Commercial Investment Real Estate

JUL-AUG 2016

Commercial Investment Real Estate is the magazine of the CCIM Institute, the leading provider of commercial real estate education. CIRE covers market trends, current developments, and business strategies within the commercial real estate field.

Issue link: http://cire.epubxp.com/i/700533

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 20 of 54

Commercial Investment Real Estate July | August | 2016 L IN V E STMENT A N A LYSIS Last year, 43 million American households rented their residences, according to Harvard University's Joint Center for Housing Studies. According to Harvard's Joint Center, this "decade-long surge in rental demand [was] unprecedented." Whether as a result of wage growth topping out at around 3.3 percent since the Great Recession, the changing priorities among a new generation of households or some combination therein, there are opportunities for investors in the multifamily market. Millennials and wage stagnation raising multifamily investments to new heights. pace demand and investors find it harder to gain return on investment. In November 2015, Manhattan apartment vacancies hit their highest in nearly a decade, according to a Bloomberg report. In general, inves- tors should anticipate leveling to decreas- ing rents as more mature markets become increasingly competitive. While some of the major real estate mar- kets begin to slow down, however, ripple markets present a growing area of opportu- nity. With regard to the New York City area, Queens and Jersey City are good examples of this phenomenon. Evaluating Returns Many owners and management compa- nies are already planning for a new nor- mal of stagnating rents to become the norm, insisting that projects in progress or planned for the future be priced according to today's rents and without the assump- tion of a ceiling-less marketplace for rent- ers. By planning an investment in multi- family properties accounting for little to no rent growth, investors can avoid surprises down the road when market dynamics shi in favor of renters. e good news is that for properties that have seen a leveling of rents, the low rate e two big factors affecting the market in the second half of 2016 are an uptick in overall household formation and increased demand for multifamily housing. Household formation dropped nearly 2 percent from 2006 to 2008, according to the U.S. Depart- ment of Commerce. However, recent incre- mental growth, in particular household for- mation outpacing home ownership in early 2015, has reversed what could have been an extended downturn. is increase in households has generated a mini-boom. From 2009 through 2012, the increase in households has exceeded the housing supply growth. As a result, the multifamily market has been playing catch-up. e implications for this mini- boom, as well as a cooling off period that has begun in certain regions, may vary, but overall the multifamily market as a whole offers opportunities for investors. e fol- lowing are several points to consider as you evaluate multifamily housing investment opportunities. Looking at Ripple Markets In New York City and Washington, D.C., a significant amount of Class A multifam- ily housing has come online, stabilizing vacancy rates as the supply begins to out- by Gregg Gerken Shifting Paradigms Alberto Masnovo/Thinkstock

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Commercial Investment Real Estate - JUL-AUG 2016