Premium U.S. Properties Surge While Smaller Assets Struggle: Inside the New Two-Tier CRE Market

High-rise building construction crane

The U.S. commercial real estate landscape is entering a dramatic new phase—one where high-value, premium properties are steadily rising, while smaller assets in secondary markets are confronting stronger headwinds. Fresh numbers from the CoStar Commercial Repeat Sale Indices (CCRSI) reveal a market split in two, forming what analysts now call a two-tier commercial recovery.

Institutional investors continue to target major office towers, large-scale industrial sites and substantial retail centers, pushing top-tier properties to their sixth consecutive month of price increases with a 0.4% jump in November. Meanwhile, small investors and independent property owners are navigating falling valuations and softer demand in lower-tier markets.

This upward trend in premium assets is supported by the latest CoStar CCRSI monthly report, one of the industry’s most trusted repeat-sale indicators.

A Market Defined by Divide

The widening contrast between asset classes is largely due to the most constrained construction environment in over a decade. CoStar reports that commercial development has slowed to its lowest level since 2013, tightening supply even as demand softens. Forecasts indicate a net loss of 100 million square feet in occupied space for 2025—marking the toughest decline since the Great Recession.

The value-weighted U.S. Composite Index, which captures high-value trades, rose 1.1% this quarter. Meanwhile, the equal-weighted index—used to track smaller deals—fell 0.9% in November, underscoring the sharp divide in market performance.

Lower Rates Fuel Premium Sales

Interest rate cuts are reshaping investor behavior. With the U.S. Federal Reserve reducing rates three times since September, borrowing is now at its most affordable level in years. This shift particularly benefits institutional buyers who act quickly when financing conditions improve.

Total sales volume for November was up more than 10% year over year,” said Chad Littell, CoStar’s national director of U.S. capital markets analytics. “We expect even more deals to surface by late December, with the full picture emerging in January.”

Construction Slowdown and Space Givebacks

For the first time since 2013, new property openings in Q4 have fallen below 100 million square feet. Looking ahead, completions across office, retail and industrial sectors are projected to decline 34.2% in 2025—dropping to 486.3 million square feet.

Net absorption is also expected to shrink by 100 million square feet next year, marking the most significant setback since 2009. Still, gradual demand improvements through late 2024 suggest that recovery could eventually extend beyond premium assets.

This month’s CCRSI findings were drawn from 1,049 repeat-sale pairs in November and a dataset of more than 335,000 tracked sales since 1996—one of the richest in the commercial real estate world.

What This Means for Real Estate Professionals

For real estate agents, investors and professionals entering the industry, these changes highlight the importance of understanding market cycles, capital flows and asset-tier performance. Premium properties might be gaining momentum, but transitional markets often hold the greatest long-term opportunity.

If you’re pursuing real estate licensing, continuing education or expanding your investment knowledge, platforms like Cameron Academy offer modern, flexible pathways to stay ahead of the industry. With commercial real estate shifting rapidly, staying informed isn’t just beneficial—it’s essential.

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