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Real Estate Alert: Senior Asset-Management Pros Open to Job Offers in Favorable Hiring Market

As featured in Real Estate Alert · Green Street News · May 26, 2026

A large swath of senior asset managers are itching to switch employers amid market conditions that are keeping their expertise in high demand, according to RETS Associates.

In a survey of asset-management professionals, the Newport Beach, Calif.-based executive search firm found that 45% of seasoned pros — those with five years or more of experience — would consider a new job. By comparison, just 26% of their junior counterparts reported the same.

That presents a critical retention challenge at a time when investors remain focused on managing existing holdings.

“The bottom line in 2026: The asset manager is still incredibly important at the vast majority of real estate companies given that deal volume continues to be off.”
Kent Elliott, Principal, RETS Associates

Demand for asset-management talent picked up after spiking borrowing costs tempered sales volume in 2023 — a typical trend line in a down market. And the need for such specialists has climbed back slowly. Asset managers remain aware of the importance of their roles: 63% of respondents said asset management had become a higher priority for their employers in 2026, versus 73% when RETS first offered the survey in 2023.

Yet against that backdrop, most real estate firms have grappled with flat compensation pools over the last few years — a potential reason more senior managers might be interested in moving.

“If somebody has generally been with a company for a longer period of time, it’s probably less likely that their compensation has been brought up through market conditions. Loyalty and compensation haven’t necessarily caught up to one another.”
Kent Elliott

Respondents ranked compensation as the leading driver of a job change, followed by opportunities for advancement or higher titles, better workplace culture, improved work-life balance, and broadening of responsibilities.

Compensation, mobility, and where people work

  • Pay climbs steeply with seniority. Mean total compensation (salary + bonus) runs from $153,000 for asset managers with under five years of experience to $534,000 for Managing Directors and Heads of Asset Management with 20+ years.
  • New York commanded a 41% premium in total compensation compared with other markets.
  • Hybrid is the norm. 65% of respondents work partially remote, only 33% are in the office five days a week, and 12% are fully remote.

The 2026 RETS Asset Management Survey encompasses responses from 255 participants working at investment firms, larger investment managers, public REITs, and operators of properties.

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