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Archives for 2025

Here’s what to expect for commercial real estate in 2026

December 30, 2025 by CARNM

The 2025 economy wasn’t as robust as anticipated — and that’s shaping the commercial real estate outlook for 2026. The economy has slowed down, unemployment is up and construction has taken a bit of a breather across most sectors.

This year saw increases in both tariffs and immigration restrictions. Together, those have raised costs for builders and developers. But interest rates have also come down, which is starting to unlock more capital, albeit slowly and cautiously.

Here’s what you can expect for the year ahead.

General investment

The many and varied outlook reports from just about every commercial real estate firm out there, as well as related consulting and financial services firms, use words like “new equilibrium” (Colliers), “firmer fundamentals” (Cushman & Wakefield), “ongoing recovery” (KBW) and “signs of price stability” (CoStar).

Looking at specifics for the year ahead, CRE leaders are slightly less optimistic than they were ahead of 2025, according to a Deloitte survey of 850 global chief executives and their direct reports at major real estate owner and investor organizations across 13 countries. Eighty-three percent of respondents said they expect their revenues to improve by the end of 2026 compared with 88% last year. Fewer respondents said they plan to increase spending, while more expect to keep spending flat. Still, 68% said they anticipate higher expenses in 2026.

Most respondents said they do expect the cost of capital to improve, and growth is expected across most asset classes. Overall sentiment is down from last year but well above that of 2023, according to the Deloitte survey.

Looking specifically at the U.S., the commercial real estate sector is entering 2026 with renewed momentum, clearer visibility, and growing optimism across both leasing and the capital markets landscape, according to a forecast from Cushman & Wakefield. It notes that despite uncertainty surrounding tariffs, a volatile policy backdrop, tightening immigration and episodes of financial market stress this year, the economy was more resilient than expected, driven in large part by artificial intelligence.

“As we head into 2026, the tone has shifted meaningfully,” said Kevin Thorpe, chief economist at Cushman & Wakefield. “There is still risk on both sides of the outlook, but we’ve moved past the peak levels of uncertainty, and confidence in the CRE sector is building. Capital is flowing again, interest rates are moving lower, and leasing fundamentals are generally stabilizing or improving. If 2025 was a test of resilience, 2026 has real potential to reward it.”

Capital is reengaging, according to Colliers, which predicts the industry is, “entering a new equilibrium.” Forecasters there point to the bottoming out of office demand and new growth in industrial, thanks, again, to AI.

PwC also emphasizes that capital began flowing again in the second half of this year, “but selectively.”

“The deal environment rewards those who can combine data-driven insight with strategic conviction. For clients, the challenge—and the opportunity—is to navigate a landscape where liquidity, technology, and consolidation are redefining the meaning of value creation in real assets,” according to a PwC report.

The share of investors who say they expect to increase their commercial real estate investments over the next six months fell in the fourth quarter of this year from the previous quarter in every sector except retail, according to a survey from John Burns Research and Consulting. Multifamily investor sentiment weakened for the fourth consecutive quarter.

“Investors cited headwinds that included elevated interest rates, economic uncertainty, and local regulatory burdens. 49% of investors expect to hold their CRE exposure at the current level over the next 6 months, in line with the past two quarters,” according to the report.

Capital markets

“Capital Markets Reawakening” – that’s the headline from Colliers, which says pricing has found a floor and deal velocity is rising. Colliers forecasts a 15% to 20% increase in sales volume in 2026 as institutional and cross-border capital reenters the market.

Capitalization rates seem to be ready to move lower next year, according to a forecast from CoStar. Its data is already showing hints of this in the multifamily and industrial sectors, where vacancies have peaked and rent growth is picking up.

CoStar also notes deal activity is picking up, with third-quarter sales volume up more than 40% year over year, and banks are “easing back into commercial real estate lending,” according to the report.

Bond markets are following suit, showing new appetite for risk. CoStar points to the narrowing spread between government and corporate bond yields to roughly 1 percentage point (well below the historical average), “typically a precursor to greater real estate investment and firming prices.”

This tracks with the Cushman & Wakefield outlook, which also notes that in 2025 debt costs eased, lenders reentered the market and institutional capital returned, “supporting a broad-based revival in deal activity.”

Lending was up 35% year over year, institutional sales activity increased 17% through October, and pricing has “largely reset, presenting the market with compelling opportunities for yield and income generation,” Cushman & Wakefield found.

Specific sectors

The office market is now widely believed to have bottomed, and assets are showing early signs of price stability.

Vacancy rates are expected to drop below 18% as more tenants return to the market, leverage expiring leases and prioritize hospitality-driven workplaces that support hybrid work, according to Colliers.

There will continue to be a flight to quality in office, as Class A buildings in many markets are now nearly fully occupied. Office construction is also at its lowest level in more than three decades, according to Yardi.

Cushman & Wakefield forecasts continued growth in San Francisco; San Jose, California; Austin, Texas; New York; Atlanta; Dallas; and Nashville, Tennessee, which posted strong positive absorption in 2025, supported by AI expansion and diversified job growth.

