Without
a doubt, the biggest news to break in Miami’s office market in recent memory
came in December, when Spanish billionaire Amancio Ortega paid an incredible
$516.6 million for the landmark Southeast Financial Center downtown.
The deal was a record-breaker for commercial property prices in Miami-Dade County, capping a year that had already seen a host of high-profile office towers trade hands.
But the sale signified much more than just an eyepopping price tag. It came in the same year that Miami’s office market fetched more foreign dollars than any other commercial sector this cycle, with Colliers South Florida reporting the market raked in roughly $996 million worth of net investments alone, though that’s largely thanks to Ortega’s gargantuan purchase.
Miami’s top commercial brokers said the increased appetite for Miami office assets is being driven by deep-pocketed institutional investors abroad.
Major international players accounted for three of the five largest office deals in South Florida last year: Ortega’s Southeast Financial grab, Japanese trade conglomerate Sumitomo Corp.’s $220 million purchase of the Miami Tower and the Spanish family-owned Masaveu Corp.’s $175 million acquisition of a majority stake in the Courvoisier Centre on Brickell Key.
But will the trend hold in 2017? Some in the industry have expressed fears that political and economic turmoil abroad, as well as President Donald Trump’s foreign trade and immigration policies, will put a damper on activity. Many of these elements have already affected South Florida’s residential market.
 However,
others say that it’s exactly that uncertainty abroad — as well as over what
Trump will do next — that is the main motivation for buyers’ rushing to place
such large bets on the Miami office market. “Just about always, the United
States is the safest country for [foreign investment]; the one with the most
transparent laws,” said Hermen Rodriguez, a senior managing director with HFF
who helped broker the Southeast Financial deal. “In times of volatility, it
seems like most of the foreign capital wants to be in the United States.”
It’s no
surprise, then, that last year saw net foreign investment in the office market
more than double from the $394 million spent in 2015.
It’s
the type of climate that has Ortega, the world’s second-richest man, with a net
worth pegged at $71.4 billion by Forbes, assembling a portfolio of trophy
properties in major cities around the world.
In
Miami, that influx of demand from overseas has certainly caught the attention
of property owners. CBRE’s José Lobón said requests for marketing proposals
have ballooned since the beginning of 2016, a signal that commercial owners are
looking to test out what the market is willing to pay for their properties.
But
it’s not just volatility abroad that’s piqued the interest of international
investors. Lobón said the relative health of downtown Miami’s office market has
made it an attractive bet to foreign investors.
A
recent fourth-quarter report from CBRE stated office vacancies in the central
business district had fallen to 11.6 percent by the end of 2016, their lowest
level since 2009. And in another clear sign of recovery from the financial
crisis, asking rents for Class A office space in the greater downtown area have
reached $51.61 per square foot, surpassing the price peak of roughly $44 per
foot set in 2008.
Those
trends of rents swelling and vacancies shrinking are likely to continue, Lobón
said, as speculative office development has only recently started to pick up.
CBRE’s figures show developers have 964,000 square feet of office space
currently under construction — still well below the 1.6 million square feet
delivered in 2010, when office construction was at its peak. And considering
the market chewed through a net total of 352,000 square feet in the fourth
quarter alone, that influx of new space likely won’t cause a reversal in the
decline of vacancies.
Trump’s
pledge to deregulate the financial industry could also act as a boon to leasing
activity in the Miami office market, said Kenneth Krasnow, who heads Collier’s
South Florida division. Banks, hedge funds and wealth managers already make up
a significant portion of the tenant mix in downtown Miami, he said, and with
fewer restrictions on the financial industry, they’re likely to expand their
practices.
For
investors, there’s also the question of pricing, said Krasnow. Foreign
institutions looking to spend as much as Ortega or Sumitomo tend to shop
around, he said, and it’s no secret that the Miami office market is a considerably
cheaper option than New York City — another investment hot spot. He said the
$516.6 million Ortega spent on the Southeast Financial Center could have easily
translated to more than $1 billion for a similar property in New York.
Though
the office market is on strong footing, Krasnow said he doesn’t expect to see
the same leap in investment volume this year, compared with 2015 and 2016,
mostly because of the Ortega deal, which Krasnow described as “once in a
generation.”
However,
there’s still plenty of anticipation in the marketplace for high-profile office
trades to be struck this year.
Sources
told TRD that Equity Office, a real estate
investment trust that was bought out by the Blackstone Group in 2007 for $39
billion, is shopping around its 27-story 1221 Brickell Avenue office tower. On
top of that, sources said Prudential Financial is quietly marketing the
Sabadell Building at 1111 Brickell Avenue, for which it paid $184 million in
2013.
“It may
not be at the same sort of record level it was,” Krasnow said. “But overall,
the trend is still moving in the right direction.” 
Original content The Real Deal



 
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