How to Identify Real Estate Market Phases (And Profit from Each One)
research·6 min read·Martin Maxwell·Apr 1, 2025

How to Identify Real Estate Market Phases (And Profit from Each One)

The four phases—recovery, expansion, hypersupply, recession—and the indicators that tell you where you are. Cap rates, absorption, vacancy, and what to do next.

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Key Takeaways
  • Recovery phase properties in Phoenix traded at 6.8% cap rates in 2012 — the same properties hit 4.2% by 2021 expansion peak
  • When absorption rate drops below 60% while housing starts stay above trend, you're seeing early hypersupply — time to lock in fixed-rate debt
  • The 'death cross' (vacancy rising while new permits accelerate) predicted 2008's downturn 18 months early

Phoenix multifamily in 2012: 6.8% cap rates. Same market, same property type, 2021 expansion peak: 4.2%. That's a 2.6 percentage point swing. On a $2 million building, that's the difference between $136,000 and $84,000 in annual NOI at the same rent. The cycle did that. Not magic. Supply and demand, vacancy, and capital flows. Phoenix was one of the "comeback cities" after 2008—hit hard, then recovered fast. The cap rate journey from recovery to expansion peak played out in real numbers. Las Vegas and Miami saw similar arcs. Your market might not move that much. But the direction is predictable once you know the phase.

You don't need a crystal ball. You need to know which phase you're in—and which indicators get you there before the headlines. Here's how.

The Four Phases

Market cycles move through four phases: recovery, expansion, hypersupply, recession. The average cycle runs 12–18 years peak to peak. Each phase has a different playbook.

Recovery. Winter has passed. Prices have bottomed. Buyers and renters return slowly. Distressed inventory lingers. Competition hasn't fully come back. This is the best buying window—you're picking up assets before the expansion rush. Phoenix in 2012 was here. Cap rates in the 6–7% range for solid B-class multifamily. By 2021, those same properties traded at 4% or below. Cap rate compression in action.

Expansion. The market's hot. Jobs up, demand outpaces supply, rents and prices rise. Good time to sell or refinance. Late in expansion, developers flood the market. New construction from the boom starts to deliver. Deals get harder. You're paying top dollar for yield.

Hypersupply. Too many units. Demand can't keep up. Vacancy rates climb. Rent growth stalls or reverses. This is a holding phase. Strengthen reserves. Don't overpay for appreciation that may not come. Lock fixed-rate debt if you haven't already—refinancing in recession is brutal.

Recession. Vacancies spike. Prices dip. Distressed opportunities appear. Selling is tough; buyers are scarce. Focus on cash flow. If you've got capital and stomach, this is when vultures feast. Most investors freeze. The ones who buy often land the best deals of the decade.

Leading Indicators

You don't wait for the news to tell you the phase. You watch the numbers.

Cap rates. Compressing = expansion. Expanding = distress or recession. Track cap rate trends for your property type and market. CoStar, local brokers, and deal flow give you the signal.

Vacancy rate. Rising vacancy = hypersupply or recession. Flat or falling = recovery or expansion. Check vacancy rate data from CoStar, Reis, or local market reports.

Rent growth. Slowing or negative = late expansion or worse. Strong positive = recovery or expansion. Year-over-year rent growth is a lagging indicator but confirms the story.

Days on market. Lengthening = cooling demand. Shortening = tightening market. Simple. Effective.

Rent growth. Year-over-year rent growth tells you where demand stands. In expansion, rents climb 4–8% or more in hot markets. In hypersupply, growth flattens or turns negative. In recession, it can drop 5–10% before bottoming. Track it. CoStar, RealPage, and local market reports publish the data. Rent growth is lagging—it confirms what cap rates and vacancy have already signaled. But when all three align, you've got a clear read on the phase.

The Absorption + Starts Signal

Absorption rate is the share of available inventory that sells or leases in a given period. When absorption drops below 60% while housing starts stay above trend, you're seeing early hypersupply. Supply is ramping. Demand isn't keeping pace. The wave of new construction hasn't hit yet—but it's coming.

What to do: Lock in fixed-rate debt. Refinance now if you're on a variable rate or short-term note. In hypersupply and recession, lenders tighten. Rates rise. You want your financing set before the cycle turns. Multifamily absorption below 50% for multiple quarters is an unprecedented oversupply signal—we've seen it in 2025–2026. When that happens, the phase is clear. Act before it does.

