real estate outlook suburban maryland ......the suburban maryland office market weakened during the...

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SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE MARKET SECOND QUARTER 2017 REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the direct vacancy rate increased to 14.7%. Asking rents, however, increased 0.1% to $26.76 PSF, despite the increase in vacancy rate. Despite the sluggish outcome of the second quarter, we anticipate the office market to improve through 2018 with the help of a limited pipeline. ECONOMY Payroll employment up 2.2% Payroll employment increased by 22,700 jobs during the 12-months ending May 2017 in Suburban Maryland, which is above the 20-year annual average of 12,000. The leisure/hospitality sector was the leader in growth, contributing 8,800 new jobs to the economy. The government sector followed with 4,200 new jobs added during the same time period, which was driven mostly by hiring in the federal government. The Suburban Maryland unemployment rate was 3.9% at April 2017, down from 4.4% one year prior. The unemployment rate is below the 10-year average of 5.8%. This compares to the Washington metro area unemployment rate of 3.4% and the national rate of 4.4% at April 2017. We expect economic conditions to remain healthy during the balance of 2017, as consumer and business confidence strengthens. Through 2021, we expect job growth to average 9,500 jobs per year, accounting for 30% of the metro total. We expect the health, technology, construction, and food services industries to fuel job growth in the period ahead. OFFICE VACANCY AND DEMAND Market fundamentals falter The direct vacancy rate in Suburban Maryland was 14.7% at June 2017, up 30 basis points from March 2017. The rate remains above the 10-year average vacancy rate of 13.3%. The Class A vacancy rate inched up 10 basis points to 11.5% and the Class B/C market increased even further by 40 basis points to 15.6%. Office market hits bump in the road Limited demand and cooling rental rates OFFICE TRENDS 10-YEAR TREND SECOND QUARTER 2017 DIRECT VACANCY 14.7% Vacancy rate edges up ABSORPTION (50,000) SF Sluggish demand YTD RENTAL RATES $26.76 PSF Up 1.2% YTD UNDER CONSTRUCTION 169,000 SF Pipeline dwindling JOB GROWTH 22,700 jobs 12-months ending May 2017

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Page 1: REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND ......The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the

SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE MARKETSECOND QUARTER 2017

REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK

The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the direct vacancy rate increased to 14.7%. Asking rents, however, increased 0.1% to $26.76 PSF, despite the increase in vacancy rate. Despite the sluggish outcome of the second quarter, we anticipate the office market to improve through 2018 with the help of a limited pipeline.

ECONOMY

Payroll employment up 2.2%Payroll employment increased by 22,700 jobs during the 12-months ending May 2017 in Suburban Maryland, which is above the 20-year annual average of 12,000. The leisure/hospitality sector was the leader in growth, contributing 8,800 new jobs to the economy. The government sector followed with 4,200 new jobs added during the same time period, which was driven mostly by hiring in the federal government.

The Suburban Maryland unemployment rate was 3.9% at April 2017, down from 4.4% one year prior. The unemployment rate is below the 10-year average of 5.8%. This compares to the Washington metro area unemployment rate of 3.4% and the national rate of 4.4% at April 2017.

We expect economic conditions to remain healthy during the balance of 2017, as consumer and business confidence strengthens. Through 2021, we expect job growth to average 9,500 jobs per year, accounting for 30% of the metro total. We expect the health, technology, construction, and food services industries to fuel job growth in the period ahead.

OFFICE VACANCY AND DEMAND

Market fundamentals falterThe direct vacancy rate in Suburban Maryland was 14.7% at June 2017, up 30 basis points from March 2017. The rate remains above the 10-year average vacancy rate of 13.3%. The Class A vacancy rate inched up 10 basis points to 11.5% and the Class B/C market increased even further by 40 basis points to 15.6%.

Office market hits bump in the roadLimited demand and cooling rental rates

OFFICE TRENDS

10-YEAR TREND SECOND QUARTER 2017

DIRECT VACANCY

14.7%Vacancy rate edges up

ABSORPTION

(50,000) SFSluggish demand YTD

RENTAL R ATES

$26.76 PSFUp 1.2% YTD

UNDER CONSTRUCTION

169,000 SFPipeline dwindling

JOB GROW TH

22,700 jobs12-months ending May 2017

Page 2: REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND ......The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the

2 REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE MARKET Q2 2017

SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE MARKETSECOND QUARTER 2017

Net absorption totaled negative 242,000 SF during the second quarter of 2017. Both Class A and Class B/C registered negative net absorption at 30,000 SF and 212,000 SF, respectively. This compares poorly to the 10-year annual average of positive 169,000 SF.

The Bethesda/Chevy Chase submarket saw the most negative net absorption during the past three months, at negative 82,000 SF. This was due primarily to the University Research Co. vacating 63,000 SF at 7200 Wisconsin Avenue and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation vacating 40,700 SF at 6931 Arlington Road.

During the first half of 2017, the government sector represented the largest share of leasing activity at 38% of all new or re-let deals. The health and nonprofit sectors followed at 22% and 11%, respectively. Notably, the Food and Drug Administration took 62,000 SF at 4041 Powder Mill Road in Beltsville and Family Health Centers leased 14,000 SF at 19851 Observation Drive in Germantown.

OFFICE RENTAL R ATES

Asking rents climb 0.1% Average asking rents in the Suburban Maryland office market increased 0.1% during the second quarter to $26.76 PSF. Class A office rents averaged $29.38 PSF, while Class B/C rents averaged $24.50 PSF.

Concession packages remained elevated during the first half of 2017. For a typical 10-year term on a new lease, tenant improvement allowances averaged $61 PSF with 10 months of free rent.

OFFICE SUPPLY AND DEVELOPMENT

Pipeline continues to dwindleThere were two deliveries in the second quarter for a total of 51,000 SF. In the Lanham/Landover/Largo submarket Potomac Construction completed 34,000 SF at 7521 Jefferson Avenue, which it will fully occupy. In addition, The Duffie Companies delivered 16,800 SF at 57 Randolph Road in the North Silver Spring/Route 29 submarket, which is 68% pre-leased by the developer.

There is 169,000 SF of office space under construction or under renovation in two buildings at June 2017, which is well below the 10-year average of 1.5 million SF. The pipeline is currently 72% pre-leased, above the 10-year average pre-lease rate of 52%. Silver Spring has the most underway with one building under construction for 121,174 SF at 100% pre-leased.

UNEMPLOYMENT RATE

PAYROLL JOB GROWTH

SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE NET ABSORPTION AND VACANCY

0%

2%

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17*

UNITED STATES WASHINGTON METRO AREA SUBURBAN MARYLAND

-5%

-4%

-3%

-2%

-1%

0%

1%

2%

3%

07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17*

UNITED STATES WASHINGTON METRO AREA SUBURBAN MARYLAND

4%

6%

8%

10%

12%

14%

16%

18%

-1.5

-1.0

-0.5

0.0

0.5

1.0

08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17*

NET ABSORPTION IN MILLIONS DIRECT VACANCY RATE

SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Transwestern.

*12-months ending May 2017SOURCE: Bureau of Labor Statistics, Transwestern.

*At second quarter 2017SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern.

Page 3: REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND ......The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the

SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE MARKETSECOND QUARTER 2017

REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE MARKET Q2 2017 3

OFFICE INVESTMENT MARKET

Investment sales healthy in Q2There were five investment sales in the second quarter of 2017. Notably, Glazer Properties purchased 15245 Shady Grove from Meritage Properties for $24.8 million, or $133 PSF, and Promark Real Estate Services purchased 451 Hungerford Drive from HBW Group for $14.5 million, or $145 PSF. In the first half of 2017, sales volume totaled $183 million, or $116 PSF, 68% of which is made up of Class B/C assets. In 2016, investment sales totaled $1.9 billion, or $222 PSF, rocketing past the $610 million, or $168 PSF, achieved in 2015.

SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE ASKING RENTAL RATES

SUBURBAN MARYLAND CONTIGUOUS BLOCK ANALYSIS

SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE DEVELOPMENT PIPELINE MILLION SF

$15

$20

$25

$30

$35

$40

08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17*

CLASS A CLASS B/C

275

143

5120

276

144

52200

50

100

150

200

250

300

10,000 SF 20,000 SF 50,000 SF 100,000 SF

NUMBER OF BUILDINGS - Q2 2016 NUMBER OF BUILDINGS - Q2 2017

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17*

COMPLETED UNDER CONSTRUCTION PRE-LEASED UNDER CONSTRUCTION AVAILABLE

*At second quarter 2017SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern.

SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern.

*Delivered YTDSOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern.

Page 4: REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND ......The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the

4 REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE MARKET Q2 2017

SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE MARKETSECOND QUARTER 2017

OFFICE MARKET OUTLOOK

Office market to steadily improve through 2018 We expect market conditions to improve at a gradual pace through 2018. The overall vacancy rate (inclusive of sublease space) should decline to the mid-14% range by year-end 2018, aided by a very limited pipeline. Net absorption during this period will likely be positive, averaging 500,000 SF per year.

Although we expect leasing activity to pick up in the period ahead, growth will remain muted compared to past recovery cycles due in part to tenant densification and consolidations. As a result, the market will remain in tenant favor in the near-term. Select submarkets with a relatively low vacancy rate, controlled pipeline and no significant move-outs on the horizon are poised to recover first. We expect Bethesda/Chevy Chase and Silver Spring to lead the pack.

We expect asking rents to rise 1.5% to 2.5% during 2017. The vacancy rate will remain elevated, which will keep rent growth conservative and concession packages elevated. The exception is top-tier space, given rising demand and limited availability for this asset class. n

Suburban Maryland Office Market Indicators

SUBMARKET INVENTORYUNDER

CONSTRUCTIONQ2 NET

ABSORPTIONYTD NET

ABSORPTIONDIRECT

VACANCYSUBLEASE

SPACETOTAL

VACANCYAVERAGERATE PSF

Bethesda/Chevy Chase 11,654,099 0 (82,000) (82,000) 7.4% 1.6% 9.0% $38.08

North Bethesda 10,765,098 0 43,000 (11,000) 18.7% 0.2% 18.9% $28.27

Rockville 8,483,331 0 (76,000) (25,000) 12.7% 0.3% 13.0% $29.71

North Rockville 12,380,046 0 (62,000) (95,000) 16.4% 1.5% 17.9% $26.98

Gaithersburg 6,386,461 0 0 20,000 12.0% 0.0% 12.0% $22.35

Germantown 2,730,085 0 5,000 30,000 14.1% 0.1% 14.2% $24.78

Kensington/Wheaton 1,333,234 0 (9,000) (7,000) 27.3% 0.1% 27.4% $24.80

Silver Spring 6,849,072 121,724 (5,000) 15,000 9.8% 0.3% 10.1% $28.11

North Silver Spring/Rt. 29 3,492,988 0 (28,000) (28,000) 9.6% 0.3% 9.9% $23.80

Montgomery County Total 64,074,414 121,724 (214,000) (183,000) 13.3% 0.7% 14.0% $28.30

Beltsville/Calv./Coll. Park 6,135,212 0 (43,000) 31,000 20.5% 0.0% 20.5% $22.27

Laurel 2,579,823 0 8,000 5,000 12.2% 0.0% 12.2% $20.30

Greenbelt 3,016,041 0 15,000 30,000 28.0% 0.1% 28.1% $21.31

Lanham/Landover/Largo 4,944,867 0 (38,000) (38,000) 23.0% 0.1% 23.1% $21.51

Bowie/Marlboro/South P.G. 4,982,613 0 10,000 30,000 14.6% 0.0% 14.6% $22.82

Prince George's County Total 21,658,556 0 (48,000) 58,000 19.8% 0.0% 19.8% $21.83

