Editors’ Weekly News Roundup December 16 – December 20
Two regional retail transactions bookended the roster of Connect CRE’s five most-read stories for the past week. The most-read story put a somewhat unusual spin on the familiar scenario of a grocery-anchored retail center changing hands: the grocery operator was the buyer.
Publix Buys N. Miami Shopping Center revealed that for the Southeastern grocery chain, the acquisition represented the continuation of a strategy it has pursued in recent years. Publix has put a major emphasis on buying shopping centers where it’s a tenant, a move that gives it greater control over investing in the property, selecting other tenants and reducing its lease expenses.
Ranking second among the past week’s most-read stories was the first of three stories on a national scale. A breaking news story that originated on Connect CRE’s sister site, Connect Money, reported a widely expected move by the nation’s central bank.
The story’s headline, Federal Reserve Cuts Rates Quarter-Point, Signals Pace to Slow Next Year, provides a clue as to why the story ranked highly. Even as the 25-basis-point reduction in the federal funds rate came as no surprise, the direction of the Fed’s future path was less predictable. The Fed is now anticipating two quarter-point rate cuts in 2025; three months earlier, most Fed officials expected to make four or five cuts in the coming year.
Earlier this year, homebuilder (and multifamily developer) Lennar Corp. divulged plans to spin off its land business as part of a push toward becoming “a pure-play, new home manufacturing company.” Last week, the company took the next step, formally registering the spin-off entity with the SEC.
In Lennar Files with SEC for $5B Land REIT Spin-Off, the past week’s third most-read story, Connect CRE readers learned that the spin-off would be called Millrose Properties and that it would debut as a standalone company with more than 105,000 homesites. Nearly half of those sites are in California, Florida and Texas.
The week’s fourth most-read story provided a global as well as national view. As reported in Hines Sees Global Recovery, Opportunity in 2025, the Houston-based investment manager sees the coming year as potentially a pivotal turning point for real estate markets worldwide.
Nonetheless, investors will need to contend with some of the same market dynamics that have prevailed in the past few years. Hines global CIO David Steinbach cited “a higher-for-longer interest rate environment where investors will need to focus on alpha generation.”
Completing the past week’s roster of five top stories was a large-scale retail transaction, this one in Las Vegas. Judged to be a non-core asset by original developer Caesars Entertainment, a shopping, dining and entertainment district along the Strip will now be owned by a joint venture, as readers learned in Caesars Unloads LINQ Promenade for $275M. Among its attractions are North America’s tallest observation wheel and the Strip’s only zipline.