If you're a commercial property giant, Shark Tank star Barbara Corcoran has some bad news for you: the market is going to get much worse before it gets any better.
In fact, it's going to be a "bloodbath."
Corcoran echoed the sentiments of Tesla CEO and Twitter owner, Elon Musk, who earlier this week tweeted: "Commercial real estate is melting down fast."
Speaking to FOX Business' The Claman Countdown this week, Corcoran—who sold her New York real estate brokerage for $66 million in 2001—said there isn't enough confidence in the commercial property market post-pandemic.
Despite mandates from big businesses like Google, Amazon and most recently Meta, swathes of office blocks across the U.S. are still lying partially empty.
According to data from security provider Kastle the average occupancy of offices across America is at just under 50%—with the New York metropolitan area seeing some of the lowest rates of tenancy.
"No one really believes it's going to turn the corner," Corcoran said. "People are staying home. Our best office buildings in midtown Manhattan are 50% occupied, and in most major cities or in secondary cities, we have a 20% vacancy rate. No one wants to take that chance."
She added that with turbulent economic times ahead she expects to see more businesses defaulting on their loans or mortgages—an issue which will trickle back to regional banks.
Corcoran's theory is in line with the data: UBS said in April it expects to see more defaults on real estate loans as a result of an expected credit crunch.
"I don't see that turning around," the Shark Tank star said. "I think it's going to be a bit of a bloodbath before it gets better."
It's a crisis Elon Musk has sounded the alarm on multiple times—his warning earlier this week, in response to Craft Ventures founder David Sacks highlighting the level of debt about to mature in the sector, was just the latest.
In March the SpaceX founder responded to a tweet about real estate debt with: "This is by far the most serious looming issue. Mortgages too.