The barometer does not isolate or precisely quantify AI’s standalone impact. Each of the underlying indicators is also being shaped and influenced by other factors. Instead, the barometer identifies indicators where AI is likely to have a pronounced impact. It focuses on momentum, tracking how each indicator signals changing conditions as AI exerts both positive and negative forces on the macro economy and the built environment.
To illustrate this momentum, here are summary charts which visualize emerging signals of AI’s impact by category, over time:
The Economic Impact Barometer shows a broadly upward trajectory, led by accelerating AI adoption, a strengthening growth engine, and rising capital formation tied to investment in AI-related infrastructure and innovation. At the same time, labor market signals are more mixed, with emerging headwinds in net employment, particularly in automation-vulnerable, white-collar sectors and among younger workers, highlighting how AI is simultaneously driving growth while reshaping workforce demand.
The CRE Impact Barometer shows an increasingly bifurcated landscape, with positive AI-driven demand clearly benefitting data centers and, highly automatable industrial facilities, where capital inflows, leasing activity, and investor pricing continue to strengthen. By contrast, office, retail, and multifamily signals remain mixed, with AI reinforcing quality and location differentiation, supporting prime assets and tech-exposed markets while leaving broader fundamentals constrained in more vulnerable segments.