76% of Commercial Real Estate Loans Matured in 2012 are Paid Off

The vast majority of loans that were initiated at the peak of the CMBS loan bubble in 2007 were paid off last year. The remaining 24% of these loans were either extended or are now in default. Many prognosticators predicted more of a blood bath and believed that more properties would fall into foreclosure.

Although many areas showed a slight upswing in the economy, the office market has not fared as well in recent months. More office workers are now working in smaller spaces so vacancy rates are not going down. Great buys will be in the office sector this year.

NEW LISTING: Aina Haina Fee Simple Business Zoned Property

 

For more information, please visit the website here: http://5156khwy.com

 
Investment Summary
 
Asking Price: Submit Offer
Tenure: Fee Simple
Occupancy Status: Owner Occupied – Delivered Vacant at Closing
Building Area: 24,200 SF – Main Building (Two-Stories)
2,279 SF – Former Medical Clinic (Single-Story)
Land Area: 60,890 SF
TMK No.: (1) 3-6-11: Parcel 1
Zoning: B-1 (Neighborhood Businesses)
 
 
Property Highlights
 
• Rarely available fee simple commercial property opportunity in East Oahu
• High street visibility & frontage along Kalanianaole Hwy
• Over 63,000 cars pass the property daily
• Adjacent to Aina Haina Shopping Center
• Well-maintained main building with high-quality finishes
• Efficient layout includes office space, assembly halls, and living quarters
• Large concrete-paved parking lot with 115 stalls
• Expansion opportunity by redeveloping former medical clinic
• Favorable business zoning and rectangular lot configuration allows for a variety of uses

SOLD: MAJOR AIEA MEDICAL OFFICE BUILDING

 

AIEA – Kamehameha Schools just sold their 61,690 square feet professional office building in Aiea, Oahu for $15,250,000. Hawaiian Island Homes (Peter Savio) purchased Newtown Square with plans to convert this 3-story multi-use building into medical office condominiums. Savio also plans to build an additional 4 or 5-story building which will include 45,000 square feet of medical office space and 300-400 parking stalls on property. "Many mainland cities are starting to see an increase of doctors establish their own businesses in office condos because they recognize the value in earning equity and investing in their practice," said Mark D. Bratton of Colliers International, who represented Kamehameha Schools in the sale.

 

With more than half of the existing tenants being medical related and located less than 1.5 miles from Pali Momi Medical Center, Colliers strategically marketed the building to investors with an interest in medical office buildings and to partial owner-users. Newtown Square will be the first and only fee simple office condominium project in Leeward Oahu, thus providing a truly unique opportunity for medical professionals in the area. The physicians will benefit from the existing dense population in the surrounding area as well as the ever growing housing population from the west. The future condo owners will also benefit from its close vicinity to Pearlridge Center, the 1.2 million square foot regional mall and the largest enclosed shopping center in the State.

 

Newtown Square was sold after Kamehameha Schools determined that it was a non-strategic property within their portfolio. A year ago, Kamehameha School decided to sell a couple of their properties allowing them to focus on their major developments in the Kakaako, University, and Kalihi areas.

JUST SOLD: Prime Office Building in Honolulu

3113 Olu Street, Honolulu

 

We are excited to announce the sale of this Fee Simple, approximately 5,720 square foot OFFICE BUILDNG. The building consists of 1,810 square feet of first floor commercial space, 2,860 square feet of second floor commercial space and 1,050 square feet of open parking beneath the second floor. The beautifully upgraded interior contains 11 rooms, 5 full bathrooms, 3 kitchen areas, 1 large conference/ meeting room and separate laundry area. The building is conveniently located near the corner of Kapahulu Avenue and Olu Street, across the street from Safeway and adjacent to Genki Sushi.

Wall Street Journal: Corporate Cram Bedevils Office Recovery

Trend of Companies Packing More People Into Less Space Picks Up Pace; A 'Tiny Library' at One Law Firm

As the office-space market slogs along in a slow recovery, landlords face another hurdle: shrinking tenants.

Companies looking for cost savings are increasingly packing more employees into less space, a trend that is helping cause U.S. vacancy rates to linger at high levels even as employers add jobs in the slowly expanding economy.

[SHRINK]

 

Panasonic Corp., for example, is planning to move into a new 280,000-square-foot U.S. headquarters in Newark, N.J., next year. But it is taking significantly less than the approximately 575,000 square feet of office and labs at its current campus in Secaucus, N.J., that is owned by Hartz Mountain Industries Inc. The electronics company says it isn't reducing its head count, but is simply reconfiguring its offices.

Employers gradually have been taking up less space for decades, but real-estate professionals say the drive to use less space has picked up since the economic downturn, as companies look to trim costs where they can across their budgets. Workstations are shrinking and private offices are disappearing, replaced by cubicles with low walls, and more employees are working remotely.

Companies today are taking space with an average of about 200 square feet per employee, down about 20% from a decade ago, said Alan Nager, an executive managing director at brokerage Newmark Knight Frank who advises companies on their real estate. The amount of space is continuing to shrink, he says.

