Research Briefing | Feb 29, 2024

US Office real estate is the bad gift that keeps on giving

Our view remains that the most severe risks in commercial real estate are concentrated in the office sector, as it continues to deal with the pandemic-induced structural shift of increased remote and hybrid work.

What you will learn:

  • In aggregate, commercial banks should be able to absorb losses on their portfolios because of lower CRE prices for offices. The risk is that the stress caused by CRE hits smaller banks, which have come under significant pressure.
  • Today’s environment features flighty deposits, a high concentration of real estate loans among small institutions, and sizable property price declines. Odds are that the bank stress from offices is far from over because a significant number of loans are due this year and interest rates will decline more slowly than anticipated.
  • The increased use of nonbanks as a source for credit has cushioned the blow to the economy from tighter lending standards among banks, but this poses a downside risk. Increased competition by nonbanks could put additional pressure on small regional banks to consolidate.
  • Small banks are feeling the blunt of the stress in the office market. However, the regional economic implications also vary. Markets with a higher concentration of office properties are more likely to feel the effects from rising vacancy and falling values.
Back to Resource Hub

Click here to subscribe to our real estate economics newsletter and get reports delivered directly to your mailbox

MINGTIANDI: Oversupply weighs heaviest on China’s office markets

China’s office markets have been flooded with new supply, evidenced by higher vacancies relative to other global markets.
Read more: MINGTIANDI: Oversupply weighs heaviest on China’s office markets

Chinese office markets look set for a lost decade

Office markets across China's major cities continue to deteriorate after consecutive years of rising vacancy rates and falling rents. Vacancy rates are now 20%-40% across the major cities – the highest among all major global markets.
Read more: Chinese office markets look set for a lost decade

Relative return index signals improving CRE attractiveness

Our latest global relative return index (RRI) signals that risk-adjusted investment opportunities in commercial real estate (CRE) should start to emerge this year before becoming more widespread in 2025. At this point, our baseline expected returns move higher than required returns, pushing the global all-property index above the 50 mark.
Read more: Relative return index signals improving CRE attractiveness

Real Estate Trends and Insights

Read more: Real Estate Trends and Insights