March 15, 2010

March 14, 2010


Hoff & Leigh’s Weekend Market Report
Hoff & Leigh, Inc.
Leasing, Sales, Management, Buyer or Tenant Representation
4445 Northpark Drive, Suite 200
Colorado Springs, CO USA 80907
March 14, 2010



You are receiving this information because, at some point, you asked or a friend referred your name to be included in our e-mail Insider’s List. If you no longer wish to receive this information, send an e-mail reply to me (tim@hoffleigh.com) and ask to be removed. Alternatively, if you know someone who could benefit from the receipt of this information, forward this e-mail to them, and suggest they contact us, so we can consider adding them to our exclusive list.


All Market Average Office Building Sale Price PSF = $102.81 (UP 0.61 from last week)

We are currently tracking 83 office buildings for sale.

This is 789,600 square feet, which represents a total market value of $81,182,414.



All Market Average Industrial Building Sale Price PSF = $100.61 (UP 0.03 from last week)

We are currently tracking 61 industrial buildings for sale.

This is 772,903 square feet, which represents a total market value of $77,763,156.



To View Tim Leigh’s ad, please click below!
http://hoffleigh.com/Doc/Tim%20Leigh.pdf



To view our most recent Colorado Springs Business Journal Ad please click below

http://hoffleigh.com/Doc/3.12.10%20Colorado%20Springs%20Business%20Journal%20Ad.pdf



Tim’s Market Report


“If you don’t mind my saying so, there’s not a man alive who could hope to measure up to that blend of Paul Bunyan, Saint Pat and Noah Webster you’ve concocted for yourself out of your stubborn Irish imagination. . .”

The Widow Paroo

From “The Music Man”

As I sit here reviewing the inventory of office buildings for sale, (looking for deals), I’ve got to confess that unless you’re an owner-user, the “pickins-are-pretty- slim”. In fact, as I study the list and look at zip code and pricing data, it becomes clear that one of the problems we have in Colorado Springs is that most of our inventory seems pretty beat up. Many of the small office buildings (for example) that are for sale were constructed in the early 1980’s and have seen better days. Most are functionally and aesthetically obsolete.

I have a good example, and unfortunately for me, it’s a property I own on North Circle Drive. I had it fully leased for 5 years. The property was a cash cow - Moo! Moo! (And, yes; “Dang, I was smart back in the day!”) It not only threw-off milk, it threw-off chocolate milk! When the tenant vacated, (they outgrew the space), I was faced with the same dilemma many building owners will face . . . “to fix or not to fix? That is the question!” I decided to take my own medicine, (which I always do, and which is why my buildings are 100% leased), and did what I’d tell a 3rd party building owner to do; I fixed. So, at some great cost I totally remodeled the building “on spec”.

Over the years, I’ve developed and refined “Tim Leigh’s Theory of Commercial Building Occupancy”. It says “most small business owners no longer want a large number of private offices in their leased space; they want light, airy and open space and fewer private offices”. They want “cool space”. They want the acclaimed Colorado lifestyle. They want it at play and they want it at work. They want environment over function. Imagine why Starbuck’s works. It’s not about the coffee.

To remake Circle Drive “cool”, we removed walls and created new, open-space. We installed glass side-lights; new light fixtures; carpet, tile and blended-in as much of the existing infrastructure to create a modern, yet “retro-feel” as we could. (And, by the way, I would be happy to showcase this property and these ideas - just call me at 719-337-9551). I brought the building into the new millennium aesthetically and technologically and now it’s ready for re-tenanting and possible sale and likely, at a premium to the market.

My point is that until Mr. Market understands that he must do what I’ve done, he will languish and grow continuously more tired and weary. The predictions are for a summer swoon – for local real estate markets to get rough again. There are folks claiming that the housing spurt will burst when the 1st time home buyer’s credit expires and as the very large inventory of phantom housing stock (bank owned and not statistically accounted for) is placed on the market for sale. To combat this predicted general decline I’m advising my building owner clients to position their property, not as generic, but as “uniquely desirable” property. For many, that will be a tall and costly order; for others it’s “out of the game, Bob!”

Want more pain? There is enough vacant space in Colorado Springs right now that it will take 25,000 new employees to fill it. Basic laws of supply and demand dictate that, without new employers and attendant new employees to occupy space, lease rates will continue to fall. If lease rates fall and if operating costs rise (which is how the game works), equity disappears and you can make some pretty accurate assumptions about value, pricing and pending foreclosure actions. There will be blood. There will be a summer of discontent.

