Delivering Alpha No one leaving New York City because
Major businesses are adding significant square footage and there is urgency to lease even more office space in New York City with no sign of any looming corporate exodus caused by democratic socialist Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s election win.
New York Mayor-elect Zohran Mamdani’s views have sparked fears that there will be an exodus of companies and capital from the city. But two of the city’s top commercial real estate executives say it’s simply not true, based on leasing activity and new building investments being made, with no pullback in plans ever since it became clear Mamdani would win, and through the democratic socialist’s official election.
“New York City is back,” said Scott Rechler, CEO of RXR Realty, ats Delivering Alpha conference in New York on Thursday. “The people who work here, live here, they feel the energy, they have the conviction, and they have every right,” he said.
“In our business right now, we are seeing CEO after CEO committing to the city,” Rechler said. “We’re seeing a record level of leasing in office buildings. And it’s not just for next year, it’s for 2028, 2030, 2032,” he added.
“We will hit over 40 million square feet in commercial office leases signed at the end of this year,” said Bill Rudin, co-executive chairman of Rudin Management. “Companies are growing here,” he said. “We haven’t seen any diminishment in meetings with brokerage firms,” he said of activity since Mamdani’s election. “People keep saying, ‘Any impact?’ No one has put their pencils down. No one is calling the moving trucks. Companies are expanding and taking space,” Rudin said.
One good example: hedge fund billionaire Ken Griffin of Citadel Securities, who is known for being outspoken with his conservative political views. Rudin, along with Steve Ross, Vornado Realty and Griffin, is breaking ground on a two-million square foot new office building at 350 Park Avenue. “Ken is committed and will have more employees at 350 Park than in Miami,” Rudin said. And while the plans pre-date Mamdani’s rise, Rudin noted they recently filed for a building permit and Griffin is a partner in the project, “so he is moving ahead and very excited about it and very much involved in the design and development of the project. ... How’s that?” Rudin added.
RXR Realty just signed a 300,000-square-foot lease with a law firm moving in 2029, and Rechler noted that the firm came back last week after the election and said they need to expand by another 200,000 square feet. JPMorgan’s new building already needs seats for another 5,000 workers beyond the 10,000 it already can hold.
Rechler noted his firm already has an anchor tenant for a 2.8-million-square-foot project that will replace a Hyatt hotel in the 2031-2032 timeframe. “People believe in New York,” he said. RXR has $7 billion in project financing and “you don’t get that if people don’t believe in the future of New York,” he added, though he said it may require “a little bit of a longer lens.”
But even right now, he said, in the wake of Mamdani’s election, the correct word to use with tenants in the high quality office space market is “urgency” to sign deals, with reports he is hearing of companies signing leases that would normally take them a year to agree to within 21 days. “That’s the market. ... enormous pipeline on the office side I’ve never seen my whole career, never seen it as strong as it is right now in tenant demand,” Rechler said.
“As of today and yesterday, the information we are getting in real time is that tenants are still in the market and looking for good high quality space,” Rudin said.
One reason for the bullish outlook on New York’s real estate market is the need to attract and retain young professional talent.
“The people they want to be working in the companies are here in New York City,” Rudin said.
“Every young professional wants to be in New York,” Rechler added, citing a 1.5% vacancy rate in the multi- family property real estate market in the city. “People want to be here,” he said.
Their view of the mayor — both real estate executives have met with him — isn’t without reservations.
“Mamdani is not necessarily consistent with the capital of capitalism,” Rechler said. “That’s the biggest risk. We have a guy who is caricature, not a character, but a caricature,” he said, and that could set Mamdani up to easily be defined as a socialist with no experience and just riding on social media savvy, he added.
It is a risk that Rechler says he is seeing play out among overseas institutional investors specifically. “When I leave the city and travel the world, they all have this big anxiety,” he said. “It may impact foreign investors in multi-family projects in New York. They hear ‘rent freeze,’ just hear that word ... and maybe there is a pullback there,” Rechler said, citing the fact that the mayor has power to appoint officials to a board overseeing those policies.
That perception is leading some institutional investors with whom RXR was talking about large investments in New York City to “pull back and say they want to see how it plays out,” Rechler said. He added the tone of these conversations implies that there could be a “chill in capital flows” among these investors.
“I’ve been in the Middle East and Europe and the first thing people want to talk about is Mamdani,” he said. Rechler is also on the board of directors of the New York Fed, and he said the topic of conversation is the same. “In the boardroom of the New York Fed they want to talk about it and their staff traveling around the world is being asked as they travel.”
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