🚨The sale of 800 Market Street for $17.2 million — a >60% discount from its 2019 valuation — underscores the severity of San Francisco’s office repricing. At $344 per sq. ft., the transaction sits above the cycle lows (~$114/sf) but well below pre-pandemic peaks near $800/sf. Vacancy near 34% and high carry costs have forced institutional owners to capitulate. CRE capital markets are resetting with cap rates now 8–10%, doubling from the 4–5% range of 2019 and slashing values accordingly.

  • Sale Price (800 Market St.) — $17.2 M (≈ $344/sf); >60% below 2019 value ≈ $45 M — [Source: SF Chronicle].

  • Downtown Vacancy Rate — 34.8% (Q2 2025) — [Source: Cushman & Wakefield].

  • Market Cap Rates — 8–10% (2025 office sales) vs. 4–5% (2019) — [Source: Kidder Mathews].

  • Loan Performance. Sharply higher cap rates drive loan-to-value compression and breach covenants; DSCR stress tests show 20–30% NOI drops erasing equity buffers. Legacy lenders face write-downs and reappraisals.

  • Demand Dynamics. Vacancy ≈ 34% limits rent growth; creative and medical tenants (≤6 ksf) are absorbing smaller suites as tech downsizing persists. Concessions >$100/sf TIs plus free rent standard.

  • Asset Strategies. Focus on adaptive reuse and experiential leasing to differentiate mid-rise assets; build capex reserves (18–24 months) to survive lease-up.

  • Capital Markets. Bid-ask spreads narrowing at distressed levels; private capital re-enters where debt is limited to ≤50% LTV. CMBS appraisers using 8–9% caps as new benchmark.

  • Rates up, values down >50%.

  • Smaller creative assets favored; commodity towers illiquid.

  • Financing thin, heavy equity required.

  • Spreads re-price to risk; banks extend or exit.

🛠 Operator’s Lens

  • Refi. High refi rates (>8%) favor all-cash or bridge to stabilize; prepay flexibility key.

  • Value-Add. Capex for TIs/common areas ≥15% of basis; model lease-up 2–3 yrs.

  • Development. New office starts paused; evaluate conversion to residential/lab.

  • Lender POV. Banks discount collateral by 50–70%; CMBS specials drive liquidation pricing signals.

  • Expect more distressed sales through 2026 as loans mature without refi options.

  • Watch pilot office-to-residential programs for inventory removal.

  • Key risk: further value erosion if tech employment weakens or rates stay high.

SF Chronicle — San Francisco Office Landmark Trades at 60% Discount as Distress Spreads (Oct 2 2025). https://www.sfchronicle.com Cushman & Wakefield — San Francisco Office MarketBeat Q2 2025. https://www.cushmanwakefield.com Kidder Mathews — San Francisco Office Capital Markets Update 2025. https://www.kidder.com

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