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Rents are falling.


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2012 Jul 31, 2:16pm   14,664 views  42 comments

by Cheeseus Sonofdog   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Millions of homes have been bought the last few years with the intent of renting them out. The rental bubble is bursting. Soon, real estate prices will also crash as investor returns are no longer a certain. The banks may regret not foreclosing while the market had a deadcat bounce.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/02/01/realestate/01cov.html?_r=1
"......it’s a good time to be a renter in New York City. Prices are falling, primarily in Manhattan, and concessions like a month of free rent are widespread........"

http://www.eagletribune.com/latestnews/x748660882/Rent-prices-dropping-in-Southern-N-H/print
"....Median gross rental costs in Rockingham County for a two-bedroom unit are below $1,200 for the first time in three years and at their lowest level in five years, according to a recent survey from the University of New Hampshire and the New Hampshire Housing Finance Authority.."

http://www.rentcafe.com/blog/cities/chicago-il/rent-in-chicago
"......Rents are coming down in popular neighborhoods such as the Gold Coast (-13%), River North (-7%), and Streeterville (-4%) as compared to the fourth quarter of 2011........"

#housing

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1   David9   2012 Jul 31, 2:23pm  

The New York Times article is from 2009, a bit dated.

2   Cheeseus Sonofdog   2012 Jul 31, 2:29pm  

Good catch. I sorted the google news search to show only results from the last month. I should have double checked to make sure it was recent.

3   bmwman91   2012 Jul 31, 2:37pm  

Well, at least the article is period correct. I was negotiating rent decreases 2007-2010. Things around here have sort of swung in the other direction since then.

4   Cheeseus Sonofdog   2012 Jul 31, 2:50pm  

It just seems like the rental game is too hot. Millions of little guys wanting to be landlords. Hedgefunds getting in on it. New construction is mostly apartments. The foreclosures bought this year probably saw their prior owners kicked out last year. They already found a new place to live when they were kicked out. Home prices are rebounding which will give local governments an excuse to jack up property taxes. The new landlord who bought a home for $60k in Phoenix six months ago is assuming his taxes will be at that level. The taxman is going to double it since the homes value has doubled since then. The insurance company is going to jack his premium because the home is now higher. That will cut into his profits. Newer landlords are going to have to ask higher rents, because his costs are now higher than he speculated. Older landlords will lower theirs to attract renters..... Renters are going to see cheaper rents.

5   bmwman91   2012 Jul 31, 3:17pm  

I agree that at this point, the herd is on the move and starting to get into the rental game now is sort of dangerous. Those that have been heavy into it for a few years will probably be OK, but at this point it is becoming the next "guaranteed easy money" thing that you hear everyone else on the airplane talking about (I fly for work weekly and fucking everyone I sit next to / overhear is talking about how RE "is back"). When Joe Blow decides that rentals are the new "loosest-slots in town" then it is probably too late to get in. The guys on here that have been loading up on properties for the last few years are probably OK since they were in well before the brainless general population started stampeding to the next marginally-greener pasture.

The real wildcard here is the hedge funds & institutional investing firms. If the government starts chopping huge chunks of the shadow inventory off to them for pennies on the dollar, I think that the relatively small private investors in here will get slaughtered. Actually, everyone will...renters, home owners, private RE investors, everyone. Housing will become corporate-run slums designed for maximum short-term profit, with all sorts of "protections" for tenants in the books and virtually none of them enforced. That's the short term. In the long term: cannibal anarchy. Odd as it may seem, my ability to keep a half-dollar grouping with my M1 Garand (30-06 battle rifle) at 100 yards might be useful someday.

6   Cheeseus Sonofdog   2012 Jul 31, 3:36pm  

A search of Caigslist has a lot more rental ads with "free month", "bad credit ok", "reduced" and other incentives. For tuesday there were 37 pages for apartments/rentals. Only 11 pages with homes for sale.

7   zesta   2012 Jul 31, 3:38pm  

Cheeseus Sonofdog says

Good catch. I sorted the google news search to show only results from the last month. I should have double checked to make sure it was recent.

confirmation bias?

Should have just posted this link:
http://bit.ly/OmipSE

8   Eman   2012 Jul 31, 3:46pm  

Cheeseus Sonofdog says

It just seems like the rental game is too hot. Millions of little guys wanting to be landlords. Hedgefunds getting in on it. New construction is mostly apartments. The foreclosures bought this year probably saw their prior owners kicked out last year. They already found a new place to live when they were kicked out. Home prices are rebounding which will give local governments an excuse to jack up property taxes. The new landlord who bought a home for $60k in Phoenix six months ago is assuming his taxes will be at that level. The taxman is going to double it since the homes value has doubled since then. The insurance company is going to jack his premium because the home is now higher. That will cut into his profits. Newer landlords are going to have to ask higher rents, because his costs are now higher than he speculated. Older landlords will lower theirs to attract renters..... Renters are going to see cheaper rents.

Let's run the numbers. According to Roberto, a $60k property can rent for $800-$850/month. Say the reassessed property tax goes from $600 to $1,200/year. That's an additional $50/month. Say insurance will go from $500 to $600/year. That's less than $10/month.

With 100% financing at 5% interest rate, your PITI goes from $412 to $472/month. How much does rent have to drop for the landlord to lose money?

9   Eman   2012 Jul 31, 4:06pm  

bmwman91 says

When Joe Blow decides that rentals are the new "loosest-slots in town" then it is probably too late to get in.

It's in the transition period from cheap to fair market. There are only a few good deals out there now, but you must know how and where to look to increase your chances. Whoever buying now are riding the tail end of the wave. The easy money has sailed away

I remember some big players started to leave the SFH (buy and hold) market as early as August 2009. That was when the housing inventory started to contract. That same force entered the condo market last year and left early this year. It seems like the window of opportunity always open for 6 to 9 months at a time and then gone. Of course that's only one man's observation. I still have a lot to learn from the veterans.

10   lostand confused   2012 Jul 31, 6:27pm  

E-man says

Let's run the numbers. According to Roberto, a $60k property can rent for $800-$850/month. Say the reassessed property tax goes from $600 to $1,200/year. That's an additional $50/month. Say insurance will go from $500 to $600/year. That's less than $10/month.
With 100% financing at 5% interest rate, your PITI goes from $412 to $472/month. How much does rent have to drop for the landlord to lose money?

A few months vacancy, tenants not paying rent, evictions, repairs, regular maintainace can all skew those numbers.

11   Tenpoundbass   2012 Aug 1, 1:26am  

Yeah I keep wondering who's paying these out outrageous rents.
Especially when we have a Government that champions a society where Men and Women stay at home and live with Mom and Dad until the ripe old age of 26. This of course in tandem with the idea that those adult simpletons should also be well saddled with Student debt. You know just to set them on the right path to servitude and pure destitution.

I think it's time Cities across America tax investor/landlords especially on single family homes 30% more than your live in home owner. Why should the landlords get all of the benefit, they are killing society by raising rents, sending young adults home to live with Mom and Dad, placing families on the couches of strangers if not in the streets. They are killing the pride of community, and home-ownership, thus driving down prices in most communities, save the fortress. That add nothing to a SFH community, but hardship and burden. Rent to low lives that burglarize neighbors they can give three shits about. Fuck'em all to hell I say.

Go buy a Multifamily unit if you want to play "The Supper".

12   Cheeseus Sonofdog   2012 Aug 1, 2:19am  

"......I think it's time Cities across America tax investor/landlords especially on single family homes 30% more than your live in home owner....."

Most states have a homestead exemption with caps on tax increases for owner occupants. Landlords may pay hundreds of percent higher taxes compared to a homeowner who got in years ago. They can also pay higher fees, license, rental inspections, etc. Not to mention a renter is often treated as a homeowner when they are in default. It can cost a landlord thousands to wait out the many months it takes the sheriff to kick out a non-paying tenant. If landlords weren't penalized rents would be much much lower as they pass on these costs to the renter.

I do agree with you about renters ruining neighborhoods.

13   New Renter   2012 Aug 1, 4:11am  

Cheeseus Sonofdog says

I do agree with you about renters ruining neighborhoods.

Yes, I parking my car on the lawn from day one. Took the wheels off too. I have an engine block next to the ratty old boat and the hedges have taken advantage of my laziness. I really like parking my old camper, work truck and many cars on the corner so drivers can't see around the corner. The collisions are far more entertaining than TV.

Oh wait, that's my owner neighbor...

Don't be hating on renters. We're not all bad.

14   bmwman91   2012 Aug 1, 4:22am  

Cheeseus Sonofdog says

I do agree with you about renters ruining neighborhoods.

You can't be serious.

15   Cheeseus Sonofdog   2012 Aug 1, 5:20am  

Of course I'm joking. I mean, when a newly married couple is looking to buy a home, they insist the realtor takes them to the area of town with the most renters, right? And renters add so much value that rental areas are priced way more than residential. Apertment complexes have almost no crime compared to the quiet residental street, right?.....

Most renters are fine people. Its the 20% which ruins things and prices, crime statistics and schools near them reflect it.

16   Tenpoundbass   2012 Aug 1, 5:27am  

Cheeseus Sonofdog says

Most states have a homestead exemption with caps on tax increases for owner occupants.

Florida has homestead exemption but they make no distinction between those that use it as a 2nd home and those that rent them out as income producing.

It's not that they pay more, but those that get HE pay less.

17   HEY YOU   2012 Aug 1, 1:30pm  

There isn't any way that the rental market could become a bubble.LMAO

18   KILLERJANE   2012 Aug 1, 4:11pm  

Florida has a homestead exemption but you have to have a current state ID to apply for it. Change your drivers license.

19   Cheeseus Sonofdog   2012 Aug 2, 6:21am  

I live in Florida. You can only claim homestead exemption for your primary house. Sure, you can rent it out, but the county does check and you lose your exemption if they find out you are not living there. Those with HE have their future tax asessed values capped at 3% per year. During the bubble, we had many properties increase 400% within five years. So, if you had HE your tax bill didn't go up much. But if you happened to rent that property, you saw your taxes triple.

20   BoomAndBustCycle   2012 Aug 2, 11:28am  

Why is this 2009 article on RENTS trending at all? The stock market was at 6000 in March 2009.. We were in the middle of a financial market crash.. of course rents were low!

Are bears really desperate enough to point to 2009 articles for confirmation rents are heading lower in 2012?

21   Massive Housing Inventory   2012 Aug 2, 11:36am  

Are housing pimps desperate enough to lie to the public about housing when rents are headed lower in;

Denver (-8.8%)
Chicago (-4.8%)
Los Angeles (-2.6%)

http://newsroom.transunion.com/MediaLibraries/TransUnion/Documents/graphics/1Q12/Q1-2012_SolutionsReport.pdf

you lying bastards.

22   Cheeseus Sonofdog   2012 Aug 2, 11:39am  

Re: 2009. The first post in this thread mentioned it and I already answered. I didn't check the date and relied on Google filtering articles from just the last month.

The stock market has risen by 100% since 2009. It rose on the excuses of "v shaped bottom", "green shoots", "recession is over". Looking back, that rally was 100% wrong. The federal reserve just told us things will suck until at least 2015. With interest rates this low, I would argue the bears are correct. Can you support a bull market in real estate and rents under these fundamentals?

Since you mentioned 2009, I will also mention that most of the new construction since then has been in apartments. Bulls want us to think once the deadbeats are kicked out due to foreclosure they will have to re-rent the very home they lost. Nope. They will have plenty of choices. From new apartments, to millions of novice landlords who are buying foreclosures thinking they will get rich renting them out. Supply and demand. Loads of rental supply coming....

23   B.A.C.A.H.   2012 Aug 2, 1:44pm  

Realtors® Are Filthy Liars says

Denver (-8.8%)
Chicago (-4.8%)
Los Angeles (-2.6%)

Ahem, so what?

