Any  office openings price dropped just somewhat throughout the very first 1 / 4,  like a insufficient substantial work development carried on in order to slow  down with regard to area, based on the sydney launched upon Wednesday.
At  the same time, U.S. office construction during the first quarter reached a  14-year low as developers remain spooked by soft demand and meager rent growth,  according to real estate research firm Reis Inc.
Persistent  lackluster U.S. job growth was behind the 0.1 percentage point U.S. office  vacancy rate decline. Demand for office space hinges on hiring workers to fill  it. Although hiring in February reached 236,000, that level has not yet been  consistent enough to convince employers to commit to leasing more space. In  areas where the growing technology and energy industries are dominant  employers, rents are increasing much faster than the national average.
The  first-quarter vacancy rate stood at 17 percent compared with 17.1 percent in  the fourth quarter, according to preliminary figures from Reis. The vacancy  rate was down a scant 0.30 percentage point from the prior first quarter.
"It's  really in line with our expected trends, given that hiring hasn't  accelerated," said Victor Calanog, Reis' vice president of research.  "It's so indicative of weak demand in the office sector that quarterly  construction figures are at a historic low and yet vacancies are not really  cratering."
Much  of the vacancy decline can be attributed to a lack of new supply and not a  strengthening of demand for space.
In  the first quarter, only 1.578 million square feet of new office space came  online in the United States, fewer square feet than some Manhattan office  buildings. It was the lowest quarterly amount of new completions since Reis  began publishing quarterly data in 1999.
Businesses  occupied only 4 million more square feet in the first quarter, an increase  equal to the prior quarter but more than 20 percent lower than the 5.3 million  square feet the prior year.
On  an annual rate, the additional 4 million square feet absorbed in the first  quarter would translate into one-third to one-fourth the rate traditionally  leased up during a comparable time in a recovery period, Calanog said.
Although  the first-quarter's vacancy rate is well below the cyclical peak of 17.6  percent seen in the second half of 2010, it remains far above the 12.5 percent  cyclical low in the third quarter of 2007 before the onset of the recession.
Given  high vacancy rates and lenders that are still skittish about committing  relatively large amounts for construction and development financing, it is hard  to justify breaking ground on new office projects, Reis said.
Meanwhile,  the national effective rental rate - which measures rents after subtracting  months of free rent and other costs that landlords incur to attract tenants -  grew at the glacial pace of 0.7 percent to $23.15 per square foot during the  first quarter.
Before  those costs, asking rent also grew by only 0.7 percentage to $28.66 per square  foot.
That  was a slowdown from the 0.8 percent pace in the fourth quarter but still  greater than the quarterly average of about 0.4 percent increase seen since  rents began rising consistently in the fourth quarter of 2010. Reis tracks 79  U.S. office markets.
The  U.S. effective rent is still about 7.7 percent below the peak level in the  second quarter of 2008, right before the collapse of Lehman Brothers sparked a  financial meltdown.
Still,  the U.S. property market is really a collective of vastly different local  markets. Property markets that have strong energy or technology sectors have  fared vastly better than the nation as a whole.
San  Francisco, New York, Houston, and San Jose, California, all saw effective rent  growth rise more than a full percentage point. Effective rent in San Francisco  rose 1.7 percent to $35.60 per square foot annually, while New York's rose 1.6  percent to $49.63 per square foot. Houston was No. 3, with rent up 1.5 percent  to $21.22 per square foot, and San Jose was up 1.1 percent at $24.65 per square  foot.
Phoenix,  Las Vegas, Detroit and Dayton, Ohio, had vacancy rates of at least 26 percent,  Reis said.
At  9.5 percent, Washington D.C. had the lowest vacancy rate in the first quarter.  Reis does not expect that to continue.
"We're  taking a look at increasing vacancies a minimum of on the following few years"  Calanog stated, including that this encircling workplace marketplaces will also  have the brunts associated with Oughout. H. pricing slashes.
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