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Broward County's office market vacancy rose to 16.2% in Q1 2026, the highest level since 2018, driven by large tenant vacancies in suburban submarkets particularly Weston and Sunrise, while the central business district remained stronger at 14.3% vacancy and recorded over 50% of total leasing volume despite overall asking rents averaging $42.68 per square foot. Net absorption declined to negative 88,032 square feet year-to-date, new leasing activity continued to slow to 231,000 square feet in Q1 marking the third consecutive quarter of decline, though downtown Class A asking rents reached $61.95 per square foot with one building surpassing $100 per square foot for the first time in the county's history.

This Cushman & Wakefield report analyzes Jacksonville's multifamily market in Q1 2026, documenting that development activity decelerated with just under 1,000 units delivered and units under construction declining to approximately 2,500, while inventory has expanded nearly 30% since 2020. Market fundamentals showed stabilized occupancy at 90.3% with net absorption of 1,200 units in Q1, average effective rents at $1,492 per unit declining 0.2% year-over-year, and sales volume of 11 properties totaling $160.4 million.

This Cushman & Wakefield market report analyzes Memphis office space conditions in Q1 2026, documenting a 17.2% vacancy rate, 88,000 square feet of year-to-date net absorption, and an overall average asking rent of $19.76 per square foot across the market. The report indicates that leasing activity concentrates in East Memphis, the 385 Corridor, and Northeast Memphis, with healthcare, professional services, and finance as the most active tenant groups, while landlords emphasize occupancy and tenant retention through concessions and longer lease terms despite pricing conditions that remain aggressive.

The Jacksonville industrial market in Q1 2026 recorded 74 lease deals at $10.11/SF asking rent with a 10.2% vacancy rate (up 430 basis points year-over-year), reflecting a supply-digestion phase driven by 2025 deliveries rather than demand contraction. The report indicates leasing activity remains concentrated in the 50K–200K SF mid-box segment, the construction pipeline is moderating with 0.9M–2.4M SF under construction, and sales volume totaled $289 million in the quarter, with institutional pricing for quality assets remaining intact despite softer leasing conditions.

This is a 2026 market outlook report published by CBRE covering the U.S. real estate market with a focus on Charlotte, North Carolina, addressing capital markets dynamics.

Cushman & Wakefield's Nashville Industrial MarketBeat Q1 2026 report analyzes the Nashville industrial market, documenting a 4.4% overall vacancy rate, asking rents reaching an all-time high of $9.46 per square foot, and 217,898 square feet of positive net absorption in the quarter, while noting that Nashville's unemployment rate stood at 3.0%, 130 basis points below the national average. The report indicates that new leasing activity slowed significantly in Q1 with 946,181 square feet of new leases signed, down 69.8% year-over-year, though tenant sentiment is beginning to improve and 4.7 million square feet of industrial product remains under construction with delivery expected through Q1 2027.

This is a first-quarter 2026 industrial sector market report published by CBRE covering the Raleigh-Durham area in North Carolina with national context. The report presents data and figures for the industrial real estate market as of March 31, 2026.

Broward County's retail market ended Q1 2026 with a 4.0% overall vacancy rate (up 30 basis points year-over-year) and an average asking rent of $35.47 per square foot (up 1.6% YOY), with nearly 100,000 square feet of new space delivered and over 690,000 square feet under construction. Leasing activity declined for a third consecutive quarter to 443,000 square feet, net occupancy fell by 94,000 square feet, and mall vacancy reached a market high of 6.5%, though investment sales rebounded strongly to $227 million in Q1 volume with cap rates ranging from 5.5% to 6.5%.

This is a market report published by Northmarq in March 2026 covering multifamily construction activity in the Raleigh-Durham area, noting that construction activity has fallen to a five-year low as of the first quarter of 2026.

Charlotte's Q1 2026 multifamily market experienced $2.3 billion in transaction volume, a 5.0% average cap rate, and 6.2% vacancy, with asking rents declining 3.2% year-over-year to $1,516 per month amid approximately 18,000 units under construction. The market is navigating peak supply pressure while maintaining strong demand fundamentals supported by 2.8 million metro residents and 1.39% year-over-year job growth, with Matthews projecting rent growth to turn positive in 2027 at an expected +1.8% annual change.

This is a market report on the Jacksonville office sector published by Colliers in March 2026, covering the first quarter of that year. The report covers office market conditions in Jacksonville, Florida and includes national market context.

This is a market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering industrial sector dynamics in the Raleigh-Durham area during the first quarter of 2026. The report includes geographic focus on Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina, and appears to have national context.

