3
0

The Rapid Increase in Rents.


 invite response                
2021 Dec 5, 3:58am   4,302 views  39 comments

by Al_Sharpton_for_President   ➕follow (5)   💰tip   ignore  

What is happening? Why? And what will happen.

Over the last several months there has been a pickup in rents, especially for single family homes.

There are three key questions:

What is happening with rents?
Why are rents increasing rapidly?
What will happen?
I don’t have all the answers, but I’ll offer some preliminary thoughts.

What is happening with rents?

Housing economist Tom Lawler has been sending me rent data since early this year indicating that rent growth was accelerating. And Christophe Barraud, Chief Economist, Strategist at Market Securities has summarized much of the recent data in U.S. Rents Rise Most On Record

From CoreLogic: Preference for Detached Properties Pushes Single-Family Rents Higher

U.S. single-family rent growth increased 7.5% in June 2021, the fastest year-over-year increase since at least January 2005[1], according to the CoreLogic Single-Family Rent Index (SFRI). The index measures rent changes among single-family rental homes, including condominiums, using a repeat-rent analysis to measure the same rental properties over time. The June 2021 increase was more than five times the June 2020 increase, and while the index slowed to a post-pandemic low last June, rent growth is running well above pre-pandemic levels when compared with 2019.


And from Zillow: Rent Prices Soar Beyond Pre-Pandemic Projections (July 2021 Market Report)

Typical U.S. rents grew 9.2% year-over-year in July, according to the Zillow Observed Rent Index (ZORI) — the fastest recorded by Zillow records in data that reaches back through 2015 — to $1,843/month. Projecting forward historical ZORI values from February 2020 — the last full month before the COVID-19 pandemic hit the U.S. in earnest — we estimate that the U.S. ZORI in July was 2.9% ($52) higher than where it would have been if the last roughly 18 months had been more ‘normal.’


From the National Multifamily Housing Council (NMHC): July Apartment Market Conditions Showed Improvement Across All Metrics

We are witnessing strong, broad-based demand for apartments as the U.S. economy continues to recover,” noted NMHC Chief Economist Mark Obrinsky. “Many U.S. gateway metros, which were among those hardest hit during the coronavirus pandemic, have now seen their occupancy rates return to near-pre-pandemic levels. Meanwhile, rent growth remains particularly strong in a number of Sun Belt and Mountain markets.”

The Market Tightness Index increased from 81 to 96 – the highest index number on record – indicating widespread agreement among respondents that market conditions have become tighter. Nearly all (92 percent) respondents reported tighter market conditions than three months prior, compared to only 1 percent who reported looser conditions.

The following graph shows the quarterly Apartment Tightness Index. Any reading above 50 indicates tighter conditions from the previous quarter.

This indicates market conditions tightened further in July, after being especially weak during the early months of the pandemic.

Share


And from Rick Paliacios Jr, Director of Research at John Burns Real Estate Consulting:

Twitter avatar for @RickPalaciosJr
Rick Palacios Jr.
@RickPalaciosJr
Good times for single-family rental
Image
August 27th 2021

20 Retweets125 Likes
And from Christophe Barraud Chief Economist, Strategist at Market Securities:

Twitter avatar for @C_Barraud
Christophe Barraud🛢
@C_Barraud
🇺🇸 #Housing | #Rents Rise in All Big U.S. Cities for First Time Since Covid Hit - Bloomberg
*The national average rent in multi-family buildings rose 10.3% from a year earlier to $1,539 -- the first double-digit rise in the dataset’s history ⚠
*Link:
bloom.bg/3zYlEKZ
Image
September 9th 2021

19 Retweets36 Likes
Why are Rents Increasing Rapidly?

Here are some initial thoughts …

What drives demand for housing is household formation. Even though population growth in 2020 was dismal (see Tom Lawler’s Lawler: Update on the Dismal Demographics of 2020; "Smallest Population increase since 1918"), household growth probably picked up in 2021.

A couple of possible reasons for household growth include:

Some younger adults probably moved in with their parents or relatives (or stayed with them) during the worst of the pandemic, and are now moving out.
Divorces might have increased in 2021 splitting households.
Unfortunately we will not have data on household formation for some time (for example, data on divorces is only available through 2019).

Some other factors might include more properties being converted into short term rentals, removing them from the long term rental housing stock, and also the eviction moratorium has probably also had an impact on rents.

