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Multifamily properties across the lower Northeast are retaining their preferred commercial real estate investment status, according to the market specialists at Gebroe-Hammer Associates. During the first quarter of 2023, the multifamily-focused investment real estate brokerage firm is reporting $182 million in sales involving 1,247 units throughout the New Jersey-Philadelphia MSA-New York State corridor.
In total, Gebroe-Hammer said it arranged 17 deals across the region’s in-demand, commuter-friendly counties in North and Central Jersey (Union, Essex, Bergen and Mercer counties), the Philadelphia region (Philadelphia, Lehigh and Bucks counties in Pennsylvania, and Camden) and New York state (Westchester County). The firm finished the quarter strong, with a $40-plus million trade involving over 250 units in Lower Bucks County. The sale involved exclusive representation of the unnamed seller and procurement of the buyer, a longtime Gebroe-Hammer client.
“Commercial real estate investing in general — like any sector that is dependent upon lending as its primary capital source — underwent a correction of varying degrees, based on asset type. Multifamily remained solid, as it always has — for decades, no matter the cycle — thanks to its basic function as shelter,” 48-year multifamily investment brokerage veteran Ken Uranowitz, Gebroe-Hammer’s president, said.
“The post-summer 2022 watch-and-wait approach has evolved into a measured reentry for investors, who are proceeding with a renewed sense of confidence, albeit with caution, as the Fed continues on its course of rate increases amid some banking turmoil,” he added. “This is being fueled by a still-buoyant labor market, positive income growth and a single-family housing sector that underwent — and continues to undergo — its own cooling and correction.”
According to Executive Managing Director David Oropeza, pricing and cap rates are adjusting accordingly, but quality, value-add and in-demand transit locations continue to sell. For example, in East Orange, the East Essex County market specialist arranged the $12 million sale of two historic midrise properties. Both are within walking distance of the city’s Brick Church Station, the target of a focused redevelopment effort that bodes well for existing property value-add repositioning.
“Connectivity and proximity to employment hubs translate into favorable returns for the buyer and positive long-term tenant demand for many years to come. The arrival of spring and the promise that it lives up to its reputation as the prime leasing season is even more cause for multifamily investment exuberance,” he said. “These characteristics pretty much fit virtually every urban or suburban municipality across New Jersey, the Philadelphia MSA and New York state.”
Rivaling urban-center multifamily assets are the region’s suburban garden apartments. In the North Jersey metro’s second-largest submarket of Bergen County, Gebroe-Hammer Vice President Joseph Gehler and sales representative David Betesh arranged the $19.8 million sale of the 80-unit Grand Lee Apartments. Bergen County and its post-World War-II-era garden-apartment stock has long been a multifamily powerhouse, albeit a submarket where for-sale assets have been and continue to be traditionally limited.
“In general, developers are still building and delivering new product throughout New Jersey. Rent growth is normalizing and people are choosing to or are forced to rent longer due to the rapid rise in interest rates and an undersupply of affordable single-family homes,” Executive Managing Director Joseph Brecher said.
“We are going through an adjustment period, which normally occurs after uptick cycles, as has been the case since the beginning of time. For the past 10 years, the cost of capital was half of what it is today. This trend, plus an abundance of dry powder parked during the COVID shutdown that was redeployed in record amounts, contributed to the latest cycle, amongst other economic factors,” Uranowitz said. “What is certain, having done this for almost 50 years, is that these cycles are never permanent. How long this particular period lasts, no one can predict. The one thing I do know is that apartments have remained the one real estate asset class that is the least affected by downturns in the economy. Having closed 17 deals in the first quarter affirms this phenomenon.”
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