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Brokers ride out recession in flat Ventura market.


Market drifts as national recovery fails to materialize ma·te·ri·al·ize  
v. ma·te·ri·al·ized, ma·te·ri·al·iz·ing, ma·te·ri·al·iz·es

v.tr.
1. To cause to become real or actual: By building the house, we materialized a dream.
 

Ventura County's office market remained flat in the fourth quarter, with no big deals in sight and brokers agreeing that leasing likely will remain lackluster lack·lus·ter  
adj.
Lacking brightness, luster, or vitality; dull. See Synonyms at dull.

Adj. 1. lackluster - lacking brilliance or vitality; "a dull lackluster life"; "a lusterless performance"
 until the economy turns around.

Tim Grant, a CB Commercial senior associate specializing in office buildings, said the flatness of the market was reflected in fourth-quarter absorption, which totaled only 2,321 square feet.

The figure involved absorption of more than 7,000 square feet in the Oxnard-Point Hueneme submarket sub·mar·ket  
n.
A geographic, economic, or specialized subdivision of a market.

adj.
Being below what is usual in a particular market: submarket wages; submarket interest rates. 
, but negative absorption of 4,300 square feet in Ventura and a negative 791 square feet in Camarillo Camarillo (kă'mərē`yō), city (1990 pop. 52,303), Ventura co., S Calif.; inc. 1964. It is the center of a fertile farm area where citrus fruits and flowers are grown. .

"A lot of people feel we've hit bottom and that it's just a matter of how long we're going to bounce 1. bounce - (Perhaps by analogy to a bouncing check) An electronic mail message that is undeliverable and returns an error notification (a "bounce message") to the sender is said to "bounce".
2. bounce - To play volleyball. The now-demolished D. C.
 along the bottom until we come back up," Grant said.

"I don't think it's going to get worse. But it would take a crystal ball to figure out when it's going to get better. It all depends on the economy right now," he added.

Grant said whether the outlook is bright or dark also depends on your point of view.

He said it can be viewed as a "bright spot" that there is no new construction and none in the foreseeable fore·see  
tr.v. fore·saw , fore·seen , fore·see·ing, fore·sees
To see or know beforehand: foresaw the rapid increase in unemployment.
 future, so the vacancy VACANCY. A place which is empty. The term is principally applied to cases where an office is not filled.
     2. By the constitution of the United States, the president has the power to fill up vacancies that may happen during the recess of the senate.
 rate is not likely to shoot up. But he said the lack of construction also could be interpreted as a signal to tenants.

"It's a warning to the tenants that they better jump on deals quickly because we will have a very tough market once this space leases up. Once that happens, it will be a good one to two years of lag time for the market to react and come up with some construction," Grant said.

Grant pointed out that a recent CB Commercial report showed vacancy rates rising nationally in downtown markets but falling in suburban markets.

"The two trends offset each other to produce the unchanged rate (of 19.5 percent) for metropolitan markets," the report said.

Cathy Condon, an office properties specialist in the real estate brokerage Grubb & Ellis' Ventura County office, said total net absorption for 1991 should exceed the 1990 total.

"What is really absorbing the quickest is the smaller, multi-tenant office space," Condon said. "The well-located, newer, well-maintained office buildings are absorbing very well. The older, multi-tenant buildings that are not well located are the ones that are suffering."

Condon said Ventura County is still attracting some tenants from Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  County, but "not to the extent that we were a few years ago, because there is so much space available now in Los Angeles."

Condon said the vacancy rate was holding at about 26 percent in the Ventura Coastal Plain submarket. "Hopefully, we've seen pretty much the end of the shrinking back in the defense and oil-related industries in the Ventura Coastal Plain that had created a lot of the vacancy in the previous quarters," Condon said.

CB Commercial's Grant noted that the Ventura market differs greatly from many Los Angeles markets because it is so much smaller.

CB Commercial lists 5.4 million square feet of space in the market, split into the four submarkets of Ventura, Oxnard, Camarillo, and Westlake-Thousand Oaks-Newbury Park.

"It's difficult to draw comparisons because ours is such a small market relative to Los Angeles County. They've got millions of square feet available, but we're small enough that things could turn around virtually overnight if we had a few big deals take place," Grant said.

He added: "If you look at a chart of our vacancy rate over the past three years, you can see how quickly it can change. It went quickly from a very healthy suburban market -- as low as 12 percent -- up to one of the highest in the country, 28 percent. That happened in a little over the year. So the same could happen in reverse. We could be very healthy, from a landlord's perspective, within a year."

