Cushman & Wakefield today released second quarter statistics for the Manhattan commercial
real estate market that show new office leases are being signed at a record pace. A total of
17.6 million square feet of new leases were signed in the first six months of 2011, the highest
six-month total in more than a decade. In May and June alone, new leasing activity totaled
nearly eight million square feet, the highest two-month total in Cushman & Wakefield's
records. Year-over-year, leasing activity is up 40 percent from the 12.6 million square feet
signed in the first half of 2010.
Strong leasing activity helped lower the overall average vacancy rate for Manhattan to 9.4
percent at mid-year 2011, a decrease of 0.5 percentage points from one month ago, marking the
largest one-month decrease since December 2005. Year-over-year, the overall vacancy rate
declined 1.4 percentage points from 10.8 percent at midyear 2010. The vacancy rate for class-A
space declined steadily to 10.0 percent at midyear 2011, down from 10.7 percent at the end of
the first quarter and down from11.5 percent at this time a year ago.
Overall asking rents in Manhattan registered $55.52 per square foot at midyear 2011, up
$1.21 or 2.2 percent from $54.31 per square foot at midyear 2010. The average asking rent for
Class-A space also rose, registering $63.58 per square foot at midyear, up $1.62 or 2.6 percent
from $61.96 per square foot at the end of 2010.
"The strong second quarter coupled with a record pace of leasing activity in the first
six months of the year is proof of a rapidly strengthening market," said Joseph R.
Harbert, Cushman & Wakefield's Chief Operating Office for the New York Metro Region.
Vacant space in Manhattan declined more than 4.4 million square feet since the end of 2010,
to 36.7 million square feet at midyear. A lack of sublease space added to the market was a key
contributing factor to the declining vacancy rate. Sublease space - which has decreased the
past seven months and now totals 5.3 million square feet - accounts for only 14.4 percent of
all available space in Manhattan, down from 21.9 percent a year ago at this time.
Absorption, which is a measure of the net change in occupied space over a given period of
time, was positive 3.2 million square feet - the first time absorption has been positive for
the January through June time period since the first half of 2007.
The Midtown market continued to lead the way in activity, with 6.1 million square feet of
new leases in the second quarter. Eight transactions of 100,000 square feet or larger closed in
Midtown during the second quarter, up from seven transactions in the first quarter.
The Midtown Class-A market, which was hit the hardest during the recession, has recovered
the fastest. The Class-A vacancy rate, which peaked at 13.9 percent in the first quarter of
2010, decreased to 10.5 percent in the second quarter of 2011.
The vacancy rate in Midtown South registered 7.1 percent at midyear 2011, which was by far
the lowest vacancy rate of any major central business district in the nation, down from 9.2
percent at this time last year. As a result, asking rents in Midtown South increased 2.1
percent from this time last year, to $44.63 per square foot from $43.71.
The Downtown market saw strong activity in the second quarter, led by Conde Nast's one
million-square-foot deal at One World Trade Center. Asking rents Downtown rose more rapidly
than other markets, with overall rents up 4.2 percent from a year ago, to $39.38 per square
foot, while Class-A rents are up 11.3 percent to $44.29 per square foot.
"The New York City economy continues to outperform the rest of the nation," Mr.
Harbert said, "and that trend is showing up in the commercial real estate fundamentals. We
anticipate that national employment growth will pick up its pace from what was a slow second
quarter, which will cause New York to experience further increases in demand for
space."
The top five leases of the quarter included a one million-square-foot lease for Condé Nast at
One World Trade Center, a 900,964-square-foot lease for Nomura Holding Inc. at 825 Eighth
Avenue, a 249,579-square-foot lease for Wells Fargo at 150 East 42nd Street, a 244,185-square-
foot lease for NBC at 1221 Avenue of the Americas and a 210,841-square-foot lease for Wilmer
Hale at 7 World Trade Center. Cushman & Wakefield was involved in three of the top five
leases completed in the second quarter, and four of the top five leases year-to-date.
