10Oct

Understand how the commercial real estate market navigates the impact of enduring elevated interest rates.

The report from Lee & Associates discusses the implications of the Federal Reserve's "higher for longer" interest rate policy on commercial real estate (CRE) investments in 2025. Following a modest 0.25% rate cut in September 2024, bringing the benchmark to 4.00%-4.25%, the Fed signals cautious easing amid persistent inflation (core at 3.1%, headline at 2.9%) and internal debates on neutral rates (ranging from 2.5% to 4%). This environment shifts CRE from momentum-driven to performance-based strategies, with elevated borrowing costs (often >6%) repricing risk, portfolios, and values. Key themes include structural rate pressures, refinancing crises, sector divergences, cap rate tensions, and adaptive investment approaches.

Key Challenges

  • Persistent Rates and Inflation: Sticky inflation in housing and services keeps rates high, with 10-year Treasuries near 4%. Lenders demand stronger sponsorship, conservative leverage, and NOI stability, leading to tighter spreads and shorter terms. The recent cut offers short-term relief but minimal impact on long-term capital.
  • Refinancing Risk: $1.5 trillion in CRE loans mature by end-2025, prompting short-term extensions. Properties from peak eras face shortfalls, especially in office and multifamily sectors. Markets like Dallas, Atlanta, and Phoenix see stretched debt-service ratios, forcing sales, payoffs, or defaults.

Sector-Specific Impacts

  • Office: Undergoing restructuring with vacancies >20% in cities like Denver, Chicago, and San Francisco (especially Class B/C). Flight-to-quality persists, but even premium assets face tenant risks. Conversions to lab/residential/flex space rise, with trades at 30-70% discounts from peaks.
  • Multifamily: Favored but divergent—urban cores (e.g., New York, Boston, LA) stabilize with low vacancies; Sun Belt oversupply (e.g., Austin, Raleigh) leads to concessions and 10%+ vacancies. High costs, rent caps (e.g., Washington's ~9.7% in 2026), and extended lease-ups complicate deals. Private buyers target below-replacement-value assets.
  • Industrial: Remains strong but cooled, with national vacancy at 7.4%. Big-box absorption slows in Phoenix and Chicago, but infill/last-mile/flex/cold storage thrives in constrained markets due to tenant retention and limited supply.
  • Retail: Resilient with 4.3% national vacancy. Grocery-anchored and experiential assets outperform in Miami, Charlotte, and San Diego. Bifurcation exists: outdated centers in tertiary markets soften, while cash-flowing properties attract private capital.

Cap Rates and Valuation

Cap rates appear stable nationally but mask a buyer-seller standoff—sellers cling to peak pricing, buyers factor in risks. Tension persists into late 2025, especially in multifamily and industrial, with repricing often subtle rather than overt yield shifts.

Investment Strategies for the New Normal

Investors shift from Fed-pivot anticipation to disciplined execution:

  • Prioritize In-Place Cash Flow: Stabilized income hedges against costs and dislocations.
  • Operational Execution: Focus on leasing, expense control, and targeted repositioning over major capex.
  • Underwrite Exits Upfront: Deals must stand alone, assuming full-cycle ownership.
  • Creative Financing: Use seller carrybacks, preferred equity, and hybrids to bridge gaps.
  • Value-Add Focus: Target assets with fixable issues (e.g., leasing friction) without overcapitalizing.

Conclusion

The report emphasizes CRE's maturation in a rate-sensitive era, rewarding pragmatism and local insight. The Fed's cut boosts confidence modestly, but elevated rates are the baseline—opportunities lie in fundamentals, not speculation. Insights from Lee professionals highlight fragmentation and selectivity.

23Aug

The property at 1739 West 9th Street in Upland, California was leased by Ron Mgrublian of Lee & Associates.

Leased: ±25,550 SF (±0.59 Acres) of Land

• Truck Parking Possible

• Fenced Yard with Aggregate

• Water/Power Possible

• Close to 10 and 210 Freeways

15Aug

The ±10,208 Industrial Building Recently sold in the Highly Sought-After Long Beach Business Park

Listed for Sale by Ron Mgrublian and Jeff Coburn, the ±10,208 SF Long Beach Warehouse property recently sold. 

The Long Beach Industrial Submarket vacancy rates remain 41% below those of the Los Angeles Industrial Market, CoStar has the average Long Beach Market Sale Price at $367 PSF.

Ron Mgrublian is a Commercial Real Estate Broker focusing on Industrial Real Estate and Warehouse Properties with the Lee & Associates Los Angeles – Long Beach, Southern California office.

06Aug

Ron Mgrublian gets another Commercial Industrial Warehouse Real Estate deal done at 2148 W. 16th St. in Long Beach, CA.

Another Commercial Industrial Real Estate deal got done on a Ron Mgrublian - Lee & Associates listing at 2148 W. 16th St. in Long Beach, CA.  The property a former food facility features floor drains and one ground level door.  It also has a fenced and paved yard, close to the freeways & ports and is in the Cannabis Zone.  If you have a commercial warehouse property you would like to sell or lease, please contact Ron at rmgrublian@leelalb.com.  See brochure.

05May

Ron Mgrublian of Lee & Associates Completes Another Big Deal, This Time a $3.9 Million Industrial Commercial Real Estate Warehouse Lease.

Ron Mgrublian of Lee & Associates completed a 5 year  lease for a 100,345 square-foot industrial warehouse space located in Rancho Cucamonga, CA.  The value of the lease is approximately $3.9 Million. Mgrublian of Lee & Associates in Long Beach represented the tenant... MORE DETAILS