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Global Real Estate Daily: March 9, 2026

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Author: Global Real Estate Editorial Team


Executive Summary: Markets Brace for Inflation Data Amid Geopolitical Crosscurrents

As of March 9, 2026, global real estate markets are navigating a complex web of geopolitical tensions, shifting monetary policy expectations, and resilient but selective demand. The Middle East conflict continues to cast a shadow over Gulf markets, while U.S. mortgage rates have stabilized but remain elevated, creating a mixed picture for housing and commercial real estate.

All eyes this week are on upcoming U.S. inflation data, which will provide critical clues about the Federal Reserve’s next moves. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate currently stands at 6.14% , up slightly from last week, as markets price in the possibility of “higher for longer” rates. In Europe, the focus remains on the repricing of assets driven by both interest rate expectations and an influx of Middle Eastern private capital. Asia-Pacific markets show continued divergence, with strength in India and Singapore contrasting with ongoing challenges in China’s property sector.


Geopolitical Impact: Middle East Tensions Persist

The security situation in the Middle East remains volatile, with significant implications for regional and global real estate markets.

ยท Regional Uncertainty: The conflict shows no signs of abating, with continued cross-border tensions. This has cemented a “wait-and-see” approach among international investors targeting Gulf markets. Dubai’s off-plan sales volumes have moderated further, though completed property transactions remain relatively stable, supported by end-users.
ยท Oil Price Dynamics: Brent crude is holding above $87 per barrel, sustaining inflationary pressures and keeping central banks on alert. This energy price floor provides a fiscal buffer for Gulf economies but complicates the global inflation fight.
ยท Safe Haven Reassessment: The UAE’s status as a geopolitical safe haven has been tested. While long-term fundamentals remain strong, the near-term risk premium for the region has increased, particularly for luxury and speculative developments.


Market Data & Research Reports

Upcoming U.S. Inflation Data (February 2026)

Markets are intently focused on this week’s release of February inflation data. Consensus expectations are for headline CPI to rise 0.3% month-over-month, with core CPI also expected to increase by 0.3% . On a year-over-year basis, headline inflation is forecast at 2.8% , with core at 3.1% .

Why it matters for real estate: A hotter-than-expected print could push bond yields higher and further delay Fed rate cuts, keeping mortgage rates elevated and potentially slowing the nascent recovery in transaction activity. A cooler print could reignite hopes for mid-2026 rate cuts, boosting REITs and transaction volumes.

Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey (March 5, 2026)

The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.14% for the week ending March 5, up from 6.04% the previous week. The 15-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 5.38% , up from 5.28%. This uptick reflects market volatility and recalibrated expectations for Fed policy.

Redfin Housing Market Data (Four Weeks Ending March 1, 2026)

ยท Pending Home Sales: Down 2.8% year-over-year, extending a trend of muted demand.
ยท Active Listings: Dropped 1.9% , the biggest decline since December 2023, highlighting persistent inventory constraints.
ยท Price Trends: Median sale prices remain resilient, up 1.2% year-over-year, as low supply offsets demand softness.

CBRE โ€” U.S. Real Estate Market Outlook 2026 (Recap)

CBRE’s 2026 outlook, covered in previous reports, projects a 16% increase in commercial real estate investment activity this year, reaching $562 billion. The firm emphasizes that capital will flow to industrial, multifamily, and data center assets, while office faces continued headwinds.

JLL โ€” Global Real Estate Perspective (February 2026)

JLL notes that logistics, living, and prime office are leading the recovery. The report highlights that while global investment volumes are recovering, the recovery is uneven, with the Americas and Europe showing earlier signs of a rebound compared to Asia-Pacific, where China’s slowdown is a drag.


Investment Deals & Capital Flows

Blackstone’s Asian Deal Challenges

As previously reported, negotiations between Blackstone and New World Development regarding a portfolio of Asian assets remain stalled over control disputes. Sources indicate that while both sides remain interested, disagreements on management rights and exit timeframes have proven difficult to bridge. The situation underscores the challenges of executing complex cross-border deals in the current environment of geopolitical uncertainty and valuation divergence.

Hong Kong Prime Office Interest

Savills continues to market the top two floors of World-Wide House in Central at an indicative price of HKD 19,000 per square foot. The bid deadline has passed, and market sources suggest multiple expressions of interest from both local family offices and mainland Chinese enterprises. A successful sale would demonstrate continued appetite for prime Hong Kong office assets despite broader market concerns.

Middle Eastern Private Capital in Europe

The wave of private capital from Israel and the Gulf reshaping European real estate continues to gain momentum. Recent weeks have seen increased activity in the German multifamily sector and UK logistics assets. Unlike sovereign wealth funds, these investors are characterized by their ability to move quickly, accept structural complexity, and take concentrated positions.

U.S. Luxury Market Activity

The ultra-luxury residential market remains active despite higher rates. A Palm Beach estate recently changed hands for $86 million** in a private transaction, while a Malibu compound is reportedly in negotiations at an asking price north of **$70 million. These transactions confirm the decoupling of the top end of the market from broader housing dynamics.


REITs, Stocks & Funds

REIT Performance

REITs have shown resilience despite the backup in rates. The Schwab U.S. REIT ETF (SCHH) is up modestly year-to-date, though it has given back some gains following the recent rate uptick. The sector’s dividend yield, averaging around 4.5%, continues to attract income-focused investors in a still-low-yield world.

Whitestone REIT (NYSE: WSR)

Whitestone continues to trade near its one-year high reached last week. The company’s focus on community-centered retail properties in Texas and Arizona has resonated with investors seeking exposure to high-growth Sunbelt markets. Analyst sentiment remains positive, with Raymond James maintaining its outperform rating.

Realty Income (NYSE: O)

Realty Income remains a bellwether for the net-lease sector. The company’s 98.9% portfolio occupancy at year-end 2025 underscores the resilience of its diversified tenant base. However, the stock has been range-bound as investors weigh its stable income stream against concerns about growth prospects in a higher-for-longer rate environment.

Prologis (NYSE: PLD)

Prologis continues to benefit from long-term tailwinds in e-commerce and supply chain restructuring. The company is also leveraging its expertise to develop data center capacity, positioning itself at the intersection of two powerful trends. Analysts remain bullish, though they note that new supply deliveries in some markets could temper rent growth in 2026.

