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Where Are We in the Real Estate Cycle?
MP3•Episode home
Manage episode 483732694 series 1374358
Content provided by Dr. Adam Gower. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Adam Gower or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.
When it comes to understanding real estate cycles, few voices carry as much weight as Prof. Glenn Mueller, of Denver University. With over 40 years in the real estate industry and more than three decades of publishing the Market Cycle Monitor – used by institutional investors, developers, and academics alike – his data-driven framework is one of the most respected in commercial real estate. In my conversation with Prof. Mueller, he shared where each property type stands today, what signals matter most, and how CRE professionals should be thinking about the road ahead. Market Cycle: Where We Are Now
…
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- Most Property Sectors Still in Growth Phase Despite headlines, the underlying fundamentals in many sectors are still solid. Industrial and retail are at or near peak occupancy, with retail benefiting from a decade of underbuilding. Hotels and some apartments are in expansion phases, while office remains in recession.
- Office: Structural Downshift, Not Just a Cycle Post-COVID remote work has fundamentally reshaped office demand. Class A in prime markets (e.g., NYC) is thriving; B/C assets and suburban offices are struggling. Adaptive reuse (e.g., office-to-resi conversions) is being explored but not yet widespread.
- Apartments: Strong Demand, But Misaligned Supply There's a 6.5 million unit housing shortfall, yet high-end, urban supply has overshot demand. Affordable and workforce housing remain undersupplied and present the most attractive opportunities.
- Employment > GDP Mueller emphasizes employment growth as the single most reliable predictor of real estate demand. Despite economic noise, job growth remains positive, indicating continued underlying support for real estate fundamentals.
- Occupancy Drives Rent, Not Price Mueller’s cycle model is based on physical occupancy, not asset pricing. Price movements are driven by capital flows, but true performance comes from rent and income growth – especially critical in today’s higher-rate environment.
- Retail: Nationally at peak occupancy. Almost all new space is pre-leased. Over a decade of cautious development has created a tight market.
- Industrial: Slight oversupply after a COVID-era building spree but expected to correct by 2026.
- Multifamily: Select markets are overbuilt (e.g., downtown Class A), but suburbs and affordable housing show structural undersupply.
- Hotels: Bifurcated; leisure and conference travel rebounding; business travel still lagging.
- Prices Are Down, and May Not Drop Further Higher interest rates have cooled pricing, but a wave of dry powder is still waiting. Institutional investors are sitting on capital and may deploy if prices stabilize rather than fall further.
- Cap Rates Are Rising – But Slowly Cap rates haven’t adjusted upward as fast as borrowing costs, leading to negative leverage. Cash buyers dominate today’s market.
- Defaults Without Distress? High-profile institutional owners (e.g., Brookfield) are handing back keys on offices; a sign of strategic exit, not systemic distress.
- Tariffs and Reshoring Could Reshape Demand Mueller sees Trump’s industrial policy (tariffs, reshoring) as a potential long-term positive for U.S. real estate, especially industrial.
- Global Capital Still Engaged, But Cautious Foreign investors remain active, but currency shifts and geopolitical risk are reshaping cross-border flows.
- Know Your Local Cycle – Even in national downturns, markets like Norfolk, VA, Honolulu, HI, and Riverside, CA, are peaking.
- Prioritize Income Stability – Focus on tenants who weathered COVID and economic shocks.
- Watch Employment, Not Noise – Labor market data remains the clearest leading indicator for demand.
- Cash is King (for now) – With interest rates high and spreads compressed, unlevered buyers have the advantage.
- Position for Affordability – Whether in retail or multifamily, demand is strongest at the middle and lower price tiers.
- Straight talk on what happens when confidence meets correction - no hype, no spin, no fluff.
- Real implications of macro trends for investors and sponsors with actionable guidance.
- Insights from real estate professionals who’ve been through it all before.
Visit GowerCrowd.com/subscribe Email: [email protected] Call: 213-761-1000
72 episodes
Where Are We in the Real Estate Cycle?