The preference for single family homes (and the corresponding larger rent increases) is partially due to the pandemic, and the desire for more space - especially for people working at home. And with the rapid increase in home prices, and lack of for sale inventory, some people are looking to rent single family homes instead.

What will happen?

Once again, these are just some initial thoughts …

First, there are quite a few apartments under construction. There have been significant delays in construction, but we should expect quite a few completions over the next year increasing supply.

The following graph shows starts under construction, Not Seasonally Adjusted (NSA), as of July 2021.


Red is single family units. Currently there are 711 thousand single family units under construction (NSA). This is the highest level since 2006.

Blue is for 2+ units. Currently there are 686 thousand multi-family units under construction. Last month, at 691 thousand units, was the most since 1974.

According to the Census Bureau, it took 6.8 months on average to build a single family home in 2020, and 15.4 months to build buildings with 2 or more units. With the pandemic related supply chain delays, the length of time to build probably increased significantly this year (2021 data will be released in March 2022).

Second, if what is driving household formation is a spike in younger adults moving out - and in divorces - that might ease by 2022.

So my sense is the rapid increase in rents will not persist.

A key impact of rising rents will be on inflation. Owners' equivalent rent of residences (OER), and rent of primary residences make up almost 1/3 of the consumer price index (CPI). Although CPI was up 5.3% year-over-year (YoY) in July, OER was only up 2.4% YoY. And rent of primary residence was up 1.9% YoY. The recent rent increases will boost OER later this year, and this will impact the measures of inflation.

https://calculatedrisk.substack.com/p/the-rapid-increase-in-rents?source=patrick.net



Comments 1 - 39 of 39        Search these comments

1   Booger   2021 Dec 5, 4:25am  

Eviction moratorium combined with building materials shortage and housing bubble.
2   Tenpoundbass   2021 Dec 5, 7:30am  

The more rents go up, the more I'm paying myself, by paying off my Mortgage last year.
3   NuttBoxer   2021 Dec 5, 8:55am  

We're paying one of the lowest rents we've ever paid, and it hasn't gone up once in almost two years. But we don't live in the city...
4   Patrick   2021 Dec 5, 10:43am  

Rents are proportional to salaries. They have to be. Unlike the case with mortgages, people can't pay rents they don't have.

So if rents are going up, that's because salaries are going up.
5   BayArea   2021 Dec 5, 2:38pm  

Sure, some people/industries have been negatively affected by the pandemic but most people I know in the Bay Area (in tech and medicine and other industries) have received massive pay increases over the last two years. Rents reflect that.
6   FuckTheMainstreamMedia   2021 Dec 5, 2:47pm  

Minimum wage in Los Angeles and OC was effectively $15 an hour in 2019 and you could find some workers for a little less than that…mostly teens and non English speakers.

Now the min wage is effectively $18 an hour and it’s very difficult to find employees even at that wage.

Combine that with lack of new construction and you have your answer.
7   BayArea   2021 Dec 5, 3:04pm  

Pandemic has served to increase the wealth gap. Poor got pulverized and the rich got richer.

It’s the American way!
8   RWSGFY   2021 Dec 5, 3:11pm  

BayArea says
Pandemic has served to increase the wealth gap. Poor got pulverized and the rich got richer.

It’s the American way!


Pulverized by 0 rent for almost 2 years and more money for sitting on their asses than for working their jobs full time? Some pulverization, lol. Can somebody pulverize me with 2 years of no mortgage and property tax payments (and no consequences), PLEASE!
9   BayArea   2021 Dec 5, 3:20pm  

I don’t know what fraction of the poor were doing that vs moving away from the city, changing their life, and getting on with it in a way that’s more sustainable.

I’m willing to see data
10   RWSGFY   2021 Dec 5, 3:31pm  

BayArea says
I don’t know what fraction of the poor were doing that vs moving away from the city, changing their life, and getting on with it in a way that’s more sustainable.

I’m willing to see data


Very small I bet. People respond to incentives not some abstract ideas and free rent and more money for not working than for keeping a job are pretty darn strong incentives.
11   Misc   2021 Dec 5, 9:40pm  

Patrick says
Rents are proportional to salaries. They have to be. Unlike the case with mortgages, people can't pay rents they don't have.

So if rents are going up, that's because salaries are going up.


There is also the way of the illegal. Just have more working people move into the same dwelling. I have seen a dozen or so people living out of a single family house. Makes parking in those areas a bitch.
12   zzyzzx   2021 Dec 6, 10:36am  

Patrick says
So if rents are going up, that's because salaries are going up


I'd like to see the data on that nationwide.
13   Patrick   2021 Dec 6, 11:03am  

Misc says
There is also the way of the illegal. Just have more working people move into the same dwelling. I have seen a dozen or so people living out of a single family house. Makes parking in those areas a bitch.



