Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Everythings BIG in TEXAS!!! 1.22 Million SQ Ft Office Lease

So I wonder where Shell SHELL got the $$$$$  , Oh YEA , From ME and YOU!!!   Shell has renewed a 15-year lease for 804,491 square feet in One Shell Plaza and 471,934 square feet in Two Shell Plaza in Houston, a combined 1.22 million square feet of office space, the largest office lease transaction in the world in 2011. Tim Relyea and Joe Peddie of Cushman & Wakefield's Houston office represented Shell in the lease transaction. Hines, the buildings' owner, was self-represented by Charles Elder and Chrissy Wilson. As part of the lease agreement, Hines will make capital improvements to the property, including mechanical and electrical upgrades and redesigned outdoor plaza areas.

For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : http://www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com/ Thank you for your interest.




Thanks,

Ed A. Ayres

Houston Realty Advisors, Inc.

Mitaquye oyasin


Thursday, November 10, 2011

1st New Office Building in Galleria in YEARS!!!!

Skanska USA is moving ahead on construction of 302,000-square-foot office building in the Uptown/Galleria in Houston.


The 20-story development at 3009 Post Oak Blvd. will be 100% self-financed by Skanska. The podium designed, all-glass curtain office building will include 12 stories of office space atop an eight-story parking garage.

The 3009 Post Oak Boulevard project has been pre-certified as LEED Platinum, including such features as high-efficiency glass, energy recovery wheel and occupancy monitoring systems, lighting control and water savings features.

"Uptown Houston is one of the largest business districts in the United States and headquarters to top corporations around the world," said Michael Mair, executive vice president and regional manager of Skanska USA Commercial Development in Houston.

Skanska USA Building, which has offices in Houston, San Antonio and Dallas, will be the construction manager and Kirksey Architecture is the architect. Skanska tapped Cassidy Turley to provide on-site property management services.

Skanska USA has focused this year on development of office projects in major U.S. markets. The firm also has commercial development groups in Boston, Washington D.C. and Seattle.

For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com Thank you for your interest.


Thanks,

Ed A. Ayres

Houston Realty Advisors, Inc.

Saturday, November 5, 2011

NEW NEWS HOUSTON CRE

Houston CRE News:

·         With 64K SF Nexeo Solutions lease, Woodlands Development Company moving forward on 3 Water Waterway Square. (Link
·         Wells Core Office Income REIT acquired 242 K SF Westway II (Link)
·         Anadarko ponders office expansion (Link)
·         Coventry/Dinerstein starting Millennium High Street multifamily/retail development (Link)
·         Boxer Property acquired 59k SF, 61% occupied 1110 NASA Parkway office building from C-III Capital Partners (Link)
·         Parmenter Realty Partners purchased Woodland Park Plaza, a 226k SF office, 68% leased building in Westchase (Link)
·         Morgan Keegan moving 24K SF to San Felipe Plaza (Link)

 
For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com  

Thank  you,

Ed A. Ayres
Houston Realty Advisors, Inc.
Mitaquye Oyasin

Saturday, October 29, 2011

What the Big Banks and Bankers are saying about our economy & CRE

There was good news and bad news in the latest flurry of bank earnings reports when it comes to their willingness to fund commercial real estate. The good news: they are showing a renewed interest in CRE loans. The bad news: they are probably not interested in most of the deals for which borrowers need financing.



Banks are reporting continued acquisition of bulk performing and nonperforming loan portfolios from other banks, particularly if the FDIC is willing to share on some of the losses going forward.

For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com Thank you for your interest.




Thanks,

Ed A. Ayres

Houston Realty Advisors, Inc.

Mitaquye oyasin





Banks are also reporting an appetite for lending on New York City and Washington, DC, deals.



Banks are reporting renewed lending to their existing customers who have survived the last four years.



And like the rest of the investment markets, banks are willing to lend on single-tenant owner-occupied properties.



The most new risk banks seem willing to take on now is for multifamily property deals, but even there, the interest seems moderate as banks are still in the "sticking their toes in the water" mode.



Outside of those limited criteria, banks' appetite for commercial real estate lending is only slightly improved from where it was one or two years ago -- and maybe not as good as it was in the first half of 2011, according to Mark Fitzgerald, a debt strategist for CoStar Group.



