Subleasing is often misunderstood—both by tenants trying to offload space and those looking to lease it. Here are key considerations from both sides:
TenantSee Weekly: Buy Services, Not Fear
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: 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: Leverage
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: Active Listening, the Skilled Negotiator's Secret Weapon
Office lease negotiations are complex, involving numerous parties (the principals and their advisors), and covering a wide range of issues, from economic to legal. The most effective negotiators are those who possess both a deep understanding of the markets, and the ability to actively listen while negotiating.
TenantSee Weekly: The Ingredients Matter
Strategy is to occupier real estate what a recipe is to a great meal. A recipe is more than the sum of its parts. It’s about how each ingredient is prepared, how and when it’s added to the mix. As with any recipe in which there are primary ingredients, vital to its success, similarly, every great strategy requires 3 main parts: