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Outlook Conference Recap: Trends Impacting the Future of Real Estate

By Wisconsin School of Business

October 20, 2022

Christian Beaudoin speaking

On Thursday, October 6th, the Graaskamp Center hosted the Wisconsin Real Estate and Economic Outlook Conference.

The second keynote presentation featured Christian Beaudoin, Managing Director, Research & Strategy, JLL Research, who discussed trends impacting the future of real estate.

You will find the key takeaways from his presentation below.

Population
  • The current decade is expected to have the lowest total population growth of any period since the founding of the US
  • This is leading to the competitive nature between cities and states, as any population migration is a zero-sum game
    • When any one region gains population, it must come at the expense of another, rather than both growing
  • Outgoing baby boomer talent won’t be easily replaced, as the birth rate has dropped below replacement level since 1971
  • Immigration is not filling the labor gap, with numbers declining significantly in recent years amid policy changes
  • LinkedIn population migration data shows accelerating growth of Sun Belt and Mountain West markets
  • Over the last one hundred years, the distribution of the US population has flipped
    • In 1920, 60% of the population was in the Northeast and Midwest
    • In 2020, over 60% was in the South and West
Sustainability
  • Sustainability is now a mandate rather than an option – focus now on decarbonization
  • Sun Belt cities are most vulnerable to climate risk
  • Cities have increasingly ambitious net zero carbon targets
    • Notably San Diego in 2035 and Austin, Denver, Salt Lake City, and San Francisco in 2040
    • Growing cities like Austin, Denver, and Atlanta are facing the challenge of reducing emissions in the face of rapidly growing population, yet this provides an opportunity to build sustainably
  • Retrofitting existing building stock will be essential to meet market demand for net-zero carbon space
    • 80% of office building stock standing in 2050 has already been built
    • Retrofitting rates will need to exceed 3% to meet 2050 targets (currently only 1-2%)
Office
  • Hybrid working is the new normal with an average of 2.7 days in the office
  • Office space demand is forecasted to have a 15% to 20% reduction for large corporate tenants
Housing
  • The national housing stock is structurally undersupplied long-term
    • Since 2010, the imbalance has become more pronounced
  • Escalating construction costs are expected to serve as a headwind to new development and drive value for existing assets
  • The cost of owning a home in the US is skyrocketing, extending rentership across markets while contributing to record rent growth
  • Significantly declining housing affordability is prolonging renter tenancy
  • Multi-housing rent growth is surpassing inflationary growth
Industrial
  • The pandemic exposed significant risks to the global supply chain
    • This has exposed companies to the benefits of re-shoring and near-shoring
  • The largest industrial markets in the US are strapped for vacant space
    • Low vacancies in gateway markets is causing some industrial tenants to shift demand to secondary and tertiary markets
Retail
  • E-commerce is back to normal, pre-pandemic levels
  • Retail foot traffic is back
  • Employee shortages remain retail’s greatest challenge

Access all of the presenters slides from the Trends with Benefits – Trends That Will Define the Future of Real Estate and Housing outlook conference here.


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