The Death of Cap Rate Compression
For the past decade, real estate investors could assume cap rates would compress over their hold period. Buy at a 6% cap, sell at 5.5%, pocket the difference plus cash flow. That assumption is now officially dead.
Cap rates have expanded across all retail sectors, driven by two forces: higher interest rates increasing capital costs, and income uncertainty making buyers more cautious. The spread between cap rates and treasury yields—the “risk premium”—has widened as investors demand more compensation for real estate risk.
The New Return Thesis
The practical impact is profound. Investors are no longer underwriting exit cap rates lower than entry caps. Prudent underwriting now assumes modest cap rate expansion at exit. The entire return thesis must be built on NOI growth and cash-on-cash yield during the hold period. There’s no “rising tide” to lift your boat.
This changes acquisition evaluation. Properties with embedded rent growth—below-market leases, strong tenant demand, locations supporting rent increases—become more valuable relative to “stabilized” assets already at market rents. The value-add opportunity isn’t just nice to have; it’s essential for acceptable returns.
Financing Structure Adjustments
Financing structures also require adjustment. With cap rates higher, LTV ratios have declined—lenders advance less against the same property. Equity requirements have increased accordingly. Deals that penciled with 65% LTV at a 5% cap may require 55% LTV at a 7% cap, fundamentally changing the return profile.
The silver lining: expanded cap rates mean higher going-in yields for new acquisitions. If you’re a net buyer deploying capital, you’re entering at more attractive basis points than investors who bought in 2021-2022.
Action Steps
Revise your underwriting templates to assume flat or expanding exit caps. If the deal doesn’t work without cap rate compression, it probably doesn’t work. Prioritize properties with clear NOI growth pathways.
Request a cap rate analysis for your target Southern California submarkets. We’ll show you current rates and recent comparable transactions.
Contact us: (213) 880-8107 | francisco.williams@williamscap.ai | williamscapitaladvisors.com




