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KEEPING IT IN PERSPECTIVE

I don’t know about you but we are watching interest rates and wondering what it’s going to take to get them down a point or two. Earlier this year economists were predicting the Federal Reserve would have multiple rate reductions by year end but now it’s looking like we will be lucky to have one reduction. It turns out that the so-called Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 didn’t do much to reduce inflation (it had the opposite effect!) and until the Fed feels inflation is back under control, we will suffer with relatively “high” interest rates. Many people don’t realize the SBA 504 rates today are only 6.35% for a 25 year term. When I think back on rates during the period of 1979-1981 when the mortgage rates were 17-18%, I think our current rates are not so bad. We just need to keep things in perspective.

 



From The Desk Of

Bruce Bossow

Featured Listings

Office For Lease

613 W. Main St.

West Dundee


123-1810 sq ft in remodeled 1881 vintage 2 story. Includes shared kitchen, 3 baths, conference room, wi-fi. $15.91 psf gross.

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Retail/Office Spaces

650 Terra Cotta Ave.

Crystal Lake



Terra Cotta Corners-5 spaces, 748-2810 sq ft. Lighted monument signage. 2810 sq ft space is divisible. $16 psf NNN.

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Rare Industrial Building

456 Dartmoor Dr.

Crystal Lake



Priced reduced on this 9750 sq ft steel industrial building on .95 acre. Highly re-furbished from top to bottom. Epoxy floors in warehouse, temperature controlled, 3000 sf of high end office, 5 drive in doors, 12 ft ceilings. A phenomenal showplace! $1,072,500.

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Fox Lake Retail

2 W. Grand Ave.

Fox Lake


870 and 1100 sq ft in line retail spaces in Fox Lake Commons at Rt 12 and Grand. Monument signage. $14 psf NNN with $5.75 psf CAM and taxes.

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Multi-Tenant Office Building

4209 W. Shamrock Ln.

McHenry



20,000 sqft masonry single story office building on 2.26 acres near Northwestern Hospital. Half is leased to 2 tenants and half is vacant for a user or other tenant. Current rents are $154,920 plus CAM and taxes. Asking $2,400,000 ($120 psf).

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Ready to Build Industrial Lot

1503 Diggins St.

Harvard


3.2 Acres located in friendly, cooperative Harvard. Flat lot that is ready to build, located in an Enterprise zone. $199,500.

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Recently Sold & Leased

$515,000 / Land

Rt. 20

Marengo

Heather Schweitzer


$350,000 / Office

407 Congress Pkwy. Unit C

Crystal Lake

Bruce Kaplan & Shari Haefner


Office

4100 Shamrock Ln.

McHenry

Heather Schweitzer


Industrial

2215 Tech Ct.

Woodstock

Bruce Kaplan


Industrial

5700 Walnut St.

Richmond

Bruce Kaplan


Land

Huntley & Bard Rd.

Crystal Lake

Bruce Kaplan


2,200 SF / Retail

93 Berkshire Rd. Unit D

Crystal Lake

Bruce Kaplan

2,000 SF / Office

760 McArdle Dr. Unit G

Crystal Lake

Heather Schweitzer

1,100 SF / Retail

2 W. Grand Ave. #108

Fox Lake

Shari Haefner

2,000 SF / Industrial

541 Jennings Dr. B-3

Lake in the Hills

Heather Schweitzer

2,100 SF / Retail

230 W. Virginia Rd. #250

Crystal Lake

Bruce Kaplan & Shari Haefner

1,416 SF / Office

500 Coventry Ln. #130

Crystal Lake

Heather Schweitzer

1,400 SF / Retail

1947 Huntley Rd.

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1,200 SF / Retail

13332 Village Green Dr.

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Featured Articles

May 2024 Commercial Real Estate Market Insights

Provided by The National Association of Realtors

 

The commercial real estate (CRE) market entered the second quarter of the year with persistently rising vacancy rates and slowing rent growth across most market sectors. Specifically, the office vacancy rate reached new record highs, approaching nearly 14%, while fundamentals in retail and industrial sectors decelerated. High interest rates and the effects of hybrid work on office spaces are the main factors that continue to hamper this sector. In the meantime, the U.S. economy started to slow down after previously exceeding expectations, reflecting the impact of inflation pressures on consumers.

 

Office Properties

At the beginning of the year's second quarter, fewer additional office spaces were vacated than occupied for the first time since the end of 2022. Even though net absorption remains negative with more vacated than occupied office spaces, this is the first time the gap between vacated and occupied office spaces has narrowed. However, the vacancy rate rose even further to 13.8% in April 2024. Looking ahead, the forecast suggests a persistent increase in available office spaces. Leasing activity, which helps to gauge the level of demand and interest from potential tenants, is about 30 percentage points below the pre-pandemic levels.

 

Multifamily Properties

On the other hand, high mortgage rates, hovering around 7%, continue to keep strong demand for apartment buildings. The multifamily sector not only rebounded from the lows it experienced last year, but net absorption is more than double that of the same period a year ago. This translates to more than twice of the additional occupied rental units than vacated compared to last April. Nevertheless, even with this strong demand, the vacancy rate remained at 7.8%. This is mainly due to the influx of new rental housing supply entering the market after the record highs in apartment construction over the past couple of years. The completion of these additional rental units has absorbed the higher demand and prevented vacancy rates from easing.

 

Retail Properties

Demand for retail spaces remained below the pre-pandemic levels as net absorption slowed further in April. Compared to a year ago, net absorption is significantly lower by approximately 30 percentage points. However, the limited availability of retail spaces keeps vacancy rates low, hovering around 4%, the lowest rate among any other sector in the commercial real estate market. With new construction deliveries likely to diminish even further, the fundamentals of this sector are expected to remain solid in 2024.

