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September 21, 2023

Harris County Housing Affordability Gap Widens As Rents Outpace Income Growth

Houston Bisnow Multifamily Annual Conference (BMAC) To Take Place At Omni Hotel Galleria Oct. 17

The gap between what is considered an affordable home in Harris County and the median price of a home grew 41% from 2021 to 2022, pushing more people into long-term rentership as those expenses are rising sharply as well, according to a study conducted this summer by the Kinder Institute for Urban Research.

Harris County Housing Affordability Gap Widens As Rents Outpace Income Growth

“Even if homeownership is a good investment, it's becoming increasingly untenable locally,” Kinder Institute research scientist Steve Sherman said during a webinar Wednesday to discuss the results and possible solutions.Last year, an affordable home in the region should have cost $127K, yet the median home price was $317.5K,…

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As Lending Options Get Scarcer, CRE Players Turn To ‘Dequity’

With no sign that the Federal Reserve’s restrictively high interest rates are coming down anytime soon, the commercial real estate industry is still looking at ways to shake loose financing as lending is set to drop around 40% this year.

One term gaining popularity is “dequity,” an ambiguously defined mix between debt and equity that developers are increasingly using to fill holes in their capital stacks. The funding carries increased risk for borrowers — but not enough to discourage the commercial real estate sector from using it to plug a gap.

“It is the de facto solution to every problem,” Sam Friedland, a senior vice president at Related Fund Management, the private equity arm of The Related Cos., said onstage at Bisnow’s 2023 National Finance Summit last week.

As Lending Options Get Scarcer, CRE Players Turn To ‘Dequity’

Dequity is simply “not taking the last dollar of risk,” Friedland said when asked to define the term. By not being the last rung in the capital stack, dequity holders are more likely to see a return and are in first position to take over a struggling building from a borrower.“It’s an…

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As Return-To-Office Mandates Threaten To Get Serious, Management Scrambles For Strategy

As Return-To-Office Mandates Threaten To Get Serious, Management Scrambles For Strategy  

Employees have heard it before: return-to-office deadlines mandating workers get back to the office this month, another in a long series of inconclusive and muddled moves by management.

But what employees still haven’t heard, years into the pandemic-era shift in working habits, is a quantifiable case for the need to return to the office, or in most cases, concrete plans from CEOs and management. Some analysts suggest firms, stymied by a lack of actionable data to inform working arrangements or real estate planning, are simply ordering people back in “or else” as a means of cleaning house and reducing headcount.

“Companies are trying to get a stake in the ground,” said Rob Sadow, CEO and co-founder of Scoop Technologies, which sells an app focused on hybrid office productivity. “Executives are saying, ‘I'm going to put out a point of view on what we think the right answer is. We're going to make that really clear to the organization.’ Employees can then vote with their feet, and they will stay here or they will leave."

After another  post-Labor Day letdown in terms of office occupancy, Bisnow reached out to a number of firms, including  AT&T, Comcast,  MetaTikTok and Farmers Insurance, that announced return-to-office mandates in early summer that were expected to be followed by employees this…

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The Future Of The Office Is No Longer A Debate. Now What?

The Future Of The Office Is No Longer A Debate. Now What?  

September. The summer holidays are over, and with their passing comes a renewed focus on whether workers will go back to the office in greater numbers. 

The answer, in the form of data from multiple sources, is a resounding no.

Despite the focus on back-to-the-office mandates from large corporations like Goldman Sachs and Amazon, the fourth post-summer return since the onset of the pandemic shows a clear picture of how people work and use offices now. 

The average occupancy of London offices in the first week of September was 33%, according to data from Remit Consulting. That figure was 32% in 2022, and the average for the first half of this year, before the summer break, was 31%. 

The new normal is here, those active in the London office sector say, adding that things are never going back to the way they were and the real estate world needs to learn how to function in a different reality. “The industry has to evolve. Home working is here to…

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