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2C — January 11 - 24, 2013 — 2013 Forecast — Mid Atlantic Real Estate Journal

www.marejournal.com

2013 F orecast

By Jeffrey L. Silberman, Kaplin | Stewart 2013 Real Estate Forecast – Cloudy with a chance of sun

F

rom a purely unsci- entific point-of-view (my disclaimer), the

in 2013, which could skew expectations for what 2013 may bring. Nonetheless, it appears that owners, de- velopers and investors are continuing to adjust to the new realities in our industry that were born from the late- 2000s collapse. The retail sector in the Northeast has settled into some fairly predictable pat- terns, which has its positives and negatives.

and owners seem to be hav- ing success in rehabilitating certain older centers that can be acquired at lower prices. This has enabled owners to offer cheaper deals to quality retailers that find it easier to lease spaces in established markets, as opposed to tak- ing a chance on centers with no sales data. In addition, Main andMain is still an attractive location, and drug stores, gas/conve- nience stores and banks are

still completing transactions at a relatively healthy clip. On the negative side, the universe of active retailers is not expanding back to pre- collapse levels. When looking at a new, community shopping center, most of the small-shop spaces are filled by restaurants and service-retail uses, such as nail salons, hair salons and other similar uses that do not involve the sale of hard or soft goods. Some traditional “retail”

deals are still being made, but the ratio of retail to restaurant/service uses has swung decidedly to the res- taurant/service. While rent is rent, res- taurant/services uses put a higher demand on parking, and most anchor co-tenants try to limit the amount of space that can be filled with non-retail uses. The office market appears to be steady, albeit at its post “go-go” days. Landlords are filling spaces, and tenants are solidifying their locations, typically at lower or flat rates. Although free rents and various forms of allowances to tenants are very normal, businesses seem to have fig- ured out where they stand in the economy and are no longer on the sidelines. Residential continues to be non-existent, other than starter-type homes and se- lect “one off” projects. From where we sit, the housing market shows no sign of improving. Until employ- ment numbers rise, we see no movement in new homes. The only segment of the residential market is multi- family, which continues to be strong. Finally, the lending market is chugging along and, in some respects, has picked up. The post-collapse fundamen- tals have not changed, such as lower LTVs and lending on costs, not appraisal, but lenders are active and deals are being closed. For better or worse, secu- ritized lending is back and borrowers are taking ad- vantage of higher LTVs and non-recourse for projects that qualify. Whether this makes sense is an entirely different discussion, but this once- dead product is definitely back. So, when compared to 2007-2008, the forecast is not great, but this is 2013 and the sun continues to break through the clouds. Jeffrey L. Silberman is a partner in the Real Estate Business &Finance group of Kaplin Stewart in Blue Bell, PA. n

forecast for the real es- tate market in 2013 is cloudy, with a chance of sun.

The year 2012 was generally positive, and busy. The year ended with a flurry of acquisitions/ sales fueled by the fear of capital gains tax increases Jeffrey Silberman

On the positive, developers

Contact: Jeffrey A. Silberman 910 Harvest Drive, Blue Bell, PA 19422-0765 • 610-260-6000 • www.kaplaw.com Other Offices: • Cherry Hill, NJ 856-675-1550 • Philadelphia, PA 215-567-3120 Kaplin Stewart At t o rne y s a t Law Getting you through the maze of real estate law. Strategy. Skill. Success.

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