#capex

TenantSee Weekly: How a Building Sale Affects Lease Negotiations

TenantSee Weekly:  How a Building Sale Affects Lease Negotiations

The pace of investment sale activity in San Francisco is accelerating.  This is the “Great Reset” about which we’ve written.  It’s driven by capital partners (equity/lenders) deciding there is no viable pathway to own their way to an exit and choosing to sell (usually at a steep discount to what they paid and/or the value of the debt).  Ultimately, these capital stack resets are healthy as they activate the asset, enabling new capital partners to transact at market.

TenantSee Weekly: No Free Lunch

TenantSee Weekly:  No Free Lunch

The office product offering is shifting to provide an array of hospitality-inspired experiences that, in some cases, rival those of a 5-Star hotel.  San Francisco landlords have lagged other markets in providing such high-end amenities because in the 2 decades prior to the pandemic, the supply/demand dynamic favored landlords, making it easier to lease space  (e.g., they didn’t have to).  For the past several years, however, San Francisco landlords have begun to spend millions on targeted amenities.  The typical playbook calls for some combination of health/fitness, conferencing and events, club/lounge/bar spaces, and specialty spaces, like golf simulator rooms and podcasting studios.