https://www.rejournals.com/mixed-sen...rkets-20180717
Mixed sentiment for Chicago real estate markets
July 17, 2018 | Staff Writer
Chicago real estate professionals universally agree that the commercial real estate markets have been consistently strong through the first half of 2018. However, according to a Mid-Year Chicago CRE Market Survey conducted by The Real Estate Center at DePaul University …
Second half outlook
No one in commercial real estate is denying that Chicago has experienced an incredible bull market run for nearly one decade. It is the length of that run, in part, that has served to somewhat temper enthusiasm in the market and make people more concerned in 2018 than they were in 2017.
“Given the sustained bullishness of the Chicago marketplace, it is rational to think that some type of correction is in order,” said Brian Rogan, vice president, Associated Bank. He went on to say that while there may be some pricing softness in the next year, he does not expect to see a major, across-the-board correction taking place.
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Amazon HQ2 or sustained organic growth
Survey participants were hard pressed to say that one outcome—winning the battle for Amazon’s HQ2 or productive, ongoing organic growth—would be more impactful for the city of Chicago. Just over 56 percent said Amazon HQ2 would be most impactful, though many expressed concern or a wait-and-see attitude based on gaining a better understanding of the incentive package that would be awarded to Amazon.
“It’s hard to know what the Amazon incentive package will mean; hard to gauge the impact, because we don’t know what has been offered,” Wurtzebach said. “Amazon is one tenant, and there is risk in putting all your eggs into one basket.”
Shilling noted that an Amazon victory is not void of concerns. “Sometimes you have to worry about what you wish for,” he said, comparing the issues that San Francisco and Seattle have experienced—huge infrastructure spending and major congestion—as they have grown as major tech hubs.
For Episcope, the question of Amazon versus organic growth is not an either/or situation, it’s an and.
“If Amazon comes to Chicago we’ll see growth we haven’t seen in 40 years,” he said. He also noted that over the long run, Chicago needs to sustain the growth of Fortune 100 companies to the City.