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CRE This Week - What's impacting the United States market?

Economic print

Altus Group

News

Altus Group

Important dates

Altus Group

Our team

Altus Group

Week of February 9, 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.

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Economic print


Macro economic factors impacting CRE

ISM Manufacturing Index


The Institute for Supply Management reported on February 2 that the Manufacturing PMI rose to 52.6 in January 2026, up from 47.9 in December, marking the first expansion in factory activity in a year. New orders jumped to 57.1, and production rose to 55.9, pointing to a meaningful pickup in demand and output. Employment remained in contraction at 48.1, while the Prices Index remained elevated at 59.0, signaling continued input cost pressures.


The January rebound in manufacturing primarily reflects conditions at U.S.-based, domestically operating manufacturers (including U.S. subsidiaries of multinationals), pointing to near-term support for industrial and logistics demand in U.S. markets tied to manufacturing, transportation equipment, machinery, and chemicals. However, with employment still contracting and firms citing tariff and policy uncertainty, the signal skews toward stabilization rather than broad expansion, favoring infill industrial, modern logistics space, and owner-user facilities over speculative new development.



Residential Vacancies and Homeownership Rate


The U.S. Census Bureau’s Residential Vacancies and Homeownership report for 4Q 2025, released February 3, 2026, points to broadly stable housing market conditions. The national rental vacancy rate registered at 7.2 percent, statistically unchanged from both the prior quarter and a year earlier. The homeowner vacancy rate was similarly flat at 1.2 percent, while the homeownership rate held steady at 65.7 percent, showing no meaningful quarter-over-quarter or year-over-year movement.




While near-term conditions have been stable, longer-run trends remain more relevant for underwriting. The rental vacancy rate has risen gradually from its 2022 low of 5.6 percent after falling sharply from post-GFC highs above 11 percent, reflecting the lagged impact of pandemic-era construction and elevated multifamily deliveries. The homeowner vacancy rate (much lower in absolute terms) has followed a similar upward path from a record low of 0.7 percent in 2023, though both metrics remain below their immediate pre-COVID levels. This points to easing supply pressure at the margin rather than a deterioration in demand, with vacancy normalization increasingly driven by new supply absorption rather than household formation weakness.


ADP Employment


The latest ADP National Employment Report showed US private-sector employment added just 22,000 jobs in January 2026, a significant slowdown from the revised 37,000 in December and well below most forecasts. The modest gain highlights weak hiring momentum, with notable job creation concentrated in education and health services, while sectors like manufacturing and professional/business services saw declines. Annual pay for job-stayers remained elevated, rising 4.5 % year-over-year, underscoring persistent wage strength even as hiring cools.




With the official government payrolls report postponed, the ADP data takes on extra weight for interpreting labor trends, and it suggests a softening labor market at the start of 2026. Sluggish private hiring could dampen consumer spending and confidence, influencing broader economic growth. For commercial real estate, slower job growth may translate into more cautious leasing activity, particularly in office and retail sectors where employment trends most directly affect demand. Sectors tied to health and education may show relative strength, but weakness in professional services and manufacturing signals uneven recovery. Additionally, if the delayed BLS report confirms softer job gains, it could bolster arguments for more accommodative monetary policy from the Federal Reserve.




Consumer Sentiment


The University of Michigan released the preliminary readout of its Consumer Sentiment Index for February 2026 on February 6. The headline index edged up to 57.3 from 56.4 in January, marking a third consecutive monthly increase. Even so, sentiment remains historically very low, hovering near levels typically associated with periods of economic stress rather than sustained expansion. The current conditions index improved modestly, while expectations softened. One-year inflation expectations declined to 3.5%, down from 4.0% in January, offering some near-term relief, while long-run inflation expectations ticked up to 3.4%.


Despite the modest improvement, sentiment at these levels suggests households remain highly cautious around discretionary spending, large purchases, and financial commitments. For the broader economy, this points to a consumer sector that is stabilizing but still fragile, with limited tolerance for negative shocks in employment or prices. For commercial real estate, historically depressed sentiment helps explain ongoing hesitation across consumer-facing sectors such as retail, hospitality, and experiential assets, where confidence often matters as much as income.

CRE This Week Economic Print

News


News to know



The housing market is swinging toward buyers | Wall Street Journal, February 2, 2026

The US housing market is increasingly shifting in buyers’ favor, with about 62 percent of homes in 2025 selling below their original listing price, the highest share since 2019, and average discounts reaching roughly 8 percent, according to data from Redfin. Elevated mortgage rates and high prices have sidelined many would-be buyers, leaving a record gap between sellers and buyers and giving those still active more leverage to negotiate price cuts and concessions. Buyer-friendly conditions are most pronounced in Southern markets such as Florida and Texas, where heavy new construction has boosted supply, while tighter markets like Newark and parts of California remain more competitive. Lower mortgage rates than a year ago and a recent uptick in existing home sales suggest modest momentum, but overall demand remains subdued as affordability constraints persist.




