As we reach the mid-year mark, commercial real estate is being defined by three converging forces: the operational maturation of the AI infrastructure boom, a decisive shift in North American trade logistics driven by nearshoring, and a higher-for-longer interest rate environment that has permanently altered debt capital markets. Here is what the data says.
This TenantBase commercial real estate market report analyzes the key forces shaping the industry in June 2026, with a spotlight on Phoenix, Arizona. The defining narrative of mid-year has shifted from anticipating rate relief to accepting a new structural reality: institutional capital is increasingly hyper-focused, deploying into niche industrial assets, water-conscious data centers, and border-adjacent logistics hubs, while simultaneously executing final unwinds of legacy office exposures.1,2,3
The macro tailwinds of AI infrastructure, nearshoring, and advanced manufacturing provide exceptional growth vectors — but they are highly localized. A $525 billion maturity wall, now fully in motion, is forcing resolution across the broader market and creating one of the most transparent underwriting environments since 2022. For submarket-level guidance on how these conditions are affecting tenant decisions in real time, TenantBase's market resources offer on-the-ground intelligence for occupiers across the country.9,10
While power availability remains a critical bottleneck, the conversation in Q2 2026 has expanded to include water usage, alternative asset institutionalization, and the reality of physical space repositioning. Developers and investors are navigating a market that rewards those who solved for the next constraint before it became consensus.1,2,3
The Water-Energy Nexus in Data Centers: With power constraints already priced into the market, developers are now tackling the secondary bottleneck: cooling. The transition from traditional air cooling to direct-to-chip liquid cooling is accelerating rapidly — not only does it enable the higher rack densities required by next-generation AI processors, but it dramatically reduces both Power Usage Effectiveness (PUE) and Water Usage Effectiveness (WUE) metrics that municipalities are now heavily scrutinizing before issuing permits. Developers who proactively secured water rights or integrated advanced sustainable cooling technology are holding the most valuable permitted sites in high-growth markets.1,7
Industrial Outdoor Storage (IOS) Goes Mainstream: Once considered a fragmented, mom-and-pop asset class, IOS has fully institutionalized. Supply chain realignments and strict zoning laws preventing new truck terminal developments have driven severe supply-demand imbalances across infill logistical corridors. In June 2026, prime IOS sites are commanding unprecedented rent premiums, with national aggregators successfully packaging regional portfolios into multi-billion dollar institutional vehicles — completing the asset class's transition from alternative to core.2
Office Repositioning Hits Critical Mass: The debate over structurally obsolete Class B and C office assets is translating into action. Driven by municipal tax incentives and relaxed zoning overlays implemented late last year, urban cores are seeing a surge in adaptive reuse. While office-to-residential remains the most common conversion, office-to-urban-logistics and office-to-edge-computing projects are proving financially viable in dense metros where land basis justifies the heavy capital expenditure — representing a new and durable repositioning playbook.3
As the July 1, 2026 USMCA six-year joint review looms, North American trade dynamics are heavily influencing CRE investment — particularly along the southern border and in major intermodal hubs. The stability of this agreement is the bedrock for the massive industrial developments underway in Laredo, El Paso, and San Diego, making the review the most consequential near-term policy event for logistics real estate.4,5
The July 2026 USMCA Joint Review: While full renegotiation is unlikely, technical adjustments regarding automotive rules of origin and labor dispute mechanisms are highly anticipated. CRE investors are watching closely, as any changes — or the uncertainty created by the review process itself — can materially affect leasing timelines in El Paso, Laredo, San Diego, Detroit, and Buffalo. Deals in border-adjacent submarkets are experiencing elongated due diligence periods as tenants await clarity before committing to long-term leases.4,5
Nearshoring Accelerates Border Demand: To bypass ongoing Section 122 tariffs and mitigate trans-Pacific shipping risks, multinational manufacturers have dramatically expanded their Mexican operations under the "China Plus One" strategy. This has created insatiable demand for cross-border logistics infrastructure on the U.S. side. Industrial vacancy rates in key Texas and Arizona border markets remain stubbornly below 3.5%, defying the broader national cooling trend and driving rent growth that has yet to show any sign of moderation.4,5
Election Year Capital Pauses: With the November 2026 midterm elections approaching, some institutional capital allocators are temporarily pausing discretionary deployment. Uncertainty regarding future corporate tax rates, depreciation schedules, and energy subsidies is creating a narrow window of reduced competition for well-capitalized private buyers ready to act on Q3 acquisitions — particularly in markets with strong industrial fundamentals where patient capital can access deals at improved pricing.4
Phoenix continues to dominate as a premier domestic case study of the infrastructure supercycle. Moving through Q2 2026, the Valley is buffering against broader national supply-driven vacancy pressures through sheer, massive-scale industrial absorption, while its data center and advanced manufacturing sectors redefine what a secondary market can attract.6,7,8
