Tag: Commercial Real Estate
-
The Fed’s December Cut: Implications Across the Wide Span of Our Markets
The Federal Reserve’s latest rate cut has become one of the most closely watched developments in the financial markets, and its implications for real estate are already driving significant conversation across the industry. In this edition of Daniel Kaufman Real Estate News, we break down what the Fed’s December action means for investors, developers, lenders,…
-
Netflix’s Warner Bros. Buyout Could Reshape Hollywood’s Property Market
Real estate developer Daniel Kaufman examines Netflix’s potential Warner Bros. buyout and its impact on entertainment property markets. The merger would give Netflix control of more than 100M square feet of studio and office space, signaling a major shift in Hollywood’s ownership structure and production real estate strategy.
-
The Office Market’s Uneven Recovery — and Where Kaufman Development Sees Opportunity
Real estate developer Daniel Kaufman analyzes the uneven recovery of the U.S. office market, highlighting rising vacancies, distressed assets, and emerging opportunities in adaptive reuse, conversions, and prime Class-A workspace. Learn where Kaufman Development and Kaufman Real Estate are targeting high-value investments in the next office cycle.
-
Government Shutdown Hits Real Estate Hard
In this analysis, real estate developer Daniel Kaufman examines how the ongoing U.S. government shutdown—now the longest in history—is disrupting key areas of the real estate market. From halted HUD funding that’s stalling housing projects to frozen GSA leasing and a sharp slowdown in hospitality, Kaufman outlines how federal inaction is rippling across development, capital…
-
The Government Shutdown Is Quietly Becoming a Multifamily Crisis
Real estate developer Daniel Kaufman analyzes how the prolonged U.S. government shutdown is evolving into a multifamily housing crisis. In this in-depth article on Daniel Kaufman Real Estate, he explains how HUD delays, stalled inspections, and frozen funding are disrupting affordable housing pipelines, jeopardizing LIHTC closings, and creating systemic risks for landlords and tenants alike.…
-
Gen Z Cities 2025: Where the Next Generation Is Choosing to Live and Work
As developers and investors, we spend a lot of time studying demand—where it’s forming, what it values, and how it’s evolving. In 2025, no demographic is shaping the housing and employment landscape more than Generation Z. Born between 1997 and 2012, they’re now entering their peak renting, working, and forming-households years. And they’re not moving…
-
The Housing Market Is Cooling Fast. Are You Ready?
The U.S. housing market is entering a new phase — one defined by slowing momentum, shifting leverage, and sharper divides between markets, product types, and buyer profiles. After years of surging prices, fierce competition, and supply shortages, the balance is tilting. Builders, investors, and developers who adapt fastest will find opportunity. Those who don’t may…
-
What Starbucks Closures Reveal About Neighborhood Health and Home Values
Starbucks has long been more than a coffee shop. It’s been a signal — a shorthand for convenience, affluence, and upward mobility. So when the company announces plans to shut down hundreds of stores across the U.S., it’s not just a business story. It’s a real estate story. And like it or not, no neighborhood…
-
Beverly Hills’ $10 Billion Bet: One Beverly Hills Redefines Ultra-Luxury Living
Beverly Hills is no stranger to opulence. But even by California’s gold-plated standards, the city is about to test the upper limits of luxury with a $10 billion mega-development that’s reshaping its skyline and retail corridor. Welcome to One Beverly Hills — a 17.5-acre transformation at the gateway to Rodeo Drive. This is more than…
-
Falling Mortgage Rates Could Unlock These 10 Housing Markets
Mortgage rates have been steadily trending lower over the last month, and the expectation is that they’ll hover in the low-6% range through the end of 2025. For buyers who have been sitting on the sidelines, that shift is meaningful. Lower rates open the door to more affordability, more options, and in some markets, a…
