Real Estate News, Views & Schmooze!
Business Sense
The Worst Advice Landlord Brokers Give Tenants
Feb 2nd
Posted by ladinventures in Business Sense
Landlord brokers generally do a great job representing landlords. That’s what they’re paid to do, and it isn’t easy. But you shouldn’t be surprised to find that the advice landlord brokers are accustomed to offer doesn’t serve your interests. Here are the eight worst kinds of advice you’re likely to hear from a dedicated landlord broker:
1. “We can get you the best deal because we know the market.”
Bad leases are signed not because a tenant some how misses a great space but because the leases are poorly negotiated.
All brokers have access to Class A space and probably 98% of Class B space. Landlords must pay their mortgage, and they never know which broker might bring in a tenant, so they let everybody know about availabilities directly, through frequent mailings, as well as through real estate databases which brokers subscribe to.
Leases go wrong because costs soar higher than bargained for, because the leases didn’t stipulate adequate performance standards for a landlord’s performance in such areas as heating, ventilating, air conditioning, electricity and other services, because leases restricted a company’s flexibility, imposed costs beyond those bargained for, and many other reasons – every one of which arise from the way the lease was negotiated. A badly negotiated lease often turns a “great space” into a bad deal.
2. “We can get you a great deal because we have a relationship with the landlord.”
If your company has the creditworthiness which suggests you can meet your lease obligations, then any landlord would love to have you as a tenant. The suggestion that you need some kind of “in” to do a deal is ridiculous. Landlords need the business of paying tenants!
What your company really needs is a broker who will represent your interests – not the interests of some landlord with whom they have a relationship or hope to build one. This is because many landlord draft leases offer blatantly anti-tenant terms, some buildings have a high level of tenant dissatisfaction, some landlords routinely violate lease terms, and there are landlords whose financial troubles could impair their ability to perform as provided in a lease.
When a broker entices you with claims of a special relationship with the landlord, you must ask whether such a relationship is consistent with an obligation to represent you. Will such a broker be free to offer full disclosure of all costs in a proposed lease? How about management practices that will affect you? Will a landlord broker be able to negotiate forcefully on your behalf if this means opposing a landlord from whom they hope to gain lucrative agency business? Of course, you want lease negotiations that are conducted amicably. This means insisting upon a professional approach, not trying to buy goodwill.
3. “We can provide great service because we have a lot of branch offices.”
One doesn’t need branch offices to identify spaces in another city, because landlords list their availabilities through brokerage networks and databases. Landlords want everybody know about what they have, so they can start getting revenue as quickly as possible.
If branch offices are serving landlords, then they face a serious conflict of interest in their ability to protect you. After all, every landlord is a current client or a prospective client, and aggressively protecting tenants jeopardizes lucrative landlord business.
The key to signing a good lease is having good site analysis, good lease analysis and good lease negotiation and good follow-up. These depend on the caliber of the tenant representative, not the location of their offices.
4. “Don’t rock the boat and upset the landlord.”
Landlord brokers often advise tenants not to negotiate aggressively, not to demand that landlords comply with lease terms and, once a lease is signed, not to insist on the rights provided in the tenant’s lease. In a recent situation, a tenant has been paying $4 million in annual escalations, and the landlord is preventing the tenant’s representative from auditing the billings as provided in the lease, yet the tenant’s current broker – a landlord broker – has repeatedly advised the tenant that continuing to demand a proper audit would alienate the landlord. Tenants seem to be afraid a hostile landlord might become more difficult to deal with.
Yet in our experience, landlords respect tenants who know their rights and pursue their interests in a business-like way.
While it’s true a tenant often needs a landlord’s cooperation, it’s also true a landlord needs a tenant to help pay the mortgage, and it’s generally cheaper to keep a current tenant satisfied than to incur the cost and possibly lost income resulting from a dissatisfied tenant moving out.
5. “Hurry up and get the deal done.”
More than anything else, landlord brokers push tenants to get a deal done. These brokers will tell tenants that if they don’t quickly commit to a space, somebody else will take it. Such pressure is especially intense in a “hot” market favoring landlords. One tenant, a major accounting firm, told us of being shown space by a nationally-known landlord broker. At virtually every location shown, the broker was mum on details but advised, “you’d better hurry up and make a decision, this space is going to be gone soon.” The tenant soon decided that the landlord broker was not providing the service they sought, despite its branch offices, large staff and national reputation. The tenant moved on and selected a tenant representative to help them find a space that will serve their needs.