This is a Bay Area Centric website. Patrick got frustrated with how Different It Is Here, so he made the website.

24   thomaswong.1986   2012 Aug 2, 2:12pm  

Realtors Are Filthy Liars says

Are housing pimps desperate enough to lie to the public about housing when rents are headed lower in;

Denver (-8.8%)
Chicago (-4.8%)
Los Angeles (-2.6%)

You are already inheriting our SF Bay Area high tech jobs... other states are booming benefiting from higher costs in CA.

25   BoomAndBustCycle   2012 Aug 2, 6:34pm  

No one talks about how Gen Y/ The Millenial generation approx 1982-2001 is much larger than the baby boomer generation. So those that think there will be an oversupply of housing is just wrong. Maybe some surburban tracts will be demolished out far from work centers... But the millenial generation will keep rents high until they absorb boomer housing at their death rate or better with ease.

26   Massive Housing Inventory   2012 Aug 2, 10:26pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

This is a Bay Area Centric website. Patrick got frustrated with how Different It Is Here, so he made the website.

You may want it to be.... but it's not.

27   New Renter   2012 Aug 6, 6:40am  

BoomAndBustCycle says

No one talks about how Gen Y/ The Millenial generation approx 1982-2001 is much larger than the baby boomer generation. So those that think there will be an oversupply of housing is just wrong. Maybe some surburban tracts will be demolished out far from work centers... But the millenial generation will keep rents high until they absorb boomer housing at their death rate or better with ease.

And how will they will be able to pay for their expensive houses? Their wages are low and anyone with a higher education will be straddled with debt. Their parents are likely tapped out. Do they have the ability to actually buy houses or will they be a generation of low income renters?

28   swebb   2012 Aug 6, 7:10am  

Massive Housing Inventory says

Are housing pimps desperate enough to lie to the public about housing when rents are headed lower in;

Denver (-8.8%)

I rented in Denver in Q2 2012 and my experience does not jibe with a 8.8% decrease in rents. The market was tight and rents were increasing. I was restricting myself to a relatively small area, but every indication I had was that rents in general had increased and were still increasing.

I don't buy it.

29   pazuzu   2012 Aug 6, 8:51am  

"Yep, if that chart doesn't SCREAM recovery..... nothing does!!! Starts at the lowest level since records were kept, the future looks booming!!!"

LOL, too funny... that chart... LMAO The duck has been plucked!

30   duckhead   2012 Aug 6, 10:00am  

That is disgusting. Not only do you negative nancys have no fantasy world of riches to turn into reality you also have NO CONCEPT OF DECENCY. My god man how can you post a picture like that… its… its… simply HORRIBLE. How would you like me to start posting pictures of hanging naked humans??? As for this topic its irrelevant, no matter how low rents fall you will still be a landlord TYCOOOOOOON. As rents fall simply buy more and more houses. Tre Simple!!! KACHINGCHING

31   Goran_K   2012 Aug 6, 10:11am  

duckhead says

That is disgusting. Not only do you negative nancys have no fantasy world of riches to turn into reality you also have NO CONCEPT OF DECENCY. My god man how can you post a picture like that… its… its… simply HORRIBLE.

Genius. Comedy gold.

32   Dan8267   2012 Aug 6, 10:24am  

duckhead says

you also have NO CONCEPT OF DECENCY. My god man how can you post a picture like that… its… its… simply HORRIBLE.

That's Chick-fil-A!

33   EastCoastBubbleBoy   2012 Aug 6, 10:34am  

During the US bubble, many said “Prices only go up…” because of X, Y and Z reasons.

Now that the buble popped, many of the (newer) regulars around here say “Prices only go down.” Because of X, Y and Z reasons.

The truth is almost always somewhere in-between.

For what it’s, all of my metrics indicate that prices have more or less bottomed. History will prove if I’m right or wrong (not that I care too much about being right). But please people, lets be rational. 1960’s prices… I don’t see that happening.

34   Eman   2012 Aug 6, 11:02am  

Yep. Rents are falling. Only cheese prices are rising.

