The value of commercial property is being driven by vacancy rates—the higher the vacancy rate, the lower the price.
At the height of the boom, a high vacancy rate was sought after because the buyer could fill the space and raise rents. Today, finding tenants is a major challenge in many areas and buyers will pay more if a building has guaranteed tenants for the long term. Robert Von Ancken, the senior appraiser for Grubb & Ellis in New York, estimates that substantial vacancies cost a seller as much as 30 percent of value.
“Investors today are very hesitant to make a mistake by underwriting improvement, decreasing vacancy, or increasing rent,” says Scott A. Singer, the executive vice president of the Singer & Bassuk Organization, a New York company that arranges financing.
Source: The New York Times, Terry Pristin (09/15/2009)
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