Dallas-Based Big Sky Forms $1 Billion Joint Venture With Off-Shore Institutional Investor

Big Sky Medical Real Estate, a Dallas-based healthcare real estate investment management firm led by well-known industry veteran Jason L. Signor, announced this morning that it has formed a $1 billion joint venture with “an off-shore, new-entrant, institutional investor.”

The new venture, which seeks to acquire medical office buildings and surgery centers, was seeded by a $400 million-plus MOB portfolio that was aggregated by the Big Sky Medical platform during the past year.

The formation of the JV was facilitated by Big Sky and the Healthcare Capital Markets and International Capital Markets teams of Newmark Group Inc.

 

Source: HREI

Eight-Building MOB Portfolio In Florida, Texas, Tennessee And North Carolina Sells For $91 Million

Dallas-based CBRE has brokered the $91 million sale of an eight-building medical office portfolio across four states in the Southeast and Texas.

A joint venture between Chicago-based Remedy Medical Properties and Boca Raton, Fla.-based Kanye Anderson Real Estate purchased the properties. Lee Asher, Chris Bodnar, Jordan Selbiger, Ryan Lindsley, Cole Reethof, Sabrina Solomiany and Zach Holderman of CBRE represented the seller, Los Angeles-based Spruce Healthcare, in the transaction.

The 177,000-square-foot portfolio includes five properties in Florida and one each in Texas, North Carolina and Tennessee. The portfolio was fully leased at the time of sale with 11 years of weighted average lease terms remaining. Two-thirds of the overall tenancy features orthopedics, oncology and imaging practices. Other specialties include ophthalmology and dermatology, both of which include ambulatory surgery centers.

 

Source: REBusiness Online

Investors Target Medical Office In Defensive Play

Demand for medical office space has mostly normalized, with investors pouring capital into the asset class in what some experts are calling a defensive strategy.

“While some people continue to practice caution amid the emergence of new COVID-19 variants, ultimately many of these appointments must be fulfilled,” Marcus & Millichap’s Alan Pontius writes in a new report. “All the while, the population is aging, which brings along certain medical realities. These factors together underpin the current strong tenant demand for medical offices.”

While traditional offices saw a major rise in vacancy at the onset of the pandemic, medical office vacancy rose just 80 basis points to 9.5% in 2020.  Availability tightened at the tail end of 2020, which drove the average asking rental rate up to $22 per square foot, an increase of nearly 4% from the end of 2019.  Asking rents were highest in San Francisco, followed by New York City, Los Angeles, San Jose, Miami-Dade, Oakland, San Diego, Orange County, Seattle-Tacoma, and Washington, D.C. Meanwhile, vacancy was lowest in 2021 in San Jose, Portland, Louisville, Seattle-Tacoma, and Salt Lake City.

Supply additions expected this year are on par with 2020 figures, with an estimated 9 million square feet of space projected to open this year. Marcus & Millichap predicts that vacancy will decrease to 9.2%, down 20 basis points and 40 basis points above pre-COVID levels.  Meanwhile, the firm predicts rent growth in the neighborhood of 2.5% to an average of $22.61 per square foot, with six markets predicted to hit levels above $30 per square foot led by the Bay Area, New York, Miami-Dad, and Los Angeles.

Staffing shortages remain a headwind for the sector in the short term, as the health crisis continues to hit healthcare worker payrolls. Stated simply, healthcare workers are burned out, and “medical practices are aware of this dilemma,” according to Marcus & Millichap, adding that 73% of those surveyed in a recent national poll ranked staffing as their largest pandemic-related challenge at the start of this year.

“The inability to onboard staff may keep medical practices from expanding this year, combating what are otherwise strong demand tailwinds,” Pontius says.

 

Source: GlobeSt.