Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

California-based CapRock Partners invests in the valley

Company positive on Vegas growth

- By Jeffrey Meehan

A Southern California private industrial real estate investment and developmen­t firm made its first play in the Las Vegas market in 2017, and is actively looking to invest in the valley.

Newport Beachbased CapRock Partners has acquired just under 300,000 square feet of multitenan­t industrial space in the west and southwest area of the Las Vegas Valley. The group has a portfolio of more than 11 million square feet, which includes its developmen­t and acquisitio­ns.

“I think when you look at the metrics of the Las Vegas industrial market, it’s got very strong fundamenta­ls — vacancy rate is low, 5 percent,” said Taylor Arnett, vice president of acquisitio­ns at CapRock. “There’s an economy that I think is a lot more diversifie­d than it was in the past.”

Arnett said Las Vegas economy is better off than it was a decade ago.

CapRock has the majority of its holdings in California in the Inland Empire. But the group also has investment­s in Los Angeles, San Diego and Northern California. More recently, CapRock expanded its reach to Las Vegas and Phoenix in 2017, Arnett said.

Arnett said CapRock started to look at Las Vegas as a target in 2015 and made its first moves a couple years later.

The group acquired three assets in the valley: one at 5190 S. Valley View Blvd.; another at 4350 Arville St.; and another that sits along Valley View Boulevard, near Desert Inn Road.

“The property on Arville (Street) that we purchased, we underwent a major renovation, and we completely rebranded the property,” Arnett said.

That property has been leased up to a good occupancy level, he said.

All of the three acquisitio­ns made by CapRock were of off-market properties that the group felt “had a decent amount of upside,” according to Arnett.

“We feel like we do a pretty good job of rolling our sleeves up — managing properties and reposition­ing properties, to get the most value out of them as possible,” Arnett said.

Arnett explained that CapRock identified the Las Vegas properties “in a submarket that we like and were able to move quickly and purchase from owners, who had owned them for a longer period. And we feel like there’s a lot of reposition­ing that can be done to these properties to increase their value over the next two to three years.”

The group doesn’t have any plans for converting the properties in the future, according to Arnett. The Arville Street property is near the 65,000-seat Raiders stadium. Arnett noted the benefit of being near a major project, but he doesn’t foresee switching to other uses such as residentia­l or multifamil­y.

The CapRock group is seeking other potential opportunit­ies in Las Vegas, Arnett said.

“Fortunatel­y, we don’t have a mandate where we don’t have to put out capital in Las Vegas. I think that allows us to remain very discipline­d,” Arnett said. “That being said, I’m working on a handful of projects right now, and I get calls on a daily basis about new acquisitio­n opportunit­ies.”

Those opportunit­ies include acquisitio­n and industrial developmen­ts. CapRock mostly focuses on smaller tenant and multitenan­t industrial properties.

“What we like about the product that we own and that we invest in is that it’s multitenan­t industrial properties with smaller tenant sizes, and there doesn’t seem to be a lot of that being built at the moment (in Las Vegas),” Arnett said.

Arnett said an estimated 6 million square feet of industrial space is set to come on-line in 2018, and similar figures for 2019, with more than 90 percent of those projects estimated to be big box distributi­on space.

“We like the smaller tenant, multitenan­t space, because we think there isn’t a lot of supply coming on-line, and that we can push rents in that particular segment,” Arnett said. “A lot of it’s driven off the fact that a lot of these small business owners want their businesses near where they live.”

Arnett said a lot of business owners in the valley are in the west and southwest part of town. CapRock is also targeting the airport submarket.

Brian Gordon, principal at Applied Analysis, agreed that a majority of the industrial product coming on-line is for larger tenants, but the smaller product is still being built.

“Developers are seeing the opportunit­y that exists in the market and the latest trends that have emerged, and are looking to take advantage of that,” Gordon said. “I don’t think developers are abandoning multitenan­t product. I should say smaller, multitenan­t product — all together — but some of those projects may not be as headline-grabbing as some of the 500,000-square-foot-plus buildings that are in the pipeline.”

Gordon said multitenan­t buildings are a key component in the overall industrial market.

Taylor Arnett said an estimated 6 million square feet of industrial space is set to come on-line in 2018, and similar figures for 2019, with more than 90 percent of those projects estimated to be big box distributi­on space.

 ??  ?? Pictured is an industrial real estate developmen­t a developmen­t is one of three acquired by Souther
Pictured is an industrial real estate developmen­t a developmen­t is one of three acquired by Souther
 ??  ?? Taylor Arnett
Taylor Arnett

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