I was a highway man. Along the coach roads I did ride; with my sword and pistol by my side.

Many a young maid lost her baubles to my trade; many a soldier shed his lifeblood on my blade;

The bastards hung me in the spring of twenty-five, but I am still alive . . .

We used to look at pricing scenarios where rents increased and with effective management you could operate small commercial buildings for profit. But, during the past decade of irrational exuberance, we all paid too much. Now, there is mass deleveraging taking place and to my point, as this occurs, if the deleveraged property is “not cool” it will depreciate further, pulling the market down and down and down.

I was a dam builder across the river deep and wide, where steel and water did collide;

A place called Boulder on the wild Colorado; I slipped and fell into the wet concrete below.

And they buried me in that great tomb that knows no sound; but I am still around . . .

I’ll always be around . . . and around . . . and around . . . and around.


And, as we’ll all be around and around, rest assured, there’s nothing new under the sun.

For example, as we wrestle with the problem of homelessness, (and let’s be honest, fighting 1st impressions is as large a part of this issue as how to help those folks), recall back to 1871. When Queen Palmer first arrived in Colorado Springs the story goes, “she was depressed by El Paso County’s scraggly graveyard which looked as though it belonged to Colorado Springs and was the 1st thing hopeful immigrants saw on incoming trains. It had 300 graves which seemed a great many for a town 3 months old.”

Or consider medicinal cures . . . In 1874, Colorado Springs, (a “dry-city” which meant that it was illegal to drink inside the city limits), had “twice as many drug stores as were needed to meet the demand for drugs.” Hmm . . . That sounds vaguely familiar. Their main business was selling whiskey – for medicinal purposes, of course. By law, each druggist was the judge of medicinal purpose. Naturally, if a customer said that he was ill because he needed a drink, the druggist was legally bound (because he was a druggist) to provide the “medicinal cure”, even if – or perhaps especially if - the patient staggered up to the “medicinal purpose counter” suffering from delirium tremens.

And there was the story about “The Spiritual Wheel” at the southeast corner of Pikes Peak and Tejon. At the corner was a fine piece of real estate; uniquely positioned to take advantage of the market opportunity created by the new “medicinal cures” industry. It was a storeroom with nothing in-it except a hole in the wall containing a partitioned tray turning on a wheel. If someone wanted a drink, he’d place a coin on the tray, the wheel turned and a jigger of whiskey miraculously appeared on the tray where the coin had been. What a country!

I fly a starship across the Universe divide; and when I reach the other side

I’ll find a place to rest my spirit if I can; perhaps I may become a highway man again;

Or I may simply be a single drop of rain, but I will remain

And I’ll be back again, and again, and again and again.


Nothing ever changes and the real estate market will recover and we’ll be back again . . . and again . . . and again.


Make it an interesting week.



Sincerely,

TJL
Tim Leigh
719-337-9551
Tim@HoffLeigh.com

March 7, 2010

Hoff & Leigh’s Weekend Market Report
Hoff & Leigh, Inc.
Leasing, Sales, Management, Buyer or Tenant Representation
4445 Northpark Drive, Suite 200
Colorado Springs, CO USA 80907
March 7, 2010



You are receiving this information because, at some point, you asked or a friend referred your name to be included in our e-mail Insider’s List. If you no longer wish to receive this information, send an e-mail reply to me (tim@hoffleigh.com) and ask to be removed. Alternatively, if you know someone who could benefit from the receipt of this information, forward this e-mail to them, and suggest they contact us, so we can consider adding them to our exclusive list.



All Market Average Office Building Sale Price PSF = $102.20

We are currently tracking 91 office buildings for sale.

This is 883,196 square feet, which represents a total market value of $90,262,414.



All Market Average Industrial Building Sale Price PSF = $100.58

We are currently tracking 62 industrial buildings for sale.

This is 776,103 square feet, which represents a total market value of $78,058,156.



To View Tim Leigh’s ad, please click below!

http://hoffleigh.com/Doc/Tim%20Leigh.pdf


To view our most recent Colorado Springs Business Journal Ad please click below
http://hoffleigh.com/Doc/3.05.10%20Colorado%20Springs%20Business%20Journal%20Ad.pdf


Tim’s Market Report

I had coffee with Mr. Bad Banker again this past week; you know the one – last week he told me “it was certainly the end of the earth”. Why I met with him again, I’ll never know. I guess I’m a glutton for punishment. He reiterated his belief to me this week when he said, in his quiet but commanding & condescending voice, “The big houses (then I wondered who the “big houses” were) said that we should expect a 5 year time-line to recovery. The smart money is bailing-out of commercial real estate for the foreseeable future unless they’re very patient.” Fiddlesticks!

