Fear sells. But that doesn’t mean you should buy it. So called “tenant only” firms sell the idea that they, alone, offer tenants conflict-free advisory. To be clear, the potential for conflict does exist in commercial real estate advisory (more on that later). Yes, as a consumer of such services, it’s important to be aware of how conflict can manifest. However, the conflict narrative being peddled by the tenant only firms is more myth than reality. It’s a clever sleight of hand, designed to distract the consumer from realizing the big gaps in knowledge that limit the tenant only firm’s ability to properly advise, while simultaneously suggesting great risk in hiring a full-service competitor.
TenantSee Weekly: Leverage
TenantSee Weekly: Men's Fashion - A Random Commentary
In the 1990s, my pants fit more loosely. They were often pleated. Then, seemingly overnight, loose fitting, pleated pants were out of fashion. To be fashionable required an entirely new product, a new look. My now out of fashion, yet still perfectly serviceable, pleated trousers were initially (optimistically?) relegated to the back of the closet, ultimately to be unceremoniously delivered to Goodwill.
TenantSee Weekly: What Do You See?
TenantSee Weekly: How Investor Exit Options Affect the San Francisco Office Market
TenantSee Weekly: Do Cities Still Matter?
I grew up in a small town but I always dreamed about big cities. I sensed they were special places where, given the right amount of drive, the right mindset, one simply could not fail. Sure, there would be ups and downs, but cities provided access to a robust network of opportunity. This was in stark contrast to the small New England towns of my childhood, many of which never fully recovered from the demise of the textile mills in the early 1900s.
TenantSee Weekly: Middle Manager on the Shelf
Our young children, now 8 and 9, have formed a special bond with Lucy and Jack, two elves assigned by Santa to watch over them. For the past several years, Lucy and Jack have demonstrated extraordinary commitment to our family. They’ve traveled during the holidays, magically appearing at our vacation destinations. They’ve even stayed on after Christmas, despite being needed at the North Pole. Just the other day, I found one of our children covering them in cinnamon (apparently this helps them get their magic back after being touched by humans). To be sure, their presence has sharpened our children’s focus, causing them to think twice about being naughty, providing a welcome assist on the parental front.
TenantSee Weekly: What's the Rate
If you look at the quarterly market reports provided by all major real estate service firms (Cushman & Wakefield, included), you will find that rent data is typically expressed in terms of “Asking Rents”. Reports will cite the trend in Average Asking Rents by submarket, or by building class. This is a somewhat misleading indicator. Why? Because it does not reflect the rent after negotiations, which often includes reductions in rate from the Asking Rate and potentially significant landlord-funded concessions. In other words, Asking Rents reflect what landlords are asking, not what they’re getting.
TenantSee Weekly: Contradictions in Logic
These days, the resetting of capital stacks (the ownership structures for office buildings) is most often facilitated through selling the building. The current market sale dynamic typically involves one set of financial partners (equity, lenders) taking big losses to permit a new set of investors and lenders to “reset” the capital stack on economic terms that provide a pathway to success (e.g., a productive investment).
TenantSee Weekly: A Good Desk
TenantSee Weekly: The Value of Your Lease
People sometimes (mistakenly) think office building values are based on location and architectural design (appearance). These are contributing factors, however, in most urban centers, investors use the income capitalization approach to valuation. Here, the building is valued on current and projected net operating income (“NOI”). To be sure, location and design will translate to differing levels of NOI. But other variables play a key role, as well. For example, the landlord’s cost basis which impacts its ability to lease space at market pricing. Where a landlord has paid too much for the asset, the underlying rental economics of the market may result in net negative leasing outcomes, causing the landlord to lose deals to other assets which have a lower cost basis and can productively transact at market.
TenantSee Weekly: In a Vaccum
Office leases are complicated undertakings comprised of many variables. The markets offer a variety of solutions, ranging from coworking to subleases to long and short-term direct leases. It’s always important for corporate leaders to understand the primary objectives they seek to achieve in leasing office space. But even when these objectives are well defined, it can be tricky to assess which solution is best.
