Five things happened in commercial real estate between May 18 and May 23 that don't just move the news cycle — they move the underwriting.
April CPI came in at 3.8%. PPI hit 6.0% against a 4.9% forecast — the highest in three years. Within 48 hours, Goldman pushed its first rate cut to December, Bank of America pushed theirs to 2027, and the Fed Funds futures market went from two cuts priced by September to zero for the year. The bridge-to-perm math on value-add apartments, select-service hotels, and suburban office just stopped working.
New York's $124.5 billion budget introduced something that has never existed in a U.S. city: a property tax based on who owns the building, not what it is. The number is real ($340–$500M annually), the legal challenges are coming, and Vancouver, London, and Paris have already shown how fast comparable cities copy this once it's on the books.
Private credit officially crossed 50% of non-agency CRE originations in Q1 — and the structure beneath that number has rewired which counterparty actually matters in a workout. The medical-office sector broke below a 7% cap rate for the first time since 2024, with a Markey-Warren-shaped time bomb the market is not pricing in. And Core Spaces just closed the largest pure-play student housing fund in history at $1.64B — 64% above target, with a structure that effectively monopolizes the next Power 5 supply cycle.
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