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Archives for 2025

How Cap Rate Drift Is Reshaping Office Negotiations

November 13, 2025 by CARNM

Interest rate volatility is rewriting the calculus for commercial real estate cap rates, particularly in the office sector, where the bid-ask spread has been a persistent obstacle for dealmakers. According to the latest TreppWire podcast, the Federal Reserve’s latest moves have again raised the term premium, driving yields higher on the long end and, albeit with a lag, translating into upward pressure on cap rates.

Stephen Busch flagged the direct impact on office transaction dynamics, noting, “for CRE that keeps the buyer-seller gap wide. Now, fortunately, we have narrowed that massive bid-ask gap significantly over the last two years, so maybe we’ll see a little bit widening back out.”

“The narrowing spread has been an encouraging sign for liquidity, but the current environment signals potential oscillation as higher rates ripple through asset pricing expectations.

Sector Sensitivity and Evolving Expectations

Office properties remain the most sensitive to cap rate drift, especially as market participants recalibrate underwriting in the face of rising financing costs and uneven recovery in tenant demand. The lagging effect of interest rates means that cap rate adjustments trail changes in the cost of capital, causing protracted negotiations and occasional deal gridlock.

A recent Trepp analysis shows cap rates are not moving evenly—they drift higher first in sectors where uncertainty is most acute and remain relatively pinned for prime, clean cash flow assets, which Busch observed are “still going to clear” despite overall market turbulence. For assets with weaker credit or less stable tenancy, “higher credit deals pay up or sit on the sidelines,” marking a clear divide between transactional liquidity and assets likely to linger without resolution.

Implications for Underwriting, Negotiation, and Exit Planning

CRE executives now face a market where financing selectivity is elevated and value-add business plans struggle to pencil under new rates. Transaction comps are harder to establish, and stabilized NOI pressures drive more scrutiny on capital plans. In cities like New York, where political changes introduce new risks, appraisers are finding their work increasingly complex, with DSCR tightness and more demanding loan cushions now the norm for multifamily and office underwriting.

The actionable takeaway for CRE leaders: adapt underwriting models to account for delayed cap-rate movement and expect financing terms to reflect persistent uncertainty. Durable, patient capital and business plans with exit flexibility are best positioned to benefit. Meanwhile, negotiation requires greater realism about asset pricing, with some sellers needing to adjust their historical expectations.

The sector now rewards institutional discipline and up-to-date transaction intelligence. As the Trepp team’s data shows, liquidity bifurcates and only prime assets offer consistent clearing. For credit-sensitive office properties, the choice is stark: pay up or remain sidelined, as the market tests the true equilibrium between value, yield and risk.

Source: “How Cap Rate Drift is Reshaping Office Negotiations”

Filed Under: All News

Healthcare Real Estate Activity Slows, Led by MOB and Hospital Trades

November 12, 2025 by CARNM

Medical real estate investment transaction activity across the United States has been subdued during the past 12 months ending September 2025. Just over 1,000 properties traded at values above $2.5 million, according to new data from Revista. This total reflects a muted pace relative to the sector’s historical averages, continuing a trend shaped by shifting capital markets and selective investor appetite.

During the year ending September 30, 2025, a total of 1,055 qualifying properties changed hands, representing 54.14 million square feet at a gross value of $16.27 billion. Medical office buildings accounted for the largest share, with 807 trades totaling $8.5 billion, an average transaction size of $10.5 million, and pricing of $360 per square foot.

Office buildings with a medical component saw 166 transactions and $2.4 billion in volume, with an average price of $205 per square foot. General hospitals posted 52 transactions valued at $4.58 billion, reflecting a sector-high average price per property at $88 million and setting the market’s highest price per square foot at $818.

Cap Rate Market Differentials

Cap rate yields reveal a marked separation between property types. MOB trades saw an average cap rate of 6.9 percent, while the office-with-medical segment averaged 7.9 percent. General hospitals posted lower yields, reflecting their premium status within the sector.

Rehabilitation hospitals led activity among specialty asset types, with 19 properties going for $580 million in total at an average price of $569 per square foot and a typical property size under one million square feet.

Behavioral health and LTAC hospitals remained highly illiquid, with just seven and four trades, respectively. These assets drew pricing of $218 and $139 per square foot, with individual transaction averages reflecting the specialized nature of the buildings and smaller unit sizes.

Market Context and Outlook

The past year’s $16.27 billion total falls significantly short of the annual average for these healthcare property segments, which has reached $24 billion with 75 million square feet traded between 2016 and 2024. This shortfall underscores a contraction in both deal size and property coverage for 2025, despite anticipation of rising activity in the fourth quarter, fueled by further interest rate reductions and marquee transactions such as the Welltower-Remedy deal.

With signs of increased liquidity returning to the market, investors, owners and lenders are likely to see more dynamic activity in the coming months. The differentiated cap rate environment and the premium commanded by core MOB and hospital assets suggest mounting competition for quality offerings and further divergence between institutional and niche property valuations. Whether the sector can return to prior volume benchmarks remains uncertain, but market participants are positioned for notable changes ahead.

Source: “Healthcare Real Estate Activity Slows, Led by MOB and Hospital Trades”

Filed Under: All News

Logistics Real Estate Hits a Turning Point in Q3 2025

November 7, 2025 by CARNM

Logistics real estate fundamentals in Q3 2025 indicate an inflection point in operating conditions. Net absorption, new lease signings, build-to-suit activity and the proposal pipeline all reached healthier levels compared with 2024, according to Prologis’ industrial sector analysis. While demand has improved, it has not yet returned to normalized levels.

