Wednesday, June 07, 2017

Insights: The State of The CRE Industry

Connect Media interviews Avison Young CEO Mark Rose
June 7, 2017 by Dennis Kaiser
Download on Avison Young website > http://www.avisonyoung.com/
Connect Los Angeles is coming up on June 21st at the newly-completed Hotel Indigo in DTLA. The Market Outlook and Industry Overview panel will explore how things look from the perspective of the C-Suite.
Connect Media asked Avison Young’s Mark Rose, who will be speaking at Connect LA, to share insights on the state of the CRE industry, his outlook for the rest of the year, as well as provide an overview of the key factors driving deals.


Q: What is the state of the industry today including the biggest trends, drivers and concerns?
A: Commenting on the state of the industry requires a country-by-country, state-by-state and province-by-province review.

The U.S. is going through a correction, but Canada is coming out of one.
The U.S. looks to be a leader in interest rate hikes this year, which is leading to a bid ask gap. This gap will continue until the direction of interest rates is more clear.
U.S. lawmakers are creating a pause as well. Stated objectives for healthcare, governmental regulations, business and tax policy are less scary than the environment of uncertainty. Business leaders and real estate occupiers and owners just want to know what the rules are. If this isn’t resolved soon, it could be a disappointing year.

Q: What is the outlook for the year ahead?
A: For the year ahead, more uncertainty, but a U.S. economy that is strong and growing. There is a wall of debt and equity to capitalize real estate.

It’s now a matter of price in the face of rising interest rates.
A repeal of Foreign Investment in Real Property Tax Act (FIRPTA) could create tremendous liquidity and offset higher interest rates.
This year and 2018 will look like more of the same, and will start and stop with every piece of legislation debated by Congress.
With that said, we are in the beginning stages of a cyclical correction that should work its way through until the end of 2018.
Other than fiscal and interest rate policy, technology trends=the big driver.

Trends to continue watching include
  • investors pivoting toward industrial at the expense of office and retail
  • premium rents paid for new high-performance assets as compared to second-generation office and retail.
This is about much more than squeezing bodies into less space.
It’s about cybersecurity, power resiliency and connectivity becoming top 5 relocation considerations.
Also watch for big service companies investing heavily in technology and technology companies.
Q: What are some of the ways companies are adjusting to the changes and challenges?
A: Change is inevitable.

  • Pricing expectations must narrow, and new money will underwrite for 5- to 10-year holds that will assume different growth rates, higher interest rates and increased cost savings driven by incorporation of renewable technology around the globe.
  • Retailers and office occupiers must face a changing world driven by technology.
  • Showrooms will shrink,
  • industrial — meaning distribution and omni-channel logistics — will continue to grow, 
  • the workforce will be impacted by myriad technologies including automation, process engineering and implementation of clean technology.
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Commentary
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US Sugar Industry Opposes New US-Mexico Deal
Claims Loophole Will Allow Continued Export-Import Dumping
US sugar producers are complaining that an agreement announced yesterday between the United States and Mexico will allow Mexican exporters to continue to dump sugar in the US.
US Secretary of Commerce Wilbur Ross denied that contention saying,
“We have gotten the Mexican side to agree to nearly every request made by US industry to address flaws in the current system and ensure fair treatment of American sugar growers and refiners.”

At issue is an agreement to end a dispute dating back to 2014 between the US and Mexico with regard to Mexican sugar imports.
Ross and Mexican Secretary of Economy Ildefonso Guajardo announced the new agreement in principal yesterday to suspend antidumping and countervailing duties against Mexican sugar imports into the United States.
Ross contended the agreement—between the governments of the United States and Mexico and the Mexican sugar industry—prevent dumping of Mexican sugar and corrects for subsidies the Mexican sugar industry receives.
Among the elements of the agreement, the price at which raw sugar must be sold at the mill in Mexico is increased from 22.25 cents to 23 cents per pound, and for refined sugar, from 26 cents to 28 cents per pound. The new agreement also reduces the percentage of refined sugar that may be imported from 53 percent to 30 percent, increasing the amount of raw sugar available to US sugar refiners. Mexico agreed to increased enforcement measures and to accept penalties for violations, including a reduction in the amount of sugar allowed to be imported equal to twice the amount—or three times the amount, under some circumstances—of any sugar found to be in violation of the agreements.
Under a section entitled Additional US Needs, Mexico accepted these conditions in exchange for a right of first refusal to supply 100 percent of any “additional need” for sugar identified by the US Department of Agriculture after April 1 of each year.
 
It is the Additional US Needs clause that bothers Phillip Hayes, a spokesman for the American Sugar Alliance, a group representing US producers, who said the section contains a major loophole. “Mexico could exploit this loophole to continue to dump subsidized sugar into the US market and short US refineries of raw sugar inputs,” he said. “This loophole takes away the existing power of the US government to determine the type and polarity”—the degree of purity that separates raw from refined sugar—“of any additional sugar that needs to be imported and cedes that power to the Mexican government.”
Ross lamented the lack of support for the agreement among US industry, but added that “we remain hopeful that further progress can be made during the drafting process. We look forward to continuing discussions with them as we finalize the agreement.”
 

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