An Overresponse To Demand
A report from the Kitsap Sun in Washington. “As CEO of New Standard Equities, a Los Angeles-area investment company, Eddie Ring is betting tens of millions of dollars that renters will be as enthusiastic about Kitsap County apartments as he is. Investors — including several large California firms — spent more than $300 million on apartment complexes in the county in 2015 and 2016 alone. Most have upgraded the properties they purchased and are charging higher rental rates. For groups looking to park money in commercial real estate, apartments are hard to beat, said Victor Targett with Windermere in Silverdale. ‘There’s probably not a commercial market as strong as multi-family has been,’ Targett said. ‘Apartments have far exceeded the rest.’”
“Heather Roossien said the improvements made to her Silverdale apartment after a recent ownership change were mostly superficial. Old furnishings were painted to cover up blemishes and workers put new fronts on cabinets instead of replacing them. ‘The thing is, the price for rent is astronomical,’ Roossien said.”
The Flathead Beacon in Montana. “The current housing and construction boom in the Flathead Valley evokes the pre-recession boom of the early 2000s. But real estate and construction experts say it’s different this time around. The big push in the current boom is for multi-family housing and more affordable housing options. And there are likely more projects on the way — Tom Jentz, planning director for the city of Kalispell said the planning department has received interest for building between 500 and 1,000 more multi-family units. ‘You may only ever see half of that built, but what it is, it indicates the pressure,’ Jentz said. ‘We’ve never had the multi-family housing pressure before.’”
From the Coloradoan. “When Colorado State University students return to Fort Collins in the fall, about 400 will move into new housing designed just for them. More than 3,400 beds are expected to open in the next two years. Carrie Gillis, real estate manager of New Colony and Somerset apartments, believes the city’s rental market will soften as more units come online, but does not expect rents to reduce, given the increasing costs of building in Fort Collins. ‘We will have to have higher rents to get projects to pencil out,’ she said.”
The Post Bulletin in New York. “All over Rochester, the number of apartments is quickly growing. Permits for about 1,000 new apartment units were issued last year, slightly down from the peak of 1,165 units approved in 2015. While Med City residents might believe apartment complexes have been sprouting up around town forever, it is a recent trend. In 2014, just 124 new apartments were approved to be built in Rochester. Most of those new apartments are priced to be considered luxury or market rate.”
“Some local housing experts think this apartment boom might be starting to pass its peak and beginning to cycle down. ‘I believe we’re going to experience an oversupply. We’re already starting to see some rent stagnation,’ said Tom Hill, Realtor and CEO of Matik Management. ‘I think what we’re seeing is an overresponse to demand.’”
The Arizona Daily Star. “Homeownership, a key indicator of neighborhood stability, has dwindled near the University of Arizona — in some cases dramatically — over the past 15 years. In a dozen neighborhoods on the university’s borders, the rate of owner-occupied homes tops out at 42 percent and in some cases the rate is 10 percent or less. Those rentals used to be occupied by UA students, but increasingly that group is choosing plush new student-housing communities, leaving residents to worry about vacant, unkempt properties left behind.”
“Thirty years ago, when Diana Lett moved into the Feldman’s Neighborhood, her neighbors were her friends. From 2000 to 2015, the rate of owner-occupied homes in Feldman’s fell from 20 percent to 12.7 percent. ‘I’d like to have neighbors who stay for years and fix up their properties,’ Lett said. ‘I’d like it if I weren’t the only person on the block to pick up wind-blown trash, haul off abandoned televisions, call in broken streetlights, and otherwise take responsibility for the place looking halfway presentable.’”
The Journal Sentinel in Wisconsin. “A seven-story, 72-unit condominium building, proposed for Walker’s Point, would be the first major condo project in the downtown Milwaukee area since the housing bubble burst in 2008. South Water’s proposed site is where developer David Winograd had planned to build a 12-story, 164-unit upscale apartment development. That $30 million project would have had monthly rents from around $1,500 to $3,000.”
“But Winograd in March disclosed that he had dropped those plans. He cited both an oversupply of new apartment units in the downtown area and rising construction costs. That apartment boom, which lately has shown signs of slowing down, has been fueled by demand from both millennials and empty nesters for downtown-area housing. Another downtown housing boom – this one involving condos – ran from the late 1990s until around 2008. After the housing market collapse, followed by a global recession, demand for downtown condos largely disappeared.”