Vornado Realty Trust (NYSE: VNO)

Vornado remains under pressure as New York City office fundamentals struggle to recover. The company’s aggressive repositioning strategy, including potential office-to-residential conversions at key properties, is seen as a long-term positive but offers little near-term earnings support.


Dark Data: Under-the-Radar Risks & Negative Developments

“Decaf Stagflation” Persists

Analysis of alternative data continues to point to a “decaf stagflation” scenario in the U.S. โ€” below-trend growth with persistent, though not accelerating, inflation. This environment limits the Fed’s ability to cut rates aggressively without a clear catalyst. For real estate, this means continued pressure on levered positions and a highly selective investment landscape.

Distressed Office Wave Building

Behind the scenes, the wave of office distress continues to build. Analysis of loan-level data reveals that a significant percentage of office loans with 2025 maturities received only short-term extensions. As those extensions approach their end, and with rates remaining elevated, a new wave of distress โ€” including forced sales and recapitalizations at steep discounts โ€” is expected in late 2026.

Insurance Cost Pressures

Unpublished data indicates that property insurance premiums in climate-exposed regions continue to rise at double-digit rates. Florida, California wildfire zones, and Texas coastal areas are seeing the most significant increases. These costs are impacting net operating income and, in some cases, rendering properties unfinanceable.

Regulatory Scrutiny on AI Pricing Tools

The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) is reportedly finalizing guidance on the use of AI-driven pricing algorithms in multifamily housing. Sources suggest the guidance will impose new disclosure requirements and could restrict certain practices deemed to have discriminatory impacts. This could disrupt revenue management strategies across the sector.


Management Changes

There have been no major, publicly announced C-suite management changes at top global real estate firms since our last report. However, several mid-level appointments are worth noting:

ยท CBRE has appointed a new head of its data center solutions group, signaling continued focus on this high-growth sector.
ยท JLL has expanded its Asia-Pacific logistics team with two senior hires from regional competitors.
ยท Cushman & Wakefield has named a new chief economist to lead its global research efforts.

The market continues to watch for any leadership shifts that could signal strategic changes at major players.


Investment Outlook & Strategy

For the remainder of March and into Q2 2026, a defensive, selective, and opportunistic approach remains warranted.

ยท Await Inflation Data: This week’s CPI print will be critical. A cooler number could open the door for a more constructive outlook on rates and transaction activity.
ยท Focus on Quality: In a risk-off environment, prime assets with strong credit tenants, long leases, and institutional specifications will continue to command premium pricing and attract the deepest pools of capital.
ยท Monitor the “3 Ds”: Decarbonization, demographics, and digitalization remain the key structural drivers. Properties aligned with these trends โ€” energy-efficient buildings, multifamily in high-growth markets, data centers โ€” will outperform.
ยท Selective Opportunities: The current market dislocation continues to create opportunities for well-capitalized investors. Key areas to watch include:
ยท European Repricing: Germany and the UK offer potential value as assets reprice to reflect higher rates.
ยท Office Conversions: Distressed office assets in prime locations may offer compelling conversion opportunities.
ยท Regional Bank Portfolio Sales: Regulatory pressure on regional banks could bring high-quality loan and property portfolios to market at attractive pricing.
ยท Hedge Geopolitical Risk: With the Middle East conflict unresolved, investors should carefully assess exposure to the Gulf region and consider diversification strategies.


Disclaimer: This report is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Always consult with a qualified professional before making any real estate investment decisions.


Global Real Estate Editorial Team โ€” Bio

Global Real Estate Editorial Team

The Global Real Estate Editorial Team is a dedicated group of analysts, researchers, and journalists committed to providing comprehensive, data-driven coverage of international real estate markets. The team combines forensic expertise, economic analysis, and investigative journalism to examine how capital flows, policy shifts, and geopolitical events shape property markets worldwide. Their work appears regularly on this platform, offering insights into investment trends, market risks, and emerging opportunities across all major regions.

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THE GLOBAL REAL ESTATE DAILY: MARCH 5, 2026

Executive Summary: A Market at a Crossroads

As of March 5, 2026, the global real estate market is navigating a complex landscape defined by shifting economic policies, geopolitical tensions, and a steady march toward sustainable and technology-driven investment.

The most immediate concern is the Middle East, where recent military activity, including documented Iranian missile strikes, has sent ripples of uncertainty through the Gulf’s once-stable real estate markets. This conflict has not only threatened regional stability but has also reignited global inflation fears, leading to a resurgence in oil prices and a subsequent upward pressure on mortgage rates. The daily average 30-year fixed mortgage rate has already risen from 5.99% last week to 6.07% as of March 4, according to Redfin data .

Despite these challenges, the United States residential market has shown remarkable underlying resilience. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate, which had recently dipped below 6.0% for the first time in three and a half years, is now facing renewed pressure but remains significantly lower than its 2023-2024 peaks . This has maintained a level of buyer activity, though pending home sales fell 2.8% year-over-year as high prices and economic uncertainty kept demand muted .

In Europe, the focus remains on the “3 Ds”โ€”demographics, digital, and decarbonization. The demand for energy-efficient buildings and green-certified properties is at an all-time high, driven by both regulatory mandates and a shift in corporate and individual preferences.

In Asia-Pacific, the market is a tale of two halves. While the Chinese property sector continues its slow and painful restructuring, markets in India and Southeast Asia are experiencing robust growth, fueled by urbanization and a burgeoning middle class. Meanwhile, in Hong Kong, premium Grade A office assets are attracting strong demand, with Savills recently appointed to sell the entire top two floors of World-Wide House in Central at an indicative price of HKD 19,000 per square foot .


Geopolitical Impact: The Middle East Conflict and Global Markets

The escalation of conflict in the Middle East has had a profound and immediate impact on the global real estate sector.

  1. UAE and the Gulf: A Test of Resilience

The UAE, and Dubai in particular, has long been seen as a “safe haven” for international real estate investment. However, the recent Iranian missile strikes have challenged this perception.

ยท Market Sentiment: Investors are adopting a “wait-and-see” approach, leading to a temporary slowdown in off-plan sales and a cooling of the luxury segment. Redfin economists note that while the war’s impact on the economy will mostly be felt in oil markets, it could make some would-be buyers think twice, much in the same way economic and global uncertainty have been turning off buyers for the last year . A Washington, D.C. Redfin agent reports one buyer is putting purchasing plans on hold due to uneasiness about tensions in Iran .
ยท Developers’ Response: Major developers like Emaar and Aldar are focusing on completing existing projects and offering more flexible payment plans to maintain buyer interest.

