Benchmarks have long been a staple of institutional real estate investing. They offer structure, comparability and a sense of discipline. In quarterly reviews and boardrooms alike, they provide a convenient shorthand for answering the enduring question: How are we doing?
But convenience has a cost — and in today’s real estate markets, that cost is growing. The problem is not that the benchmarks are wrong. It is that they increasingly are mistaken for truth rather than context. As capital markets normalize unevenly, operating fundamentals diverge, and long-held liquidity assumptions are tested, heavy reliance on benchmark-relative performance obscures more than it illuminates.
Most private real estate benchmarks are appraisal-based constructions. They rely on periodic