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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.

Vanbarton Healthcare Group and Tramview Capital Management Joint Venture Plan $100 Million Investment into Healthcare Properties Nationwide

Vanbarton Healthcare Group, a newly formed operating division of New York City-based real estate investment manager Vanbarton Group LLC, is teaming with Tramview Capital Management in a joint venture targeting healthcare investments in select markets throughout the country.

Earlier this year, Vanbarton Group launched a healthcare division led by industry veterans Steve Leathers and Sean Leahy. Vanbarton Healthcare Group plans to acquire high quality medical office and specialty healthcare properties in growing markets throughout the US. With its healthcare joint venture partner Tramview, the division is targeting approximately $100 million of healthcare investments in the coming quarters.

The venture’s first closing consists of two medical office buildings totaling approximately 19,000 square feet in Port Charlotte and Venice, Florida which are fully leased to one of the largest providers of eye care services in Southwest Florida.

The acquisition included the flagship location for Community Eye Centers located adjacent to two major acute care hospitals with over 500 beds in Port Charlotte, Florida. The second location in Venice, Florida is located on the Tamiami Trail Road, a major route along Western Florida with approximately 41,000 cars passing per day. Each of these properties benefit from significant demographic tailwinds with both above average population growth and disproportionately high over 65 population who are large consumers of ophthalmic care.

“The recent Florida closings are indicative of Vanbarton Healthcare Group’s strategy of identifying overlooked pockets of value in an increasingly popular healthcare investment arena,” said company principal Steve Leathers. “Both properties offer steady cash flow with minimal landlord obligations coupled with attractive annual rental increases.”

The Vanbarton and Tramview joint venture will continue to seek similar opportunities in the healthcare real estate vertical in strong markets throughout the United States.

“The acquisition of these two well-located properties aligns with our strategy to aggregate well leased, quality medical office assets in U.S. markets with strong fundamentals,” said Rob Davies, Managing Partner of Tramview Capital Management. “Vanbarton has built a first-rate team, and we are thrilled to partner with them in executing this investment strategy.”

Vanbarton Group, LLC, is a vertically integrated real estate investment manager for global institutional investors. The New York-based firm has approximately 50 employees located in several offices throughout the country including New York, San Francisco and Seattle. For more information visit vanbartongroup.com.

Tramview Capital Management is a value-oriented real estate investment management firm focused on investing in institutional quality real estate in targeted growth markets across the U.S. Tramview was formed in 2020 and is currently investing its second comingled fund. Tramview leadership has overseen and managed approximately $5 billion of equity invested globally across all property types and throughout the capital stack on behalf of institutional clients (e.g. pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, endowments, foundations) and high net worth individuals. For more information, visit http://www.tramview.com.

 

Source: PRWeb

The Medical Office Sector Continues To Hold Steady

The medical office sector couldn’t be in better shape despite fears of the impact from telemedicine and given the demand for health care, the industry should be robust over the next 12 months, according to analysts.

A segment known for its stability and resistance to recessions set record highs for asking rents in 2021 as vacancies decreased–a trend expected through the next year and beyond. Development of new medical office buildings continues after a slowdown at the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, and for quality properties on the market, investors are gobbling them up quicker than ever. That’s coming off record highs in sales volume and pricing in 2021.

None of that demand is a surprise given an aging population along with migrations and relocations that have picked up since the start of the pandemic in 2020.

Maddie Holmes, a New York-based senior research health care analyst for JLL, said medical office absorption hit a record in 2021 at 18.5 million sq. ft. on a trailing fourth-quarter basis–nearly two times the typical rate going back to 2019 and previous years. That demand continues to be strong in 2022 despite telemedicine becoming a bigger part of the health care landscape.

“Health care is a contact sport in that you have to see your physician,” said Bryan Lewitt, a managing director for healthcare in JLL’s Southern California office. “Telemedicine and Facetime and other avenues of technology aren’t enough because they’re not diagnostic. When the hospitals closed because of COVID, most people delayed their health care visits, procedures. That has created a huge demand for these next two years.”