Cushman & Wakefield's Q1 2026 MarketBeat report on Broward County multifamily markets documents that Q1 deliveries totaled 1,515 units with units under construction falling to approximately 6,000—the lowest since 2020—while stabilized occupancy rose 20 basis points to 93.5%, net absorption reached 856 units, and overall effective rent stood at $2,423 per unit (down 0.9% year-over-year but up 1.3% quarterly). The report notes that demand outpaced supply in 2025 for the first time in three years with Central Fort Lauderdale and Hollywood/Dania Beach accounting for 57% of Q1 market gains, though nearly 3,400 additional units scheduled to deliver by year-end are expected to pressure occupancy rates entering 2027.

This is a market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering the industrial sector in Nashville, Tennessee. The report presents Q1 2026 market dynamics and conditions for the Nashville industrial market.

This is a market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering office sector dynamics in the Raleigh-Durham area during the first quarter of 2026. The report includes national geographic context alongside regional analysis of the Raleigh-Durham office market.

This is a market report published by Colliers in March 2026 covering the office sector in the Raleigh-Durham area of North Carolina, with national scope. The report provides market analysis for the first quarter of 2026.

The document is a navigation and index page for Cushman & Wakefield's Raleigh MarketBeats reports covering Q1 2026 across office, industrial, life sciences, and multifamily property sectors. It provides summary statistics including office vacancy at 22.3% (up 10 basis points quarter-over-quarter), industrial vacancy at 9.0% (up 90 basis points), life sciences vacancy at 27.6% (down 120 basis points), and notes that the Raleigh-Durham multifamily market has delivered over 33,000 units since 2023.

The Memphis industrial market in Q1 2026 achieved 2.5 million square feet of net absorption, the highest quarterly figure since Q4 2022, driven primarily by bulk deals exceeding 500,000 square feet and expansion activity from technology and energy manufacturers including Jabil and Hyosung HICO. The vacancy rate declined to 7.7%, the lowest since Q3 2024, with net asking rents for warehouse/distribution space remaining relatively stable at $4.15 per square foot while concessions continue to moderate as large-block supply tightens.

The Charlotte office market recorded 858,500 square feet of new leasing in Q1 2026, with vacancy declining 20 basis points quarter-over-quarter to 24.2% and asking rents increasing 1.4% to $34.81 per square foot, driven by strong demand from financial services tenants including JP Morgan and Charles Schwab, and the metro ranking first nationally in job growth with 39,200 positions added year-over-year. The market is expected to see continued elevated leasing activity, declining vacancy as new supply remains limited with only Queensbridge Collective under construction, and further rent increases particularly in Class A properties due to supply constraints and tenant preference for newer, higher-quality assets.

Jacksonville's retail market delivered nearly 695,000 square feet of new space over the past 12 months while vacancy increased 50 basis points year-over-year to 5.1%, with annual asking rent growth slowing to 1.7% and averaging $26.08 per square foot as of Q1 2026. Investment sales totaled near $730 million across more than 420 transactions with an average price of $193 per square foot, while demand declined from the prior year with net occupancy losses of 90,500 square feet, though St. Johns County remained the strongest performer with over 113,000 square feet of absorbed space.

Charlotte's industrial market recorded a 7.7% vacancy rate and $8.65 per square foot asking rent in Q1 2026, with year-to-date net absorption of 2.7 million square feet driven by strong logistics demand and job growth that ranked first nationally among 104 tracked U.S. metros at 39,200 positions added. The active development pipeline totaled 7.2 million square feet with 1.3 million square feet of speculative completions delivered in the quarter, and over 4.5 million square feet of additional speculative construction expected to deliver in 2026 as the market moves toward equilibrium.

Charlotte's sub-125K SF industrial segment reported a 5.8% vacancy rate and 4.6% year-over-year rent growth reaching $10.63/SF in Q1 2026, with approximately 2.1 million SF under construction and negative absorption of 275K SF reflecting modest demand softening. The segment showed relative resilience compared to the broader market, with institutional investment activity rebounding and sales pricing reaching $119/SF, supported by limited new supply in smaller-format spaces.

This Cushman & Wakefield report analyzes Nashville's office market in Q1 2026, documenting a 16.6% overall vacancy rate, $37.95 per square foot asking rent, 57,195 square feet of net absorption, and 601,013 square feet of new leasing activity driven primarily by Oracle's 116,026-square-foot lease at Neuhoff in the Central Business District. The report notes Nashville's stable economy with 3.0% unemployment and 1.2 million employed residents, while highlighting that no new office projects delivered in Q1 and construction remains limited to 231,320 square feet across three AJ Capital projects in the Airport South submarket, with expectations for continued vacancy improvement as signed leases commence.