Frederick County 6,810,541 47,727 20,000 75,000 11.9% 0.1% 12.0% $21.97

Total 92,543,511 169,451 (242,000) (50,000) 14.7% 0.5% 15.2% $26.76

SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern.

Page 5: REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND ......The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the

Copyright © 2016 Transwestern. All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or distributed to third parties without written permission of the copyright owner. The information contained in this report was gathered by Transwestern from CoStar and other primary and secondary sources believed to be reliable. Transwestern, however, makes no representation concerning the accuracy or completeness of such information and expressly disclaims any responsibility for any inaccuracy contained herein.

T 301.571.0900 www.transwestern.com

6700 Rockledge Drive, Suite 500ABethesda, Maryland 20817

SUBURBAN MARYLAND OFFICE MARKETSECOND QUARTER 2017

METHODOLOGY

The information in this report is the result of a compilation of information on office properties located in Suburban Maryland. This report includes single-tenant, multi-tenant and owner-user office properties 15,000 SF and larger, excluding properties owned by a government agency.

CONTACT

Elizabeth NortonManaging Research Director | Mid-Atlantic [email protected]

Suburban Maryland Office Market Indicators

PROPERTY CLASS INVENTORYUNDER

CONSTRUCTIONQ2 NET

ABSORPTIONYTD

ABSORPTIONDIRECT

VACANCYSUBLEASE

SPACEOVERALL

VACANCYAVERAGERATE PSF

Class A 20,417,542 121,724 (30,000) 39,000 11.5% 0.5% 12.0% $29.38

Class B/C 72,125,969 47,727 (211,000) (87,000) 15.6% 0.5% 16.1% $24.50

Total 92,543,511 169,451 (242,000) (50,000) 14.7% 0.5% 15.2% $26.76

SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern.

Suburban Maryland Office Market Notable Lease Transactions

TENANT DEAL TYPE ADDRESS SUBMARKET SQUARE FEET

Kaiser Permanente Pre-Lease 4000 Garden City Drive Lanham/Landover/Largo 173,000

Hughes Network Systems Renewal 100 Lake Forest Blvd Gaithersburg 111,000

GSA New Lease 4041 Powder Mill Road Beltsville/Calv./Coll. Park 62,000

Citron Cooperman & Co. Sublease 2 Bethesda Metro Bethesda/Chevy Chase 20,000

Long & Foster Real Estate Renewal 4650 East-West Highway Bethesda/Chevy Chase 19,000

Family Health Centers New Lease 19851 Observation Drive Germantown 14,000

Recorded Books New Lease 8400 Corporate Drive Lanham/Landover/Largo 10,000

SOURCE: CoStar, County Newsletters, Washington Business Journal, Washington Post, Transwestern.

Suburban Maryland Office Market Construction Activity

SUBMARKET SQUARE FEET UNDER CONSTRUCTION/RENOVATION PERCENT PRE-LEASED

Silver Spring 121,724 100%

Frederick County 47,727 0%

Total 169,451 72%

SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern

Brandt Scheidemantel Research Associate | Mid-Atlantic 202.775.7048 [email protected]

Page 6: REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND ......The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the

Flex/industrial market rebounds during Q2 Net absorption slightly positive and asking rents edge up

The Suburban Maryland flex/industrial market strengthened during the second quarter of 2017, registering positive net absorption of 50,000 SF. Despite the positive absorption, the direct vacancy rate edged up 30 basis points to 8.3%, due to the delivery of 1200 Claybrick Road, which was only 60% pre-leased. Asking rents increased 0.8% during the second quarter to $8.11 PSF. The pipeline as of June 2017 totaled 820,000 SF, of which 49% is pre-leased.

