Inside The “Standoff” Over What Office Buildings are Worth

Article originally posted on HERE on March 13, 2024

How much is an office building in a big city worth these days? No one really knows.

The big picture: Investors have been poised to pounce on depressed office properties for a while now, but there hasn’t been much opportunity for actual deal-making.

  • Yes, but: That’ll probably start to change this year. “This is really evolving. I would say that activity is picking up,” says Cathy Marcus, co-CEO at PGIM Real Estate.

Why it matters: Where these values shake out will provide some clarity for a banking system that’s still a little jittery from last year’s mini-crisis. Banks hold just under 40% of the trillions in outstanding U.S. commercial real estate debt.

Zoom out: The plunge in office values is one of the most well-telegraphed downturns in recent memory, thanks to the rise of both interest rates and remote work. Wall Street loves a good opportunity — and plenty of firms have been raising funds to scoop up office assets on the cheap.

  • But it’s got to be really, really cheap.
  • Often this means buying a building’s debt at a big discount to face value as a means to eventually take control.

But it’s taking a while for banks to decide how to handle situations in which the building is worth less than the loan — some banks want to delay realizing losses for as long as they can, says one real estate investor.

  • According to Scott Rechler, CEO of real estate investing firm RXR: “We are starting to see some movement — not a lot yet — in deals where lenders are willing to start trading at prices that better reflect the substantial discounts that you need, to attract capital to invest in office.”
  • He says that his firm made offers on about $1 billion worth of office loans back in January, but “we haven’t gotten a lot of feedback yet.”

Where it stands: It’ll take some time “for the standoff between buyers and sellers on where values are, to work its way through the system,” says Marcus.

  • Even appraisals are all over the map. “We’ve seen multiple appraisals for the same building be 25% off of each other,” says Rechler.
  • Similarly, in a recent auction where a lender was trying to sell a bond backing an office building, “the [bids] were all over the place between the first round and the second round,” Marcus says.

Between the lines: So far, sale data show that buildings in cities’ central business districts have shed about 40% of their value on average versus the peak in April 2022, according to MSCI Real Assets.

  • But each building is different, and the quality spectrum is incredibly wide. Some of these buildings no longer need to exist; while the most modern, amenity-packed buildings may only see a small dip in value.

What to watch: There’s about $265 billionof U.S. office loans maturing throughout 2024 and 2025, according to data firm Trepp. That’ll force more sales and restructurings. And a few more big deals will catalyze more big deals.

  • “Once investors and lenders have better visibility of where values ultimately land and what structures are being used, I think you’ll start seeing an uptick in trades,” Rechler says. “It’s going to be a process through this year and into ’25.”
Step outside of the major U.S. cities, and the standoff isn’t nearly as pronounced.

State of play: Suburban offices have lost about 17% of their value since the peak, MSCI data show. That’s not what anyone wants for their portfolio, but it’s not nearly as bad as cities’ central business districts (CBDs).

  • The “good” news for regional and local banks: They have much lower exposure to CBD office loans than to suburban ones, according to MSCI.

Behind the scenes: For these smaller, lower-price point buildings (think under $100 million) all-cash buyers started appearing around the third quarter of last year, says Marcus.

  • Since there was very little debt available for office buildings, all-cash buyers were suddenly at an advantage. And they appeared to be non-traditional real estate buyers taking advantage of the leg down in values.
  • “Over the past two to three quarters, when we have sold assets … the common denominator of the list of bidders is that we’ve never heard of any of them. That was one of the most striking things,” Marcus says.

Zoom out: Big-name investors defaulting on once-coveted NYC buildings may get the most headlines — but Marcus has also seen plenty of building owners willing to put up more money to get a loan extension, and avoid default.

  • “Not all investors have the same motivation. Families, who’ve held an asset for generations, and intend to hold it for more generations, are motivated by very different things than a five-year return,” she says.
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