News: Appraisal & Consulting

The Workout: Bifurcation and the portfolio - by David Kirk

David Kirk

 

The FED has reached a stabilizing level of economic activity, and will now be watching domestic micro as well as macro indicators for further action, including rate cutting, to achieve so-called soft landing. The FOMC has already implied that the March FOMC meeting will be too soon to expect the first rate cut and acknowledged that the downside rate risk is indeed in the discussions. The FED’s Beige Book report was issued January 24, 2024, compiled since the last report which was issued on November 29, 2023. The 12 Federal districts have reported broadly stabilizing economic activity and presents the anecdotal commentary which informs the FOMC rate decisions based on economic indicators aggregating national data. For commercial property, the outlook has marginally improved, and workouts are occurring without clear pattern.

Bifurcation is the buzz. Whether the hybrid employment or the weakened loan, the two-way is one way to deal with the workplace and work force and the loan and capital stack that supports the built environment. As stewards, we offer our constituencies a choice in the built environment and we are getting the job done!

The portfolio offers options, choices, priorities. The methodology for establishing priorities and balancing risks is idiosyncratic, individualistic and mediative. The rewards are improving as rates in the market improve and as capital sources multiply and accessibility improves.

The professional networks are working hard to share observations and patterns in the commercial property markets. The Counselors of Real Estate have launched the fourth Palooza series of topical zooms, 12 topics for 2024, on market conditions including, among others, property markets, capital markets, taxes, legal and insurance for its members. Major commercial real estate firms are offering online wrap-ups for 2023 and forecasts for 2024 with informed anecdotal context as well as aggregations. Other networks are sharing changing best practices and, increasingly, workout activity. The public sector is well represented on panels, as attendees, and as collateral resources. Memberships within the professional networks are broadly diversified by sector, profession and geography. The candor and detail and anecdotal content are all robust. The built environment is highly dependent on cooperative efforts from a variety of stakeholders. And they are at the table. Public information is the platform. Pro-forma solutions carefully curated and utilized.

So bifurcation is imagined and negotiated. Like the FED’s ongoing commentary, the stakeholders are feeling their way toward the resolution of conflicts between the parties. Much to be done. Stewards of the built environment must balance risks to maintain the assets, upgrade, and market for constituents. All are on a deal-by-deal basis. Often with portfolio considerations. The commonality is clarified by engagement and careful planning, and with demonstrative action. Performance is essential to goals. And yes, the portfolio matters. All parties have portfolio considerations, even though some portfolios are limited.

David Kirk is founder, chief executive officer of Kirk & Co., Boston, Mass.

READ ON THE GO
DIGITAL EDITIONS
Subscribe
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