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The St. Louis office market experienced a significant slowdown in the first quarter of 2026, with negative net absorption of 545,870 square feet and vacancy rising 140 basis points year-over-year to 15.0%, as tenants reassessed space needs amid hybrid work adoption and macroeconomic uncertainty. Average asking rental rates declined to $22.17 per square foot and are projected to remain flat throughout 2026, with limited new construction activity and only 231,870 square feet currently under development as landlords contend with liquidity constraints.

St. Louis investment sales volume reached 2.4 billion dollars in the past four quarters, up 6.1 percent year-over-year, with industrial and multifamily assets accounting for 67.1 percent of activity. Capitalization rates increased 39 basis points to 7.6 percent, while multifamily rental rates hit a record high of 1,363 dollars per unit, though industrial vacancy surged 150 basis points to 6.0 percent.

The 1Q26 Kansas City office market report by Newmark covers employment trends, leasing fundamentals, and transaction activity, finding that the region's unemployment rate stood at 3.9% in December 2025 (50 basis points below the national average) while nonfarm payroll employment remained flat at -0.3%, with construction and education-health sectors leading job growth while business and professional services posted the largest losses. The report documents strong leasing momentum with 463,336 SF of net absorption in the quarter and 1.1 MSF over the past four quarters marking the seventh consecutive quarter of positive absorption, vacancy declining to 15.2% (down 130 basis points year-over-year), and average asking rents at $22.87/SF projected to grow 2.50% to 3.25% by year-end 2026.

The St. Louis Retail Report for 1Q26, published by Newmark Zimmer, examines retail market conditions in the St. Louis region, documenting net absorption of negative 179,870 square feet over the past four quarters driven by tariff-driven uncertainty and cautious tenant behavior, alongside select transaction sales including a 50,000 SF Dick's Sporting Goods property for $13.3 million and other retail assets across multiple submarkets. The report presents market overview data showing the metro vacancy rate increased 30 basis points year-over-year to 4.0%, while the National Retail Federation projects U.S. retail sales growth of 4.4% in 2026, and local market news highlights expansion by chains such as Checkers & Rally's and adaptive reuse projects including Slick City Action Park.

This Cushman & Wakefield report analyzes Richmond, Virginia's multifamily market in Q1 2026, finding that the region experienced sustained job growth with an 18.1% increase in job postings since February 2020 (versus the U.S. average of 13.4%), while overall vacancy decreased 30 basis points year-over-year to 9.2%, effective rents grew 2.0% year-over-year to $1,603 per unit, and the construction pipeline contained 4,425 units under development. Major announced investments included Solstice Advanced Materials' $220 million commitment in Chesterfield and Eaton's $50 million investment in Henrico County, with year-to-date net absorption of 469 units and sales volume totaling $203 million in the quarter.

This is a market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering the office sector in Baltimore and the surrounding regional context. The report addresses market dynamics and conditions in the Baltimore office market during the first quarter of 2026.

Cushman & Wakefield's Q1 2026 Kansas City multifamily market report shows a 4.5% vacancy rate, $1.49 effective rent per square foot, and 0.9K net absorption across 190,759 total inventory units, with approximately 7,000 units under construction. The market experienced 3.2% year-over-year rent growth, outpacing national averages, while unemployment held at 4.1% and absorption outpaced deliveries by 200 units in the quarter, indicating steady sustainable growth.

Cushman & Wakefield's Q1 2026 New Jersey office market report documents overall vacancy at 21.8% (50 basis points below year-ago levels), asking rents at $32.43 per square foot, and 371,986 square feet of negative absorption during the quarter, with Class A properties commanding an 11.5% premium and accounting for 59.7% of leasing volume. The state's labor market remained stable at 4.6 million jobs with education and health services posting 3.5% year-over-year growth, while Northern New Jersey vacancy declined 140 basis points year-over-year to 21.3% and Central New Jersey vacancy rose 80 basis points year-over-year to 22.5%, with demand concentrated in well-located, transit-accessible high-quality office buildings reflecting an ongoing flight-to-quality trend.

Northern Virginia's industrial market recorded 4,526 square feet of net absorption in Q1 2026, extending five consecutive quarters of positive absorption, with vacancy at 4.8% and overall asking rents at $17.23 per square foot. New leasing activity declined to 265,000 square feet in Q1 2026 from over 700,000 square feet in Q1 2025, with warehouse and distribution space dominating 87% of new leasing activity, while overall asking rents eased slightly but remained elevated relative to historical levels.

Investment activity in the Kansas City market reached $4.2 billion in total sales volume over the past year, representing a 20.6% increase compared to the prior five-year average, with multifamily and retail assets accounting for 66.1% of activity and the metro area ranking fourth among the 13 largest Midwest markets. Capitalization rates compressed by 98 basis points year-over-year to 6.1% in first quarter 2026, rental rates reached record highs in industrial ($6.23 per square foot) and multifamily ($1,430 per unit) sectors, and vacancy rates declined year-over-year in office, multifamily, and industrial property types.

