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U.S. Office Investment Hits Largest Full-Year Total Since 2007
Los Angeles – Feb. 24, 2015 — Increased demand for office space, the strongest labor market since 1999, and continued strong interest from investors combined to drive the largest full-year office investment total since 2007, according to the latest research from CBRE Group, Inc.
Total investment volume in U.S. office properties totaled $119 billion in 2014, a 15 percent climb over the previous year.
The year closed with a very active quarter for office property investment, in terms of sales volume. In the fourth quarter of 2014, U.S. office sales volume reached $35.6 billion — 13 percent higher than the previous quarter.
Despite the steady climb in office property acquisitions over the last several years, the 2014 figure was 44 percent below the previous peak of 2007.
Relative to other property types, foreign capital was particularly focused on the office sector, acquiring $17 billion of U.S. office assets in 2014 — representing 45 percent of foreign investment in U.S. commercial real estate.
Within the office sector, foreign capital leaned toward central business district (CBD) properties, with 80 percent of it going to such assets. Canada, Norway, and Hong Kong were the largest sources of international investment capital in 2014, with New York City and Boston the leading markets for foreign office investment.
“The U.S. office market remains a safe haven for foreign investors looking to make their way into the U.S. In 2015, we anticipate total office investment will rise roughly 15 percent,” said Jeanette Rice, Americas head of investment research, CBRE.
U.S. office leasing metrics were also strong, with net office absorption totaling 15.4 million square feet for the quarter, and 52.7 million square feet for the year — the best performance since 2007 and well exceeding the long-term average of about 40 million square feet.
“The U.S. office market ended the year on a strong note,” said Sara Rutledge, director of research and analysis, CBRE. “Office space demand was supported by the tightest labor market conditions seen during the recovery and healthy GDP growth. Looking ahead, the U.S. economy should continue to improve, with tailwinds to consumer spending outweighing headwinds to exports and capital spending. As a result, office market fundamentals should continue to tighten.”
The U.S. office vacancy rate declined another 20 basis points (bps) in the fourth quarter of 2014, to 13.9 percent, which was down 100 bps from year-end 2013. Downtown and suburban vacancy mirrored the overall quarterly decline, falling by 20 bps each, to 11.1 percent and 15.5 percent, respectively.
Gross asking rental rates for office space continued their steady rise in the fourth quarter of 2014, averaging $28.30 per square feet at year end. Following 15 consecutive quarters of rising rents, the U.S. average ended 2014 only 2.4 percent below its 2008 prior peak.
The largest increase in office investment activity in 2014 came from private, non-institutional U.S. investors, a category that includes non-traded REITs. This group acquired $38 billion of office assets — an increase of 26 percent over 2013. Investment by public REITs also rose substantially — by 13 percent to $15 billion.
Trends in cap rates and sales price per square feet also reflect the large amount of capital coming into the sector, as well as the continued improvement in market performance. Over the year ending Q4 2014, cap rates dropped 30 bps to an average of 6.7 percent for all types of office assets.
Total completions of multi-tenant office buildings rose to 8.8 million square feet in the fourth quarter, for an annual total of 22.3 million square feet, which was only half of the long-term average. However, office construction is gaining momentum nationally and across more markets. Office space under construction totaled 88.7 million square feet at year’s end, with 20 markets now experiencing activity at 2 percent or more of standing inventory.
CBRE Group, Inc., a Fortune 500 and S&P 500 company headquartered in Los Angeles, is the world’s largest commercial real estate services and investment firm (in terms of 2014 revenue). The company has more than 52,000 employees (excluding affiliates), and serves real estate owners, investors, and occupiers through more than 370 offices (excluding affiliates) worldwide. CBRE offers strategic advice and execution for property sales and leasing; corporate services; property, facilities and project management; mortgage banking; appraisal and valuation; development services; investment management; and research and consulting. For more information, visit www.cbre.com.
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