LA Times – After nearly three years of declines there are signs that Southern California’s beaten-down commercial real estate market has struck bottom — setting up the possibility of a rebound later this year.
In a sign of the easing, heavyweight investors armed with buckets of cash are on the prowl, looking to snap up office buildings, warehouses, shopping centers and apartments at the market’s low, industry observers say. The buyers are choosy, but the most desirable buildings elicit bidding wars when they come up for sale.
The auction earlier this year of Wilshire-Bundy Plaza, a prominent Brentwood office building, drew 40 bidders. The 14-story building will sell for $111 million to Santa Monica landlord Douglas Emmett Inc. if a Bankruptcy Court approves the deal, said real estate broker Bob Safai of Madison Partners.
“That’s an incredible price in today’s marketplace,” Safai said. Now he is trying to sell 801 S. Figueroa St., a 25-story tower in downtown Los Angeles that he hopes will garner $180 million.
Although commercial building landlords in many markets are still struggling with high vacancy rates and weak rents, the erosion in some sectors has slowed, piquing the interest of buyers. In addition, reinvigorated banks have been able to postpone or avoid liquidating billions of dollars’ worth of distressed real estate loans sitting on their books, helping to solidify prices.
In a similar fashion, Southern California’s housing market hit bottom more than a year ago and prices have been trudging higher ever since, partly because a feared wave of fresh foreclosures hasn’t materialized.’
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