Real estate cap rates in the USA - October 2012

Steve Felix is a weekly blogger on institutional real estate and other topics.  He has a knack for finding and distilling important information.  On November 30, 2012, he posted information on real estate capitalization rates that he gleaned from a recent report prepared by the folks at Real Capital Analytics.  Here is what he had to say:

  • Hotels:  Nationwide, cap rates for hotels have remained relatively flat in 2012 at an average of 7.7%.
  • Apartments:  The capital shift to higher yielding markets has caused national cap rates to rise in the mid/high-rise sector, although average yields for garden properties have held firm and changed little over the past six months.
  • Retail:  While average cap rates on strip centers have fallen to 7.6% nationally, properties with the right anchor and location can command well below that.
  • Industrial:  Nationally cap rates continue to witness compression and, at an average of 7.6%, have reached lows not seen since late 2008.
  • Office:  Average cap rates nationally, on CBD (Central Business District) acquisitions, have risen since Q1'12 with fewer trophy sales to pull down the average and more secondary market sales that push the average up.
H. Pike Oliver

Born and raised in the San Francisco Bay Area, H. Pike Oliver has worked on real estate development strategies and master-planned communities since the early 1970s, including nearly eight years at the Irvine Company. He resided in the City of Irvine for five years in the 1980s and nine years in the 1990s.

As the founder and sole proprietor of URBANEXUS, Oliver works on advancing equitable and sustainable real estate development and natural lands management. He is also an affiliate instructor at the Runstad Department of Real Estate at the University of Washington.

Early in his career, Oliver worked for public agencies, including the California Governor’s Office of Planning and Research where he was a principal contributor to An Urban Strategy for California. Prior to relocating to Seattle in 2013, Oliver taught real estate development at Cornell University and directed the undergraduate program in urban and regional studies. He is a member of the Urban Land Institute, the American Planning Association and a founder and emeritus member of the California Planning Roundtable.

Oliver is a graduate of the urban studies and planning program at San Francisco State University and earned a master’s degree in urban planning at UCLA.

https://urbanexus.com
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