|
Jeanne Peck |
Chicago,
IL - Ongoing mortgage spread compression, lower treasury
yields and less restrictive underwriting are today's headlines.
Investors
are constantly surprised about the downward movements in mortgage and
capitalization rates. Many fear of
being 'too late' to the investment party,
but have no choice but to accept skinnier returns given the
insatiable
appetite for investing in various types of commercial real estate ventures.
Mirroring this trend, key real estate capital
market discussion points
relating to very low starting yields are as follows:
Commercial
properties, namely retail and industrial assets are clearly back on
the favored list with most lenders, as funding sources offer tighter spreads
and pricing comparable with the most favored property type
(multifamily).
The lower range for mortgage rates on
conservatively
leveraged
assets is only represents about a 10-basis-point variance between different
properties types (except for hotel and special-purpose assets).
Long-term
(10 year) mortgage rates start below 4% for such type of fundings.
New
construction is in demand most types of urban infill properties
including
multifamily, mixed-use and retail developments. Return-on-cost
benchmark
development yields for such projects start as low as 6.5% in most
markets,
but can even be 50 to 100 basis points lower in gateway coastal
markets.
Insatiable
demand for credit-tenant, net leased properties generates
capitalization
rates starting in the higher-4% range, particularly for
ground
lease deals. Credit tenants are more
selective on locations,
creating
a new construction shortage, while tax exchange investors drive the
demand
side of the market in direct competition with institutional sources.
The
Real Estate Capital Institute's director, Jeanne Peck suggests,
"Borrowers
are having a field day with competitive financing choices,
including
structured debt and equity transactions.
She
adds, "in fact, the biggest
competition for the capital stack is within the capital stack as
existing
lenders and equity investors are willing to contribute more dollars
into
high quality assets, pushing out mezzanine, Pref equity and other types
of
hybrid debt vehicles from the financial equation."
For
a complete copy of the company’s news release, please contact:
Jeanne
Peck, Executive Director
director@reci.com /
www.reci.com