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The risks of U.S. commercial banks being overexposed to commercial real estate (CRE) have intensified as the global pandemic upended long-held economic assumptions of perpetually subdued...
For the first time since the great financial crisis, buyers of top-rated commercial mortgage-backed securities are suffering losses.
The pain felt by developers, institutional investors, and office-focused real estate investment trusts is likely only beginning.
Recent events have strained the U.S. commercial real estate (CRE) market, from the pandemic’s effects to the Federal Reserve’s battle with inflation.
The value of distressed US commercial real estate neared $80 billion in the third quarter, its highest level in a decade, as rising interest rates and sagging office demand shook the property...
Hundreds of billions of dollars of assets under collective management, and a collective wariness towards commercial real estate (CRE). To be sure, none called an immediate crisis or crash.
With public pensions already underfunded by an estimated $1 trillion, a decline in the value of commercial real estate could make this bad situation significantly worse. You get the idea.
More than $94 billion of US commercial real estate is currently distressed, according to MSCI Real Assets, with a further $201 billion at risk of slipping into that category.
In PwC’s midyear outlook, the professional services company simply said commercial real estate is not crashing. Despite the Federal Reserve’s interest rate hikes that have pushed the cost of...
The commercial real estate sector may deflate rather than be the next bust. But it is still worth looking to the past to know how to prevent future disaster. Only by acting decisively can...