Paul Bubny is managing editor of Real Estate Forum and GlobeSt.com. He has been reporting on business since 1988 and on commercial real estate since 2007. He is based at ALM Real Estate Media Group's offices in New York City.
“We may see the delinquency rate dance around a bit over the next few months as we enter the final innings of the wall of maturities,” says Manus Clancy at Trepp.
The biggest declines in construction expenditures were seen in the public sector; however, the industry's jobless rate marked the lowest on record for June.
Brett White, Cushman & Wakefield's chairman and CEO, says his firm favors “new organizational models that leverage strategic partnerships” and rejects the industry convention of self-performing “every aspect of the value chain.”
Office investors are paying greater attention to opportunities outside the CBD, but the suburban market has never gone away, says Marcus & Millichap's Al Pontius.
First American Financial's Loan Application Defect Index is now at the same level as almost two years ago in July 2015, says Mark Fleming, the firm's chief economist.
Transaction declines from the current cycle's quarterly zenith are just one way in which the market differs from the price collapses that followed the '07 peak, says Real Capital Analytics.
Despite being one unified city for more than a century, Brooklyn and Manhattan can each operate largely as viable, independent ecosystems, writes GFI Realty's Michael Weiser in this <b>EXCLUSIVE</b> commentary.
Equity Residential's David J. Neithercut, whose firm kicked off Q2 earnings season for the sector, cited “high occupancy, retention and renewal pricing despite elevated levels of new supply.”
June's nationwide increase marked the first time since early 2016 in which the rate of year-over-year growth increased from the prior month, says Yardi Matrix.