Apartment Finance
TodayCAPITAL MARKETSEQUITY INVESTMENT Seeking
EquityAPARTMENT FINANCE TODAY • June 2008 Developers
need more equity to make deals pencil out, but it's harder to find and more costly. BY
JERRY ASCIERTO Developers are searching harder to find equity
as capital providers grow more cautious this year. With lenders providing
lower loan-to-value ratios, developers need more equity to pencil out deals. But
equity prices have increased significantly over the last six months, and conservative
underwriting standards have slowed access to it. Last year, both debt and
equity providers often stretched underwriting standards to make deals work in
a rush to place capital. Those days are long gone as equity sources take a much
closer look at deals, and adjust underwriting and return expectations accordingly.
Four years ago to one year ago, everything was the samewhether you
were in Dallas or Des Moines or Denver, said David Fitch, president and
CEO of developer Gables Residential, at the recent APARTMENT FINANCE TODAY Conference
in Phoenix. Now theres much more scrutiny about property types and
what the submarket is like, and tailoring specific returns. Gables
Residential is working on deals in Austin, Texas, and Dade County, Fla. One
market is great, the other is a disaster, Fitch said The same equity
players showed up for both deals, but the underwriting was much different.
Equity investors are no longer assuming aggressive rent growth as a matter of
course when underwriting deals. Many projections are being built assuming flat
rents, even in strong metro markets, in the first half of 2008. And sellers
are saying, show me the money when engaging with buyers now. Buyers
have to demonstrate that they have the financing and not that theyll just
put it together on the fly, which was the case last year when all that money was
there, said Tyler Anderson, a vice chairman at CB Richard Ellis multi-housing
group. Today, if Im a buyer, Im making sure I get my capital
stack completely lined up. Search party As a result
of the increasingly conservative capital markets, developers are firing up the
searchlights to find equity. Developer Trillium Residential has engaged a mortgage
banker for the first time in years in its search for equity investors. In
the past, the equity found us, said David Dewar, Trilliums founding
partner and principal. Large life insurance companies such as Northwest
Mutual and Prudential are still providing equity, and many developers are also
sourcing both debt and equity from pension funds and other financial services
firms such as CalPERS, CalSTRS, and TIAA-CREF. Were talking to life
insurance companies now that we havent talked to in the last five years,
said Fitch. Opportunity funds are also getting more active as the commercial
real estate market grows more distressed. At the end of March, Blackstone Group
closed a $10.9 billion opportunity fund called Blackstone Real Estate Partners
VI, and another opportunity fund, Lone Star Funds, is trying to raise $10 billion
to also take advantage of the down market. With a dearth of capital on
the market, some creative financing strategies are emerging. Trillium Residential
recently received a quote from a large mutual fund looking to provide equity on
a new construction deal. Rather than quote one deal, they wanted
to tie a construction deal with one of our stabilized deals to take some of the
risk out, said Dewar. It was the first time Ive seen two assets
in different stages being tied together like that. Expensive money
Mezzanine financing providers have significantly upped their return expectations
over the last year. For transitional, unstabilized properties, mezzanine providers
are asking for returns in the high teens and low-20 percent range, up from between
13 percent and 15 percent a year ago. The higher mezzanine rates have caused
a sea change in the attitude of equity investment, said Stephen OConnor,
president of the OConnor Group, a consultant to the housing and community
development industry. Most equity providers now begin negotiations expecting mid-20
percent returns, and as high as 30 percent, up from the high teens and low-20
percent range a year ago. But its not just conventional market- rate
deals that are having a hard time. Equity is especially difficult to come by for
affordable housing deals, as the prices of low-income housing tax credits (LIHTCs)
continue to plummet. The weakened demand for the credits has pushed prices into
the low-80 cent range in some markets, OConnor said, as many large financial
institutions hit by big losses see little need to reduce their tax liability.
The primary source of equity for the last 20 years has been LIHTCs,
said OConnor. But now, youve got institutions writing off $8
billion, $12 billion in losses, so they no longer need the credits. Institutions
are walking away from it. Foreign capital As domestic
equity providers grow cautious and the U.S. dollar remains weak, its a great
time for foreign capital to step in and fill the void. But while the depressed
commercial real estate market has attracted opportunity funds, foreign capital
providers have been skittish in the first half of 2008. The Australian
funds and Middle Eastern funds will be looking at the United States more and more,
especially once all of the bad real estate news settles down, said Fitch.
Accessing foreign capital can be a dicey proposition, especially in navigating
the long time frames that many foreign equity providers take to assess a deal.
The trick with foreign capital is how fast the capital comes to us,
said Anderson of CB Richard Ellis. It takes some firms in London 90 days
just to look at a deal sometimes. If you want to tap that source, you have to
do it through their U.S.-based advisers. Some cities are beginning
to strike partnerships with overseas investors in hopes of spurring a capital
infusion. The mayor of Phoenix, Phil Gordon, has formed a global trade initiative
that seeks to facilitate direct foreign investment in Phoenix, according to Dewar,
who is based in Tempe. The initiative will initially focus on developing
relationships in Dubai, United Arab Emirates, and a group of local business leaders,
including Dewar, will travel to Dubai this summer. One aim of the initiative
is to establish direct international flights between Dubai and Phoenix, an important
consideration. In talking to representatives from a German pension fund recently,
Dewar found that a big inhibitor to German companies investing in Phoenix was
the length of the flight, which can take up to 24 hours. |