Hurrying into a deal risks neglecting comprehensive due diligence, overlooking costly drawbacks in a building, failing to properly analyze the risks and total costs of a landlord’s draft lease – and signing up for a transaction which can become a serious liability to your company.
6. “Since you’re such a big tenant, you have very few alternatives.”
Some of the worst leases have been signed by big companies probably because top executives felt they had to be in a particular building. While it’s true the number of large spaces in a particular area are limited at any point in time, this definitely doesn’t mean big tenants must accept whatever terms landlords care to offer.
Getting a good deal, however, means big tenants must gain every possible bargaining advantage. Tenants must have a representative serving tenants exclusively – and not the interests of landlords.
It’s critically important for a large space user to start the site search early. A million square foot tenant should start at least five years before lease expiration. Starting early means you’ll be able to see more spaces and include options that require building from scratch as well as different options for leasing vs. owning. There are almost always more alternatives for large space users than you might imagine, including existing buildings in the same area that can be repositioned, buildings in a different area once considered off limits, and build-to-suits.
By developing viable alternatives, objectively analyzed in detail, you will understand your true costs and trade-offs. Only with this background can you know if a premium is being demanded for the solution you prefer, and whether it is a premium you think is worth paying.
Equally important, all this means you’ll be able to pursue preliminary negotiations, and if they don’t lead to satisfactory terms, you’ll have time to walk away and begin negotiations elsewhere.
7. “The landlord’s draft lease is boilerplate, standard terms.”
So-called “Standard terms” invariably mean pro-landlord terms because leases are drafted by landlords which are naturally protecting their interests. You wouldn’t expect them to do otherwise.
“Standard terms” often includes tenant budget-busters like operating expense loopholes, mark-ups on mark-ups, vague landlord performance standards and no audit rights.
Don’t be pressured into accepting “standard terms.” A lease negotiation should be driven by your business objectives, not by a landlord’s desire to avoid risk (and pass it on to tenants like you). Your business needs must be translated into lease terms to be secured during negotiations.
8. “Just focus on rent and workletter – let lawyers take care of the fine print.”
Many corporate executives imagine they’ve locked in their biggest costs by shaking hands on these two terms.
However, the rest of the lease is loaded with costs. There easily are 18 or 19 significant non-rent costs in a typical lease, many hidden, and it’s contrary to the interests of landlord brokers to identify these costs – or do anything else that might jeopardize a deal.
Lawyers don’t provide complete protection for tenants because they aren’t trained to analyze, nor have hands-on experience with, business issues which are responsible for so many excessive lease costs. Lawyers don’t claim to know how desirable or undesirable a landlord draft lease is from the standpoint of the current real estate market. Lawyers aren’t experts on the economics of building operating systems. Lawyers aren’t expected to know how various ways of charging for electricity will affect costs. Lawyers don’t audit landlord billings, so they don’t see whether particular landlords honor or evade lease terms – and what must be done about it. Lawyers typically review a lease without ever visiting the building, and many problems are missed because a lease didn’t address certain things which must be seen to be appreciated – or avoided, as the case may be.
Best advice!
Overall, the most common reason tenants seem to take bad advice from landlord brokers is that they’re impressed by the big deals such brokers have done. But as talking points, big deals are meaningless unless they’re good deals for tenants. The fact is that a substantial number of leases over 100,000 square feet have serious problems, even though these leases were reviewed by competent lawyers.
It’s shocking to see how many large leases have inadequate operating expense controls, high-cost electricity formulas, mark-ups on mark-ups, vague landlord performance standards, weak sublease rights, limited audit rights and so on. In some cases, lease problems became so serious that heads rolled.
Best advice: when you’re interviewing a broker, ask not about what deals a firm has done but about how a firm has protected tenants. You’ll probably find out all you need to know about the deals while discussing how a broker analyzes sites, evaluates landlords, negotiates leases, negotiates other kinds of real estate transactions, monitors build-outs, audits billings and in other ways protects tenants. How else can you be sure that a broker and the resulting lease will protect your company’s vital interests?
Finding the Right Commercial Real Estate Can Make or Break Your Dream
Jan 8th
Posted by ladinventures in Business Sense
Form a Life-Long Relationship With an Exclusive Tenant Client Advisor and You Will Have an Edge.
By Steven Ladin
Special to New Business Minnesota
Every day in the State of Minnesota a multitude of people get laid off, become tired of working for someone else, or have a great new idea. In fact, there are on average 44,000 people every year, year after year, who start a business in Minnesota.
