Spec Development Returning In Hottest U.S. Office Markets

Posted on July 29, 2014

Cranes are once again dotting the skylines of select U.S. cities as office
construction, fueled by rising rents and strengthening demand in the improved
economy, finally awakens from a six-year slumber.

Unlike the scattered build-to-suit projects that marked the early office recovery, lenders and
investors are again rolling the dice on speculative ventures in a handful of
large metros, including San Francisco, San Jose, Boston, Austin, New York — and
especially, Houston.

Spec deals are trending upward across the country as rising rents and receding supply justify new projects. Year-over-year office rent growth held steady at 3.7% in the second quarter, matching the first quarter for the largest increase of the recovery so far, according to data
analyzed by CoStar Portfolio Strategy.

Project deliveries increased by nearly 20% to 47 million square feet over the
past four quarters versus a year earlier. Under-construction volumes have jumped
more than 38% over year-end 2013 levels to 65.4 million square feet through the
second quarter, with the top 10 markets representing almost 70% of total
development activity, according to JLL’s Midyear 2014 Office Outlook.

However, unlike in past cycles, no one is worried about over-building.

“This is by no means a spec-driven supply wave to be concerned about”
from an overbuilding standpoint, noted Aaron Jodka, manager of U.S. market
research for CoStar Portfolio Strategy.

“Spec is no longer a four-letter
word in the office markets where rents justify construction. The issue is, there
are only a handful of markets where that’s the case,” Jodka added.