Secular themes and investment implications
Let’s look at how cyclical and secular trends may play out across key commercial real estate sectors across regions, from those enjoying tailwinds to the most stressed.
RESIDENTIAL
Residential housing will likely benefit from long-term trends such as urbanization, increasing household formations, and rising costs of home ownership. Student housing may benefit as more learners go abroad to schools in the U.S., U.K., Australia, and other countries. Supply remains below historical levels and we anticipate limited price declines and healthy rental growth.
With banks sidelined, we see attractive opportunities to lend to development and value-add projects. On the equity side, we see potential in newer properties in select urban gateway markets at less expensive entry points.
Investors may benefit from diversification into areas such as core and core-plus properties and developments near leading universities. As with other sectors, multifamily and student housing will likely benefit as investments flow from office and retail markets.
LOGISTICS
Few areas have benefited more from the coronavirus pandemic than logistics. E-commerce should continue to drive demand for industrial storage and distribution assets over the secular horizon. Consumer desire for quick deliveries is driving demand in urban areas. Tenants increasingly want new, more modern facilities with smaller carbon footprints, especially in Europe.Footnote3 Nearshoring is catalyzing demand in new regions and near ports, while regulatory restrictions limit the supply of land.
Prices for logistics facilities have already declined across mature markets, dropping 10% in the U.S. and 20% in Europe. Limited supply and outsize rental growth suggest the sector may be among the first to see compression of capitalization rates. Where pricing has neared a cyclical trough, investors may even consider accepting negative leverage (when debt decreases an investor’s net operating income) given the sector’s growth prospects.
DATA CENTERS
Growing demand for data center capacity is among the most powerful secular trends in the global economy. Capacity in Europe significantly lags the U.S., and latency and digital-sovereignty requirements necessitate local facilities.
However, few platforms can credibly combine continent-wide real estate development know-how with the technical expertise and experience needed to develop, lease, and operate data centers. This material barrier to entry creates an exceptional opportunity to meet demand in the highest-growth markets for facilities that can store and process vast amounts of data.
LODGING
The hotel sector has recovered from the pandemic-induced downturn and remains resilient despite a deteriorating economic backdrop and rising operating costs. While business travel may slow, we believe tourism will continue to spur demand, including from Japanese and Chinese travelers. Sustainability concerns should also boost energy-efficient and eco-friendly operations.
Lodging has traditionally relied more heavily on commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) and regional banks for financing. But the contraction in these sources of finance could create attractive opportunities for lenders capable of underwriting these operationally complex real estate assets.
RETAIL
In recent years, the growth of e-commerce has pushed down retail rents and valuations. As we expect recession to tamp down spending in the U.S., businesses providing nonessential products appear most vulnerable to further declines. In contrast, we don’t expect significant further correction in prices of Class A assets.
We believe investors should focus on multitenant properties in prime locations. These have proven resilient, and investors have been gradually returning, even though rental growth is likely to be muted. Equity investments in shopping centers anchored by grocery stores and retail properties in traditional, prime locations appear attractive in the U.S., while debt investments for assets such as these may be preferable in Europe.
OFFICES
No property sector has been hit harder than office buildings. The pandemic normalized remote working, which we expect will continue in the U.S. In Europe, by contrast, workers have generally returned to the office, particularly those going to modern offices with desirable working environments. As a result, our research suggests that clearing prices for U.S. office assets today are down by 25% to more than 40% from 2021 levels versus declines of 15% to 20% for office properties in Europe and Asia-Pacific, which have higher occupancy levels. With this backdrop, we expect to see increasing distressed sales in the U.S., versus selective and limited sales in European and Asian markets.
Going forward, we see a trifurcation of the office sector. Best-in-class assets – buildings with low carbon footprints, appealing amenities, alluring locations, and high occupancy – will likely weather the storm. We also see opportunity in “brown-to-green” investments that target Class B+ and A- properties, especially in prime locations in Europe and Asia-Pacific. However, we expect mid-quality structures will require upgrades in order to survive, while the lowest-quality assets will become obsolete, leaving owners facing big losses.
- We anticipate that reduced liquidity, pressure on fundamentals, and geopolitical tensions will cause short- to medium-term distress. Rapid interest rate increases in the U.S. have led to defaults, regional banking crises, and stricter lending standards. Europe faces an energy crisis and uncertainty from the war in Ukraine, while Asia-Pacific experiences geopolitical tensions. Real estate loans totaling some $2.4 trillion globallyFootnote1 will mature over the next few years, forcing a day of reckoning.
- We favor new loan origination and purchases of existing loans – including transitional lending. We believe investors should take a broad approach to debt, but go narrow and deep on equity investments. Investors should focus on high-conviction, tactical deployment into stressed and deeply discounted assets facing immediate liquidity pressures, in our view. Overall, we prefer a mix of cyclically distressed assets and properties benefiting from secular themes.
- Private credit and special situations will gain prominence. Distressed banking sectors present opportunities to seize market share from nonbank lenders. We see potential in commercial real estate lending, loan portfolio sales, nonperforming loans, and rescue capital. Investors may benefit from high quality assets with lower loan-to-value ratios and attractive spreads, while negatively perceived commercial mortgage-backed securities may offer high yields at potentially significant discounts.
- Market volatility will provide relative value investment opportunities across debt and equity markets, both public and private. Global platforms are well-positioned to make tactical trades and exploit pricing discrepancies between public and private markets.
- We see the greatest opportunities in the residential, logistics, and data center sectors in the U.S., Europe, and the Asia-Pacific region. However, these sectors will evolve in diverse ways in different regions.
We’re in a challenging macroeconomic environment that requires versatility, patience, and a long-term perspective. We believe investors should lean into the target-rich opportunity set in real-estate-related credit over the near term, while remaining strategic and patient in equity. For long-term investors, we believe that equity strategies focused on assets that will benefit from secular trends – including demographics, digitalization, and decarbonization – will drive value creation.
1 JLL, Morgan Stanley, CBRE Return to content↩
2 PIMCO as of 31 March 2023 Return to content↩
3 Green Street, April and May 2023 Return to content↩