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Commercial strata gives investors more-regulated and complicated residential condo market

Real Estate Investing Part 4: commercial strata in B.C.

Frank O’Brien
Western Investor

 Main Street, Vancouver, strata retail at nearly $1,000 per square foot. |Corbel Commercial

Commercial strata gives investors an edge not seen in the more-regulated and complicated residential condo market

Geographically and historically, Metro Vancouver represents perhaps the best opportunity on the planet to make money in commercial real estate. Mortgage rates are at 100-year lows and the area has among the lowest industrial and commercial vacancy rates and highest lease rates in the country.

In this fourth of a four-part Western Investor series on real estate investing, we look at the commercial and light industrial strata market, where the opportunity to invest in commercial ‘condos’ can outweigh the potential of residential stratas.

In B.C., the provincial Strata Property Act does not differentiate between the commercial and residential sectors. While this provides some certainty, it also creates challenges in older mixed-use projects where four or five commercial owners can be out voted by the much larger number of residential strata owners. In B.C., a vote of 80 per cent of strata owners can force the sale of the entire project for re-development.

Most developers set up separate strata groups for residential and commercial sections to negate this. Investors are advised to check such separation is in place in any mixed-use project.

Commercial condos offer a route for investors to share in steady lease demand and Metro Vancouver’s proven price appreciation. As well, some B.C secondary markets, most notably Victoria and Kelowna, offer commercial strata opportunities with a lower entry price but similar income and yield potential.

Commercial strata investing generally involves buying a space, leasing it out for period of time, say five years, and then selling the unit to capture the increase in real estate values.

Commercial strata offers an advantage over residential strata in that tenants normally sign longer-term leases than in residential units, the property requires less maintenance and tenants are responsible for any improvements. Also, commercial rents are not subject to BC Residential Tenancy regulations which caps annual rent increases and can restrict evictions for non-payment of rent.

In Metro Vancouver, a well-positioned retail strata can return cap rates of 3.5 per cent to 5 per cent, with grocery-anchored malls and regional shopping centres ranging from 4 per cent to 5.5 per cent.

“What you can get on the street will beat the bank,” said an agent with Macdonald Commercial, who specializes in retail property sales and leases.

Metro Vancouver’s retail vacancy rate is 2.3 per cent, about half the current national rate of 4.1 per cent.

Prices for commercial strata, such as retail or light industrial, have increased sharply in the past year. It is not uncommon to see existing Metro Vancouver commercial stratas selling for upwards of $700 per square foot, with new product demanding $1,000 or more per square foot, similar to the residential condo market.

Retail lease rates range from lows of $25 to $60 per square foot in suburban and Vancouver secondary strolls to $150 per square foot in prime downtown shopping districts, like Robson and Alberni Streets.

Commercial rents are calculated annually. For instance, if you rent your 1,000 square foot retail strata for $50 per square foot it is generating $50,000 annually, or about $4,100 per month.

It is preferable to have commercial tenants pay triple-net leases, which means the tenant pays for all maintenance and property taxes, as well as for the space. In B.C., commercial real estate values – and property taxes – can increase dramatically if the site is rezoned for high-density residential. Having a triple-net lease in place protects you as an investor.

While Metro Vancouver is the hottest area for commercial strata investors, there are also enticing opportunities in Victoria and Kelowna, where some see a ground floor opportunity for commercial investors.

In Victoria major players, including Chard Properties, Nicola Wealth, Reliance Properties and the mammoth Jim Pattison Group have been buying up entire blocks in Victoria’s Old Town, the North Douglas Street zone and Harris Green neighbourhoods for large mixed-use developments. Harris Green near downtown alone has plans for2,200 homes in an eight-block radius.

“This is like buying into Vancouver’s Yaletown two decades ago,” an agent with William Wright Commercial noted. “As people move into these areas, you are going to see explosive demand for service-type retail.”

One new Victoria retail strata project recently sold out at $607 per square foot, all to Metro Vancouver investors.

Kelowna is also seeing both an influx of new residents and rapid development, most of it concentrated downtown where the University of B.C. Okanagan is expanding its campus and a series of new residential towers are rising.

Kelowna’s retail sector has seen the vacancy rate fall to 4.3 per cent, down from 5.5 per cent a year ago.

Kelowna strata retail space is selling from around $500 per square foot and downtown lease rates range from $35 to $50 per square foot. The result is a typical capitalization rate for retail investors of from 5.5 per cent to 6 per cent, which is higher than in most of Metro Vancouver.

 

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