
Real estate investment trusts (REITs) play a pivotal role in various property sectors, from warehouses and apartments to hospitals and hotels. In this comprehensive overview, we highlight the top publicly traded REITs (and a few real estate-related companies) in each major property type category. We’ll explore their focus and portfolios, and explain how those asset types are traded on Brevitas. Brevitas is an online marketplace connecting buyers and sellers of commercial real estate opportunities, offering a neutral platform (not a brokerage) for deal-making. Whether you’re interested in industrial warehouses or digital infrastructure, understanding these market leaders can inform your investment strategy and show how Brevitas facilitates similar transactions.
Industrial Real Estate
Industrial REITs own and manage properties like warehouses, distribution centers, and logistics facilities that keep supply chains moving. In Brevitas’ industrial listings search, you’ll find many such assets available for sale, reflecting the same categories of properties that these REITs specialize in. Brevitas helps connect buyers and sellers for warehouses, manufacturing facilities, and logistics hubs by providing deal rooms and marketing tools to efficiently exchange these opportunities. Below are five leading public industrial REITs:
Prologis, Inc. (NYSE: PLD)
Prologis is the world’s largest industrial REIT, focused on high-quality warehouses and distribution centers in key global markets. Its portfolio spans logistics facilities near major ports, airports, and urban areas, serving e-commerce and supply-chain operators. The company’s scale and global reach make it a bellwether for industrial real estate demand. On Brevitas, similar distribution warehouses and last-mile fulfillment centers appear as listings, allowing investors to buy local industrial assets reminiscent of Prologis’s holdings. Prologis’s deal focus on long-term leases with creditworthy tenants mirrors what Brevitas users often seek in industrial deals (stable income from logistics real estate).
Rexford Industrial Realty, Inc. (NYSE: REXR)
Rexford Industrial specializes in infill industrial properties in Southern California – one of the nation’s tightest and most in-demand warehouse markets. Its facilities include light industrial and warehouse buildings in Los Angeles, Orange County, and the Inland Empire, often serving as last-mile distribution or regional manufacturing hubs. Rexford’s strategy focuses on value-add acquisitions and redevelopments in supply-constrained areas. On Brevitas, you can find industrial listings in similarly high-demand urban logistics markets. Investors on the platform might encounter multi-tenant industrial parks or single-tenant warehouses in metro areas, akin to the types Rexford owns, highlighting opportunities to invest in scarce industrial assets that attract strong tenant interest.
EastGroup Properties, Inc. (NYSE: EGP)
EastGroup Properties is an industrial REIT focused on the Sunbelt region, developing and owning multi-tenant business distribution centers. Its properties are typically clusterings of flex warehouses in markets like Texas, Florida, Arizona, and California, catering to a variety of small-to-mid sized businesses needing light industrial space. The company emphasizes functional, shallow-bay warehouses in supply-constrained submarkets. On Brevitas’s marketplace, Sunbelt industrial properties – from modern business parks to last-mile delivery warehouses – are commonly listed. EastGroup’s asset types (multi-tenant industrial parks) align with what Brevitas users might sell or acquire when looking for stable, diversified income from industrial real estate in growing regional markets.
First Industrial Realty Trust, Inc. (NYSE: FR)
First Industrial Realty Trust owns and develops logistics properties across major U.S. distribution hubs. Its portfolio includes bulk warehouses, light industrial buildings, and flex space in key markets such as Chicago, New Jersey, Dallas, and Southern California. First Industrial serves a range of tenants from manufacturers to e-commerce distributors, and it often engages in build-to-suit development for large corporate tenants. On Brevitas, listings for big-box warehouses or industrial development sites in transportation corridors echo First Industrial’s focus. The REIT’s emphasis on core industrial assets with good transportation access is reflected in Brevitas deals where sellers offer warehouses near highways, rail lines, or ports – properties poised for robust demand in the logistics sector.
STAG Industrial, Inc. (NYSE: STAG)
STAG Industrial is known for its nationwide portfolio of single-tenant industrial properties, particularly in secondary markets. STAG targets warehouse and light manufacturing facilities that are mission-critical to tenants, often acquired through sale-leaseback deals. The REIT’s diversification across many U.S. regions and tenants helps manage risk. STAG’s deals typically involve acquiring individual warehouse buildings with solid tenants in place. On Brevitas, investors similarly can find single-tenant industrial properties – for example, a distribution center leased long-term to a food distributor or a manufacturing plant leased to an auto-parts supplier. Such listings on Brevitas represent the same kind of stable, income-producing industrial assets that STAG pursues, allowing private investors to step into a REIT-like strategy on a deal-by-deal basis.
Office Real Estate
Office REITs invest in workspace properties ranging from skyscrapers in city centers to sprawling office parks and life science campuses. These companies navigate trends in leasing demand, such as remote work and corporate relocations. On Brevitas, office property listings include multi-tenant office buildings, medical offices, and creative flex spaces, reflecting what office REITs buy and sell at larger scale. Brevitas connects buyers and sellers of office assets by showcasing opportunities and facilitating due diligence in deal rooms, without taking a brokerage fee. Here are five top office REITs and their niches:
BXP, Inc. (NYSE: BXP)
BXP, Inc., formerly Boston Properties, is the largest publicly traded developer and owner of Class A office buildings in the United States. Its portfolio is concentrated in gateway cities like Boston, New York, Washington D.C., San Francisco, and Los Angeles. BXP’s assets include iconic urban office towers and mixed-use complexes often leased to blue-chip corporate and technology tenants. The company also invests in life science lab office space and has embraced sustainability in building management. On Brevitas, buyers can find high-quality office listings in central business districts or prime suburban submarkets, analogous to BXP’s trophy properties (albeit on a smaller scale). Whether it’s a downtown high-rise or a premium suburban office campus, Brevitas enables transactions for the types of workspaces that mirror BXP’s focus on premier, highly amenitized buildings that attract top-tier tenants.
SL Green Realty Corp. (NYSE: SLG)
SL Green is a leading office landlord concentrated in Manhattan, NYC. It owns a collection of prominent office towers in Midtown and Downtown Manhattan, catering to financial firms, law practices, and corporate headquarters. SL Green’s strategy often involves re-developing older buildings into modernized offices and occasionally blending in ground-floor retail or amenities to add value. The company is attuned to the NYC market dynamics and has been navigating high vacancies and repositioning assets post-pandemic. On Brevitas, while one might not find a Manhattan skyscraper for sale every day, there are opportunities to acquire office buildings in major urban centers and downtowns. Listings for multi-story office properties or mixed-use buildings with office components in dense cities on Brevitas reflect SL Green’s domain. Brevitas users looking at those deals can connect with owners without brokerage intermediaries, potentially acquiring urban office assets similar in concept to SL Green’s portfolio (though typically smaller scale or in secondary cities).
