The Investor's Dilemma
Birdbath vs. Car Wash
In 2025, commercial real estate investors are navigating a complex market. The choice is no longer just about high-risk growth ("Car Wash") versus low-risk stability ("Birdbath"). It's about finding the strategic sweet spot in between.
Investor Sentiment is Cautiously Optimistic
70%
of investors plan to acquire more assets in 2025 than in the previous year, signaling a rebound in market activity.
The Spectrum of Strategy
From stable income to aggressive growth, every investment strategy has a distinct risk-return profile.
Core (The Birdbath)
Low Risk | 4-10% Return
Stabilized, fully-leased assets in prime markets. The focus is on predictable cash flow and capital preservation.
Core-Plus
Low-Mod Risk | 6-12% Return
Mostly stable properties that require minor improvements, offering a blend of income and modest capital growth.
Value-Add
Mod-High Risk | 10-17%+ Return
Requires significant renovations or operational fixes to increase value, often targeting underperforming assets.
Opportunistic (Car Wash)
High Risk | 15-25%+ Return
Ground-up development or repositioning of distressed assets. High potential rewards for high risk tolerance.
Key Market Drivers Shaping Decisions
The Great Office Divide
The office market has split. While new Class A buildings remain stable, older assets are struggling, creating a pipeline of "Car Wash" opportunities for investors willing to undertake major repositioning or adaptive reuse projects.
The Interest Rate Squeeze
Elevated interest rates are fundamentally altering CRE economics, making refinancing difficult and pushing weaker assets into distress. This pressure creates opportunities for well-capitalized buyers.
Past Rates
<5%
Current Rates
~7.75%
Typical CRE loan rates, past vs. present.
Where is Capital Flowing in 2025?
Investors Seek the "Sweet Spot"
The majority of investors are not flocking to pure safety or pure risk. They are targeting "Birdbath-Plus" strategies that balance enhanced returns with manageable risk.
Top Targeted Asset Classes
Assets with strong fundamental demand, like Multifamily and Industrial, remain top choices. Retail has seen a resurgence due to low vacancy and strong tenant demand.