ECONOMY

Payroll employment up 2.2%Payroll employment increased by 22,700 jobs during the 12 months ending May 2017 in Suburban Maryland, which is above the 20-year annual average of 12,000. The leisure/hospitality sector was the leader in growth, contributing 8,800 new jobs to the economy. The government sector followed with 4,200 new jobs added during the same time period, which was driven mostly by hiring in the federal government.

The Suburban Maryland unemployment rate was 3.9% at April 2017, down from 4.4% one year prior. The unemployment rate is below the 10-year average of 5.8%. This compares to the Washington metro area unemployment rate of 3.4% and the national rate of 4.4% at April 2017.

We expect economic conditions to remain healthy during the balance of 2017, as consumer and business confidence strengthens. Through 2021, we expect job growth to average 9,500 jobs per year, accounting for 30% of the metro total. We expect the health, technology, construction, and food services industries to fuel job growth in the period ahead.

FLEX/INDUSTRIAL TRENDS

10-YEAR TREND SECOND QUARTER 2017

DIRECT VACANCY

8.3%Vacancy ticks up in Q2

ABSORPTION

7,000 SFLimited demand YTD

RENTAL R ATES

$8.11 PSFAsking rents down 0.6% YTD

UNDER CONSTRUCTION

820,000 SFHealthy pipeline

JOB GROW TH

22,700 jobs12-months ending May 2017

SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL MARKETSECOND QUARTER 2017

REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK

Page 7: REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND ......The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the

2 REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL MARKET Q2 2017

SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL MARKETSECOND QUARTER 2017

SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL NET ABSORPTION AND VACANCY

SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL ASKING RENTAL RATES

SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT PIPELINE MILLION SF

4%

5%

6%

7%

8%

9%

10%

11%

12%

-1.5

-1.0

-0.5

0.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17*

NET ABSORPTION IN MILLIONS DIRECT VACANCY RATE

$0

$2

$4

$6

$8

$10

$12

$14

07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17*

BULK WAREHOUSE FLEX/WAREHOUSE FLEX/R&D

0.0

0.2

0.4

0.6

0.8

1.0

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2.0

07 08 09 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17*

COMPLETED UNDER CONSTRUCTION PRE-LEASED UNDER CONSTRUCTION AVAILABLE

*At second quarter 2017SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern.

*At second quarter 2017SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern.

*Delivered YTDSOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern.

FLEX /INDUSTRIAL VACANCY AND DEMAND

Sluggish start to the yearThe direct vacancy rate was 8.3% at June 2017, up 30 basis points from three months prior. This compares favorably to the 10-year average of 9.8%.

Net absorption totaled positive 50,000 SF during the second quarter of 2017, which brings the first half net absorption to just 7,000 SF. During 2016, net absorption totaled 2 million SF, which is significantly higher than the 10-year annual absorption average of 632,000 SF.

The vacancy rate increased due in part to the delivery of 1200 Claybrick Road, a 216,000 SF distribution facility that had only leased 60%, or 130,000 SF, to Starbucks.

Prince George’s County experienced the weakest net absorption at negative 84,000 SF during the past three months. This was due primarily to hhgregg vacating 393,000 SF at 14301 Mattawoman Drive, which contributed significantly to the negative net absorption during the quarter. Both Montgomery County and Frederick County fared better with positive 67,000 SF each, in the absence of any major move-outs.

Page 8: REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND ......The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the

REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL MARKET Q2 2017 3

SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL MARKETSECOND QUARTER 2017

FLEX /INDUSTRIAL RENTAL R ATES

Rents up 0.8% during Q2 Flex/industrial asking rents averaged $8.11 PSF at June 2017, a 0.8% increase since the end of the first quarter. Montgomery County experienced the greatest increase in rents at 2.4% whereas Prince George’s County and Frederick County asking rents were stagnant in the second quarter.