“For large office users looking to secure high-quality space, the message is clear: if you find the right space, act decisively,” said James Bohnaker, principal economist at Cushman & Wakefield. “There is strong demand for new, high-quality space and not enough of it to go around. And given the limited construction pipeline, it’s going to get even tighter.”

Industrial has also seen a huge drop in construction, down 63% since 2022, according to the Colliers report. Vacancy is peaking and net absorption is set to jump to 220 million square feet, as reshoring, manufacturing and data centers fuel demand.

Retail is already undergoing a major shift in how and where companies are leasing space, according to Brandon Svec, national director of U.S. retail analytics at CoStar.

He points to nearly 26 million square feet of ground floor retail leased in nontraditional properties in the first three quarters of 2025, including multifamily, student housing, hospitality and office.

Retailers are embracing smaller footprints, with the average retail lease signed over the past four quarters falling below 3,500 square feet for the first time since CoStar began tracking this in 2016. This is being driven largely by restaurant and service operators such as Starbucks, Chipotle, Chick-fil-A, Jersey Mike’s, Dunkin’ and McDonald’s, according to Svec, who noted the growing appeal of walkable, mixed-use retail environments over traditional big-box formats. He does have a warning though.

“Significant uncertainty remains around the impact of tariffs on an already fragile consumer. While suppliers and retailers have largely absorbed these costs to date, many have signaled that price increases are imminent. With consumers already showing some signs of spending fatigue, tariff-related price hikes could further strain household budgets and dampen discretionary spending,” Svec wrote in a report.

Multifamily rents are starting to ease, as a record level of new supply continues to make it through the pipeline.

“Multifamily has led investment sales volume since 2015, and there are no signs of this changing. However, its share of total volume is expected to ease somewhat as investors allocate more capital to office, data centers, and retail,” according to the Colliers report.

Data centers have been the darling of 2025, with demand significantly outpacing supply. Deloitte called the sector, “a clear bright spot in the U.S. commercial real estate landscape.” It pointed to nine major global markets where 100% of the new construction pipeline is already fully pre-leased.

Data centers do, however, face headwinds in financing, grid capacity, zoning and local politics.

“Friction is building as communities push back on data center development. A few projects have already been abandoned, and more are expected to be shelved in 2026,” according to the Colliers forecast.

REITs

Public-to-private REIT transactions and portfolio mergers are likely to dominate in the year ahead as listed valuations lag private market pricing, according to a report from PwC. That will be driven by considerations of scale, governance credibility and cost of capital.

“Expect accelerated M&A as capital concentrates, AI exposes inefficiencies, and platforms converge—real assets are entering a new phase defined by intelligence, integration, and scale-driven opportunity,” wrote Tim Bodner, global real estate deals leader at PwC.

As for the real estate investment trust stocks, they were the real laggards of 2025, but could be poised to outperform in 2026, according to a forecast from Nareit, the REIT industry association. It points to a divergence between stock market valuations and REIT valuations and an ongoing divergence between public and private real estate valuations.

“These will close, and one or both could happen in 2026. If they do, we expect REITs to outperform based on our own historical analysis and their ongoing strong operational performance and balance sheets,” the report said.

Source: “CNBC Property Play Here’s what to expect for commercial real estate in 2026”

Filed Under: All News

November 2025 Commercial Real Estate Market Insights

December 19, 2025 by CARNM

Labor market conditions continued to lose momentum, as revised payroll figures and a gradual uptick in unemployment indicated further cooling. With inflation readings on pause and hiring activity moderating, the Federal Reserve will likely proceed to another cut in December to support economic conditions. In response, longer-term interest rates have edged lower, providing early financial relief. At the same time, the broader economy has remained on solid footing, supported by steady consumer spending and continued strength across the private sector.

Overall, commercial real estate conditions remained mixed in November. The office market showed tentative improvement, with demand pressures easing from last year, but conditions were still constrained by tenant caution and widespread use of incentives, while recovery remained uneven across property classes. Multifamily conditions were largely steady as the sector continued to work through prior oversupply, with softer seasonal leasing and cooling rent momentum, though lower-tier properties showed greater resilience. Retail softened modestly as demand weakened and new supply added pressure, yet it remained comparatively resilient, thanks to stronger pricing power and steadier performance across general retail formats. Industrial continued to cool as elevated supply weighed on demand, pushing availability higher and slowing rents, signaling a broader shift from rapid expansion toward normalization.

Below is a summary of the performance of each major commercial real estate sector in November of 2025.

Office Properties

The office market showed tentative improvement in November, with annual absorption losses narrowing sharply from last year, though demand remained slightly negative. Vacancy held near 14.1% while rent growth slowed to 0.7%, reflecting continued reliance on concessions. Class A continued to anchor demand despite elevated vacancy, Class B saw gradual improvement with rents still outperforming the national average, and Class C remained under pressure but retained the lowest vacancy in the sector.

