An Allen Matkins/UCLA Anderson Forecast California Commercial Real Estate Survey, unveiled earlier this year, showed that the pandemic-related economic recession is having a mixed effect on California commercial real estate sectors, as this downturn is not due to slackening in housing markets or a stock market crash.
While office space markets
are in a holding pattern and retail markets are on a downward
trajectory, multifamily housing and industrial space continue to grow.
The
biannual survey polled a panel of California real estate professionals
to project a three-year outlook for state commercial real estate and
forecast the potential opportunities and challenges affecting the
industry’s sectors.
Office Developers Take a "Wait-and-See" Approach With the pandemic shifting the use of traditional office space, there is much
uncertainty as to what the future of this sector will look like. Though
panelists are confident about the growth in demand between 2020 and
2023, they are pessimistic about the return on investment in new office
space today. In both Northern and Southern California, panelists believe
that newly built space, in addition to companies reducing their
existing space, will outstrip any near-term increased demand for new
construction. The conclusion is that the end of the latest office
building boom is at hand, though there will be demand for office
reconstruction and low-rise office
building construction. Across the board, there is a wait-and-see
sentiment, and that portends a downturn in the rate of new development.
Industrial
Comes Roaring Back to Record-High Optimism In the June 2020 survey,
industrial space sentiment dropped slightly but was logical, given the
pandemic. However, vacancy rates have remained extremely low across all
regions surveyed and sentiment about the coming three years shows an
optimism that has not been seen for many years. A dramatic shift in
buying habits to online shopping during the pandemic has likely changed
household purchasing for the future.
Although
panelists are very optimistic about the next three years, their current
building plans are only marginally greater than ambitious pre-pandemic
plans. In both Northern and Southern California, approximately 30% of
the panelists stated that the recession has made them to consider
increasing developments they will undertake. Therefore, the expectation
is for a new wave of warehouse building.
Recession
Creates More Challenges for Retail During the last economic expansion,
retail faced an uphill battle. The current recession tripled down on
that struggle. First, the loss of household income and the
shelter-in-place policies reduced demand for brick-and-mortar retail.
Second, the inability to physically frequent many retail establishments
created a new set of online shoppers.
Third,
increases in the savings rate on the part of households in response to
the recession suggests less spending. Marginal properties may not find
tenants who can pay sufficient rent.
Panelists
believe that retail properties will generate lower, if any, returns in
2023 compared to the end of 2020. New retail property construction is
expected to significantly decline from 2020 through 2023.
Multi-Family
Market Sentiment Continues to Be Mixed Panelists do not see 2023 as
having higher multifamily occupancy compared to today. The markets that
have not improved are either urban areas that have had dramatic declines
in rental rates because of an exodus to more suburban areas (San
Francisco and L.A.) or are generally lower income (like the East Bay and
Sacramento). Overall, multi-family development is still expected to
grow in California as the economy rebounds and housing demand grows
again.
The Survey The
UCLA Anderson Forecast is one of the most widely watched and often-cited
economic outlooks for California and the nation and was unique in
predicting both the seriousness of the early-90s downturn in California
and the strength of the state's rebound since 1993. The Forecast was
credited as the first major U.S.
economic
forecasting group to predict the recession of 2001 and, in March 2020,
it was the first to declare that the recession caused by the COVID-19
pandemic had already begun.
Learn more at uclaforecast.com.