The Washington City Paper. “D.C.’s most notorious slumlord, Carter Nowell of Sanford Capital, is now facing bank foreclosure at two of his properties and is delinquent in mortgage payments on three others. The company has received millions of dollars a year in taxpayer subsidies by way of housing vouchers for low-income tenants. But financial data on these five properties, which together represent roughly a third of Sanford’s D.C. holdings, show a company in strong financial health through mid-2016, the period for which data is available.”
“Perhaps most striking is that Sanford’s borrowing history for each of the five properties in question, which are all in Wards 7 and 8, follows a similar pattern over several years. This pattern is well illustrated by the case of Sayles Place Apartments, which is currently in foreclosure.”
“Carter Nowell and his original business partner Patrick Strauss, along with Patrick’s wife Mary Strauss, signed a $3.8 million loan to buy Sayles Place in 2010. Four years later, Nowell more than doubled his loan amount to $7.25 million through a refinance with Basis Real Estate Capital II, part of the New York-based Basis Investment Group (an LLC in bad standing with the state of Maryland, which has since sold off all five of these loans), and the Strausses did not sign on subsequent mortgages.”
“In documents provided by Trepp Wire, Sayles Place is appraised at $9.5 million. The District’s tax assessment for the property is about half that amount, or $5 million. This is the pattern across all five properties. First Nowell and the Strausses sign for a loan. Later, the bank uses an appraisal value several millions higher than the purchase price. Nowell refinances, vastly increasing the loan amount and the Strausses drop from the deal. He makes regular payments on properties that are, at least on paper, in great financial health. Then in February of 2017 he stops making payments (with a brief return to current status in March at Sayles Place only).”
“The numbers in this pattern are most stark at Elsinore, where Nowell is currently on the hook for a loan of more than $12 million, even though he bought the property for a mere $2.3 million in 2014. In Trepp’s statements, Elsinore’s appraised value is $17.6 million. The District has assessed it at $8.6 million.”
“Nowell, who has refused media inquiries for the past several months, responded to City Paper’s request for comment on its foreclosures and delinquencies with an email statement. ‘Sanford Capitol [sic] owns several properties that are being driven into bankruptcy by the Attorney General, District agencies, and tenant advocates,’ wrote Nowell, making reference to lawsuits against the company filed by AG Karl Racine. ‘Each of these properties currently houses numerous tenants who haven’t paid rent in months or even years in some cases, severely limiting our ability to maintain and make improvements to these buildings. We are a business and do not have the unlimited resources of the District government.’”
‘Perhaps most striking is that Sanford’s borrowing history for each of the five properties in question, which are all in Wards 7 and 8, follows a similar pattern over several years. This pattern is well illustrated by the case of Sayles Place Apartments, which is currently in foreclosure.’
‘Carter Nowell and his original business partner Patrick Strauss, along with Patrick’s wife Mary Strauss, signed a $3.8 million loan to buy Sayles Place in 2010. Four years later, Nowell more than doubled his loan amount to $7.25 million through a refinance with Basis Real Estate Capital II, part of the New York-based Basis Investment Group (an LLC in bad standing with the state of Maryland, which has since sold off all five of these loans), and the Strausses did not sign on subsequent mortgages.’
There’s going to be a lot of this.
Lots of brand new, yuuuuge trucks with all the bells and whistles at the beach this weekend, adorned with names of various construction companies no one has ever heard of. Bet I can count on one hand the number that are actually paid for and have plenty of fingers left over.
Some of those debt junkies are paying upwards of $1000 per month, zero down.
’signed a $3.8 million loan to buy Sayles Place in 2010. Four years later, Nowell more than doubled his loan amount to $7.25 million through a refinance…has since sold off all five of these loans, and the Strausses did not sign on subsequent mortgages’
I’ve been saying this for a while because I listen to these guys on their radio shows and webcasts. They have bid everything up to where it doesn’t cash flow much if at all, but they don’t care because they refi out so much over and over. Note that this group didn’t do a damn thing to the property and they doubled what they borrowed, in four years! Not what they had in in, what they borrowed. And a refi is tax free.
‘did not sign on subsequent mortgages’
They brag endlessly about this: it’s non-recourse loans. It is probably the majority of what’s being done. Sure, buy an apartment, use the tax write offs to protect other income, collect a little government gravy here and there, refi out millions and walk away with no liability. What could go wrong?
It’s corruption, plain and simple. The government is in bed with this whole thing. We’ve never had such a sleazy group of politicians in DC in the history of this once great country. WHO is the market for these refis, and why are they non-recourse?