Since you are one of those 44,000 with a dream of your own, you have many decisions to make when setting up your office. As a commercial real estate broker, every day I work with businesses – new and old – that are looking for the right property, in the right location, at the right price.
The good news is that the right property – one that fits your needs and budget – is out there. The bad news is that finding it on your own is extremely difficult and time consuming.
The key to securing the best deal is to work with someone who knows the market inside and out, and is cognizant of special situations, emerging commercial real estate trends and the range of deals that are being done. Also, just as important, working with someone who looks out for you and your business needs. That person is an Exclusive Tenant Client Advisor. If you are looking for property to lease or buy for an immediate need or just planning your budget for a future move, I highly recommend you consider using one.
The traditional way to find commercial property on your own is to drive around the area where you’d like your business to call home; spot as many “For Lease” or “For Sale” signs as you can and write down the phone numbers. This is pretty scattershot.
When you start calling off your list, you most likely will speak to the building owner or the owner’s representative. Their role is to represent their property. They usually are not willing to tell you that a building nearby actually might be a better fit.
Just remember whose interest they are looking out for. They will work very hard to get you into the buildings they represent. There isn’t any incentive for them to do price comparisons for you or to recommend options they don’t represent.
You are on your own.
Another traditional route is to use a commercial brokerage firm that represents multiple properties and multiple owners. They bring tenants or buyers to the table and negotiate a transaction in the best interest of the owner.
Most brokers negotiate from both sides of the table, claiming to impartially represent both an owner and a tenant or buyer in the same transaction. The pressure of retaining major listing arrangements for local and national accounts often influences the outcome of transactions within a firm.
Again, you are on your own.
I don’t believe it’s possible to negotiate from both sides of the table. I believe you are best served by exclusive representation – someone who represents you.
Finding an Exclusive Tenant Client Advisor can save you both time and money. They know business and commercial real estate and are skilled negotiation specialists.
They will analyze your specific business needs and occupancy requirements, identify and evaluate the appropriate options and facilitate your lease or purchase negotiations for you. Just like a residential real estate transaction, typically there is not any cost to the tenant for this representation.
Even when you do find the right space on your own or with a broker, you will wonder if you have negotiated the right price. An Exclusive Tenant Client Advisor will research properties, arrange showings and assure that you lease or buy your property at the best rate.
Research has shown that tenants who utilize an Exclusive Tenant Client Advisor can save as much as 10 percent to 40 percent on their lease or purchased transactions.
The relationship you form with your Exclusive Tenant Client Advisor will also assist you in other ways in setting up your office. They can offer professional referrals for phone service, IT services, furniture, office supplies, accounting, legal services, insurance, and much more. A good Exclusive Tenant Client Advisor has already built strong relationships with many value-added service providers they know and trust.
You’ve probably heard this a lot since you started your business: work with professionals and have a team of trusted advisors. The reason people tell you this, is because it’s true. It’s not any different when it comes to leasing or buying office space.
Make sure you have someone in your corner…office.
Steven Ladin, CEO and owner of Ladin Ventures, LLC, has extensive real estate experience in the Twin Cities market and has a staff of Exclusive Tenant and Buyer Client Advisors. Previously, Ladin was Managing Partner with Miller Management Company. Ladin is a member of the real estate industry’s top professional associations and organizations including the National Association of Realtors Commercial Alliance, Minnesota Association of Realtors, Minneapolis Area Association of Realtors and the Minnesota Commercial Association of Realtors. He can be reached at (763)331-3010, sladin@ladinventures.com or on Twitter – @LadinVentures. www.LadinVentures.com.
Ma-and-Pa Focused Ladin Ventures Moves To Grow
Dec 4th
Posted by ladinventures in Business Sense
Photo taken by Nancy Kuehn | Minneapolis/St. Paul Business Journal
Ma-and-Pa Focused Ladin Ventures Moves To Grow
Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal – by Sam Black
Steve Ladin wants to expand his real estate brokerage business 500 square feet at a time.
Ladin, CEO and owner of Ladin Ventures, has turned the focus of his three-year-old firm primarily to representing mom-and-pop businesses that fly under the radar of most commercial real estate firms.
On Monday, Ladin moved his five-employee company from a small office in St. Louis Park into a strip center next to a Famous Dave’s restaurant in Plymouth.
