flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

North America’s office market should enjoy continued expansion in 2020

Market Data

North America’s office market should enjoy continued expansion in 2020

Brokers and analysts at two major CRE firms observe that tenants are taking longer to make lease decisions.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | January 10, 2020

A poll of real estate brokers and analysts across North America sees more runway for office demand this year. Image: Pixabay

The medical office and industrial sectors will drive what is expected to be moderate growth in the commercial real estate market this year, predict the real estate advisory teams of Transwestern and Devencore located in 43 U.S. and Canadian metros.

The biggest potential impediments to that growth could be rising build-out costs and regulations on how medical tenants can use space.

The survey (which can be downloaded from here) finds that conditions for the U.S. office market, while expected to improve, might still be down slightly from the previous year’s outlook. The Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, and West regions are expected to exhibit the strongest office demand. Two fifths of the survey’s respondents expect overall leasing velocity and tenant prospects to be flat this year, as tenants require more time to finalize their decisions.

Brokers and analysts are concerned about ebbing consumer confidence, given the upcoming elections and uncertain economy. Optimists, though, anticipate pockets of demand from tech and medical tenants. Brokers also expect tenant densification (measured by leased space per employee) to continue but at a decelerating pace from last year.

“Tenants are getting creative with space efficiency, with many opting to densify space in order to upgrade quality,” the survey observes.

Flat to slightly better conditions could prevail in most markets this year. Charts: Transwestern and Devencore

 

This trend might explain why respondents expect development pipelines to be only flat or slightly higher this year, with some markets showing signs of oversupply and rising construction costs. However, tenant leasing will remain intensely competitive, with concession packages staying at least even with 2019 or a bit higher, according to 81% of survey respondents.

About the same percentage think investment interest and pricing will be flat or rise slightly in 2020, and nearly three-fifths (56%) foresee flat capitalization.

The survey also looks at the markets for medical offices, industrial, and Canada’s office market. Its findings include the following:

•The medical office sector will “handsomely” outperform in 2020, with leasing activity, tenant walk throughs, asking rents and development all expected to be higher this year.

•Half of the respondents expect conditions for industrial to be healthy, albeit with slight deceleration in leasing velocity. And while brokers see some overbuilding occurring in markets like Houston and Dallas-Fort Worth, “generally, low supply, coupled with high demand from ecommerce, is forecasted to drive the market.”

•With the exception of Alberta, Canada’s major provinces—Ontario, British Columbia, and Quebec—should see leasing velocity and tenant prospects pick up this year. However, tenants are now taking anywhere from seven to 12 months to sign midsized deals. 

Related Stories

Market Data | Feb 10, 2016

Nonresidential building starts and spending should see solid gains in 2016: Gilbane report

But finding skilled workers continues to be a problem and could inflate a project's costs.

Market Data | Feb 9, 2016

Cushman & Wakefield is bullish on U.S. economy and its property markets

Sees positive signs for construction and investment growth in warehouses, offices, and retail

Market Data | Feb 5, 2016

CMD/Oxford forecast: Nonresidential building growth will recover modestly in 2016

Increased government spending on infrastructure projects should help.

Market Data | Feb 4, 2016

Mortenson: Nonresidential construction costs expected to increase in six major metros

The Construction Cost Index, from Mortenson Construction, indicated rises between 3 and 4% on average.

Contractors | Feb 1, 2016

ABC: Tepid GDP growth a sign construction spending may sputter

Though the economy did not have a strong ending to 2015, the data does not suggest that nonresidential construction spending is set to decline.

Data Centers | Jan 28, 2016

Top 10 markets for data center construction

JLL’s latest outlook foresees a maturation in certain metros.

Market Data | Jan 20, 2016

Nonresidential building starts sag in 2015

CDM Research finds only a few positive signs among the leading sectors.

Market Data | Jan 20, 2016

Architecture Billings Index ends year on positive note

While volatility persists, architecture firms reported healthy performance for 2015.

Market Data | Jan 15, 2016

ABC: Construction material prices continue free fall in December

In December, construction material prices fell for the sixth consecutive month. Prices have declined 7.2% since peaking in August 2014.

Market Data | Jan 13, 2016

Morgan Stanley bucks gloom and doom, thinks U.S. economy has legs through 2020

Strong job growth and dwindling consumer debt give rise to hope.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021