Ventura County's empty space still includes a 115,000-square-foot building in Oxnard that Chevron Corp. had planned to occupy before changing its plans and relocating to Northern California Northern California, sometimes referred to as NorCal, is the northern portion of the U.S. state of California. The region contains the San Francisco Bay Area, the state capital, Sacramento; as well as the substantial natural beauty of the redwood forests, the northern . The building remained available for sale or lease in the fourth quarter.

At least one developer, however, is still proceeding with plans for new space.

Marketing director Martin Menne of the Sammis Co. said the company "is basically ready to pull the permits and start work" on a 103,000-square-foot project at McInnes Ranch ranch, large farm devoted chiefly to raising and breeding cattle, horses, sheep, and goats. The cattle ranch was introduced from Latin America to Texas and the plains of the W United States and Canada.  in Oxnard.

Sammis already has 411,000 square feet of industrial space in seven buildings at the site. It will add three more with the new project.

"Our question now is when to start (the new buildings)," Menne said. "We're not sure, considering the economy, how long we should wait, so we're really in the midst Adv. 1. in the midst - the middle or central part or point; "in the midst of the forest"; "could he walk out in the midst of his piece?"
midmost
 of deciding when we should start."

Menne said the key to the Sammis project, however, is that the developer has secured financing from Wells Fargo Wells Fargo

armored carriers of bullion. [Am. Hist.: Brewer Dictionary, 1147]

See : Protectiveness


Wells Fargo

company that handled express service to western states; often robbed. [Am. Hist.
 Bank.

"The loan is closed. It's just up to us when we want to start," he said.

Menne said none of the space in the new project has been preleased yet, but added, "If we could get one of them pre-leased right now and have to be on a timetable where someone needed to be in the space, we would start right away."

Besides the sluggish market, one factor that has been preventing construction in the city of Ventura is the continuing drought drought, abnormally long period of insufficient rainfall. Drought cannot be defined in terms of inches of rainfall or number of days without rain, since it is determined by such variable factors as the distribution in time and area of precipitation during and before .

Ventura relies on local lakes and wells for its water because it is not a member of the Metropolitan Water District network that serves the rest of the county. The city is in the second year of a so-called "water moratorium A suspension of activity or an authorized period of delay or waiting. A moratorium is sometimes agreed upon by the interested parties, or it may be authorized or imposed by operation of law. " that has virtually stalled stall 1  
n.
1. A compartment for one domestic animal in a barn or shed.

2.
a. A booth, cubicle, or stand used by a vendor, as at a market.

b.
 construction by limiting water hookups.

Miriam Mack, redevelopment administrator at the Ventura Redevelopment Agency, said the agency is hoping "something will happen with respect to water" that will enable some new construction to proceed.

"We're hoping to get an allocation The apportionment or designation of an item for a specific purpose or to a particular place.

In the law of trusts, the allocation of cash dividends earned by a stock that makes up the principal of a trust for a beneficiary usually means that the dividends will be treated as
 from the Casitas Water District that we can use any way we choose," Mack said. "If more water becomes available to the city through Casitas or other sources, we're hopeful that the city council will" permit water hookups that would in turn allow some construction downtown.

Mack said the city is hoping to be selected as the site for a new office building that would house a California State Court of Appeals branch. The redevelopment agency also has some sites where it hopes to build housing and some commercial sites that it "hasn't been able to market" because of the water shortage, she said.

In the residential market, sales of homes in the Ventura region in October climbed 9.8 percent from their September level and rose 7.5 percent from a year ago, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 the California Association of Realtors.

But the association reported the median price of a Ventura region home in October was $233,540, down 2.1 percent from the $238,520 recorded in September and 2.5 percent lower than the $239,620 recorded in October 1990.

The figures indicate a continuation of a stabilizing stabilizing,
v to hold a limb motionless in order to ground its energy; a standard isometric resistance technique, it releases tension and lengthens muscle fibers.
 trend since the zooming market of a few years ago, real estate agents said.

In the late 1980s, buyers lined up to make offers and prices climbed daily. Since then, the number of listings has risen steadily and prices have slowly declined.

Just as the office scene is a tenants' market, the agents say, the residential scene is a buyers' markets and will likely remain so until inventory shrinks and the economy turns around.
COPYRIGHT 1992 CBJ, L.P.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1992, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Special Report: Real Estate
Author:Howard, Bob
Publication:Los Angeles Business Journal
Date:Jan 27, 1992
Words:1247
Previous Article:Santa Barbara effort gives a new look to the concept of affordable housing development. (Special Report: Real Estate)
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