
CRE This Week - What's impacting the United States market?
June 8, 2026 - US commercial real estate news, macroeconomic indicators and market analysis.
Week of June 8, 2026
Welcome to the latest edition of CRE This Week, curated by Altus Group’s US research team.
Our team has handpicked pertinent and noteworthy market indicators, articles, original research, and significant industry dates that are critical to the US commercial real estate sector. We understand that your time is valuable, so we're excited to deliver research that helps you stay informed and saves you some time each Monday morning.
For more key economic indicators that matter to commercial real estate, see Top Indicators by Major Asset Type.

Economic print
Macro economic factors impacting CRE
The U.S. Census Bureau released the Value of Construction Put in Place report for April 2026 on June 1. Total construction spending rose to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of $2,172.4 billion, up 0.4 percent from the revised March estimate and 0.9 percent above year-ago levels. Private residential construction increased 0.8 percent month over month to a $909.9 billion annual rate, while private nonresidential spending slipped 0.2 percent to $729.8 billion. Public construction rose 0.4 percent to $532.7 billion, supported by gains in educational (up 0.6 percent) and highway (up 0.4 percent) outlays. Year to date, total spending of $657.2 billion ran just 0.2 percent above the same period in 2025, pointing to a broadly flat construction environment.
The headline private nonresidential contraction masks a sharp divergence by category. Most major segments remain positive on an annual basis, with office up 9.4 percent and lodging up 5.4 percent. The drag is concentrated in manufacturing, which at one point accounted for nearly one in three dollars of private nonresidential construction and is now down 18.5 percent year over year, pulling the overall private nonresidential figure to a 2.0 percent annual contraction. Commercial and healthcare spending rose less than 2 percent, meaning both are likely contracting in real terms once inflation is accounted for. For CRE, the takeaway is a thinning supply pipeline across most property types, a medium-term tailwind for occupancy and rent growth in industrial and multifamily as deliveries roll off prior-cycle peaks. The fading manufacturing boom, tied to the completion of IRA- and CHIPS-supported projects, removes a major source of industrial construction demand and warrants close watch for its knock-on effects on adjacent logistics and infrastructure activity.
Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey
The Bureau of Labor Statistics released the April 2026 JOLTS data on June 2. Job openings rose to 7.6 million (+731,000), a rate of 4.6%, with the gain driven almost entirely by professional and business services (+668,000), while finance and insurance fell 135,000. Openings are now up 520,000 year over year. Hires declined to 5.1 million (-419,000), pushing the hires rate down to 3.2%. Total separations also fell to 5.0 million (-399,000), with the decline concentrated in retail trade (-136,000). Quits held at 3.0 million (1.9% rate) and layoffs and discharges were unchanged at 1.7 million (1.1% rate). March job openings were revised up by 21,000 to 6.9 million.
The divergence between rising openings and falling hires is the key signal. Employers are posting more positions, particularly in professional and business services, but converting fewer into actual headcount; absorption follows hires, not postings. Flat quits and layoffs keep near-term occupancy risk contained, and the retail trade decline in separations may reflect some stabilization among cost-sensitive tenants. Overall, the data points to a labor market holding steady rather than building momentum, which supports a slow and uneven leasing recovery across office, retail, and industrial.
Employment Reports (ADP and BLS)
ADP and the BLS both pointed to a labor market holding momentum in May. ADP, released June 3, showed private employers added 122,000 jobs, beating forecasts and marking the strongest reading since January 2025. Hiring was broad-based, with eight of ten sectors adding jobs and gains across all establishment sizes. Education and health services led at 57,000, followed by trade, transportation, and utilities at 36,000. Small firms (1-49 employees) accounted for 67,000 of the total, while large employers (500+) added 40,000.
