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In Beth Mattson-Teig’s piece she quotes Mark West, senior managing director at a commercial real estate capital intermediary firm. “Across all product types in real estate, there is no shortage of capital...looking for good quality deals…And in the net lease, sale-leaseback space it is very attractive, and plenty of capital is looking for the long-term, predictable cash flow that is represented by sale-leasebacks.”
With the demand up and supply short, it would certainly appear that we are in a seller’s market for at least one segment of the commercial real estate arena. Real Capital Analytics tallies the total sale-leaseback transactions in 2014 at $9.4 billion.
The 2014 volume in sales can be attributed to what commercial brokers see “From the owner perspective, we have seen a high potential of sales, as owners have made it through the depression and have decided to capitalize on current market conditions.” They are monetizing those assets to fuel growth and expansion.
What I found very interesting in the article was the interest in shorter term lease deals. Brand new investment properties, whether they are net-leased opportunities like a Walgreens or a sale-leaseback, typically have a long-term lease. Long-term leases usually mean low cap rates, which translate to higher prices per square foot. Existing net-leased properties typically have leases with shorter terms that often times translate to higher cap rates, which deliver lower prices per square foot.
One investment company purchased a large warehouse in the greater Chicago area leased by Solo Cup. They had 10 years left on the lease which, in that market, allowed for the sale at a 7% cap rate. With a longer term lease, the article suggests, that rate would have been about 6%.
The buyer was thrilled that they were able to acquire this asset at $51 per square foot. That still seems pricey, but it is, after all, the Chicago market and not Rock County. However, it does appear that the treasure in the market is sale-leasebacks with shorter-term leases. If you own a property and would like to generate cash for growth, the time could not be better to go to market.