These are good times for U.S. landlords. For many tenants,
not so much.
With demand for apartments surging, rents are projected to
rise for a fifth straight year. Even a pickup in apartment construction is
unlikely to provide much relief anytime soon.
That bodes well for building owners and their investors. Yet
the landlord-friendly trends will likely further strain the finances of many
renters.
A 6 percent rise in apartment rents between 2000 and 2012
has been exacerbated by a 13 percent drop in income among renters nationally
over the same period, according to a report from Apartment List, a rental
housing website, which used inflation-adjusted figures.
“That’s what we call the affordability gap,” says John Kobs,
Apartment List’s chief executive. “I don’t see that improving in the near
future.”
Demand for rental housing has grown as the U.S. economy has
strengthened since the end of the Great Recession nearly five years ago. Steady
job growth has made it possible for more people to move out on their own and
rent their own apartments. Yet rising home prices are preventing many from
buying.
A combination of rising rents and sluggish pay gains will
likely continue to weigh on the U.S. economy, which relies primarily on
consumer spending.
The trend is straining the finances of tenants like Michael
Strane.
The geologist recently decided to move from Pasadena,
California, to the L.A. suburb of Whittier, where asking rents jumped an
average of nearly 14 percent last year, according to real estate data provider
Zillow.
The location of Strane’s new apartment cut his two-hour
commute to work in half. But he’ll be paying $1,045 a month, $200 more than he
paid before.
“I’m actually paying more than I really feel comfortable
paying right now,” says Strane, 39.
Rental demand has risen in much of the United States since
the housing market collapsed in 2007. A cascade of foreclosures forced many
people out of their homes and into apartment leases. At the same time,
construction of apartments was stalled until the last couple of years because
many builders couldn’t get loans during the credit crisis.
Add to that several recent trends, from rising mortgage
rates to stagnant pay, which have combined to discourage many people from
buying homes. It’s resulted in fewer places to lease and a bump up in rents.
The national vacancy rate for apartments shrank from 8
percent to 4.1 percent from 2009 to 2013, according to commercial real estate
data provider Reis Inc.
As a result, landlords were able to raise rents in many
markets. The average national effective rent rose 12 percent to $1,083 during
those years, according to Reis, which tracked data for apartments in buildings
with 40 units or more. Effective rent is what a tenant pays after factoring in
landlord concessions, such as a free month at move-in.
Over the same period, the median price of an existing U.S.
home has risen about 14 percent, according to data from the National
Association of Realtors.
Among major U.S. markets, rents rose the most in Seattle in
2013, up 7.1 percent from the year before, according to Reis. The
second-biggest increase, 5.6 percent, was in San Francisco. Nationwide,
effective rent rose 3.2 percent last year compared with 2012. Rents rose even
as the nation added about 127,000 apartments, the most since 2009, according to
Reis. The addition of those apartments hasn’t been enough to absorb the surging
demand for rentals.
The Picerne Group is among the apartment complex owners with
buildings under construction. The company, which owns properties in California,
Arizona, Nevada and Colorado, expects to break ground soon on luxury rental
buildings in the Southern California cities of Cerritos and Ontario. The
buildings, which have nearly 500 units combined, are due to open next year,
says Brad Perozzi, managing director of the company, based in San Juan
Capistrano, Calif.
“We definitely see demand improving, especially the younger
demographic coming out of college and being in their prime renter years,”
Perozzi says. “Even though the single-family home market is coming back, it’s still
somewhat cumbersome to obtain a mortgage and come up with a down payment.”
Jaswinder Bolina knows something about that.
An assistant professor of English at a the University of
Miami, Bolina couldn’t afford to pay the roughly $2,000 rent for his
two-bedroom, two-bath apartment in an upscale area of Miami and still save
enough money for a 20 percent down payment on a condo.
Ultimately, his parents pitched in, helping him buy a
$340,000 condo that he expects to close on in May.
“It could have taken me 10 years to save enough for a down
payment because property values have rebounded out here to the point where I’m
priced out of the market,” Bolina says.
CHASING LOWER RENTS
Rising rents in San Francisco compelled Marc Caswell to move
to Los Angeles in September. He and his girlfriend couldn’t get past the cost
of renting a two-bedroom apartment in the San Francisco Bay area, where such
housing listed recently on Zillow.com for an average asking rent of $4,100 —
more than double what the couple hoped to pay.
“In a year or two, there would have been no money put away,”
says Caswell, who works for an environmental nonprofit.
The couple, who earn a combined salary of about $120,000,
now pay $2,000 a month for a two-bedroom apartment in Los Angeles, the
12th-most-expensive rental market last year.
Even with more buildings under construction, rising demand
will push rents up in many markets. Reis expects a stronger job market to enable
more people to start renting their own places instead of living with roommates
or parents. As a result, the firm predicts that effective apartment rents will
increase 3.3 percent this year to an average of $1,118 nationally.
GOOD FOR INVESTORS
Higher demand and rising rents, unwelcome as they are for
tenants, will produce more income for owners such as apartment REITS. These
real estate investment trusts operate buildings they acquire or build.
Steadfast Income REIT, based in Irvine, Calif., is counting
on rental growth and demand to continue rising in Texas, Illinois, Kentucky,
Oklahoma and the seven other states where it’s invested $1.6 billion to buy
buildings with a total of about 16,000 units.
The company has avoided coastal markets, where apartment
buildings for sale tend to command high prices, making it harder to turn a
profit without charging rents that could price out many tenants. Steadfast
likes to buy buildings where it can make money while serving tenants who earn
between $45,000 and $75,000. On average, it charges $950 in rent, says Ella
Neyland, Steadfast’s president.
Steadfast has 40 percent of its holdings in Texas, where an
energy boom is creating jobs faster than the national average. Those jobs are
luring people to cities like San Antonio and Houston and driving up demand for
rentals.
“Every single day I have some apartment home in my portfolio
that’s up for renewal,” Neyland says. “As the market improves, I increase the
rents.”
Source: Associated
Press
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