Jacksonville's office market recorded a 20.7% overall vacancy rate in Q1 2026, declining 260 basis points year-over-year to its lowest level since Q3 2023, with average asking rent holding firm at $23.01 per square foot, up 0.6% year-over-year. Leasing activity totaled nearly 117,000 square feet in Q1, down from the previous quarter and year-ago period, with suburban submarkets capturing 90.4% of deals and Deerwood Park commanding the highest rents at $24.35 per square foot.

This is a fourth-quarter 2025 office market report for the Raleigh-Durham area published by Colliers, covering commercial real estate activity in that North Carolina region.

This is a market report published by Northmarq on December 31, 2025, covering multifamily real estate transaction activity in the Raleigh-Durham area during the fourth quarter of 2025, with a focus on a rebound in activity during that period.

This is an industrial sector data report published by CBRE on December 31, 2025, presenting fourth-quarter 2025 figures for the Raleigh-Durham market in North Carolina.

This is a fourth-quarter 2025 market report published by Colliers covering the industrial sector in the Raleigh-Durham area of North Carolina. The report provides market analysis for the industrial real estate segment in this geographic region.
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The Raleigh-Durham industrial market in Q4 2025 recorded average asking rents of $10.17 per square foot, up 0.9% year-over-year, with rent growth sustained despite rising vacancy supported by newer inventory and higher replacement costs. Vacancy increased to 6.4% in Q4 2025 from 6.1% one year prior, while year-to-date 2025 net absorption totaled 1.7 million square feet, up from 1.1 million square feet in 2024, as inventory growth continued to outpace demand.

The Memphis industrial market absorbed 5.1 million square feet in 2025, representing a 122% increase over 2024, driven by demand from energy, power, and technology sectors including solar panel storage (1.4 million square feet) and data center operations. Vacancy fell 40 basis points to 8.5% in the fourth quarter, while average net rent for warehouse/distribution declined slightly to $4.12 per square foot as landlords prioritized occupancy through concessions rather than rate reductions, with base rent escalations moderating to the 3% to 3.25% range.

This is a retail market report for the Raleigh-Durham area published by Colliers at the end of the fourth quarter of 2025. The report covers retail sector conditions in this North Carolina market.

The Cushman & Wakefield Memphis Office Q4 2025 report analyzes market fundamentals for the Memphis office sector, showing a 17.6% vacancy rate, 85,000 square feet of year-to-date net absorption, and an overall asking rent of $19.28 per square foot, with employment at 661,000 and unemployment at 4.6%. The report notes that Memphis recorded its lowest annual absorption since 2021 but ended the year positive through midsize move-ins with no large move-outs, while large deals remain rare and medical tenants are driving increased demand in the 5,000–15,000 square foot range, with tenant improvement allowances becoming a key factor in closing deals.

The Charlotte metro multifamily market recorded 3,547 units of net absorption in Q3 2025, marking the 11th consecutive quarter of positive absorption, with stabilized occupancy at 91.9% despite effective rents declining 1.4% to $1,595 per unit. The region's economy expanded with 8.2% population growth over five years and 2.2% year-over-year nonfarm employment growth, while 20,042 units remained under construction with the South End and LoSo submarkets combining for 34.5% of quarterly absorption.

Jacksonville's multifamily market in Q3 2025 showed early stabilization with vacancy declining to 12.2% and positive absorption despite soft asking rents averaging $1,500 and negative 1.5% annual rent growth, reflecting pressure from several years of heavy supply delivery. The market featured 813 units delivered during the quarter with 2,800 units remaining under construction, sales volume of $315 million at an average price of $181,000 per unit and 5.8% cap rates, while the metro continued strong in-migration and employment growth supported by investments including a new University of Florida graduate campus and Otto Aviation manufacturing facility.

The Tampa-St. Petersburg multifamily market is experiencing rebalancing as in-migration slows, with the metro projected to post its slowest annual population growth since 2011, and net absorption sharply declined in the second half of 2025 after six consecutive quarters above 2,000 units. Vacancy across Class A, B, and C properties remained in the 5 to 6 percent range heading into 2026, with construction deliveries expected to slow in some submarkets like West Pasco County-Hernando and the Peninsula while accelerating in Central Tampa and New Tampa-East Pasco County, though no deliveries are currently scheduled for 2027.

