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Office Values Plunge while Cities Push for Housing Conversions

Office Values Plunge while Cities Push for Housing Conversions

FromReal Estate News: Real Estate Investing Podcast


Office Values Plunge while Cities Push for Housing Conversions

FromReal Estate News: Real Estate Investing Podcast

ratings:
Length:
5 minutes
Released:
May 30, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

It’s another dose of bad news for office space providers. Researchers had previously estimated that remote work would take a 28% bite out of office values by 2029, but they apparently underestimated the impact. They are now predicting the decline will be closer to 44%. On the flip side of that coin, a drop in values will also make it easier for at least some of those buildings to be converted to badly needed housing, with the help of government incentives.   Hi, I'm Kathy Fettke and this is Real Estate News for Investors. Please remember to subscribe to this podcast and leave us a review.   As Bisnow reports, researchers had reported last year that office values would lose about $500 billion in value over ten years, from 2019 to 2029. Now those academic researchers from New York University and Columbia University are saying that office values have already surpassed that amount in just three years, from 2019 through last year. (1)   Half a Trillion Dollar Loss in Value   In New York City, values were down about $70 billion. In San Francisco, the loss in value was more like $33 billion. And in Charlotte, it was about $5 billion. Their research estimated a total of $506 billion, or more than half a trillion dollars, in lost value for the entire nation.   Researcher Arpit Gupta says of the update: “The primary reason for the change is that we now estimate a more persistent work from home regime than before.” He also says that researchers took into account work-from-home rates for various cities and says that New York was hit hard because of a high number of remote workers.   Lost Tax Revenue, Lifeless City Centers   Office owners aren’t the only ones grappling with this situation. Cities are also dealing with lost tax revenue and downtown corridors that appear lifeless as office space sits empty. Unfortunately, not all office space is suitable for a conversion, and conversions are expensive.   According to Josh Bernstien of Bernstein Management in the New York Times, just one in 20 office buildings in Washington, D.C. would be suitable for a conversion. And then the conversion might cost a whopping $400 to $500 a square foot. Bernstein says that it’s often the case that building from scratch would cost less. (2)   Most Office Space is Not Suitable for Conversion   The Times cited a Moody’s analysis that found only three percent of the buildings it tracked would be candidates for conversion because the median rent is so low. In New York, the median rent is just $55 a square foot. The analysis shows that only 36% of the office properties roughly match that value. And then on top of that, there’s the cost of the conversion which includes design issues. As the Times reports, offices may have columns that are 20 feet apart, huge open areas, and windows that don’t open.   But, there is a growing trend to turn at least some of the now empty office space into housing. And state and local governments are recognizing the need for incentives. (3)   States, Cities Incentivize Conversion Projects   California is one of them with a $400 million program. Chicago is another. It’s making almost $200 million available for developers in “tax increment financing” or TIFs. The Department of Transportation website describes a TIF as: “A value capture revenue tool.” It says: “The TIF creates funding for public or private projects by borrowing against the future increase in these property-tax revenues. The intent is for the improvement to enhance the value of existing properties and encourage new development in the district.” (4)   Bisnow reports that the opportunities exist for these so-called “Office-to-Resi” projects and that developers are showing interest, so long as there’s public money to subsidize them. A big decline in office values will also help make these conversions more affordable.   Researchers say the key takeaway from all of this is that: “Remote work is shaping up to massively disrupt the value of commercial office real estate in the sh
Released:
May 30, 2023
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

Don’t get caught off guard by market crashes that can take all your money down with them. And don’t miss out on markets where you can build wealth practically overnight. Real Estate News for Investors with Kathy Fettke is the premiere source for savvy real estate investors who want the edge. Stay up-to-date on new laws, regulations, and economic events that affect real estate. Topics include: market trends, economic analysis that affects housing prices, updates on the best rental markets for investing in single-family rentals or multi-unit rentals, turn-key housing standards, the fate of the highly revered 1031 exchange and other tax law affecting investors, self-directed IRA investing and 401k changes, where rents and property values are rising or falling, flipping risks, new Dodd-Frank rules regarding private lending and financing standards, areas with job losses vs job growth, areas that are overbuilt or over-supplied versus areas with low supply and high demand, and how to avoid real estate scams. We'll bring you the latest reports from organizations like the National Association of Realtors, Realty Trac, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, Zillow, Trulia, Redfin, Rent Range, Property Radar, the Norris Group, Peter Schiff, Robert Kiyosaki’s Rich Dad, Suse Orman, Bigger Pockets, Dave Ramsey and more. And we'll help you interpret the data in terms that make sense for your real estate goals, and portfolio. Grow and protect your wealth by staying on the forefront of economic data analysis, expert opinions, innovative investing strategies and profitable investment opportunities. We'll share all the top real estate news stories and the best trade secrets investors should know, so you can stay ahead of the curve and make fully informed real estate decisions. Host Kathy Fettke is Co-CEO of the Real Wealth Network, author of Retire Rich with Rentals and host of the Real Wealth Show on iTunes. She brings decades of media and real estate investing experience, offers her own viewpoints on particular topics, and taps into her network of real estate experts for real world news updates created just for investors like you. Get the real news on real estate on The Real Estate News For Investors Show!