Kansas City's retail market outperformed regional and national benchmarks in early 2026, with leasing activity exceeding new deliveries by six-to-one over the past four quarters, occupancy at 95.4%, and investment volume reaching $725 million in the preceding 12 months—a 55.5% year-over-year increase. The National Retail Federation projects U.S. retail sales to grow 4.4% year-over-year in 2026 to approximately $5.6 trillion, supported by stable employment, wage growth, and healthy household balance sheets, though risks including inflationary pressures and geopolitical uncertainty remain.

This is a Q1 2026 office sector data report for St. Louis published by CBRE on March 31, 2026. The report presents figures and market data for the St. Louis office market within a national context.

This Cushman & Wakefield market report analyzes Richmond, Virginia's retail real estate market in Q1 2026, covering economy, supply, demand, and pricing across 27 submarkets totaling 79.5 million square feet of inventory. The document finds that Richmond's retail market experienced sustained job growth with 18.1% increase in job postings since February 2020, overall vacancy compressed to 3.4%, asking rents for new development ranged from $42 to $55 per square foot, and sales volume reached $61 million for the quarter including a Hobby Lobby location sale for $9.7 million.

Cushman & Wakefield's Q1 2026 MarketBeat report on St. Louis office markets finds that overall vacancy closed at 18.2% with 27,130 square feet of positive net absorption, while average asking rents declined to $21.90 per square foot year-over-year. Class A properties drove leasing activity, accounting for nearly 70 percent of the market's 526,232 square feet in new leasing during the quarter, with West County and Clayton submarkets recording the strongest demand despite continued pressure on rents across all property classes.

This is a market report published by CBRE in December 2025 covering the data center sector in Northern Virginia as part of a broader analysis of North American data center trends in the second half of 2025. The report addresses the regional market within the context of national trends and includes geography tags for Northern Virginia, Virginia, the Washington-DC area, and Asia-Pacific.

This is a quarterly data report published by CBRE on December 31, 2025, presenting industrial sector figures for Northern and Central New Jersey in the fourth quarter of 2025. The report provides market metrics and statistical information for the industrial real estate segment in that regional area.

Richmond's multifamily market softened in 2025 with occupancy declining 10 basis points year-over-year to 95.2%, effective rents declining 0.1%, and sales volume reaching $800 million. Hampton Roads exhibited stronger fundamentals with occupancy increasing 70 basis points to 96.5%, effective rent growth of 3.2% year-over-year, and multifamily sales of approximately $1.1 billion, representing a 30.7% increase from 2024.

Kansas City's industrial real estate market achieved 11.8 million square feet of net absorption in 2025, the highest total since 2007, with a year-end vacancy rate of 6.2% and asking rents at $5.73 per square foot. The market was characterized by a shift toward build-to-suit projects (8.3 million square feet, or 84.5% of total deliveries), including Panasonic's 2.7-million-square-foot battery manufacturing facility in De Soto, Kansas, though sustained growth will likely depend on increased leasing activity in smaller speculative buildings of 200,000 to 500,000 square feet.

The document analyzes the St. Louis retail real estate market in Q4 2025, reporting a 5.5% vacancy rate, asking rents of $13.36 per square foot, and negative annual net absorption of 278,000 square feet driven primarily by the Neighborhood & Community property type and the Illinois submarket. New construction activity reached its heaviest quarterly level since Q2 2020 with 302,000 square feet underway in Mid County (59.4% pre-leased), while the region's unemployment rate stood at 4.0% as of Q3 2025 amid broader economic indicators showing 1.7% GDP growth and 0.5% retail sales growth.

This is a data figures report published by CBRE on December 31, 2025, covering the office sector in New Jersey and related markets including Northern New Jersey, Philadelphia, New York, and national comparisons for the fourth quarter of 2025.

Cleveland's industrial market entered 2026 with a 3.9% vacancy rate and asking rents of $5.80 per square foot, having experienced four consecutive quarters of rising vacancy from 2.8% at end-2024, reflecting a market settling into a healthier equilibrium. The market recorded 133 total leases in Q1 2026 (109 new deals totaling 1.49 million square feet and 24 renewals of 417,217 square feet), nine construction completions delivering 362,000 square feet, and 1.34 million square feet remaining under construction with anticipated deliveries in subsequent quarters.

Cushman & Wakefield's Q1 2026 Indianapolis industrial market report shows strong tenant demand with net absorption reaching 3.3 million square feet (up 3,798.1% year-over-year), while the overall vacancy rate declined 380 basis points to 7.2% and asking rents remained relatively flat at $6.15 per square foot. Construction completions totaled just over 500,000 square feet—the lowest since Q1 2019—with the under-construction pipeline at 3.9 million square feet consisting primarily of build-to-suit projects, while warehouse and distribution leasing accounted for 90.2% of new leasing activity.

This is a data report published by CBRE on March 31, 2026 presenting office sector figures for Indianapolis in the first quarter of 2026. The report covers office market metrics for Indianapolis, Indiana and includes national context.

