Skip Navigation

Mixed Results on Recent Rental Market

Started by bjw2103
about 15 years ago
Posts: 6236
Member since: Jul 2007
Discussion about
The usual caveats should be applied here, since the data is coming from one brokerage only, and, of course, it's a brokerage, but interesting nonetheless: * Studios and 1BRs up 6-7% in 2010 * Vacancy rate higher than this summer but lower YoY * Concessions down (22% of rentals had one vs 60% last year) I'm guessing rents will have to drop a bit from here on out (these prices seem unsustainable to me), so will be interesting to keep an eye on. http://ny.curbed.com/archives/2011/01/12/concessions_melt_away_from_manhattan_rental_market.php#more
Response by huntersburg
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 11329
Member since: Nov 2010

Is it Citi-Habitats that is the problem, or the landlords of properties at the lower end?

Ignored comment. Unhide
Response by citiagentnyc
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 8
Member since: Jan 2011

Oohah, I've figured it out. You're a mean spirited person. No need to respond. I think even those who may share your point of view would be embarrassed for you.

Ignored comment. Unhide
Response by inonada
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 7952
Member since: Oct 2008

Here's one that's been sitting months after it rented, citiagentnyc:

http://www.citi-habitats.com/viewlisting.php?adID=847771

As I'm sure you know, this guy has been the the top producer at the company for the past decade, and the other guy is a Senior Managing Director, not sure what that means, but probably not some rogue operative inside Citi-Habitats. I'm sure both are great guys who do their jobs wells, but if their rented listings get to sit around, I gotta question the company's resolve in cleaning up such listings. It's a way of doing business, rubs many the wrong way, but perhaps helps bring in some clients. It seems like a deliberate choice by CH from where I'm sitting, would be happy to hear if it is otherwise.

Ignored comment. Unhide
Response by huntersburg
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 11329
Member since: Nov 2010

Depending on how you look at that ad (hit refresh), you either get Senior Managing Director in looking to the side Larry Goldblatt, or regular Managing Director with really long hair Meredith Weise.

Ignored comment. Unhide
Response by oohah
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 82
Member since: Feb 2010

@citiagentnyc - Of course you are not going to respond to me. I figured it out. You have no response and you know it. $100 sez you're never going to do a little research from the customer's point of view to see why most people can't stand the company that you "work" for.

By the way, nice attempt at taking a shot at me! A little advice: You should probably never use the term "I think" because reading your posts, it really doesn't suit you! (Oooooh, ain't I a meanie!)Now if you want to battle wits, I suggest you think again because you're obviously bringing a nail file to a gunfight.

But if it makes you feel any better, I am sure that your fellow Citi-habitats brokers are not embarrassed for you - or for anything at all, for they truly have no shame.

"I think" you'll fit right in!

Ignored comment. Unhide
Response by huntersburg
almost 15 years ago
Posts: 11329
Member since: Nov 2010

rents going up
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748704680604576110062827617504.html?mod=googlenews_wsj
January 29, 2011
Housing Woes Fuel Apartment Surge .
By DAWN WOTAPKA
Falling home prices and lethargic sales have been bad news for homeowners, but a boost for one group of real-estate investors: apartment-building landlords.

With millions of families switching from being homeowners to renters, apartment-building values have soared. Investor demand is so intense, prices of some properties are approaching values last seen in mid-2007.

.That isn't good for renters, who enjoyed falling rents, landlord concessions and even offers of incentives such as flat-screen televisions to sign leases after the recession hit the housing market. Now rents are rising and vacancies are falling in many markets, making it harder to find a place.

Lindsey Neiling, a 23-year-old Chicago resident, is facing a rent increase to $765 from $720 on her studio apartment when her lease is up in April. "They know they can get more for my unit," she said.

Benefits from rising apartment-building values are rippling beyond their owners. It's a boon for banks and other lenders holding billions of dollars of debt on apartment buildings and other commercial real estate that had been under financial stress.

Values of apartment buildings rose 16% in 2010, according to brokerage firm Marcus & Millichap, after falling 27% between 2006 and 2009. Values of apartment buildings owned by real-estate investment trusts are now within 10% of their 2007 peak, according to Green Street Advisors, a research firm that follows REITs.

Resurgent apartment values were first seen in late 2009 in markets such as New York City and Washington, D.C., where the economy has held up better and recoveries have been quicker. But the price surge has now spread to other markets including Los Angeles, Seattle, Boston, Baltimore and Austin, Texas.

Some say things are even hot in Las Vegas, a hard-hit market with plenty of foreclosed homes available for rent. Last month, the Croix Townhomes complex in the city's Henderson suburb sold for nearly $20 million, or $143,000 per unit, well above the national average.

Investors in some markets have begun to quickly resell or "flip" properties, a practice not seen since the boom years. Last month, TIAA-CREF paid $62 million for the 261-unit Newbury Commons in Stamford, Conn. The purchase price was 65% above what Seaboard Properties paid in February 2009, according to Real Capital Analytics.

Apartment-building values are being propelled partly by low interest rates that have made borrowing less expensive and competing investments like the bond market less attractive. Values of office buildings, stores, warehouses and other types of commercial real estate are also rising in some markets for the same reason.

But the apartment market is the healthiest, partly because financing is cheaper. Mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac buy apartment-building loans originated by others as part of their mission to support the housing market, but they don't buy loans for other commercial property.

.Apartment values also are getting boosted by powerful supply-and-demand forces. Renter households now top a record 37 million after increasing more than 3.5 million in the past five years, partly due to the foreclosure crisis. Green Street Advisors expects an additional 4.4 million rental households to be added by 2015.

Statistics released this past week show that the slump in housing sales is far from over. The Case-Shiller Home Price Index released Tuesday posted a 0.5% drop in November on a seasonally adjusted basis. The Commerce Department on Wednesday announced that only 321,000 homes were sold in all of 2010, the lowest tally in records dating back to 1963.

The nation's home-ownership rate is also falling, to 67% of U.S. households in 2010, after topping 69% in 2004, according to the Census Bureau, with further declines expected. Each 1% decline represents one million households moving to rentals, housing experts say.

Job growth may also be boosting demand for apartments, particularly among 25-to-34-year-olds, a group known as big renters.

The group has garnered the lion's share of new jobs, emboldening people who had been sharing units or living with parents to get their own apartments, Green Street said.

Meantime, new supply of apartment buildings is at its lowest level in two decades because the financing spigot turned off when the recession hit.

Apartment completions will total 53,000 this year, half of what was delivered in 2010, according to Marcus & Millichap, and down from 120,000 in the peak year of 2009.

Cameron Hardesty, a 25-year-old public-relations account executive, said that when she relocated to Washington, D.C., from her parents' home in Dallas, she encountered a frenzied apartment-rental market.

"It was like, if you didn't follow up on an ad on Craigslist within a half hour you were out of luck," she said.

To be sure, not all apartment markets are booming. Houston, Jacksonville, Fla., and Memphis, Tenn., had fourth-quarter vacancy rates topping 10%.

But in other markets, some see a risk of overheating. Since low interest rates are partly propelling the rise in value, rate increases could take some steam out of the market. And landlords won't be able to keep raising rents at current rates if job growth doesn't pick up.

For now, however, market forces are expected to keep pushing rents higher. Green Street expects every major metro market to see rent growth between 3% and 10% this year, with the biggest gains in San Jose, Calif., San Francisco and New York City.

Write to Dawn Wotapka at dawn.wotapka@dowjones.com

Copyright 2011 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved
This copy is for your personal, non-commercial use only. Distribution and use of this material are governed by our Subscriber Agreement and by copyright law. For non-personal use or to order multiple copies, please contact Dow Jones Reprints at 1-800-843-0008 or visit
www.djreprints.com

Ignored comment. Unhide

Add Your Comment