Travis Ives, an executive director with Cushman & Wakefield who heads its U.S. Healthcare capital markets team, said telehealth has even helped the medical office segment because it connects patients with physicians.

“That makes it more likely that a serious problem will be diagnosed and require treatment,” Ives said. “That treatment is going to occur in a medical office building rather than in an emergency situation like in a hospital. There’s just so much health care that can’t be delivered over the phone. It’s become another component to the delivery care continuum, but not something that’s going to replace medical offices.”

The State Of Medical Office Occupancies

During the pandemic when there was a slowdown in construction starts, coupled with those high rates of absorption, occupancy for medical offices moved from 91.3 percent during the first quarter of 2020 to 91.7 percent at the start of the first quarter of 2022, Holmes said.

Shawn Janus, national director of Healthcare Services for Colliers, reported five of the 10 leading U.S. markets started 2022 with vacancy rates lower than the national average of 8.3. percent. Boston had the lowest vacancy rate at 6.3 percent, followed by New York, 6.8 percent. Miami, Philadelphia, and Chicago were below the national average while Los Angeles was just above it. On the other side, Dallas and Houston had the highest vacancy rates among leading markets at 10.9 percent and 12.5 percent, respectively. Atlanta and Washington, D.C. exceeded 9 percent, Janus said.

“I think you’re seeing vacancy in older medical buildings that are now picking up office tenants, while class-A and class-B (medical offices) have lower vacancy. And if they are strictly medical they do much better,” said Susan Wilson, a healthcare real estate advisor for Lee & Associates and vice president of Lee Healthcare.

Medical office rents historically grow at a steady rate of 2 percent to 3 percent year–over-year, but that pattern is being challenged by current conditions.

“There’s very little supply coming online, and we have already fallen below 10 percent vacancy, which is not a healthy market for tenants,” Lewitt said. “The landlords are going to have a lot of leverage, plus you have increased construction costs that will make it difficult for providers to relocate. I suspect that rents are going to continue to go up because 80 percent of tenants renew their lease in health care. It’s a very sticky business.”

During the BOMA International’s Medical Office Buildings + Healthcare Real Estate Conference held in May in Nashville, Ives said this was the first time that every meeting they took with medical office building owners focused on rental growth.

“They are starting to push their annual escalations and wondering how far they can push their rents,” Ives said. “Most of them have portfolios that are getting up to 90 percent to 95 percent occupied and are starting to think ‘we may as well be asking for it at this point.’ I think rent growth will run hot here for a little bit. As long as vacancy remains tight and inflation is relatively high, I think you will see rent growth running higher than it has historically. Where it used to be the norm to ask for 2.5 percent to 3 percent annual increases on a new lease, in a lot of markets now it’s 3.5 percent to 4 percent-plus. That might not be a big deal in other products but for medical offices those are big escalations.”

Janus said there’s a lot of discussion with tenants about sharing inflation risks since a 2 percent increase doesn’t compensate owners costs with inflation currently running at 8 percent.

“I have heard 4 percent fixed-rate increases, which I have never seen in 20-plus years in this space,” Janus said. “There has been talk about going to CPI and doing it in a risk-sharing manner.”

While leases of 10 to 15 years give owners a security of income, they are looking at shorter term leases so they can bring it back up to the market given the volatility and inflation, Janus said.

“Providers are asking if we want shorter-term leases because inflation is high right now and when it comes back down, do we want to be caught in a 10-year lease that continues to escalate,” Janus said. “And if we can reset, the market may come back down.”

With this environment, Janus said some tenants are looking at whether they should now own their buildings rather than lease them.

There are limits, however, to how much medical office rents can grow, according to Chris Jacobson, a healthcare real estate advisor for Lee & Associates and vice president of Lee Healthcare.

“It’s never going to go through the roof,” Jacobson said. “They can only afford what they can afford with reimbursement from insurance. They can only see so many patients and do so many procedures a day. It’s not like they can sell more coffee.”