Alexandria Real Estate Equities, Inc. (NYSE: ARE)
Alexandria Real Estate Equities is a unique office REIT specializing in life science and technology campuses. Its properties are predominantly lab-enabled office buildings in innovation clusters like Boston’s Cambridge area, South San Francisco, San Diego, Seattle, and Research Triangle. Alexandria provides mission-critical space for biotech companies, pharmaceutical research, and tech firms, often integrating office and laboratory facilities. The REIT’s tenants range from startups to major pharmaceutical corporations, and the demand for lab space has been strong in recent years. On Brevitas, specialized office properties such as medical office buildings, R&D facilities, or flex properties with lab space can be found under office or special purpose listings. These are analogous to Alexandria’s assets – for example, a medical research facility for sale or a biotech incubator building might be marketed on Brevitas. The platform enables investors to discover such niche opportunities and connect with sellers, which is valuable since life science real estate requires matching the right buyer expertise with the property type.
Vornado Realty Trust (NYSE: VNO)
Vornado Realty Trust is a prominent office and retail landlord with a portfolio concentrated in New York City (particularly Manhattan) and some assets in Chicago and San Francisco. Vornado’s New York holdings include office buildings (like those in the Penn Station/Penn Plaza area) and high-street retail spaces. The company is known for owning large clusters of properties and undertaking major redevelopment projects (such as the transformation of the Penn District in Manhattan). Vornado’s strategy can involve repositioning older buildings, integrating retail and advertising income (think big video boards in Times Square), and managing a mix of office and retail tenants. On Brevitas, investors might find opportunities to buy downtown office buildings or mixed-use properties with office and ground-floor retail, similar in spirit to Vornado’s mixed portfolio. Brevitas allows sellers of these assets to reach a broad network of buyers without paying brokerage commissions, and buyers to evaluate deals in major markets—paralleling how Vornado trades trophy assets, but at an accessible level for private capital.
Kilroy Realty Corporation (NYSE: KRC)
Kilroy Realty is a West Coast-focused office REIT known for developing and owning contemporary, campus-style office buildings and life science projects. Kilroy’s portfolio spans Greater Los Angeles, San Diego, the San Francisco Bay Area, Seattle, and Austin, with a mix of creative office campuses and lab office facilities. Many of its properties cater to tech and media companies (for example, streaming and entertainment firms in Hollywood or tech startups in San Francisco) as well as biotech firms in San Diego and Seattle. Kilroy emphasizes sustainability and innovative design in its developments. On Brevitas, office listings on the West Coast – whether a single-tenant creative office in Silicon Beach or a multi-tenant suburban office park in Austin – align with Kilroy’s footprint. Brevitas users interested in those regions can find available properties and leverage the platform’s data rooms and communication tools to transact. The types of assets Kilroy holds (modern, well-located offices often leased to tech/life science tenants) are attractive to many investors, and Brevitas helps bring similar deals (like an office/R&D building in a tech hub) directly to their inboxes through alerts and searches.
Multifamily Residential
Multifamily REITs own apartment communities and are a key part of the rental housing market across the U.S. They typically focus on large portfolios of apartment complexes in various regions and at different price points (luxury high-rise to garden-style suburbs). Brevitas features an extensive multifamily listings search where brokers and owners list apartment buildings for sale, from small 10-unit properties up to institutional-grade portfolios. Brevitas helps connect investors with these opportunities by providing property details, financials, and a secure channel to communicate – all without acting as a broker or taking a cut of the deal. The following are five leading multifamily REITs and what they’re known for:
Equity Residential (NYSE: EQR)
Equity Residential (EQR) is one of the largest apartment REITs in the U.S., founded by Sam Zell. It specializes in upscale multifamily communities, primarily in high-density urban and close-in suburban locations. Equity Residential’s portfolio is concentrated in coastal gateway cities – think New York City, Boston, Washington D.C., Seattle, San Francisco, and Southern California – along with some presence in Denver and Atlanta. Its properties often feature high-end amenities and target young professionals and affluent renters. On Brevitas, investors can search for apartment assets in these types of markets; for example, a mid-rise apartment building in Washington D.C. or a garden apartment complex in a Los Angeles suburb might be listed for sale. The kinds of assets EQR owns (well-maintained, well-located rental communities with strong tenant demand) are exactly what multifamily investors on Brevitas seek. Brevitas facilitates these multifamily deals by allowing sellers to confidentially share rent rolls and financials in deal rooms and enabling buyers to perform due diligence similarly to how Equity Residential would analyze an acquisition.
AvalonBay Communities, Inc. (NYSE: AVB)
AvalonBay Communities is another top-tier apartment REIT with a portfolio of luxury and high-quality apartment communities. AvalonBay’s focus is on high-cost coastal markets such as New England, the New York metro area, the Washington D.C. metro, Northern and Southern California, and recently select expansion into Southeast Florida and Denver. The company develops many of its properties under the “Avalon” and “AVA” brand names, offering amenity-rich living in urban and suburban settings. Many AvalonBay properties are large complexes or high-rises with hundreds of units and upscale amenities like pools, gyms, and concierge services. When browsing Brevitas for multifamily opportunities, one might find assets that echo AvalonBay’s strategy on a smaller scale – for instance, a newly built 50-unit luxury apartment building in a growing suburban city, or a value-add 200-unit garden apartment community in a strong job market. AvalonBay’s general deal focus is long-term ownership of core multifamily in supply-constrained markets, which is a goal shared by many private investors who use Brevitas to acquire apartment buildings that can be held for stable cash flow and appreciation.
Camden Property Trust (NYSE: CPT)
Camden Property Trust is a multifamily REIT with a focus on the Sunbelt region, including cities like Atlanta, Charlotte, Orlando, Tampa, Phoenix, Dallas, Austin, Houston, Denver, and Southern California. Camden’s portfolio largely consists of mid-rise and garden-style apartment communities that often feature resort-like amenities (pools, clubhouses, fitness centers). Camden’s strategy has been to follow population and job growth, investing in markets with favorable economic and demographic trends. Many of its properties cater to middle- to upper-income renters and are located in suburban areas or edge cities experiencing strong growth. On Brevitas, multifamily listings frequently include Sunbelt apartment complexes – for example, a 150-unit apartment property in a booming Texas city or a newly built community in Phoenix could be on the platform. These are exactly the kinds of assets Camden owns and continues to seek (strong occupancy, potential rent growth, modern features). Through Brevitas, sellers of similar Sunbelt apartments can reach a wide pool of buyers, and buyers can capitalize on opportunities in thriving markets much like Camden’s, leveraging Brevitas’s alerts to spot new multifamily listings in target cities.