  1. Global Inflation and Interest Rates

The conflict has driven oil prices back above $85 per barrel, stoking fresh inflation concerns.

ยท Mortgage Rates: In the U.S. and Europe, the downward trend in mortgage rates has stalled. While the 30-year fixed rate in the U.S. dipped to 5.98% for the week ending February 26, the daily average has already ticked up to 6.07% . The hope for further cuts in the near term has faded.
ยท Refinancing Risks: For commercial real estate owners with debt maturing in 2026, the prospect of “higher-for-longer” rates remains a significant risk, particularly in the office sector.


Sector Performance and Trends

  1. Residential: Affordability and the Rental Economy

ยท The “Lock-In” Effect: While mortgage rates have improved from their 2023 highs, many homeowners remain “locked in” to their low-rate mortgages from the 2020-2021 era, keeping inventory levels tight. New listings declined 1.2% year-over-year, and the total number of homes for sale dropped 1.9%, the biggest decline in over two years . However, new data reveals a more complex picture: listing withdrawals climbed to nearly 45% of new listings in 2025, the highest ratio in recent history. Compass counts over 150,000 more withdrawals than in 2024 through mid-November, suggesting these are not failed sales but delayed transactionsโ€”a “shadow demand” waiting to activate .
ยท The Hidden Demand: Purchase mortgage applications have run 15-25% higher than the prior year throughout 2025, yet actual closed sales rose only 2-4%. This gap suggests a population of serious buyers who started the homebuying process but paused, likely due to rates ticking up or the right house not materializing . With four years of delayed moves and the share of homeowners wanting to move within two years jumping from 10% to 25% since the pandemic, the potential for a demand release in 2026 is significant .
ยท The Rise of Rental: With homeownership remaining out of reach for many, the build-to-rent (BTR) sector is booming globally, particularly in the UK, Canada, and the U.S.

  1. Commercial: The Office Rebirth and Data Center Surge

ยท A-Grade Office Demand: The “flight to quality” is complete. Companies are willing to pay a premium for sustainable, well-located, and amenity-rich office spaces that encourage employees to return to the workplace. In Hong Kong, the sale of premium top-floor office units at both 9 Queen’s Road Central (34/F) and Bank of America Tower (37/F) were quickly acquired after a short launch, reflecting sustained strong demand for top-tier special office units in core business districts . Savills notes that the World-Wide House offering “might become the last available prime top-floor Grade A office in core Central for sale in short term,” presenting an ideal window for office end-users to enter the market .
ยท Data Centers: Driven by the AI revolution, data centers have become the most sought-after asset class in the industrial sector. Global power demand from data centers is projected to double by 2030.

  1. Industrial and Logistics: The Nearshoring Effect

ยท Supply Chain Shifts: The ongoing geopolitical instability has accelerated the trend of “nearshoring” and “friend-shoring,” leading to increased demand for industrial and warehouse space in Mexico, Vietnam, and Eastern Europe.
ยท Fundamentals Stabilizing: According to CoStar data through Q4 2025, while industrial and apartment sectors face the widest supply-demand imbalances, both have made significant strides in narrowing their gaps. Industrial rent growth, after reaching double-digits in 2022, dropped to 1.7% at year-end 2025, while apartment rent growth plunged to 0.4% from a high of 9.2% in early 2022 . Despite historically low occupancy rates at 86.0%, office continues to maintain consistent and positive rental gains, posting annual rent growth of 1.2% .


Technology and Innovation

  1. AI-Driven Valuations and Management

ยท Predictive Analytics: AI is now used to predict property value trends with unprecedented accuracy, allowing investors to make more informed decisions.
ยท Smart Building Management: AI-driven systems are optimizing energy consumption in large commercial buildings, reducing operating costs by up to 20%.

  1. Tokenization and Fractional Ownership

ยท Increased Liquidity: Platforms like Headway NOVA in Dubai and others in the U.S. and Europe are enabling fractional ownership of high-value assets through blockchain technology, opening the market to a wider range of investors.


Latest Transactions and Market Momentum

Luxury Residential Highlights

ยท U.S. Virgin Islands Auction: A landmark estate in Christiansted spanning 22,000 square feet on more than two acres with R-4 live/work zoning is being auctioned by Concierge Auctions. Listed for $11.65M, starting bids are expected between $4M-$6M. The property showcases emblematic Danish West Indian architectural character with modern luxury finishes and sweeping panoramic vistas .

Commercial Transactions

ยท Hong Kong Prime Office: Savills has been appointed as lead agent for the sale of the entire top two floors (26/F and 27/F) of World-Wide House at 19 Des Voeux Road Central. The property has a total gross area of approximately 20,766 square feet and will be sold on an as-is basis with vacant possession. The indicative unit price is HKD 19,000 per square foot, with sealed bid submission closing on March 10, 2026 .

Cross-Border Capital Flows

ยท Middle Eastern Capital in Europe: A growing but under-analyzed wave of Israeli and Middle Eastern private capital is reshaping European real estate markets. Unlike sovereign wealth funds, these investorsโ€”including figures like Yakir Gabay, Ruslan Husry, Ilan Azouri, and Raphael Raingoldโ€”operate as entrepreneurial principal investors making direct, concentrated acquisitions across Germany, the UK, and Southern Europe. Their willingness to tackle operationally complex portfolios gives them a distinctive edge as European real estate enters a repricing cycle .
ยท Strategic Drivers: Diversification away from concentrated domestic markets, currency and geopolitical hedging, and entrepreneurial deal culture that enables quick moves and acceptance of structural complexity make this corridor structurally important for European markets .


