventory should more than double this year compared with 2012. Meanwhile, pre-leasing has been steady, and its impact on the vacancy rate is predicted to be minimal. However, vacancy may start to inch up in 2014 as developers fill the pipeline with sizable speculative projects. Far North Dallas has become a draw for major corporate relocations, and therefore a hotbed for office development. This is due in part to the area’s relatively affordable housing and well-rated schools. Space slated for delivery this year in Far North Dallas has been largely spoken for, but the area is also home to one of the largest speculative projects underway, a 342,000-square-foot office tower scheduled to become available in late 2014. Office development has also increased in the Fort Worth area. That being said, near-term deliveries are expected to be light and limited to buildings less than 75,000 square feet, including some properties dedicated entirely for medical uses. Looking at both quarterly trends and monthly updates, healthy employment …
Lease renewals and, in some instances, expansions into larger layouts, are occurring in Atlanta as employers create new jobs. The metro has also landed some plum relocations recently. State Farm and General Motors have chosen the metro as the site for regional headquarters, and the firms will create thousands of jobs during the next several years. Many of the GM jobs are new information technology positions and they are coming here in response to the metro’s highly skilled and educated work force. As the region becomes an information technology hub in the Southeast, other employers are also adding workers. AT&T has expanded its presence by filling 600 IT positions and plans to hire an additional 1,000 employees throughout the state. Additionally, Airwatch, a mobile software firm, has already hired 200 Atlanta workers and expects to create 600 more positions by year end. Other companies, such as InfoSystems, ExactTarget, PulteGroup Inc. and Spanx, are also planning to expand operations in the metro. Scheduled expansions by these employers and recent additions to payrolls have helped to fill office space that has been vacant since the trough of the recession. The Atlanta office market will make strides by the end of this year, …
It is no secret hat recovery in this real estate cycle hinges on job creation. In Phoenix, this means all eyes are on the markets that can deliver not only space and amenities, but also that golden element: employees. The Southeast Valley emerged early as Phoenix’s premier labor play and most dynamic “big picture” winner with amenities like Arizona State University, Light Rail and a strong base of corporate users. As a result, markets like Tempe have surged ahead with year-to-date positive net absorption of 4.1 percent, 15.8 percent vacancy (compared to the metro Phoenix rate of 24.9 percent) and a host of new tenant announcements. In 2013 alone, Go Daddy added 150,000 square feet to its local footprint; Silicon Valley Bank inked an expansion at Hayden Ferry Lakeside; and State Farm rocked the industry with plans for a new $600-million, 2-million-square-foot office development. In March, GM announced it will invest $21 million and hire 1,000 employees for a new Information Technology Innovation Center in Chandler. This will boost Chandler’s already positive performance, which includes an auspicious 12.8 percent office vacancy and rents at $22.31 per square foot. This area has experienced a small but positive year-to-date absorption of 0.6 …
Kansas City is best known for its beer, barbecue and jazz, and an economy inextricably linked to railroads and cattle. It’s not unusual for an Easterner flying over Kansas City on his way to Los Angeles to remark, “I hear I can get a great steak down there.” You can indeed find a great steak down here, but most importantly the economy is more about the steak than the sizzle. The truth is that the local economy is so broad-based that it is difficult to define. Kansas City’s economic growth today is driven by life sciences, architecture and engineering, information technology as well as financial services. All of these industries feature homegrown companies and institutions that began with entrepreneurial roots such as telecommunications giant Sprint, a company that traces its roots to a small utility company west of Kansas City. The world’s power plants and sports stadiums are designed in Kansas City, and a cure for cancer is ongoing driven by The Stowers Institute for Medical Research and the University of Kansas in conjunction with the Kansas City Area Life Sciences Institute. Cerner, the second largest health care technology company in the world with more than 8,000 employees, announced in …
Amazon, Zulily, Real Networks, Intel, eBay, Attachmate, PATH, Omeros, F5 Networks, Microsoft. Collectively, these technology companies have dominated Seattle’s office leasing landscape over the past 12 months. This period has seen an eye-popping absorption of more than 1.9 million square feet. That would be astonishing growth in nearly any city, but with a Class A and B base of 63 million square feet, this number is even more impressive. The vacancy rate has dropped and now stands at 11.5 percent, while correspondingly rental rates rose more than $4 per square foot, cresting above the $30 per square foot, full service, for the first time in more than a decade. In addition, both rental abatement and discretionary tenant improvement allowances have diminished. What’s noteworthy is that none of these companies made commitments in the Central Business District. Instead, each opted for an urban campus style as opposed to a traditional stacked, high-rise presence. These companies either backfilled Class A properties immediately south of Downtown in Pioneer Square or relocated into first-generation space just north of the core in the South Lake Union submarket. Despite this current trend, Seattle’s core is very healthy. It’s even listed as a top-three investment market on …
If you subscribe to the notion that “a rising tide floats all boats,” then all of South Florida is benefiting from the renewed interest by out-of-market and international investors in all of the region’s commercial property sectors. In addition to regular South Florida investors from America’s Northeast and affluent Latin Americans, Florida has experienced a significant number of property acquisitions by Canadians in the last 18 months. While much of the international investment has focused on Miami/Dade County, one of the largest Broward County investments this year has come from Miami-based Fifteen Group, which recently acquired the Sawgrass Technology Park for $52 million in Sunrise, Fla. The Class B office and industrial buildings were formerly occupied by Racal Milgo and the seller had planned to redevelop the campus but never did. While industrial, multifamily and retail are garnering the most attention, the pricing structure for office properties is improving. The current cap rate for well-located, stabilized assets is on average 7.5 to 8.5 percent and falling as the market recovers. Much foreign investment is tied to capital flight and is less concerned with achieving the highest yield. As such, pricing is less important to those investors. In terms of sales …
Over the past decade, Baltimore City has seen a gradual shift in office market activity. Demand for office space has become increasingly focused on the waterfront properties of the Pratt Street Corridor and Harbor East. Many older buildings in the traditional Central Business District (CBD) with smaller footprints have become less attractive for office use. The CBD has also experienced a surge in both population and apartment demand that has pushed the residential supply to its occupancy limit. This balance between vacant office space and demand for residential space in the CBD has created a prime opportunity for redevelopment. The CBD has struggled to recover from the economic recession, when office vacancy rates spiked to almost 23 percent. It has, however, experienced small amounts of positive absorption over the past few years. Demand for space has been focused on Class A inventory as a “flight to quality” trend has emerged in the CBD. Net absorption for Class A inventory in the CBD has increased each year since 2008 and has been a primary factor in stabilizing the overall Baltimore City vacancy rate. Mid-year 2013 numbers suggest that this trend of increasing demand for Class A office space will continue for …