LOS ANGELES 2010 - MULTIUNIT REAL ESTATE PREDICTIONS
February 16, 2010 on 12:08 am | In Economy, Experts Say, Fascinating Information, Investment Opportunities, Market Trends, Rents, Statistics, Trends, Uncategorized, all |Edited by Jodi Summers
The sun is shining again in Los Angeles. After two years of job cuts, payrolls are predicted to expand payrolls minimally in Los Angeles County in 2010, according to the 2010 National Apartment Index Report by Marcus & Millichap.
Los Angeles moves up two places this year to No. 13, thanks to perceived strengths in our marketplace. The hot spot is our sister city, San Diego, which rose four spots to No. 2 on the index due to expectations for resumed employment and household growth. (Washington, D.C., retained the top spot in the NAI for the second consecutive year, as ongoing government spending will fuel metrowide hiring and apartment demand.) New York City, which is the tightest apartment market in the country, finished in the No 3 spot.
Following are some of the most significant aspects of the Los Angeles Apartment Research Report:
* The local employment market is expected to stabilize in the second half. Following a loss of 115,000 jobs in 2009, payrolls are forecast to expand by 0.3 percent this year, with the addition of 13,000 positions.
* Rental completions will slow to 1,550 units in 2010, a 0.2 percent addition to inventory. Approximately 800 apartments are expected to come online in the San Fernando Valley due to continued job losses in the retail and construction sectors.
* Vacancy is forecast to tick up 20 basis points this year to 6 percent in response to ongoing stock additions.
* Lingering high unemployment will continue to pressure owners to lower rents. Asking rents are expected to fall to $1,335 per month in 2010, while effective rents will slip to $1,263 per month, respective declines of 2.8 percent and 3.6 percent annually.
Investors realize the current value of the Los Angeles, and there is a trend of cash-rich buyers shifting money out of the stock market and buying multiunit property with the intent of holding it for future generations.
“After watching the Los Angeles apartment market for years I have decided to move monies out of my stock portfolio and buy apartment buildings for my children,” noted one savvy investor.
A bolster for the multiunit market place is that Government-Sponsored Enterprise financing will remain available due to the GSE’s ongoing commitment to the asset class. (GSEs hold or pool approximately $5 trillion worth of mortgages.)
In conclusion, Marcus & Millichap expects, “Long-term rates to remain low this year, mortgage rates to stay relatively stable and lenders increasingly opting to work out extensions or modifications for loans rather than taking near-term losses. Seller financing, or assumable debt, will also become a big factor in transactions this year.”
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http://www.marcusmillichap.com/aboutus/News/Current/020510_los_mm.asp
http://www.globest.com/news/1580_1580/insider/183133-1.html
http://www.uli-la.org/node/382
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Government-sponsored_enterprise#See_also
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There has been much ballyhooing about the woes of owning real estate. What gets lost in the argument is that for those who “buy and hold” in Los Angeles – and who ride out the inevitable real estate cycles – returns can be impressive. Those renting should view the current downturn as an opportunity to buy what has proven in recent times to be a solid investment: a little piece of LA.
Comment by Jamie Adner — February 16, 2010 #
2010 will feature more of the same from bank foreclosures and short sales. In their most recent statistics, according to NAR about 25% of all transactions in America right now are distressed properties. Obviously things are different here in San Diego, where that number feels like 100%, but really is closer to about 2/3 of all sales, and it changes from area to area throughout the county. Because of a lack of cohesion and cooperation on the part of the banks and also on the part of government regulation, getting anything done with a bank in 2009 was (and is) pretty darn difficult. True, systems are in place and getting further refined, and more people are getting employed to take on the workload at the banks to get used to dealing with so many short sales, however, this has been a work in progress for the past 3 years and will continue to be so for 2010 and beyond.
Comment by Michael Justin Wolf — February 20, 2010 #
Each year through 2015, there will be $250 billion to $300 billion in loans that will come due on office buildings, malls, shopping centers, Multi-family apartment buildings, manufacturing facilities, warehouses, Self Storage and other commercial properties, according to PriceWaterhouseCoopers, a New York-based professional services company.
Comment by Scott A. Meyers — February 20, 2010 #
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