Introducing Market Reports—search the largest database of commercial real estate market reports.

Trade Tensions Cool Blackstone’s Real Estate Profits in Q1

Blackstone’s Q1 profits took a hit as trade tensions cooled real estate activity, even amid strong inflows across other units.
Blackstone’s Q1 profits took a hit as trade tensions cooled real estate activity, even amid strong inflows across other units.
  • Blackstone’s Q1 real estate realizations fell 65% year-over-year to $4.3B, contributing to a 25% drop in distributable earnings from the previous quarter.
  • Trade tensions and uncertainty around tariffs dampened market activity, with President Jon Gray suggesting a swift resolution could help rebound dealmaking.
  • Despite the slowdown, Blackstone raised $62B in capital across all lines, the most in nearly three years, and ended the quarter with $177B in dry powder.
  • Real estate investment returns lagged, with opportunistic assets down 3.7% year-over-year and core-plus up just 0.1% since March 2024.
Key Takeaways

Deal Flow Down, Trade Fears Up

Blackstone’s real estate arm took a Q1 2025 hit as Trump’s trade war chilled deal activity, per Bisnow. Realizations fell to $4.3B, down 65% YoY, pulling distributable earnings —and overall Blackstone profits— down 25% from the previous quarter.

President Jon Gray emphasized that a resolution to the trade dispute could help revive the market: “Faster resolution of the tariff diplomacy will lead to better outcomes for the real economy and markets,” he told Bloomberg.

Finding Opportunity In the Fog

Still, Blackstone deployed $36B in real estate and raised $62B firmwide—its strongest quarterly inflow since 2022. With $177B in dry powder, Gray noted the firm is eyeing discounted opportunities in the market chaos: “When prices reset lower we think of that as an opportunity.”

Real Estate Takes The Back Seat

While Blackstone’s broader business lines continued to perform, real estate lagged in both capital inflows and returns, weighing on overall profits. The sector brought in just $6.1B in new capital, and its returns were muted:

  • Opportunistic real estate investments rose just 0.2% in Q1 but are down 3.7% year-over-year.
  • Core-plus assets rose 1.2% for the quarter, but gains since March 2024 were a slim 0.1%.

CEO Stephen Schwarzman noted a potential upside: tariffs may curb new construction and bolster existing property values. “Tariff effects are likely to drive up construction costs and further reduce new supply, which is supportive for real estate values absent recessionary conditions,” he said.

What’s Next

Despite the cautious tone around real estate, Blackstone remains well-positioned. Blackstone’s AUM hit $1.2T in March, with leadership expecting real estate interest to rebound as markets stabilize.

Gray summed up the outlook with tempered optimism: “As this recovery begins to take hold, I think you’ll see the capital flow back.”

RECENT NEWSLETTERS
View All
Prologis Cools Its Forecast as Tariff Tensions Shake Warehouse Market
April 18, 2025
READ MORE
Multifamily Buyer & Seller Confidence Ticks Up Despite Policy Uncertainty
April 17, 2025
READ MORE
Tariffs Turn Apartment Oversupply Into a Windfall for Developers
April 16, 2025
READ MORE
Multifamily Demand Defies Economic Headwinds in Early 2025
April 15, 2025
READ MORE
CRE Daily - No Cap

podcast

No CAP by CRE Daily

No Cap by CRE Daily is a weekly podcast offering an unfiltered look into commercial real estate’s biggest trends and influential figures.

Join 65k+
  • operators
  • developers
  • brokers
  • owners
  • landlords
  • investors
  • lenders

who start their day with CRE Daily.

The latest news and trends in commercial real estate delivered to your inbox. Get smarter about what matters in just 5-minutes or less.