Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated, a commercial real estate and investment management company, engages in the buying, building, occupying, managing, and investing in commercial, industrial, hotel, residential, and retail properties in the Americas, Europe, the Middle East, Africa, and the Asia Pacific. The company also offers real estate agency leasing, tenant representation, property management, advisory, and consulting services; and debt advisory, loan sales and servicing, value and risk advisory, equity and funds placement, merger and acquisition, corporate advisory, and investment sales and advisory services. In addition, it provides on-site real estate management services for office, industrial, retail, multifamily residential, and other properties; cloud-based software solutions; integrated facilities management, space planning, office design, and workplace strategy consulting services; program and project management, implementation and support, managed services, and advisory/consulting services; and investment management services to institutional investors and high-net-worth individuals, as well as designing, building, management, and consulting services to tenants of leased space, owners in self-occupied buildings, and owners of real estate investments. It provides its services to real estate owners, occupiers, investors, and developers for various property types, including critical environments and data centers, offices, industrial and warehouses, residential properties, infrastructure projects, retail and shopping malls, logistics, and military housing and transportation centers; and hotels and hospitality, cultural, educational, government, healthcare and laboratory, and sports facilities. The company was formerly known as LaSalle Partners Incorporated and changed its name to Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated in March 1999. Jones Lang LaSalle Incorporated was incorporated in 1997 and is headquartered in Chicago, Illinois.
Q4 2025 is off to a flying start with record highs being printed left, right, and center. US and Japanese stocks made fresh new highs, while the gold price powered through $4,000 for the first time, and Bitcoin crossed the $126k level. Is this all a case of USD weakness, irrational exuberance, or solid fundamentals? This week, we are reviewing Q3 market performance, Q2 earnings season, and the outlook heading into the end of 2025…
The Utilities sector gained 3.1% while the market remained flat over the last week. As for the longer term, the market has risen 18% in the past 12 months. Looking forward, earnings are forecast to grow by 15% annually. Market details ›