

Walk into an open house in northern New Jersey today, and you’ll see a housing market defined by scarcity. In towns where 80 homes might have been for sale in the past, there are now just ...




For most of the last decade, investing in South Jersey real estate was less about skill than timing. Prices rose, inventory stayed tight, and deals closed. Investors who got in early made money almost in spite of themselves.
That market is over. Patrick Gorman, who leads the Gorman Group Realtors in Collingswood, New Jersey, has watched the shift up close. And he says investors who haven’t adjusted are finding out the hard way. What’s replaced the boom rewards different things: realistic expectations, disciplined pricing, and the ability to close deals that don’t go smoothly on their own.
The real estate market in Camden, New Jersey spent the better part of a decade rewarding almost anyone who showed up. Investors were buying properties for $40,000 to $60,000 and renting them for $1,300 to $1,400 a month. The numbers worked almost automatically, and the market kept forgiving mistakes — on pricing, on tenant selection, on deal structure.
That environment shaped a spate of investors and agents who never had to develop the harder skills. Negotiation, financial analysis, problem-solving when deals go sideways — none of it was particularly necessary when rising prices covered most errors.
Sellers felt it too. “Sellers have been in the driver’s seat for so long that they were able to overplay their hands,” Gorman says. For years, overpricing a property wasn’t fatal. Demand absorbed it. That dynamic trained sellers to anchor high and wait — a habit that’s now working against them.
The window that made those returns possible has closed. Prices have risen sharply, and the yields that once made Camden an obvious entry point for investors have compressed accordingly. A property that would have generated strong cash flow five years ago may barely break even at today’s acquisition costs.
That shift has forced a recalibration on both sides of the table. Sellers who built expectations during the boom are still adjusting. “Sellers were able to overplay their hands,” Gorman says. “That’s not necessarily the case anymore.” Listing a property above market value no longer draws competing offers that bail out the price — it draws silence.
For buyers, the math now requires more discipline up front. Gorman’s team runs detailed financial analysis on every property they represent, modeling returns at current prices and realistic rents rather than the numbers investors remember from a few years ago. In the small to mid-size apartment building segment — properties valued between $500,000 and $10 million — that kind of rigor is rare, and the gap between what investors assume and what the numbers actually show can be significant.
The deals that make sense in today’s market don’t look the way investors expect. The most accessible opportunities right now are occupied properties with below-market rents — not the vacant, ready-to-renovate deals that tend to attract attention. These properties offer immediate income with a value-add path: make improvements, stabilize the asset, and bring rents gradually to current market levels.
The most active areas for this kind of investment include East Camden, Pennsauken, Kramer Hill, and Gloucester City, where both local and institutional buyers have been active.
What’s harder to find is the easy deal. Gorman is direct about what’s changed: the era of buying distressed properties at $40,000 to $60,000 and generating strong yields is over. Investors still hunting for those numbers are either going to wait a long time or talk themselves into overpaying. The opportunity that remains is real, but it requires a different kind of patience — and a clearer view of what the numbers actually support.
The deals that fall apart today rarely fail because of the market. They fail because of what happens between contract and closing — disputes over repairs, appraisal shortfalls, tenant complications that nobody anticipated. In a forgiving market, those problems often resolved themselves. In this one, they don’t.
That’s a meaningful distinction for investors choosing representation. Gorman points out that many agents who entered the business during the boom have never worked through a tougher cycle. The skills that matter now — negotiation, problem-solving, financial analysis, knowledge of the legal and practical realities of distressed properties — weren’t required to succeed then. “Now it’s going to be a skill-based market again,” he says.
For investors, the practical implication is straightforward: the quality of your representation affects whether your deal closes, and at what terms. In a market where execution matters as much as opportunity, that’s not a secondary consideration.
About the Expert: Patrick Gorman leads the Gorman Group Realtors, a South Jersey team specializing in distressed properties, investor transactions, and small to mid-size apartment buildings. He has worked in the Camden market since 2001.
This article is based on information provided by the expert source cited above. It is intended for general informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or real estate advice. Readers should conduct their own research and consult qualified professionals before making any real estate or financial decisions.
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