Notorious R.O.B.

Conversations about the real estate industry, marketing, technology, and public policy

A Few Random Questions About the Latest Rent Report

Renter Nation!

The Wall Street Journal reports that rents are up and vacancies are down across the United States:

Apartment landlords are enjoying rising rents and falling vacancies.

The average effective rent, the amount paid after discounting, was $997 in the second quarter of the year, up from $974 a year earlier, according to a report scheduled for release Thursday by Reis Inc., which tracks leasing data for 82 markets. Second-quarter rents rose in all but two markets.

Yay for landlords, I suppose. And yay for me, for having predicted the whole Renter Nation thing several months back. But there are some unanswered questions that naturally come to mind. Let’s ask them, shall we?

 

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Future of Rentals: PETRA, TRA, and End of Housing As We Know It

[Note: This is a longer version of the original, which was posted on AOL Housingwatch a few days ago.  I'm crossposting it because Notorious ROB has no space constraints and my readers are used to 2,000 word posts, heh. :) ]

In Part 1 of this series, where I laid out why I believe the 30-year fixed rate mortgage (among other features of contemporary homeownership) was on its way out, to be replaced by a far greater emphasis on rentals.  So let’s take a brief look at what the future of rentals might look like, since many of you reading this now will be renting for a lot longer than you had ever imagined.

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What Am I Missing Here: Multifamily Loans Down 63%?

From National Real Estate Investor comes news that loans for commercial multifamily projects have dropped 63% year over year:

Commercial and multifamily mortgage loan originations continued to fall on a year-over-year basis in the second quarter, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association’s (MBA) Quarterly Survey of Commercial/Multifamily Mortgage Bankers Originations. Second quarter originations were 63% lower than during the same period last year. Conduits for commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS) registered a 98% drop compared with the same period last year.

“The slowdown in originations has come from both a decrease in the supply of capital available and a decrease in the demand for new mortgages,” says Jamie Woodwell, MBA’s vice president of commercial/multifamily real estate research. “It is likely volumes will remain muted until buyers, sellers, borrowers, lenders and their expectations of rates and terms match closely enough for transaction activity to pick back up.”

I don’t quite get this.  There has to be more to this story.

We’re in the midst of a severe downturn in the housing market.  The people who are in a position to know are saying they don’t know when things will turn around, as transaction sides and home values are both down in the pits.

This should be absolute boom times for multifamily, no?

I mean, people may no longer be able to get a mortgage to buy a house.  People might be losing their homes to foreclosure.  But they have to live somewhere, don’t they?  I suppose it’s possible that all those unsold homes are now being rented out, but that doesn’t make a lot of sense.  Someone who wants to sell a house doesn’t necessarily want to take on tenants who may stick around for a year at least.

I would think that demand for rental multifamily would be enormous.  So what gives?

/scratch head in puzzlement.

-rsh

This Seems Odd…

The Real Estate Journal is reporting that the largest landlord in San Francisco is putting apartment properties up for sale, and raising some questions:

After five years as the most aggressive buyer of apartment buildings in San Francisco, the Lembi family has — for now — become the city’s biggest seller.

The 18 buildings up for sale are a pittance of the family’s 307-building holding in one of the country’s hottest rental markets. But the listings have aroused speculation about this most-watched but little-understood local empire: Is the move portfolio-shaping to take advantage of a run-up in prices that the Lembis largely created or is it a sign they are overextended?

“We’re not under any pressure to sell,” said Walter Lembi, managing director of Lembi Group. He said the closely held group, whose main units are Skyline Realty Inc. and CitiApartments Inc., is seeking to take profits on buildings that it “successfully turned around, fixed up and earned higher rents.”

But Mr. Lembi acknowledged that the tight commercial-mortgage market has crimped the group’s ability to fund acquisitions and refinance highly leveraged properties.

“We’ve been through many tough markets before, and from a financing standpoint, this is one of the toughest,” he said. “All the lenders I have are working with us, giving us extensions on loans that are coming due.” He said the discussions involve refinancing, not restructuring, loans that are due “in a year or two” as the group looks to “reduce short-term debt.” Mr. Lembi declined to comment on the amount or composition of the group’s debt and whether rental income covers debt obligations.

That’s… interesting.

As the article itself mentions, San Francisco is projected to be the most attractive market for multifamily in the nation, with rents expected to increase 7.4% in 2008.  And that fits in with the conventional wisdom about rents in a tough residential housing market.

Lost amidst all the doom and gloom about the sub-prime meltdown and its impact on the residential housing market, with stories of homeowners just walking away from their over-levered homes, etc. is the fact that people have to live somewhere.  If people can’t buy a house, or walk away from the one they already own, they still have to hang their hat somewhere.  That means a recovery in the rental market, as demand for rental units increase.

So one would think that 2008, 2009, and possibly beyond would be a great time to be in multifamily rental properties.

Why is Lembi group selling now?

If it’s simply the case of one company facing cashflow issues and needing to sell some buildings to deal with it, then no big deal.  If the Lembi Group is just acting in concert with their investment plan, and this is the time to maximize portfolio gains by selling the properties, then no big deal.  If it’s indicative of something else in the underlying economy, that the Lembi group sees as the largest landlord in San Fran but others do not, then possibly a big deal.

One possible clue is the notion of domestic outflow.  Michael Barone wrote in middle of 2007 that San Francisco experienced a domestic outflow of 10% between 2000 and 2006 (with an immigrant inflow of 7%, for a net loss of 3% of the population).  That’s a lot of people to lose in six years’ time.  If the San Francisco market has been experiencing net outflow — particularly of higher-income tech industry workers — then that could explain why smart multifamily operators want to cash out some gains now, even as the home sales market goes into the tank.

Fewer renters = lower rent.  The iron law of economics.

This story bears some watching.

-rsh