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Orange County's office vacancy rate stood at 14.4% in Q2 2026, up 10 basis points quarter-over-quarter but down 340 basis points year-over-year. Industrial vacancy climbed to 5.1% in Q1 2026, rising 60 basis points quarter-over-quarter and 110 basis points year-over-year, while retail vacancy increased to 4.9% in Q1 2026, up 50 basis points quarter-over-quarter and 40 basis points year-over-year.

This is a market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering industrial sector dynamics in the Washington DC market during the first quarter of 2026. The report addresses the industrial sector at both the local Washington DC and national geographic levels.

This is a data report published by CBRE in March 2026 presenting office sector figures for Philadelphia in the first quarter of 2026. The report covers the Philadelphia office market with reference to national data.

The Q1 2026 Cushman & Wakefield MarketBeat report analyzes the suburban Philadelphia office market, finding a diverged market with the Schuylkill Corridor maintaining tight 11.4% direct vacancy while Primary and Secondary markets remained above 20.5%, and documenting 248.6K square feet of negative year-to-date net absorption against an overall 22.0% vacancy rate and asking rent of $28.33 per square foot. Key lease transactions included Saint-Gobain Corporation's 321,226 square foot renewal at 20 Moores Road in the Southern Route 202 Corridor, and the report identified over 1.7 million square feet of financially distressed assets representing 14.4% of all suburban vacant space.

The Seattle industrial market in Q1 2026 experienced rising vacancy (9.3%, up from 8.9% at year-end 2025), negative net absorption of 850,000 SF year-over-year, and declining rents averaging $1.07 PSF, driven by global supply chain pressures, elevated fuel costs, and regional tax policy uncertainty. Regional inventory reached 409.7M SF across 11,333 properties with 1.54M SF delivered in Q1 primarily in Pierce County, while construction of 2.6M SF remained underway at 46% preleased and 85 buildings sold for $368.4M at an average cap rate of 6.6%.

This is a first-quarter 2026 industrial sector report published by CBRE covering the Puget Sound market in the Seattle, Washington area. The item presents data and figures for the industrial real estate sector in this geography during the first quarter of 2026.

The Philadelphia industrial market recorded a 10.8% overall vacancy rate and $12.86 asking rent per square foot in Q1 2026, with year-to-date net absorption of 2.4 million square feet representing 76.8% growth year-over-year, driven by strong leasing activity across Burlington and Lower Bucks Counties. Regional employment grew 1.4% year-over-year despite the unemployment rate rising 70 basis points to 5.0%, and the market's construction pipeline continued to contract to 2.2 million square feet under development as asking rents are expected to remain steady through the first half of 2026.

This is a market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering office sector dynamics in the Philadelphia central business district during the first quarter of 2026. The report examines conditions in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania office market.

The Seattle office market in first quarter 2026 experienced significant labor market deterioration, with the regional unemployment rate rising to 5.4% in February 2026 from 4.3% a year prior, driven by 3,420 WARN-noticed layoffs led by Amazon's 2,387 cuts, while office investment activity recovered with $245.6 million in sales across 11 properties at a 7.1% cap rate. For the first time in the recovery cycle, both vacancy and availability declined concurrently by approximately 90 basis points quarter-over-quarter, reaching 23.2% and 26.7% respectively, with the region posting 253,352 square feet of positive net absorption in Q1 2026—the first positive quarter since Q1 2022—though this improvement was tempered by continued tech sector job losses threatening near-term office demand.

Cushman & Wakefield's San Diego Office MarketBeat Q1 2026 report documents office market conditions showing a vacancy rate of 15.4% (up 140 basis points year-over-year) and an overall asking rent of $3.48 per square foot, with negative net absorption of 335,000 square feet driven by Class A space losses in Central County submarkets. San Diego's employment grew 0.7% year-over-year to 1.6 million jobs through January 2026, with projected growth of only 1.0% in 2026 and 0.8% in 2027—both below the five-year historical average—indicating continued pressure on office demand amid modest hiring concentrated outside core office-using sectors.

The Seattle office market in Q1 2026 posted a 23.1% vacancy rate for the overall Puget Sound region, with Seattle proper at 28.0%, showing deceleration in vacancy growth after years of sharp increases and modest signs of stabilization. Net absorption remained negative at -486,708 SF regionally, though at an improving pace compared to prior years, while construction activity contracted to historic lows of 63,527 SF under construction, and average asking rents edged up modestly to $32.95 PSF as investment transactions continued at approximately $310 million across 33 deals.