"I think CRE lenders have pulled back from earlier this year," Fitzgerald said. "CMBS new issuance is pretty much dormant again, banks have pulled back, life insurers continue to lend but are nearing their annual allocations after significant activity in the first half of 2011."



Going forward, the picture doesn't look much better.



"The downward pressure on net interest margins from Operation Twist and low long-term rates will also hurt bank profitability in the near term, which means less room to dispose of legacy loans/make new loans," Fitzgerald said.



Steve Miller, director of U.S. debt and risk research for CoStar Group, said, "I would add that based on some anecdotal discussions, in selected products/markets for the "right" borrower, the largest banks and some of the re-capitalized mid-tier banks are putting out CRE loans. Apartment construction, for one, seems to be the flavor of the day."



"However," Miller added, "the data doesn't really show an upturn - it probably won't for a while, we're in a de-leveraging environment and banks would like nothing better than to have underwater loans go away. They just can't sell enough of their underwater loans at prices that make sense, given their capital condition and earnings capacity, to turnover their portfolios fast enough."



Low Demand May Be Driving Low Liquidity

According to the Federal Reserve Board's monthly survey of economic conditions (Beige Book), banking and finance financial activity was reported to have weakened some since the summer.



Dallas bankers noted that the improvement in financial conditions had stalled, and Chicago bankers indicated a further tightening of credit conditions, particularly for financial firms. In addition, New York bankers reported noticeably weaker activity in the securities industry. Loan volumes were either flat or down slightly in most Districts.



That said, several districts indicated that strong competition among banks for high quality borrowers was leading to lower rates and fees for these customers.



New York bankers' responses suggested increased demand for residential and commercial mortgages but mostly residential refinancing activity. Respondents reported a decrease in spreads of loan rates over costs of funds for all loan categories--especially commercial mortgages.



Philadelphia bankers reported that commercial real estate contacts continued to plan for slow growth due to increased economic uncertainty,



Several commercial bankers in Virginia and Maryland reported moderate increases in loan demand in recent weeks, although some of the increase was from refinancing. One banker attributed an increase in loan applications to businesses shopping around to establish new bank relationships. Also, a lending officer in Richmond reported a sharp increase in loans to existing customers, because new products were now available and the approval process was faster.



In Atlanta banking contacts indicated continued weak loan demand.



Chicago credit conditions tightened further as volatility in financial markets remained elevated and increased risks coming from Europe and the weakness in U.S. economic activity. Most lending activity was still in the form of refinancing, which picked up with lower long-term interest rates.



In Kansas City and Dallas, bankers reported demand for commercial and residential real estate loans was marginally weaker and banks showed more caution in supplying loans to anyone but the most creditworthy of borrowers.



What follows are the comments we heard from bank executives during bank earnings conference calls this past week.



Sticking To Those We Know

"There are lots of opportunities to help our existing customers to refinance their existing loans as they buy new property as we can provide capital to them and then also as the CMBS market continues to mature and refinancers opportunities there. So, overall the commercial real estate business and the risk adjusted returns there are pretty attractive."

Timothy J. Sloan, Senior Executive Vice President and CFO, Wells Fargo & Co.



"There are selective opportunities with clients that we know very, very well, who have market opportunities that arise from the volatility or the down tick or whatever you want to call it in the market place itself. Some of it comes from other lender distress."

Betsy Zubrow Cohen, CEO, The Bancorp



"What we're doing is spending a good amount of time looking at a commercial real estate portfolio and really looking at it in a risk-based basis. And I hate to paint all commercial real estate with a really broad brush and say we don't want it as part of our portfolio. That's far from the truth. And I think in all reality, you'll still see commercial real estate being a significant part of our portfolio for a long time. It's really -- it's pruning the high-risk assets off and trying to partner with those that have successful real estate projects and keeping those as part of a community banks portfolio."

Robert B. Kaminski, COO, Executive Vice President, Mercantile Bank



"Our commercial real estate loan portfolio increased $51.6 million or 13% on an annualized basis. The growth was spread fairly evenly across a number of different property types. We saw a few more attractive refinancing opportunities this quarter in our CRE portfolio that we made an effort to retain, which partially contributed to the lower level of natural runoff than we experienced."

