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Lument reports 221 skilled nursing transactions closed in 2024, 36 percent above 2023, with a median cap rate near 12 percent and an average price of $88,000 per bed, supported by a favorable 4.2 percent net Medicare Part A reimbursement increase for 2025.

B+E examined Q1 2025 net lease market activity including real-time on-market data and cap rates. Supply decreased across several asset classes, with the largest drops in casual dining, banking and car wash, down 12 percent, 12 percent and 31 percent respectively.

US retailers shuttered roughly 7.1 million sq ft of space in the first quarter following one of the weakest annual absorption totals in a decade. Canada posted negative net absorption of 5.2 million sq ft in retail over the same period.

Apartment leasing momentum accelerated through the first half of 2025 as elevated mortgage rates restrained both renter transition to ownership and sales by existing owners. Aggregate demand for retail property slowed materially amid heightened economic uncertainty, increased bankruptcies and store closures.

BGO's global economic outlook projects modest expansion near 2 percent for 2025 and 2026, with inflationary pressure stemming primarily from U.S. tariffs. The report frames the macro backdrop for global commercial real estate investment.
The report provides Canadian commercial cap rates, sales volumes and capital markets analysis. Industrial and multifamily led activity in 2025 as cap rates began to stabilize or firm in several asset classes.

Newmark's first quarter 2025 industrial report assesses net absorption and vacancy, which was expected to hover near a cyclical high of 6.9 percent in 2025. Industrial transaction cap rates fluctuated around the low-to-mid 5 percent range.

The annual student housing outlook reviews preleasing, rent growth and investment trends across university markets. It complements the firm's core multifamily research with a dedicated view of the purpose-built student housing sector.

Savills offers insight into U.S. office leasing dynamics and capital markets trends in the first quarter of 2025. The report highlights shifts in office occupancy and workplace mandates against national benchmarks.

The Q2 2025 update introduces an augmented base case combining macroeconomic scenarios with a machine-learning behavioral model. The forecast points to growth near 1.5 percent, disinflation, Federal Reserve rate cuts and stabilizing commercial real estate fundamentals.

Brookfield highlights a recovering real estate market with improving fundamentals and rising transaction activity, identifying housing, data centers, hospitality and logistics as the most attractive sectors where supply constraints meet sustained demand and operational improvements drive returns.

This interview with McKinsey senior partner Aditya Sanghvi examines where office attendance stands today and the growing opportunity for commercial real estate to adapt to new ways of working. It revisits demand projections from the firm's earlier hybrid-work research.

McKinsey finds the US was short 8.2 million housing units in 2023, a gap that could grow to 9.6 million by 2035, and estimates closing it would require about $2.7 trillion of investment while potentially adding nearly $2 trillion to GDP. It identifies five themes for making housing more affordable and advancing economic mobility.

Blackstone President and COO Jon Gray argues the conditions are in place for a strong dealmaking environment in 2025, including in real estate, which he sees continuing on a path of recovery alongside infrastructure investment opportunities.

Cotality reported U.S. home prices increased 3.4 percent year-over-year in December 2024 and forecast a 4.1 percent year-over-year gain from December 2024 to December 2025. A slight month-over-month dip was anticipated for January 2025.

Jim Coulter and Scott Lebovitz argue the major themes of climate investing are cascading from private equity into infrastructure, where capital is needed to scale solutions over the next decade.

LaSalle's Investment Strategy Annual outlook for 2025 frames the start of a new real estate cycle, with separate chapters covering the global outlook and deep dives on Europe, North America, and Asia Pacific.

The first-quarter forecast described cooling but still positive industrial demand, projecting continued net absorption through 2025. It tracked the moderation in warehouse leasing following the post-pandemic boom.

Berkadia surveyed its investment sales advisors and mortgage bankers on the 2025 outlook, finding 83 percent of multifamily investors planned acquisitions during the year and only 2 percent intended to shrink portfolios.

McKinsey examines why global demand for office space has continued to decline even after the pandemic ended, and what that implies for the future of the office. It analyzes attendance patterns, vacancy, and the outlook for office values.

All four indices came in below the breakeven level of 50: Market Tightness at 40, Sales Volume at 41, Equity Financing at 48 and Debt Financing at 32, signaling looser conditions and reduced deal flow to start the year.

Fannie Mae's annual multifamily outlook anticipates conditions improving in most markets through 2025, while flagging negative rent growth in high-supply metros such as Austin, Phoenix, San Antonio and Raleigh.

Lument's 2025 outlook expects seniors housing and care valuations to rise above 2024 levels as occupancy nears pre-COVID norms, while a tight labor market and compressed margins remain the predominant headwinds to value appreciation.

Global allocations to real estate averaged 8.7 percent of AUM against a 9.0 percent target, a small underallocation. European investors now match their 9.4 percent target, and operating platforms ranked as the top preferred access route in Europe, followed by debt funds.

Capital Economics expects further capital value declines across all US sectors during the year, with valuations looking stretched and forecasts running below the PREA and ULI consensus.

AEW's first quarter 2025 perspective assesses U.S. property fundamentals and pricing as the market entered a recovery phase. The report tracks institutional investor return expectations across the major sectors amid still-elevated interest rates.

BGO argues the first quarter 2025 U.S. commercial real estate market is stronger than widely perceived, with stable fundamentals and emerging investment opportunities. Industrial and multifamily are flagged as the most promising sectors.

The C-Suite Outlook compiles the perspectives of senior real estate executives on conditions and strategy for the year ahead. It draws on a respondent base where 82 percent are C-suite or senior executives averaging roughly 25 years of industry tenure.

The survey reported a median hotel development cost of 219,000 dollars per room across surveyed properties, with luxury hotels exceeding 1,057,000 dollars per room, reflecting stabilizing construction costs.

Apartment List introduced a Time On Market index measuring how long listed units take to lease, complementing its rent estimates and vacancy index. Units were taking roughly 30 days to lease in recent readings as elevated supply kept the market soft.

Northmarq's 2025 national multifamily outlook reports a combination of optimism and uncertainty, with stronger than forecast conditions and robust renter demand stabilizing the sector, alongside an anticipated slowdown in new construction.

The explainer details how Apartment List derives a daily and monthly vacancy rate from listed units across its platform. The national vacancy index reached 6.9 percent in January 2025, the highest level since tracking began in 2017.

abrdn judges that most global real estate price corrections have concluded entering 2025, with returns driven by income and net operating income growth rather than yield compression. The firm is most positive on multifamily, expecting excess supply to be absorbed by mid-2025.

The year-end sentiment survey found optimism returning to commercial real estate, with the Real Estate Market Index moving into recovery territory. Respondents projected further improvement in market conditions over the following 12 months.

CREFC's quarterly Compendium compiles data on the state of the CRE debt capital markets, including outstanding debt, issuance volumes and lending activity across the 6.2 trillion dollar sector.

Principal viewed real estate values as largely adjusted for the cycle, with debt among its highest conviction strategies and structurally-driven sectors such as data centers, logistics and residential well positioned for 2025.

Marcus and Millichap's 2025 multifamily forecast projects supply and demand to re-align for the first time in four years. Rent growth was expected to remain tepid through much of 2025 with momentum building later in the year, supported by average rents remaining well below typical mortgage payments.

The report provides an overview of the sustainability impact of data centers, focusing on greenhouse gas emissions, energy consumption and water usage across leading providers and hyperscale cloud platforms.

The fifth annual outlook reports strengthening investor sentiment as asset values stabilize on subsiding inflation, lower interest rates and expansive fundraising. Colliers expects private investors, especially family offices and private equity funds, to be among the more active buyers.