John Oharenko |
The bond markets responded by dropping the 10-year treasury yield by more than eight percent.
As
consumer spending slows on retail goods, the Fed focuses on controlling wage
inflation. The Fed's leadership suggested that a 5% interest rate would
help reduce inflation.
The
new annual inflation target is likely to hover in the 2.5%-to-3% range instead
of the 2% benchmark that has existed since the end of the Great
Recession.
In addition to Fed news, a couple of other
"hot" topics realty investors face include negative leverage, yield
fatigue and strict underwriting:
Negative
Leverage: As long as mortgage rates exceed cap
rates, negative leverage keeps investors sidelined. The dramatic bid-ask
pricing differential discourages more market liquidity. However,
select players bet on inflation protection to lift overall yields during the
later years of the projected holding period. Alternatively, unleveraged
buyers (e.g., pension funds) remain committed to income-property real estate,
especially core and core-plus assets. Also, many investors believe mortgage
rates will drop as the economy cools. Cap rates will remain steady due to
a limited supply of desirable properties.
Strict Underwriting: Unlike previous real estate economic cycles, short-term lenders maintain strict discipline for underwriting value-add and construction ventures, particularly for new deals. Banks and other financial institutions worry about balance sheet reserves for existing projects nearing stabilization as regulators monitor portfolios for too many loan extension risks. Takeout lenders and an absence of buyers add more concern as long-term debt burdens owners with higher mortgage rates based on fewer proceeds. As has been the case for much of last year, debt service coverage limits loan proceeds instead of LTV ratios. At the same time, developers are resizing return-on-cost yields to reflect higher debt costs and risk, adding 100 to 150 basis points to exit cap rates.
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The
Real Estate Capital Institute® is a volunteer-based research organization that
tracks realty rates data for debt and equity yields. The Institute posts
daily and historical benchmark rates, including treasuries, bank prime, and
LIBOR.
Contact:
John Oharenko, Executive Director
director@reci.com / www.reci.com
The Real Estate Capital Institute®
Chicago, Illinois USA 60622