Dark Data: Fraud, Scandals, and Negative Developments

Major Fraud Cases

ยท Los Angeles County Lien Fraud: Rita Cedeno Ortiz, 58, has been charged with 25 felony counts of knowingly causing false instruments to be recorded, filing mechanics liens falsely claiming millions in unpaid contracting work. The liens clouded titles of ten properties in Beverly Hills and throughout Los Angeles County, with amounts ranging from $800,000 to over $98 million. If convicted, Ortiz faces over 24 years in state prison .
ยท Philippines “Sangla-Tira-Benta” Scam: The National Bureau of Investigation arrested a woman accused of orchestrating a fraudulent scheme targeting property renters and buyers in Rizal. The subject misrepresented herself as the owner of a condominium unit, collected Php300,000 from a victim for occupancy rights, then offered to sell the unit for Php1.5 million. The scam was exposed when the legitimate owner appeared demanding payment for rental delinquency. The subject had also illegally mortgaged the legitimate owner’s parking slot without authorization .
ยท Maryland Investment Scheme: Andrew Joseph Egber, 61, a former financial advisor for Wells Fargo, Raymond James, and Steward Partners, was sentenced to 18 months in jail for a fraudulent real estate investment scheme. Egber deceived elderly clients into withdrawing money from their retirement accounts for supposed real estate investments, instead depositing the funds into his personal account and stealing the money. He pleaded guilty to felony theft over $100,000, exploitation of a vulnerable adult, and securities fraud, and was ordered to pay $545,831 in restitution .

Market Risks

ยท U.S. Housing Market Concerns: Pending home sales fell 2.8% year-over-year in the four weeks ending March 1, while active listings dropped 1.9%โ€”the biggest decline since December 2023 . Some analysts warn of potential market vulnerability, with theories about institutional investors like Blackstone buying large numbers of homes fueling public debate, though the company states it owns less than 1% of available housing in its operating markets .
ยท Withdrawal Paradox: The record-high listing withdrawal rate of nearly 45% in 2025, while representing potential “shadow demand,” also indicates significant market hesitation and transaction delays that could impact market liquidity .


Investment Outlook and Strategy

For the remainder of 2026, the key for investors will be diversification and resilience.

ยท Focus on Fundamentals: In an uncertain environment, properties with strong cash flows and high-quality tenants will outperform. Signs of stabilizing property fundamentals across the four traditional property types suggest operational gains may be ahead as markets move toward equilibrium .
ยท Sustainability is Non-Negotiable: Green-certified buildings are no longer a “nice-to-have” but a requirement for institutional investors and top-tier tenants.
ยท Emerging Market Opportunities: While risks remain, the long-term growth prospects in India, Southeast Asia, and parts of Africa offer significant upside for those with a higher risk appetite.
ยท The Hidden Demand Opportunity: With over 150,000 delayed seller-buyer combinations from 2025 alone and purchase applications running 15-25% higher than closings, a reservoir of latent demand waits for the right moment to activate. If mortgage rates cooperate and hiring improves, sales growth could potentially reach 8-10% in 2026, representing the strongest transaction growth of the post-pandemic era .
ยท Capital Corridor Awareness: Understanding the motivations and structures of Israeli and Middle Eastern private capital flowing into European real estate is increasingly critical for sponsors, co-investors, and advisors competing for dealflow in a repricing market .


Disclaimer: This report is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Always consult with a qualified professional before making any real estate investment decisions.




Bernd Pulch โ€” Bio
Bernd Pulch โ€” Bio Photo

Bernd Pulch (M.A.) is a forensic expert, founder of Aristotle AI, entrepreneur, political commentator, satirist, and investigative journalist covering lawfare, media control, investment, real estate, and geopolitics. His work examines how legal systems are weaponized, how capital flows shape policy, how artificial intelligence concentrates power, and what democracy loses when courts and markets become battlefields. Active in the German and international media landscape, his analyses appear regularly on this platform.

Full bio โ†’ | Support the investigation โ†’

THE GLOBAL REAL ESTATE DAILY FEBRUARY 27 2026

Powered by IMMOBILIEN VERTRAULICH

Author: Ben Williams

For: berndpulch.org

Introduction

As of February 27, 2026, the global real estate market continues its accelerating stabilization and cautious recovery, supported by mortgage rates holding near multi-year lows following yesterday’s decline. US 30-year fixed mortgage rates averaged 5.98% for the latest weekly period (Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey, released Feb 26 โ€” down 3 basis points from prior and the lowest since early September 2022), with daily/marketplace averages ranging 5.85โ€“6.03% (Zillow/Bankrate/WSJ/Mortgage News Daily as of February 27). This environment sustains affordability gains, refinance activity, and buyer demand. US house prices remain stalled nationally at ~0% growth (J.P. Morgan 2026 forecast), with year-over-year at 0.9% (latest Cotality data). Globally, nominal house price growth holds at 2.4% YoY (Knight Frank Q3 2025 weighted average across 55 markets), with 86% of markets positive, though real growth is slightly negative at -0.1%. JLLโ€™s February 2026 Global Real Estate Perspective continues to forecast steady 2026 growth driven by lower rates, contained inflation, and fiscal support, with strength in offices, industrial, and retail.

The report covers macro trends, regional updates, sector insights, and the latest deal activity as of February 27, 2026.

1. Executive Summary

Sentiment holds at โ€œaccelerating recoveryโ€ with mortgage rates stable at 5.98% (Freddie Mac weekly). This multi-year low continues to boost affordability and sales potential. US existing-home sales show seasonal softness but growing rebound signals. Global outlooks remain positive, with resilient assets holding firm amid AI office pressures. CBRE projects US commercial investment +16% to ~$562B; JLL notes rebounding leasing and demand. Markets stable today with no major shifts in key indicators.

Table 1: Regional Real Estate Outlook Summary (2026)

RegionPrimary SentimentKey DriversMajor Challenges
North AmericaStable to Cautiously OptimisticRate stability (5.98% avg.), multifamily/industrial strength, data centersAI office disruption, builder sentiment
EuropeGaining MomentumRising rents, liquidity return, policy supportConstruction costs, regional divergences
Asia-PacificMixed, Selective GrowthUrban migration (India), supply constraints (Japan), China stability measuresOversupply (China), affordability squeeze (Australia)
Middle EastBullishMega-projects, foreign ownership reformsCost inflation (~4%), geopolitical risks

2. Global Macro Trends

2.1 AI Disruption: Office Sector Fallout
AI and hybrid-work models continue exerting pressure on traditional office space; prime, well-located assets show selective resilience as landlords accelerate repositioning and innovation.

2.2 Mortgage Rates and Affordability
US 30-year fixed holding at 5.98% (Freddie Mac Feb 26); daily averages 5.85โ€“6.03% as of February 27. Multi-year lows continue to expand buyer pools and support affordability gains. Consensus forecasts point to rates remaining near or below 6% through Q1.

