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When the AI panic hit Wall Street, the public markets went into an absolute whipsaw.
Commercial real estate took one of its sharpest beatings in years - CBRE tumbled, JLL tumbled, and names like Newmark and BXP weren't far behind. The narrative? Investors were terrified that AI would automate the brokerage business, gut white-collar jobs, and crater office demand overnight. There’s just one problem with that "doom and gloom" story: CBRE just posted record annual revenue of $40.6 billion - up 13% year over year.
In Episode 25 of TQCIS, we break down why this selloff might be one of the most "oversold" moments in recent history. They dive into why the Luddite Fallacy is the most underused framework in CRE right now, proving that efficiency doesn't decrease demand for labor - it usually explodes it. We also look at the ultimate "vibe shift": Coinbase. After paying $25 million to exit San Francisco and declaring themselves "remote-first," they’re officially back with 150,000 square feet. It turns out, when innovation cycles speed up, the smartest companies realize that digital communication is not the best form for learning.
Also in this episode:
- The AI Clustering Effect: Why San Francisco is proving that innovation still needs a physical epicenter (and why talent is a social species).
- Tuesday is the New Monday: Placer.ai data shows the midweek spike is real. What does that mean for a lease built on "contractual lock-in" instead of customer success?
- The Elon Effect: SpaceX is poised to raise more in its IPO than 90 companies combined. We discuss why Musk is arguably the most important "city-maker" alive today.
- The Agentic Unlock: Greg shares how he’s using AI agents to get "brutally honest" feedback on sales pitches and account management in real time. Is the office dead? Or is the "passive landlord" the only thing actually going extinct?