The San Diego office market in first quarter 2026 experienced a 16.2% year-over-year decline in leasing activity to 1.0 million square feet while vacancy remained essentially flat at 13.6%, though availability rose to 17.1% indicating growing marketed space. Sales volume increased substantially by 186.4% year-over-year to 2.3 million square feet with average pricing normalized to $215.21 per square foot compared to $462.67 in the prior year quarter, and the near-term outlook expects continued uneven conditions as occupiers prioritize higher-quality space while investment activity focuses on discounted urban and value-add suburban assets.

The Seattle retail market in Q1 2026 posted a vacancy rate of 4.0%, up from 3.3% year-over-year, with asking rents stable at $23.40 per square foot, while net absorption remained negative at -17.8K SF though improved from prior years. Smaller-format and service-oriented retail continued to outperform, construction deliveries totaled approximately 51K SF concentrated in suburban corridors, and investment activity remained measured amid selective capital deployment.

The San Diego industrial market recorded 2.1 million square feet of leasing volume and positive direct net absorption of 250.5 thousand square feet in first quarter 2026, while vacancy increased to 9.6% and asking rental rates declined to $1.46 per square foot NNN. Industrial investment sales activity slowed with 1.4 million square feet trading across 54 transactions totaling $260 million, with average pricing falling to $307 per square foot amid selective capital markets and manufacturing employment declining 2.4% year over year in the San Diego-Chula Vista-Carlsbad MSA.

Philadelphia's Central Business District office market showed a 20.4% vacancy rate and negative year-to-date net absorption of 273,087 square feet in Q1 2026, with leasing dominated by renewals (235,000 sf) over new leasing (120,000 sf), reflecting tenant preference for right-sizing in higher-quality space. Trophy assets demonstrated pricing resilience with asking rents $10–$18 per square foot above Class A properties and vacancy below 10%, while Class A and Class A- segments faced persistent headwinds from distressed properties and over 300,000 square feet of newly identified conversion candidates.

Seattle's industrial market ended Q1 2026 with a 9.7% vacancy rate and negative net absorption of 481,000 square feet, reflecting continued weakness in demand recovery despite early signs of stabilization from increased touring activity and large-block interest. Average asking rents declined to $0.95 per square foot year-over-year, with only two projects totaling 887,000 square feet delivered in the quarter, while leasing activity of nearly 1.9 million square feet was driven primarily by renewals and six large deals exceeding 100,000 square feet.

This is a retail sector data report published by CBRE on December 31, 2025, presenting fourth-quarter 2025 figures for Orange County, California. The report covers retail market metrics for the Orange County area within the broader Los Angeles and national geographic context.

Greater Philadelphia's office market ended 2025 with vacancy at 21.8% after rising 150 basis points year-over-year, though net absorption improved to only slightly negative as leasing momentum increased. Class A rents grew 4.2% annually driven by trophy asset demand, while sublease availability stabilized and asking rents recorded three consecutive quarters of gains.

This is a market report published by Colliers in Q4 2025 covering the office sector in Orange County, California and surrounding national markets. The report provides research and analysis on office real estate conditions and trends for the fourth quarter of 2025.

This is a market report published by Colliers in Q4 2025 covering the industrial sector in Orange County, California, with national context. The report provides analysis of industrial real estate conditions and market activity in the Orange County and Los Angeles areas.

Greater Philadelphia's industrial market weakened further in 2025 as new supply outpaced absorption, pushing vacancy to 8.7%, the highest level in two years. Despite softer fundamentals, leasing activity reached 22.0 million square feet for the year, a two-year high, with Class A properties capturing 40.9% of volume despite representing only one-third of inventory. Development slowed significantly to a five-year low of 4.9 million square feet under construction, while asking rents rose 6.2% annually to $11.90 per square foot.

This is a market report published by CBRE in December 2025 providing an overview of the San Diego life sciences sector for the fourth quarter of 2025. The report covers the life sciences market in San Diego, California, with references to national context.

This is a market report published by Colliers at the end of 2025 covering the multifamily sector in Orange County, California, with national scope. The report presents research findings for the fourth quarter of 2025.

This is a data report published by CBRE on June 30, 2025 presenting multifamily housing figures for the second quarter of 2025 in Washington DC. The report covers the multifamily sector with geographic focus on Washington DC and national markets.