2.3 Global Policy and Trade
Divergent monetary paths persist (US/UK easing vs. Eurozone/Canada stabilization). Steady global GDP growth (~2.9% real per S&P) and contained inflation continue to support the constructive real estate outlook (JLL February 2026).

3. North America Analysis

3.1 United States
Housing: Affordability holds strong with stable low rates; sales momentum building. Commercial: Multifamily and industrial sectors lead; total investment still projected +16%.

3.2 Sunbelt Region
National 0% price stall continues to mask strong domestic migration-driven performance in select Sunbelt markets.

4. European Market Deep Dive

4.1 United Kingdom
Modest positive momentum intact; lower rates supporting transaction volumes.

4.2 Germany
Residential prices +4.2% annually; chronic supply shortage continues to fuel rent growth.

4.3 European Union
Policy support and returning liquidity are steadily lifting demand and investment activity.

5. Asia-Pacific Regional Outlook

5.1 China
Stabilization policies taking effect; oversupply pressures gradually moderating.

5.2 India
Strong disciplined growth driven by urban migration and healthy IPO pipeline.

5.3 Australia
Severe housing shortages continue pushing prices higher; focus remains on adaptive supply solutions.

5.4 Japan
Moderate growth sustained; Tokyo supply constraints keeping prime assets highly competitive.

6. Middle East & Emerging Markets

6.1 UAE
Foreign ownership reforms accelerating activity; robust retail and hospitality pipelines.

6.2 Saudi Arabia
Ambitious development projects advancing despite rising costs; economic diversification on track.

7. Biggest Deals Spotlight (Recent Momentum as of February 27, 2026)

Deal flow remains concentrated in resilient, high-quality segments with ongoing South Florida activity:

  • Mixed-Use/Commercial: Voloridge acquires portion of Harbourside Place (Jupiter, FL) for $57.6M (wellness & health-focused redevelopment).
  • Residential Luxury: Waterfront estate in Palm Beach, FL closes at $57M.
  • Multifamily: Princeton Grove Apartments (Miami-Dade, FL) trades at $39.5M (~40% off previous peak; 216 units acquired by AEW/Grand Peak).
  • New Residential Land: Waterfront vacant lot in Surfside, FL (9224 Bay Drive) sold for $13.9M (Feb 24).
  • New Celebrity Residential: Derek Jeter’s Coral Gables mansion (7275 Old Cutler Road) sold for $13.2M (Feb 24).
  • Broader momentum: Siemens Energy $421M expansion (NC), ongoing self-storage and multifamily transactions, Compass $1.6B merger progress.

8. Sector-Specific Insights

8.1 Office Real Estate โ€” Continued AI-driven volatility; repositioning and innovation critical.
8.2 Multifamily Real Estate โ€” Strong tenant demand and rent growth persist.
8.3 Retail Real Estate โ€” Mixed results; experiential and necessity retail outperforming.
8.4 Industrial Real Estate โ€” E-commerce and supply-chain resilience remain powerful tailwinds.

9. Conclusion & Future Outlook

The inflection point holds strong: mortgage rates stable at 5.98% and sustained affordability improvements are powering a sustainable recovery in core real estate segments, while tech disruption and regional variations remain key watchpoints. Investors should monitor upcoming sales releases and the next Freddie Mac update (March 5). 2026 baseline expectations: modest US price growth (0โ€“2%), rising transaction volumes, and continued outperformance in alternative and necessity-driven sectors (JLL).

References
(Updated from Freddie Mac PMMS Feb 26 2026 at 5.98%, Zillow/Bankrate/WSJ/Mortgage News Daily daily averages as of Feb 27 2026, J.P. Morgan, Cotality, JLL Global Real Estate Perspective February 2026, The Real Deal South Florida reports Feb 23-24 2026, S&P Global, and other sources as of February 27, 2026.)

Bernd Pulch (M.A.) is a forensic expert, founder of Aristotle AI, entrepreneur, political commentator, satirist, and investigative journalist covering lawfare, media control, investment, real estate, and geopolitics. His work examines how legal systems are weaponized, how capital flows shape policy, how artificial intelligence concentrates power, and what democracy loses when courts and markets become battlefields. Active in the German and international media landscape, his analyses appear regularly on this platform.

Full bio โ†’

Support the investigation โ†’

THE GLOBAL REAL ESTATE DAILY FEBRUARY 26 2026

Powered by IMMOBILIEN VERTRAULICH

Author: Ben Williams

For: berndpulch.org

Introduction

As of February 26, 2026, the global real estate market accelerates its steady stabilization and cautious recovery, now reinforced by further mortgage rate easing. US 30-year fixed mortgage rates averaged 5.98% for the latest weekly period (Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey, released today โ€” down 3 basis points from 6.01% and the lowest since early September 2022), with daily/marketplace averages ranging 5.87โ€“6.05% (Zillow/Bankrate/WSJ/Mortgage News Daily as of February 26). This fresh decline bolsters affordability, refinance activity, and buyer demand. US house prices remain stalled nationally at \~0% growth (J.P. Morgan 2026 forecast), with year-over-year at 0.9% (latest Cotality data). Globally, nominal house price growth holds at 2.4% YoY (Knight Frank Q3 2025 weighted average across 55 markets), with 86% of markets positive, though real growth is slightly negative at -0.1%. JLLโ€™s February 2026 Global Real Estate Perspective continues to forecast steady 2026 growth driven by lower rates, contained inflation, and fiscal support, with strength in offices, industrial, and retail.

The report covers macro trends, regional updates, sector insights, and the latest deal activity as of February 26, 2026.

1. Executive Summary

Sentiment strengthens to โ€œaccelerating recoveryโ€ as mortgage rates drop to 5.98% (Freddie Mac, released today). This multi-year low continues to boost affordability and sales potential. US existing-home sales show seasonal softness but growing rebound signals. Global outlooks remain positive, with resilient assets holding firm amid AI office pressures. CBRE projects US commercial investment +16% to \~$562B; JLL notes rebounding leasing and demand. Markets stable today with the new rate release as the key positive catalyst.

