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Updated over 9 years ago on . Most recent reply
What CRE category is undervalued?
I'm selling some apartments at what feel like crazy low caps. I'd like to 1031 the money into a value play of some kind. Retail is the traditional next step but I'm concerned about the outlook for anything except AAA locations.
I'm considering:
- Industrial - Apparently this is where the smart money is going in my market, but I don't know the first thing about making a good play here
- Health care - Pretty much recession proof but it's hard to compete with the REITs for quality product
- Office - Terrible in my market, might be good in others
- Restaurants/bars - Cap rates almost as low as residential for quality local tenants, and much lower for NNNs
Where are you guys seeing high cap rates and good outlooks?
@joel owens - I'm sure you have some good comments here as always!
Most Popular Reply
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Nick,
I'm only talking in generalities, since you don't specify many details, such as if you are investing for cash flow, for appreciation, for repositioning/value add, etc.
Anytime you state something like "this is where the smart money is going", it sounds like that it has already appreciated. Also, be careful as stating things such as "healthcare is recession proof". You are not in the healthcare business, you are in the real estate business. That comment has no bearing on whether you should buy an asset built for healthcare, nor will your property have a higher ROI or lower vacancy. For instance, you buy a building with an urgent care. That urgent care can lose money (many do) and hence not be able to make lease obligations. These comments only make sense on a macro scale, but have no bearing on the few properties you may acquire.
It sounds like you are selling out of multifamily because you see it overvalued (low caps) and looking for a CRE category that is undervalued (on average of course). Based solely on what you stated, your "value play" would be to go into office based on you stating that it's "terrible".
In my market (Inland Empire, So Cal), all asset classes are overvalued. However that's why you are in real estate. You can always find an undervalued asset in an overvalued category.