What Asian Investors Are Seeking
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Real Estate Bisnow (Vancouver)

What Asian Investors Are Seeking

Cap rate isn't as important as the quality of product, when it comes to Asian investors, according to RE/MAX regional EVP Elton Ash.

Elton just got back from NYC, where he joined other company executives to ring the opening bell at the New York Stock Exchange. RE/MAX had its initial public offering in October (RMAX is the symbol--which could turn into a comedy bit when you ask for the "max" closing rate of "Max"). On the commercial front, in the western region, RE/MAX has over 240 brokers and did $890M in transactions in 2012. The experience in NYC was interesting. "They served us breakfast on the trading floor," Elton tells us (right, with RE/MAX VP Larry Oberly).

No offense, but we're shocked that tiny hot air balloon is holding them all up. The firm's data points to a tight supply in commercial real estate in Vancouver and most other markets across Canada that was limiting sales activity for the first half of the year. An interesting and uniquely Vancouver angle is the level of investment by the Asian community in the local market. Elton says while the residential market saw a slowdown of sales activity and prices as a result of the Chinese market pulling back (investments plateaued because the Chinese were the only ones doing the buying, thus pushing market values), commercial real estate investment has been marked more by a reluctance among the Asian community to sell.

One RE/MAX commercial broker told Elton he took an interested buyer to a Hong Kong owner of a commercial property he had purchased back in the 1980s, offering the owner "a lot of money," but the owner told him selling would be "my grandson's decision." Another appeal of the market to the Asian community adds Elton is the finite boundaries of the surrounding mountains and sea (there is nowhere else the Vancouver market can grow) and cultural affinity. Snapped is the 44k SF Newton Commerce Centre in Surrey, which RE/MAX sold earlier this year for $7M.

Colliers (Retailers) VAN
Addison (Talent5) VAN
Bisnow (RonBurg) WVAN

Design Panel Likes West Hastings Project

Morguard's 215k SF office tower (below) planned for 601 West Hastings St received unanimous support from the Vancouver Urban Design Panel. Morguard's Geoff Nagle tells us no changes to the renderings are required. The project is still working through re-zoning with the city, he says, with the target for approval summer '14. Geoff is snapped next to Morguard colleague Margaret Knowles and Rina Zigler.

Also on the Morguard front, tenant fit-out continues in Uptown in Saanich, where Scotiabank opened its new branch on the Blanshard level earlier this month. (If you're sensitive, avoid this building, since it looks like it's sticking its tongue out at you.) Both Knickerbockers and the Emily Carr Branch of the Greater Victoria Public Library will open during the next few weeks. Leasing progress will determine when the next phases at the mixed-use development kick off.

McCord Dev VAN
Bisnow Hypnotic HALF

Striking Mixed Use Project
Gets City Approval

City council approved rezoning for a 90k SF, nine-storey mixed-use project, to be located at Seventh and Main. It'll feature retail, artist studios, and townhouses. The design is not your standard cookie-cutter look. (Though should we really be insulting cookie cutters this close to Christmas? They bring us cookies, don't forget.) Main Street Commercial Holdings is the project owner. Arno Matis Architecture is overseeing design to LEED Gold. The site, comprised of three legal parcels, is actually located on the northeast corner of Main St and E Seventh Ave.


Go-To Lunch Spots for Dealmakers

Ever wonder where the action really goes on in Vancouver, lunch spots and watering holes for the deal-making set? We asked around and will have a Top 5 (or 6, or 7--only our stomach knows) for you in an upcoming edition. The bar at the Fairmont Pacific Rim hotel (pictured) is on the list. Stay tuned for the rest, and send us your suggestions.


"Hell, there are no rules here--we're trying to accomplish something."--Thomas Edison

 
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