Alvin D. Kang, CEO, Nara Bancorp Inc.



Payoffs, Foreclosures Offsetting Increased Lending

"Average total loans were essentially unchanged at $11.9 billion. Increases in commercial mortgages, residential mortgages and commercial loans were offset by continued decline in the construction portfolio."

Charles J. Nugent, CFO and Senior Executive Vice President, Fulton Financial



"On the CRE side, modest growth in commercial mortgage activity will continue to be masked by the net contraction in construction lending, particularly residential construction from our acquired portfolios."

René F. Jones, CFO, Executive Vice President, M&T Bank



CRE lending "will stay lumpy going forward, but it's on an overall downward trajectory. I mean, the overall construction book continues to decline. I think it's down 20% approximately year-over-year."

P. W. Parker, Chief Credit Officer and Executive Vice President, U.S. Bancorp



"We saw a continued run-off in the commercial mortgage and commercial construction books. Average CRE balances were down $510 million or 4% sequentially. We continue to expect run-off in these portfolios in the near to intermediate term, although at a steadily slowing pace. I would expect that the size of this portfolio will plateau with the stabilization improvement in commercial real estate markets perhaps in the next several quarters."

Daniel T. Poston, Executive Vice President and CFO, Fifth Third Bancorp



"We're still going to see some continued runoff in non-owner-occupied just for no other reason that we really aren't out looking for any of the non-owner-occupied during this downturn."

Michael H. Price, Chairman, CEO and President, Mercantile Bank



Multi Lenders for Multifamily

"We continue to operate in a challenging environment; economic growth remains weak, unemployment stubbornly remains elevated and home values continue to remain soft. In addition, the implementation of Operation Twist by the Federal Reserve has contributed to a flattening of the U.S. Treasury yield curve, putting further downward pressure on long term interest rates and current mortgage product offerings, as well as increasing mortgage loan prepayments. However, we are optimistic that the increase in our loan pipeline, coupled with the reduction in the expanded conforming loan limits that commenced Oct. 1, 2011, and the resumption of multifamily/commercial real estate lending, should facilitate modest loan and balance sheet growth in the fourth quarter and more robust growth in 2012."

Monte N. Redman, President and CEO of Astoria Financial Corp.



"We believe there is a long-term sea change in terms of home ownership. Therefore, there is going to be very attractive investments for folks in rental and properties for a long time. That's a very appropriate kind of CRE lending for us to do. So, we're not getting out of the real estate lending business. We'll be approaching it with an appropriate amount of energy given our long-term goals.

Kelly S. King, Chairman and CEO, BB&T Corp.



Capitalizing on Other Banks' Distress

"Period-end loans were up $8.2 billion from the second quarter reflecting our commitment to our commercial and retail customers through this period of economic uncertainty. Loan growth was once again driven by our commercial portfolio which grew $9.1 billion or 3% from the second quarter and was diverse across our commercial businesses. This growth also reflects our ability to capitalize on the opportunities generated in the business environment including the purchase of $1.1 billion in loans from the Bank of Ireland which were all U.S. based and largely all commercial real estate."

Timothy J. Sloan, Senior Executive Vice President and CFO, Wells Fargo & Co.



"We've originated a lot of loans for several years now that have come from competitors who had capital challenges or concentration of credit challenges or whatever and we have seen a lot of opportunities to originate loans for customers that have been able to buy assets from those weakened competitors or acquire loans that are discounted from those weakened competitors. So yes that has been a source of loan growth for us in the quarter just ended as it has been for quarters over the last three years."

George Gleason, Chairman and CEO, Bank of the Ozarks Inc.



Nearing an Inflection Point

"We believe commercial real estate may have reached an inflection point, as run-off is slowing and commercial mortgage originations grew linked-quarter. Our distressed loan portfolio continues to decline, but at a slower pace than in the past."

Richard J. Johnson, CFO, PNC Financial Services Group Inc.

