Posts

MOBs Continue To See Demand As They Adapt To Market Changes

The medical office building (MOB) sector continues to be favored by investors as a stable asset despite real estate challenges and disruptions brought on by the pandemic, according to JLL’s (Chicago) new Healthcare and Medical Office Perspective.”

The recent report explores key themes impacting U.S. healthcare systems and medical office owners, including labor challenges, payor and reimbursement pressures, elevated costs, and industry disruptions

“Facilities offer both risks and opportunities to healthcare providers, and, despite the challenges, the critical nature of healthcare and large tailwinds from a growing and aging population continue to make healthcare real estate one of the most stable asset classes for investors,” Jay Johnson, National Practice Leader, Healthcare Markets, JLL, said in a press release.

Specifically, medical office occupancy is relatively stronger than the commercial office sector and was significantly less disrupted by pandemic. Medical office asking rents averaged 2 percent growth year over year for the past five years and reached an average $23 per square foot triple net by mid-year 2022, reports JLL.

Medical office sales reached $9.2 billion in the first half of 2022 after a record performance and investor interest in 2021. JLL anticipates 2022 to close at another record year. The strong demand for healthcare services and the continued shift to outpatient care is expected to assure healthy investor appetite for MOBs.

 

Source: healthcare design

Medical Office Commercial Real Estate Continues To Gain Strength

Any medical facility likes to hear about improving conditions. That’s exactly what medical office buildings are experiencing: improved fundamentals that make property owners, investors, and operators healthy.

Colliers has a Q3 2022 report on healthcare real estate that covers performance in the top 100 U.S. markets.

“Despite economic concerns and industry challenges, the medical office property sector (MOB) continues to go from strength to strength, setting record highs for asking rents, sales volume, and pricing over the past four quarters,” read the report’s overview. “Demand is outpacing supply, vacancy remains tight, and capitalization (cap) rates have remained relatively stable. As a result, development activity is gaining momentum, reflecting confidence in the sector.”

But it comes with a caveat: the healthcare industry they depend on isn’t feeling so rosy. Pricing pressures are under way, and MOB owners that could mean monitoring and potential course of treatment.

On the plus side, average vacancy in the top 100 metros in the first half of 2022 was 8%. That was 40 basis points below the same period the previous year. The top 10 markets ranging from 6.3% in Boston to Houston’s 12.3%.

Top 100 average Los Angeles had the highest net MOB asking rents at $36.85 per square foot. That was quite the outlier.

“However, none of the other top 10 metros have an average MOB rent higher than $30 per square foot,” the report said. “Boston and New York are the next highest at $26.26 per square foot and $26.19 per square foot, respectively.” Although numbers for the lowest prices in the top 10 didn’t appear, a graph clearly showed that four—Atlanta, Boston, Dallas, and Philadelphia—were significantly below the national average.

To try pacing demand, construction rose, with completions of 14 million square feet in the four quarters ending with Q2 2022. That was up from the 13.7 million square feet from the previous 12-month period. MOB under construction rose more sharply, from 30.9 million to 37.1 million square feet.

And investor demand was strong at $17.2 billion in the four quarters ending with Q2 2022, the highest on record. Though that was largely due to the last quarter of 2021, which according to an included graph stood far above other quarters.

MOB is largely in a position to weather economic storms, as medical care is something difficult for many people to forego. But practitioners are also eying costs.

“In the face of reduced income and, in some cases, operating losses, some providers are cutting staff despite an overall shortage of employees in the healthcare industry.”

That would suggest real estate overhead will also be under scrutiny.

As an increasing amount of MOB is taken up by larger organizations—hospitals, HMOs, and other big operators—lowering those costs are likely to be on their agendas, and they have fiscal muscle to negotiate hard.

 

Source: GlobeSt.

MOBs’ Transaction Volume Slows In Q2 2022 But It’s Hardly a Hindrance

A slight slip in medical office transactions in Q2 2022 compared to Q2 2021 levels is not indicative of the continued interest and investment in medical office real estate.

In 2022, according to Q2 Medical Office Market Update from Brown Gibbons Lang & Company (BGL), medical office buildings and ambulatory surgical centers will continue to emerge as the “most attractive assets” within the industry.

“Demand for outpatient clinics continues to increase due to advancements in medical technologies, patient preferences, and financial incentives,” according to BGL’s report. “In search of a stable investment option, we predict more institutional and retail investors will direct capital toward the medical office market for the remainder of 2022.”

Christopher Cumella, co-founder, Cypress West Partners, tells GlobeSt.com that capital markets have paused with the uncertainty in the market, particularly in terms of debt.

“As long as that remains uncertain transactions will be slower,” Cumella said. “Especially when coming off records years it will feel even slower. The Fed’s monetary policy is creating a bid-ask spread between buyers and sellers, which might need some time to close that gap.”

A ‘Red-Hot’ Past Decade

Michael Dettling, Principal, Healthcare Real Estate Services, Avison Young, tells GlobeSt.com that the medical office market has been red-hot for both institutional and private investors for the past decade. Investors are drawn to the steady performance of medical offices with low vacancy, strong tenant credit, long lease terms and low tenant turnover resulting in high property valuations.

“Medical office sales slowed a bit in Q2 2022 with the rise in interest rates and following a torrid end of 2021 which likely pulled some sales forward resulting in a weakened first half of 2022,” said Dettling.

Dettling said another factor for the strong sales late in 2021 was the pent-up demand for deployment of capital following the weak COVID-period sales.

“With medical office values remaining high and cap rates compressed, sales will moderate for the next 12 months as investors monitor the economy and rate movement,” Dettling said.

Medical Office ‘Proven’ Resilient

Mitch Creem, Principal at GreenRock, tells GlobeSt.com that investors have always seen medical office buildings as a haven during uncertain financial times, primarily due to their historically proven resiliency during market downturns.

“There are many medical office buildings today still owned by physician groups or syndications looking for capital partners to help finance property upgrades and modernization,” Creem said. “In many cases, physicians are eager to monetize their real estate equity holdings to provide dividends to those groups or provide funds for succession planning and retirements. Similarly, many U.S. hospitals own medical office buildings on or near their campuses, but those assets are in need of major improvements to attract and retain physicians and patients. Partnering with real estate investment trusts and funds to obtain capital for those updates is crucial today given declining hospital profits and cash flows.”

Creem said, additionally, these MOBs will remain desirable investments in light of the continuing growing aged population and a shift of medical care toward lower-cost outpatient settings.

Average Price Per Square Foot Increased

BGL reported that medical office properties accounted for 22.8% of Q2 2022 office transactions—down 3.1% from the same quarter last year.

Year-over-year transaction volume dropped to $2.94 billion from $3.28 billion, a 10.4% decrease. There was a 20% increase in the average price per square foot ($356) from a year ago.

Real Estate Investment Trust (REITs), private equity, and institutional investors continue to raise and deploy sizable capital into the commercial healthcare real estate industry space.

Residents Seek Services ‘Closer to Home’

CommercialEdge’s manager Doug Ressler tells GlobeSt.com, that according to Yardi’s most recent data, more than 16 million square feet of properties that include some types of medical offices are currently under construction.

“Furthermore, as the U.S. population is aging, demand for MOBs is poised to grow in the coming years, especially in suburban centers, where residents will seek services closer to home,” Ressler said. “We are getting more calls from investors in other segments of real estate looking to pivot into medical office due to trends we are seeing in the general office. We are wondering if more competitive bid environments could keep pricing steady,” Thomas Allen, founder and CEO of Practice Real Estate Group, tells GlobeSt.com,

 

Source: GlobeSt.