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Friday, February 11, 2022

Pair of Chicago’s Western Suburb and South Side’s Apartments Sell for $30M

229 Park Avenue and 5736 South Stony Island Avenue

A pair of multifamily sales totaling $30 million on Chic ago’s South Side and its western suburb of Clarendon Hills reflect investors’ growing appetite for apartments, a stark contrast to the city’s pandemic-battered office market.

Local real estate development and investment firms Hubbard Street Group, Centrum Realty & Development, and Pine Grove Partners sold 229 Park, a 43-unit apartment building at 229 Park Avenue in Clarendon Hills, 22 miles southwest of downtown Chicago. Local real estate developer HP Ventures Group paid $19.4 million for the fully occupied building.

“With its excellent location in an upscale suburb walkable to transportation, 229 Park is a great example of our niche strategy to serve tenants who prefer to rent high-quality units in excellent locations,” said Steve Cook, HP’s managing partner.

The property is a two-minute walk to the Clarendon Hills Metra Station and about 10 miles from Chicago Midway International Airport.

While office buildings are still reeling from the pandemic, both Chicago’s suburban and downtown multifamily market gained strength last year. Owners of multifamily properties sought to capitalize on higher rents and increased occupancy in suburban Chicago after the pandemic. In downtown Chicago, tenants signed about 9,000 new leases in the second quarter of last year, the strongest multifamily rental market in more than 10 years. Local real estate investment firm 29th Street Capital also sold a 75-unit apartment at 5736 South Stony Island Avenue in Chicago’s Hyde Park neighborhood to an undisclosed buyer for $10.62 million.

After buying the property in 2017, 29th Street Capital renovated more than half of the units, refinishing hardwood floors and adding stone counters. The building, which was 96 percent occupied, went under contract in two weeks after hitting the market.

The rental property is less than a mile from the Obama Presidential Center and offers multiple bus routes to downtown including the Number 6 Jackson Park Express and Number 15 Jeffery Local.

“It is walking distance to the University of Chicago, a stone’s throw from a world-class museum, the Museum of Science and Industry, and a short distance to the lakefront and multiple modes of transportation,” said Interra Realty’s Lucas Fryman, who represented both the buyer and seller. The firm 29th Street Capital, which acquired $3.1 billion of multifamily assets across the country, also sold a 42-unit rental building in suburban Mount Prospect for $5.5 million in November.

Source: Pair of Chicago’s Western Suburb and South Side’s Apartments Sell for $30M

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/pair-of-chicagos-western-suburb-and-south-sides-apartments-sell-for-30m/
at February 11, 2022 No comments:
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Thursday, February 10, 2022

Property Investors Spent More Than $1 in Every $3 on Apartments in Fourth Quarter

Rent Increases Boosted Investor Demand, According to CoStar Analysis

Multifamily property sales surged in the second half of 2021 and accounted for more than $1 out of every $3 spent in the fourth quarter, according to preliminary CoStar data.

The multifamily sector made up 34% of all property sales in the last three months of 2021, the highest percentage in five years. The surge comes at the expense of industrial assets, which, following a brief second-quarter spike in retail property sales, remain the second choice among investors.

In 2020, landlords were wondering whether apartment dwellers would pay rent. Now they’re wondering how long record-setting rent growth can last, according to CoStar analysts. After passing out big concessions for several months at the start of the pandemic, landlords increased rents at an annual average pace of 11% thanks to soaring demand, strong demographics, and a broader economic recovery.

With demand and rent growth surging, investment capital poured into multifamily properties. Investment sales have been occurring at a historically high pace. Dallas, Phoenix, and Atlanta sit as top markets by sales volume, as investors have shifted capital away from core coastal markets and into the Sun Belt.

Demand for apartments, however, is expected to slow in 2022, according to CoStar analysts. Without expanded unemployment benefits, stimulus checks, or an eviction ban in effect, the tightness of the rental market could loosen, softening demand.


Source: Property Investors Spent More Than $1 in Every $3 on Apartments in Fourth Quarter
https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/property-investors-spent-more-than-1-in-every-3-on-apartments-in-fourth-quarter/
at February 10, 2022 No comments:
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Wednesday, February 9, 2022

Demand for Apartments Fuels Strong Start to the Year for Freddie Mac

A $61 million loan for the purchase of Arium Santa Rosa Beach apartments in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida, will help launch Freddie Mac’s first commercial mortgage-backed securities offering of the year. (CoStar)

Government-sponsored housing finance giant Freddie Mac is returning to the commercial mortgage-backed securities market as strong fundamentals push apartment deals to record-breaking levels.

Freddie Mac said it has three offerings on its calendar this week, totaling an estimated issuance balance of $2.6 billion.