 

Industrial Properties

The industrial sector couldn't escape the impact, with demand for industrial spaces also decelerating. Net absorption has dropped to levels not seen in over a decade. After reaching record-high levels at the end of 2021 and the beginning of 2022, fueled by the need for warehouse spaces to accommodate online shopping and e-commerce demands, net absorption is 63% lower than a year ago and 52% below the pre-pandemic average level. However, this sector continues to experience the fastest rent growth compared to any other sector in the commercial real estate market. Specifically, rents for industrial spaces are 4.7% higher than a year ago. The outlook for the industrial real estate market remains positive, driven by factors such as the lasting impact of e-commerce and robust construction spending.


By Jason Dannatt, Commercial Resource Capital

Reset Ready: Navigating the Great Reset in Commercial Real Estate

 

A short-term interest rate cut may be on the horizon—but that doesn’t mean we are returning to yesterday’s persistent low rates and high valuations. The year ahead will require new thinking and reformulating the math as we structure financing for the next wave of commercial real estate investment. What CRE needs now is a significant recalibration—a Great Reset.

The first step: shifting how we think about interest rates. Sitting around and waiting for long-term interest rates to return to near-zero is overly optimistic. Even if the Federal Reserve achieves its inflation target of 2%, the federal funds rate will settle in at around 2% and a normal, upwardly sloping yield curve will result in a 5-year Treasury rate of approximately 3% and a 10-year Treasury rate around 4%.


With long-term Treasury rates at those levels, financing for stabilized properties will be in the 5% to 7% range—a far cry from the 3% to 4.5% range we saw just a few years ago. Unless real estate investors can withstand negative leverage for a short time because of increasing net operating income (NOI), most investors can expect to price prime properties using capitalization rates in the 6% to 7% range or higher. Moving from a 4% cap rate to a 6% cap rate is a 33% decline in a property’s value, assuming NOI is stable.

That brings us to step two of the Great Reset: changes to NOI. While there has been significant rental rate growth—especially for apartments in certain markets and industrial properties nationwide—in many instances, expenses have increased as fast or faster than rental rates. Major operating expenses like real estate taxes, insurance rates, personnel costs and repair and maintenance costs have all had significant increases. The increase in expenses outpacing the increase in rents also creates a decrease in value to all property types.


Additionally, there is the coming wave of loan maturities to consider. Twenty percent of the $4.7 trillion in outstanding commercial mortgages will mature in 2024, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association, with nearly $2 trillion coming due by the end of 2026. About one-third of the debt coming due in 2024 is a result of loan extensions from 2023 by borrowers and lenders that were hoping for rates to come down in 2024. Assuming lenders do not extend the loans into the future, this wave of maturities will bring many properties to market at prices lower than the owners paid for them in the past.


Lenders whose underwriting factored in favorable debt service coverage ratios and traditional debt yield tests will likely weather the interest-rate storm without major losses in the CRE sector due to the low leverage that underwriting based on debt yield required. Those disciplined lenders will be able to remain active in the market and stand to gain considerably as the Great Reset occurs. The moment is especially ripe for those ready to lend in sectors like industrial and multifamily real estate, where borrowers who secured financing during the low-interest-rate window between 2017 and 2020 now face the need to restructure their debt.


How can investors and lenders alike stay ahead of the curve? Here’s a look at the year ahead.


Where we are—and where we are headed

Many “pretend and extend” lenders have long been awaiting a drop in interest rates that will likely not happen. The aftermath of the global financial crisis of 2008 created a misplaced sense of permanence around the low rates that followed. Many developers, investors and debt providers misinterpreted a temporary phase (albeit a temporary phase that lasted a decade) as the new normal. The reality is that interest rates in the 6% to 7% range, or far higher, were the norm in previous decades. To expect extremely low rates indefinitely was simply unrealistic.


Sellers have also been slow to adjust. Now, the disconnect between seller expectations and buyer willingness has propelled billions into funds aimed at acquiring distressed debt or assets. The pressing question remains: What will cause the bid-ask spread to narrow enough for transactions to take place? Borrowers that have locked in low, fixed-rate financing have no reason to sell into this environment. However, as loans mature and a wave of maturities occurs over the next year or so, these borrowers will be faced with the decision to refinance at much higher rates—assuming NOI growth has kept up enough to overcome the increase in interest rates—or they will be forced to sell or infuse significant equity into projects to replace the existing debt with lower leverage.


Different product types and geographies deliver different opportunities

Despite current challenges, the Great Reset will offer opportunities to both investors with dry powder and lenders with the capacity and willingness to lend into the CRE market. Some sectors, like new industrial and multifamily development, have cooled in recent months as the wave of new supply has overwhelmed the positive demographics of many multifamily markets (such as in the Sun Belt), and the satiation of industrial demand in the aftermath of pandemic-era supply chain disruptions.


Long term, both trends will enable unique opportunities for strategic investments amid market excess and the rise of office adaptive reuse. When an apartment community is not performing to pro forma, for example, a buyer can potentially acquire the property with less leverage and more equity, then refinance when lower rates come along.


The next phase of the Great Reset

Advancing the market requires a shift in collective thinking. After all, one investor’s bad news may be another investor’s golden opportunity. A well-performing building, such as a multifamily property within an in-fill market with high barriers to entry might simply have the wrong debt structure for the times. With a forced sale due to a maturing, low-rate loan, a new ownership group can invest at a reset basis. This creates opportunities for lenders and enables projects to be revived with a reinvented capital stack. Fresh capital and a willingness to invest and lend will be critical in successfully navigating the Great Reset.


By John Basrkidjija, Illinois Real Estate Journal

9225 S. IL Route 31

Lake in the Hills, IL 60156

 847-854-2300 

www.PremierCommercialRealty.com