Table 1: Regional Real Estate Outlook Summary (2026)

RegionPrimary SentimentKey DriversMajor Challenges
North AmericaStable to Cautiously OptimisticFurther rate easing (now 5.98% avg.), multifamily/industrial strength, data centersAI office disruption, builder sentiment
EuropeGaining MomentumRising rents, liquidity return, policy supportConstruction costs, regional divergences
Asia-PacificMixed, Selective GrowthUrban migration (India), supply constraints (Japan), China stability measuresOversupply (China), affordability squeeze (Australia)
Middle EastBullishMega-projects, foreign ownership reformsCost inflation (\~4%), geopolitical risks

2. Global Macro Trends

2.1 AI Disruption: Office Sector Fallout
AI and hybrid-work models continue exerting pressure on traditional office space; prime, well-located assets show selective resilience as landlords accelerate repositioning and innovation.

2.2 Mortgage Rates and Affordability
US 30-year fixed now at 5.98% (Freddie Mac, released Feb 26 โ€” down from 6.01%); daily averages 5.87โ€“6.05% as of February 26. Further multi-year lows expand buyer pools and support affordability gains. Consensus forecasts point to rates remaining near or below 6% through Q1.

2.3 Global Policy and Trade
Divergent monetary paths persist (US/UK easing vs. Eurozone/Canada stabilization). Steady global GDP growth (\~2.9% real per S&P) and contained inflation continue to support the constructive real estate outlook (JLL February 2026).

3. North America Analysis

3.1 United States
Housing: Affordability improves further with todayโ€™s rate drop; sales momentum building. Commercial: Multifamily and industrial sectors lead; total investment still projected +16%.

3.2 Sunbelt Region
National 0% price stall continues to mask strong domestic migration-driven performance in select Sunbelt markets.

4. European Market Deep Dive

4.1 United Kingdom
Modest positive momentum intact; lower rates supporting transaction volumes.

4.2 Germany
Residential prices +4.2% annually; chronic supply shortage continues to fuel rent growth.

4.3 European Union
Policy support and returning liquidity are steadily lifting demand and investment activity.

5. Asia-Pacific Regional Outlook

5.1 China
Stabilization policies taking effect; oversupply pressures gradually moderating.

5.2 India
Strong disciplined growth driven by urban migration and healthy IPO pipeline.

5.3 Australia
Severe housing shortages continue pushing prices higher; focus remains on adaptive supply solutions.

5.4 Japan
Moderate growth sustained; Tokyo supply constraints keeping prime assets highly competitive.

6. Middle East & Emerging Markets

6.1 UAE
Foreign ownership reforms accelerating activity; robust retail and hospitality pipelines.

6.2 Saudi Arabia
Ambitious development projects advancing despite rising costs; economic diversification on track.

7. Biggest Deals Spotlight (Recent Momentum as of February 26, 2026)

Deal flow remains concentrated in resilient, high-quality segments with fresh South Florida activity:

  • Mixed-Use/Commercial: Voloridge acquires portion of Harbourside Place (Jupiter, FL) for $57.6M (wellness & health-focused redevelopment).
  • Residential Luxury: Waterfront estate in Palm Beach, FL closes at $57M.
  • Multifamily: Princeton Grove Apartments (Miami-Dade, FL) trades at $39.5M (\~40% off previous peak; 216 units acquired by AEW/Grand Peak).
  • New Multifamily: PGIM sells $132M apartment complex in Palm Beach Gardens (Feb 25).
  • New Luxury Residential: Fisher Island condo (Miami Beach) closes at $15M (Feb 24); Delray Beach ocean-proximate home at $9.7M (Feb 25).
  • Broader momentum: Siemens Energy $421M expansion (NC), ongoing self-storage and multifamily transactions, Compass $1.6B merger progress.

8. Sector-Specific Insights

8.1 Office Real Estate โ€” Continued AI-driven volatility; repositioning and innovation critical.
8.2 Multifamily Real Estate โ€” Strong tenant demand and rent growth persist.
8.3 Retail Real Estate โ€” Mixed results; experiential and necessity retail outperforming.
8.4 Industrial Real Estate โ€” E-commerce and supply-chain resilience remain powerful tailwinds.

9. Conclusion & Future Outlook

The inflection point is strengthening: mortgage rates dropping to 5.98% (new Freddie Mac low) and sustained affordability improvements are powering an even more sustainable recovery in core real estate segments, while tech disruption and regional variations remain key watchpoints. Investors should monitor upcoming sales releases and the next Freddie Mac update (March 5). 2026 baseline expectations: modest US price growth (0โ€“2%), rising transaction volumes, and continued outperformance in alternative and necessity-driven sectors (JLL).

References
(Updated from Freddie Mac PMMS released Feb 26 2026 at 5.98%, Zillow/Bankrate/WSJ/Mortgage News Daily daily averages as of Feb 26 2026, J.P. Morgan, Cotality, JLL Global Real Estate Perspective February 2026, The Real Deal South Florida reports Feb 23-25 2026, S&P Global, and other sources as of February 26, 2026.)

Bernd Pulch (M.A.) is a forensic expert, founder of Aristotle AI, entrepreneur, political commentator, satirist, and investigative journalist covering lawfare, media control, investment, real estate, and geopolitics. His work examines how legal systems are weaponized, how capital flows shape policy, how artificial intelligence concentrates power, and what democracy loses when courts and markets become battlefields. Active in the German and international media landscape, his analyses appear regularly on this platform.

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Support the investigation โ†’

GLOBAL REAL ESTATE DAILY, FEBRUARY 25 2026

Powered by IMMOBILIEN VERTRAULICH

Author: Ben Williams

For: berndpulch.org

Introduction

As of February 25, 2026, the global real estate market continues its steady stabilization and cautious recovery, supported by mortgage rates remaining near multi-year lows and moderating price pressures. US 30-year fixed mortgage rates averaged 6.01% for the week ending February 19 (Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey โ€” lowest since September 2022), with daily marketplace averages on February 25 holding firm between 5.99โ€“6.04% (Zillow/Bankrate/WSJ/NerdWallet/Mortgage News Daily). This environment sustains affordability gains, refinance activity, and gradual demand improvement. US house prices remain stalled nationally at \~0% growth (J.P. Morgan 2026 forecast), with year-over-year at 0.9% (latest Cotality data). Globally, nominal house price growth holds at 2.4% YoY (Knight Frank Q3 2025 weighted average across 55 markets), with 86% of markets positive, though real growth is slightly negative at -0.1%. JLLโ€™s February 2026 Global Real Estate Perspective continues to forecast steady 2026 growth driven by lower rates, contained inflation, and fiscal support, with strength in offices, industrial, and retail.