Multifamily Properties

The multifamily market remained largely steady in November, with absorption softening modestly as new deliveries continued to slow and the sector worked through prior overbuilding. Vacancy edged up to 8.3% while rent growth eased further to 0.2%, reflecting a weaker winter leasing season. Across property classes, pricing momentum cooled in Class A and B, while Class C continued to face tenant losses but maintained the lowest vacancy and the strongest relative rent performance.

Retail Properties

The retail sector softened in November, with annual absorption turning negative and rent growth easing to 1.9%, though it still leads all major property types in pricing gains. Vacancy held at 4.3%, but rising deliveries and limited removals point to mild upward pressure ahead. Performance diverged by segment, with general retail remaining the most resilient, while neighborhood and power centers saw weaker demand but continued to post the fastest rent growth.

Industrial Properties

The industrial sector continued to cool in November, as new supply remained well ahead of tenant demand, with net absorption down 30% year over year. This imbalance pushed vacancy higher, reinforcing the loss of momentum that has taken hold since the sector’s peak. As availability increased, rent growth slowed to 1.4%, reflecting softer pricing power across most markets. Logistics properties still anchor demand, but overall conditions point to a normalization phase as the market works through elevated supply levels.

Hotel Properties

The hospitality sector held steady in November 2025, with occupancy at 62.4%, still about 3% below pre-pandemic norms as remote work trends and softer corporate travel continue to limit demand in major business markets. Despite this, hotel revenues have improved, with ADR and RevPAR now well above 2019 levels, supporting solid profitability. At the same time, transaction activity has slowed as higher financing costs and economic uncertainty make investors more cautious.

Source: “November 2025 Commercial Real Estate Market Insights“

Filed Under: All News

2025 Federal Economic Area Report

December 10, 2025 by CARNM

Read the current Federal Economic Area Report provided by CARNM and RPR. This report offers real estate professionals a window into demographics and consumer behavior in the state of New Mexico.

View the report here.

Filed Under: All News

Multifamily and Industrial Set for Vacancy Drops in 2026

December 9, 2025 by CARNM

The U.S. commercial real estate market is poised to enter 2026 with stabilizing fundamentals, stronger investor confidence and transaction volume projected to rise 15–20%. Across sectors, leasing and sales activity are gaining momentum, with pricing largely finding a floor and cap rate spreads normalizing, according to Colliers’ 2026 Commercial Real Estate Outlook Report.

Multifamily remains the leader in sales volume, with occupancy expected to improve in 2026, supported by high home prices and constrained new supply. Operational efficiency and resident retention will be key amid rising costs, while selective development targets middle-market units. This sets the stage for stronger rent growth in 2027 and 2028.

Industrial space under construction has dropped 62% since 2022, nearing its cyclical low, while demand from logistics, manufacturing, data centers and R&D continues to strengthen. Net absorption is expected to exceed 220 million square feet, up 37% from 2025. Supply constraints, reshoring initiatives and policy programs like the CHIPS Act support steady growth, while rent gains remain modest between 1% to 4%.

Vacancy in the office sector is expected to fall below 18% by year-end, supported by rising demand and limited new construction. AI companies are driving leasing in key markets, while hybrid work reshapes corporate campuses with tech-enabled, adaptable and hospitality-inspired designs. New owners are repositioning underperforming assets, converting obsolete properties to mixed-use or upgraded spaces and asking rents are projected to rise between 1–2% as the markets approach balance.

Retail development remains limited due to high construction and financing costs, sustaining performance despite uneven demand. Vacancy is expected to stay steady and rents are projected to rise around 1.5%, led by Southern and Western metros. Retailers are leveraging AI and experiential formats to engage consumers, while demand is increasingly polarized between value-conscious and luxury segments.

Data centers continue to see near-historic low vacancies driven by enterprise AI adoption. However, power limitations and community opposition are limiting speculative development, while lease rates rise. Investor activity is robust, with CMBS and private capital fueling expansion, though infrastructure limits will continue to shape delivery timelines.

Healthcare is increasingly decentralized, with medical office buildings, outpatient centers and ambulatory facilities expanding closer to patient populations. Occupancy of MOBs remains high at 92.5%, and rents are rising about 2%. Integration of AI and other technologies is enhancing operational efficiency and patient experience, sustaining investor demand.

In life sciences, onshoring, AI-driven research and recovering valuations support leasing opportunities, even as vacancy remains elevated. Limited speculative construction and improving venture capital flows may drive absorption and demand for GMP facilities in 2026.

Upscale and luxury hospitality properties are outperforming, fueled by high-income travelers, while midscale and economic hotels face more price-sensitive domestic demand. Generative AI tools are influencing travel planning, with guests increasingly seeking local and unique experiences. Supply growth remains modest at 1.3% and net operating income growth is subdued.

Source: “Multifamily and Industrial Set for Vacancy Drops in 2026”

Filed Under: All News

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