LWR Commercial
Archive for January, 2008
RV / Auto / Boat / Motorcycle Dealership
Jan 31st
6429 15th St East
Sarasota, FL 34243
Details
| Sale Price: | $4,325,000 |
| Gross Building Area (GBA) | 20,000 SF |
| Sale Terms: | Cash to Seller |
| Tax ID Number / APN : | 1853410056 / 185340007 |
Property Description
14,200 sq. ft. Car Dealership and Showroom on approximately 4 AC zoned Heavy Commercial. Adjacent lot is undeveloped, approximately 4.25 AC zoned Heavy Commercial. Owner will divide.
7,000 sq. ft. of showroom / offices.
Spectacular 22′ high, 8,200 sq. ft. canopied entrance area creates an impressive display area for cars, RVs, boats or equipment rental.
Functional warehouse space in back is 7,000 sq. ft. with 22′ to 43′ height and featuring 6 overhead doors.
Sarasota County explores its own economic stimulus plan
Jan 29th
County Administrator Jim Ley sent a letter to the Sarasota County Commission today outlining a number of ideas to jump-start the local economy.
“Ley pointed to the recently passed $1.4 billion sales tax, which includes funding for the construction of roads and public buildings as well as improvements to parks, public lands and economic development. These projects were originally slated for implementation over a 15-year period beginning in 2010. Ley wants to accelerate these and get the construction industry jump-started.”
Ley suggested getting up to $300 million of those projects under design or construction contracts “in the next 24 months,” adding “construction and materials costs are at their lowest in years and borrowing costs are low.”
In addition to the jobs it would create, it would help with the infrastructure which has been retarding some of the commercial development. The development would in turn create a more diverse tax base here in Sarasota and lessen the impact of lowered property taxes on residential property.
The lowered barriers to entry would hopefully help some of the smaller developers to push forward projects that would have otherwise been too daunting if they had to pay for road widening and/or extra water, sewer capacity.
All in all, it seems more prudent than the Bush Administration’s stimulus package and it would have a long-term benefot to Sarasota County and it’s commercial real estate development.
Sarasota Commercial Property Disappoints Vultures
Jan 16th
“So far, all signals from commercial real estate investment analysts point to very low delinquency and default rates” says Joseph Caton of Waterbury, Conn. based Hartford One Group. And even in the hardest hit areas, such as South Florida, there seems to be a feeling of much ado about nothing. Despite the mortgage debacle, there just aren’t many commercial properties in distress.
You can read his article from the National Real Estate Investor magazine here. Or below:
Distressed Deals Hard To Find
By W. Joseph Caton
So far, all signals from commercial real estate investment analysts point to very low delinquency and default rates, particularly in the CMBS and CDO worlds. And with investment funds continuing to raise large amounts of capital to pursue value-added and distressed assets, such opportunities are proving hard to find.
And even when distressed assets do come to market, buyers are paying rich prices to gain access to these assets, based on an analysis of announced deals. Troubled regional markets such as southern California, south Florida and Michigan continue to lead the potential areas for available distressed deals, while the hotel and retail sectors lead the property types where scavenger investors are searching these days.
Air of caution
For now, loan servicing managers are not resting on these prevailing trends, but instead gearing up to deal with a market where more distressed assets may surface. Stacey Berger, executive vice president of Midland Loan Services, one of the largest servicers of commercial real estate loans, recently remarked that while there is not a significant amount of distress in CDOs and CMBS, there is anticipation of such a development.
“Even though there are selected assets and transactions that have issues, there is little by way of delinquencies to spark many distress transactions at deep discounts,” Berger says. “Similarly, on the CMBS side, there is an increase in delinquency and default, but this increase is coming from very low levels to begin with.”
The delinquency and default rate for CMBS is still at less than 1%, according to Fitch Ratings, which hammered home that point during a recent forecast conference hosted by the agency. Berger’s conclusion may very well be right on the money.
