Friday, September 28, 2012

Cap Rates on Walgreens and CVS Properties Remained Flat

NNN Lease Market News



Cap Rates on Walgreens and CVS Net Lease Properties 



Cap rates on Walgreens and CVS properties remained flat with the quarter prior at 6.45 percent and 6.7 percent respectively, but cap rates on restaurants fell 25 basis points to 7.25 percent. Cap rates on McDonald’s restaurants in particular fell 20 basis points to 4.8 percent, and cap rates on Dollar General stores fell 15 basis points, to 8.1 percent.


In addition, cap rates on properties leased to banks compressed 35 basis points, to 5.5 percent. Still, the cap rate compression on the most popular properties was below predictions. Back in May, researchers with Marcus & Millichap Real Estate Investment Services estimated that cap rates on dollar stores and drug stores would fall 30 basis points each from the first to the second quarter of 2012, while cap rates on quick service restaurants would fall 60 basis points.

However, few of those properties are trading in the core markets. Finding a McDonald’s or a Walgreens for sale in a primary market has “gotten tougher because there is not a lot of new things coming out of the ground and partly that’s what pushed down cap rates, as well as [the fact that] interest rates have gotten so low,” says Jonathan W. Hipp, president and CEO of Calkain Cos., a Reston, Va.-based brokerage and consulting firm specializing in the net lease sector.

To compensate for lack of product in prime locations, net lease investors have been more willing to accept risk in exchange for higher yields. Some are starting to buy assets leased to A-credit tenants in second-tier markets, Hipp notes. Others are investing in franchise restaurant locations instead of corporate-owned properties because they like the sector’s healthy growth.


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