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Morgan Stanley says commercial real estate will crash harder than during the Great Financial Crisis. Here’s how 5 other top institutions see it playing out

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The big banks, research, and advisory firms are chiming in on the state of the commercial real estate sector, with forecasts and assessments ranging from a price decline “worse than in the Great Financial Crisis” to challenges that are “manageable,” amid high interest rates and tightened credit that’s both pushed the cost of borrowing up and seen defaults rise.

There seems to be a consensus that the office sector is most at risk, given the widespread shift to working from home that emerged from the pandemic, which has largely impacted demand. However, how that will affect the overall market, depends on whom you ask.

To better understand what might come next for commercial real estate, let’s take a look at recent papers published by Capital Economics, PwC, Morgan Stanley, Bank of America, UBS, and Goldman Sachs.

Capital Economics says that office values are unlikely to recover by 2040 

In a report by Kiran Raichura, Capital Economics’ deputy chief property economist, he likens the beleaguered office sector to malls, which he says have seen no real recovery. Both sectors lack demand, and in the case of offices, it’s because of the shift to working from home.

The research firm suggests that the “35% plunge in office values we’re forecasting by end-2025 is unlikely to be recovered even by 2040,” which means that office values probably won’t regain their pre-pandemic peaks in the next 17 years.

The firm’s reasoning? Office key-card swipes are down to 50% of pre-pandemic levels (which were already at 70% to 75%). That low utilization is pushing companies to reduce their physical space, equating to a higher vacancy rate of 19% in the first quarter of this year versus 16.8% in the last quarter of 2019. Still, Raichura says, the true increase is roughly double when taking sublease vacancy into account. Therefore, office vacancy has already seen a bigger increase than that of malls between 2016 and 2023.

Additionally, major landlords are already returning their stranded office assets to lenders, which will likely increase following an uptick in commercial mortgage backed securities delinquencies seen in May, according to the firm. All the while, real estate investment trust investors are “shying away from office.” After more than three years into the downturn, the office REIT total returns index is down more than 50% relative to the all-equity REIT index, similar to the drop in the regional mall REIT total returns index in the beginning years of the retail sector’s correction, Capital Economics points out.

This is all to say that the road ahead for office owners is “set to be an arduous one,” as Raichura put it, without addressing the overall state of commercial real estate.