That would also put upward pressure on rents in those places.

The legal occupancy limit for a house or apartment is two people per bedroom, plus one more for the whole place. But it seems like it is not enforced.
14   HeadSet   2021 Dec 6, 6:51pm  

Patrick says
The legal occupancy limit for a house or apartment is two people per bedroom, plus one more for the whole place. But it seems like it is not enforced.

A few years back, in Prince William County (a DC suburb) a judge threw out a similar law when the local police were enforcing it. "Racism," you know. Illegals where living like a tribe in a single-family condo.
15   Robert Sproul   2021 Dec 7, 7:43am  

Tenpoundbass says
The more rents go up, the more I'm paying myself, by paying off my Mortgage last year.

My daughter paid off her home in Minneapolis last month. Refi'ed into a 15 year mort maybe 5 years ago, and then proceeded to accelerate the payments and extinguished the Death Pledge in record time. While others in her cohort were back to cranking out some equity for various frivolities. Never been prouder.
16   NDrLoR   2021 Dec 7, 7:53am  

Robert Sproul says
various frivolities.
A defendant on People's Court needed $8,000 to have a roof put on her horse barn, so she took out a second mortgage. Never underestimate stupidity.
17   B.A.C.A.H.   2021 Dec 7, 8:11am  

Robert Sproul says
Never been prouder.

Congratulations Robert!

Good job dad!
18   NuttBoxer   2022 Apr 9, 6:42pm  

Our rent is finally going up after two years of living in the same place. $85, which is the biggest increase we've ever had. The other was after living in a 3/1 house in San Diego for four years. Rent increased from $1,375 to $1,450.
19   HeadSet   2022 Apr 9, 7:38pm  

NuttBoxer says
Our rent is finally going up after two years of living in the same place. $85, which is the biggest increase we've ever had. The other was after living in a 3/1 house in San Diego for four years. Rent increased from $1,375 to $1,450.

You are likely a tenant your landlord wants to keep.
20   NuttBoxer   2022 Apr 10, 4:47pm  

HeadSet says
You are likely a tenant your landlord wants to keep.


Also because they're good landlords. We've had our share of un-appreciative ones, and with those, it really doesn't matter if you're a good tenant or not.
21   MAGA   2022 Apr 10, 9:25pm  

My apartments are encouraging tenants to charge their rent. With an additional service fee of course.
22   AmericanKulak   2022 Apr 13, 12:26pm  

Rented out in two weeks for $1550 with the tenant moving in this weekend, signed a year lease. Last tenant was September-April 1st and paid $1200.

$350 increase, WOW! On a Unit that cost me $70k including new floors, paint, and basic furniture (it's partially furnished) all included, 5 years ago.

Studio apartment, Space Coast, Florida.
23   GNL   2022 Apr 13, 2:10pm  

AmericanKulak says
Rented out in two weeks for $1550 with the tenant moving in this weekend, signed a year lease. Last tenant was September-April 1st and paid $1200.

$350 increase, WOW! On a Unit that cost me $70k including new floors, paint, and basic furniture (it's partially furnished) all included, 5 years ago.

Studio apartment, Space Coast, Florida.

$70k? I would have bet anything that you couldn't find any place to buy for $70k. When did you buy this place?
24   Booger   2022 Apr 13, 3:19pm  

WineHorror1 says
AmericanKulak says
Rented out in two weeks for $1550 with the tenant moving in this weekend, signed a year lease. Last tenant was September-April 1st and paid $1200.

$350 increase, WOW! On a Unit that cost me $70k including new floors, paint, and basic furniture (it's partially furnished) all included, 5 years ago.

Studio apartment, Space Coast, Florida.

$70k? I would have bet anything that you couldn't find any place to buy for $70k. When did you buy this place?


Studio condo in Florida 5 years ago. I believe it. I would expect the monthly condo fee to be kind of expensive.
25   Booger   2022 Apr 13, 3:21pm  

Which is a worse place to find an apartment, Tampa or Phoenix?
26   zzyzzx   2022 Sep 30, 8:37am  

https://abc13.com/harris-county-evictions-covid-19-pandemic-aftermath-economy-emergency-rental-assistance-program/12276891/

Harris County leaders working to solve 'massive problem' after thousands of evictions within 1 month
28   zzyzzx   2022 Oct 5, 9:27am  

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/rental-inflation-the-market-is-shifting-130016129.html

CoStar Group Inc., through its Apartments.com platform, found rents declined 0.4% between August and September as the U.S. median rental price declined from $1,641 in August to $1,634 last month.

