Saturday, June 19, 2010

Western Real Estate Business Article on Sacramento Office Market


This month, June 2010, the magazine Western Real Estate Business has a profile on the Sacramento Market. With our colleagues at Cassidy Turley we contributed to the commercial real estate market review. Here are our particular observations on the office market in Sacramento..

Office

The Sacramento Valley office vacancy rose to 16.3 percent in first quarter 2010, as total availability increased 300,000 square feet for a total of 13.9 million square feet. Sublease space remained constrained, representing less than 3 percent of the total availability. The overall average asking rate for office space slid another $0.03 per square foot quarter over quarter to $1.85 per square foot full service in first quarter 2010.

Gross absorption was a mediocre 1 million square feet in first quarter 2010, about 25 percent less than its quarterly average in the past year and 40 percent below since 2005. Large tenants remain very scarce in the market, with most of the activity being dominated by smaller tenants less than 10,000 square feet. Net absorption, the change in occupied space, was a negative 368,000 square feet in first quarter after having reported positive 117,800 and 213,000 square feet in fourth and third quarters of 2009, respectively. Notably, during the past year, net absorption (which excludes new vacant construction) has actually held stable with just negative 50,000 square feet. The heavy dose of new unoccupied construction has really been a primary cause for the large increase in vacancy and availability in the past year.
The larger leases in first quarter 2010 included California State Board of Equalization for 76,502 square feet in Sacramento; ITT Technical Institute for 27,020 square feet in Rancho Cordova; Principal Financial Group for 24,645 square feet in El Dorado Hills; and Brown & Caldwell for 22,126 square feet in Rancho Cordova. There were also a handful of notable sales, led by CSAC Excess Insurance Authority’s acquisition of a 48,591-square-foot building in Folsom.
Office construction continued to trickle at the start of 2010 as projects funded more than 1 to 2 yearsr ago are now finally being completed. One building was delivered in first quarter: the 141,210-square-foot Sutter Health Facility in east Sacramento. This pace is already drastically cooler than last year when 1.9 million square feet were delivered and caused a massive swelling to the area’s vacancy rate. The development pipeline, however, is quickly diminishing as developers wait on the sidelines until market conditions become favorable. This slowdown is a double-edge sword, as it will help alleviate rising vacancy, but it will also take away construction jobs, a historical key source of job growth for the market.

The climate continues to remain favorable for tenants as there are still a lot of rental rate discounts being offered, plus concessions such as free rent and higher tenant-improvement allowance dollars from landlords. Lease terms also remain shorter, with the typical leases ranging between 1 and 3 years. The office sector will continue to battle the effects of the economic recession. The services and tech sectors lost a reported 10,000 jobs, and the job outlook ahead remains pretty grim. The forecast is that there will continue to be growing vacancy, slightly lower rents and very little new construction. The bright spots in the local office market have been and will likely continue to be owner-user sales financed with SBA long-term, low-interest loans and growth in healthcare and education.

Notably, the heavy majority of the 10 largest office leases transacted in 2009 were from the state’s government. Government is at risk as revenues from property and sales taxes continue to shrink, as the deficits become increasingly structural. Employees are being furloughed. Services are being cut back, and capital expenditures are being frozen. A great deal of the federal stimulus funds found their way to state and local government last year, but who knows what the political future holds? What happens to state and local government will have profound impacts. There is reason to be more optimistic, but being able to avoid a “double dip” is not certain.

— Jim Gray is a partner and Nahz Anvary an associate in Cassidy Turley BT Commercial’s Sacramento office.
Here is a link to the entire article:

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