The report covers macro trends, regional updates, sector insights, and the latest deal activity as of February 25, 2026.

1. Executive Summary

Sentiment remains โ€œsteady recoveryโ€ with mortgage rates near multi-year lows (6.01% Freddie Mac weekly) continuing to boost affordability and sales potential. US existing-home sales show seasonal softness but clear rebound signals. Global outlooks stay positive, with resilient assets holding firm amid AI office pressures. CBRE projects US commercial investment +16% to \~$562B; JLL notes rebounding leasing and demand. Markets remained stable over the past 24 hours with no material shifts in key indicators.

Table 1: Regional Real Estate Outlook Summary (2026)

RegionPrimary SentimentKey DriversMajor Challenges
North AmericaStable to Cautiously OptimisticRate easing (6.01% avg.), multifamily/industrial strength, data centersAI office disruption, builder sentiment
EuropeGaining MomentumRising rents, liquidity return, policy supportConstruction costs, regional divergences
Asia-PacificMixed, Selective GrowthUrban migration (India), supply constraints (Japan), China stability measuresOversupply (China), affordability squeeze (Australia)
Middle EastBullishMega-projects, foreign ownership reformsCost inflation (\~4%), geopolitical risks

2. Global Macro Trends

2.1 AI Disruption: Office Sector Fallout
AI and hybrid-work models continue exerting pressure on traditional office space; prime, well-located assets show selective resilience as landlords accelerate repositioning and innovation.

2.2 Mortgage Rates and Affordability
US 30-year fixed steady at 6.01% weekly (Freddie Mac Feb 19); daily averages 5.99โ€“6.04% as of February 25. Multi-year lows continue to expand buyer pools and support affordability gains. Consensus forecasts keep rates near or below 6% for the remainder of Q1.

2.3 Global Policy and Trade
Divergent monetary paths persist (US/UK easing vs. Eurozone/Canada stabilization). Steady global GDP growth (\~2.9% real per S&P) and contained inflation continue to support the constructive real estate outlook (JLL February 2026).

3. North America Analysis

3.1 United States
Housing: Affordability continues to improve with stable low rates; sales momentum building. Commercial: Multifamily and industrial sectors lead; total investment still projected +16%.

3.2 Sunbelt Region
National 0% price stall continues to mask strong domestic migration-driven performance in select Sunbelt markets.

4. European Market Deep Dive

4.1 United Kingdom
Modest positive momentum intact; lower rates supporting transaction volumes.

4.2 Germany
Residential prices +4.2% annually; chronic supply shortage continues to fuel rent growth.

4.3 European Union
Policy support and returning liquidity are steadily lifting demand and investment activity.

5. Asia-Pacific Regional Outlook

5.1 China
Stabilization policies taking effect; oversupply pressures gradually moderating.

5.2 India
Strong disciplined growth driven by urban migration and healthy IPO pipeline.

5.3 Australia
Severe housing shortages continue pushing prices higher; focus remains on adaptive supply solutions.

5.4 Japan
Moderate growth sustained; Tokyo supply constraints keeping prime assets highly competitive.

6. Middle East & Emerging Markets

6.1 UAE
Foreign ownership reforms accelerating activity; robust retail and hospitality pipelines.

6.2 Saudi Arabia
Ambitious development projects advancing despite rising costs; economic diversification on track.

7. Biggest Deals Spotlight (Recent Momentum as of February 25, 2026)

Deal flow remains concentrated in resilient, high-quality segments:

  • Mixed-Use/Commercial: Voloridge acquires portion of Harbourside Place (Jupiter, FL) for $57.6M (wellness & health-focused redevelopment).
  • Residential Luxury: Waterfront estate in Palm Beach, FL closes at $57M.
  • Multifamily: Princeton Grove Apartments (Miami-Dade, FL) trades at $39.5M (\~40% off previous peak; 216 units acquired by AEW/Grand Peak).
  • Additional Recent Activity: Palm Beach Ibis Isle luxury home sold for $10M (Feb 23); Welltower senior housing portfolio (Palm Beach County) for $81M (Feb 20).
  • Broader momentum: Siemens Energy $421M expansion (NC), ongoing self-storage and multifamily transactions, Compass $1.6B merger progress.

8. Sector-Specific Insights

8.1 Office Real Estate โ€” Continued AI-driven volatility; repositioning and innovation critical.
8.2 Multifamily Real Estate โ€” Strong tenant demand and rent growth persist.
8.3 Retail Real Estate โ€” Mixed results; experiential and necessity retail outperforming.
8.4 Industrial Real Estate โ€” E-commerce and supply-chain resilience remain powerful tailwinds.

9. Conclusion & Future Outlook

The inflection point is holding: historic low rates near 6.01% and sustained affordability improvements are powering a sustainable recovery in core real estate segments, while tech disruption and regional variations remain key watchpoints. Investors should monitor upcoming sales releases and the next Freddie Mac update (Feb 26). 2026 baseline expectations: modest US price growth (0โ€“2%), rising transaction volumes, and continued outperformance in alternative and necessity-driven sectors (JLL).

References
(Updated from Freddie Mac PMMS Feb 19 2026, Zillow/Bankrate/WSJ/NerdWallet/Mortgage News Daily daily averages as of Feb 25 2026, J.P. Morgan, Cotality, JLL Global Real Estate Perspective February 2026, The Real Deal, S&P Global, and other sources as of February 25, 2026.)

Bernd Pulch (M.A.) is a forensic expert, founder of Aristotle AI, entrepreneur, political commentator, satirist, and investigative journalist covering lawfare, media control, investment, real estate, and geopolitics. His work examines how legal systems are weaponized, how capital flows shape policy, how artificial intelligence concentrates power, and what democracy loses when courts and markets become battlefields. Active in the German and international media landscape, his analyses appear regularly on this platform.