FLEX /INDUSTRIAL SUPPLY AND DEVELOPMENT

Pipeline limited Two buildings delivered during the second quarter of 2017. The U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum completed 103,000 SF at 4800 Macroni Drive in Prince George’s County, which came online fully leased. In addition, Liberty Property Trust delivered 216,000 SF at 1200 Claybrick Road, which was 60% pre-leased to Starbucks.

Projects under construction or renovation in the Suburban Maryland flex/industrial market totaled 820,000 SF at 49% pre-leased at June 2017. Notably, Matan Companies has 323,000 SF under construction at its Wedgewood West industrial development site at New Design and English Muff Road in Frederick County and SunCap Property Group has 330,000 SF under construction at 800 North Frederick Avenue, which will be a new FedEx distribution center.

FLEX /INDUSTRIAL INVESTMENT MARKET

Modest activity There were five flex/industrial investment sales during the first half of 2017. Notably, Transwestern’s Mid-Atlantic Capital Markets Group brokered the sale of 10100 Willowdale Road for $13.1 million, or $133 PSF, to an affiliate of Industrial Property Trust. Investment sales during the first half totaled $44.8 million, or $87 PSF, compared to $211 million, or $111 PSF, in 2016.

FLEX /INDUSTRIAL MARKET OUTLOOK

Vacancy to edge down during 2017 We expect the Suburban Maryland flex/industrial market to perform moderately well during 2017. We expect the overall vacancy rate to decline slightly to the low-8% range by December 2017. Given the vacancy rate is below the 10-year average, we expect asking rents to rise 1.5% to 2.5% during 2017.

Although the current pipeline is controlled, it could expand over the next 12 months as tenants are seeking newer product with efficient layouts and adequate truck court depths. Flex/industrial tenants in the District of Columbia could be lured to Suburban Maryland in search of cheaper rates and newer product. We expect investment activity will pick up over the next 12 months as investors seek assets in a market well positioned to capture the growing demand for product in the Washington/Baltimore Corridor. n

Page 9: REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND ......The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the

4 REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL MARKET Q2 2017

SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL MARKETSECOND QUARTER 2017

Suburban Maryland Flex/Industrial Market Indicators

SUBMARKET INVENTORYUNDER

CONSTRUCTIONQ2 NET

ABSORPTIONYTD

ABSORPTIONDIRECT

VACANCYSUBLEASE

SPACETOTAL

VACANCYAVERAGERATE PSF

Bulk Warehouse 19,307,442 167,000 (213,000) (110,000) 12.8% 1.7% 14.5% $6.57

Flex/Warehouse 35,159,969 0 117,000 47,000 5.6% 0.0% 5.6% $6.85

Flex/R&D 2,425,715 0 12,000 15,000 14.5% 0.7% 15.2% $10.95

Prince George's County Total 56,893,126 167,000 (84,000) (48,000) 8.4% 0.6% 9.0% $6.93