The Matthews Tampa industrial market report for Q1 2026 documents market fundamentals that softened as vacancy rose to 7.3% despite 379K SF of positive absorption, with 322K SF of new deliveries and 2.6M SF under construction continuing to pressure fundamentals. Asking rents reached $12.69/SF with annual growth of 3.4% representing a significant deceleration, while industrial sales volume totaled $240M with average sale prices at $154/SF and cap rates at 7.6%.

Orlando's office market in Q1 2026 recorded a vacancy rate of 16.5%, down 40 basis points from the prior year, with asking rents rising to $26.65 per square foot, while leasing activity totaled 456,000 square feet, down 14.9% year-over-year, with the central business district accounting for 32.2% of new leases. Class A properties dominated leasing at 60.7% of total activity, though rents declined 3.8% year-over-year to $28.45 per square foot, while the Airport/Lake Nona submarket experienced the highest vacancy at 30.8% and steepest rent decline of 5.1% year-over-year.

Orlando's industrial market recorded a vacancy rate of 8.1% and net asking rent of $9.49 per square foot in Q1 2026, with year-to-date net absorption of 187,100 square feet despite leasing activity declining 70.5% year-over-year to 696,000 square feet, the slowest quarter since early 2020. The market faces upward vacancy pressure from 3.1 million square feet under construction with only 30.9% preleased, while employment grew 0.7% year-over-year with Orlando's unemployment rate rising to 4.1% as of Q4 2025.

Orlando's retail market in Q1 2026 showed strong performance with net absorption of approximately 540,000 square feet over the preceding 12 months, vacancy near historic lows at 3.9%, asking rents at $31.19 per square foot reflecting 5.4% year-over-year growth, and sales volume reaching $523 million. The market remained structurally undersupplied with only 1.17 million square feet under construction, mostly preleased, while leasing activity rose more than 15% year-over-year despite tenant expansion constraints from limited availability.

Orlando's multifamily market delivered 9,503 units in the past 12 months (expanding inventory by 4.4%), but construction activity declined 34.1% year-over-year to its lowest level since 2020, with stabilized occupancy falling 70 basis points to 92.0% and effective rents declining 2.1% to $1,804 per month. Net absorption totaled 1,866 units through 2026 year-to-date, down nearly 1,000 units annually, with I-Drive Orlando and Southwest Orlando submarkets leading the region in absorption despite high new supply levels.

Tampa Bay's multifamily market delivered 1,059 units in Q1 2026 (down 54.7% year-over-year), with 31 buildings totaling 8,908 units under construction, while stabilized occupancy fell to 91.0%, the lowest level in a decade, and effective rents declined 4.9% year-over-year to $1,806 per square foot. Investment activity remained strong with $2.0 billion in total sales, the second-highest volume in Florida, at an average sale price of $231,000 per unit, though select submarkets including East Tampa (95.5% occupancy) and Downtown Tampa (93.4% occupancy) continued to perform well.

Tampa's retail market in Q1 2026 maintained a 3.7% vacancy rate near historic lows despite negative net absorption of approximately 80,000 square feet driven by store closures and bankruptcies, while asking rents averaged $27.00 per square foot with continued quarterly growth supported by a constrained construction pipeline of roughly 800,000 square feet, most of which was preleased. The metro's strong fundamentals reflected population growth exceeding 3.4 million residents, unemployment at 3.9%, and broad tenant demand across grocers, discount retailers, fitness, and medical users, with annual investment sales volume reaching approximately $1.6 billion at a cap rate around 6.7%.

Tampa Bay's office market achieved its lowest vacancy rate since year-end 2021 at 18.2% in Q1 2026, down 110 basis points year-over-year, with the market ranking ninth nationally for annual vacancy improvements and posting 115,000 square feet of net absorption driven by major tenant move-ins including Geico's 61,000-square-foot expansion at Corporate Oaks I. Direct asking rents reached a historical high of $33.02 per square foot with Class A space commanding $36.30 per square foot (up 4.6% year-over-year), while 563,000 square feet of new leasing activity occurred in Q1 with the Westshore submarket leading at 264,000 square feet and concentrated primarily in Class A product representing 59.4% of activity.

Cushman & Wakefield's Tampa Bay retail market report for Q1 2026 shows that vacancy inched up 50 basis points year-over-year to 3.8% while remaining below the national average of 5.9%, with average asking rent rising 1.7% to $27.02 per square foot. Tampa's retail investment market recorded $324 million in total sales (up 6.9% year-over-year), ranking third-highest in Florida, with Q1 leasing activity reaching 813,000 square feet and nearly 92% of investment deals closing below $5 million.