By Leslie Shaver
Wed, September 3, 2025 at 8:53 AM PDT
This story was originally published on Multifamily Dive. To receive daily news and insights, subscribe to our free daily Multifamily Dive newsletter.
Cityview started the year at a torrid transaction pace, posting its strongest first quarter ever.
The Los Angeles-based apartment owner and manager, which recently opened a New York office as a springboard to investment in the eastern U.S., bought and sold nine properties.
Then, “Liberation Day” arrived on April 2, and President Donald Trump announced tariffs, dragging down second-quarter numbers.
“Everything shut down,” Sean Burton, CEO and chairman of Cityview, told Multifamily Dive. “Investors were scared. Any kind of turmoil gives investors a reason to pause.”
The numbers back that up. Apartment sales volume fell 14% year over year to $35.1 billion in the second quarter of 2025, according to a report that data firm MSCI Real Assets shared with Multifamily Dive. However, they rose 5% to $66.6 billion in the first half of the year.
…
Even if rates fluctuate, many observers believe that buyers and sellers have simply learned to adapt to the uncertainty. “I think that the market has gotten accustomed to volatility,” said Sharon Karaffa, president of multifamily debt and structured finance for New York City-based real estate services provider Newmark’s Multifamily Capital Markets Division. “If you want to transact, you just have to deal with it.”
Burton agrees. “Even though there’s turmoil, people have a handle on what it’s going to look like,” he said. “So we think the second half of the year will be solid — maybe not as strong as we thought in January, but definitely solid.”
…
“We’re seeing a lot more transactions hit the market,” Cityview’s Burton said. “We’re seeing things start to trade.”
“I think that the market has gotten accustomed to volatility. If you want to transact, you just have to deal with it.”