Unprecedented demand for apartments combined with the vacancy rate hitting a historical low created record-breaking rent growth of 11% for U.S. multifamily properties in 2021, CoStar data shows. That helped fuel historically high sales.

The activity also spurred record multifamily lending. Total multifamily origination volume in 2021 was expected to hit $450 billion, according to Steve Guggenmos, vice president of research and modeling at Freddie Mac.

“Looking forward to 2022, we expect growth to continue but at a slower rate — up 5%-10% to $475 billion to $500 billion,” he estimated in a new forecast. “Despite more modest growth, these forecasts indicate a very strong year for originations and record-setting volume in 2021 and 2022.”

The economic and multifamily recovery is expected to continue through 2022, according to Guggenmos.

“Given the robust demand for housing this year, we believe that upward price pressure for both rental and for-sale housing will continue in the short term as we continue to experience an overall housing shortage across all housing types,” Guggenmos said.

Sun Belt Rent Growth

Among the top 10 markets, the pandemic emphasized trends that were already emerging prior to 2020, namely that the strongest rent growth occurred in less expensive Sun Belt and tech hub markets. The growth in these markets during the pandemic was explosive, with year-over-year rent growth of 21% or more.

Even among the bottom 10 markets, year-over-year rent growth was strong, with the weakest market reporting rent growth in excess of 3% and all others seeing rent growth of 5% or more.

“The migration changes initially brought about by the pandemic appear to be continuing,” he said. “New trends, however, are also emerging. During the early days of the pandemic, many residents fled expensive, densely populated, coastal urban city centers for less expense and less dense suburban locations. This demand for a lower-cost living continues to reshape the demand seen in markets across the nation.”

In 2022, gateway and some Midwest Rust Belt markets are expected to see improving vacancy rates. The largest projected drops in vacancy are concentrated in Northeast and mid-Atlantic markets such as Washington, D.C., and Boston, where vacancy rates are expected to decline by 160 and 130 basis points, respectively, according to Guggenmos.

A couple of factors could moderate historic demand and price growth nationally, he noted.

COVID-19 could still cause fresh waves of economic uncertainty that will likely persist throughout this year. And while the economy is growing, inflation has become a growing concern.

“Looking forward, we believe some areas of the economy will continue to see upward pressure on prices while others will likely see lessening upward inflation,” Guggenmos said.

The first securitization expected from Freddie Mac this week is the estimated $830 million FREMF 2022-KF128 offering.

The two largest loans in the deal back large acquisitions last year, according to Freddie Mac’s circular for the bonds. Brentwood Investment Group of Lakewood, New Jersey, acquired the 480-unit Crown Point Townhome Apartments in Norfolk, Virginia, for $77 million, and Carroll acquired the 280-unit Arium Santa Rosa Beach in Santa Rosa Beach, Florida, for $93 million.

The first deal on tap is backed by floating-rate loans. The other two offerings still expected to come this week are a fixed-rate offering estimated at $1.3 billion and an estimated $450 million small-balance offering backed by loans of less than $10 million on smaller properties.


Source: Demand for Apartments Fuels Strong Start to the Year for Freddie Mac
https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/demand-for-apartments-fuels-strong-start-to-the-year-for-freddie-mac/
at February 09, 2022 No comments:
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Tuesday, February 8, 2022

No End in Sight Yet for Higher Home Prices

 

After a blistering year, the housing market shows no sign of retreat entering 2022.

Demand continues apace, especially in cities in the Mountain West and Southeast where population growth has been particularly strong, while the number of homes available for purchase has not kept up. Consequently, price growth has been meteoric during the pandemic, and while that may slow, it’s not happening yet.

The median price for existing homes grew by 13.9% year over year in November, according to the National Association of Realtors. The Case-Shiller home price index, which accounts for same-property transactions but is slightly lagged, grew by 19.1% from October 2020 to October 2021.

Home price trends are hard to reverse. Recent sales comparables drive valuations for buyers and sellers, and with prices growing at a rapid clip, it’s unlikely that that momentum will slow. Just over 42% of home sales closed above the asking price in the four-week period ending on Dec. 26, 2021, compared to about 20% in the same period in 2019, according to real estate brokerage Redfin.

Given this recent history, it may not be surprising that projections for home prices in 2022 are all over the place, ranging from continued strong price increases to declines. But a variety of factors influence the direction of the housing market, making the effort to produce forecasts challenging.

Millennial Demand Drives Prices Higher

A significant driver of housing demand will continue to come from millennials, who are aging into their first-time home-buying years. They have made up a large portion of homebuyers for the past few years, but a large share is yet to reach their 30s when owning a home becomes a larger priority. And although many millennials preferred urban areas prior to the pandemic, hybrid work schedules and flexible work-from-home policies have attracted many to move to suburban areas where home prices tend to be more affordable and construction is more feasible.

