Investors bet big time on demand for rental properties over homeownership in 2014, when sales of apartment buildings hit a record $110.1 billion, or nearly 15% higher than the previous year, according to Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), a professional services and investment management firm.
Nearly half of those transactions were for buildings in six metros: New York, Los Angeles, Atlanta, Houston, Dallas, and Washington D.C. And the allure of owning rental properties in America’s largest cities continues into 2015, the Wall Street Journal reported.
Blackstone Group, the world’s largest private equity holder of real estate, in late January agreed to pay $1.7 billion for 36 properties with an estimated 11,000 apartment units, half of which are in Washington D.C. and Boston. The seller was Praedium Group, which JLL and Evercore Partners advised. The deal increases to 43,000 the number of apartment units managed by LivCor, Blackstone’s multifamily real estate unit, according to Crain’s Chicago Business.
The multifamily sector “has become the preferred asset class of institutional investors” since the last economic downturn, says Jubeen Vaghefi, managing director of JLL’s capital markets division. That opinion is consistent with what Vaghefi wrote in JLL’s Fall 2014 Multifamily Outlook: “The ability for multifamily starts to occur 3.5 times faster than the overall market is due to the combination of higher oversupply of single-family homes throughout the United States, a marked preference for multi-unit buildings, and residential development in core submarkets, which continue to post high occupancy rates.”
The question now is how long investors will ride this gravy train, especially if increasing supply adversely impacts rent appreciation.
The Census Bureau’s latest data for housing starts, which it released on January 21, 2015, estimates that 456,000 units were under construction in buildings with five or more units at the end of December 2014, or 26% more than in December 2013. The possibility that this market may be overheating, though, is reflected in annualized multifamily starts, which inched up by only 0.3% in December to 339,000 units. Annualized multifamily permits issued stood at 338,000 units in December, down 12.4% from December 2013
On a less ambiguous note, rents increased by 3.6% nationwide in 2014, according to Reis, the real-estate research firm. Apartment vacancy rates, at 4.2%, were near their lowest levels in 2001. And the days of excess demand that has kept rents under control “are likely over,” Ryan Severino, Reis’ senior economist, stated.
JLL contends that with vacancies stabilizing and with the market average of inventory under construction at 4.4% and growing, “the pace of multifamily tightening is softening, with projected rent growth between 2% and 3% over the next 18 months.”
Related Stories
Multifamily Housing | Oct 29, 2020
Uncertainty shades a once-soaring multifamily construction market
Demand varies by region, and by perceptions about the economy, COVID-19, and the election.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 22, 2020
The Weekly show: Universal design in multifamily housing, reimagining urban spaces, back to campus trends
BD+C editors speak with experts from KTGY Architecture + Planning, LS3P, and Omgivning on the October 22 episode of "The Weekly." The episode is available for viewing on demand.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 20, 2020
New multifamily complex completes in Austin
Charlan Brock Associates and Britt Design Group designed the project.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 15, 2020
Miami’s yacht-inspired UNA Residences begins construction
AS+GG designed the tower.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 15, 2020
L.A., all the way
KFA Architecture has hitched its wagon to Los Angeles’s star for more than 40 years.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 2, 2020
Everyone's getting a fire pit!
Skeleton fire pit in Chicago, October 2020
Coronavirus | Oct 2, 2020
With revenues drying up, colleges reexamine their student housing projects
Shifts to online learning raise questions about the value of campus residence life.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 1, 2020
Glass railings installed at 300-unit rental complex in Columbus, Ohio
Vision Communities chose Viewrail railings for the main entrance of The Ave, a 300-unit rental enterprise in Columbus, Ohio.
Multifamily Housing | Sep 29, 2020
Washington, D.C.’s first modular apartment building breaks ground
Eric Colbert & Associates designed the building.
Multifamily Housing | Sep 22, 2020
AIA/HUD Secretary's Awards celebrate affordable, accessible, and well-designed housing
Each year, the AIA and HUD partner to celebrate projects that demonstrate affordable, accessible and well-designed housing, proving that good design is not exclusive.