payingyourshare Posted October 27, 2013 Share Posted October 27, 2013 Wages that suck, rents on the rise, mandatory health insurance all add up to less disposable income for millions of households. Bottom Line, Here comes your Obama Economy Recession. Get ready for a major rent hike Rent will likely continue to rise for three or four years -- by about 16%, according to an expert's estimate. By MSN Money Partner Fri 12:54 PM This post comes from Marilyn Lewis at partner site Money Talks News. The price of renting is rising and competition is growing for apartments, condos and houses. Rents rose 7.6% nationally in the last five years, The Wall Street Journal says. In some cities they're up 10%. Apartment rents (that's the average rent, excluding perks and freebies) are expected to rise about 16% — from $1,049 in 2012 to roughly $1,215 by the end of 2017, Reis Inc. analyst Michael Steinberg tells Money Talks News. Voracious demand Blame it on the recovery, which is in itself is a good thing, of course. It means, however, that more people are in the market for rentals. At the same time, builders are struggling to bring new apartments online fast enough to meet the increased demand. "The country has been on a decades-long drought of large-apartment-building construction" because, until recent years, homeownership was growing, writes Slate economic writer Matthew Yglesias. Investors have been buying up foreclosed homes and renting them out, but even that's not enough to satisfy the demand for rentals. "Finding an apartment to rent got even harder in the third quarter, as the U.S. apartment vacancy rate fell to its lowest level in more than a decade," says Reuters, citing statistics from Reis Inc., a provider of commercial real estate data and services. More renters in the market Here’s why the population of renters is growing: Foreclosures. The share of Americans who rent a home is at a record high, in large part because of the millions of foreclosures that followed the real estate crash. Since 2006, the first year the U.S. saw more than a million foreclosures, an estimated 21.57 million homes have been foreclosed on, according to this chart at StatisticBrain. Recovery. By 2012, 45% of 18- to 30-year-olds were living with older family members, says the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta. Compare that with 39% in 1990 and 35% in 1980. As the economy recovers, economists expect more workers to find jobs and start entering the competition for rentals. Tighter lending standards. Homeownership has dropped to an all-time low after the crash as lenders grew very fussy about whom they'd offer a mortgage. Homeownership rates in the U.S. fell to 65% in June, after climbing to a record high of 69% in 2005, according to the Census Bureau (see Table 14). Rising home prices. Lenders are loosening up their standards a little (but not a lot). But just as it started getting easier to finance a home, prices began rising -- skyrocketing in some areas. That's also pushing more people to rent, The Wall Street Journal says. Busted boomers. A growing population of downsizing retirees and empty nesters who've lost retirement savings and need to rent is contributing to the demand. Rents are rising All of this translates into rising rents. Given the increased competition and tight supply of homes for rent, it's no surprise that landlords are pushing rents higher. Reis, which analyzes rents, says the average apartment rent now is $1,073. It rose 1% last quarter and 3% over a year ago. Not one of the 79 markets tracked by Reis saw rents fall. In fact, the weak growth in salaries and new jobs has kept rents from rising even higher, Reuters says. "Landlords would like to raise rents faster, but most tenants simply can't afford to pay more right now," Reis senior economist Ryan Severino told CNBC. In the third quarter, according to Reis: Vacancies. The supply of apartments was tightest in New Haven, Conn., and most plentiful in Memphis, Tenn. Increases. The nation's biggest rent hikes -- 2.2% -- pushed the average price paid to $2,043 per month in San Francisco, and $1,686 in San Jose, Calif. Highest rents. New Yorkers pay the highest rents in the nation: $3,049 per month on average, an increase of 0.9%. Lowest rents. The cheapest rentals in the country are in Wichita, Kan., at $529 per month, a 0.8% increase. The future for renters It's hard to tell how high rents will go. On one hand, demand is likely to keep growing. According to real estate brokerage Marcus & Millichap: The oldest echo boomers just turned 28 years old and will create a significant number of households over the next two years. Additional households will form with the arrival of 1.2 million (to) 1.6 million immigrants annually through 2017.On the other hand, new construction will eventually absorb demand. Rental investors have been slow to respond with new apartments because construction takes a long time from start to finish. Builders must find and buy land and submit to the local permitting process before they can even break ground. Rents won't keep rising forever. "'You just can't have double-digit rent growth every year or rents would be a million bucks,' said Bob Faith, founder of Greystar Real Estate Partners, a Charleston, S.C.-based company that owns and operates about 216,000 rental units nationwide," the Journal says. The National Association of Realtors predicts apartment rents will increase another 4% in 2014. The Journal quotes experts who say rent hikes could continue for three more years. Has your rent been going up? Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
nefarious101 Posted October 27, 2013 Share Posted October 27, 2013 maybe the barak obogus will sprinkle a little hope and change on this....after all he is the magic negro Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Str8tEdge Posted October 27, 2013 Share Posted October 27, 2013 You mean increased demand leads to higher pricing of an economic commodity???????? Better not let the retarded leftists catch wind of this. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
shintao Posted October 27, 2013 Share Posted October 27, 2013 Interesting how the economy is controlled by Boner in the House. And we all know the success story of that, don't we!!! Refresher Course Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
payingyourshare Posted October 27, 2013 Author Share Posted October 27, 2013 You mean increased demand leads to higher pricing of an economic commodity???????? Better not let the retarded leftists catch wind of this. Guess we could look on the bright side, you and my wife may see a 30% wage increase in the coming years. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kobia2 Posted October 27, 2013 Share Posted October 27, 2013 This can easily be fixed..... an amendment is being added to Obamacare, where kids can stay on their parents insurance until they are 75. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
payingyourshare Posted October 27, 2013 Author Share Posted October 27, 2013 Interesting how the economy is controlled by Boner in the House. And we all know the success story of that, don't we!!! Refresher Course Madcow is a white house lapdog and anything she say's is irrelevant,,,,, Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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