Intelligent Investment

Private Investors Dominating Office Activity Since 2020

Chart of the Week

February 26, 2025 2 Minute Read

Chart of the Week

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Accompanying the recent decline in office investment activity has been a change in the profiles of those trading. The chart below tells the story.

Comparing investment sales from 2003 to 2019 and from 2020 to February 2025 shows that private buyers (Developers/Owner/Operators, high-net-worth individuals and non-traded REITs) have dominated activity in recent years. For example, deals in which a private buyer bought assets from a private seller have accounted for 26% of total volume since 2020, up from 14%, in the 2003-2019 period. Conversely, institutional investors (banks, endowments, equity funds, insurance companies, investment managers, pensions, and sovereign wealth funds) have become decidedly less active. Institution to institution trades accounted for just 8% of total sales volume since 2020, about half the level from 2003 to 2019.

This trend may be driven, in part, by an inherent risk aversion among institutional investors, which shy away from properties that can often offer yields that rival junk bonds. The operational and construction expertise of many private investors also makes them advantaged buyers at a time when so many office properties need upgrades and repositioning.

Figure 1: Top 10 Unique Office Buyer & Seller Type Combinations by Period

Chart showing top 10 commercial real estate transaction types between 2003-2019 and 2020-2025. Data includes private, institutional, and public sales.

Source: CBRE Econometric Advisors, MSCI Real Capital Analytics.

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