#tenantsee weekly

TenantSee Weeky: It's Not Really About the Office

TenantSee Weeky: It's Not Really About the Office

It’s Not Really About the Office
 
We’re experiencing a behavioral shift which is changing one of the most pervasive social institutions of our time; namely, how, and where white-collar workers work.  Few societal constructs impact individuals, or society, as much as where and how we work.  The collective dialogue about this change, especially between employer and employee, has at times been challenging.  However, we’re now entering a more hopeful phase of the conversation, one which promises to finally move us to a new place, letting go of the idea that we must revert to pre-pandemic norms.

TenantSee Weekly: Meet WALT

TenantSee Weekly: Meet WALT

WALT, or weighted average lease term, is an essential metric in the valuation of office buildings as it forecasts the stability of future cash flow.  WALT was less important back when office markets like San Francisco were seeing aggressive year over year rent growth.  Back then vacancy was worth more than leased space, the theory being a buyer could take advantage of vacant space to capture higher rent (necessary to justify inflated pricing which baked in aggressive rent growth assumptions).  However, in the broader historical context of valuation, the idea that vacancy is worth more than occupancy is antithetical to defining value.  Indeed, the more prevalent (and logical) approach to value hinges on the quality and duration of the net operating income.  Of course, this approach is less sexy as it disables a seller’s capacity to “sell the dream”.  The buyer is buying stability and yield, both of which are measurable going in.