Core metrics to track
– Inventory and months of supply: Measures how many months it would take to sell current listings at the recent sales pace. Low months of supply favors sellers; high favors buyers.
– Median/average price trends: Track both to spot price direction and distribution changes. Pay attention to price per square foot for apples-to-apples comparison.
– Days on market (DOM): Shortening DOM usually signals rising demand or constrained supply; lengthening DOM signals cooling.
– Absorption rate: Sold units divided by available units over a period — useful for forecasting how quickly new listings will be absorbed.
– Price-to-rent ratio: Useful for buy-vs-rent decisions and identifying markets where rentals outperform appreciation.
– Cap rates and NOI (for income properties): Compare to local risk-free rates and alternative investments to assess return potential.
– Vacancy and rent growth (multifamily/commercial): Early indicators of demand shifts.
– New construction permits and housing starts: Pipeline supply can materially affect future pricing and vacancy.
High-value data sources
– MLS and local brokerage reports for transaction- and listing-level data.
– Public records and county assessor databases for ownership and tax history.
– National and regional dashboards from major listing portals for trend context.
– Local planning and building departments for permits and zoning changes.
– Labor market data and population estimates from government agencies to assess demand drivers.
– Commercial providers (market research firms, CoStar, REIS) for institutional-grade multifamily and office analytics.
Practical process for an actionable analysis
1. Define the market: Use walkable submarkets, school districts, or commute rings rather than broad metropolitan areas. Granularity matters.
2.
Gather baseline data: Pull 12–24 months of sales, listings, rent, vacancy, and permit data.
Normalize price per square foot and unit mix.
3. Calculate the core metrics: Inventory, absorption, DOM, cap rate, rent growth, and price growth.
Visualize trends with simple charts.
4.
Benchmark: Compare your submarket to nearby submarkets and the broader metro area. Identify outliers and reasons (transit access, job centers, new supply).
5. Identify drivers and risks: Job growth, infrastructure projects, zoning changes, interest rate sensitivity, and migration patterns.
6.

Scenario test: Model 2–3 scenarios (base, upside, downside) for pricing, vacancy, and cap rates to estimate returns and stress points.
7. Monitor continuously: Set alerts for permit filings, big corporate relocations, major employer layoffs, and sudden upticks in listings.
Tips for investors and agents
– Focus on leading indicators: permit activity, rent delinquencies, and new lease concessions often precede price moves.
– Use localized comps: A single block or school zone can behave differently than the city average.
– Consider liquidity: High cap-rate markets may offer yield but can lag in liquidity and price recovery.
– Keep an eye on financing: Mortgage rate shifts can compress buyer pools and change affordability quickly.
– Document assumptions: Clear assumptions make it easier to revisit decisions when the market moves.
Visualization and tools
– Simple charts (trend lines, heat maps, scatter plots) reveal patterns faster than tables.
– Spreadsheet models for scenario analysis; GIS tools for spatial overlays; and dashboards for rolling monitoring streamline decision-making.
A disciplined, repeatable market analysis process turns raw data into practical intel. Whether evaluating a single-property acquisition or advising clients on price strategy, focus on consistent metrics, local context, and scenario planning to make confident, data-driven choices.