L.A.'s office market takes a hit amid trade wars, fires and economic uncertainty

L.A.'s office market takes a hit amid trade wars, fires and economic uncertainty

Tenants hunting for office space in the Los Angeles area are in the driver's seat as vacancies plague many landlords trying to fill their buildings with people.

The greater Los Angeles office rental market started the year with a turbulent first quarter and historically high vacancies as tenant demand was persistently soft in spite of more robust return-to-office policies coming from managers.

A notable exception was Century City, which is experiencing tight occupancy and some of the highest rents in the West.

Countywide, though, overall office vacancy reached a new high of 24.2%, real estate brokerage CBRE said. When "shadow" office space that is leased but not occupied is considered, overall availability is more than 29% — about triple what is considered a healthy market balance between landlord and tenant interests.

Real estate experts hoped for better at the end of 2024 as the leasing market that had been lagging since the COVID-19 pandemic began showed signs of recovery, including more companies calling for workers to return to their desks. Then came the devastating wildfires and economic uncertainty caused by President Trump's global tariffs.

L.A.'s office market takes a hit amid trade wars, fires and economic uncertainty

"We were more optimistic heading into 2025," CBRE property broker John Zanetos said, as the county office market saw year-end leases signed by some good-sized tenants including toy makers Mattel and Jazwares .

Read more: Mattel is revamping its work spaces as employees return to the office

The January wildfires that knocked the city back on its heels put many business decisions on pause.

Later in the quarter, confusion about tariffs and potential trade wars introduced another element of uncertainty, said Michael Soto, vice president of research in the western region for real state brokerage Savills.

Real estate analysts are watching "very closely" to see whether there is new hesitation in decision-making among business leaders that could slow down initial public offerings of stocks, mergers and other ventures that would typically lead to acquisitions of office space, Soto said.

"Anxiety is back in the market," he said. Some tenants "are probably slowing down their decision-making until there is a little more clarity in the macroeconomic environment."

The downtown Los Angeles office market, one of the region's largest, continued to struggle in the first quarter, with vacancy hitting nearly 34% and overall availability at 37%, slightly up from a year earlier, CBRE reported .

Downtown has struggled with vacancy for decades, but companies' cutbacks in their office space since the start of the pandemic have helped drive down the values of office buildings and pushed some landlords into such financial stress that they're having a hard time coming up with the money to attract tenants, Zanetos said.

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