Friday, September 30, 2011

MIDWAY DEVELOPMENT BREAKS GROUND ON CITYCENTRE THREE

CITYCENTRE THREE


A rendering of the 120,000-square-foot CityCentre Three in Houston. HOUSTON — Midway Development has contracted with Hoar Construction who has commenced construction on the 120,000-square-foot CityCentre Three, a mixed-use property slated to be six stories, located in CityCentre in Houston. Midway Cos. has still more office towers they can develop on the  property, which was designed by by Munoz & Albin with Kirksey Architects and all they hope all will achieve LEED Silver certification. The exterior will have a courtyard featuring fountains and landscaped seating areas. Construction for the property is expecting to last 12 months. For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com Thank you for your interest.


Thanks,

Ed A. Ayres

Houston Realty Advisors, Inc.

Mitaquye Oyasin

Thursday, August 11, 2011

5 Building sale by GE Commercial, was that a GOOD price?

General Electric Commercial Finance Real Estate, and entity of GE Capital Corp., sold its five-property office portfolio in Houston to Peloton Capital Partners. The properties traded for $19 million, or approximately $55 per square foot.

The assets consist of 347,587 square feet of office space in Harris County. The buildings are at 2950 and 3030 S. Gessner, 10200 Richmond Ave., 11931 Wickchester Lane and 1250 Woodbranch Park Drive
 
For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com  Thank you for your interest.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Whats Howard Hughes been up to? Is He still is SO quiet and reclusive? NOT LIKELY!!!!!

Check it out......The Howard Hughes Corp., (NYSE:HHC) bought an interest in The Woodlands, a master-planned community in Texas, from a unit of Morgan Stanley (MS) for $117.5 million.

Howard Hughes, spun off last year from General Growth Properties Inc. (NYSE: GGP), will control the Houston development by taking a 47.5% interest through a definitive agreement with Morgan Stanley Real Estate. The consideration includes $20 million in cash payable at closing and a $97.5 million non-interest-bearing note due Dec. 1, 2011.
Howard Hughes and its predecessors has been an investor in The Woodlands since 2004 and its partner, Morgan Stanley Real Estate Investing, has been an investor since 1997. Upon completion of the purchase, Howard Hughes will wholly own The Woodlands as a subsidiary, including all unsold property.

As of March 31, unsold property in included 1,372 acres of residential land representing 4,532 lots, and 936 acres of land earmarked for commercial use.

The Woodlands also has full or part ownership in 434,000 square feet of office space, 203,000 square feet of retail and service space, 865 rental apartment units. It also owns a 440-room conference center facility and 36-hole country club.

For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com Offer opportunities for Houston office space. Thank you for your interest.


Thanks,

Ed A. Ayres

Houston Realty Advisors, Inc.

Mitaquye Oyasin

Thursday, June 30, 2011

I wonder where they got the 340 Million ?? Oh yea, from Me & You!!!

Chevron Corp. purchased Four Allen Center, the 1.23 million-square-foot office tower it fully occupies at 1400 Smith St. in downtown Houston, from Brookfield Office Properties for $340 million, or approximately $277 per square foot. The investment entity Towanda Development I Ltd. sold the building to Brookfield for $120 million in September 2006. “This sale is reflective of our ongoing strategy of recycling capital from mature assets into more accretive opportunities,” said Ric Clark, chief executive officer of Brookfield.
Built in 1983, Four Allen Center is a 50-story structure on 1.14 acres in the central business district. Chevron has leased the property for nearly five years.  The U.S. oil and gas company also inked a 311,000-square-foot office renewal next door at Continental Center I, a 1.1 million-square-foot, 51-story skyscraper at 1600 Smith St. Chevron's previous lease for 475,000 square feet expires in May of next year. The new deal will leave 164,000 square feet available next spring.  Brookfield has owned 1600 Smith St. for five years. It is 95.4 percent leased. Continental Airlines also anchors the property with 414,578 square feet. The average asking rent per year is approximately $23 per square foot, according to CoStar Group information.
“We have created significant value through the sale of this stabilized asset concurrent with Chevron’s sizeable lease extension at our adjacent property,” said Dennis Friedrich, president and global chief investment officer of Brookfield. “Chevron represents the type of top-flight corporate tenant we seek to partner with in our global energy-sector markets.” Paul Frazier and Margaret Gosda negotiated the lease in-house for Brookfield. Tim Relyea of Cushman & Wakefield represented Chevron.For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com

Monday, May 23, 2011

Houston Oil companies take more office space 1st quarter. I wonder if its because.....