But there are credit issues looming on the horizon, and the CMBS special servicers — loan servicing agents who specialize in managing troubled assets — are taking note. They are preparing for a turn in the market. These special servicers, often asset managers by trade, observe that real estate-backed deals are tracking the corporate debt market quite closely. Instances of delinquency and default are a bit higher in corporate debt, with defaults now standing at just about 2.6% and rising.
The air of caution among loan servicers and asset managers may be well-founded since the real estate-backed market has historically tracked corporate bonds quite closely, particularly high-leveraged deals.
In early June, for example, many corporate deals began to fall apart after financing for leveraged buyouts ran into funding problems. Cautious, high-yield investors began to demand higher compensation for the perceived risk in these deals. Commercial real estate investors then began to make similar demands. They wanted higher returns for perceived higher risks.
Pent-up capital
The availability of capital for distressed real estate deals is continuing to grow. On the investor side of the business, an enormous amount of funding has already been raised to pursue attractive deals. It’s estimated that in 2007 hedge funds, venture capital and private equity firms matched or surpassed the level of capital they raised in 2006 — a previous record high.
According to estimates by Private Equity Real Estate News (PERE), $65 billion was raised in 2007, roughly 20% more than the $54 billion in 2006. During 2005, private equity real estate funds, or value-added and opportunistic real estate private partnerships, raised roughly $34 billion.
This war chest suggests that despite the cautious feelings among real estate investors and their financing partners, there is sufficient capital seeking a home in real estate to significantly affect how quickly distressed deals are snapped up, and at what price.
While the California Public Employees’ Retirement System is considering a staff recommendation that the $255 billion pension fund raise its allocation in 2008 for real estate to 10% from the current 8%, according to PERE, private equity is slated to raise its allocation in 2008 to 10%, up from the current 6% level.
With such a high level of interest in real estate from institutional investors, it is little wonder that distressed deals are being valued rather richly in this market, or not done at all. Investors who are seeking deals at steep discounts will have to wait for a major breakdown in real estate fundamentals in order to realize their value investment strategies. Just when and how that breakdown in fundamentals will occur is still an unknown.
W. Joseph Caton is managing director of Waterbury, Conn.-based Hartford One Group, a real estate finance consultant.
CID 2008 Schedule
Jan 14th
The Commercial Investment Division of the Sarasota Association of Realtors starts the new year off with a panel discussion on the outlook for commercial business in our region this Tuesday, Jan. 15 at 8:30 a.m. in the SAR Main Auditorium. The meeting is free and open to all CID members, and a continental breakfast will be served. Below is a comprehensive list of the 2008 program schedule:
Jan. 15, 2008 – SAR – 2008 Commercial Market Forecast Panel (Marcia Sevigny, Brian Kennelly and Joe Hembree will be having a panel discussion on the 2008 real estate market)
Sponsor: Insignia Bank
Feb. 19, 2008 – Offsite – Clark Station (Danielle Squires, V.P. Global Rates for Wachovia to discuss the current lending economy)
Sponsor: Barry Edwards and Associates
March 18, 2008 – SAR – Tampa Bay Partnership (To discuss the 2020 plan for the Tampa Bay Market)
Sponsor: Fleischman Garcia
April 15, 2008 – Offsite – Creekwood Commons
Sponsor: Interstate Commercial Brokers
May 20, 2008 -SAR – State Sen. Lisa Carlton(Tentative)
Sponsor: TBD
June 17, 2008 – SAR – Power Marketing Session
Sponsor: TBD
July 15, 2008 – SAR – Vern Buchanan (Tentative)
Sponsor: TBD
Aug. 19, 2008 – SAR – Power Marketing Session
Sponsor: TBD
Sept. 25, 2008 – Annual CID Golf Tournament: Noregular monthlymeeting scheduled
Sponsors: Various
Oct. 21, 2008 – Offsite – Bay Village
Sponsor: Coldwell Banker
Nov. 18, 2008 – SAR – Power Marketing Session
Sponsor: TBD
Dec. 2, 2008 – Annual CID Holiday Breakfast – Noregular monthlymeeting scheduled
Sponsor: TBD



