Northmarq in GlobeSt.: Triple net lease listings are up

Originally published in GlobeSt.

The April letter about triple net lease from Northmarq’s Chris Lomuto shows, as he put it, a “mixed bag of results.”

Top observation is that the average closing cap rate for the month ending March 31, 2024, was about 6.60%, or roughly 95 basis points up from the depths of July 2022. It’s also down nearly 20 basis points from December 2023.

But the evening out bears the classic problem of looking at averages rather than data distributions. As Lomuto noted, the deals with higher closing caps had offset those with lower closing caps.

“What does that mean for pricing on a given deal?” he wrote. “The truth is whether you’re buying or selling right now, you really have to look at each deal individually and compare it to what else is on the market, to understand what kind of pricing may be possible.”

Looking at 60-day ranges to account for reporting delays, January 2024 looked roughly the same as January 2023. But the surrounding data doesn’t. December 2023 looked “fairly anemic” compared to the previous two years. Looking at a graph of data, swings (measures of volatility) and amplitude (measures of activity) have been compressing for several years. That raises the question of what the coming year might look like in comparison.

Average asking cap rates were roughly back to where they were in February 2020, before all hell broke loose. That’s 102 basis points above the low of May 2022.

Lomuto also noted a needed shift in perspective in measuring triple net lease against other metrics, particularly against the S&P 500, which is important if you want to understand where investors might prefer to focus. He said that “while stock prices have clearly risen relative to trailing earnings, companies like NVIDIA are being bid up on expected future earnings.”

Instead of using equities as a reasonable comparable, treasuries and borrowing rates might be more apt, except “those spreads have not really normalized yet.”

Lomuto sees a lot in the data “symptomatic of macroeconomic uncertainty, thin trading volumes, and more noise in the data.” This is a case of time eventually telling.

Listing activity was up about 27% compared to 2023. Ads are coming down about 26% faster than at the same time as last year. Again, hard to tell now whether that is good news or sellers pulling out faster, but it could be a sign of faster transactions.

Also, triple net inventory has seen 3.5% to 4% in each of the last two months. “If that type of growth repeats in April, it may push us past the inventory peak we saw in November.”

The story was written by Erik Sherman and appeared on GlobeSt.com on April 23, 2024. © 2024 ALM Global Properties, LLC. All rights reserved.

Northmarq is a full-service capital markets resource for commercial real estate investors, offering seamless collaboration with top experts in debt, equity, investment sales, loan servicing, and fund management. The company combines industry-leading capabilities with a flexible structure, enabling its national team of experienced professionals to create innovative solutions for clients. Northmarq's solid foundation and entrepreneurial approach have built an annual transaction volume of more than $39 billion and a loan servicing portfolio of more than $76 billion. Through the 2022 acquisition of Stan Johnson Company and Four Pillars Capital Markets, Northmarq established itself as a provider of opportunities across all major asset classes. For more information, visit: www.northmarq.com.