Recently Leased | Office | Boise, ID

Photo of building located at 7337 W. Northview St., Boise, ID 83704

Boise, Idaho – February 2021– Lee & Associates Idaho, LLC has facilitated the lease of a 2,400 SF office space, located at, 7337 W. Northview St., Boise, ID 83704. Lee & Associates’ agents are considered experts in their local markets. In addition, they have access to a national network of 1,000 agents across 60 offices to serve their clients on a local, regional, national and international basis.

Matt Mahoney, Managing Principal, and Austin Hopkins, Associate, at Lee & Associates Idaho, LLC represented the Landlord, NDC, LLC and the Tenant, Gem State Family Eyecare was represented by Chase Erkins, Principal, and Trey Thomas, Associate, at Lee & Associates Idaho, LLC.

Recently Leased | Industrial | Garden City, ID

Photo of building located at 116 E. 40th St., Garden City, ID 83714

Garden City, Idaho – January 2021– Lee & Associates Idaho LLC, has facilitated the lease of a 2,400 SF industrial space, located at, 116 E. 40th St., Garden City, ID 83714. Lee & Associates’ agents are considered experts in their local markets. In addition, they have access to a national network of 1,000 agents across 60 offices to serve their clients on a local, regional, national and international basis.

Chase Erkins, Principal, at Lee & Associates Idaho LLC, represented the tenant and the Landlord, Crown Smith, LLC was represented by Farzin Safavi at Atova Inc.

Buy or Sell. Is it a good time?

As a real estate agent, my obvious answer is YES. But why?

Real estate in the Treasure Valley is probably as good as it has ever been. Demand is soaring, housing prices keep breaking records, the returns for commercial investment properties are compressed more than ever, but it is still a good time to buy. How can this be?

Multiple factors are pushing the market to these new heights. Interest rates at historically low levels make it so we can put the debt on an investment property at 4% for 10-30 years (depending on product type) and purchase a property at a 5-7% cap rate and it still makes sense as a long term investment. Doing this while the Fed chairman, President (current and future), and Speaker of the House are all calling for more printing of money makes this a pretty appealing time to try and find a hedge against potential inflation.

Demand is the other factor that makes buying in the Treasure Valley continue to be a good bet. With Idaho having the fastest growing population per capita and lowest job loss in the nation we have a good recipe for continued growth and development. The hard part about the growth and development is we don’t seem to be keeping up. Permits are down for the year in both residential and commercial construction. Due to this, we are falling further behind in providing products for our businesses and people. With more demand, we will continue to see more price increases.

Assuming the wheel keeps turning the way it currently is, this is the reality we are looking at. What happens if that reality changes though? What would make it a good time to sell now? If in-migration slows to the valley and we don’t continue to reduce our unemployment rate at our current trend we may experience a slowdown. Real estate is influenced by many things but mainly incomes, lending, and mortgage rates. Mortgage rates are about as low as they are going to be without going negative. Lending is still happening, but with more questions and concerns from lenders, and incomes haven’t risen fast enough in the valley to keep up with the increases in prices. Tack on potential inflation in the stores from the continued stimulation out of thin air from the government and we may be looking over the edge of a cliff ready to fall in the next 12-18 months. There is also likely to be an increase in capital gains taxes and another attack on getting rid of the 1031 exchange. I don’t think the latter is probable, but it keeps getting thrown around every couple of years and is something to watch closely.

What reality we end up with is yet to be seen, but the potential for a cliff is a reason some property owners in the valley are choosing to take some chips off the table, shore up their balance sheets, and prepare for a potential buying opportunity in the years to come. 

Boise and the surrounding areas are going through many changes. I think the outlook is strong even if the rest of the country sees some major economic challenges in the coming years. Whether it is a good time for you to buy or sell depends on your personal investment philosophy and your situation. If you don’t have a personal investment philosophy you’re invited to reach out and I’d be happy to give you some things to think about when developing yours out.

Have a great holiday season!

Chase Erkins
Principal, Associate Broker
(208) 789-4900
chasee@leeidaho.com

Sunwest Bank 2020 Economic Forum Recap

The 'Sunwest Bank 2020 Economic Forum' was held in Boise on November 5, 2020. It was interesting to be at a live event again and was facilitated by the Boise Center very well.

At the forum CEO Eric Hovde, gave a great presentation, starting with his thoughts and facts on Covid-19 and the effect on the economy and society in 2020. 

It was interesting to see the two slides he put together based on which presidential candidate gets elected.

Photo of PowerPoint Slide explaining what happens if Trump Wins
Image-5.jpg


The 2021 predictions are a little uncertain. One part that was interesting to me was the prediction of white-collar job layoffs. Eric mentioned there are banks already starting this, and he believes that will increase throughout the next year. A second stimulus package will have a short term impact on how all of this plays out and have some challenging long term implications for our country to dig out of after the stimulus high wears off.

His predictions on interest rates and equity markets suggest good things for Idaho’s real estate market. The increase in demographic shifts from high-cost, high-tax states, coupled with low-interest rates, will continue to push demand and values higher in our real estate market. This is showed in the next photo, with Idaho being the biggest winner by the percentage of net domestic migration.

Photo of PowerPoint Slide showing 2021 Predictions and Demographics Shifts

Mobile Home Parks | Advantages, Challenges & Responsibilities

LoopNet Article - Investing in Mobile Home Communities: Advantages, Challenges and Responsibilities

This is a great, high-level, article to learn a little bit about the pros and cons of mobile home park investing. There are many “gotcha’s” in mobile home park investing that you want to be aware of before going down that path to prevent you from costly expenses or losing the park altogether. If you can navigate those, you can find your way into a lucrative asset category with solid, long term cash flow.

They do mention in the article that parks have become much more expensive than they used to be. In 2013-14 this asset class started to get a lot of attention from former apartment investors who thought the apartment market was getting too expensive. The parks in and around Boise are no exception. While they aren’t trading at the compressed cap rates of apartment complexes (which have now dipped as low as 3.7% in some cases) they are dropping below 7% caps in many cases.

Low interest rates can be blamed for some of this, however mobile home parks often trade without a lender being involved. Many times the owners will carry a loan for the new investor since they have become accustomed to the high cash flow that mobile home parks throw off and don’t want to pay high taxes. High demand for assets with multiple tenants to spread out investor risk is the main cause driving down the returns across multiple asset classes.

If you have more interest in mobile home parks or any other commercial real estate category please give me a call.