By industry, financial services accounted for 28.2 percent of all leasing year-to-date,
followed by information/media at 27.5 percent and government, education and social services at
11.8 percent. This compares to the first half of 2010, when financial services accounted for
22.6 percent, followed by legal services at 12.1 percent and government, education and social
services at 11.9 percent.
INVESTMENT SALES
Property sales closed in Manhattan during the first six months of 2011 totaled more than $13.1
billion, up 152 percent from the $5.2 billion closed through midyear 2010.
On an annualized basis, with the more than $13.1 billion in sales closed and nearly $4.4
billion under contract during the first half of 2011, overall property sales for 2011 would
reach $35 billion, on par with investment volume in 2006 and the second highest annual sales
volume in the city's history. The highest volume occurred in 2007, when total sales hit $47.8
billion.
"Property values are increasing rapidly in Manhattan - partly as a result of improving
leasing fundamentals and partly as a result of a tremendous amount of capital focused on New
York City," said Mr. Harbert.
Class-A office sales have totaled $5 billion year to date, attracting the most investment
capital. Hotel property and development sites followed with $2.2 and $2.0 billion,
respectively. Institutional investors have accounted for 36 percent of this year's
acquisitions, followed by private capital at 29 percent, real estate investment trusts at 23
percent, and foreign investors at 9 percent.
RETAIL
The Manhattan retail market continues to perform strongly, particularly in the primary
corridors. Availability rates are flat or decreasing in every major market and average ground
floor asking rents appear to be rising slowly.
After strong leasing activity in both the Upper and Lower Fifth Avenue corridors earlier
this year, availability rates are at extremely low levels. Only three units remain available
for lease in the Upper Fifth Avenue market, which spans Fifth Avenue from from 49th to 60th
Streets. These spaces have an average ground floor asking rent above $2,000 per square
foot.
Times Square is another corridor where availability is tight. The Times Square Theater
leased over 30,000 square feet at 215 West 42nd Street this quarter, helping drop the
availability rate to just 5.1 percent. The "Bowtie" - spanning from 42nd to 47th
Streets on Broadway continues to see heightened asking rental rates that exceed $1,500 per
square foot.
In SoHo, from West Houston to Grand Streets and West Broadway to Broadway, availability
continued to decline to 6.5 percent, down from 8.4 percent at the end of 2010. More than 14
retail spaces were leased this quarter in SoHo, with apparel retailers taking the majority of
the units. Though ground floor asking rents in the submarket average $268 per square foot this
quarter, on premier streets like Prince, Spring and Broadway, asking rents on spaces can exceed
$600 per square foot.
Availability in the Madison Avenue market, which stretches from 56th to 72nd Streets,
decreased slightly to 11.1 percent, although the market continues to have high availability.
Recent activity helped drive asking rents up to $838 per square foot this quarter, a 2.3
percent increase from the first quarter of 2011.
Leasing activity in the Third Avenue market was strong, with nine spaces leased. Tenant
leases in high priced spaces included The Gap, Verizon Wireless and Zales.
HOTEL
Hotel occupancy has held steady over the last five years registering a rate of between 80 to 84
percent. Driven by tourism and corporate travel, with the financial services industry leading
the way, Manhattan has the highest hotel occupancy rate in the top 25 markets in the U.S.
"The reason for the strength is that there has been strong absorption for new supply
throughout Manhattan and demand has outpaced new supply," said Tom McConnell, a senior
managing director at Cushman & Wakefield Sonnenblick Goldman. "The average occupancy
rate, which suffered in 2009, is almost back to its peak from 2007."
There have been 16 transactions for $4.2 billion in the first six months of 2011 compared to
six transactions and $448 million in the first six months of 2010 and 11 transactions and $1.1
billion for all of last year.
The buyer type in the last two years has been primarily U.S. REITs followed by real estate
funds followed by domestic and international private buyers.
The top three transactions in the first six months of 2011 include a $446 million
transaction by Pebblebrook Hotel for 49 percent interest in the Denihan Hospitality Group,
which is a total of six hotels, a $400 million transaction by Northwood Investors for The New
York Palace Hotel and an $80 million transaction for the Chelsea Hotel, which was sold by a
group of families to Joseph Chetrit.
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