Mid-America Apartment Communities, Inc. (MAA) (NYSE: MAA)
Mid-America Apartment Communities (branded simply as MAA) is an apartment REIT that operates a diversified portfolio across the Southeast, Southwest, and Mid-Atlantic regions. With headquarters in Memphis, MAA has a strong presence in markets such as Atlanta, Dallas, Austin, Charlotte, Raleigh, Tampa, Nashville, Phoenix, and beyond. Its properties range from suburban garden-style complexes to urban mid-rises. MAA often focuses on markets with steady job and population growth, maintaining a mix of Class A and B apartments appealing to a broad renter base. On Brevitas, prospective buyers will find many multifamily investment opportunities in similar markets – like a stabilized 100-unit apartment property in a growing Carolinas city or a value-add apartment complex in a Florida suburb. MAA’s general deal approach of acquiring or developing in economically vibrant regions is mirrored on Brevitas by the volume of listings in those same places. Brevitas helps buyers emulate an MAA-style strategy by giving them direct access to multifamily deals in diverse Sunbelt markets, where they can use the platform’s tools to analyze rent comps and network with brokers/owners for smooth closing.
Essex Property Trust, Inc. (NYSE: ESS)
Essex Property Trust is a REIT focused on multifamily properties along the West Coast, specifically Northern California (Bay Area), Southern California (Los Angeles and Orange County), and the Seattle metropolitan area. Essex’s portfolio is known for being concentrated in high-cost, supply-constrained coastal markets where homeownership is out of reach for many, thus driving strong apartment demand. The company’s assets range from high-rise apartment buildings in downtown Seattle or San Francisco to large low-rise complexes in Silicon Valley and suburban LA. Many Essex communities cater to professionals in tech hubs and coastal employment centers. If you’re looking at Brevitas for apartment building sales in California or Seattle, those listings are directly in line with Essex’s domain. For example, a 30-unit apartment in the Bay Area or a beachfront apartment property in Santa Monica might be featured on Brevitas. Through Brevitas’s platform, owners of such West Coast multifamily properties can discreetly market their asset (preserving confidentiality via controlled document sharing), and investors can find rare opportunities in markets with high barriers to entry – the very reason Essex invests heavily in those regions.
Retail Real Estate
Retail REITs invest in properties where consumers shop, dine, and gather – from regional shopping malls to open-air shopping centers and free-standing retail stores. The retail real estate landscape has evolved with e-commerce, pushing REITs to focus on top-tier locations and experiential tenants. On Brevitas, the retail listings include everything from single-tenant net lease restaurants and pharmacies to strip malls and urban storefront buildings. Buyers and sellers on Brevitas can connect over these retail deals efficiently. Brevitas allows for nationwide exposure of retail property listings, making it easier to find the right investor for a shopping center or the right property for a 1031 exchange. Here are five leading retail REITs and their specialties:
Simon Property Group, Inc. (NYSE: SPG)
Simon Property Group is the largest mall REIT and a global leader in owning premier shopping malls, outlet centers, and mixed-use retail destinations. Simon’s portfolio features Class A regional malls such as The Forum Shops in Las Vegas, King of Prussia in Pennsylvania, and Roosevelt Field in New York, as well as a large portfolio of value-oriented outlet centers under the “Premium Outlets” brand. Simon’s properties attract high foot traffic and feature a mix of luxury brands, mainstream retail, entertainment venues, and dining. They have also ventured into adding hotels, apartments, and experiential attractions to some properties to create true live-work-play environments. On Brevitas, while a trophy mall might not frequently hit the open market, there are opportunities to acquire retail centers and lifestyle centers with similar characteristics on a local scale. For instance, a successful regional mall in a secondary city or a large power center with strong anchor tenants might be listed. Brevitas allows sellers of substantial retail assets to discreetly reach qualified buyers. Investors inspired by Simon’s strategy may seek out quality retail properties (e.g., a dominant local shopping center with stable tenants) on Brevitas to mirror the success of top-tier retail, albeit in a manageable investment size.
Realty Income Corporation (NYSE: O)
Realty Income is famously known as “The Monthly Dividend Company” because of its track record of paying monthly dividends. It is a net lease REIT primarily focused on single-tenant free-standing retail properties under long-term leases (though it has diversified into industrial and other properties via net lease as well). Realty Income’s portfolio includes thousands of properties across all 50 states and internationally, leased to tenants such as convenience stores, drugstores (Walgreens, CVS), dollar stores, supermarkets, quick-service restaurants, and other chain retailers. The net lease model means the tenant is responsible for property expenses (taxes, maintenance, insurance), providing Realty Income with stable, predictable income. On Brevitas, single-tenant net leased retail properties are frequently listed – these are popular 1031 exchange targets. An investor could find, for example, a Walgreens pharmacy on a 15-year lease for sale or a fast-food restaurant property with a corporate lease. These Brevitas listings align perfectly with Realty Income’s asset type. Brevitas connects private buyers to such net lease opportunities, enabling them to invest in passive income properties similar to those that form the backbone of Realty Income’s portfolio.
Kimco Realty Corporation (NYSE: KIM)
Kimco Realty is one of the largest owners of open-air shopping centers in North America. Its focus is on grocery-anchored shopping centers and mixed-use assets with a strong necessity retail component. Kimco’s properties are spread across major metropolitan areas and suburban communities, often featuring a supermarket or big-box store as a traffic anchor alongside smaller tenants like restaurants, service retailers, and specialty shops. In recent years, Kimco has also incorporated elements like apartments or offices into some of its retail centers to create mixed-use environments. On Brevitas, you can find listings for neighborhood shopping centers and strip malls that are similar to Kimco’s holdings. For instance, a grocery-anchored center in a growing suburban area or a retail plaza near a dense residential community might be available for acquisition. These listings attract investors seeking stable cash flow from daily-needs retail tenants. Brevitas facilitates the sale of such centers by allowing sellers to present rent rolls and tenant profiles securely, and buyers can evaluate the mix of tenants (grocery anchors, etc.) much like Kimco does when it acquires a new center.
Regency Centers Corporation (NASDAQ: REG)
Regency Centers is a REIT that owns and operates high-quality grocery-anchored shopping centers, predominantly located in affluent suburban trade areas. Regency’s portfolio is known for its focus on necessity retail and service-oriented tenants, often anchored by market-dominant grocers like Whole Foods, Kroger, or Publix. The REIT tends to invest in centers where demographics are favorable (high incomes, dense populations) and retail demand is robust. Many Regency centers also incorporate dining and specialty retail to create a convenient one-stop experience for shoppers. On Brevitas, similarly, many retail property listings emphasize grocery anchors or essential retailers as selling points, since these signify steady foot traffic and resilient performance. An example listing might be a shopping center anchored by a national grocery chain and a pharmacy, with a variety of smaller tenants (hair salons, pet stores, cafes). Those are precisely the kinds of properties Regency Centers owns. Using Brevitas, an investor could source a deal for a well-located grocery-anchored center and leverage the platform to analyze leases and reach the seller directly, effectively pursuing a Regency-like investment through an online marketplace.
Federal Realty Investment Trust (NYSE: FRT)
Federal Realty is a venerable retail REIT with a track record of focusing on high-quality shopping centers and mixed-use properties in major U.S. markets. Their portfolio has a concentration in the Northeast (e.g., Washington D.C. metro, Philadelphia), California, and select Midwest and Southeast markets. Federal Realty’s properties often feature a mix of retail and other uses; for example, some centers have been redeveloped to include apartments or offices above ground-floor retail (as seen in projects like Santana Row in San Jose). The company emphasizes locations with strong demographics and typically holds assets long-term, ensuring they continue to evolve with consumer trends. On Brevitas, buyers might encounter unique urban retail properties or redeveloped mixed-use centers similar to Federal Realty’s strategy. For instance, a listing could be an open-air lifestyle center with a blend of national retailers and local boutiques, or a suburban town-center style development with retail and apartments. Brevitas provides the platform for such complex assets to be marketed to the right investors. Federal Realty’s general deal focus (prime locations, potential for densification or mixed-use addition) can guide Brevitas users in what to look for – and indeed, Brevitas makes it easier to source those prime retail investments by aggregating listings nationwide that match those criteria.
Healthcare Real Estate
Healthcare REITs own properties like medical office buildings, hospitals, senior living communities, and skilled nursing facilities. These assets are specialized, often requiring knowledgeable management due to healthcare regulations and tenant needs. Brevitas may not have a dedicated “Healthcare” category in its menu, but such properties are commonly listed under special purpose listings or as medical offices in the office category. Brevitas connects buyers and sellers of healthcare real estate – for example, a clinic condominium, a surgery center, or a senior housing facility – by providing a neutral marketplace to exchange information. No brokerage commissions are taken by Brevitas, making it an attractive platform for niche properties. Here are five major healthcare REITs and their areas of focus:
Welltower Inc. (NYSE: WELL)
Welltower is one of the largest healthcare REITs, with a portfolio emphasizing senior housing and assisted living facilities, medical office buildings, and some specialty hospital and post-acute properties. Welltower’s senior housing properties (often operated by partners under brands like Sunrise Senior Living or Belmont Village) provide independent living, assisted living, and memory care services to the aging population. Additionally, Welltower owns outpatient medical buildings and health-system anchored medical office campuses usually affiliated with large healthcare providers. On Brevitas, properties like assisted living communities or stand-alone memory care facilities sometimes appear, generally marketed under special purpose or hospitality (if they have lodging-like operations) categories. These listings attract investors looking to enter the senior living sector. Similarly, medical office buildings – especially those leased to clinics or physicians groups – can be found via Brevitas’s office search (filtered for medical use). Such opportunities allow investors to step into Welltower’s shoes on a deal level, acquiring healthcare real estate that serves essential needs. Brevitas aids this process by connecting sellers (who might be healthcare operators or developers) directly with buyers who understand the nuances of healthcare tenants and leases.
Ventas, Inc. (NYSE: VTR)
Ventas is a diversified healthcare REIT with a broad portfolio that includes senior housing communities, life science and innovation centers, medical office buildings, and hospital facilities. Ventas has a significant presence in senior housing (both in the U.S. and UK/Canada), often working with operating partners for the management of those properties. It also has been a major investor in life science real estate, owning lab and research facilities (especially after its acquisition of a large university-affiliated life science portfolio). Medical office buildings near academic medical centers and hospitals are another staple of Ventas’s holdings. Through Brevitas, investors interested in similar asset types might find, for example, a medical office condo near a hospital for sale, or a small portfolio of senior living facilities being quietly marketed. Ventas’s general approach of aligning with healthcare providers and research institutions can guide buyers on Brevitas to look for properties with strong tenants like hospital systems or universities. Brevitas provides the platform for these specialized listings, and while healthcare deals can be complex, features like document sharing and structured offer submission on Brevitas make it easier to conduct due diligence on a medical property much like Ventas would.
Healthpeak Properties, Inc. (NYSE: PEAK)
Healthpeak Properties (formerly known as HCP, Inc.) is a healthcare REIT that has honed its focus on three main areas: life science campuses, medical office buildings, and senior housing. In recent years, Healthpeak has exited the skilled nursing sub-sector to concentrate on the other areas. Its life science portfolio consists of lab-enabled offices primarily in Boston, San Diego, and San Francisco – serving biotech and pharmaceutical tenants (in that way, overlapping with Alexandria’s territory). Healthpeak’s medical office portfolio includes on-campus or adjacent-to-hospital outpatient centers leased to health systems and physicians. And its senior housing properties, often operated by third parties, provide housing and care for seniors in need of assistance or specialized care. If you’re searching Brevitas, you might find a multi-tenant medical office building (MOB) as a listing – possibly one that’s part of a hospital campus – which parallels Healthpeak’s MOB investments. Or you could see a listing for a memory care facility or assisted living residence seeking a buyer. Brevitas allows those selling healthcare facilities to reach a targeted investor audience. By using Brevitas’s filters and alerts, a buyer can keep track of, say, all “medical office” related listings in certain states, effectively building their own mini Healthpeak-like portfolio through individual acquisitions sourced online.
Medical Properties Trust, Inc. (NYSE: MPW)
Medical Properties Trust (MPT) is unique among healthcare REITs for its concentration in hospital real estate. MPT primarily acquires acute care hospitals, rehabilitation hospitals, and other specialty hospitals and leases them to hospital operators under long-term, triple-net leases. It has built a global portfolio of hospital properties, including in the U.S., Europe, and other regions, making it one of the largest owners of hospital real estate. The company often engages in sale-leaseback transactions, allowing hospital operators to free up capital while MPT takes ownership of the real estate. On Brevitas, hospital properties are less frequently listed than outpatient or senior living assets (because hospitals are often owned by big systems and not sold often), but occasionally one might encounter a surgical hospital or behavioral health facility for sale, likely as a special purpose listing. More commonly, smaller inpatient facilities like rehab centers or surgical centers could appear. For investors looking at such deals, Brevitas’s neutral platform allows direct communication with sellers (who might be healthcare companies) which is crucial as these transactions can be highly specialized. Essentially, Brevitas can cater to even the niche of hospital real estate by connecting the right parties, similar to how MPT pursues deals directly with hospital operators.
Omega Healthcare Investors, Inc. (NYSE: OHI)
Omega Healthcare Investors is a REIT focused predominantly on skilled nursing facilities (SNFs) and, to a lesser extent, assisted living facilities. Omega’s properties are typically nursing homes and rehab centers where residents receive 24/7 care or therapy, and these properties are leased to healthcare operating companies under triple-net leases. The majority of Omega’s portfolio is in the United States, with some properties in the UK. This sector often relies on government reimbursement (Medicare/Medicaid in the US), which adds a layer of complexity to operations. Omega’s role is as a capital provider to the skilled nursing industry, and it manages tenant relationships to ensure rent coverage remains solid. On Brevitas, skilled nursing facilities or nursing home portfolios might come up for sale, likely categorized under special purpose real estate. An investor knowledgeable in healthcare operations might be browsing for a regional group of nursing homes that a regional operator is divesting – such a scenario could appear as a listing. Through Brevitas, those deals can be marketed to specialized investors without publicly advertising sensitive financial details (using Brevitas’s secure sharing features). Omega’s focus on long-term care facilities highlights a segment of the healthcare real estate market that, while specialized, is accessible on Brevitas for those with the right expertise, demonstrating the platform’s breadth in connecting even healthcare landlords and investors.
Hospitality Real Estate
Hospitality REITs own hotels and resorts, ranging from luxury urban hotels to extended-stay suites and destination resorts. The hotel industry is highly operationally intensive, and REITs in this sector often own the real estate while hiring professional hotel management companies to run the day-to-day operations. Brevitas features hospitality listings that include independent boutique hotels, franchised limited-service hotels, and even resort properties. Since Brevitas is a transaction platform, hotel owners can list properties to reach a global investor base without an auction or broker-driven process, and buyers can find deals often off-market elsewhere. Let’s look at five major hospitality REITs and what types of hotels they invest in:
Host Hotels & Resorts, Inc. (NASDAQ: HST)
Host Hotels & Resorts is the largest lodging REIT and primarily owns high-end hotels and luxury resorts. Its portfolio includes marquee properties often affiliated with premium brands like Marriott, Westin, Ritz-Carlton, Four Seasons, and Hyatt. Host’s assets are located in prime destinations – big city centers (New York, Washington D.C., San Francisco), resort areas (Hawaii, Florida, Phoenix/Scottsdale), and near major convention hubs. These hotels typically have hundreds if not thousands of rooms and extensive meeting spaces, targeting business, group, and leisure travelers. On Brevitas, while a billion-dollar city hotel might not be listed, you can find sizeable hotels for sale, such as a 200-room full-service hotel in a downtown area or a beachfront resort that an owner is divesting. These opportunities give private investors a chance to enter the upper end of the hospitality market. Brevitas helps by allowing confidential sharing of financial performance (occupancy rates, RevPAR, etc.) only with vetted buyers. Essentially, Brevitas can facilitate the trading of upscale hospitality assets on a scale that might interest someone aiming to follow in Host’s footsteps at a smaller scale, like acquiring a flagship hotel in a secondary city.
Park Hotels & Resorts Inc. (NYSE: PK)
Park Hotels & Resorts is a prominent lodging REIT that was spun off from Hilton Worldwide in 2017. As such, many of Park’s properties carry Hilton brands (Waldorf Astoria, Hilton, Embassy Suites, DoubleTree, etc.), and the portfolio is composed of large-scale hotels and resorts. Park’s assets are geographically diverse, including major hotels in cities like Honolulu (the Hilton Hawaiian Village), San Francisco, Chicago, New Orleans, and Orlando, as well as resort properties and some smaller market conference hotels. Park focuses on upper-upscale and luxury segments, often with hotels that serve convention and group business or are iconic in their locale. On Brevitas, an investor might find, for example, a big-brand full-service hotel (maybe a Marriott or Hilton flag) in a downtown or a tourist-heavy location for sale, which would be the kind of asset Park owns. Through Brevitas, buyers interested in these larger hotel assets can connect with sellers worldwide. Park Hotels & Resorts’ strategy of improving and rebranding hotels to maximize value is something we see on Brevitas too – listings might highlight renovation upside or brand conversion opportunities. The platform thus serves as an efficient marketplace to find value-add hotel deals similar to those Park pursues, but available to individual investors or smaller investment firms.
Pebblebrook Hotel Trust (NYSE: PEB)
Pebblebrook Hotel Trust is a REIT that specializes in upscale and luxury independent hotels, often with a focus on lifestyle and experiential properties. Pebblebrook’s portfolio includes a mix of boutique hotels and resorts in markets such as San Francisco, Los Angeles, Portland, Seattle, Boston, Washington D.C., and South Florida. Many of its properties are unique or historic hotels, as well as trendy lifestyle hotels, and a number belong to the “Curator Hotel & Resort Collection” that Pebblebrook initiated to help independent hotels with best practices and cost savings. On Brevitas, hotel listings sometimes include boutique urban hotels or independent resorts looking for a new owner – these are right in Pebblebrook’s wheelhouse. For example, a stylish 100-room boutique hotel in a city’s arts district or a historic hotel in a tourist town could be up for sale on the platform. Pebblebrook’s deal focus on acquiring unique hotels with repositioning potential is mirrored by Brevitas listings where sellers pitch upside through renovations or changes in branding/management. Investors using Brevitas can find these niche hospitality gems and leverage the platform to review financials (ADR, occupancy, NOI), much as Pebblebrook meticulously underwrites boutique hotel acquisitions.
Ryman Hospitality Properties, Inc. (NYSE: RHP)
Ryman Hospitality Properties is a unique hospitality REIT with a focus on large convention center hotels and entertainment venues. Ryman’s crown jewels are the Gaylord-branded convention hotels – enormous properties like Gaylord Opryland in Nashville, Gaylord Palms in Orlando, Gaylord Texan near Dallas, and Gaylord Rockies in Colorado – each of which has thousands of rooms and massive meeting spaces, catering to group events and conferences. These resorts also have extensive amenities (water parks, multiple restaurants, etc.) to serve leisure guests. Additionally, Ryman owns iconic attractions like the Ryman Auditorium and Grand Ole Opry in Nashville (hence the company’s name). Ryman’s strategy is highly focused: owning one-of-a-kind assets that dominate their segment. On Brevitas, finding a comparable scale property is rare, but you might see listings for full-service resorts or conference center hotels on a smaller scale. For instance, a regional conference hotel with 300 rooms and 50,000 square feet of meeting space might be available, or a resort with a golf course and spa could be listed. Those types of deals would appeal to investors who understand the group business – just as Ryman does. Brevitas allows such sellers to reach a broad audience without heavy marketing, preserving the operation’s stability during the sale process. While Ryman’s assets are somewhat singular, Brevitas provides a marketplace for even large-format hospitality assets, supporting transactions in that specialized arena.
Apple Hospitality REIT, Inc. (NYSE: APLE)
Apple Hospitality REIT owns one of the largest portfolios of rooms-focused hotels in the United States. Its strategy is centered on upscale select-service and extended-stay hotel brands primarily under the Marriott and Hilton umbrellas – brands like Courtyard, Marriott, Hilton Garden Inn, Homewood Suites, Residence Inn, and Hampton Inn. Apple’s properties are spread across dozens of states, usually in suburban or urban commercial districts with consistent corporate and leisure demand. They favor hotels that have limited food and beverage operations (reducing operational volatility) but offer reliable accommodations for travelers. On Brevitas, many mid-market hotel listings fit this profile: a 100-room Hilton Garden Inn off an interstate, a 150-room Courtyard by Marriott near a business park, or a cluster of extended-stay hotels being sold as a portfolio. Those deals reflect Apple Hospitality’s typical assets. Investors on Brevitas can find such stabilized, select-service hotels – often with flags and management in place – which provide cash flow without the complexity of a full-service hotel. Brevitas’s platform might host, for example, a confidential listing for a Marriott-branded select-service hotel where financials are available in a secure deal room for qualified buyers. This matches Apple’s focus and allows a buyer to step into a proven hotel operation under a trusted brand, all facilitated through Brevitas’s non-brokered approach.
Data Centers and Digital Infrastructure
Data center REITs and companies own facilities that house servers and network equipment, forming the backbone of the digital economy. These highly specialized properties require robust power, cooling, and security. In addition, the rise of artificial intelligence (AI) and blockchain (Bitcoin) has spurred demand for hyperscale data centers and crypto mining data center facilities – a new breed of real estate infrastructure. Brevitas doesn’t have a stand-alone “Data Center” category, but such properties are listed under special purpose real estate or sometimes under industrial, given their warehouse-like structures. Brevitas can connect buyers and sellers of niche assets like server farms, telecom facilities, and crypto mining sites by providing a neutral platform to showcase these opportunities. Below we highlight major public players in the data center space and in AI/Bitcoin infrastructure, illustrating how their assets align with what might trade on Brevitas:
Equinix, Inc. (NASDAQ: EQIX)
Equinix is the world’s largest data center REIT, specializing in colocation data centers that enable interconnection between enterprises, cloud providers, and internet companies. Equinix operates over 240 data centers worldwide across Americas, EMEA, and Asia-Pacific regions. Their facilities (often called International Business Exchange or IBX centers) are known for housing critical IT infrastructure in major metro areas, where customers rent space (cabinets, cages, suites) to place their servers and directly connect with other networks and clouds. Equinix data centers thrive on ecosystem effect – for example, financial firms colocating to get low-latency connections to exchanges, or cloud providers connecting directly to their large clients. On Brevitas, it’s possible to encounter specialized listings such as a telecom hub building, a small regional colocation facility, or an edge data center site for sale. While Equinix itself tends to develop and hold long-term, the type of properties it owns (secure, purpose-built data centers in connectivity-rich locations) do occasionally come to market in private deals. Brevitas could list, say, a data center property that a telecom company is divesting or a former industrial building converted for server hosting. Buyers with interest in digital infrastructure can use Brevitas to find these rare assets. Although acquiring an Equinix-scale facility might be out of reach, investors might purchase a smaller operational data center via Brevitas, effectively entering the same industry that Equinix dominates, on a proportional scale.
Digital Realty Trust, Inc. (NYSE: DLR)
Digital Realty is another global data center REIT and one of the largest owners of data centers, with a portfolio spanning North America, Europe, Asia, and Australia. Digital Realty’s focus has traditionally been on larger-footprint data centers that serve enterprise and hyperscale cloud clients – facilities where big tech companies might lease wholesale space to deploy thousands of servers. They also offer colocation and interconnection services (especially after their Telx acquisition and the Interxion acquisition in Europe), though their profile is slightly more wholesale compared to Equinix. A Digital Realty data center could be a multi-story concrete fortress in Ashburn, Virginia (a famous data center hub) or a converted warehouse in Dallas filled with server halls. If an investor is looking on Brevitas, they might find properties like an empty industrial building marketed as a potential data center redevelopment (highlighting heavy power availability), or an existing smaller data center serving regional needs. Digital Realty’s deals often revolve around securing land and power for future data center development or sale-leasebacks with enterprise occupants. On Brevitas, one could similarly find a mission-critical facility – for example, a disaster recovery data center building that a bank is selling and leasing back. The platform’s wide reach can bring such specialized sellers together with infrastructure-focused buyers. Essentially, Brevitas can enable pieces of the Digital Realty playbook (owning and leasing data-rich real estate) by exposing those opportunities to a broader investment audience beyond the handful of large REITs.
Iron Mountain Incorporated (Data Centers Division) (NYSE: IRM)
Iron Mountain, widely known for document storage, has also become a significant player in the data center arena over the past several years. Leveraging its trust-based brand, Iron Mountain Data Centers offers secure, compliance-driven colocation facilities to enterprises and government agencies. They have expanded with data centers in key markets like Northern Virginia, Phoenix, Denver, New Jersey, and even an ultra-secure underground data center in a former limestone mine in Pennsylvania. Iron Mountain’s positioning is often about security and reliability, catering to customers with sensitive data storage needs. On Brevitas, the sale of a data center might not always use household names, but you could find, for example, a secure bunker-like facility or a regional co-location site for sale, which are akin to Iron Mountain’s assets. Furthermore, traditional Iron Mountain warehouses (document storage facilities) themselves occasionally hit the market, and those can be redeveloped or partially converted to data use – something an opportunistic investor might pursue. Brevitas listings under industrial or special purpose could include such properties with high security or unique construction features. Through Brevitas, smaller data center operators looking to exit can find buyers, which means investors can assemble a data center portfolio piece by piece, echoing Iron Mountain’s expansion into digital storage real estate. And since Brevitas deals can be done without brokerage fees, it lowers the transaction friction in what is often a tight-knit, specialized market.
DigitalBridge Group, Inc. (NYSE: DBRG)
DigitalBridge Group (formerly Colony Capital) is not a traditional REIT but a diversified digital infrastructure investment company that manages and owns assets across cell towers, data centers, fiber networks, small cells, and edge infrastructure. DigitalBridge has stakes in or outright ownership of various data center platforms (it was behind the acquisition of data center companies like DataBank, Vantage, and others), as well as investments in tower companies and fiber. As a publicly traded company, DigitalBridge provides exposure to the broader digital infrastructure asset class. Its strategy is to deploy capital into growing digital asset businesses, often partnering with institutional investors. On Brevitas, the concept of digital infrastructure shows up perhaps in the form of unique listings: for instance, a data center campus development site, or a regional colocation business that owns a couple of data center properties and is for sale. Additionally, one might find telecom real estate – such as cell tower sites (though towers are usually sold in portfolios through brokers) or cable landing stations. While these are rarer on public listing platforms, Brevitas’s reach and no-cut model can attract sellers of niche assets who want to quietly market to a curated group. Essentially, investors could source deals in each vertical (a tower site here, a fiber route station there, a small data center) via Brevitas and end up with a mini DigitalBridge-like portfolio of digital infrastructure. Brevitas helps by making introductions and information exchange seamless, mirroring how DigitalBridge sources opportunities but at an individual transaction level available to a range of investors.
AI & Bitcoin Infrastructure Companies
Beyond traditional REITs, the rise of AI computing and cryptocurrency mining has given birth to companies that bridge technology and real estate by operating data centers for specialized purposes. These companies may not be REITs (often they are tech firms), but they have significant real estate footprints: large warehouses or containerized facilities filled with power-hungry computer hardware. We include them here because they represent a property type – often industrial land with heavy power capacity – that is increasingly relevant. Brevitas can be a platform to transact the real estate underlying such operations: for example, a Bitcoin mining farm (land with electrical infrastructure and data center buildings) or a GPU computing center might be sold as a real estate asset plus equipment. Brevitas’s neutral marketplace is well-suited to these emerging categories, as deals can be confidentially marketed to interested parties without public fanfare. Below are five notable public companies in the AI/Bitcoin infrastructure space:
Marathon Digital Holdings, Inc. (NASDAQ: MARA)
Marathon Digital Holdings (recently rebranded as MARA, Inc.) is one of the largest Bitcoin mining companies globally. Marathon operates mining facilities that house tens of thousands of ASIC miners (specialized computers) which solve cryptographic puzzles to mine Bitcoin. The company has partnerships and sites in regions with low-cost electricity, including data center-like mining installations in places like Texas, North Dakota, and Montana. Marathon’s business is essentially running large-scale, power-intensive server farms focused solely on cryptocurrency. From a real estate perspective, Marathon’s infrastructure includes warehouses or container parks with robust power connections, cooling (often simple fan cooling or immersion cooling systems), and physical security, often located in industrial zones or near power generation sources. If such a facility were to be sold, it would involve the land, the buildings, and possibly the mining equipment. On Brevitas, one could envision a listing where, for instance, a Bitcoin mining farm is offered as a turn-key real estate and business package – perhaps a motivated seller wants to offload a site and its miners to a new entrant. While not common, these transactions do occur in the crypto space, and Brevitas provides a logical platform since it can reach both real estate investors and specialty investors. Marathon’s focus highlights that even digital businesses have tangible real estate needs, and those needs (like a 20-acre site with 100MW power substation) can be traded. Brevitas connecting those dots is an example of how the platform adapts to new asset classes.
Riot Platforms, Inc. (NASDAQ: RIOT)
Riot Platforms (formerly Riot Blockchain) is another leading Bitcoin mining company in North America. Riot has made headlines for its massive mining facility in Rockdale, Texas – one of the world’s largest Bitcoin mines, located on the site of a former aluminum smelter, tapping into abundant Texas energy. Riot’s operations also include mining infrastructure in upstate New York (though some of those were curtailed) and expansion into other states. Like Marathon, Riot’s assets are essentially data centers optimized for crypto mining, consisting of warehouse structures or containerized mining rigs with high electrical capacity. They often generate excess heat (leading to innovative cooling solutions) and need to be near power grids with either low-cost renewable energy or peaker plants. In terms of real estate, the Rockdale site is a sprawling industrial property with its own substation – a very specialized piece of industrial real estate. On Brevitas, if an independent miner or even a company like Riot were to sell a site, they would want to reach energy-infrastructure-savvy buyers. A listing might read something like “50-acre Blockchain Data Center Campus – 200 MW potential, includes land, buildings, and operational miners.” Riot’s approach to vertically integrate power management and mining shows real estate investors that the value lies not just in land, but in land with the right power and zoning. Brevitas’s marketplace can highlight those features in a listing (using tags for power capacity, etc.) so that buyers looking for, say, “mining data center” could find a match. Riot’s prominence underscores the point that industrial real estate in remote areas can transform into digital asset revenue centers – a trend Brevitas users are increasingly aware of when scanning special purpose listings.
CleanSpark, Inc. (NASDAQ: CLSK)
CleanSpark is a Bitcoin miner that positions itself as “America’s Bitcoin Miner,” emphasizing a sustainable and efficient approach to mining. CleanSpark operates mining facilities in states like Georgia and has been acquiring additional data centers to grow its Bitcoin production capacity. The company’s narrative focuses on using low-carbon energy (including nuclear and renewables) for mining and employing advanced energy management to improve profitability. For example, CleanSpark has operations in Georgia where it leverages the state’s nuclear-heavy power grid. From a real estate perspective, CleanSpark owns or leases large warehouse-like structures or container arrays where their miners are installed. The sites typically feature high security, heavy duty transformers, backup generators, and often are located in industrial parks or rural areas with available power. On Brevitas, a property listing akin to CleanSpark’s assets might be something like an “Industrial Crypto Mining Facility – 40,000 SF on 10 acres, with 50MW power feed, existing mining infrastructure included.” CleanSpark’s deal focus recently has been acquiring existing mining sites rather than building from scratch – similarly, on Brevitas, buyers can find existing facilities with infrastructure (perhaps a former co-location data center or a defunct crypto mine) and repurpose or upgrade them. Brevitas provides the connectivity for such deals, ensuring that specialized properties don’t languish just because they require a narrower pool of buyers. CleanSpark’s publicly traded status means it discloses the value of these assets, which in turn informs private market participants on platforms like Brevitas what a fair price may be for a megawatt of mining capacity in real estate terms.
