The Right and Wrong Way to Divide a Market into Submarkets
Mathew Laborde, SIOR, CCIM
I never check LinkedIn messages. To contact me, email me at [email protected]
Has anyone ever attempted to create submarkets?
When analyzing trends in a real estate market, it can be very helpful to divide that market into submarkets because stats such as sale prices and transaction volume can differ greatly from one pocket of a Parish / County to another.
Here are the submarkets Elifin Realty created for one of our recent research reports (view at MakeGreatDeals.com).
Anyone can circle a certain pocket of industrial buildings and call it the “Industriplex” submarket. That’s easy.
But what about splitting up an entire Parish/County so that every square inch of the geography is accounted for and the submarkets remain relevant as you evaluate different property types? It’s a difficult task.
Here are some potential ways to divide up a market and why they’re a bad choice:
RESIDENTIAL MLS AREAS - Often the dividing line between the residential MLS areas are major highways. In commercial, submarkets are frequently defined by those very thoroughfares and to have one side of the street in one submarket and the other side in another.... is problematic.
CREATE YOUR OWN - You could create your own submarkets based on what you feel are the right boundaries... the issue is that it’s very inflexible and time consuming when you want to drill down further or revise submarket boundaries and apply it to historical data.
ZIP CODES - A solid option because all of your property address data already contains a zip code and thus is already categorized! That takes a load off. And you can combine zip codes to make larger submarkets or break it out if you’d like to. The major drawback besides seemingly arbitrarily created boundaries that aren’t as relevant today as they perhaps once were? You can only drill down so far. If you wanted to look at just the data in the Baton Rouge CBD for example, you couldn’t do that by taking the zip codes 70801 and 70802.... because those zip codes encompass a much larger area.
The solution?
CENSUS BLOCK GROUPS - There are online sites where you can bulk geo code your addresses into census block groups. You then assign census block groups into your desired submarkets. If you ever want to change, expand, or hone in a submarket further... all you have to do is redefine which census block groups fall under your new submarket name and then all of your historical data will align with your new submarkets.
The census block groups have the added benefit of being able to be paired with all of the census data.
Director, Commercial & Investments at Berkshire Hathaway Home Services Georgia Properties-Corporate
4 年I propose using the best information resource so as to not 1) recreate your own 2)and use information provide has done that for you allowing you to not reinvent the wheel when requesting research CALL ME LAZY/Crazy but then the boundaries are in place so the researchers can just “click” I will check out census block groups (hmmmmm) Tks Matthew!
Building a 15-min town from scratch with local investors
4 年We did the same thing here. Micro-markets might be a more appropriate term in our part of the world. But, it’s useful for showing more subtle trends inside the CRE marketplace.
NYC Office Space | CRE Marketing
4 年Better to be experts in one area than to try and be everything to everyone. Submarkets are all that we know :)
MIDTOWN NYC Office Space. Relocation, Renewals & Restructuring.
4 年Paul & Robert