Full bio โ†’

Support the investigation โ†’

GLOBAL REAL ESTATE DAILY FEBRUARY 24, 2026

Powered by IMMOBILIEN VERTRAULICH

Author: Ben Williams

For: berndpulch.org

Introduction

As of February 24, 2026, the global real estate market maintains its steady stabilization and cautious recovery path, underpinned by persistent mortgage rate easing and moderating price pressures. US 30-year fixed mortgage rates remain at 6.01% (Freddie Mac Primary Mortgage Market Survey, week ending February 19 โ€” still the lowest since September 2022), with daily/marketplace averages holding firm in the 5.86โ€“6.14% range (Zillow, Bankrate, WSJ, NerdWallet as of February 24). This rate environment continues to improve affordability, support refinance activity, and drive gradual demand recovery. US house prices are stalled nationally at \~0% growth (J.P. Morgan 2026 forecast), with year-over-year growth at 0.9% (latest Cotality data). Globally, nominal house price growth stands at 2.4% YoY (Knight Frank Q3 2025 weighted average across 55 markets), with 86% of markets still posting positive growth, while real growth remains slightly negative at -0.1%. JLLโ€™s February 2026 outlook continues to forecast steady global growth supported by lower rates, contained inflation, and fiscal spending, with particular strength expected in offices, industrial, and retail sectors.

The report covers macro trends, regional updates, sector insights, and the latest deal activity as of February 24, 2026.

1. Executive Summary

Sentiment remains firmly in โ€œsteady recoveryโ€ mode. Multi-year low mortgage rates (6.01% Freddie Mac) continue to boost affordability and sales potential. US existing-home sales show typical seasonal softness but growing rebound signals. Global outlooks stay positive, with resilient asset classes holding firm amid AI-related office pressures. CBRE still projects US commercial investment volume rising +16% to approximately $562B in 2026; JLL reports rebounding leasing activity and investor demand across key sectors. No material shifts were reported over the past 24 hours.

Table 1: Regional Real Estate Outlook Summary (2026)

RegionPrimary SentimentKey DriversMajor Challenges
North AmericaStable to Cautiously OptimisticRate easing (6.01% avg.), multifamily/industrial strength, data centersAI office disruption, builder sentiment
EuropeGaining MomentumRising rents, liquidity return, policy supportConstruction costs, regional divergences
Asia-PacificMixed, Selective GrowthUrban migration (India), supply constraints (Japan), China stability measuresOversupply (China), affordability squeeze (Australia)
Middle EastBullishMega-projects, foreign ownership reformsCost inflation (\~4%), geopolitical risks

2. Global Macro Trends

2.1 AI Disruption: Office Sector Fallout
AI and hybrid-work models continue exerting pressure on traditional office space; prime, well-located assets show selective resilience as landlords accelerate repositioning.

2.2 Mortgage Rates and Affordability
US 30-year fixed steady at 6.01% (Freddie Mac, latest weekly release Feb 19); daily averages remain 5.86โ€“6.14% as of February 24. Multi-year lows continue to expand buyer pools and support affordability gains. Consensus forecasts keep rates near or below 6% for the remainder of Q1.

2.3 Global Policy and Trade
Divergent monetary paths persist (US/UK easing vs. Eurozone/Canada stabilization). Steady global GDP growth (\~2.9% real per S&P) and contained inflation continue to support the constructive real estate outlook (JLL February 2026).

3. North America Analysis

3.1 United States
Housing: Affordability continues to improve with stable low rates; sales momentum building. Commercial: Multifamily and industrial sectors lead; total investment still projected +16%.

3.2 Sunbelt Region
National 0% price stall continues to mask strong domestic migration-driven performance in select Sunbelt markets.

4. European Market Deep Dive

4.1 United Kingdom
Modest positive momentum intact; lower rates supporting transaction volumes.

4.2 Germany
Residential prices +4.2% annually; chronic supply shortage continues to fuel rent growth.

4.3 European Union
Policy support and returning liquidity are steadily lifting demand and investment activity.

5. Asia-Pacific Regional Outlook

5.1 China
Stabilization policies taking effect; oversupply pressures gradually moderating.

5.2 India
Strong disciplined growth driven by urban migration and healthy IPO pipeline.

5.3 Australia
Severe housing shortages continue pushing prices higher; focus remains on adaptive supply solutions.

5.4 Japan
Moderate growth sustained; Tokyo supply constraints keeping prime assets highly competitive.

6. Middle East & Emerging Markets

6.1 UAE
Foreign ownership reforms accelerating activity; robust retail and hospitality pipelines.

6.2 Saudi Arabia
Ambitious development projects advancing despite rising costs; economic diversification on track.

7. Biggest Deals Spotlight (Recent Momentum as of February 24, 2026)

Deal flow remains concentrated in resilient, high-quality segments:

  • Mixed-Use/Commercial: Voloridge acquires portion of Harbourside Place (Jupiter, FL) for $57.6M (wellness & health-focused redevelopment).
  • Residential Luxury: Waterfront estate in Palm Beach, FL closes at $57M.
  • Multifamily: Princeton Grove Apartments (Miami-Dade, FL) trades at $39.5M (\~40% off previous peak; 216 units acquired by AEW/Grand Peak).
  • Additional momentum: Siemens Energy $421M expansion (NC), ongoing self-storage and multifamily transactions, Compass $1.6B merger progress.

8. Sector-Specific Insights

8.1 Office Real Estate โ€” Continued AI-driven volatility; repositioning and innovation critical.
8.2 Multifamily Real Estate โ€” Strong tenant demand and rent growth persist.
8.3 Retail Real Estate โ€” Mixed results; experiential and necessity retail outperforming.
8.4 Industrial Real Estate โ€” E-commerce and supply-chain resilience remain powerful tailwinds.

9. Conclusion & Future Outlook

The inflection point is holding: historic low rates at 6.01% and sustained affordability improvements are powering a sustainable recovery in core real estate segments, while tech disruption and regional variations remain key watchpoints. Investors should monitor upcoming sales releases and any further rate easing. 2026 baseline expectations: modest US price growth (0โ€“2%), rising transaction volumes, and continued outperformance in alternative and necessity-driven sectors (JLL).

References
(Updated from Freddie Mac PMMS Feb 19 2026, Zillow/Bankrate/WSJ/NerdWallet daily averages as of Feb 24 2026, J.P. Morgan, Cotality, JLL Global Perspective February 2026, The Real Deal, S&P Global, and other sources as of February 24, 2026.)

Bernd Pulch (M.A.) is a forensic expert, founder of Aristotle AI, entrepreneur, political commentator, satirist, and investigative journalist covering lawfare, media control, investment, real estate, and geopolitics. His work examines how legal systems are weaponized, how capital flows shape policy, how artificial intelligence concentrates power, and what democracy loses when courts and markets become battlefields. Active in the German and international media landscape, his analyses appear regularly on this platform.

Full bio โ†’

Support the investigation โ†’