Skip to content
Trending
September 23, 2025Salesforce issues weak revenue guidance even as earnings beat estimates June 19, 2025Salesforce shares fall as software maker shows pockets of weakness December 17, 2025Salesforce’s raised guidance lifts the stock but doesn’t change our rating February 20, 2025Fed officials are worried about tariffs’ impact on inflation and see rate cuts on hold, minutes show March 8, 2025Sen. Blumenthal asks Visa for records of its payments deal with Elon Musk’s X June 15, 2025UK Finance Minister Rachel Reeves’ spending plans risk creating ‘a snowball effect’ that pushes borrowing costs higher March 16, 2025Goldman Sachs offers its newest option for downside protection in volatile markets November 25, 2025Nvidia name-checks Michael Burry in secret memo pushing back on AI bubble allegations March 26, 2025British businesses pile on the pressure on U.K. Financial Minister Reeves ahead of budget update October 5, 2025Investors aren’t the market’s biggest loser if Trump, SEC end quarterly reporting
  Friday 6 February 2026
everydayread.net
  • HOME
  • Bitcoin
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
everydayread.net
everydayread.net
  • HOME
  • Bitcoin
  • Business
  • Earnings
  • Economy
  • Finance
everydayread.net
  Business  Real estate titan Barry Sternlicht says he will ‘have to’ drop employees in favor of AI
Business

Real estate titan Barry Sternlicht says he will ‘have to’ drop employees in favor of AI

AdminAdmin—November 11, 20250

Property Play: Where real estate giants Sternlicht and Wallace are putting their money

A version of this article first appeared in the CNBC Property Play newsletter with Diana Olick. Property Play covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, from individuals to venture capitalists, private equity funds, family offices, institutional investors and large public companies. 

Sign up to receive future editions, straight to your inbox.

Billionaire Barry Sternlicht, chairman and CEO of Starwood Capital Group, is a legendary, legacy real estate investor. Brendan Wallace is an entrepreneur who co-founded Fifth Wall, a venture capital firm investing in property technology and decarbonizing real estate. The pair first met in the gym. Now, Wallace can say Sternlicht is a mentor – as well as a Fifth Wall investor – and Sternlicht jokes that Wallace is his trainer.

Together they gave CNBC Property Play a rare glimpse into how old-school commercial real estate investing is pivoting to a new tech-driven world order and how that new world order still relies on lessons learned in the past. 

Here are some of the highlights from the conversation, edited for clarity and length:

On CRE investing

Sternlicht: We endured a 500 basis point, fairly rapid increase in rates, and most people who were invested had to pay some price for that, whether the yields on property went up or they weren’t properly hedged. Your costs went up, your expenses, and they drained a lot of cash flow from assets that might have gone into fixing the assets up. That’s behind us now, and there’s no doubt that interest rates are going down. … In May of next year, Jerome [Powell] will  be out [as Federal Reserve Chairman], and nobody’s getting that job without agreeing to lower rates.

More stories

Sen. Warren asks FTC to consider blocking Dick’s-Foot Locker merger over antitrust concerns

August 6, 2025

Once high-flying Bluebird Bio sells itself to private equity after tough times for the gene therapy maker

February 22, 2025

Luxury credit card rivalry heats up as Amex, JPMorgan tease updates to their premier cards

June 16, 2025

Federal housing agency will not cut Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loan limits, new director says

March 26, 2025

I think they should lower rates. I think inflation that we’re seeing is tariff related. It will continue. It’ll get worse, probably, in the fourth quarter, when the new inventories hit the shelves and the tariffs can no longer be ignored. 

Wallace: The rate increases that Barry was mentioning, those impacted prop tech definitionally, because all tech companies, all loss-making businesses, rerated all at the same time. And at the same time, the demand from commercial real estate stopped. 

