TWO FORCES DRIVING THE CRE OUTLOOK
Why the Fed’s dual mandate is the most important force driving CRE today Why slowing job creation is good for CRE Will the Fed raise rates again this year?
FOURTH QUARTER REAL ESTATE INVESTOR LUNCHEON | In-Person Event: Thursday, December 12th at 12:00 PM | Click HERE to RSVP
Why the Fed’s dual mandate is the most important force driving CRE today Why slowing job creation is good for CRE Will the Fed raise rates again this year?
Bloomberg Features Marcus & Millichap CEO Hessam Nadji The Challenged Office Sector – What’s Needed For Recovery • Why commercial real estate distress on banks may be overstated • Which office properties are performing best and worst • Which property types face the lowest distress risk and why • The valuation disconnect – how prices are adjusting
How investors are adapting to the market How recent headlines are hiding market perspective The window of opportunity that may soon close
What’s driving the surge in confidence levels? Why Wall Street thinks the Fed will keep rates flat Are forces beginning to align to bolster CRE activity?
How does sales activity compare to the long-term norm? Which buyers are most active? What unique opportunities are being created?
What investment opportunities are created by the realignment of savings with the pre-pandemic trend? Will reduced savings influence Federal Reserve rate policies? How will a burn-off of household savings affect different types of CRE?
Will the U.S. face a recession or can the Fed achieve a soft landing? The risks posed by the resumption of student loan payments Why economic growth is tapering and the prospects of an extended slow-growth cycle
Historically, how long has it taken for CRE prices to recover? Could it be better to redeploy capital into different assets? How can buyers hedge risk when financing CRE investments?
The key economic forces restraining recession risk What’s driving employment in local markets? How job creation influences household formation and CRE demand
Which property types took the longest to recover from the Great Financial Crisis? How has each property type been affected in the post-pandemic era? Should investors expect most property types to return to the typical 3-6% annual gains?