First US Bank failure of 2026 has ties to commercial real estate | Bisnow, February 3, 2026

Illinois regulators seized Metropolitan Capital Bank and Trust in Chicago, marking the first U.S. bank failure of 2026, with the FDIC transferring deposits and most assets to First Independence Bank. While no official cause has been cited, court records point to a problematic $4.5 million commercial real estate loan tied to a failed HUD-insured skilled nursing portfolio and a borrower later charged with running a Ponzi scheme. The loan was repeatedly modified without adequate collateral or due diligence, and the exposure was large relative to the bank’s balance sheet, underscoring how concentrated CRE risk can still pose problems for smaller banks.




Do more deportations mean lower housing costs? | Wall Street Journal, February 3, 2026

The Trump administration argues that stepped-up deportations are helping lower housing costs by reducing demand, but economists and housing analysts say the evidence is weak and that oversupply and slowing migration between states are far more important drivers of recent price and rent declines. While the Department of Homeland Security claims millions of immigrants have left the country, researchers note that rents were already falling in many targeted markets and estimate the direct savings from deportations at only a few dollars per month for renters. Surveys from John Burns Research and Consulting show immigration enforcement has instead made it harder for some owners to fill apartments, particularly in Sun Belt markets with excess supply. At the same time, deportations are tightening construction labor supply and raising costs, potentially slowing new housing delivery and undercutting affordability goals, even as the Department of Housing and Urban Development moves to more strictly verify tenant eligibility in federally subsidized housing.




The one big beautiful bill: Catalyst or constraint for CRE’s next cycle? | Commercial Property Executive, February 3, 2026

Seven months after passage, the One Big Beautiful Bill is beginning to influence commercial real estate activity, though more as a stabilizing tailwind than a full reset for the market. Expanded depreciation, bonus expensing, Opportunity Zone permanence, and other tax provisions have improved cash flow visibility and underwriting clarity, helping revive investor confidence and early-stage deal activity, according to industry participants cited by Commercial Property Executive. At the same time, elevated interest rates, tariff-driven construction costs, and broader macro volatility continue to constrain feasibility, keeping lenders cautious and many projects moving slowly. The result is a market defined by measured momentum rather than acceleration, where policy clarity is helping capital move off the sidelines, but fundamentals such as borrowing costs and construction pricing still determine which deals actually move forward.




US REITs net acquirers in 2025, buying over $32B in properties | S&P Global Market Intelligence, February 4, 2026

Publicly traded US REITs were net buyers in 2025, acquiring about $32.5 billion of properties while selling roughly $24.4 billion, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. Acquisition activity was concentrated in the fall and led by healthcare REIT Welltower, which accounted for nearly $9.8 billion of purchases, largely driven by large senior housing and skilled nursing portfolios. Other active buyers included W. P. Carey and Terreno Realty, reflecting continued interest in net lease and industrial assets. On the disposition side, sales volumes rose sharply year over year, led by Sun Communities and multifamily focused REITs such as Aimco and Elme Communities, highlighting a market where public REITs are selectively recycling capital while leaning back into acquisitions.




Macro signals, micro shifts: Linneman’s 2026 economic outlook | Institutional Real Estate Inc, February 5, 2026

At a recent Walker & Dunlop webcast hosted by Institutional Real Estate, Peter Linneman predicted a measured but constructive outlook for 2026: in his view, the U.S. economy is slowing but not headed for recession, inflation is effectively back near long-run norms once shelter distortions are stripped out, and the Fed is likely to deliver 75–100 bps of rate cuts later this year. Linneman’s outlook for commercial real estate is that today’s stress is primarily supply-driven rather than demand-driven, helping explain why asset values remain well below pre-pandemic peaks despite resilient macro conditions. He expects gradual rebalancing across sectors as new construction falls, with improving prospects in retail and select office markets, continued overbuilding challenges in multifamily, and steady but unspectacular industrial performance. His bottom line: disciplined underwriting, patience, and a sharp focus on supply dynamics and fundamentals rather than betting on a broad, rapid rebound.