The Real Estate Market Watch - current events through a real estate lens.
MP3•Episode home
Manage episode 483732694 series 1374358
Content provided by Dr. Adam Gower. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Dr. Adam Gower or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.
When it comes to understanding real estate cycles, few voices carry as much weight as Prof. Glenn Mueller, of Denver University. With over 40 years in the real estate industry and more than three decades of publishing the Market Cycle Monitor – used by institutional investors, developers, and academics alike – his data-driven framework is one of the most respected in commercial real estate. In my conversation with Prof. Mueller, he shared where each property type stands today, what signals matter most, and how CRE professionals should be thinking about the road ahead. Market Cycle: Where We Are Now
…
continue reading
- Most Property Sectors Still in Growth Phase Despite headlines, the underlying fundamentals in many sectors are still solid. Industrial and retail are at or near peak occupancy, with retail benefiting from a decade of underbuilding. Hotels and some apartments are in expansion phases, while office remains in recession.
- Office: Structural Downshift, Not Just a Cycle Post-COVID remote work has fundamentally reshaped office demand. Class A in prime markets (e.g., NYC) is thriving; B/C assets and suburban offices are struggling. Adaptive reuse (e.g., office-to-resi conversions) is being explored but not yet widespread.
- Apartments: Strong Demand, But Misaligned Supply There's a 6.5 million unit housing shortfall, yet high-end, urban supply has overshot demand. Affordable and workforce housing remain undersupplied and present the most attractive opportunities.
- Employment > GDP Mueller emphasizes employment growth as the single most reliable predictor of real estate demand. Despite economic noise, job growth remains positive, indicating continued underlying support for real estate fundamentals.
- Occupancy Drives Rent, Not Price Mueller’s cycle model is based on physical occupancy, not asset pricing. Price movements are driven by capital flows, but true performance comes from rent and income growth – especially critical in today’s higher-rate environment.
- Retail: Nationally at peak occupancy. Almost all new space is pre-leased. Over a decade of cautious development has created a tight market.
- Industrial: Slight oversupply after a COVID-era building spree but expected to correct by 2026.
- Multifamily: Select markets are overbuilt (e.g., downtown Class A), but suburbs and affordable housing show structural undersupply.
- Hotels: Bifurcated; leisure and conference travel rebounding; business travel still lagging.
- Prices Are Down, and May Not Drop Further Higher interest rates have cooled pricing, but a wave of dry powder is still waiting. Institutional investors are sitting on capital and may deploy if prices stabilize rather than fall further.
- Cap Rates Are Rising – But Slowly Cap rates haven’t adjusted upward as fast as borrowing costs, leading to negative leverage. Cash buyers dominate today’s market.
- Defaults Without Distress? High-profile institutional owners (e.g., Brookfield) are handing back keys on offices; a sign of strategic exit, not systemic distress.
- Tariffs and Reshoring Could Reshape Demand Mueller sees Trump’s industrial policy (tariffs, reshoring) as a potential long-term positive for U.S. real estate, especially industrial.
- Global Capital Still Engaged, But Cautious Foreign investors remain active, but currency shifts and geopolitical risk are reshaping cross-border flows.
- Know Your Local Cycle – Even in national downturns, markets like Norfolk, VA, Honolulu, HI, and Riverside, CA, are peaking.
- Prioritize Income Stability – Focus on tenants who weathered COVID and economic shocks.
- Watch Employment, Not Noise – Labor market data remains the clearest leading indicator for demand.
- Cash is King (for now) – With interest rates high and spreads compressed, unlevered buyers have the advantage.
- Position for Affordability – Whether in retail or multifamily, demand is strongest at the middle and lower price tiers.
- Straight talk on what happens when confidence meets correction - no hype, no spin, no fluff.
- Real implications of macro trends for investors and sponsors with actionable guidance.
- Insights from real estate professionals who’ve been through it all before.
Visit GowerCrowd.com/subscribe Email: [email protected] Call: 213-761-1000
72 episodes
All episodes
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