Latest news
Latest news
◆ Data centres: crunch time for Europe's capital markets ◆ How AI is changing capital markets work... ◆ ... and hiring
Single asset, single borrower deals drove the US CMBS market in 2025, particularly on New York City collateral as office attendance rose. With interest rates predicted to fall further in 2026, market participants are looking forward to a greater variety of deals on commercial real estate from other cities and sectors, writes Pooja Sarkar
The conditions are set so that 2026 promises to be even better than the already impressive 2025. A deepening of esoteric asset classes, combined with entirely new deal types, as well as more debut issuers are set to be the key themes, writes Tom Hall
More articles
-
Luxury retail park in Los Angeles still forced to go down pre-placed route
-
Spiking interest rates and shrinking demand are testing the long term health of the office sector
-
AI, 5G and IoT are driving strong demand for data centers
-
Price guidance is tighter across the stack compared to a similar transaction from April
-
Deals with shorter-term loans have become more popular as borrowing costs remain elevated
-
Rebound in activity might be short-lived as fundamentals remain weak
-
Under the current proposal, healthy risk mitigating strategies such as banks' credit transfer programs and interest rate hedging could be prohibited
-
Staff are particularly interested in language that would narrow the broad 'catchall' provision, according to Mayer Brown
-
◆ Another blow for London listings ◆ Cold property: US offices worry CMBS ◆ AT1 market revival ◆ SLLs vanishing