Further, those left behind in rental units are becoming more motivated to consider homeownership as apartment rents move ever higher. CoStar’s market rent series for U.S. apartments grew by 11.2 percent in 2021 — the highest rate of growth in the 21-year series. While the forecast calls for slower growth over the next five years, rents can be hiked annually or more frequently and are not as guaranteed as a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, which helps make housing costs easier to budget and boosts potential demand for housing.

Yet inventories of homes for sale remain historically low. The National Association of Realtors reported 2.1 months of inventory in November, a record low, and Redfin reports that 26 days was the median number of days on the market for existing homes sold in the four-week period ending on Dec. 26, 2021, compared to roughly 50 days in the same period in 2019. During the pandemic, families were reluctant to move, depressing inventories. With a growing number of cases due to the omicron variant, the inventory of homes for sale should remain constrained through the early months of 2022.

At the same time, builders of new homes have faced rising costs of construction materials and labor, leading them to raise prices higher or choose to build homes with higher price tags. In the current environment of strong demand, it’s more likely the latter will occur. Private residential construction spending grew by 16.3% year over year in November.

It’s not all bad news. Rising prices have been a boon to homeowners who face financial difficulties by allowing them to refinance or sell at a profit, as home equity has been boosted. Some buyers expected a wave of distressed properties to reach the market in 2021 due to pandemic-related forbearance programs, but that never materialized. Mortgage data provider Black Knight reports that just 891,000 mortgages remained in forbearance as of Dec. 21, 2021, compared to a peak of roughly 4.7 million in May 2020.

At Some Point, Prices Should Decelerate

In reality, price increases at recent rates cannot sustainably continue unabated. At some point, erosion of affordability will limit the buyer pool, and that may be starting to happen. Fewer households can afford to buy a home at today’s prices than earlier in the pandemic, when incomes were supported through various government programs, such as stimulus checks and enhanced unemployment benefits. The National Association of Realtors housing affordability index fell to 148.2 in October 2021, roughly to 2017-2019 levels when the housing market was more balanced.

Furthermore, housing affordability has become a larger strain in high-cost-of-living areas such as San Francisco and Los Angeles. The housing affordability index in the U.S. West registers 111.9, compared to 200.9 in the Midwest.

To be sure, affordability has been buoyed by mortgage rates, which have been historically low despite a gradual increase to 3.1% in December from 2.7% a year ago for the average mortgage rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage, according to Freddie Mac.

However, rates are expected to rise in 2022. The Federal Reserve announced last year that it would accelerate its winding down of asset purchases, including mortgage-backed securities. In its Summary of Economic Projections, the median projection calls for three rate hikes over the year, with three more likely coming next year. This would lead to higher long-term rates, which mortgages are usually tied to, and increase housing costs for buyers that wait to secure home loans.


Source: No End in Sight Yet for Higher Home Prices
https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/no-end-in-sight-yet-for-higher-home-prices/
at February 08, 2022 No comments:
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Monday, February 7, 2022

Chicago Firms Form Venture To Invest $1.5 Billion in Single-Family Rental Homes

Harrison Street and Core Spaces together plan to develop build-to-rent communities in large metropolitan markets such as Austin, Texas. (Getty Images)

Chicago firms Harrison Street and Core Spaces plan to invest $1.5 billion in developing and buying rental homes throughout the country.

The companies on Monday announced a joint venture to invest in build-to-rent communities in large metropolitan markets, saying they will invest as much as $1.5 billion in the emerging real estate sector.

The venture will pair Core Spaces’ build-to-rent platform and Harrison Street’s large scope, with $39 billion in assets under management in several property types.

Core Spaces and Harrison Street will focus on single-family rental homes within master-planned communities that have high-end amenities and are located in high-growth suburban areas with characteristics such as top-tier school districts, they said in a statement.

“Affordability challenges in the U.S. housing market and changes in lifestyle preferences are driving demand for single-family rentals and we believe our progressive design and hospitality-driven approach will differentiate our BTR communities in the single-family rental market,” Dan Goldberg, president of Core Spaces, said in the statement.

The firms join several others that have been pairing up resources to move into the BTR sector.

Earlier this month, Plano, Texas-based More Residential and San Francisco-based Stockbridge Capital Group said they plan to buy $4 billion worth of single-family rental homes.

Late last year, Miami-based Starwood Capital Group acquired Houston-based Land Tejas for an undisclosed sum, and Atlanta-based Invesco Real Estate bought a 75% stake in Avanta Residential, the single-family rental affiliate of El Paso, Texas-based Hunt Cos.