The same report also found that the national vacancy rose 5.4% at the end of September as the pace of newly delivered units nearly doubled to 120,000 units, signaling a shift in market conditions from just a year ago when demand significantly outpaced supply.

“This is the fourth quarter in a row in which new supply additions just significantly outpaced the demand. We're still seeing a lack of cluster demand and the new supply is not getting absorbed. It's putting upward pressure on the vacancy rate,” Lybik said.

As a result, landlords are “really desperate” to get tenants to occupy their units, Lybik explained, which is leading to rents nationally declining on a nominal basis as more tenants stay in their current apartments.
29   ElYorsh   2022 Oct 5, 9:37am  

Anything that comes from Yahoo is crap. In the San Diego area rents are skyrocketing. You can't find a 2 bd apartment for less than 3000 dlls in any area except for the ghettos, and those are getting filled by recent immigrants on Section 8 assistance.

I work with several property owners and managers, they all tell me that they feel bad but they have to keep up with the rental market. All those big corporate apartment complexes are raising rents and keep moving companies busy.
30   Michael Cooke   2022 Oct 5, 10:33am  

As I've always understood it: Rents are reflective of the actual amount cash on hand people have to pay. Lenders don't provide loans for rent.

Corporations and institutional investors are gobbling up units to rent. There are also restrictive building regulations with everyday people mortgaging houses to rent. A person "owns" 10 houses. Yet renters pay the mortgages. The same corporations and individuals are using housing to "park" their money. Bank owned houses used to sit empty for years without being occupied.

There is also a never ending stream of millions of immigrants who need a place to live.
31   Michael Cooke   2022 Oct 5, 10:46am  

AmericanKulak says

Rented out in two weeks for $1550 with the tenant moving in this weekend, signed a year lease. Last tenant was September-April 1st and paid $1200.

$350 increase, WOW! On a Unit that cost me $70k including new floors, paint, and basic furniture (it's partially furnished) all included, 5 years ago.

Studio apartment, Space Coast, Florida.


$70,000 in Canaveral? Not possible. Not even in Titusville. You might get a trailer park can for $70.000. But it comes with a $500-$1000 per month lot rent, payable to Wall Street.
32   just_passing_through   2022 Oct 5, 11:03am  

ElYorsh says

You can't find a 2 bd apartment for less than 3000 dlls in any area except for the ghettos, and those are getting filled by recent immigrants on Section 8 assistance.


I was paying 2100 for a 2BD in Rancho Penisquitos until 2 weeks ago. They raised the rent to 2400. Not great but not exactly ghetto either.
34   DD214   2022 Dec 7, 4:27am  

Lawler: Likely "Dramatic shift" in Household Formation has "Major implications" for 2023

https://calculatedrisk.substack.com/p/lawler-likely-dramatic-shift-in-household
35   zzyzzx   2022 Dec 7, 7:38am  

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/rent-prices-fall-november-2022-134838504.html

Rent prices fall for a third straight month in November
36   RWSGFY   2022 Dec 7, 7:40am  

zzyzzx says

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/rent-prices-fall-november-2022-134838504.html

Rent prices fall for a third straight month in November


Noooooo!
38   NuttBoxer   2023 Jan 25, 11:27pm  

ElYorsh says


Anything that comes from Yahoo is crap. In the San Diego area rents are skyrocketing. You can't find a 2 bd apartment for less than 3000 dlls in any area except for the ghettos, and those are getting filled by recent immigrants on Section 8 assistance.


We live east of the city, and pay $1,700 for a 2/2 apt. Definitely not the ghetto. Although I did see a unit coming up in our complex being listed for $2,100(same owner for whole complex). Average rents in this area for 2bdr are around $2,000. for $3,000 you can get a 3/2 house, again not in bad areas. Don't believe the hype..
39   NuttBoxer   2023 Jan 31, 4:44pm  

Went on Trulia the other day, which I never knew tracks price changes in rentals in a very easy to see way. Most of the changes are down, at least $100 or more. In San Diego, Inland Empire, and Yuma. Could be a good summer to move, assuming things hold together.

Please register to comment:

api   best comments   contact   latest images   memes   one year ago   random   suggestions