by Calculated Risk on 1/18/2011 03:15:00 PM
Tuesday, January 18, 2011
Apartments: "Consensus has a high price"
A few random thoughts from the apartment conference ..
• Rent growth is mostly from reduction in concessions. Not as much top line growth.
• Austin: rents are up 13%, but there is huge building boom (seems like every builder is planning or already started a project in Austin, so people are talking about the coming flood of supply)
• CAP rates look a little like a bubble ... people are buying the low 5s in some areas. There is plenty of capital flowing into multi-family.
• Greg Mutz (CEO AMLI Residential Properties) joked "Consensus has a high price"!
• Investment money is flowing into the sector.
• On submarkets: Las Vegas, Phoenix, Inland Empire, parts of Florida, Altanta were all named as disappointing.
• Everyone likes Boston, Seattle, Austin (although afraid of the coming supply) LA, Orange County ...
• Almost all areas are showing improvement.
• Several people have noted that turnover is at record lows (people aren't moving for jobs). Some people are concerned that as the economy improves turnover will increase again - and that eventually some people will choose to own.
• 2010 was beyond all expectations, and that is part of the reason for the optimism. The low level of completions in 2011 suggests the markets will be even tighter.
• Walt Smith, CEO Riverstone Residential (manages 162,000 units) said it is "Pedal to the metal" on rents.
For more, please see the previous post.
NMHC: Is the recovery real for apartments?
by Calculated Risk on 1/18/2011 12:44:00 PM
I am attending the NMHC Apartment Strategies Conference in Palm Springs today.
The first session asked: Is the recovery real for apartments? I'll have more later, but just a few quick notes ...
The overwhelming sense from participants is "YES" the apartment recovery is real. One data point - There are a record number of attendees this year.
The expectations are for a record low supply completed this year (as Tom Lawler and I have noted before). Some pickup in completions next year (2012), and then plenty of completions in 2013. The starts will probably pickup later this year, although I'll know more at a later session. The pickup in starts will help both GDP and employment growth this year.
The expectations are for strong rent growth over the next two years (around 5% per year) for large upper tier apartments. This will keep the vacancy rate from falling too much as owners trade off rent increases for occupancy.
Apartment market has bifurcated. Upper half of apartments are improving, regardless of geography. Lower half are struggling.
In 2010 most new households selected renting as opposed to owning. The feeling is this will continue for at least a couple more years.
I'll have more later ...
NAHB Builder Confidence Remains Unchanged In January
by Calculated Risk on 1/18/2011 10:00:00 AM
The National Association of Home Builders (NAHB) reports the housing market index (HMI) was unchanged at 16 in January. The consensus was for a reading of 17. Confidence remains very low ... any number under 50 indicates that more builders view sales conditions as poor than good.
Note: I'm attending the NMHC apartment conference in Palm Springs today - I'll post the graph tonight. Here is the graph from last month (Nothing has changed!)
Press release from the NAHB: Builder Confidence Remains Unchanged In January
Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes held unchanged at a relatively low level of 16 for a third consecutive month in January, according to the latest National Association of Home Builders/Wells Fargo Housing Market Index (HMI), released today.
...
"The HMI and its subcomponent indexes are holding steady following a below-expectations finish in 2010," noted NAHB Chief Economist David Crowe. "At this point, housing remains on the sidelines of a weak economic recovery as consumers and builders wait for clear and consistent indications that jobs and economic output are reviving."
...
While the HMI components gauging current sales conditions and sales expectations for the next six months both held steady from the previous month, at 16 and 25, respectively, the component gauging traffic of prospective buyers edged up a single point to 12 in January.
HMI scores rose by one point in the Midwest and four points in the West in January, to 14 and 15, respectively. Meanwhile, HMI scores fell two points in the Northeast and one point in the South, to 20 and 17, respectively.
NY Fed: Empire State Manufacturing Index shows "conditions improved" in January
by Calculated Risk on 1/18/2011 08:30:00 AM
From the NY Fed: Empire State Manufacturing Survey
he Empire State Manufacturing Survey indicates that conditions for New York manufacturers improved in January. The general business conditions index rose 2 points to 11.9. The new orders index moved up 10 points to 12.4, and the shipments index surged 18 points to 25.4. After a sharp decline last month, the inventories index rose above zero. Employment indexes also climbed into positive territory.This was below expectations for an increase to 14.0.
Monday, January 17, 2011
Update: NMHC Apartment Conference
by Calculated Risk on 1/17/2011 08:27:00 PM
Tomorrow I will be attending the NMHC Apartment Strategies Conference in Palm Springs.
A few of the sessions:
• Is the recovery real for apartments?
• To build or not to build: That is the question.
• Reality Check: Have valuations really firmed or are we in bubble 2.0?
I'll report on what I hear ... (I'll be posting during the day)
EU finance ministers call for increase in EFSF
by Calculated Risk on 1/17/2011 03:45:00 PM
From the Irish Times: EU ministers seek rescue fund boost
Euro zone finance ministers called today for an increase in the effective lending capacity of the union's rescue fund, but Germany said there was no urgency and it would be March before a firm plan was in place.The expectation is the European Financial Stability Facility (EFSF) will eventually be increased from €440 billion to €700 billion. The European financial crisis is far from over ...
...
"There will not be results today, the market developments in the last week have, thank God, taken any urgency out of these discussions," [German finance minister Wolfgang Schaeuble] told reporters.
Weekend:
• Summary for Week ending January 15th
• Schedule for Week of January 16th