The trend is slowing the recovery of the office market. Since office vacancies hit a post-recession peak of 18.8% in 2010, the market has improved only slightly, according to brokerage Jones Lang LaSalle. The vacancy rate was 17.6% in the fourth quarter, still well off the 13.8% rate during the height of the boom in 2007.

Office landlords have been encouraged lately by news of job growth. They also are hoping that the dearth of new construction will give the market a boost.

But the efforts by tenants to do more with less remain a hurdle. "The way that people use space is changing," Richard Clark, chief executive of the large office landlord Brookfield Office Properties Inc., said on a conference call with analysts earlier this month.

Even when the economy kicks into a higher gear, the trend is expected to continue. "Given increased efficiency of space usage by tenants plus the limited amount of construction put in place at the peak, it will take more than the previous peak level of employment to reach the previous peak levels for occupancy and rent," analysts from Moody's Investor Service wrote in a report last week.

To be sure, not all companies are overhauling their space. Many tenants simply renew their leases when they come due, which makes it harder to rethink their approach to workspace than if they were moving to a different building.

 

shrink

 

 

 

 

 

But some industries are both contracting and using less space per employee. For example, many companies in the financial-services sector—a traditional driver of the office-space market—have been laying off workers and looking for more-efficient workspace.

"It's kind of all about cost control at this point for that industry," Brookfield's Mr. Clark said.

Landlords of top space are particularly concerned about law firms, which for decades devoted large swaths of their offices to filing cabinets and libraries, as well as desks for support staff. But lawyers need fewer assistants, and technology is shrinking, or making obsolete, the need for paper storage.

Consider San Diego law firm Robbins Geller Rudman & Dowd LLP. Last year, the firm signed a 114,000-square-foot lease at 655 West Broadway in San Diego, contracting its space about 20% even while the firm is adding lawyers, said Darren Robbins, founding partner.

"We redesigned our space. We have a very tiny library now," Mr. Robbins said.

The trend isn't confined to the private sector. The General Services Administration, which administers leases and office space for much of the federal government, is in the process of renovating and expanding its headquarters building in Washington to make it far denser amid an era of fiscal austerity.

Should the whole expansion and renovation project be completed—the second phase isn't yet funded—the 800,000-square-foot building is expected to hold about 6,000 employees, up from 2,400 held in the building before the renovation, which was about 700,000 square feet. That would allow it to stop leasing at three other locations in the Washington region.

The redo calls for replacing tall cubicle walls and offices with denser seating and low or no walls in between employees. It would also relying on a concept known as "hoteling," where employees don't have permanent desks, allowing the agency to have more employees than desks given that many are out of the office on a given day.

 

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203833004577250050812013624.html

Office buildings in Hawaii have benefited from Hawaii’s record setting Small Business Administration (SBA) loan program

Many Doctors clinics around Hawaii have benefited from this great Hawaii loan program. Business’s can borrow almost all of the amount needed to buy a property and do renovation work from a partnership of local banks and the  SBA. We also see evidence of industrial building users purchasing property here in Hawaii with proceeds from this great program.

See Below for the specifics from the Star Advertiser.

The U.S. Small Business Administration’s Hawaii office lent $73.6 million to 343 small businesses in the fiscal year that ended on Sept. 30, setting a record.
Hawaii’s previous high was in 2004, when the SBA lent $63.6 million here.
“The record loan volume is a great sign,” said Jane Sawyer, SBA district director. “Each loan makes a big difference to our economic and employment outlook.”
The SBA also announced awards for lender of the year in three categories. Top honors in the large-bank category went to Bank of Hawaii, which made 80 guaranteed loans for $8.98 million. The midsize lender of the year was American Savings Bank with 36 approvals for $3.69 million. Hawaii National Bank captured the top award in the small-bank category with 13 loans for $3.6 million.
HEDCO, a certified development company that works with the SBA, provided more than $28 million for 54 small business ventures, a record performance in its program’s history. First Hawaiian Bank was honored as the most active participant in this program in 2011, making 30 loans. These loans provide long-term, fixed-rate financing to help expanding firms acquire land, buildings, machinery and equipment for building, modernizing or renovating facilities.
“I applaud our lenders for working diligently with borrowers to deliver the financing needed to keep their businesses viable and moving forward,” said Sawyer.
The Hawaii SBA also presented Holomua Awards to several organizations that assisted the small-business community, including:
» The Hawaii Chapter of SCORE for its expanded training and outreach to veteran-owned small businesses.
» Ohana Pacific Bank for its steady increase in SBA loans in 2011.
» The Honolulu Star-Advertiser business section for the “Akamai Money” column, which provides information for small businesses.
» Central Pacific Bank for its fast response and pace of SBA lending.
» The Hawaii Small Business Development Center Network for its work with financial institutions to support borrowers in developing and revising financing plans and strategies.

  • Your Source for Commercial Real Estate in Hawai'i