Professional Experience
Paul Morassutti is Chairman of CBRE Limited and previously lead CBRE’s Valuation and Advisory team in Canada. Paul has a wide ranging background encompassing all facets of Institutional real estate and land development. He is also a member of CBRE’s Executive Management Committee and Canadian Executive Council.
Paul has authored numerous articles and has appeared in and on BNN, Bloomberg News, the CBC, The Globe & Mail, The Economist and the National Post among others. He is a frequent guest speaker at commercial real estate conferences and events and has developed and presented multi-day, in-house valuation training for groups such as Realpac, NAIOP, the Appraisal Institute of Canada and Brookfield Financial.
Paul is a member of the Royal Institute of Chartered Surveyors and previously sat on the Advisory Board for the Schulich School of Business MBA Program in Real Estate and Infrastructure. He is also a past Director of Artscape where he chaired the Project Development committee.
Advantage Insights
- Article
CBRE Outlook: Setting The Stage For a Real Estate Recovery in 2024
February 28, 2024 4 Minute Read
CBRE’s new Canada Real Estate Market Outlook forecasts that commercial real estate investment activity will recover in 2024 as credit conditions return to normal.
- Article
Toronto’s Rising Office Vacancy Masks Progress Made in Other Canadian Markets
January 16, 2024 5 Minute Read
CBRE’s new Q4 2O23 Office and Industrial Figures reports detail the state of Canadian commercial real estate markets.
- Article
Real Estate Owners Drag Heels On Decarbonization ‘At Their Peril’
May 23, 2023 6 Minute Read
Real estate owners who fail to take ESG seriously and don’t have a robust ESG reporting system in place are “quickly becoming dinosaurs,”
- Article
Liquidation Underway, But No Need For Meltdown Over Nordstrom’s Departure
March 30, 2023 4 Minute Read
The closure of Nordstrom’s Canadian operations has raised questions about the future of retail. CBRE’s experts explain why there’s no need to panic.