Ladin said his company targets day-care providers, hair salons, restaurants and other small companies that can benefit from having a real estate advocate. That strategy has potential because the small-business market is expanding as laid off workers start new companies, he said. “We see this huge upswing in the small-business realm. In Minnesota, 44,000 new businesses start every year.”
Small tenants and new entrepreneurs tend to rely too heavily on finding commercial real estate by calling phone numbers on signs in front of buildings, Ladin said, adding that it’s often difficult for small businesses to find a broker.
Ladin wants his company to be approachable by small businesses. “We’re not going to wear suits or be ostentatious.”
Ladin’s real estate career began in 2000 when he joined Miller Management Co., a St. Louis Park-based apartment operator that he and two partners sold in 2006.
He spent his first few years at Ladin Ventures focusing on the multifamily market, helping buy and sell apartment buildings. When that market tailed off this year, Ladin began to focus on the needs of small businesses.
Ladin said he has about 20 small clients, and most deals he works on are for between 500 and 10,000 square feet.
He’s recruited Jackie Fenske, former vice president of merchandising operations at Fingerhut, to be executive vice president and oversee most day-to-day operations.
Ladin’s goal is to increase the firm’s size to at least 15 advisers and 25 total employees by the end of 2010, then double that in 2011.
Ladin said he received a lot of quality resumes from brokers through ads on Craig’s List. His blog, theschmoozer.net, says that the company is seeking agents who know the market and are enthusiastic about trying new business methods. He indicates the brokers might make more than $80,000 in the first year.
Ladin is heavily involved in social media. He designed his own avatar (above) and has about 950 followers on Twitter.
Ed Hanlon, a commercial real estate broker in the Minnetonka office of Edina Realty Inc. who works with many small companies, said most small businesses can benefit from having their own tenant reps and it seems like Ladin’s business plan has merit.
However, it takes many little deals to equal one big deal, and the little ones often require hand-holding while excited entrepreneurs figure out the realities of paying for real estate.
Minnesota Commercial Real Estate Magazine’s Featured Broker Q & A Session
Jul 29th
Posted by ladinventures in Business Sense
Read the candid Q & A interview with Ladin Ventures CEO & Broker, Steven Ladin featured in this month’s issue of Minnesota Commercial Real Estate Magazine:
Social Networking…Will You Join My Clique?
Jul 21st
Posted by ladinventures in Business Sense

The following is a great read on social networking. Although it is focused on the music industry, we can take these lessons an apply them to just about any industry.
Enjoy!
Social Networking
By Bob Lefsetz
Too many people believe a social network is something you invade to spread the word on your band. The goal is not to ride on the back of someone else’s social network, but to create your own.
We want to belong. That’s why MySpace blew up and Twitter too. The sense of community. Facebook is a bit different. It’s about building upon the community you’ve already got, keeping the bonds strong, or getting back to where you once belonged, rekindling old connections. Big media corporations are fascinated by these social media entities, they’re trying to uncover how to leverage them financially. But, a band’s goal is a bit different. Facebook communities don’t want you invading them. Nothing’s worse than having your party crashed by unwanted people or messages. We get to select who we want to follow on Twitter, and as soon as you start hyping something, indicating you’re being paid to send the message, we unfollow you. And MySpace? MySpace is history.
So, when you sit in those marketing meetings, when you’re at home dreaming of a way to blow yourself up, don’t think about harnessing yourself to someone else’s rocket. The key is to create your own rocket!
In other words, Facebook and Twitter, all social networks are tools. They’re not MTV, wherein you air one video and everybody sees it and you’re on a rocket to the moon. They’re certainly not radio, wherein you dictate to masses who are not entitled to a response. Social networks are islands that you must ask permission to enter, and behave properly or be ejected. So, if you think you’re going to leverage all those millions of users, you’ve got another thing coming. But you can build your own social network.
Oh, do we HAVE TO?
Nobody in old media wants to hear this. Old media doesn’t want to start over, it wants a short cut. That’s what major labels had. That’s what major corporations still employ. You’ve got enough money to advertise, to bang people over the head. But today people IGNORE advertising. If you’re planning on ramming anything down anybody’s throat, you’re screwed. But can you build something so good people will be drawn to you?
Did you catch the action on Twitter today? Amazon deleted books from Kindles. In short order, it was one of the biggest stories on the microblogging service. Amazon in bed with publishers, don’t trust the man. The truth ultimately outed a few hours later, that the publisher in this case did not have the rights to the books being sold and those who had purchased them had their money refunded. But the point is there’s an online police force, that is spreading the word of your misdeeds, and preventing you from making all those riches you had in your plan.
