Commercial real estate (CRE) lending saw a significant rebound in Q1 2025, with banks leading non-agency deals amid volatile market conditions.
Major commercial real estate brokerages posted solid first-quarter growth, but lingering concerns over U.S. trade policies are tempering optimism for the rest of 2025.
Despite an onslaught of new supply, demand held firm, fueled by a strong labor market and unaffordable for-sale housing.
The move signals rising investor appetite for discounted property bets, fueled by a market correction in CRE and pressure from lenders.
Austin leads in affordable housing construction, but the benefits aren’t reaching those who need them most.
After a slow 2024, capital is flowing once again into private NAV REITs, led by a new wave of top-performing vintages.
CMBS delinquencies just hit 7.03% in April, their highest point since early 2021
Data from Trepp shows $6.2B in office properties traded hands in January 2025 alone—an 80% increase YoY.
Multifamily lending accounted for more than half of 2024’s CRE mortgage activity.
Washington joins California and Oregon in setting rent limits, fueling a national rent control movement.
Large-market, high-dollar property deals saw a 0.5% decline in Q125, while smaller, lower-priced transactions rose 2.6%.
After a short-lived reprieve, CMBS delinquency rates are back on the upswing, with multifamily loans and looming maturity defaults leading the charge.