I would say an overlay on top of it was also that a big part of where real estate companies were investing in the last four years was around decarbonization efforts, so trying to conform to new carbon neutrality laws … and anticipating this kind of wave of decarbonization. And I feel like with [President Donald] Trump‘s election, it kind of felt like they got a hall pass, certainly for four years.

Get Property Play directly to your inbox

CNBC’s Property Play with Diana Olick covers new and evolving opportunities for the real estate investor, delivered weekly to your inbox.

Subscribe here to get access today.

On AI and data centers

Sternlicht: We’ve probably got $20 billion dedicated to [the data center] space. I think it’s a different issue than you think. Most of us don’t build until we get a hyperscaler lease. So we get the lease from Amazon, Microsoft, Google, Oracle. What we’re watching now is the credit worthiness of the tenant, and particularly Oracle, because Oracle is doing all these deals back-ended to [ChatGPT], and Chat is a startup that doesn’t make money and requires hundreds of billions of dollars to grow to the scale they want to be. 

There’s no question AI is going to change the entire world and do it much faster than anything we’ve ever seen before, much faster than the internet, certainly faster than the Industrial Revolution. That is terrifying to me. I mean, I’m not so complacent. I look at … how we spend money, and what I can do with AI agents that I do with humans today, and it’s terrifying for the people. I think we have to let people go, right? Jobs of 15 people can be done with a chatbot that costs me $36 a month. 

Wallace: I was trying to trace all these pretty Byzantine and somewhat incestuous commitments that are happening between the large tech companies, between the digital infrastructure providers, and it’s actually very hard to trace who’s going to ultimately pay for it all, but ultimately it has to be paid for in the economy.

The way to just acid test whether it makes sense is if you looked at the amount of AI compute that will be required to fill all the data centers that are in production or have been announced to go into production, and then you assume that the tech companies have to make some profit on top of that to justify it, which they’re not today, but let’s assume they have to. Take any margin you want, assume that’s the revenue that’s then therefore flowing to large language models and AI. What percent of U.S. GDP would that be today if you ran that math? My fear is that it might be like 120% of U.S. GDP. 

On their next bets

Sternlicht: We’re heavily investing in Europe, actually. Not here. They’ve done the stimulus package. They have low rates. They don’t have, really, inflation. They don’t have tariffs. It’s amazing, having returned from Europe and the Middle East, I can buy everything cheaper in Europe than I can here now.

Wallace: New York City. People overestimate the durability of these political vibe shifts. Within two years of electing Trump, we elected [Zohran] Mamdani to run New York, and I just think these things move dialectically. Over the long term, New York is going to be super valuable. So if I were a betting person, I didn’t have to make a return in the next four years, I would bet on New York.

Trump proposes 50-year mortgage, but some say homeowner savings would be minimal
Rocket Lab posts record third-quarter revenue, launch backlog
Related posts
  • Related posts
  • More from author
Business

American Airlines no longer lets basic economy flyers earn miles

December 18, 20250
Business

Delta president Glen Hauenstein, who helped turn airline into industry profit leader, to retire in February

December 17, 20250
Business

Consumers are feeling gloomy about the economy. Here’s why they’re spending anyway

December 16, 20250
Load more
Read also
Finance

Visa says new AI shopping tool has helped customers with hundreds of transactions

December 18, 20250
Economy

Trust these numbers? Economists see a lot of flaws in delayed CPI report showing downward inflation

December 18, 20250
Earnings

Nike tops earnings estimates but shares fall as China sales plunge, tariffs hit profits

December 18, 20250
Business

American Airlines no longer lets basic economy flyers earn miles

December 18, 20250
Finance

Billionaire fund manager Ron Baron praises beaten-up financial stock whose new CEO he compares to Jamie Dimon

December 17, 20250
Economy

Watch Fed Governor Christopher Waller speak on interest rates and the race to succeed Powell

December 17, 20250
Load more
    © 2022, All Rights Reserved.
    • About Us
    • Advertise With Us
    • Contact Us
    • Disclaimer
    • Cookie Law
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions