- The Paycheck Protection Program: Following the implementation of Colorado’s stay-at-home order, retailers of all types and sizes quite literally overnight lost their ability to generate the revenues necessary to meet obligations and turn a profit. Despite a fairly tumultuous rollout, the Paycheck Protection Program provided a significant lifeline to retailers and small-business owners. Eligible recipients of PPP funds were permitted to utilize these funds for rents obligated under a lease, thereby benefitting both retail tenants and landlords in a time period of uncertainty. Rent payment burden between tenants and landlords was mitigated temporarily but certainly not eliminated as significant choppiness persisted across many retail assets.
- IRS extends Section 1031 exchange deadlines: Commercial real estate investors who were engaged in a 1031 exchange with an identification period on or after April 1 and before July 15 were granted an identification extension to July 15. This is a significant extension beyond the typical 45-day time period allotted for 1031 exchange investors to identify a replacement property. This allowed many would-be time-sensitive 1031 exchange investors some breathing room to exercise patience throughout much of April and May before, ultimately, coming back to the market for acquisitions in late May up to the deadline date of July 15. Demand drives single-tenant, net-lease investment activity. Active investors in the retail space have demonstrated a significant flight to quality since mid-March, increasingly targeting single-tenant, net-lease for purchase requirements. These assets often feature buyers executing 1031 exchanges on an all-cash basis.
Covid-19 and impact on investment property market

Hindsight is classically 20-20, but it’s difficult to imagine that on Jan. 1, 2020, any participant in Colorado’s retail investment market could’ve accurately predicted the dramatic shift we encountered overnight on March 15. An unfamiliar and unwelcomed reality rapidly established itself that hardly resembled anything we’ve ever known. The potential for rent growth, cap rate compression or tenant expansion plans quickly became immaterial as market uncertainty ensued. Decisions surrounding rent deferrals or forbearance programs took center stage while fiscal stimulus and tax extension programs provided by the federal government became critical and necessary.
It is no surprise that COVID-19’s dramatic arrival and related public policy responses quickly and materially impacted the retail investment property market throughout the Colorado Front Range. As retail property owners and investors evaluate investment decisions in today’s variable environment, it is critically important to understand the variable factors influencing Colorado’s retail property market.
Paycheck Protection Program and 1031 exchange extension.
In response to the pandemic, the federal government signed into law the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act on March 27. Two programs proved particularly impactful to the retail property market: