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Two Office Landlords Defaulting May Be Just the Beginning

With at least $92 billion of office mortgages maturing this year, landlords are under increasing pressure. 

Some offices in cities such as San Francisco are struggling to get workers to return, increasing the pressure on landlords.

Photographer: Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
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A Pacific Investment Management Co. office landlord that defaulted on $1.7 billion of mortgage notes sent shockwaves through a troubled part of the real estate market.

For years, property owners have been grappling with the rise of remote work — a problem so large that one brokerage estimates roughly 330 million square feet (31 million square meters) of office space will become vacant by the end of the decade as a result. But low interest rates allowed the investors to muddle along more easily without worrying about the debt.