Apartment Volume Slides 17% in July

The frantic apartment transaction market of the past few years may finally be slowing.

With $9 billion in transaction activity in July, apartment sales fell 17%, according to New York–based commercial research firm Real Capital Analytics (RCA).

RCA attributed the decline in apartment sales activity to a drop-off in portfolio and entity-level transactions, which fell 65% to $1.2 billion. But RCA noted other problems as well in its report.

Read entire article here in MultiFamily Executive.

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Construction Lenders All-In for Apartments

Banks are eager to lend money to apartment developers to build new apartments. “We still get a number of bids for every deal—four to six or more,” says Michael Riccio, co-head of national production for CBRE Capital Markets.

Construction lenders seemed on the brink of tightening their lending standards earlier this year. Experts worried too many apartments were already under construction and vacancy rates were about to rise. But this spring, demand for apartment properties continued to grow, powering yet another strong season of rising rents—and construction lenders are eagerly making loans to new development projects.

Read entire article here in National Real Estate Investor.

Carried Interest Unexpectedly Re-emerges for CRE

WASHINGTON, DC—Congress has been trying to change carried interest’s tax characterization for years and in some instances, came rather close to suceeding. More recently, the issue died down — at least on the Hill — as the conversation shifted to comprehensive tax reform.

‘Carried interest’ is safe for now, has been the unspoken message.

Last week that message changed.

On Wednesday the Internal Revenue Service quietly proposed a rule that would effectively do what numerous proposed acts and measures could not: ban companies such as private equity firms from converting the management fees they receive from their investors — fees that would normally be taxed as ordinary income — into capital contributions invested in their funds. These are taxed at a much lower tax rate.

Read the entire article on GlobeSt.com  here.

The Oil Impact on Commercial Real Estate

Perhaps more so than any other industry, oil and its pricing volatility impacts all elements of the U.S. economy, both positively and negatively. Looking at it from a macroeconomic level, higher oil prices are good for some industries, and yet bad for others—and the same goes for lower prices. So overall, how does oil and energy affect the commercial real estate profession? Well, almost in the exact same way, if you break it down.

According to recent statistics from the U.S. Energy Information Administration., U.S. oil production will grow to 9.31 million barrels daily by 2016, so the industry is still healthy production-wise. But for the past few years, prices have remained low and are expected to remain steady or even decline for the foreseeable future. Where this has the greatest impact for commercial real estate is in the retail sector. It’s a simple equation: Reduced gas prices cause a boost in discretionary income and the end result is additional spending for the country. Money that would be typically earmarked towards filling car and home gas tanks now remains in the wallets of U.S. consumers and retailers are the clear beneficiaries.

To read entire article published at National Real Estate Investor click here.