Copyright Barchart

Want expert insights on REITs and BDCs? Join Colorado Wealth Management Fund’s email list—widely regarded as the top REIT analyst on Seeking Alpha. Stay ahead of the market with exclusive updates! [Sign Up Now] For nearly two years, rate fear has dominated every real estate conversation. The narrative was simple: higher yields meant lower REIT prices, and anything tied to real estate income was supposedly “uninvestable.” But markets evolve faster than narratives and 2025 is already proving that the story has started to shift. As the Fed nears the end of its tightening cycle and inflation data cools, capital is quietly moving back into income assets. For investors following The REIT Forum, that shift could reshape opportunities across REITs, mREITs, BDCs, and preferred shares as we move toward 2026. The Macro Backdrop: From Fear to Fundamentals Through most of 2023 and 2024, REITs traded more on interest-rate headlines than on fundamentals. That dynamic is starting to break. Even as Treasury yields hover near 4.5%, REITs with strong balance sheets and predictable cash flows are stabilizing — and in several cases, outperforming. Institutional flows are returning to large-cap names like Prologis (PLD) , Simon Property Group (SPG) , and Realty Income (O) as investors rediscover the appeal of contractual rent growth and durable yields. Meanwhile, specialized REITs in data infrastructure and life sciences — Equinix (EQIX) and Alexandria Real Estate Equities (ARE) — are benefiting from secular growth drivers that are only loosely correlated with rates. It’s not a boom, but it’s a meaningful turn: valuation resets are meeting improving fundamentals. The REIT Landscape: Winners Emerging from the Fog A quick snapshot of the sectors showing the most traction: Industrial & Logistics (PLD, (REXR) ) – Global supply-chain normalization and limited new construction are pushing rents higher. Retail & Mixed-Use (SPG, (FRT) ) – Foot traffic and occupancy remain strong, and cap rates have widened enough to attract value investors again. Residential ((INVH) , (MAA) , (CPT) ) – Single-family rental REITs like Invitation Homes (INVH) and Sunbelt-focused apartment names like Mid-America Apartment Communities (MAA) are well positioned for modest rent growth through 2025. Infrastructure & Data (EQIX, (CCI) , (AMT) ) – Demand for connectivity and data processing continues to expand faster than supply. Healthcare ((MPW) , (DOC) ) – Still in recovery mode, but select operators may benefit from stable long-term leases and demographic tailwinds. Investors who fled these names during the rate panic are starting to trickle back in — quietly, but steadily. Mortgage REITs and BDCs: Stabilizing the Income Engine The ripple effect extends beyond equity REITs. Mortgage REITs and BDCs are seeing the early signs of stabilization as well. Annaly Capital Management (NLY) and AGNC Investment Corp (AGNC) have been active in repositioning their hedges to protect book value. If rate volatility continues to cool, spreads could normalize, supporting better total-return potential. Two Harbors Investment (TWO) and Dynex Capital (DX) remain interesting examples of firms keeping leverage disciplined while waiting for improved refinancing conditions. On the BDC side, leaders such as Ares Capital (ARCC) and Main Street Capital (MAIN) have maintained portfolio quality through the rate cycle. Their floating-rate exposure helped during 2024, and improved credit sentiment could aid valuations into 2026. This cross-sector stability matters because it reinforces confidence in the broader income ecosystem — particularly preferred shares. Preferred Shares: Where Stability Meets Opportunity Preferred shares issued by REITs and mREITs are one of the most direct ways to benefit from improved fundamentals without taking full equity risk. As base rates drift lower and volatility eases, the spread on many REIT preferreds remains unusually wide relative to historic averages. That setup creates asymmetry: the income stream remains attractive, while the downside may be capped if the credit backdrop continues to firm. At The REIT Forum, we’ve emphasized how floating-rate preferreds with smaller spreads can underperform when rates decline — because a 2% rate drop is a bigger portion of an 8% yield than a 10% yield. Investors should keep that math in mind as the yield curve shifts. Why 2025–2026 Could Be the Turning Point Here’s what makes this environment compelling: Rates May Fall, but Slowly. A gradual path favors REITs with long-duration leases and strong balance sheets. Credit Markets Are Reopening. REITs can refinance on better terms, and BDC portfolio companies gain more flexibility. Cap Rates Have Reset. Much of the pain from higher rates has already been priced in. Demand Drivers Are Intact. Data, healthcare, housing, logistics — the underlying need for physical assets hasn’t changed. That combination supports a “grind-higher” scenario — not a euphoric rebound, but a sustainable recovery. By the time 2026 arrives, the REIT sector could look very different from the discounted, rate-obsessed market investors faced in 2023–2024. Key Tickers That Frame the Story Here’s a cross-section of widely followed names that illustrate the landscape: PLD, SPG, O, EQIX, ARE, INVH, NLY, AGNC, TWO, DX, ARCC, MAIN, MPW, CCI, AMT, MAA, CPT. Each highlights a different piece of the puzzle — from property ownership to credit intermediation — but together they form the income backbone of the U.S. market. The Bigger Picture The shift from fear to fundamentals doesn’t happen overnight, but it’s underway. Investors who only see “higher for longer” are missing the underlying transition: earnings stability, improving access to capital, and renewed investor appetite for reliable yield. For followers of The REIT Forum, that means watching less of the daily rate chatter and more of the cash-flow dynamics that actually drive long-term performance. The headlines will eventually catch up. By then, the best entry points will likely be gone. Conclusion 2025 is shaping up to be the year when the rate-driven narrative finally gives way to a fundamentals-driven market. REITs, mREITs, and preferred shares that survive this phase with stable balance sheets could lead the next leg higher as we head into 2026. For disciplined income investors, this isn’t a time to chase momentum — it’s a time to recognize that fear is fading and the foundation for the next cycle is being laid right now. Join The REIT Forum by Colorado Wealth Management Fund, trusted by over 60,000 investors for expert analysis on REITs, BDCs, and preferred shares. This article was compiled by my assistant. If there are any mistakes, blame him - I certainly will.