The Harrison Street-Core Spaces venture’s development pipeline already has $2.5 billion in total capital, with more than 6,500 units in areas including Austin, Texas; Denver, Colorado; Dallas, Texas; Orlando, Florida; and Nashville, Tennessee. The venture said it already has nine projects in various stages of development.

The firms have invested together in student housing deals on campuses including the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, the University of California at Berkley, University of South Florida, Georgia Institute of Technology, University of Oklahoma, and Auburn University.

“The U.S. single-family BTR market is a rapidly expanding asset class with strong demographic tailwinds, and we are excited to draw from our U.S. student housing BTR experience alongside Core Spaces, an experienced developer and operator with significant residential real estate expertise, to identify attractive investment opportunities,” Harrison Street co-founder, Chairman and CEO Christopher Merrill said in the statement.

Harrison Street also invests in properties including life sciences, senior housing, and storage. It also has offices in San Francisco, London, and Toronto.

In another deal announced Monday, Harrison Street said it has acquired 11 medical office properties across six states from Ryan Companies. Tenants in the buildings include Edward-Elmhurst Health of Illinois, Froedtert Health & the Medical College of Wisconsin, and Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin.

Harrison Street and Ryan have completed 17 transactions in senior living, medical office, and healthcare, according to the statement.


Source: Chicago Firms Form Venture To Invest $1.5 Billion in Single-Family Rental Homes
https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/chicago-firms-form-venture-to-invest-1-5-billion-in-single-family-rental-homes/
at February 07, 2022 No comments:
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Sunday, February 6, 2022

This Year's Multifamily Pipeline to Set Record

 

The industry will add roughly 400,000 new rentals this year.

Marcus & Millichap is expecting the US to add roughly 400,000 new rentals in 2022, a record for the last few decades. Rental demand is anticipated to increase this year with rising interest rates and elevated single-family home prices.

“The new supply will play a key role in appeasing the housing shortage,” Marcus & Millichap predicts.

The Sun Belt is poised to account for one-fourth of the new units with Dallas-Fort Worth, Phoenix, Austin, Houston, Nashville, and Atlanta leading the way with each expected to add more than 10,000 units in 2022.

Migration to those metro areas is expected to combine to 250,000 new households this year.

Other Markets Still Intrigue

This is not to say that developers are focusing exclusively on these markets. At the recent GlobeSt.com Multifamily conference, investment professionals and experts explained where they are placing capital going forward.

Jerry Fink, the managing partner at the Bascom Group, says Las Vegas has the firm “most intrigued.” Fink likes the fundamentals, which include limited land for new development, a narrow new construction pipeline, and, the kicker, 10% rent growth.

The Colorado market, and specifically Denver, is also a favorite secondary market, according to Loryn D. Arkow, a partner at law firm Stroock, said. She added that she has seen client interest in Miami and other sunbelt cities, but said there is some concern that a bubble is looming in those markets. She is most confident in the northwest and Rockies.

In Arizona, Brian Tranetzki, principal and head of the multifamily at Taylor Street Advisors, said that Tucson was the most underrated market in the state. It is a discount compared to Phoenix, but there has been strong job growth and the economic growth drivers are equally as attractive.

The most unlikely market to make the cut: Albuquerque. It is the favorite underrated market of Jeff Adler, VP at Yardi Matrix. He called the market unloved, but said that it has strong fundamentals and has historically performed well with strong 7% rent growth.

David Harrington, EVP, and managing director at Matthews Real Estate Investment Services, and Fink are also bullish on core markets, and both like Los Angeles specifically. The Bascom Group is focused on what Fink called the doughnut around Downtown Los Angeles, neighborhoods like Boyle Heights. “We are finding tremendous demand for low-density, renovated two-story buildings,” Fink said.


Source: This Year’s Multifamily Pipeline to Set Record
https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/this-years-multifamily-pipeline-to-set-record/
at February 06, 2022 No comments:
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Saturday, February 5, 2022

2022 U.S. Multifamily Investment Forecast

 

Will Multifamily's Record Performance Carry into 2022? Trends, Insights, and Outlook for 46 Markets Across the U.S.

 

The health crisis unlocked a wave of changes to the economy and housing market that transformed the multifamily investment landscape. To help investors adapt to and capitalize on the unprecedented climate, the 2022 Multifamily Investment Forecast offers deep insight on the performance, investment, and financing landscape for the coming year.

Key Features Include:

  • 2022 economic, housing, and demographic outlooks
  • Apartment market index rankings
  • Supply and demand forecasts for every market
 

 

Download Full Report

 

 

 

How Can We Help You?

Are you looking to Buy, Sell, or Finance/Refinance Multifamily Property?

contact us

https://www.creconsult.net/market-trends/2022-u-s-multifamily-investment-forecast/
at February 05, 2022 No comments:
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