September 2025 Fed Rate Decision and Office Market Analysis
The Federal Reserve cut the benchmark Federal Funds rate by 25 basis points at its September meeting, with just one official dissenting in favor of a larger 50-basis-point cut. This decision has important implications for Fort Worth commercial real estate financing and investment activity.
Fed Economic Projections
The Fed's latest Summary of Economic Projections shows:
**2025 Federal Funds rate forecast**: Lowered 30 basis points**2026 Federal Funds rate forecast**: Lowered 20 basis points**2026 PCE inflation projection**: Raised to 2.6% (from 2.4%)**2025 growth forecast**: Revised up to 1.6% (from 1.4%)**2026 growth forecast**: Upgraded to 1.8% (from 1.6%)The increasingly dovish outlook for rate cuts is a welcome sign for developers and builders. However, there is increasing dispersion in the 2026 interest-rate projections made by FOMC members.
Office Leasing Trends Show Strength
According to Commercial Café, the national office vacancy rate improved to 18.7% in August—down 80 basis points year-over-year. Class A and amenity-rich properties continue to drive lease demand in top urban cores.
Top Markets for Vacancy Improvement:
**Houston**: Steepest decline (down 410 bps to 20.2%)**Manhattan**: Highest utilization in five years (down 300 bps to 13.6%)Challenging Markets:
**San Diego**: Vacancy climbed 350 bps to 22.6%**Washington, D.C.**: Up 260 bps due to federal workforce reductionsNationwide construction activity remains sluggish with only 10.7 million square feet of new office projects.
Real Estate Roundtable Sentiment Index
The Q3 2025 Real Estate Roundtable Sentiment Index rose 13 points to 76—signaling stronger outlook for:
Operating conditionsAsset valuesAccess to capitalKey findings:
73% of respondents expect market conditions to improveOnly 10% say conditions have worsened compared to one year ago59% expect improvement in valuations over next yearDebt capital availability has reboundedSector Standouts:
MultifamilyData centersManhattan officeThe industrial sector is viewed as operating within an oversupply cycle.
Homebuilder Sentiment
The NAHB-Wells Fargo Housing Market Index remained at 32 in September, reflecting persistently weak builder sentiment:
High mortgage rates and elevated construction costs continue to weigh on marketCurrent sales conditions for single-family homes remained static**39% of builders reported cutting prices** (highest since post-pandemic)Average discount of 5%However, six-month expectations improved to their strongest reading since March.
National Apartment Rent Collections
According to the latest Chandan Economics-RentRedi Report:
On-time rent payments jumped 58 bps to 83.1% in SeptemberAugust's on-time rate revised down to 82.6%On-time payments remain down 227 bps year-over-yearLate payments driving underperformance in mom-and-pop sectorBy Property Type:
2-4 unit rentals: 83.7% (highest)Single-family rentals: 83.3%Multifamily: 81.7%Western states continue to hold highest on-time payment rates.
Bond Yield Volatility and Property Returns
According to Oxford Economics:
Bond yield swings driving most acute changes in property returnsMost apparent in CRE markets with low cap ratesTreasury yields have seen increased volatility amid policy uncertaintyImpact Analysis:
1% GDP contraction leads to 1.4-2% decline in capital returns1% consumer price increase results in 0.3-1.8% return decreaseRetail values highly sensitive to interest rate fluctuationsIndustrial assets react more to direct demand contractionsResidential shows less exposure to bond market swingsSan Francisco highlighted as example where yield changes compress spreads, amplifying price movements.
Transaction Volume Rebounds
According to Altus Group:
Aggregate CRE transaction volume totaled $115 billion in Q2 20253.8% increase from one year before**Multifamily transactions**: +39.5%**Office transactions**: +11.8%Price Trends:
Median price per square foot rose 5.0% from Q1 and 13.9% YoYMost coastal metros outperformed national trends (except NY and SF)Top Performing Subsectors:
Automotive: +25.4%Limited-service hotels: +17.2%Medical offices: +15.1%CMBS Delinquencies
According to Trepp, CMBS delinquencies rose in August:
Overall delinquency rate: 7.29% (sixth consecutive monthly increase)**Multifamily**: 6.86% (nine-year high)**Office**: 11.6% (all-time high)**Retail**: 6.42% (lowest in past year, down 48 bps)**Industrial**: 0.6% (lowest of major property types)Seriously delinquent loans (60+ days, foreclosure, REO) at 6.88%.
Fort Worth Market Outlook
The September rate cut creates favorable conditions for Fort Worth CRE:
Office Market:
Vacancy improvement trend in major markets signals recoveryFlight-to-quality benefiting Class A propertiesLimited new construction supporting landlord leverageInvestment Activity:
Transaction volume rebounding across property typesMultifamily leading volume increasesMedical office showing stabilityFinancing Environment:
Lower rates improving acquisition underwritingConstruction financing costs decliningRefinancing options improvingStrategic Recommendations
For Fort Worth commercial real estate participants:
**Office investors**: Target quality assets in strong submarkets**Multifamily**: Consider acquisitions as transaction volume recovers**Industrial**: Wait for supply-demand rebalancing**Retail**: Focus on grocery-anchored and experiential concepts**Development**: Advance projects as financing conditions improveContact SVN Trinity Advisors for Fort Worth commercial real estate expertise and transaction guidance.