Thursday, August 1, 2013

Denver Industrial Market Report - Midyear 2013

The Denver Industrial Market continued its recovery in the 2nd quarter of 2013 and is demonstrating signs of prolonged strength. The three highlights of the quarter were: 1,850,000 SF of positive absorption; almost 600,000 SF of speculative construction broken ground on; and a $0.20 increase in the average quoted lease rates. With the total industrial vacancy rate falling 0.3% to 7.3%, Denver is well below the national industrial vacancy rate of 8.5%. 
 
Modern industrial space (24’+ clear height, large truck courts) remains scarce in all size ranges causing many prospective tenants to remain on the sidelines or forego contemplated moves and/or expansions altogether. The total warehouse market is now at a 5.8% vacancy rate with the East I-70 submarket, the largest sub market, at 6.4%. 
 
Developers have been waiting for sustained increases in rental rates to justify speculative construction. While continued increases in rates are still needed to further justify new projects, especially any under 200,000 SF for economies of scale, developers with a low land basis are rolling projects out in an attempt to stay ahead of the curve. Majestic Realty was the first to break ground in the NE submarket with construction starting on a 500,000 SF building within the Majestic Commercenter, while Prologis is not too far from putting a shovel in the ground at Stapleton Business Center North (391,000 SF). The Bradbury Companies broke ground in the Centennial Industrial Market on a 98,000 SF speculative building this quarter as well. The higher average rental rates in the south submarkets helped justify the smaller building size in this case.
 
At the end of the quarter interest rates increased by approximately 100 basis points causing a ripple effect of concerns throughout both the residential and commercial real estate markets. Most analyst agree that interest rates really only have one direction to go and that is up, how quickly they increase is yet to be seen. We expect the Fed to closely regulate increases as to not abruptly stall the momentum in the real estate markets, and the overall economy. Many prudent investors and owner/users are seeking out the longest term money as possible to hedge the anticipated higher rates.
 
For the full Industrial and Office Market Report please visit:  Bitzer Newsletter

Thursday, July 25, 2013

Commercial Construction in Denver - Photo Update

It's incredibly exciting to see all of the new developments that are in progress all across Denver spanning the office, retail and industrial sectors. Below are a few pictures that I took over the last week or so of significant projects:

Cherry Creek Office & Retail
215 Saint Paul Street, Denver
16th Street Mall - Office, Multifamily, Retail
16M - 16th & Market Street
  


Union Station - Office and Retail
One Union Station - 16th & Wynkoop St.

Union Station Redevelopment

ProLogis Industrial Speculative Development
390,000 SF - 56th Ave & Havana Street
Breaking ground begins with removing an old Stapleton Airport runway!

Interstate Warehouse Expansion - Cooler/Freezer
Stapleton Business Center


Majestic 500,000 SF Speculative Industrial
Majestic CommerCenter - Aurora

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

10 Highlights from the NAIOP Mid Year Forecast Breakfast: Here We Grow Again

Yesterday I attended the NAIOP Mid Year Forecast Breakfast held at the Marriott City Center in Denver. With over 300 commercial real estate professionals in attendance, the overall sentiment was very upbeat and optimistic that the Denver commercial real estate market should see continued improvement across all sectors for the unforeseeable future. Below are a few highlights from the panelists.

Office - Doug Wulf, Cassidy Turley Colorado 
1. Use imagination and innovation to create new or revitalize old projects.
2. The health of the Denver office market hinges on job growth. Denver currently ranks 8th in the US for job growth in part because of our diversified economy.
3. "Millennial's" have a voice in where companies locate. The current focus is on location and amenities which have showing to promote productivity. Companies will pay 10-30% more for an edgy and modern building.
4. The aging population in the US is leading to a proliferation of medical office properties.

Industrial - T.J. Smith, Colliers 
5. The investor demand for industrial property is unprecedented. CAP rates in the low 6's for institutional grade and mid 8's for properties with deficiencies.
6. Quality inventory is very low, leasing concessions are down it is shifting to a landlords market.
7. Multiple spec developments are already underway however current lease rates do not fully support development costs, especially on projects under 100,000 SF.

Investment - Brad Lyons, CBRE
8. There is a wall of capital pursuing national investment deals which is putting continued downward pressure on CAP rates. As a result of the recent jump in interest rates, there has been a slight pullback in interest in non-core assets.

Land - Eric Roth, CBRE
9. The SFR land market is very strong with more builders entering the market instead of PE firms which were the norm in the recent past. Construction costs are up and access to trade labor is very tight.
10. Denver has a big renter pool which should be able to absorb all of the product coming online. Approaching an oversupply of projects.

 

Well it has been a while since I actively updated this blog but I am recommitting myself to keeping it current and proving my thoughts on both the Denver and the national commercial real estate market. My apologies for the hiatus and hopefully you will find the forthcoming posts of interest and relevance. Thanks!