Dell Hell is the classic example. Dell has never recovered. It’s about to be eclipsed in the PC market by Acer.
But the good news is if you play by the rules, and have got something great, people with no financial investment will tell many, and you can get traction, oftentimes not having spent a dime. How big will you become?
Kill someone, create a stunt and you might make TMZ. Everybody will know you, and then forget you. At best you’ll be a distant, laughable memory. You don’t want this. In other words, if you try to goose it, you’re on a slippery slope.
This goes against marketing history! Wherein you grow market share by playing with intermediaries, employing shenanigans that will result in a clueless public purchasing your wares. Those days are through. As much as Jessica Simpson’s musical career.
People want to belong to new communities. That’s why FM radio blew up decades ago, that’s why Pandora does not deliver the key experience today. We want to be a member of the group. Can you create a group we want to belong to?
Arianna Huffington has built a better group than the “New York Times”. The HuffPo stands for something, it’s the number one blog. The “New York Times”? It’s removed, it’s not down with the people, it’s fading. You have to be accessible today, you’ve got to get down in the pit, you can’t have contempt for your audience, you’ve got to believe you’re no better than them.
The public makes stars! Not record company or media kingpins.
And you’ll never really know what the public desires.
So get a Facebook page, get a Twitter account, and provide so much information about your project that people will want to follow you. Play to the hard core, who visit your site daily and check your tweets constantly. This is not the twentieth century, where you parlayed four singles over three years to multiplatinum success… The hard core know what’s on the album before you’ve even shipped it! And the hoi polloi have so many other interests, so many diversions, that the odds of them joining your hard core are almost nonexistent. Casual fans yield almost nothing, maybe a single sale on iTunes. Whereas hard core fans buy the $100 boxed set and a t-shirt, never mind a concert ticket.
Stop shooting for the moon. Figure out how to satiate and get more money from those who truly care, who will do their best to convert new fans. Your ability to strong-arm fans is almost nil, certainly online. Not only are corporations not to be trusted, but bands get a thumbs-down too. Because of endless street-teaming and spamming. People only trust their friends. So you’ve got to create friends in order for them to bring in new friends.
So stop talking about your social network marketing plans, how you’re going to spread the word via the millions posting updates and pics about their lives. Think about building a fire that will draw people to you! Embody trust. And quality. It’s a brand new world.
SmartZip-A Rating System for Real Estate Investors
Jun 23rd
Posted by ladinventures in Business Sense

Features More than 12 Million Investment-Rated Properties, Including Foreclosures, in
Home prices and mortgage rates are at historic lows and, in February, Fannie Mae announced a new policy to allow qualified investors and second home buyers to obtain up to 10 loans, replacing the previous four loan limit. “There is immense pent-up demand from investors looking to capitalize on this opportunity,” said Tom Glassanos, president and CEO of SmartZip. “With today’s announcement, SmartZip brings transparency to the best investment values in two of the top markets,
SmartZip Score is the first quantitative property rating to offer a risk-adjusted assessment of the investment potential of residential real estate. SmartZip Score applies proven stock and bond rating analytics to the most comprehensive base of real estate investment attributes ever assembled. On a 1-100 scale, SmartZip Score gives investors and homebuyers an easy and intuitive way to assess if a property is really worth buying. Properties are rated two ways: a “growth” score for risk-tolerant investors seeking above-average capital appreciation and an “income” score for risk-averse investors looking for consistent monthly cash flow.
SmartZip.com provides a full range of tools and features, making it the first one-stop online destination for real estate investment. Using visual, color-coded “heat maps,” and ratings-based market screening and home search tools, users can research and compare markets, then find and confirm top-rated for-sale and foreclosure properties, all based on investor criteria such as SmartZip Score, cash flow, appreciation, school ratings, and more.
SmartZip offers a variety of benefits to a range of audiences:
- SmartZip for Investors
- Identifies the best markets and best properties;
- Computes rental income and expenses to expect;
- Projects long-term cash flow and appreciation; and
- Assesses how to maximize after-tax returns.
- Identifies the best markets and best properties;
- SmartZip for Sellers and Listing Agents
- Calculates best price for rapid sale;
- Markets properties to a national buyer pool;
- Differentiates the value of properties; and
- Instills confidence in the value of a transaction.