The official BLS report on June 5 largely confirmed that strength. Nonfarm payrolls rose 172,000, in line with April's upwardly revised 179,000, while the unemployment rate held at 4.3% and has stayed within a 4.3% to 4.5% range since July 2025. Job gains were led by leisure and hospitality (+70,000), local government (+55,000), and health care (+35,000). Financial activities lost 22,000 jobs and is down 107,000 since peaking in May 2025, while transportation and warehousing was roughly flat. March and April were revised up by a combined 93,000. Average hourly earnings rose 0.3% on the month and 3.4% year over year.
For CRE space demand, the makeup of the gains points in different directions by property type. Hospitality payrolls climbing well above trend support hotel operations and the food-service tenancy that anchors many retail centers, while continued health care hiring feeds medical office absorption. The weak spot is office: financial activities have now shed jobs for a full year, and that sector drives a disproportionate share of CBD leasing, so the data argue for continued caution on office tenant demand even as consumer- and health-driven sectors hold up. Industrial sits in between, with steady trade and transportation hiring offsetting a flat warehousing read. On the capital markets side, the firmer payrolls, upward revisions, and steady wage growth remove any near-term case for easing. A Fed hold is near-certain at the next meeting, but futures have shifted toward pricing a 25 basis point hike by year-end rather than a cut, and the 10-year Treasury rose to over 4.5% after the release. That keeps debt costs elevated and the financing math unchanged for owners facing refinancing or acquisition decisions in the back half of the year.

News
News to know
News to know
Median implied cap rate for US REITs ticks up in Q1 2026 | S&P Market Intelligence, June 1, 2026
The median implied capitalization rate for US equity real estate investment trusts rose 7 basis points sequentially to 7.7% in the first quarter. On a year-over-year basis, the median implied cap rate for the US REIT sector is down 19 bps, according to an analysis by S&P Global Market Intelligence. Cap rates for the sector rose significantly in 2022 and 2023 as the Federal Reserve's interest rate-hiking program raised concerns about the asset class. While the median implied cap rate for the US REIT sector has declined in many recent quarters, the figure remains elevated.
C-PACE lending expanding in size, scope as regulations adjust | Commercial Observer, June 2, 2026
Commercial Property Assessed Clean Energy (C-PACE) financing, structured as fixed-rate, 30-year loans secured by a property tax assessment rather than a first lien, has grown well beyond its early focus on sustainability upgrades into new construction, capital stack recapitalizations, and refinancing. Originations hit a record $2.42 billion in 2024, with 2025 preliminary data pointing to even higher volume given cumulative originations now exceeding $10 billion. Back-to-back record deals closed in late 2025 and early 2026, including a $465 million loan for an office-to-multifamily conversion in Washington, D.C. Retroactive C-PACE, now active in more than 25 states, has emerged as a recapitalization tool for completed projects, while New York City's program is broadening eligibility to cover gut rehabilitations, new construction, and adaptive reuse acquisition costs. Forty states and Washington, D.C., now have enabling legislation, with 32 active programs compared to six in 2015.
America's data center build-out is falling way behind schedule | Wall Street Journal, June 2, 2026
Google parent Alphabet announced an $80 billion equity raise to fund AI data center construction, including a $10 billion stake purchase by Berkshire Hathaway. Shares fell 3.9% on the news, with the company losing $340 billion in market value over three trading sessions. A JPMorgan analysis found that more than 60% of data center capacity planned for 2027 completion is not yet under construction, with another 7% delayed, citing supply chain backlogs, permitting hurdles, and power availability as primary constraints. To address grid interconnection bottlenecks, Google acquired wind and solar developer Intersect Power for $4.75 billion, making it the only major tech firm to own a power company. The company is also piloting demand-response programs with utilities and announced a three-year agreement with Voltus to help create up to 100 megawatts of capacity in PJM. Microsoft, Alphabet, Meta, and Amazon collectively spent $410 billion on capex last year and are expected to exceed $670 billion in 2026.