35   mell   2012 Aug 6, 12:19pm  

robertoaribas says

apocolypsefuck is still winning in my book, but duckhead is in a strong second position for the main reasons to read this site!

It's the best screen name by far and that alone qualifies to be on every possible blog. When I am zoning off in the morning before work watching my stocks go up for no reason I get that blank stare and in those minutes I try to figure out what this screen name could possibly mean and how Shostakovich is connected to the apocalypse. This goes even deeper than picking the daily winner of computer generated spam email subjects and beats any politician's, banker's, lawyer's, real estate agent's or Keynesian economist's dribble of the day. Dow to 50K, long printing presses and mortgages!

36   Facebooksux   2012 Aug 6, 11:15pm  

mell says

robertoaribas says

apocolypsefuck is still winning in my book, but duckhead is in a strong second position for the main reasons to read this site!

It's the best screen name by far and that alone qualifies to be on every possible blog. When I am zoning off in the morning before work watching my stocks go up for no reason I get that blank stare and in those minutes I try to figure out what this screen name could possibly mean and how Shostakovich is connected to the apocalypse. This goes even deeper than picking the daily winner of computer generated spam email subjects and beats any politician's, banker's, lawyer's, real estate agent's or Keynesian economist's dribble of the day. Dow to 50K, long printing presses and mortgages!

Shostakovich was a proponent of subsistence farming. He loved tubers in all shapes, sizes and varieties.

We know how fond AF is of this skill. He is merely honoring his philosophical mentor.

37   Cheeseus Sonofdog   2013 Mar 26, 1:06pm  

Median Rental Rate Tumbles 14% In Downtown West Palm Beach In 2012

The demand for rental units in the Downtown West Palm Beach / Palm Beach Island coastal market decreased even as the median monthly lease price tumbled to less than $1.35 per square foot in 2012 from about $1.55 per square foot in the same period in 2011 and more than $1.65 per square foot in 2010, according to the report.

http://www.condovultures.com/News/ViewArticle/tabid/77/ArticleId/106638/Median-Rental-Rate-Tumbles-14-In-Downtown-West-Palm-Beach-In-2012.aspx

Median rents on a per-square-foot basis, meanwhile, dropped 3 percent in February from a year earlier after climbing 1.5 percent in the 12 months through February 2012 and 3 percent a year earlier, according to Fletcher Wilcox, a real estate analyst at Grand Canyon Title Agency in Phoenix.

......while Las Vegas rents fell 4.1 percent to a median 70 cents a square foot over the same timeframe, according to RentRange LLC.........

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-03-18/rent-gains-trail-as-blackstone-crowds-u-s-with-homes.html

38   SJ   2013 Mar 26, 1:10pm  

Not in the bay area at least rents have not dropped in Mountain View, Sunnyvale or Santa Clara yet.

39   thomaswong.1986   2013 Mar 26, 4:45pm  

CaptainShuddup says

I think it's time Cities across America tax investor/landlords especially on single family homes

Many dont realize that rental incomes under reported to the IRS since they lack a well documented audit trail like W-2s and 1099s.

Tax revenues from Rental Income would spike if one was to give a credit to renters.. as long as they report total payments made to landlords. Would bring in 100s of Billions in taxes. Everthing from Room Rentals to SFH rentals... there is alot of room for improvements.

Trust but verify...

IRS looks to cut rental tax losses
Thursday, March 10, 2011

The Internal Revenue Service needs to keep a closer eye on landlords. They apparently are not reporting all their income.

That's the word from the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration, or TIGTA, the federal office that keeps tabs on the IRS. TIGTA recently looked more closely at rental activity and its associated tax revenue because in August 2008, the Government Accountability Office reported that more than half of taxpayers with rental real estate activity in 2001 misreported their income and losses to the tune of $12.4 billion.

So what did TIGTA's follow-up find? That the IRS is indeed leaving lots of rental tax money uncollected.

40   REpro   2013 Mar 26, 4:52pm  

35% rise in prices plus unsustainable rent rate may make Phoenix “scratching head” for money managers think that maybe is a time to take profits.

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