- Calculates best price for rapid sale;
- SmartZip for Lenders
- Determines present and future collateral value of a property;
- Assesses the size of potential loss in foreclosure; and
- Simplifies the decision to foreclose or modify a loan.
- Determines present and future collateral value of a property;
“Online real estate sites are focused on what a home costs and not on what it’s really worth,” said Avi Gupta, vice president of research and marketing at SmartZip. “SmartZip Score is an independent, disciplined methodology that gets to the fundamentals of property value. In a time of uncertainty, fundamentals, not price, count most.”
About SmartZip, Inc.
SmartZip is the leading provider of independent, analytics-based ratings and research for real estate investment. SmartZip is used by investors and homebuyers looking to easily rate, compare and confirm the best properties to buy. The SmartZip Score™ is the first and only quantitative rating offering a risk-adjusted assessment of the investment potential of residential properties. SmartZip Score applies proven stock and bond rating analytics to the most comprehensive base of real estate investment attributes ever assembled. SmartZip is a privately held, venture backed corporation headquartered in
SmartZip and SmartZip Score are trademarks of SmartZip, Inc.
Help Put Al Franken On The Street…
Nov 4th
Posted by ladinventures in Business Sense

I’m a big proponent in NOT mixing business and politics. Sometimes casual political conversation can steer clients closer to you if they agree with your opinions or leave a sour resin in their mouth, if you are on the opposite axis of the political spectrum. Therefore, I choose to casually stay clear of such banter. It’s just not worth losing business over.
However, there are some who use political headpieces as marketing material in search of gaining attention of their product or service. You don’t see it much in real estate but I did get an email today that did catch my attention. They used ” Help Put Al Franken On The Street…” in the subject line and posted the following flyer in the email.

help-put-al-franken-out-on-the-street.pdf
It certainly is attention getting, but is it worth politically pigeonholing yourself in the process? You be the judge.
The 2008 Great Depression…How Our Generation Will Handle It
Oct 10th
Posted by ladinventures in Business Sense

I received this comic as an email from my Financial Adviser friend, Erle Savage with Regan Investments. Although it is meant to be a satirical view on our current economic crisis, there is some absolute truth associated with it’s underlying meaning.
Unfortunately for all of us, our generation’s financial priorities are fundamentally upside-down and are in absolute opposition from our humbled grandparents’ generation which lived in the 1920’s. How did we get here? Did we fail to listen to our fiscally responsible elders as they told us stories of when they saw first hand the agony of their own financial crisis?
I remember for a high school project, I interviewed my grandfather on what it was like to live in those times. He said after the crash, “People finally realized the actual Value of money and this in-turn, made us fiscally responsible adults.”
In the past, I personally have had my youthful exuberance in irrational habits with money. However, today as a responsible adult I very much respect and understand my grandfather’s school of thought. I’m very grateful that this had been instilled in me as a child and will also use these methods in order to teach my children the same.
I can only hope others of my generation will utilize this current “cleansing period” as an awakening and finally “get it” so we may help teach future generations the ACTUAL VALUE of a dollar.
It’s The Best Time In 30 Years To Be Investing In Apartments!
Mar 16th
Posted by ladinventures in Business Sense


From Barron’s Edited by Robin Goldwyn Blumenthal:
The carnage in housing hasn’t spared any sector of the real-estate market. But favorable fundamentals could turn apartments into lucrative investments again. “The demographics are very supportive for apartments, with a lot of young people graduating from college,”says Sam Chandan, chief economist of real-estate research firm Reis. An estimated 82 million echo-boomers (baby boomers’ progeny) will be striking out on their own over the next seven years. While some surely will move back to the parents’ pad, many will join the ranks of the renters. So will an in-flux of immigrants and displaced home owners.
During the single-family housing boom, multifamily-market supply was very restrained: Site completions as a percentage of existing stock averaged 1% in the past five years, half the previous five year average. “It’s the best time in 30 years to be investing in apartments,” says Christopher Finlay, managing principal of Mission Residential, which does private syndications of apartments in growing middle markets like Salt Lake City-where’07 rent growth out paced the 4.4% average increase nationwide.
Shares of apartment real-estate-investment trusts fell 25% last year, more than the total REIT universe of 16% according to the FTSE Nareit index. But apartment REITs are only one of two sectors to be up year-to-date. Middle-
market apartment REITs possibly poised for turn around: Mid-America Apartment (ticker: MAA) and United Dominion (UDR), which don’t have big exposures to boom-and-bust markets.