This Cushman & Wakefield MarketBeat report analyzes the Cincinnati industrial real estate market in Q1 2026, finding that overall vacancy fell to 5.4% with year-to-date net absorption reaching 2.7 million square feet—a multi-year high—while the overall asking rent remained essentially flat at $6.35 per square foot. Key tenants including Walmart (1.2 million square feet at C5 Encore Logistics Center) and DB Schenker Logistics drove demand, and Greater Cincinnati ranked in the top 10 of the largest U.S. metropolitan areas for new corporate investment projects according to Site Selection Magazine.

Cushman & Wakefield's Cincinnati Office MarketBeat for Q1 2026 reports that Greater Cincinnati's overall office vacancy rate stood at 25.6% with negative net absorption of 13 square feet, while the overall asking rent across all classes was $20.81 per square foot, representing a slight year-over-year increase. Key transactions included Taft Law's relocation and Paycor's occupancy of a newly constructed 44,000-square-foot headquarters, with leasing activity at 196,000 square feet down 34% year-over-year.

This is a market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering the industrial sector in Las Vegas during the first quarter of 2026, with geographic scope extending to Nevada, Arizona, and national markets.

Las Vegas' industrial market experienced a slight vacancy tightening to 12.7% in first quarter 2026 as net absorption of 1.5 million square feet outpaced construction deliveries of 1.3 million square feet, with major transactions including PepsiCo's 1.0 million square foot pre-lease at North Vegas Logistics Center and DHL's 1.3 million square foot multi-building move-in. Local employment declined 0.8% year-over-year while leasing activity declined from strong 2025 levels amid headwinds from slowing population growth, elevated housing costs, and a depressed labor market.

Greater Columbus's industrial market achieved a 5.2% vacancy rate in Q1 2026 with net absorption of 2.1 million square feet year-to-date, while asking rents averaged $6.34 per square foot despite a 1.6% year-over-year decline. Key transactions included an undisclosed e-commerce company's purchase of the 1.1 million square foot West Jefferson Logistics Center for $96 million and Crane Logistics' 509,000 square foot lease at Pickaway County, with 418,000 square feet of new construction delivered in the quarter.

Las Vegas's office market recorded a 12.4% total vacancy rate in first quarter 2026 (down 30 basis points from year-end 2025), with modest net absorption of 206,410 square feet, while office-using employment totaled 238,000 jobs in December 2025, up 7.8% from pre-pandemic levels but down 2.2% year-over-year. The market faces headwinds from a sluggish housing sector, declining tourism, geopolitical tensions, and an empty construction pipeline with no new professional office projects delivered since 2024, though limited supply and steady renewal activity are expected to eventually drive moderate rent increases as Class A space continues to lease quickly while older inventory struggles.

This is a commercial real estate market report published by Colliers in March 2026 covering the office sector in Columbus, Ohio. The report represents first-quarter 2026 analysis and is part of broader national market coverage.

Cleveland's retail market in Q1 2026 maintained a 5.1% vacancy rate supported by limited new construction and tight supply, though demand softened with negative absorption of 623,000 square feet and rent growth moderated to 0.7%. Investment activity strengthened with sales volume reaching $140 million, as investors focused on grocery-anchored centers and net lease assets offering stable income despite broader economic uncertainty and demographic headwinds.

The Cushman & Wakefield MarketBeat report on Columbus office markets for Q1 2026 shows that overall office vacancy decreased to 23.1% year-over-year, with positive net absorption of 31,000 square feet and asking rents rising 4.2% to $22.45 per square foot across all property classes. Greater Columbus ranked in the top 10 of U.S. metropolitan areas for economic development projects with 83 total projects underway, while the regional unemployment rate stood at 4.2% as of Q4 2025.

The U.S. office market is showing a selective recovery with shrinking inventory and declining availability, but demand remains concentrated in highest-quality assets and strongest locations. Trophy and class A buildings command an average rent premium of approximately 50% over class B space, while leasing activity remains 21% below pre-COVID averages nationally, though some markets like Manhattan and San Francisco have returned to or exceeded pre-pandemic leasing levels.

Cushman & Wakefield's Q1 2026 Cleveland office market report indicates overall vacancy remained flat at 10.9% with net absorption of negative 481,804 square feet, reflecting continued tenant downsizing despite solid leasing activity, while asking rents declined slightly to $19.42 per square foot overall with Class A rents rising to $21.73 per square foot. Transaction activity in Q1 included 98 sales totaling 2.77 million square feet led by the 640,736-square-foot auction of 6300 Wilson Mills Road, and 197 leases totaling 638,599 square feet with 61 percent of deals under 2,000 square feet, concentrated among smaller tenants.

The Detroit industrial market experienced rising vacancy and negative absorption in Q1 2026, with the vacancy rate reaching 4.1%—the highest since 2015—while net absorption totaled negative 829,000 square feet driven by slower leasing activity and increased move-outs. Overall net asking rents increased 2.1% year-over-year to $7.40 per square foot, the highest rate since Q4 2023, though new leasing activity surged 57.8% year-over-year to 2.3 million square feet, signaling potential future demand recovery.