From warehouses to apartments, CRE stress spreads to new sectors | GlobeSt, February 6, 2026

Commercial real estate stress is no longer confined to office, with industrial and multifamily increasingly under pressure as higher rates, rising costs, softening demand, and excess supply weigh on performance heading into 2026. Analysts at Fitch Ratings expect CMBS performance to continue deteriorating as office delinquencies peak and strain spreads to other sectors. Industrial is showing early cracks as post-pandemic overbuilding meets weaker logistics demand, while multifamily faces oversupply in parts of the Sun Belt and West after years of record construction. Office remains challenged by stagnant rents and high renovation costs, and some warn hotels could be next if consumer finances weaken. Lenders are responding by demanding capital, transparency, and value-add solutions rather than simple loan extensions, according to GlobeSt.


CRE This Week Market Research

INSIGHTS Spotlight


Catch the latest research and insights from Altus



Podcast | Why 2026 could be a surprisingly strong year for CRE credit

What happens when a cooling labor market, easing financing conditions, and renewed activity on housing policy all converge at once? This week on CRE Exchange, Omar Eltorai and Cole Perry discuss how these forces are shaping the early narrative for the 2026 commercial real estate market.



Article | What CREFC Miami revealed about CRE debt markets in 2026

The CRE Finance Council's annual conference kicked off earlier this month in Miami Beach, bringing together lenders, credit investors, and service providers across the CRE debt ecosystem. Our research team was there to take a pulse check on the market, and the sentiment was more optimistic than a year ago.

Check out our takeaways from the event.



CRE This Week Upcoming

Important dates


Upcoming data releases and events

Data releases (Times in EST)


Monday, February 9

  • 8:00 AM: Curbline Properties Corp. [NYSE:CURB]


Tuesday, February 10

  • 10:00 AM: Brixmor Property Group Inc. [NYSE:BRX]

  • 10:00 AM: Vornado Realty Trust [NYSE:VNO]

  • 12:00 PM: UDR, Inc. [NYSE:UDR]

  • 1:00 PM: Kilroy Realty Corporation [NYSE:KRC]


Wednesday, February 11

  • 8:30 AM: Urban Edge Properties [NYSE:UE]

  • 9:00 AM: Agree Realty Corporation [NYSE:ADC]

  • 9:00 AM: Welltower Inc. [NYSE:WELL]

  • 10:00 AM: InvenTrust Properties Corp. [NYSE:IVT]

  • 10:30 AM: NNN REIT, Inc. [NYSE:NNN]

  • 11:00 AM: Highwoods Properties, Inc. [NYSE:HIW]

  • 11:00 AM: Acadia Realty Trust [NYSE:AKR]

  • 11:00 AM: NETSTREIT Corp. [NYSE:NTST]

  • 12:00 PM: W. P. Carey Inc. [NYSE:WPC]

  • 2:00 PM: Douglas Emmett, Inc. [NYSE:DEI]


Thursday, February 12

  • 8:30 AM: Kimco Realty Corporation [NYSE:KIM]

  • 8:30 AM: Getty Realty Corp. [NYSE:GTY]

  • 8:30 AM: LXP Industrial Trust [NYSE:LXP]

  • 8:30 AM: Iron Mountain Incorporated [NYSE:IRM]

  • 9:00 AM: Piedmont Realty Trust, Inc. [NYSE:PDM]

  • 9:00 AM: Independence Realty Trust, Inc. [NYSE:IRT]

  • 9:00 AM: Safehold Inc. [NYSE:SAFE]

  • 10:00 AM: Essential Properties Realty Trust, Inc. [NYSE:EPRT]

  • 10:00 AM: STAG Industrial, Inc. [NYSE:STAG]

  • 12:00 PM: Four Corners Property Trust, Inc. [NYSE:FCPT]

  • 5:00 PM: Federal Realty Investment Trust [NYSE:FRT]


Friday, February 13

  • 9:00 AM: Healthcare Realty Trust Incorporated [NYSE:HR]

  • 12:00 PM: Public Storage [NYSE:PSA]

  • 1:00 PM: CareTrust REIT, Inc. [NYSE:CTRE]

  • 2:00 PM: Sabra Health Care REIT, Inc. [NASDAQ:SBRA]

Upcoming industry events


  • February 8-11: MBA Commercial Finance Convention (San Diego, CA)

  • February 11-13: AFIRE Winter Conference (Washington, DC)

  • February 25-28: CORFAC Spring Conference (New Orleans, LA)


About our research team

People - Omar Eltorai's Profile
Omar Eltorai

Senior Director of Research

Altus Group

Altus Research

CRE Exchange Podcast

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.

Contact us
Cole Perry's Profile
Cole Perry

Associate Director of Research

Altus Group

Altus Research

CRE Exchange Podcast

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.

Contact us

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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