The best first half for industrial demand since 2023. The pipeline behind it is the part to watch.
Cushman & Wakefield
Every story on The American Developer that names Cushman & Wakefield, 9 and counting.
Coverage
Three leases, three submarkets, three different landlords. The Miami office bid is not coming from one place.
The read for developers: the 1980s-scale supply wave is being absorbed, and the timing window on distressed deals is starting to close.
The bleeding has slowed, but a 38.6% downtown vacancy shows the recovery is a flight to quality, not a tide lifting all towers.
Even in a soft Bay Area office market, hard-corner assets next to a trillion-dollar anchor still trade, and buyers pay for the adjacency.
A trading giant's relocation and expansion is a bright spot in a downtown Houston office market running near 30% availability.
Cushman & Wakefield's second-quarter read shows the office rebound broadening into secondary markets.
One of the country's largest apartment REITs is expanding in South Florida at a land basis its brokers call a record for the submarket.
One of the country's largest apartment managers exits the RealPage antitrust fight, agreeing to price its units independently.