Can ultra-low-cost housing scale? | Urban Land Institute, June 2, 2026
ULI's Homeless to Housed Initiative is examining whether travel trailers, Park Model RVs, and tiny homes can serve as a scalable alternative to conventional affordable housing. New travel trailers run $25,000 to $60,000, Park Model RVs $80,000 to $85,000 fully furnished, and microhomes roughly $50,000, compared to approximately $350,000 per door in Austin. Community First! Village outside Austin has housed nearly 1,900 people using this model, with 45 similar communities nationally. The primary obstacles are regulatory: RVs are classified as vehicles rather than housing, making them ineligible for HUD housing vouchers without case-by-case waivers. Building codes, zoning restrictions, and infrastructure costs for utilities further limit deployment. The International Code Council is updating the International Residential Code to create a standalone tiny homes standard, though adoption would require state-by-state action.
Nearly a quarter of real estate investors surveyed by Knight Frank have or expect infrastructure exposure by year-end 2026, rising to over a third among larger investors by AUM. Energy security has moved from an operational consideration to a central investment thesis, with power availability and grid access increasingly defining asset competitiveness across logistics and data centers. Private unlisted infrastructure funds raised a record $289 billion globally in 2025, with renewable-focused funds representing 44 to 64 percent of sector-specific capital raised over five years. Among infrastructure-focused investors, 85 percent are also targeting data centers, reflecting the convergence of digital and energy infrastructure as an integrated real assets strategy.
Berkshire Hathaway's $6.8 billion acquisition of Taylor Morrison is the latest in a wave of consolidation among U.S. home builders, joining Japanese entrants Sumitomo Forestry (Tri Pointe Homes, $4.5 billion), Daiwa House subsidiaries Trumark and Stanley Martin, and an Iida Group affiliate that bought into Utah-based Wright Homes -- Japanese builders now collectively control an estimated 6% of U.S. single-family construction. The common thread is scale and innovation: modular construction accounts for 15% of new Japanese homes versus 3% in the U.S., and UBS estimates the shift could add roughly $6,175 in operating profit per home. With builders under margin pressure from mortgage-rate buydowns and Taylor Morrison trading at roughly 10 times forward earnings ahead of the deal, the acquisitions reflect both a valuation opportunity and a longer-term bet on construction productivity gains in a structurally undersupplied market.
H-1B crackdown on Indian workers erodes a Texas real estate boom | Bloomberg, June 3, 2026
A pullback in H-1B visa holders is deepening the housing downturn in the Dallas-Fort Worth suburbs, where South Asian buyers drove one of the largest US building booms of the pandemic era. Indian buyers once made up 70% of sales at Celina-based Tradition Homes but have fallen below 30% over the past year, leaving a backlog of 125 luxury homes under construction. Home prices in the Collin County suburbs north of Dallas dropped almost 9% year over year in February, more than double the 4% decline across the broader metro, per Redfin. The reversal reflects tighter federal and state visa rules, including new H-1B fees, higher salary thresholds, a Texas freeze on new state petitions, and an AG fraud probe, compounded by AI-driven tech layoffs. Builders such as Coventry Homes are relying on rate buydowns and upgrades to clear unsold inventory, while some owners face losses, forbearance, or foreclosure as they try to sell. The trend also raises concerns about the local tax base that funds schools and roads, and points to similar exposure in other visa-dependent tech markets like Northern Virginia, Raleigh, and Seattle.
Multifamily CMBS loan distress keeps rising | Bisnow, June 3, 2026
Multifamily loan distress continued climbing in the first quarter as oversupply, weak rent growth, and a higher-for-longer rate environment pressured borrowers. The share of multifamily CMBS loans 30 or more days delinquent rose 0.7 percentage points to 7.28%, according to a Mortgage Bankers Association report, while Fannie Mae loans 60 or more days delinquent edged up 4 basis points to 0.78%. Both rates have risen steadily since 2023. MBA's Judith Ricks tied the increase to economic and geopolitical uncertainty, including the Iran war, which has weakened a refinancing market that was more accommodative late last year. The Fed has held its benchmark rate flat across three consecutive meetings, with the 10-year Treasury peaking at 4.6% in May and sitting just under 4.5% as of early June. Ricks said MBA now expects rates to stay flat or possibly rise by year end, a sharp reversal from its early-2026 outlook, and projects 2026 origination volume to fall well below 2025 as refinancing remains constrained. Rent growth offers little offset, with U.S. apartment rents up just 0.7% year over year in May per Apartments.com. Ricks also flagged early signs of short-term delinquencies concentrated in 2023 and 2024 loan vintages as an area of emerging weakness.