I’ll grant that the big houses (the big boys; the big shots;) may feel that way, and in fact, institutional-grade investment property may have a long time to recovery, but “our forte is local folk” and I’m here to tell-ya, that while the local market’s not robust, it ain’t the end of the earth.

And to my point, I was asked to provide some advice to a friend who is considering buying property on a multi-generational basis for a large non-profit. She wanted to know if we were at the bottom of the market or “should they wait-to-buy?” “Dang”, I thought, “If your time-line’s 100 years, who cares?” It seems to me that the people who care about micro-managing the market are traders and speculators; not investors who have well located property situated to weather-the-storm.

I told her, “A smart guy once told me that all real estate transactions happen because of 1) fear or; 2) greed.” Want to tell where the market is? How do you feel? How you feel will tell you exactly where the market is. Afraid it’s going to go down? Then you’re a Seller. Greedy that you’re missing the bus? Then you’re a buyer. Like most stuff in life, it’s that simple.

Then I got the latest information from the assessor’s office. According to their report, 18 commercial buildings sold in February. Their combined square feet were 382,144 and they had a total value of $20,799,200. That’s an average sale per building of $1,155,511. In those sales were 3 of those “institutional-type” sales that aren’t supposed to happen for 5 years. Hmm . . . .

Now, most of you know that our company cut-its-teeth on, and does more deals in Class B & C buildings than our competitors. We currently enjoy about a 36% market share in our space – I know; thank you! That’d be called, “There ain’t no magic at 4:00 o’clock in the morning!” (4:00 o’clock is where you find hard work & elbow grease!) We’re the guys who handle the bottom 80% of the market. So, as I noodled over the assessor’s numbers, I did a little calculating of my own. If you take away the 3 institutional sales, the story’s dramatically different. In reality, “our market” sold 15 buildings totaling 61,585 square feet in February. Their total sales value was $10,499,200 (about ½ the assessor’s reported total), which is an average price per building of $699,946. Hmm . . .

So, how’s the market? One answer comes from Virgil McCormick who always told me, “Figures lie & liars figure.” How’s the market? What numbers do you want to believe? Are you fearful or greedy?

And from the candidate’s desk; last week was a whirl. I’ve continued my process of meeting individuals & small groups; so if you or your small group would like to meet to “discuss the issues” let me know. I started asking for support and campaign contributions. (Unfortunately, it’ll cost a lot to run this campaign and yes, it’s OK to say you support my candidacy and it’s OK to send contributions! You can go to www.TimforMayor.com to learn more.

I met several folks from around the state including the Executive Director of the Colorado Municipal League (Sam Mamet) and Mayor Hutchinson from Ft. Collins. Seems like common sense that our city should be linked with like-minded folks up and down the front-range. That linkage can create unexplored opportunities for collaborative cultural and business ventures which could cost little and provide great benefit. Over the course of the next several weeks, I hope to meet Pueblo’s, and other leaders along the lower Arkansas River Valley with whom we share many common interests.

I received a short-course in Budgeting for Outcomes. That we don’t seem to do this now seems a little nutty. I’ve read that currently, our process is “input budgeting” where we add-up all the wants and desires of each department and then try to raise revenue to pay for everything. That process produced an expected $33,000,000 shortfall in the next budget cycle and leads to the idea of tax increases; and I learned that we have (approximately) a $50 million unfunded health insurance liability for retirees and I learned that we have (approximately) a $65 million unfunded retirement liability. I learned about article XI of the city charter, paragraph 11-30, which states “All municipal elections shall be non-partisan.”

And I was asked several times last week to make campaign promises. So finally, succumbing to your requests, in typical politician-style, here you go: “If elected, I promise to do the following 3 things: 1) conduct the symphony; 2) be the Grand Marshal in a parade; and 3) learn to line-dance!” Frankly, that’s about the best I can do with a straight face.

Seriously, it’s my contention that one of our problems is we expect too much from our elected leaders. “Honest” elected leaders don’t have wands sufficiently filled with magic to solve individual problems. We should expect our leaders to lead; we should expect our leaders to ask big questions, think big thoughts and lead the bureaucracy out of the way so the invisible hand of Adam Smith can do what it does. That’s the only magic we need. Oh, and maybe some of that stuff you get at 4:00 o’clock in the morning.

Have a profitable week.


Sincerely,

TJL
Tim Leigh
719-337-9551
Tim@HoffLeigh.com