TSMC and the Silicon Desert Expansion: The advanced manufacturing sector continues to reshape the North Valley. With Phase 1 of the TSMC complex fully operational, Phase 2 construction is accelerating and generating immense downstream demand for specialized suppliers, component manufacturers, and edge computing operators. First-half 2026 industrial leasing activity has maintained its staggering pace, pushing year-over-year absorption figures well past historical averages. The semiconductor supply chain ecosystem taking root around the TSMC campus is becoming a durable demand driver for industrial product across the Greater Phoenix metro.6
Water-Conscious Data Center Mandates: As Phoenix scales toward a projected 3.75 gigawatts of data center capacity by 2031, municipal water conservation has become the critical gating item. New facilities are increasingly required to utilize closed-loop cooling systems that consume zero net water — a shift that is fundamentally restructuring site selection and pre-development timelines. Developers who proactively secured water rights or integrated advanced sustainable cooling technology in 2024 are now holding the most valuable permitted sites in the Southwest, commanding significant leasing premiums over competitors still navigating the permitting queue.7
Multifamily Stabilization: After a period of elevated vacancy driven by the record 2024–2025 supply deliveries, the Phoenix multifamily market has officially turned the corner. The massive influx of high-wage tech and manufacturing talent associated with TSMC and the broader semiconductor ecosystem has absorbed the excess inventory. As of June 2026, rent growth has returned to positive territory and concessions are rapidly burning off in prime submarkets like Chandler and Scottsdale — signaling the beginning of a new rent growth cycle for a market that was among the most oversupplied nationally just 18 months ago.8
The debt markets have accepted a new structural reality. The Federal Reserve's decision to hold rates steady into mid-2026 has finalized the transition away from zero-interest-rate policies, bringing permanent shifts to CRE financing. Alternative lenders and private credit funds have decisively filled the void left by regional banks, and the clearing of distressed inventory is now underway in earnest.9,10
| Capital Source | Status | Key Takeaway |
|---|---|---|
| Regional & Community Banks | Retreating | Pruning CRE exposure under regulatory pressure; forced to take losses on legacy office and multifamily positions9 |
| Private Credit / Debt Funds | Surging | Originating complex capital stacks including preferred equity and mezzanine; providing rescue capital for sponsors at maturity10 |
| CMBS / SASB (Top-Tier Assets) | Active | Top-tier logistics and grocery-anchored retail refinancing seamlessly, often oversubscribed; SASB issuance continues to lead9 |
| Distressed Office / Class B CMBS | Stress Peak | Class B office loans facing special servicing transfers and note sales; clearing prices finally established, activating opportunistic buyers9,10 |
Private Credit's Golden Age: Alternative lenders and private credit funds have decisively filled the void left by regional banks. In Q2 2026, private debt funds are originating complex, customized capital stacks — including preferred equity and mezzanine tranches — providing crucial rescue capital for sponsors facing maturity defaults on otherwise fundamentally sound assets. The structural retreat of banks from CRE has created a durable opportunity for alternative lenders that will persist well beyond the current maturity wave.10
Distressed Resolution Accelerates: Lenders are no longer extending and pretending. Regulatory pressure and reserve requirements have forced banks to take their losses, establishing clearing prices for distressed office and transitional assets for the first time since the pandemic disruption began. This is triggering a flurry of transaction activity for opportunistic funds sitting on record dry powder — and the CMBS refinancing squeeze is absolute, with a significant uptick in special servicing transfers for Class B office loans maturing this quarter.9,10
Looking toward the second half of 2026, success in commercial real estate will require surgical precision. The macro tailwinds of AI, nearshoring, and advanced manufacturing provide exceptional growth vectors — but they are highly localized, and the policy environment around the USMCA review and November elections introduces meaningful near-term volatility.
Where capital is flowing: Power- and water-secured data center sites remain the highest-conviction position in the market, joined by IOS portfolios in infill corridors, supply-constrained multifamily in undersupplied Midwest and coastal metros, grocery-anchored retail attracting safe-haven foreign capital, and Class A logistics in advanced manufacturing hubs like Phoenix, Columbus, and Indianapolis. Investors should monitor the outcomes of the July USMCA review closely and prioritize assets with robust power and water infrastructure as both resources become structural constraints for a growing list of asset types.1,2,4,7
The most transparent underwriting environment since 2022: For debt and equity players, the current climate — characterized by stabilized interest rates and accelerating distress resolution — offers the clearest pricing signals the market has produced in over four years. For well-capitalized sponsors with dry powder, Q3 and Q4 2026 are shaping up as one of the most attractive distressed-acquisition vintages of the post-GFC era. Brokers and tenants navigating this shifting landscape can explore current availabilities through TenantBase's platform, which tracks active requirements and off-market opportunities across all major U.S. markets.9,10
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