The Coldwell Banker Commercial® brand(CBC) is a worldwide leader in the commercial real estate industry, and is part of the oldest and most respected national real estate brand in the country, Coldwell Banker Real Estate. Coldwell Banker Commercial is an Anywhere (NYSE: HOUS) brand, a global leader in real estate franchising and provider of real estate brokerage, relocation and settlement services.
Student housing demand remains strong heading into 2026, but slowing rent growth and widening market divergence signal a shift toward disciplined underwriting and operational excellence. As supply pressures and localized performance trends reshape the sector, top operators are differentiating through student‑focused experiences, university partnerships, and data‑driven management strategies.
U.S. shopping malls are making a comeback in 2026 as Gen Z drives foot traffic and experience‑driven retail reshapes the industry. From mixed‑use developments to immersive entertainment and social spaces, successful malls are evolving into lifestyle destinations that blend retail, dining, and community engagement, while lower‑tier properties continue to lag.
Artificial intelligence is reshaping data center real estate, driving massive investment while changing how these assets are developed, financed, and leased. Coldwell Banker Commercial explores how rising predevelopment capital requirements, shorter AI‑driven lease terms, and unprecedented commitments from major technology firms are redefining data center underwriting and the future of digital infrastructure in commercial real estate.
Corporate facility investment trends reveal where commercial real estate demand is headed next, as companies commit capital to manufacturing plants, logistics hubs, data centers, and corporate campuses. By analyzing Site Selection’s Governor’s Cup data, Coldwell Banker Commercial dives into how Sunbelt growth markets, infrastructure‑rich legacy metros, and supply‑chain‑driven manufacturing investments are shaping future industrial and office real estate demand.
Tenants are factoring capital stability into office leasing decisions as refinancing risk, distressed assets, and uneven reinvestment reshape the office market. Coldwell Banker Commercial explores why a landlord’s financial strength and long-term investment capacity are now as critical as location, rent, and amenities when evaluating office space.
Coldwell Banker Commercial Affiliates announces the launch of Coldwell Banker Commercial Morgan Properties in Bloomingdale, Georgia, led by top-producing broker Kim Iler Morgan, who brings 20 years of experience and deep regional leadership to the Savannah market. This announcement highlights continued commercial growth in coastal Georgia, the strength of the Coldwell Banker Commercial network, and how Morgan’s new affiliate office is positioned to serve investors, developers, and business owners amid sustained economic expansion.
CBC explores the resurgence of coworking in the U.S., highlighting how flexible workspace has evolved into a core component of modern corporate real estate strategy amid hybrid work and shifting office demand. It explains why “Coworking 2.0”—defined by corporate adoption, sustainable operator models, and new partnership opportunities for landlords—is becoming a permanent and growing layer of today’s office market.
A shifting U.S. population trend is reshaping commercial real estate strategy, as the once‑dominant Sun Belt migration surge normalizes and growth disperses across a wider set of markets. By analyzing new Census data, moving patterns, and sector‑specific implications, Coldwell Banker Commercial explains why CRE investors must look beyond headline migration stories and focus on long‑term economic durability, job creation, and the evolving definition of a “growth market.”
Coldwell Banker Commercial reviews early signals suggesting the commercial real estate market may be entering a new phase, highlighting a sharp rebound in the LightBox CRE Activity Index, rising listings, stronger underwriting activity, and stabilizing lending conditions. By examining pricing data, sector‑level performance, and shifting investor participation, the piece explains how transaction momentum is gradually rebuilding—and why the next stage of the CRE cycle is likely to be more selective, fundamentals‑driven, and uneven across property types and markets.
Coldwell Banker Commercial explores why institutional capital is returning to private real estate with renewed selectivity and how net lease has emerged as a top target for investors seeking durable income, inflation‑protected cash flow and credit‑backed stability. It breaks down the structural tailwinds—from onshoring to sale‑leaseback demand—driving institutional interest in net lease, and explains why this asset class offers a compelling intersection of private credit and hard‑asset value in today’s more discerning real estate cycle.