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Year-End Report Shows Demand Strong For Manhattan's Most Expensive Office Space
11 Jan, 2006, New York, NY
City sees surge in leases above $70 per square foot
Midtown, Midtown South and Downtown vacancy rates reach four-year lows
Cushman & Wakefield today released year-end statistics for the Manhattan commercial real
estate market that show strong demand for the city's most expensive office space and declining
vacancy rates throughout the borough.
In 2005, Cushman & Wakefield tracked more than 78 completed office leases with rents above
$70 per square foot, compared to 48 in 2004 and just eight in 2003. The $70 figure is
representative of the higher end of the market, well above the average asking rent of $53 per
square foot registered at yearend for New York's most modern and best located office buildings
in Midtown.
Throughout the city, the vacancy rate fell to four year lows as more than 10 million square
feet of available space was removed from the market. The Midtown vacancy rate declined to 7.8
percent, its lowest level since the third quarter of 2001; Midtown South's vacancy declined to
7.4 percent, its lowest point since the second quarter of 2001; Downtown's vacancy declined to
10.6 percent, its lowest level since the fourth quarter of 2001.
According to Joe Harbert, Cushman & Wakefield's chief operating officer for the New York
Metro Region, "An increase in pricing for the high-end space in the market illustrates the
strength of the financial services sector in the economy. The most expensive office space,
located for the most part on Fifth Avenue, Madison Avenue and Park Avenue, has been leased
primarily by financial services, hedge fund and real estate investment firms. Those are the
types of tenants who are growing and competing for this type of space."
Mr. Harbert said that financial services firms remained the most active industry in 2005,
leasing more than 4.2 million square feet of office space on deals above 10,000 square feet,
followed by law firms at 1.6 million square feet and media companies at 1.4 million square
feet.
Among the top leasing deals of 2005 were Citigroup at 485 Lexington Ave., 787 Seventh Ave. and
731 Lexington (750,000 square feet), Bank of America at 50 Rockefeller Plaza (320,000 square
feet), American Express Financial Advisors at Three World Financial Center (220,000 square
feet), law firm Fried Frank Harris Schriver & Jacobson at One New York Plaza (330,000
square feet), the law firm Ropes & Gray at 1211 Avenue of the Americas (240,000 square
feet), and the law firm McDermott Will & Emery at 340 Madison Ave. (170,000 square
feet).
Overall leasing activity for 2005 totaled 25.5 million square feet, down from 29.5 million
square feet in 2004. According to Mr. Harbert, despite the fact that less new leasing occurred
in 2005, the office market tightened due to the fact that "fewer firms gave up excess
space, companies that had been marketing excess space for lease took it back off the market and
a substantial amount of space was converted to residential use in Midtown South and
Downtown."
The nearly $15 difference in average asking rents between Midtown and Downtown at the end of
2004 has increased to more than $17 per square foot at the end of 2005. A class-A space
comparison between Midtown and Downtown reveals a $19 per square foot differential, before
factoring in economic incentives for companies locating Downtown.
According to Mr. Harbert, "the latest economic incentives package approved over the summer
has been making an impact lately. There were several transactions and leases out for Downtown
office space at the end of the year, and Downtown saw its vacancy rate decline throughout
2005."
Mr. Harbert pointed out that three of the top 10 Manhattan office lease transactions were
closed Downtown in 2005 for a total of about one million square feet. "A further
tightening of the Midtown market, combined with meaningful Downtown incentives, should
reinvigorate Downtown Manhattan and its prospects going into 2006," Mr. Harbert
said.
INVESTMENT SALES
Preliminary estimates for the total value of Manhattan building sales in 2005 set another
record, reaching $16.8 billion at yearend. The previous record was set in 2004, when about
$15.1 billion in commercial space was purchased.
The highest profile sale of the year was the $1.72 billion sale of the MetLife Building to
Tishman Speyer Properties. Arranged by Cushman & Wakefield's New York Capital Markets
Group, it set the record for a single office building sale.
According to Mr. Harbert, "Commercial real estate investment has really only gone through
two phases since the stock market crash of 2000. Initially, money flowed from stocks and bonds
to office buildings that had more predictable returns - meaning buildings that were modern and
fully leased for the long-term, carrying little leasing risk.
"Interest rates continued their decline to historic lows, and building prices rose to
record highs, even as vacancy rates were rising," Mr. Harbert added. "The second
phase started when investors, primarily private equity investors, started betting on a
turnaround in leasing fundamentals. Taking advantage of low interest rates, they started buying
properties that had large blocks of space available to reap the higher returns available
through improved occupancy."
In 2005, more than 60 percent of transactions were completed by private equity investors taking
advantage of the lower interest rate environment.
RETAIL
Retail continues in an upward trend. SoHo remains the hottest retail market as far as activity.
Ben Sherman, Massoni and Footlocker all leased space for new locations there during the fourth
quarter.
Madison Avenue saw a $6.00 bump in asking rents, with several properties drawing more than
$1,000 per square foot. Retailers like Calypso, which took 11,000 square feet at 815 Madison,
and Pomellato, which leased space at 741 Madison, showed interest in the area, lowering the
vacancy rate to 7.7 percent at yearend, from 10.5 percent at the end of the second quarter
2005.
Rents on the Upper West Side along Broadway also jumped from $242 at the end of the third
quarter to $264 at yearend, due to the development of 1880 Broadway, which came to the market
with asking rents ranging from $350 to $450 per square foot.
Times Square continues to be strong. Tenants have shown interest in the area, not only for the
immense tourism and foot traffic, but also seeing the new residential development there and
west of Eighth Avenue.
At the end of 2005, the level of interest for high-profile corner spaces in Manhattan by banks
slowed slightly. While there remains substantial competition to lease these corner locations,
the pause by the banks has been noted, and it remains to be seen if this trend will continue
into 2006.

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