 Houston absorbed 422k SF during Q1, but deliveries outpaced tenant demand, pushing vacancy 1 0bps to 16.1%. Class-A vacancy jumped 20 bps to 13.9%, largely due to Hines’ delivery of the 972k SF BG Group Place. Class-B properties ended the quarter with a 19% vacancy, a 10 bps increase. Oil drilling activity in South Texas increased recently, leading numerous service companies to take occupancy last quarter. This helped Class-A assets absorb 480k SF. A lot of energy firms also signed expansions last quarter, led by KBR with a 216k SF Class-A expansion in Eldridge Oaks. EnerVest, Koch Industries, Noble Denton, Willbros Group, and EDG also expanded in Q1. One last tidbit: Houston’s sublease inventory decreased by more than 500k SF in Q1, lowering total inventory to 3.6M.

For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com  Offer opportunities for Houston office space. Thank you for your interest.

"Life is a Storm my friend. You will bask in the sunlight one moment and be battered on the rocks the next. What makes you a man is what you do when that storm comes. You must look into that storm and say You must do your worst for I will do mine and the fates will know you for the man you are."




The Count of Monte Cristo

Thursday, May 12, 2011

Rising Occupancy Should Bring Growth In Retail Rents By Year-End

Near-Term Outlook For Retail Real Estate Remains Positive Despite First-Quarter Pause In Net Absorption


Falling vacancy rates and rising demand for retail real estate should finally bring about meaningful rent growth for landlords in most U.S. retail markets by the end of 2011, according to CoStar Group economists, Randy Drummer reporting from COSTAR on May 11th, 2011

Growth in employment and moderately rising demand fueled by greater numbers of shoppers and little new supply of retail development on the horizon should set the stage for a significant drop in vacancy rates, which CoStar expects to fall as low as 5% by late 2014.

Bolstered occupancy will in turn lead to growth in rental rates, which have been in decline since the recession. By the end of this year, rents should turn positive across the U.S. and from there rise fairly rapidly, peaking at about 6% growth annually by 2014, CoStar Group forecast recently in its First Quarter 2011 Retail Review and Outlook. CoStar Real Estate Strategist Suzanne Mulvee co-presented the retail market report with Real Estate Strategist Kevin White and Real Estate Economist Ryan McCullough.

The near-term outlook is promising for retail properties, but longer term, starting in 2013, uncertainties such as employment growth, rising oil prices, delivery of new supply and mounting pressure to generate continued high levels of retail sales could challenge the strength of the recovery, CoStar analysts noted.



"While it is the negligible new supply that is allowing retail real estate to turn the corner, the future depends on job and wage growth levels," said Chris Macke, senior real estate strategist for CoStar Group.



Retail sales have already returned to 2007 levels, with year-over-year growth in the 6% range for the last couple quarters -- well above the historical range of 4.5% to 5%. Spending should remain strong if jobs and economic growth stays on track, Mulvee said.



Though appliances, electronics and other big-ticket purchases are still down, spending on health care and personal care is up over 13%, with increases also reported in online sales, food and beverage, general merchandise, clothing and sporting goods spending. The level of sales per square foot of retail space has also moved well above pre-recession levels -- evidence that retailers are doing better and may eventually need more space, providing a platform for rent growth, Mulvee said.



Leasing volume has also picked up robustly, with CoStar projecting more than 53 million square feet of retail space leased in the first quarter. While it’s not yet translating into large net absorption gains -- just 9 million square feet of absorption nationwide in the first quarter, the lowest since fourth-quarter 2009 -- the heightened activity and diminished supply kept the national vacancy steady in the first quarter at 7.2%.



Fast-recovering, high-barrier Northeast corridor markets are seeing the most demand, with Washington, D.C. posting an absorption increase of 1.5%, followed by Houston (1.2%), Boston, (1.1%), Philadelphia (1%) and Detroit and Minneapolis, (each 0.8%.) Markets hard hit by oversupply and housing issues like Tampa, Phoenix and Atlanta continued to show flat absorption in the first quarter.



