US CRE Market Insights – March 2024


US CRE Market Insights – March 2024
  • The US Federal Market Operating Committee (FOMC) agreed to hold interest rates steady for the fourth consecutive time at its meeting in January, leaving its benchmark interest rate at a target range of 5.25% to 5.50%.1

  • The 10-year US Treasury notched a sixteen-year high in October and has since eased to just over 4% as of late February. The decline in long-term rates stem from the expectation that the US Federal Reserve (Fed) will not be raising interest rates as many times in 2024 as investors initially thought. The Fed still expects rate cuts to occur in the second half of 2024, but they seem to be delaying any premature cuts until they see signs that inflation has permanently cooled.1

  • Inflation, as measured by the core personal consumption expenditure (PCE) index, declined meaningfully to 2.9% in December but remained higher than the Fed’s 2% goal. As a result, most economists surveyed by the Blue-Chip Economic Indicators are now expecting rate-cuts to occur later into 2024, as well as fewer cuts to happen within the year overall.2,3

  • Within commercial real estate debt, commercial mortgage loan spreads are adjusting, albeit at a slower pace, and at the time of this writing were in the 150 to 215 bps range. Life companies have remained disciplined in their lending standards with most having similar allocations in 2024 compared to 2023.

  • Property transaction volume was down 41% during 4Q 2023 compared to a year earlier. Transaction volume was down 51% in 2023 compared to 2022.4

  • Property values were essentially flat for the past three quarters of 2023. However, property prices still declined by 5.9% in December compared to the previous year.4

  • NCREIF National Property Index (NPI) returned -7.9% in 4Q 2023 compared to a year earlier. Capital appreciation was reported as -11.8%, with income return at 4.3%.5

 

Property sector outlook   

 

4Q 2023 total return

Under construction as % of inventory

4Q 2023 vacancy rate

4Q 2022 vacancy rate

4Q 2023 YoY rent growth

4Q 2022 YoY rent growth

Aegon AM Real Assets sector outlook

Apartment

-7.3%

5.0%

7.6%

6.5%

0.9%

3.9%

Neutral

Industrial

-4.1%

2.4%

5.7%

3.9%

6.7%

10.5%

Neutral

Office

-17.6%

1.2%

13.5%

12.4%

0.8%

1.1%

Most Cautious

Retail

-0.9%

0.5%

4.0%

4.2%

3.4%

4.4%

Neutral

Sources: National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries, CoStar Realty Information Inc., and Aegon Real Assets US. As of December 31, 2023.

 

Apartment

The apartment sector continues to face cyclical supply headwinds with demand fundamentals remaining healthy. While supply headwinds are affecting the majority of the top 50 markets, the magnitude of new supply and performance across these markets differs significantly. Given strong demand supported by low homeownership affordability and the necessity of housing, we believe apartment sector performance will likely stabilize towards the end of 2024.

 

Industrial

The industrial sector remained relatively tight in 4Q 2023 but performance softened heading into 2024 as a near-record amount of new supply hit the market and demand continued to moderate. Elevated supply levels are projected to be above trend and likely to push vacancy rate upwards over the next several quarters. However, recent pullback in starts signaled supply side pressure is expected to recede by early 2025.6 Longer-term growth prospects continue to be supported by supply chain reshoring, near-shoring, and e-commerce driven consumption.

 

Office

The office sector continues to face structural challenges with the hybrid work model not showing any signs of ending in most metros. Roughly a quarter of existing office leases are expected to expire in 2024 and 2025, with more than 80% of these leases being executed before the pandemic.7 We believe office tenants are likely to negotiate for lower rates or downsize to smaller square footage if the overall sentiment on office use does not improve.

 

Retail

The retail sector continues to demonstrate resilience as its vacancy rate declined to the lowest recorded level in 4Q 2023. Rent growth remained solid as the demand for retail space remains high supported by a strong and resilient labor market that continues to drive up consumer spending as wage growth outpaces inflation. Real estate fundamentals in the retail sector are expected to remain strong in 2024 due to very little new construction deliveries over the past decade, and availability rates are expected to continue to be tight through 2024.6

 

1Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. January 31, 2024

2Wolters Kluwer. Blue Chip Economic Indicators. February 9, 2024

3US Bureau of Economic Analysis. Personal Income and Outlays. January 26, 2024

4MSCI Real Capital Analytics. January 23, 2024

5National Council of Real Estate Investment Fiduciaries. December 31, 2023

6CoStar Realty Information, Inc. January 31, 2024

7Compstak. October 4, 2023

 

Important disclosures

ARA_USCRE_Market_Insights_March_2024.pdf

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