This is a market report published by JLL in June 2025 covering the Seattle retail sector as of the second quarter of 2025. The report appears to address retail market conditions and dynamics in the Seattle, Washington area with potential reference to national market context.

This is a market report published by CBRE in June 2025 examining data center trends in the Northern Virginia market during the first half of 2025. The report covers the data center sector in the Northern Virginia region, which includes the Washington, DC area.

Newmark's Denver Office Market Overview for first quarter 2026 documents negative net absorption of 249,270 square feet and a vacancy rate of 31.1 percent, though this represents improvement from prior-year declines, while leasing activity surged 43.5 percent sequentially to 2.1 million square feet as median asking rents held relatively stable at $32.15 per square foot. Office-using employment sectors contracted year-over-year amid an unemployment rate of 4.2 percent, though the University of Colorado projects economic headwinds will ease in 2026 to improve hiring and employment growth.

Austin's industrial market vacancy rate increased to 15.7% in Q1 2026 from 14.8% in the prior quarter, exceeding the historic high of 15.3% from Q3 2003, driven by 1.9 million square feet of deliveries with 82% vacant and net absorption declining 75.2% quarterly to 122,998 square feet. Average asking rental rates rose slightly to $14.43 per square foot, the construction pipeline increased 5.2% to 13.2 million square feet, and leasing activity increased 8.2% quarter-over-quarter despite year-over-year declines of 16.5%.

This is a market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering industrial sector dynamics in Denver for the first quarter of 2026. The report addresses the Denver industrial market within a broader national context.

Miami's office market recorded 918,000 square feet of total leased space in Q1 2026, with tech occupiers accounting for 37% of leasing activity and FIRE tenants representing 20%, while the market achieved $523.3 million in sales volume—the highest first-quarter total in over a decade—driven by major transactions including Goldman Properties and Citadel's acquisition of 545 Wyn and Mana Group's purchase of One Downtown. Miami's office utilization stood at 75.1% in February 2026 compared to February 2019, outperforming primary national markets, with overall market vacancy at 13.7% and positive net absorption of 96,265 square feet for the quarter.

Miami-Dade County's retail market in Q1 2026 showed vacancy rising 50 basis points year-over-year to 3.2%, below the national average of 4.4%, with average asking rent reaching $48.98 per square foot, up 1.1% annually. Leasing momentum improved with deal volume rising 26.9% year-over-year to over 708,000 square feet, though net occupancy losses totaled 394,000 square feet, while retail investment sales declined 15.8% to approximately $212 million, with capitalization rates averaging 5.8% unchanged from the prior year.

This is a Q1 2026 retail market data report published by CBRE covering Denver, Colorado. The report contains figures and metrics related to the retail sector in the Denver market during the first quarter of 2026.

This is a Q1 2026 market report published by CBRE presenting data and figures on the office sector in Miami, Florida. The report appears to cover office market metrics for the Miami market as of March 2026.

The Phoenix office market recorded negative direct net absorption of 267,340 square feet in the first quarter of 2026, with total leasing activity of 1.4 million square feet and a decline in vacancy rates to 24.0 percent year-over-year, while average direct asking rents rose 2 percent to $31.45 per square foot. The market continues to experience tenant downsizing driven by hybrid work trends, with demand shifting toward move-in-ready spec suites and Class A buildings offering enhanced amenities such as collaborative spaces and on-site services.

The Phoenix retail market in Q2 2026 recorded a 4.5% vacancy rate with average asking rents of $1.78 per square foot per month, representing a 9.37% year-over-year increase, while 3.29 million square feet remained under construction and average sale prices reached $296 per square foot. Year-to-date net absorption totaled 590,640 square feet (down 62.23% from the prior year), construction deliveries reached 1.29 million square feet (down 9.75% from 2025), and average cap rates expanded to 6.5%.

The Phoenix multifamily market in Q2 2026 experienced improving fundamentals with vacancy declining to 11.3% (down 40 basis points year-over-year) and net absorption of 9,414 units year-to-date (up 50.24% compared to the prior year period), while construction pipeline activity contracted 35.45% to 15,974 units under construction. Average asking rents declined 2.17% year-over-year to $1,536 per month, cap rates compressed to 5.8% from 6.6%, and average sale price per unit increased 3.64% to $266,672, reflecting stronger investor sentiment as the market absorbs recent supply additions.

