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The Portland office market in Q2 2026 showed stabilizing vacancy at 15.3% with positive year-to-date net absorption of 173,519 SF, though quarterly net absorption remained negative at -29,025 SF, while average asking rents declined 2.4% year-over-year to $29.16 PSF. The regional unemployment rate stood at 4.7% as of May 2026, and the market is expected to remain tenant-favorable in the near term with limited new construction in the pipeline.

The Salt Lake City industrial market report for Q1 2026 covers overall market conditions including 7.9% vacancy, 61,000 square feet of net absorption, and $0.80 per square foot asking rents, alongside economic data showing 846,400 jobs and 3.6% unemployment in the region. Key findings include positive net absorption driven by warehouse/distribution gains concentrated in the Northwest submarket, manufacturing space posting the tightest vacancy at 2.2%, and nearly 8.5 million square feet of industrial space delivered since early 2024 with approximately 47% remaining available.

Palm Beach County's industrial market recorded a 7.7% overall vacancy rate in Q1 2026, declining 60 basis points from Q3 2025's peak, with average asking rent reaching $13.70 per square foot despite a 1.0% quarterly decline; net absorption totaled 94,000 square feet year-to-date while the development pipeline held 811,000 square feet under construction with 53% preleased. The market experienced decreased new leasing activity for the third consecutive quarter at just over 135,000 square feet, though renewal activity remained strong and positive net absorption is expected to continue supported by over 517,000 square feet of leased space in the pipeline and the 200,000 square foot Hoerbiger corporate headquarters scheduled for occupancy by year-end.

Portland's retail market in Q2 2026 maintained a vacancy rate of 4.7% while average asking rents reached $2.02 per square foot per year, up 2.66% year-over-year, with the market recording positive net absorption of 45,624 square feet despite limited construction deliveries of only 10,004 square feet year-to-date. Investment activity strengthened significantly as average retail sale prices surged 92.12% year-over-year to $335 per square foot, while the development pipeline remained relatively steady at 514,643 square feet under construction and average cap rates declined to 6.6%.

Minneapolis-St. Paul's multitenant office vacancy rose to 24.7% in the fourth quarter, driven by mid-size tenant space reductions, though Boston Scientific's completion of a 400,000-SF Maple Grove campus partially offset losses. Market strength remains concentrated in select nodes like Edina and the West End, where well-capitalized landlords continue to leverage generous concessions to attract tenants amid below-average leasing activity.

The Minneapolis-St. Paul office market recorded 4.8 million square feet in total leasing volume during 2025, representing over 4% growth compared to 2024, though remaining below pre-COVID levels. Q4 2025 showed total availability at 22.3% with negative net absorption of 1.5%, largely driven by Ameriprise Financial's full vacancy of the Ameriprise Financial Center, while the development pipeline remained conservative with no new office projects breaking ground that quarter.

Portland's office market in Q4 2025 experienced elevated vacancy at 24.3% and negative net absorption of 1.6 million square feet year-to-date, driven by tenant downsizing and limited backfill, while asking rents held steady at $33.57 per square foot as landlords used increased concessions and tenant improvement allowances to compete amid declining employment and reduced hiring. Class A properties with modern amenities and sustainability features commanded stronger pricing, while older commodity office space faced greater competitive pressure, with leasing activity concentrated in newer buildings and suburban submarkets rather than the CBD and central core.

This Newmark research report analyzes the Minneapolis-St. Paul industrial market as of fourth quarter 2025, covering economic conditions, employment trends, and leasing fundamentals across the region. Key findings include a 4.2% vacancy rate with 2.7 million square feet of net absorption in 2025, manufacturing employment growth of 1.6% year-over-year, and industrial leasing volume above historical averages driven by data center-related activity including Meta Platforms' 715,000-SF facility in Rosemount and Daedex's 503,000-SF lease in Dayton.

Fort Lauderdale's multifamily market experienced a slowdown in Q3 2025 with asking rent growth of just 0.1% following the unsustainable surge of 2021–22, driven by a large luxury supply wave that expanded vacancy to 7.6% and increased concessions, though rents remained over 25% above early-2021 levels and 34% above the U.S. average. The market recorded 8,760 units under construction (predominantly Class A luxury), annual sales of $1.8 billion with cap rates rising to 5.6%, and strong absorption averaging over 1,000 units per quarter since late 2023, while lower-rent submarkets posted some of the strongest annual rent gains as renters shifted toward more cost-effective areas.

Fort Lauderdale's retail market in Q3 2025 exhibits tight conditions with asking rents averaging $36 per SF, vacancy at 3.9%, and annual rent growth slowed to 1.1%, supported by strong tenant demand from fitness, grocery, and entertainment users despite minimal new supply of approximately 281,000 SF under construction. Retail investment sales reached $292 million over the past year driven by grocery-anchored and neighborhood centers, with the metro's economy remaining resilient supported by a median household income of $79,795, unemployment at 3.6%, and employment 5% above pre-pandemic levels.

Portland's industrial market experienced rising vacancy and softening employment in Q3 2025, with the vacancy rate climbing to 6.2% as new deliveries outpaced demand, while nonfarm employment fell 0.6% and the unemployment rate rose to 4.8%. Average asking rents remained flat at $0.93 per square foot on a monthly triple-net basis, with landlords maintaining pricing through concessions and lease flexibility rather than rate reductions, though nearly 1.6 million square feet remained under construction across the market.

Portland's office market experienced weakening fundamentals in the second quarter of 2025, with unemployment rising to 4.5%, office vacancy reaching a record high of 24.3%, and net absorption declining by 311,820 square feet despite modest job gains in education, health services, and information sectors. Average asking rents dipped slightly to $31.30/SF while leasing activity remained subdued, with tenants increasingly favoring affordable suburban submarkets over the downtown core, and no new office construction projects underway amid challenging market conditions.

Salt Lake City's commercial real estate investment market recorded $1.60 billion in transaction volume year-to-date through mid-2025, representing a 28% increase from mid-year 2024, with multifamily and industrial sectors leading activity. Capitalization rates increased across three of four asset classes, with multifamily at 5.4%, industrial at 6.0%, retail at 7.0%, and office holding flat at 9.75%, while the regional economy expanded with employment at 844,100 jobs and gross metro product projected to grow from $120.6 billion in 2025 to $128.2 billion in 2027.

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.

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.

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.

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.

Jacksonville's industrial market experienced a sharp rise in vacancy to 10.6% in Q1 2026, driven by speculative construction deliveries totaling nearly 690,000 square feet with no preleasing in place, while leasing activity declined 13.5% year-over-year to 837,000 square feet. Industrial asking rents increased 3.2% year-over-year to $7.97 per square foot, though the document notes that double-digit vacancy and reduced construction activity may begin to ease rental prices in the near future as tenants gain more space options.

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.

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.

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 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.

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.

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.

Cushman & Wakefield's Q1 2026 MarketBeat report on Broward County's industrial market shows overall vacancy declined 10 basis points quarter-over-quarter to 5.4%, though it remains 120 basis points higher year-over-year due to 1.2 million square feet of 2025 deliveries of which over 90% remained unoccupied. Net absorption surpassed 137,000 square feet in Q1, the highest quarterly total in two years, while average asking rents rose 5.0% year-over-year to $17.67 per square foot, with new construction completions and expected pipeline deliveries projected to create upward vacancy pressure and rate volatility throughout 2026.

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.

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.