Posts

Dallas-Fort Worth Named The No. 2 Investment Market Nationwide

Commercial real estate investors rank Dallas-Fort Worth as the No. 2 investment market in the U.S., with the Texas metro maintaining its reputation for solid economic fundamentals in the job and population growth categories, CBRE said in its 2021 Americas Investor Intentions Survey.

Popular investment targets include life sciences labs, medical offices, single-family rentals, data centers and cold-storage facilities.

Austin is the only market to outrank DFW in the study, which was completed by surveying 150 U.S.-based real estate investors from Dec. 9 through Feb. 2.

Secondary markets like Dallas and cities across the Sun Belt scored high among CRE investors in the latest survey because of investors’ potential to obtain more equity and income growth in these low-cost, rapidly expanding areas, CBRE said.

Tech-driven markets also scored high among the CRE investor class, with the Top 10 choices for investment outlays including big-time tech players like Austin, Denver, San Francisco and Seattle.

Investors with more assets under their control also showed a greater interest in taking risks in 2021. For the first time since the survey began seven years ago, a larger pool of  investors with assets of more than $50B under their control showed a stronger appetite for opportunities in secondary markets like Dallas over primary, first-tier cities.

Investors looking for high returns also exhibited a greater risk tolerance heading into 2021, with 30% of respondents, up from 16% last year, saying they’re ready to target distressed assets or opportunistic plays in 2021. As they expand their reach, investors expect aggressive pricing in the logistics and multifamily spaces and discounts in most other asset types, according to CBRE.

CRE investors in 2021 also want more diversity when it comes to asset types.  Seventy-two percent of those surveyed said they are looking to invest in one or more alternative asset types this year, up from 54% in 2020.

 

Source: Bisnow

The Dallas-Fort Worth Market: When Physician Real Estate Owners Should Buy And Sell

Dallas-Fort Worth is a unique market for physician real estate owners.

The city’s growing population affords the benefits of a primary market, allowing a practice to operate in a large medical office building in a densely populated area alongside a major freeway all while creating synergies with neighboring providers.

However, given Dallas-Fort Worth is less dense than other major metropolitan areas like San Francisco, Los Angeles, and New York, providers here have a unique opportunity.  Physician groups can actually build their own facility at a reasonable price, allowing them to offer comprehensive services under one roof, providing a more convenient and cost-effective experience for patients.

Many physicians develop their own facility because it allows them to control their destiny, manage their occupancy cost, and become a real estate investor.  Frequently, physicians focus solely on the benefits of flexibility, pride of ownership, and long-term monthly cash flow and haven’t yet determined their long-term strategy for one of their largest investments.

Over the next decade we’ll see many physicians looking towards retirement. With 43% of physicians over the age of 55, near term turnover is imminent. That number is even higher for specialist providers such as Orthopods (52%), Urologists (48%), and Ophthalmologists (48%). Considering 75% of physician-owned practices have just 1-20 providers, physician turnover can have a major impact on a practice. But what does that mean for the real estate?

For many homeowners, if you want to move, you vacate your home and likely sell it for an appreciated value. For many small business owners, you lease from a landlord and operate under a short-term lease. For many commercial business owners, even if you retire, you still maintain equity in the business, which also owns the real estate.

Physician-owned clinical real estate is different. Most commonly, the practice and real estate entities are composed of different partners. If a health system buys your practice, they have little interest in buying your real estate. If a young physician joins your practice, they may not have the financial capability or desire to buy into the real estate, especially with medical school debt at an all-time high. Unlike other businesses where retired owners maintain some equity, if a physician retires, his ownership is liquidated and redistributed to existing or incoming partners.

Let’s say you retired and still own the real estate; you’re no longer in control of your tenant. The practice may continue to operate there, but likely under a short-term lease to maintain flexibility.  If the practice vacates your building, you’re stuck trying to sell a large special-purpose facility.  Most office users don’t need a 20,000 SF facility with a large waiting area and layout suited to delivering healthcare services.

In Dallas-Fort Worth, the current average sale price for vacant medical office buildings between 10,000 and 50,000 square feet is $93 per square foot, and that’s after being on the market ten and a half months. To put this in perspective, the cost to construct a new medical office building can range between $150-$250 per square foot, and the average value of medical office properties structured as investment sales is $299 per square foot.

Based on the numbers, it’s apparent that the best time to sell your real estate is while you remain operating in it, thus positioning it as an investment sale. For owner-occupiers like physician practices, this transaction is known as a sale-leaseback. A sale-leaseback is simply a real estate sale simultaneous with executing a new long-term lease. In this type of transaction, the real estate is often sold to a 3rd party institutional investor seeking a stream of consistent rental cashflow.  Instead of paying rent to yourself, the practice now pays rent to a third-party landlord.

“Even if a real estate sale doesn’t meet your current objectives, addressing potential partnership challenges early will maximize the value and security of your investment.” points out Collin Hart, CEO & Managing Director of ERE Healthcare Real Estate Advisors.

At first, a sale-leaseback may sound similar to a reverse mortgage or a loan. While it’s not quite that, it’s certainly an alternative finance structure.  These sales are commonly used by larger corporations as a way to free up capital for investment in other areas, without carrying debt on their balance sheet. However, for many physician-owned practices, this model can be used strategically. A sale and leaseback gives physicians the ability to cash out of their real estate at a peak in the market.

At the same time, this type of sale solves challenges related to partnership structuring, recruitment, turnover, and succession planning.  With demand for healthcare real estate investments on the rise, these transactions can be structured with limited personal liability, providing flexibility for retirement during the term of the lease, without financial exposure.

Over the last few decades, owning a medical facility has given physicians flexibility; however, divesting of real estate can create opportunities for the future.

 

Source: D CEO Healthcare Magazine