The economic outlook for Greater Washington continues to show a region locked in stasis by a chilled commercial real estate market.
At the same time, a handful of data points offer a glimpse of hope for the near future.
That’s the latest finding from CBRE’s REVIVE Regional Vibrancy Index charting the D.C. area’s economic strengths and weaknesses in the wake of a pandemic that changed the core of how the region operates, from the shift to hybrid work to the evolution in how people get around.
CBRE (NYSE: CBRE) and the Washington Business Journal are partnering to produce the monthly index, tracking changes throughout 2024. The index in May fell 1.3% from the previous month to 65.5 out of 100. The data lags by about a month.
The most recent index, however, sits 12.2% below where it was a year ago in May 2023.
Like in April, the score continues to be weighed down by a growing intensity of distress in the region’s commercial real estate markets, which face higher interest rates and softer demand. Valuations of commercial space, especially downtown offices, have also fallen dramatically, leading to fewer transactions. Office foreclosures in the first half of 2024 have already exceeded the total number recorded in 2023, CBRE reported, fueled primarily by rising vacancy and upcoming debt maturities.
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