Demand remains weak for power centers, where construction of new supply was quite heavy for several years starting in 2005. Construction in all retail sectors is at a standstill and debt market constraints will continue to limit building, though a few projects delayed by the recession are starting to come back.



With little new space available, vacancy rates are finally cresting. Underscoring the breadth of the occupancy recovery, as much as 60% of the 1,000 retail submarkets tracked by CoStar showed declining vacancy rates in the first quarter, with the strongest declines in Northeast and Texas markets like Houston, Detroit, Denver, Boston and Philadelphia.



Housing-bust markets like Phoenix and the Inland Empire still are seeing vacancies well above their historical average. Among product types, lifestyle centers and to a lesser degree malls are seeing vacancy rates tick down.



While the situation is expected to reverse quickly as existing supply gets leased up, overall rents are still edging downward year over year across the retail spectrum. Similarly to occupancy and absorption, rents are improving at different rates in different markets and product types, McCullough said. Rental rates for lifestyle centers and community shopping centers are still seeing downward pressure, while malls and power centers are seeing quoted rents stabilize and even move up slight over the last couple of quarters, McCullough said.



Markets that depend on strong population growth to drive retail sales such as the Inland Empire, CA are seeing largest year over year rent losses. Rents fell 8.4% in the Inland Empire, followed by Phoenix (-7%), Tampa (-7.5%) and Denver (-9%). Markets with sustained growth like Texas and perennially under-retailed markets like New York and Los Angeles saw the least erosion.



The nation’s overall growth rate of around 3% annually "isn’t spectacular" and not as strong as the early recoveries in previous recoveries, but it’s enough to generate jobs and gradually bring down the unemployment rate and create renewed positive absorption and a "pretty meaningful recovery" in commercial real estate, White said.



"We expect it will gather momentum over the course of this year and into 2012," White said.



For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com Offer opportunities for Houston office space. Thank you for your interest.

Friday, April 29, 2011

LOOPNET SOLD to COSTAR; How much more will our fees go up on the 88,000 subscribers ?

COSTAR ACQUIRES LOOPNET

CoStar Group has signed a definitive agreement to acquire LoopNet for approximately $860 million. The transaction between the two companies is expected to close by the end of 2011. As part of the agreement, LoopNet shareholders will receive $16.50 in cash and approximately 0.04 shares of CoStar Group common stock for each share of LoopNet common stock. This equates to a total equity value of approximately $860 million and an enterprise value of $762 million. Upon closing, LoopNet shareholders will own approximately 8.5 percent of CoStar shares outstanding on a fully diluted basis. In addition, CoStar has received a commitment from J.P. Morgan for a $415 million loan and a $50 million revolving credit facility, which will be used to fund the acquisition and for general operating purposes.
"CoStar revolutionized how the industry researches commercial real estate and LoopNet revolutionized the way the industry markets commercial real estate," said Andrew Florence, president and CEO of CoStar, in a statement. "We expect the combination of our companies to give the $11 trillion commercial real estate market the full benefit of the Internet." With the merger, CoStar's subscriber base stands to grow from 88,000 subscribers to at least 160,000 subscribers, representing approximately 15 percent of the commercial real estate market's participants. LoopNet.com currently has 4.8 million registered users and more than 6 million unique visits quarterly.

For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com  Offer opportunities for Houston office space. Thank you for your interest.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

University of Texas buys GOLD-- Why not Real Estate?

Institutional investors are no doubt recoiling on news that one of their very own – the $20 billion Texas University Endowment Fund – has taken a $1 billion position in dumb ol' gold bars, stored on their behalf in New York vaults, collecting dust but earning no interest and paying no dividend. This report at Bloomberg has all the details: The University of Texas Investment Management Co., the second-largest U.S. academic endowment, took delivery of almost $1 billion in gold bullion and is storing the bars in a New York vault, according to the fund’s board.  The fund, whose $19.9 billion in assets ranked it behind Harvard University’s endowment as of August, according to the National Association of College and University Business Officers, added about $500 million in gold investments to an existing stake last year, said Bruce Zimmerman, the endowment’s chief executive officer ....

The decision to turn the fund’s investment into gold bars was influenced by Kyle Bass, a Dallas hedge fund manager and member of the endowment’s board, Zimmerman said at its annual meeting on April 14. Bass made $500 million on the U.S. subprime-mortgage collapse.