Lee Asher, who leads the Healthcare & Life Sciences Capital Markets at CBRE, cited how rental rates are trending up because of rising construction costs and increased tenant improvements. Rental rates across the country have been in the low $20s on a triple net basis while new construction is in the low $30s on a triple net basis, he said.

“If you’re an existing tenant that used to be in the low $20s and your alternative is to relocate to a new building that’s going to be $30, you’re going to think hard about staying,” Asher said. “The landlords recognize that and are able to push rates at their buildings to mid-$20s on a triple-net basis.”

For those who want to relocate, a tenant improvement package to upgrade and do a full build-out for new space is about $100 a sq. ft. and $150 if it’s specialized, Asher said. The tenants can stay where they’re at, and the landlord will increase rents and give $10 a sq. ft. in tenant improvements for paint, carpet and millwork.

“If you’re an existing owner, you’re probably at 85 percent to 90 percent retention,” Asher said. “The question is if you have a vacancy in your building, how do you fill it if no one is moving. What we are seeing is there’s still a lot of consolidation and expansion among physician groups. The No. 1 reason I hear from our leasing folks as to why someone would relocate is they’ve grown out of their space and the building can’t accommodate them. It creates a vacancy in the building, but there are other tenants expanding as well that can backfill that space.”

Entering 2022, average net asking rents for medical office space increased by 1.7 percent over 2021 to $22.61 per sq. ft., which is a new high, Janus said. Rent growth in 2021 was strongest in Los Angeles at 3 percent, followed by Chicago and New York with 2.2 percent.

Los Angeles has the highest average net asking rents at $35.13 per sq. ft. Boston and New York were the next highest at $26.70 per sq. ft. and $26.11 per sq. ft., respectively. Rents in the remaining markets range from $20 to $25 per sq. ft., Janus said.

The Medical Office Investment Sales Climate

The medical office sector is building off a record year in 2021 for sales that resulted in $15.4 billion in transaction volume, according to Todd Perman, vice chairman of global healthcare services for Newmark. Perman said he doesn’t expect hospitals to use general offices as much going forward when employees can work from home.. That was a 23 percent increase over 2020 and 142 percent increase over 10 years. The price at $358 per sq. ft. reached its highest value in 20 years. Cap rates have compressed to the lowest average in more than 20 years at 5.9 percent. Private equity, strong medical office occupiers, and shifting demographics contributed to the banner year, Perman said. Because of recession resiliency, new domestic and foreign investors are seeking out acquisitions, he added.

“In recessionary periods, there’s always been a flight to quality and health care is one of those areas people fly to,” Perman said. “They flock to invest in health care when other areas like retail and other sectors are not performing as well, and there’s more risk in those sectors. We have seen through the pandemic that we have new investors in this space and billions of dollars invested on top of what was already here because of that flight to quality.”

Private equity interests led the way accounting for 63 percent of sales volume, according to Revista. PE investors also made up 75 percent of the sellers.

“There is a lot more money going after buildings than there are buildings for sale,” Wilson said. “If an investor wants to sell the building, it will probably never make the market if it’s fully leased. If it’s 100 percent medical and good credit tenants, it will be gone in a week.”

Janus said pricing was highest in the West and Northeast at $515 and $420 per sq. ft. The Southwest was third at $361 per sq. ft. The Midwest has the lowest average pricing of the six U.S. regions at $280 per sq. ft., he said. There have been sub-4 percent cap rates for prime medical office buildings, he said.

Jacobson said he recently saw a 2.7 cap rate in California.

Analysts said they don’t think the new cap-rate lows can sustain themselves but flatten out. There’s no shortage of capital, and there’s a lot of competition for assets and thus a positive outlook for medical office demand.

Lewitt added, however, that given inflation at 8 percent and rising interest rates, there’s some pause at the moment among investors to figure out the returns.

 

Source: Wealth Management