by HARM follow (0)
Comments 1 - 7 of 113 Next » Last » Search these comments
@Muggy,
The wife and I had been looking for a bigger place in LA about 4 years ago. Got met with pretty shabby inventory, few amenities, high asking prices, all kinds of conditions (no pets, large deposits, etc.) and a rather arrogant attitude from the (mostly Boomer) property owner/managers (just had to slip that little dig in there ;-) ).
Just last October, we got a nice place month-to-month with NO pet deposit or restrictions, yard, garage, W/D hookups, etc. What a difference a few years makes.
Muggy,
LOL! O.K you got me there. This plays hand in glove with my design to become a "rental snob"!
We only rent month to month, we have a 130 lb. Saint Bernard that likes to dig, we don't smoke but have thought about giving it a try AND I'm thinking about getting back into guitar. ELECTRIC guitar! That cool w/you Mr. LL?
ALL YOUR RENTALS ARE BELONG TO MUGGY
One of the classic arguments for saying that rents will increase is - "as more homedebtors get into foreclosures, they will start renting, increasing demand for rentals".
The first time I heard it, it actually seemed correct to me for a second or so. It is not completely wrong as the foreclosed house may not become available for rent and the debtor may move to an apartment as opposed to a house thereby pushing demand for apartments etc.
But if that's the reason for rents going high, I will take it !
I tried to push some of my Sacramento 2 br units from $950/mo. to $975/mo. last year, but I'm back down to $950...
If you are renting in most areas and want to live in an average looking flat roof 50 year old apartment building you have plenty of choices...
I'm hoping to push the rents over $1,000 a unit (and get some better tenants) with new windows, new interior doors, and new carports...
Definitely in OC, high-end rents are soft. Above 3K, you can get a pretty decent place. I handled this last year already, and have a new post about the same stuff...
http://socalbubble.blogspot.com/2007/01/rents-not-measuring-up.html
P.S. Cote' did not believe me then. Wonder if he'll change his opinion or see it as a technical bounce.
John Doe.
Rents in S Marin for SFH's have increased substantially in the past 2 years. And, there's definitely more supply. In 2005 you could fit all the 4BR SFH's for rent south of Sir Francis Drake on one Craigslist screen without scrolling. Now there are dozens.
But that hasn't stopped rents from increasing over $1,000/month.
Not saying this is in any way indicative overall, just that there are definitely pockets of rising (and fairly quickly rising) rents; much faster than inflation. Perhaps this is part of the "prime area price stability" phenomenon: prime areas severely restrict new apartment stock supply, so SFHs comprise an overly large portion of rental inventory. This uncouples prevailing rents from the normal supply-demand expectations, due to "landlords" pricing based not on rational rental business terms but instead on "needs" and other psychological stuff. The effect is these areas more quickly push rents to a level that encourage people to either (a) leave or (b) buy. But not enough leave to push prices or rents down.
All I know is that after another year or two of this rate of rental increases and even my Bubblizer will tell me to buy a house.
Gee, you mean rents won't triple or quadruple this year and even things out?
Comments 1 - 7 of 113 Next » Last » Search these comments
Ok, it's official. We can finally put to bed one of the perma-bull/Trolls' favorite myths: rents are not about to shoot up and correct the price-to-rent imbalance all by itself. And, oh, we're not all going to work for Google and become Googleaires. Or marry supermodels... or live forever. Sorry to burst anyone's bubble. ;-)
HARM
Sacramento Bee
By Jim Wasserman - Bee Staff Writer
January 19, 2007
Story appeared in BUSINESS section, Page D3
An oversupply of units has held down prices locally.
ABC7.com
LOS ANGLEES, January 18, 2007
Landlords Lowering Apartment Rates, Offering Incentives
New York Times
January 16, 2007
Buyers Scarce, Many Condos Are for Rent
National Real Estate Investor
Jan 1, 2007
Mr. Fix It
#housing