Wednesday, November 21, 2012

NNN Lease Market is Overly Pupular

NNN Lease Market News



Single-Tenant Real Estate Market is Overly Popular



Although the single-tenant real estate market is overly popular, who or what in our industry is actually thriving in this period of a declining cap rate yield curve is rarely discussed.

In 2009, I wrote an article about the apparent high rate of attrition in the net lease brokerage community. Brokers couldn’t afford to be brokers, developers couldn’t develop, tenants shut down plans for new stores and closed existing locations. So what happened to everyone that hung in there and stuck it out? The cream has risen to the top. Developers of single tenant properties that stuck to what they knew, maintained and fostered existing relationships, and made people aware that they weren’t going anywhere fared extremely well when it became time to start building again. They had more opportunities to purchase land for new buildings or redeveloped vacant buildings.

The development team may have become a little smaller with a lot more multitasking within their ranks, but what it made them more efficient service providers. Developers realized that collective thinking and pooled efforts of fewer people made each project more manageable for any specific property. Developers found that scale was important and it was unique to each property.

www.calkain.com 

Friday, November 16, 2012

Net Lease Investors Can't Get Enough High-Yielding REITs

NNN Lease Market News



Desperate for income, investors can't get enough high-yielding REITs and Wall Street is rushing to supply them. Companies are lining up to convert into REITs, a step that requires approval from the Internal Revenue Service.
Prisons, cell towers and golf courses were turned into REITs in the late 1990s, Mr. Westphal says with "pretty dreadful" results that in some cases produced losses of 90% or more.
So the market is changing and investors should temper their expectations accordingly.
While owning REITs is a good idea, panic buying isn't. Many investors are dumping money-market funds or bond funds and replacing them with higher-yielding REITs, says Morningstar analyst MichaelRawson. But REITs aren't bonds; the FTSE NAREIT Equity REITs Index, a benchmark of more than 120 of these stocks, lost 37.7% in 2008, when U.S. Treasury bonds had a positive 13.7% return.


UPREITS: TAX-DRIVEN CONVERSIONS FOR PROPERTY OWNERS


One of the more under-discussed aspects of the REIT is how it can benefit a seller of real estate. By contributing a property to a REIT you can achieve many of the same benefits associated with a §1031 exchange including deferral of gain recognition not to mention several other potential advantages. For the owner looking to monetize their investment in a tax advantaged manner with the possibility of additional upside this option deserves some additional examination. 






Tuesday, November 6, 2012

The Marketplace Views Ground Leases as a Very Secure Type of Investment

NNN Lease Market News



Andrew Fallon, assistant vice president at Calkain Cos.

Market values of land alone logically come in somewhat below what ownership of both land and improvements would fetch. And buyers just as logically expect a return premium for full ownership relative to ground leases.

Hence the historic differential in cap rates between ground leases and outright trades of land and net leased structures is typically in the range of 50 to 100 basis points depending on location, tenant credit, lease term and structure and related factors, notes active net lease investment broker Andrew Fallon, assistant vice president with specialty advisor Calkain Cos.

Well-positioned ground leases in major markets tend to trade at cap rates in the vicinity of 6 percent or a bit below these days, compared to roughly 6.5 to 7 for land and improvements subject to net leases. One potentially exploitable factor likely to generate outsize returns for the savvy small-cap investor is that full ownership of both land and improvements reverts to the landowner when the lease terminates.

Hence a forward-looking investor able to track down and land a replacement tenant (ideally with minimal retrofitting expenses) might be able to essentially secure ownership of a functional structure sooner rather than later – without really paying for it. Another strategic approach here is to actively trade in ground leases, insightfully buying and selling based on timing of built-in rental-rate escalations.

And when an existing tenant does opt to exercise renewal options again and again, the more typical passive high-net-worth individual playing this space today still owns land that should retain value throughout economic cycles, Fallon relates. Given that small-cap ground leases are mostly in high-traffic locations – and tend to trade in all-cash transactions – cap rates are generally less volatile than with leveraged real estate investments as interest rates rise and fall, he elaborates.

“The marketplace views ground leases as a very secure type of investment – even more than ownership of both land and (net leased) structures,” continues Fallon, who has brokered deals for ground leases of properties occupied by the likes of 7-Eleven, KFC/Taco Bell, McDonald’s, Chick-fil-A, Wells Fargo, Bank of America and others.

“The thinking is that if the tenant is willing to spend the capital on the improvements (knowing they’ll eventually revert to the landowner), then it’s a location worth committing to.”

Long-term ground leases these days have exceptional appeal for high-net-worth individual investors tired of dealing with “tenants, toilets and trash” – and who also seek better fixed-income returns than today’s dismal bond rates, and far less wealth-preservation risk than the stock market entails.

But again, given how NNN leases are structured, ground lease investing can also offer savvy small-cap real estate entrepreneurs opportunities to generate even better returns through active trading strategies – or embracing re-tenanting risk under the right circumstances.