Hut 8 Mining Corp. (NASDAQ: HUT)
Hut 8 Mining is a Canadian-based cryptocurrency mining company that is listed on Nasdaq and the Toronto Stock Exchange. Hut 8 operates mining sites in Canada (Alberta) and has been involved in a merger with U.S. Bitcoin Corp to expand its footprint in the United States. Apart from Bitcoin mining, Hut 8 has a unique facet in that it also runs a small data center cloud and colocation business (primarily in Canada), signaling a diversification towards high-performance computing (HPC) for artificial intelligence and other uses. The real estate for Hut 8’s operations ranges from simple outdoor mining setups using shipping containers filled with miners (benefiting from Canada’s cold climate for cooling) to traditional warehouse data centers. Hut 8’s Drumheller and Medicine Hat facilities in Alberta, for instance, are industrial properties optimized for mining – complete with transformer yards and cooling infrastructure. On Brevitas, one might see opportunities in similar cold climate locations or other energy-abundant areas where a mining operation could be established – essentially land or existing facilities being marketed as ideal for Bitcoin or HPC data centers. If Hut 8 decided to sell one of its older sites, or if a similar firm did, Brevitas would be a great way to quietly find a buyer experienced in digital assets. Additionally, as AI computing demand grows, sites that once mined crypto could be repurposed for GPU farms; Brevitas’s audience includes innovative investors who spot those trends. Hut 8’s example straddles both Bitcoin and other computing uses, so a Brevitas listing highlighting a “Data Center Facility – Suitable for Crypto Mining or AI GPU Hosting” might attract interest. This flexibility is something the platform can convey well through detailed descriptions and broker/buyer direct discussions.
HIVE Digital Technologies Ltd. (NASDAQ: HIVE)
HIVE Digital Technologies (formerly HIVE Blockchain) is a public company that started as one of the first crypto mining firms bridging traditional capital markets with blockchain infrastructure. HIVE mines Bitcoin (and previously mined Ethereum before it moved to proof-of-stake) and importantly, has been pivoting to utilize its fleet of GPU (graphics processor) mining rigs for other high-performance computing tasks, such as providing AI computing, rendering, or scientific computing services. HIVE’s mining facilities are located in cold climates for efficient cooling – notably in Canada (Quebec and New Brunswick), Sweden, and Iceland. These facilities often reuse legacy industrial infrastructure (for example, a former data center or industrial building) and are powered by renewable energy (hydroelectric or geothermal). HIVE’s positioning is at the intersection of cryptocurrency and the growing AI hardware needs. The real estate it occupies includes warehouses and industrial land with substantial power agreements, outfitted with both ASIC miners and GPU servers. If HIVE were to monetize any of its real estate, it would likely do so by selling a fully-equipped data center or by spinning off a facility with a lease-back. On Brevitas, properties that could serve dual purposes – crypto mining today, AI computing tomorrow – are likely to garner interest. A listing might highlight, for example, “Green Energy Data Center – 30MW, currently supporting blockchain and HPC workloads.” HIVE’s story demonstrates how a special-purpose property can adapt to different uses over time. Brevitas similarly allows sellers to emphasize the versatility or unique capability of a property (like access to cheap power or robust cooling infrastructure), which helps buyers evaluate conversion or adaptive reuse potential. In the world of HIVE and similar companies, the lines between real estate and tech infrastructure blur – an area where Brevitas can shine by bringing together real estate investors and tech operators on neutral ground to make a deal.
Brevitas: A Neutral Platform, Not a Broker
In all the above sectors – from industrial warehouses to Bitcoin mining sites – Brevitas serves solely as a neutral marketplace and tech platform for connecting professionals. It’s important to note that Brevitas is not a broker or middleman in the transactions. The platform takes no commission or “cut” when deals close. Instead, Brevitas provides the tools and environment for buyers, sellers, and their brokers to privately network, market properties, and communicate. Features like deal rooms (for sharing due diligence documents), integrated chat and messaging, email marketing campaigns for listings, and custom alerts empower users to exchange opportunities directly. Brevitas doesn’t represent either party; it remains an impartial facilitator, much like a digital meeting place. This model ensures that real estate professionals keep 100% of their commission or equity, and principals can negotiate directly and transparently. Through Brevitas, a broker can showcase a property to a global audience without sacrificing their commission, and a buyer can source off-market deals without paying a platform success fee. The result is a more efficient marketplace for commercial real estate and related assets, where the focus is on creating connections and value, not inserting extra transaction costs. By leveraging Brevitas’s technology (deal rooms for document exchange, chat for quick Q&A, and broadcast email for marketing to targeted investors), users in any of the above REIT sectors can transact swiftly and securely, knowing Brevitas’s role is purely to support their deal-making, not to interfere with it.
Conclusion and Call to Action
The commercial real estate world is incredibly diverse – encompassing traditional property types like offices and apartments as well as emerging niches like data centers and crypto mining facilities. The public REITs highlighted above offer a window into high-level investment strategies and portfolio compositions in each sector. For individual investors, brokers, and developers, platforms like Brevitas make it possible to pursue similar strategies deal by deal. Whether you’re aiming to acquire a neighborhood shopping center reminiscent of a Retail REIT’s holding, or list a specialized property like a medical office or Bitcoin mining site, Brevitas provides the audience and tools to get it done. If you’re ready to explore opportunities in any of these categories, consider leveraging Brevitas for your next deal. Create a free Brevitas account to browse current listings, set up alerts for properties that match your criteria, and connect directly with sellers and brokers on your terms. No matter the asset type – industrial, multifamily, hospitality, or data centers – Brevitas helps level the playing field by giving you access to a nationwide (and global) network of deals and professionals. Use the insights from the REITs above to refine your investment focus, then let Brevitas alert you to the next great opportunity. With Brevitas’s neutral, commission-free platform, you can turn your real estate goals into reality just as the big REITs do, one property at a time.
References
- Company investor relations websites (for Prologis, Boston Properties (BXP), AvalonBay, Simon, Welltower, Host Hotels, Equinix, etc.) – accessed for portfolio details and stock information.
- Yahoo Finance stock pages for each mentioned ticker – used to verify ticker symbols and company naming conventions.
- Brevitas.com – Brevitas platform search pages for Industrial, Office, Multifamily, Retail, and Special Purpose listings, to confirm the types of properties available and how they are categorized.
- Public filings and presentations of REITs (e.g., 10-K reports, investor presentations) – for understanding each REIT’s strategy, e.g., Ventas’s diversification or Rexford’s SoCal focus.
- News releases and industry articles (Nareit, commercial real estate news sites) – for recent context like mergers (e.g., HTA & HR merger, Duke Realty acquisition by Prologis) and trends (e.g., data center demand, Bitcoin miners’ expansion plans) to ensure accuracy as of 2025.