The Death Cross of Fundamentals

Chart guys talk about the death cross—50-day moving average crossing below the 200-day. For stocks, it's often a lagging confirmation. For real estate, there's a fundamental equivalent: vacancy rising while new permits accelerate. Supply ramping into softening demand. That combination predicted 2008-style stress roughly 18 months before the worst of it. The death cross in traded REIT indices and housing ETFs showed similar timing—confirmation that the fundamentals were rolling over.

What to watch: Vacancy trend + permit/start trend. If both are moving the wrong way—vacancy up, starts up—you're in the danger zone. Time to preserve capital, reduce leverage, and wait for the next cycle.

Why 18 months? Leading indicators don't flip overnight. Permit applications lead starts by months. Starts lead deliveries by 12–24 months. Vacancy responds when the new supply hits. So the "death cross" of fundamentals—vacancy turning up while permits stay high—gives you a long runway. You're not predicting the exact month. You're seeing the setup. Use that time to refinance, build reserves, or pause new acquisitions. The cycle will do the rest.

What to Do in Each Phase

Recovery: Buy. Distressed inventory, less competition, cap rates that support cash flow. Best risk-adjusted entry of the cycle.

Expansion: Hold or sell. Refinance to lock rates and pull capital. Don't overpay for new acquisitions. Late expansion = cap rate compression that squeezes yield.

Hypersupply: Hold. Build reserves. Lock fixed debt. Don't panic-sell quality assets. Wait for the next recovery.

Recession: Buy if you can. Cash flow matters most. Quality assets at distressed prices. Everyone else is scared. That's when the best deals appear.

Regional variation. Phoenix, Las Vegas, and Miami had brutal crashes and sharp recoveries. Cleveland and Pittsburgh moved slower—less volatility, smaller swings. Your market has its own rhythm. The four phases still apply. But the amplitude differs. A 2% cap rate swing in Phoenix might be 1% in a stable Midwest market. Use local data. National headlines are noise. Your deal is local.

The Takeaway

The Market Cycles guide goes deeper on the four phases and how to position. When to Buy tackles timing. Real Estate in Recessions covers downturn playbooks. The Phoenix example—6.8% to 4.2% over nine years—isn't unique. It's what market cycles do. Know your phase. Watch absorption, vacancy, and starts. Lock debt before hypersupply. Buy when the numbers work. The cycle will turn. Your job is to be ready when it does.

Glossary Terms8 terms
S
Supply and Demand

Supply and demand is the basic economics of markets: low supply plus high demand pushes prices up; high supply plus low demand pushes them down.

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V
Vacancy Rate

The percentage of time a rental property sits empty and produces no income, calculated as vacant units divided by total units — the silent profit killer in rental investing.

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C
Cap Rate

Cap rate (capitalization rate) is the annual percentage return a property generates based on its net operating income divided by its purchase price or current market value. It strips out financing entirely — showing what you'd earn if you paid all cash — making it one of the fastest ways to compare deals across different markets.

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C
Cap Rate Compression

Cap Rate Compression is a financial analysis concept that describes a specific aspect of how real estate transactions, analysis, or operations work in the context of real estate investing deals.

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D
Death Cross

A death cross is a bearish chart signal that appears when a short-term moving average (usually the 50-day) crosses below a long-term one (usually the 200-day). It tells you momentum has shifted — recent weakness is overtaking the longer trend.

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M
Market Cycles

Market cycles are the four phases — recovery, expansion, hypersupply, and recession — that real estate markets move through over roughly 18 years, driven by supply-and-demand and new construction.

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A
Absorption Rate

Absorption Rate is a market analysis concept that describes a specific aspect of how real estate transactions, analysis, or operations work in the context of market research location analysis deals.

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H
Housing Starts

Housing Starts is a economic fundamentals concept that describes a specific aspect of how real estate transactions, analysis, or operations work in the context of market cycles deals.

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About the Author

Martin Maxwell

Founder & Head of Research, REI PRIME

Specializing in rental properties, I excel in uncovering investments that promise high returns. Sailing the seas is my escape, steering through challenges just like in the world of real estate.