INSIGHTS Spotlight
Catch the latest research and insights from Altus
Article | US CRE operating fundamentals hold steady to start 2026
Capital expenditure at the property level came in notably lighter than recent periods in Q1 2026.
Omar Eltorai and Cole Perry sat down with Altus Valuation Advisory experts Alexander Jaffe, MAI and Michael Amthor to dig into what's potentially behind the lighter CapEx, and a rundown of the Q1 2026 NCREIF ODCE results, sector by sector.
Where is sector-level divergence showing up? And where might patient, long-term capital find opportunity heading into 2026 and 2027?
Article | CRE debt markets entered a state of transition in Q1 2026
The broad-based improvement that defined CRE debt markets in 2025 gave way to a more divided market in Q1 2026.
Analysis by Omar Eltorai and Andrew Pabon indicates that floating and fixed-rate borrowers landed in very different places, and the gap between sectors widened.
Our Q1 2026 US Debt Capital Markets Survey captures 1,866 lending quotes from 110 CRE debt professionals. Read the full report - or sign up to participate in our Q2 survey.

Important dates
Upcoming data releases and events
Data releases (Times in EST)
Tuesday, June 9
6:00 AM: NFIB Optimism Index (May)
8:30 AM: U.S. Trade Balance (Apr)
10:00 AM: Existing Home Sales (May)
10:00 AM: Wholesale Inventories (Apr)
Wednesday, June 10
8:30 AM: Consumer Price Index (CPI) (May)
2:00 PM: Monthly U.S. Federal Budget (May)
Thursday, June 11
8:30 AM: Initial Jobless Claims (Jun 6)
8:30 AM: Producer Price Index (PPI) (May)
Friday, June 12
10:00 AM: Consumer Sentiment, Preliminary (Jun)
Upcoming Industry Events
June 8 – June 10: CREFC Annual Conference (New York, NY)
June 27 – June 30: BOMA International Conference & Expo (Long Beach, CA)
About our research team

Omar Eltorai
Senior Director of Research
Altus Group
Omar Eltorai is a Research Director at Altus Group. With more than a decade of experience in the industry in investment management and financing roles,
Omar's focus is on macro, capital and market trends affecting the US CRE market. Beyond regularly authoring articles and reports, his commentary and analysis has been featured in various media publications, including: Wall Street Journal, Globe Street, and Yahoo! Finance.

Cole Perry
Associate Director of Research
Altus Group
Cole Perry is a Associate Director of Research with Altus Group's Research team. In this role, Cole delivers key insights into macroeconomics, capital markets, and the broader commercial real estate sector.
Cole boasts a rich background in Commercial Real Estate analytics with previous roles at CompStak and Brixmor Property Group. He holds dual M.S. degrees from Columbia University in Urban Planning and Real Estate Development.
Disclaimer: The opinions expressed in this newsletter are solely those of the authors and are not endorsed by Altus Group Limited, its affiliates and its related entities (collectively “Altus Group”). This publication has been prepared for general guidance on matters of interest only and does not constitute professional advice or services of Altus Group. You should not act upon the information contained in this publication without obtaining specific professional advice. No representation or warranty (express or implied) is given as to the accuracy, completeness or reliability of the information contained in this publication, or the suitability of the information for a particular purpose. To the extent permitted by law, Altus Group does not accept or assume any liability, responsibility or duty of care for any consequences of you or anyone else acting, or refraining to act, in reliance on the information contained in this publication or for any decision based on it. The distribution of this publication to you does not create, extend or revive a client relationship between Altus Group and you or any other person or entity. This publication, or any part thereof, may not be reproduced or distributed in any form for any purpose without the express written consent of Altus Group.
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