#tenants

TenantSee Weekly: Tenant Alert: Hidden Traps in Landlord-Funded Tenant Improvement Allowances

TenantSee Weekly:  Tenant Alert: Hidden Traps in Landlord-Funded Tenant Improvement Allowances

Office lease negotiations are complex, and tenants who lack strong representation are often at a serious disadvantage—they don’t know what they don’t know. One key area where this shows up is the tenant improvement allowance (TIA).

TenantSee Weekly: Subleasing Office Space - What Tenants Need to Know

TenantSee Weekly:  Subleasing Office Space - What Tenants Need to Know

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: Is ChatGPT Better Than You (Me)?

TenantSee Weekly:  Is ChatGPT Better Than You (Me)?

If you’re a business professional—accountant, lawyer, engineer, or even (gulp) an office broker—you’ve probably wondered: Can AI do my job better than me?
 
As a broker who advises office tenants, I tested ChatGPT in a domain I know well. I asked it for average Class A office rents in downtown San Francisco over the last 30 years, including supply and demand dynamics. In less than a minute, it delivered a surprisingly accurate answer.

TenantSee Weekly: What Tenants See Impacts Tenancy

TenantSee Weekly: What Tenants See Impacts Tenancy

Most of what tenants need to see in order to make smart leasing decisions is not immediately visible. It must be uncovered through strategic discovery and analysis. That’s the mission of TenantSee: to provide the process and resources that bring hidden factors to light. We don’t make decisions for our clients—we make their decisions better.

TenantSee Weekly: What Really Matters

TenantSee Weekly:  What Really Matters

In the business of advising office tenants on leasing space, services are provided by a wide range of firms—from solo practitioners to global public companies with thousands of employees. As in any competitive industry, each firm tries to differentiate itself by highlighting its strengths while casting doubt on the competition.

TenantSee Weekly: When the Landlord Isn't (the Value of Options)

TenantSee Weekly:  When the Landlord Isn't (the Value of Options)

We’ve written a lot over the past few years about the capital stack, the equity and debt structures that commonly define ownership of office assets.  We’ve talked about “broken” capital stacks, situations in which the original equity is wiped out and some portion of the debt may also be under water.  We’ve noted it’s very challenging to transact in these assets because the financial partners would need to invest more capital on transactions that would generate negative returns.  In other words, good money after bad.
 

TenantSee Weekly: What's Missing

TenantSee Weekly:  What's Missing

Negotiating office leases is like any other complex financial decision in that more information leads to better decisions.  Yet companies face challenges acquiring the right information at the right time. Why? Because the services typically offered by real estate brokerages are centered on transacting based on site selection and the negotiation of basic rental economics.  This is not enough.  Sometimes, these services (at least) include a level of multi-building negotiation, exercising a degree of leverage, but too often they lack the proper structure to gather and assess critical data, data that will have a big impact on outcome. 

TenantSee Weekly: Buy Services, Not Fear

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

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:  Leverage

The concept is simple.  It’s the thing you use to make the deal better.  But in real estate negotiations, the extent of a tenant’s leverage and how best to exercise it, is less than obvious.

TenantSee Weekly: Men's Fashion - A Random Commentary

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: 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.

TenantSee Weekly: What Do You See?

TenantSee Weekly: What Do You See?

When you look at an office building, what do you see?  Maybe you see the architecture.  Maybe it’s the neighborhood, the restaurants, and amenities.  Perhaps, you see the views from within the building.  This is what most people see.  They’re all important.  But it’s what you don’t see that matters most.

TenantSee Weekly: How Investor Exit Options Affect the San Francisco Office Market

TenantSee Weekly: Do Cities Still Matter?

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

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: Contradictions in Logic

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:  A Good Desk

Did you know the modern desk dates to 2000 BC?  It was used by ancient Egyptian scribes.  Over the centuries, the desk has evolved, often to keep pace with new technologies.  For example, the steel desks of the early 20th century were designed, in part, to provide better support for heavy typewriters.    

TenantSee Weekly: The Value of Your Lease

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

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.