The Phoenix industrial market in Q1 2026 experienced declining vacancy rates to 12.4% (down 120 basis points year-over-year) with 7.5 million square feet of leasing activity and 4.4 million square feet of direct net absorption, while new construction slowed significantly to only 1.2 million square feet delivered. Average direct asking rents increased 5% year-over-year to $1.18 per square foot NNN for spaces 10,000 square feet and larger, driven by demand from advanced manufacturing, semiconductor expansion, and logistics users across submarkets including Glendale, North Chandler/Gilbert, and Goodyear.

Greater Boston's industrial market experienced its third consecutive quarter of negative net absorption, though leasing activity surged 68.9% year-over-year in the first quarter of 2026. Vacancy rose to 10.8% as new construction remained active, but the construction pipeline has fallen to a four-year low, suggesting near-term supply moderation. Asking rents returned to positive annual growth of 1.7%, driven by advanced manufacturing buildings and a flight-to-quality trend among tenants seeking modern industrial space.

Austin's multifamily market in Q1 2026 experienced negative rent growth of 4.7% with asking rents averaging $1,500 per unit and a 13.5% vacancy rate, reflecting oversupply from 14,600 units under construction. Despite soft fundamentals, the market absorbed 3,800 units during the quarter, exceeding the 2,000 units delivered, though a large construction pipeline is expected to sustain competitive pressure and limit near-term rent recovery.

This is a quarterly industrial sector report published by CBRE in March 2026 presenting market figures for Atlanta. The report covers industrial real estate data and metrics for the first quarter of 2026.

During Q1 2026, multifamily net absorption in Phoenix reached 6,261 units, representing the strongest quarterly performance in at least the last 26 years. The total overall vacancy in the metro Phoenix retail market was 5.0% during the first quarter of 2026.

Atlanta's industrial market recorded 9.5 million square feet of leasing activity in Q1 2026, a 3.2% year-over-year increase, with I-85 North leading all submarkets at 3.3 million square feet and net absorption reaching 4.1 million square feet—the strongest occupancy growth since Q2 2024. Average asking rents declined 6.8% year-over-year to $8.81 per square foot, while the overall vacancy rate edged up 20 basis points to 8.7%, and the under-construction pipeline remained historically constrained at 17.0 million square feet.

Cushman & Wakefield's Denver Industrial MarketBeat Q1 2026 reports that the Denver industrial market ended Q1 2026 with a 7.7% overall vacancy rate, $10.22 per square foot asking rent, and 983,000 square feet of year-to-date net absorption, driven primarily by strong demand for small-bay and mid-sized spaces. Leasing activity reached 2.9 million square feet across 236 deals in Q1 2026 (a 27.9% year-over-year increase), while construction completions totaled 354,000 square feet, far below the five-year average of 1.6 million square feet, with a healthy pipeline of 4.2 million square feet under construction.

Miami's multifamily market delivered 1,956 units in Q1 2026, up 53.5% year-over-year, with a construction pipeline of nearly 13,800 units concentrated in Downtown Miami at 30.7% of development activity, though stabilized occupancy declined 80 basis points to 94.2% as vacancy rose above 9.0% from cumulative supply growth of 41.1% since 2020. Effective rent totaled $2,641 per unit in Q1 2026, down 1.0% year-over-year, while net absorption of 2,195 units marked the highest quarterly figure since Q3 2021, with investment momentum carrying into early 2026 at over $73 million in transactions and a price per unit of nearly $398,000.

Greater Boston's office market posted negative net absorption of nearly 140,000 square feet in the first quarter of 2026, pushing the vacancy rate to a historic high of 23.2 percent. Class A assets posted positive absorption for the second consecutive quarter, while Class B properties logged their eleventh consecutive quarter of negative absorption. Development has slowed sharply, with new office construction falling to a 15-year low, and only one project remaining underway in the region.

This is a quarterly industrial sector data report published by CBRE in March 2026 covering the Miami market. The report presents figures and metrics for the industrial real estate sector in Miami, Florida.

Miami's office market in Q1 2026 recorded a 15.1% overall vacancy rate with asking rents at $65.22 per square foot, driven by modest leasing activity of 288,000 square feet (down 54.3% year-over-year) and ongoing flight-to-quality demand favoring Class A space, while the market maintains a 490,000-square-foot construction pipeline that is only 20% preleased. Class A rents reached $71.59 per square foot (up 4.8% year-over-year) and Class B rents rose to $54.40 per square foot (up 3.9% year-over-year), with Coral Gables leading submarket rent growth at 13.9% annually to $62.17 per square foot.