The Roundtable’s policy news digest will resume publication on Friday, December 5, 2025
Recent issues of Roundtable Weekly can be searched by keyword here.
The Roundtable’s policy news digest will resume publication on Friday, December 5, 2025
Recent issues of Roundtable Weekly can be searched by keyword here.

The new stopgap extends government funding only through Jan. 30, leaving appropriators less than two months to complete the remaining FY2026 bills. With the government reopened, housing, permitting, tax, and energy policy issues are again at the forefront of congressional debates. (PoliticoPro, Nov. 13)
Housing

Permitting & Energy

Tax and Tariff Policy

Roundtable on the Road

RER will continue working with lawmakers to provide insights and advance practical solutions as Congress moves into a compressed legislative window.

The federal government reopened late Wednesday after a 43-day shutdown, the longest in U.S. history, as Congress approved a short-term funding bill keeping agencies running through Jan. 30, 2026. (The Hill, Nov. 13)
State of Play

What’s Restored: NFIP, HUD Programs, Federal Services

What’s Next
Another shutdown is possible if Congress fails to meet the Jan. 30 deadline.

Blackstone announced this week that Kathleen McCarthy, global co-head of Blackstone Real Estate, will step down from the firm at the end of the year after an impactful 15-year tenure. As Chair of The Real Estate Roundtable (RER), she will continue to lead the organization’s policy agenda, member engagement and industry outreach. (Bloomberg | CoStar, Nov. 11)
Next on RER’s meeting calendar is the all-member State of the Industry (SOI) Meeting, which will include policy advisory committee sessions, on January 21–22, 2026, in Washington, DC.

(WASHINGTON, D.C.) — The Real Estate Roundtable’s (RER) Q4 2025 Sentiment Index registered an overall score of 67, equivalent to the prior quarter, reflecting that commercial real estate executives’ sentiment has shifted from caution toward guarded optimism as markets stabilize, transaction activity resumes, and expectations build for easing interest rates in 2026.
The Current Index rose one point to 64, while the Future Index dipped slightly to 69, together indicating confidence that the worst disruptions of recent years have passed—even as policy uncertainty and uneven capital access continue to shape near-term decision-making.
Industry leaders credited easing rate pressures and increased market activity for boosting optimism, despite tariffs and shifting policy signals posing persistent challenges.
“Real estate executives see encouraging momentum,” said Jeffrey DeBoer, RER President and CEO. “Roundtable members are reporting steady improvement and renewed confidence across sectors. Despite improvements, tariffs continue to drive up development costs and complicate business planning. Moreover, the record-long government shutdown is disrupting infrastructure and construction permitting, and access to current economic data that companies rely on to plan. Clear, consistent, and coordinated policies from Washington are essential to unlock capital and support long-term economic growth in communities nationwide.”
The Q4 Sentiment Index topline findings include:
Sample responses from participants in the Sentiment Index’s Q4 survey include:
“Market conditions have strengthened, and real estate has benefited from overall market optimism, driven by expectations of continued rate cuts on the short end of the curve and confidence that the economy will avoid a recession.”
“Equity is coming in, but real estate has lots of competition among infrastructure, private markets, etc.”
“Tariffs have been a disaster for our industry, not only because the cost of materials is higher, but also because of the uncertainty they create which significantly hampers the ability to make decisions.”
Data for the Q4 survey was gathered by Chicago-based Ferguson Partners on RER’s behalf in October. See the full Q4 report.
The Real Estate Roundtable (RER) brings together leaders of the nation’s top publicly-held and privately-owned real estate ownership, development, lending and management firms with the leaders of major national real estate trade associations to jointly address key national policy issues relating to real estate and the overall economy.
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The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) released its long-awaited reorganization of various program offices on Monday. It lists ENERGY STAR–the voluntary federal public-private partnership promoting efficiency in buildings and appliances–as falling under the newly structured Office of Radiation and Indoor Air (“ORIA”). (EPA website | E&E News, Nov. 3)
Agency Restructuring
Industry Advocacy

ENERGY STAR Continues During Shutdown
RER and our industry partners will continue to track these events closely. The coalition will advocate for EPA to operate the bipartisan, highly successful ENERGY STAR program robustly and efficiently once the government reopens.

The government shutdown, now in its sixth week, continues to strain markets. Despite some bipartisan progress, the path to reopening remains uncertain as the economic fallout spreads across housing, infrastructure, and other sectors.
State of Play
Implications for the Economy & CRE
Supreme Court Weighs Limits on Presidential Tariff Powers

RER continues to urge Congress to move swiftly toward a bipartisan funding agreement that reopens the government, restarts critical permitting and data functions, and ensures continuity for housing, infrastructure, and financial programs essential to real estate investment and economic growth.

The Real Estate Roundtable’s (RER) Q4 2025 Sentiment Index registered an overall score of 67, equivalent to the prior quarter, reflecting that commercial real estate executives’ sentiment has shifted from caution toward guarded optimism as markets stabilize, transaction activity resumes, and expectations build for easing interest rates in 2026.
Topline Findings
The Q4 Sentiment Index topline findings include:
Roundtable View
Data for the Q4 survey was gathered by Chicago-based Ferguson Partners on RER’s behalf in October. See the full Q4 report.

Industry leaders convened with policymakers at this week’s Fall Roundtable Meeting to address national policies impacting commercial real estate and the broader economy.
Fall Roundtable Meeting

Speakers & Policy Issues
Roundtable members engaged in policy issue discussions with the following guests:





Next on RER’s meeting calendar is the all-member State of the Industry (SOI) Meeting, which will include policy advisory committee sessions, on January 21–22, 2026, in Washington, DC.

The Federal Reserve on Wednesday approved a second consecutive quarter-point rate cut, lowering the federal funds rate to 3.75-4 percent. Chair Jerome Powell cautioned that another reduction in December is uncertain, suggesting the pace of easing could soon slow.
Fed’s Decision
Housing and CRE Outlook
RER Advocacy

Basel III Endgame
RER will continue to track developments on monetary policies and support measures that preserve liquidity and lending capacity as rate relief remains gradual.