Sales of properties valued between $5 million and $25 million have “easily” outpaced those from the same period in 2019 and 2020, according to a new report from Green Street, with $28.11 billion in smaller assets changing hands.
A common question we receive from our investors is what do properties marketed as Class A, Class B, and Class C mean, and why does it matter?
Tenancy in common investments (“TIC” or “TIC Investments”) have become a booming industry in the United States in recent years. A tenancy in common investment (better known as a TIC) is an investment by the taxpayer in real estate which is co-owned with other investors.
When COVID-19 emerged in Spring 2020, the nation’s apartment operators (rightly) prioritized occupancy over pricing power, so they hesitated to push rents when initial leases expired for their existing customers.
A wide range of indicators shows surprising strength in everything from jobs, wages, and personal savings to home sales and apartment demand.
Effective asking rents have now fully recovered in a half-dozen gateway metros since prices hit pre-pandemic levels during June across Chicago, Los Angeles, and Northern New Jersey’s Newark-Jersey City area.