TenantSee Weekly: Taxis and the Offices
Technology replaces that which it improves.
Not long ago, the streets of San Francisco were full of taxis. Simply by raising your arm, you could hail a taxi in minutes. Then, Uber and Lyft created their apps. Their intention was always to disrupt an industry that hadn’t changed in decades. Initially, many taxi drivers transitioned to become Uber and Lyft drivers, likely anticipating the technology would shift, not replace their work. But that’s not how this is turning out. Autonomous vehicles will replace human-driven, human transport solutions in major cities where taxi drivers once thrived.
TenantSee Weekly: Disbributed (but only a little)
Surveys indicate most workers favor a distributed workplace in which they can work from anywhere, any time. When it comes to work, individuals focus (mostly) on their own specific benefits, as opposed to thinking about how the ways in which their work gets done affects the broader organization. This makes sense, as one of the key benefits of our economic system is how it permits the individual to get ahead, to maximize its value. Employees realize value in a variety of ways, including compensation and other variables. Flexibility in where and when people work is high on the list of non-compensation related variables.
TenantSee Weekly: Sell Your Occupancy by Leveraging Options
TenantSee Weekly: Impossible Math
Imagine you invested in an office building in San Francisco in 2015. At the time, the building was 95% occupied. You paid $750/sf for the building and secured a loan on 50% of the value at the rate of 3.5%. 50% of the building’s tenant leases rolled in 2023/2024, a fact you underwrote as opportunity, opportunity to increase net operating income by achieving higher rents. Then the pandemic hit.
TenantSee Weekly: I Was Told We'd Be Discussing the Office...
AI has summarized capitalism for me as follows:
“…an economic system where private individuals and corporations own and control the means of production, such as property, businesses, and industries. In capitalism, the core principles are profit motive, private property, and market competition. The government's role is limited to taxation and standard regulatory laws, and individuals are given the freedom to operate their businesses and manage their income as they choose.”
TenantSee Weekly: Connecting Your Advisor’s Fee to Value Creation
In cities like San Francisco, tenant broker fees have increased significantly since the pandemic. These fees are typically fronted by the landlord and recouped over the term of the lease through the rent paid by the tenant. You may be wondering why landlords would offer more fee when rental economics are on the decline. It’s because landlords think of the fee as an incentive to brokers to bring deals to their building. As soon as one landlord increases the fee, others marketing comparable buildings follow suit because they want to ensure their building gets equal consideration (and they think brokers select which buildings to show the client based on fee – they (mostly) don’t). When the markets are tight, as they were in the decade preceding the pandemic, landlords hold fees flat. They don’t need to pay more to attract demand – the simple fact they have available supply is sufficient.
TenantSee Weekly: It's What's Inside That Counts
If you’re like me, growing up your mother told you no less than twice a day “…it’s what’s inside that counts” or “…don’t judge a book by its cover”. I’m grateful for that advice, as it helps me be more mindful of bias, more open minded. Did you know the same is true for office buildings? That it’s not just about how the building looks, or where it’s located. The nuanced details of the ownership, debt, and occupancy also matter…a lot.
TenantSee Weekly: Work
Over the past several years the concept of work has undergone more change than at any point in recent history. While there’s many narratives, one common discussion centers on changing where and when we work to make work less harmful to our health. This is exemplified by remote work.
Work can certainly be harmful. Yet few among us can avoid harm. Indeed, harm often comes to us in ways we cannot and do not anticipate. Sometimes what seems good turns out to be bad. The very world in which we live is full of harmful realities. I’m not convinced the absence of work brings less harm. Nor am I convinced the changes we’re seeing now around how and where we work are as good for us as we hope they will be. I think we’re generally failing to account for a variety of negative consequences that are slowly becoming more apparent.