“Central banks are printing more money than they ever have, so what’s the value of money in terms of purchases of goods and services,” Bass said yesterday in a telephone interview. “I look at gold as just another currency that they can’t print any more of.”

What has the world come to?
Just think how silly this would have sounded just a few years ago -- that is, before the financial market crash caused investors all around the world to start doubting all sorts of conventional wisdom, not the least of which is the idea that the U.S. currency is sound.

For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com  Offer opportunities for Houston office space. Thank you for your interest.

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Houston leasing more and more space

HOUSTON -- Willbros United States Holdings, Inc., an oil and gas equipment and services provider, has signed an 87,212-square-foot office lease at Five Post Oak Park in Houston's Galleria submarket. Willbros extended its original lease for 10 years, expanding its size by 44,178 square feet. Tim Relyea, Joe Peddie and David Guion of Cushman & Wakefield of Texas represented Willbros, while Clint Bawcom and Brian McMackin of Cassidy Turley represented the landlord, Shorenstein Properties LLC. Five Post Oak Park is a 567,319-square-foot Class A office building located at 4400 Post Oak Pkwy.

For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com Offer opportunities for Houston office space. Thank you for your interest.


FACEBOOK at http://www.facebook.com/home.php#/profile.php?id=1223783810&ref=nf



Thanks,

Ed A. Ayres

Houston Realty Advisors, Inc.

Mitaquye oyasin

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Google will no longer support real estate listing in 2011

Search giant Google will no longer support real estate listings uploaded to its classifed listings site on Google Maps, the company announced today.Consumers will no longer be able to find for-sale, foreclosure, or rental properties through the search function on Google Maps, and real estate professionals will no longer be able to upload their listings to Google Base, the company's classifieds site, which is being replaced by Google Shopping APIs and will not support real estate listings."In part due to low usage, the proliferation of excellent property-search tools on real estate websites, and the infrastructure challenge posed by the impending retirement of the Google Base API, we've decided to discontinue the real estate feature within Google Maps on February 10, 2011," the company said in a blog post. Home seekers can still use "Google search results to find helpful real estate information and websites" as well as view local businesses, directions and transit times through Google Maps and explore neighborhoods through Google Street View, the company added.
"This does not come as a surprise to me. Even with Google's huge audience, it shows having listing data is clearly not enough to deliver a good real estate search experience and build audience," said Pete Flint, CEO and co-founder of property search site Trulia.
The company added that Google's removal of listings data will not affect its mobile application, which uses the Google Maps API.

For more information on Houston office space, Houston retail space or Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : http://www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com/

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

HOUSTON 2010 We are No 1#, What is instore for 2011????

2010 Houston ranks as No. 1 manufacturing city in U.S.


Houston is the No. 1 manufacturing employer in the country, with 228,226 employed in the industry, Manufacturers' News Inc. reported.

Houston's nearly 230,000 manufacturing jobs topped the nation, according to the Manufacturers' News Inc. report. The industrial directory publisher ranked cities according to number of factory jobs, using Standard Industrial Classifications and including oil and gas exploration categories.

Texas overall dominated the ranking. Dallas ranked No. 6 with 81,626 positions, while San Antonio was No. 17 with 52,039 people. Austin came in at No. 26 with 43,103 workers. Manufacturing accounts for about 9 percent of jobs in Houston.

New York was the second largest factory employer with 139,127 jobs followed by Chicago with 108,692 and Los Angeles with 83,719.

Cities that registered notable changes since 2008 included Detroit, falling to No. 45 from No. 29; Seattle, which has moved up to 34th from 46th; and St. Louis, which overtook Cincinnati as the nation's fifth-largest manufacturing employer.

Since August 2008, the nation's top 10 industrial cities have lost a total of 95,805 manufacturing jobs, or 8.4 percent, according to the report.

Things are moving up and now is rthe time to lock in reantl rates!!!!  Good time to BUY!!!!! as well!!

For more information on Houston manufacturing or office space, Houston retail space, Houston warehouse space and Houston industrial space, please call Ed Ayres @ 713 782-0260 or see my web site at : www.houstonrealtyadvisors.com