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The Sponsor Matters More Than The Market

The Sponsor Matters More Than The Market

In today’s environment, the conversation around alternatives is no longer about whether to allocate, but where and with whom.

Multifamily rent growth is projected to reaccelerate to roughly 2–4% in 2026 as new supply declines sharply from its 2024 peak. Four years of market distress have wiped out many undercapitalized, overleveraged and inexperienced operators. As family offices and private wealth platforms continue to increase exposure to private markets, manager selection is now the primary source of edge.

We’re operating in a true dispersion era. Two sponsors can pursue nearly identical strategies in the same market and deliver meaningfully different outcomes. The difference is rarely the macro—it’s execution.

Operator vs. Allocator

A useful lens to evaluate different managers is determining who is an operator and who is an allocator. Allocators forecast returns based on market assumptions; operators actively shape outcomes by controlling the underlying drivers of performance—leasing, expense management, capital improvements and tenant retention.

With a market reset now clear and deal flow unlocked, deploying investment along a cyclical wave is not going to create separation from competitors.  In today’s market, active management that focuses on and has a track record of controlling NOI is what will ensure consistency and distinction over volatility.

Process Metrics

To understand if a manager takes an active, operator over allocator approach, headline IRRs are less instructive than metrics that show a disciplined approach to achieve strong returns. Process-oriented questions to evaluate discipline include:

    • How quickly and efficiently are value-add programs executed?

    • What does tenant retention look like through cycles?

    • How tightly are bad debt and operating expenses managed relative to underwriting?

    • How often do actual results deviate from initial projections—and in which direction?

These are the signals of repeatability.

Red Flags

At the same time, certain structural red flags have become more consequential in a more competitive multifamily investment environment. Among them:

    • Underwriting that leaves little margin for error.

    • Insufficient reserves relative to business plan complexity.

    • Misaligned or unclear fee structures that prioritize activity over fundamentals.

    • Short-duration debt supporting longer-duration strategies.

Each of these can erode otherwise sound investment theses and favorable market conditions.

The broader takeaway is straightforward: structure and discipline matter more than timing.  Manager selection, grounded in execution capability and attention to deail, is what ultimately determines whether a strategy delivers on its promise of consistent, distinguished returns.

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In today’s environment, the conversation around alternatives is no longer about whether to allocate, but where and with whom.

Multifamily rent growth is projected to reaccelerate to roughly 2–4% in 2026 as new supply declines sharply from its 2024 peak. Four years of market distress have wiped out many undercapitalized, overleveraged and inexperienced operators. As family offices and private wealth platforms continue to increase exposure to private markets, manager selection is now the primary source of edge.

We’re operating in a true dispersion era. Two sponsors can pursue nearly identical strategies in the same market and deliver meaningfully different outcomes. The difference is rarely the macro—it’s execution.

Operator vs. Allocator

A useful lens to evaluate different managers is determining who is an operator and who is an allocator. Allocators forecast returns based on market assumptions; operators actively shape outcomes by controlling the underlying drivers of performance—leasing, expense management, capital improvements and tenant retention.

With a market reset now clear and deal flow unlocked, deploying investment along a cyclical wave is not going to create separation from competitors.  In today’s market, active management that focuses on and has a track record of controlling NOI is what will ensure consistency and distinction over volatility.

Process Metrics

To understand if a manager takes an active, operator over allocator approach, headline IRRs are less instructive than metrics that show a disciplined approach to achieve strong returns. Process-oriented questions to evaluate discipline include:

    • How quickly and efficiently are value-add programs executed?

    • What does tenant retention look like through cycles?

    • How tightly are bad debt and operating expenses managed relative to underwriting?

    • How often do actual results deviate from initial projections—and in which direction?

These are the signals of repeatability.

Red Flags

At the same time, certain structural red flags have become more consequential in a more competitive multifamily investment environment. Among them:

    • Underwriting that leaves little margin for error.

    • Insufficient reserves relative to business plan complexity.

    • Misaligned or unclear fee structures that prioritize activity over fundamentals.

    • Short-duration debt supporting longer-duration strategies.

Each of these can erode otherwise sound investment theses and favorable market conditions.

The broader takeaway is straightforward: structure and discipline matter more than timing.  Manager selection, grounded in execution capability and attention to deail, is what ultimately determines whether a strategy delivers on its promise of consistent, distinguished returns.

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