Thursday, March 18, 2010

PricewaterhouseCoopers: Apartment Sector to Lead Rising Property Sales in 2010

Mar 16, 2010 12:39 PM, By Denise Kalette, NREI senior associate editor

As cap rates begin to stabilize, investors are showing more confidence in the commercial real estate market than at any point in the last two years, a new report from New York-based PricewaterhouseCoopers shows.

Although transactions are expected to be lower in 2010 than at the peak of the market, the report released today projects marked improvement over 2009, with the apartment sector leading the recovery effort.

Cap rates, which gauge expectations of property income and value, not only show signs of leveling off, they have even declined slightly in some markets for quality assets, according to the PricewaterhouseCoopers' Korpacz Real Estate Investor Survey.

As cap rates become more attractive to investors, that trend is expected to help stabilize commercial property values. Survey participants project that over the next six months, overall cap rates will hold steady in 19 of the 30 markets surveyed. Last quarter, the survey projected stabilization in only two markets.

“The worst seems to be over, according to survey participants, as investors suggest that the bottom is near, if not here, particularly for better-positioned markets and assets,” said Susan Smith, director of real estate advisory practice at PricewaterhouseCoopers, and editor-in-chief of the survey.

Commercial real estate fundamentals also are expected to moderate in the remainder of this year. Across property types, occupancy and rental rates have deteriorated significantly in the past 24 months, but the declines are not expected to be as severe in 2010 as they were last year, according to the survey.

“Following the onset of the recession and the credit crisis, underlying fundamentals were deteriorating and overall cap rates were expanding simultaneously and quickly, causing values to plummet,” said Smith.

Marketing pace quickens

In the apartment market, the low end of the range for overall cap rates decreased 75 basis points this quarter to 5%, as investors showed up to bid for quality assets in healthier markets. In another good sign, the average time it took to market the assets declined in two survey markets, indicating restored confidence among many investors, according to the report.

Investors forecast that the apartment sector will be the first to recover, noting that some multifamily assets already are showing slight value increases. The office and retail sectors, meanwhile, are more deeply mired in the economic doldrums, and affected by nationwide job losses.

Survey participants said that owners and lenders finally are coming to agreement on the value of properties, overcoming at least in part, the bid-ask stalemate over prices that has impeded many transactions for more than a year. Read Full Article