Bulk Warehouse 2,602,549 330,000 5,000 (3,000) 9.3% 0.0% 9.3% $10.59

Flex/Warehouse 15,392,681 0 10,000 (108,000) 8.7% 0.3% 9.0% $11.44

Flex/R&D 4,357,858 0 52,000 83,000 7.9% 0.0% 7.9% $13.03

Montgomery County Total 22,353,088 330,000 67,000 (28,000) 8.6% 0.2% 8.8% $11.65

Bulk Warehouse 5,268,423 323,293 (5,000) (11,000) 8.2% 0.0% 8.2% $5.48

Flex/Warehouse 9,610,661 0 68,000 94,000 5.9% 0.3% 6.2% $7.89

Flex/R&D 1,775,242 0 4,000 0 15.0% 0.4% 15.4% $10.11

Frederick County Total 16,654,326 323,293 67,000 83,000 7.6% 0.2% 7.8% $7.36

Bulk Warehouse 27,178,414 490,293 (213,000) (124,000) 11.6% 1.2% 12.8% $6.74

Flex/Warehouse 60,163,311 0 195,000 33,000 6.4% 0.1% 6.5% $8.19

Flex/R&D 8,558,815 0 68,000 98,000 11.2% 0.3% 11.5% $11.83

Suburban Maryland Total 95,900,540 820,293 50,000 7,000 8.3% 0.4% 8.7% $8.11 Note: Totals might not add due to rounding. SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern

Page 10: REAL ESTATE OUTLOOK SUBURBAN MARYLAND ......The Suburban Maryland office market weakened during the second quarter of 2017, as net absorption registered negative 242,000 SF and the

Copyright © 2016 Transwestern. All rights reserved. No part of this work may be reproduced or distributed to third parties without written permission of the copyright owner. The information contained in this report was gathered by Transwestern from CoStar and other primary and secondary sources believed to be reliable. Transwestern, however, makes no representation concerning the accuracy or completeness of such information and expressly disclaims any responsibility for any inaccuracy contained herein.

SUBURBAN MARYLAND FLEX/INDUSTRIAL MARKETSECOND QUARTER 2017

T 301.571.0900 www.transwestern.com

6700 Rockledge Drive, Suite 500ABethesda, Maryland 20817

Suburban Maryland Flex/Industrial Market Construction Activity

SUBMARKET SQUARE FEET UNDER CONSTRUCTION/RENOVATION PERCENT PRE-LEASED

Prince George's County 167,000 43%

Montgomery County 330,000 100%

Frederick County 323,293 0%

Total 820,293 49%

SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern

Suburban Maryland Flex/Industrial Market Indicators

PROPERTY TYPE INVENTORYUNDER

CONSTRUCTIONQ2 NET

ABSORPTIONYTD

ABSORPTIONDIRECT

VACANCYSUBLEASE

SPACEOVERALL

VACANCYAVERAGERATE PSF

Bulk Warehouse 27,178,414 820,293 (213,000) (124,000) 11.6% 1.2% 12.8% $6.74

Flex/Warehouse 60,163,311 0 195,000 33,000 6.4% 0.1% 6.5% $8.19

Flex/R&D 8,558,815 0 68,000 98,000 11.2% 0.3% 11.5% $11.83

Total 95,900,540 820,293 50,000 7,000 8.3% 0.4% 8.7% $8.11

SOURCE: CoStar, Transwestern

Suburban Maryland Flex/Industrial Market Notable Lease Transactions

TENANT DEAL TYPE ADDRESS SUBMARKET SQUARE FEET

Lasership, Inc New Lease 1511-1517 Cabin Branch Dr Prince George's County 50,000

Black & Decker New Lease 9200 Alaking Court Prince George's County 14,000

Easton Leasing Company New Lease 6850-6872 Distribution Dr Prince George's County 10,000

Oriental Shipping New Lease 15914-15916 Indianola Dr Montgomery County 10,000

Nadex New Lease 5610-5624 Lafayette Pl Prince George's County 8,000

Capital Badminton New Lease 7510-7520 Lindbergh Dr Montgomery County 7,000

The Net America Corporation New Lease 16201 Trade Zone Avenue Prince George's County 7,000

SOURCE: CoStar, County Newsletters, Washington Business Journal, Washington Post, Transwestern

CONTACT

Elizabeth NortonManaging Research Director | Mid-Atlantic [email protected]

METHODOLOGY

The information in this report is the result of a compilation of information on flex/industrial properties located in Suburban Maryland. This report includes single-tenant, multi-tenant and owner-user flex/industrial properties 15,000 SF and larger, excluding properties owned by a government agency.

Brandt Scheidemantel Research Associate | Mid-Atlantic 202.775.7048 [email protected]