The Prologis IBI Activity Index cooled to 53 in Q3 and into October, reflecting that while supply chain activity advanced earlier in 2025, year-to-date holiday spending remains muted. Utilization rates rose through Q3, averaging 84% and climbing to nearly 85% in October.

Differences by company type reveal strategic supply chain shifts in response to changing trade policies. Manufacturers and wholesalers, who front-loaded freight earlier in the year, recorded higher activity and utilization than retailers through October. These trends should reverse as goods move downstream ahead of the holiday season. Despite these gains, average utilization remains below traditional expansionary levels, leaving room for a strong supply chain response if consumption exceeds expectations.

Net absorption totaled 47 million square feet in Q3, up 64% from the previous quarter, though still behind the typical pace of 59 million square feet. New lease signings rose an average of 10% in Q2 and Q3 vs. Q1, reflecting growing confidence and a return to long-term leasing strategies. As more customers shift from caution to action, speculative deliveries are expected to decline, creating greater scarcity in the market.

Activity continues to be led by large and e-commerce companies, with sectors tied to essential goods — including food and beverage, e-commerce and healthcare — driving the bulk of leasing volume. Categories linked to discretionary spending remain subdued, potentially creating pent-up demand to be released as interest rates stabilize and the economic outlook improves.

Vacancy is projected to remain near the mid-7% range in the near term, supporting a stabilizing market environment. The construction pipeline continues to shrink, with new starts below the 2017–2019 average. Prologis notes that this decline reflects heightened developer discipline, influenced by compressing margins, a shortage of well-located land with adequate infrastructure and growing regulatory barriers.

Source: “Logistics Real Estate Hits a Turning Point in Q3 2025”

Filed Under: All News

October 2025 Commercial Real Estate Market Insights

November 6, 2025 by CARNM

In September 2025, U.S. job growth remained sluggish, with only modest gains, and unemployment edged higher. Recent labor revisions pointed to fewer jobs than previously estimated, underscoring a softer employment landscape. Inflation remained above the Fed’s target, though cooling rents suggest some relief ahead. In response to slower job creation, the Federal Reserve delivered a long-awaited rate cut, signaling the beginning of an easing cycle. Despite these headwinds, the broader economy continued to expand at a solid pace, supported by steady consumer spending and underlying private-sector strength.

Elevated borrowing costs continued to challenge commercial real estate in September, though performance varied across sectors. Office demand is slowly improving, with annual losses narrowing and vacancy ticking lower. Multifamily remained relatively balanced as slower construction helped absorption keep pace with new supply. Retail activity softened but remained the top-performing property type in rent growth, supported by strong general retail performance. Industrial activity stayed positive but slowed further as construction continued to outstrip demand, nudging vacancy higher and rents lower.

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

Office Properties

The office market continues to show tentative improvement, with annual losses narrowing sharply and quarterly absorption turning positive for the first time since 2021. Vacancy edged down to 14.0% for the first time in 6 years, and rent growth eased to 0.7% as landlords rely on incentives to attract tenants. Class A offices remain the main source of demand despite higher vacancies, while Class B space is showing gradual improvement after a long stretch of losses. Class C properties continue to lose tenants, though at a much slower pace than before.

Multifamily Properties

The multifamily market continued to move toward balance in September, with net absorption holding steady at just over 506,000 units as developers slowed construction activity. Vacancy edged lower while rent growth softened, reflecting a market gradually adjusting to more sustainable demand. Class A properties showed renewed strength, Class B remained stable, and Class C continued to benefit from steady demand for affordable housing. Sun Belt metros saw rents slip amid excess supply, while urban markets like New York and Dallas-Fort Worth maintained healthy leasing activity.

Retail Properties

The retail sector softened, with net absorption falling to – 4.3 million square feet over the past year ending in September and rent growth easing to 1.9%. Even so, retail remains the strongest performer among commercial property types, supported by low vacancy and steady consumer activity. General retail led demand, while neighborhood centers and malls rebounded from earlier losses. Southern markets like Raleigh and Charlotte, NC, posted robust rent gains, whereas Chicago continued to face declining occupancy amid broader economic challenges.

Industrial Properties

Industrial absorption remained positive in September, though the sector continued to lose momentum as new construction outpaced tenant demand. Vacancy inched higher and rent growth eased, reflecting a market still digesting several years of rapid expansion. Logistics facilities drove most leasing activity, while flex and specialized spaces saw mixed results. Major hubs such as Dallas–Fort Worth and Savannah continued to expand, whereas markets like Memphis and Baltimore experienced pullbacks, highlighting the uneven nature of the slowdown.

Hotel Properties

The hospitality sector showed consistent performance in September 2025, maintaining an occupancy rate of 62.7%. While still about 3% below pre-pandemic norms, lingering remote work trends and subdued corporate travel continue to restrain urban demand. On the other hand, revenue metrics have strengthened, with ADR and RevPAR exceeding 2019 levels by 22% and 16%, respectively, supporting healthy profit margins. Investment activity, however, has moderated as high financing costs and broader economic caution slow transaction volume. Leisure markets such as Hawaii remain standouts, while recovery in business-focused hubs like Oakland, CA, and several Texas metros remains incomplete.

Source: “October 2025 Commercial Real Estate Market Insights”

Filed Under: All News

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