Home Marketing & Statistics Jones Lang LaSalle Reports Manhattan’s Trophy Buildings Boosting Rents Citywide

Jones Lang LaSalle Reports Manhattan’s Trophy Buildings Boosting Rents Citywide

Annual North American Skyline Review reports heightened demand combined with flat supply causing increased rents and reduced concessions

NEW YORK, NY – April 5, 2012 – (RealEstateRama) — Most of the gains in Manhattan’s average asking rental rates over the past year can be attributed to increases in rates for the city’s trophy buildings. Starting rents in some of New York’s trophy product surpassed $175 per square foot for the first time since 2008, according to Jones Lang LaSalle’s Spring 2012 Skyline Review for New York.

The Plaza District, typically the highest-priced submarket in Manhattan, posted average asking rental rates of $95.39 per square foot for trophy space in February 2012, a 30.3 percent increase in asking rents from the $73.32 per square foot recorded at the bottom of the market in 2010. The Spring 2012 Skyline Review noted, however, that the city continues to see a wide disparity in pricing. The Midtown trophy set saw more modest average asking rental rates of $89.12 per square foot in February 2012, a boost of 26 percent from rates of $72.11 per square foot at the bottom of the market. Downtown trophy asking rents have grown just 10.7 percent over the same time period to $51.56 per square foot, representing a more than 40 percent discount to the Plaza District.

Nationally, with just four regional markets adding minimal new developments, leasing demands continue to outpace supply, allowing landlords to scale back tenant improvement allowances by five percent while increasing rents by nearly three percent at top office properties. The annual North American Skyline Review from Jones Lang LaSalle also reports that heightened investor interest for this type of product caused activity to expand beyond gateways into secondary markets.

“Vacancy levels continued to drop nationally in trophy and Class A properties in 2011; yet, with the exception of markets spurred by technology, energy and healthcare demands, they have a way to go before witnessing the lows of 2006,” said John Sikaitis, Director of U.S. Office Research. “However, net-effective rents in the U.S. increased with some markets witnessing double-digit growth. With limited supply in the pipeline, we anticipate to see this upsurge trend in rents continue.”

Jones Lang LaSalle Skyline Markets
Jones Lang LaSalle’s annual proprietary Skyline Report provides a unique perspective of office market trends across a select group of Class A and Trophy buildings in urban areas. This top tier of buildings, representing 30 percent of total CBD office space, historically has been the market-moving segment of the office sector, leading the overall market through downturns and expansions. The North American Skyline Review combines data from 26 U.S. and five Canadian markets to gain a broader insight into near-term market trends.

Leasing Highlights
Demand within the Skyline segment continued to outpace that of the overall U.S. office sector through the end of 2011 and into 2012. In total, the Skyline market absorbed 6.5 million square feet of space in 2011 and outshined overall market rates by 40 percent. Vacancy levels also dropped from a high of 15.7 percent to the current level of 14.7.

In addition, only four markets – Boston, Houston, Miami and Washington, DC – delivered a total of seven new buildings compared with the 2007-2010 annual averages of 17 new buildings across the U.S. Skyline.

Looking ahead, the development pipeline appears just as equally barren with a total of eight buildings under construction, measuring 6.1 million square feet with New York and Washington, DC accounting for nearly 90 percent of the space currently under construction driven by the World Trade Center and CityCenter developments, respectively. Looking forward, large blocks of space will continue to come at a premium across most geographies and tenant leverage will continue to slip with almost no new supply.
Overall, asking rents jumped 2.9 percent in 2011 to an average full service rate of $37.35 per square foot while tenant concessions packages have lowered with improvement allowances down 5.0 percent in 2011 and rent abatement down 5.1 percent.

Investment Highlights
Investors continued to flood capital into core stabilized assets in 2011 with sales of Skyline assets increasing at nearly double the rate of overall U.S. office sales volume. In total, Skyline sales volume jumped 66.4 percent with New York, Houston, Chicago, Boston and Washington, DC registering sales volumes greater than $1 billion throughout the year.

Major Market Highlights

Chicago:
• Of the 16 deals larger than 100,000 square feet signed in the CBD during the year, 15 were in Skyline buildings primarily resulting from relocations or expansions seeking quality upgrades.

Los Angeles:
• The Downtown Skyline continued to outperform the rest of the Class A office market despite rising vacancy in key Trophy assets hit hard by the downsizing in the large energy, financial and legal services tenants.

San Francisco:
• Rental rates outperformed the overall market averaging $48.28 per square feet versus the market’s $43.39 per square foot. Additionally, technology leasing activity continued as the driving force behind investment activity as sales volume reached its highest level since 2007.

Washington, DC:
• The completion of the election cycle and more certainty surrounding the federal budget should help tenant demand in 2013.

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Jones Lang LaSalle is a leader in the New York tri-state commercial real estate market, with more than 1,700 of the most recognized industry experts offering brokerage, capital markets, facilities management, consulting, and project and development services. In 2010, the New York tri-state team completed approximately 17 million square feet in lease transactions, completed capital markets transactions valued at $861 million, managed projects valued at more than $5.8 billion, and oversaw a property and facilities management portfolio of 83.5 million square feet.

About Jones Lang LaSalle
Jones Lang LaSalle (NYSE:JLL) is a financial and professional services firm specializing in real estate. The firm offers integrated services delivered by expert teams worldwide to clients seeking increased value by owning, occupying or investing in real estate. With 2011 global revenue of $3.6 billion, Jones Lang LaSalle serves clients in 70 countries from more than 1,000 locations worldwide, including 200 corporate offices. The firm is an industry leader in property and corporate facility management services, with a portfolio of approximately 2.1 billion square feet worldwide. LaSalle Investment Management, the company’s investment management business, is one of the world’s largest and most diverse in real estate with $47.7 billion of assets under management. For further information, please visit our website, www.joneslanglasalle.com

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