News: Spotlights

The 128/495 market is entering a New Frontier - by David Skinner

David Skinner

I spent the last few days looking through transactions over the last few years, and as I was reliving some of those transactions. I realize how the marketing process for a building from Rte. 128 to I-495 would have been much different. Back then, user sales for vacant buildings were far more common, private equity was less aggressive in making purchase offers especially on vacant buildings, and bidding wars on lease assignments happened far more infrequently. 

There is a trend growing around the 128/495 beltways that will likely never be reversed. Let me explain. 

In the last few months I’ve also had a few assignments that have taken me to New Jersey and parts of the five boroughs of New York. These assignments have led to my making cold calls to scores of property owners whose buildings are not being actively marketed, and what I have found has been astounding. The New York/New Jersey markets have matured far beyond the Greater Boston market because of the sheer volume of product that has been built over the last few years. Not only that, the extremely dense population of the New York Metro attracts international tenants of all kinds. This gives reason for developers and investors of all kinds to pour money into any building that could be improved and rented out, even if the returns look slim. 

This is what the Greater Boston market is facing right now. Tenants are being pushed out of the city because of the multi-family and lab development which are both driving the lease rates up. This is making the market for institutional investors much more attractive. 

What we have seen for the last couple years and we will continue to see over the next couple years will mirror the trend of the New York/New Jersey market. Users who are looking to purchase property in the area will not be able to do it because there will be nothing available. The difference between the history of industrial real estate and the new frontier of industrial real estate is that in the past, users and investors would cyclically exchange property, depending on how the market was trending and how the economy worked. The new frontier of developers/investors/private equity gobbling up all the real estate presents a material change, and that is what these kinds of buyers are not inclined to sell for any price. 

This presents a whole new world, especially for users. It is not just a matter of time before the market corrects itself and prices start to move back in a direction that is more favorable to a buyer. Markets adjust and pricing changes based upon supply and demand. The supply is down and demand is up across the entirety of the Greater Boston area, and the sector of companies that are buying all the real estate are not the kinds of companies who are interested in selling. 

Here is how you avoid getting overtaken by this trend. 

My recommendation to any owner occupant is to review your real estate requirements and if you have any desire to purchase real estate within the next three years, make a push now to clearly define what you need and the geography in which you are looking, and then start getting aggressive about purchasing what you need. 

There will be a point in our lifetimes where finding institutional real estate to buy will become almost impossible, as it has become almost impossible in the New York/New Jersey market. This is happening around 128/495 that nothing short of an economic collapse would be able to undo, so if you would like to jump out in front of it, buy land and distribution space while it is still available!

David Skinner is an associate at The Stubblebine Company, Lexington, Mass.

READ ON THE GO
DIGITAL EDITIONS
Subscribe
STAY INFORMED FOR $9.99/Mo.
NEREJ PRINT EDITION
Stay Informed
STAY CONNECTED
SIGN-UP FOR NEREJ EMAILS
Newsletter
Columns and Thought Leadership
Shawmut Design and Construction breaks ground on the 195 District Park Pavilion in Providence, RI

Shawmut Design and Construction breaks ground on the 195 District Park Pavilion in Providence, RI

Providence, RI Shawmut Design and Construction celebrated the ceremonial groundbreaking for the 195 District Park Pavilion, marking the start of construction on a facility that will feature year-round dining and support space for park operations. In addition to the 3,500 s/f building, the project will include infrastructure upgrades
The New England Real Estate Journal presents<br> the First Annual Project of the Year Award! Vote today!

The New England Real Estate Journal presents
the First Annual Project of the Year Award! Vote today!

The New England Real Estate proud to showcase the remarkable projects that have graced the cover and center spread of NEREJ this year, all made possible by the collaboration of outstanding project teams. Now, it's time to recognize the top project of 2024, and we need your vote!
Investing in a falling rate environment - by Harrison Klein

Investing in a falling rate environment - by Harrison Klein

Long-term interest rates have fallen by 100 basis points, and the market is normalizing. In December of 2022 I wrote an article about investing in a high interest rate, high inflation market. Since then, inflation has cooled off, and the Fed has begun lowering their funds rate.
The 2024 CRE markets: “The Ups” (industrial) and “The Downs” (Boston class B/C office) - by Webster Collins

The 2024 CRE markets: “The Ups” (industrial) and “The Downs” (Boston class B/C office) - by Webster Collins

The industrial markets have never been stronger. What has happened is that the build out of Devens with new high-tech biotech manufacturing with housing to service these buildings serves as the connector required to really make the I-495 West market sizzle. Worcester has been the beneficiary