When I ask “who is the market,” I’m asking who is buying this garbage, because obviously the originator is not holding the loan, they’re selling it off on the secondary market, just like last bubble.
We won’t know the who until the losses and lawsuits start coming in. Previous articles indicate mostly pensions/life insurance companies chasing yield and given comfort by government backing.
‘First Nowell and the Strausses sign for a loan. Later, the bank uses an appraisal value several millions higher than the purchase price. Nowell refinances, vastly increasing the loan amount and the Strausses drop from the deal. He makes regular payments on properties that are, at least on paper, in great financial health. Then in February of 2017 he stops making payments’
‘properties that are, at least on paper, in great financial health’
This is all you have to show. The ultimate bag holders never saw these dumps.
‘Each of these properties currently houses numerous tenants who haven’t paid rent in months or even years in some cases, severely limiting our ability to maintain and make improvements to these buildings’
But they had 94% occupancy! Remember the NC apartment guy saying some lie about occupancy and concessions so they don’t spook the lenders?
So pension funds, broke as they are, didn’t learn their lessons last time in their speculative forays, and are back to buying absolute garbage again?
Wait a minute, why is the government backing cash-out refis on multi-family residential?
Let me guess, these securities are rated AAA again? I feel sick to my stomach…
If it’s government backed, it’s AAA. Why are they backing cash out refis on shacks? Why are they backing non-recourse cash out refis on apartments? Is it any wonder why it’s a boom? These guys can pocket tax dodges, government goodies and millions of Yellen bucks with a dog of an investment and tax free! The rates of return are multiples of what is put at risk.
We’re right back in the soup, maybe worse…
‘Carrie Gillis…believes the city’s rental market will soften as more units come online, but does not expect rents to reduce, given the increasing costs of building in Fort Collins. ‘We will have to have higher rents to get projects to pencil out,’ she said.’
Now Carrie, I’m sure you can explain to potential tenants these costs when you are up against free rent and $99 move ins, but something tells me they’ll be uninterested. And note that apparently they don’t “pencil out” at the current rates.
The Front Range is an overpriced, traffic choked, polluted dump.
Local NPR just reported that 4 of the 5 most unaffordable counties in the country are in metro Denver.
But the weather’s just gawwwwgeous in the wintah. Oh, wait…
Actually, it’s much better than most people think. But given the average pay, Denver is very overpriced.
Going back to the new student apartments in Ft. Collins, enrollment at CSU has been steadily growing. Whether or not students can afford the rent remains to be seen.
‘Whether or not students can afford the rent remains to be seen’
Here’s what’s crazy: this woman above says they need even higher rents to “pencil out.” What the Tucson article doesn’t mention is many more student towers are on the way: it’s the usual luxury stuff, because otherwise - no pencil.
Wasn’t Tucson sporting an insanely high vacancy rate on rentals already? I seem to recall an article saying as much.
One in eight vacant city wide. Has been for years.
“Local NPR just reported that 4 of the 5 most unaffordable counties in the country are in metro Denver.”
In the country or the state?
I’m guessing in the state. Because while Denver is expensive, compared to the Bay Area, LA and San Diego it’s cheap.
They might have been talking about a relative basis compared to local incomes.
Especially since “real jobs” in Fort Collins pay less than similar jobs in Denver, which is only 50 miles away.
“Heather Roossien said the improvements made to her Silverdale apartment after a recent ownership change were mostly superficial. Old furnishings were painted to cover up blemishes and workers put new fronts on cabinets instead of replacing them. ‘The thing is, the price for rent is astronomical,’ Roossien said.”
Vote with your feet, Heather. Refuse to pay extortionate rent demands and move somewhere more modestly priced.
It’s been kinda difficult given Mel Watt and the GSE’s have been pouring hundreds of billions per year into this value add game. The tax code is massively tilted towards it too, not to mention the low income tax credits scam, etc. Eventually the new construction overwhelms demand and we see who is swimming naked.
Commercial/Multifamily Mortgage Debt Rises Above $3 Trillion
June 13, 2017
National Mortgage Professional Magazine
According to the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), total commercial/multifamily debt outstanding rose to $3.01 trillion at the end of the first quarter of 2017, the first time it has broken the $3 trillion mark. Multifamily mortgage debt outstanding rose to $1.17 trillion, an increase of $23.4 billion, or 2.0 percent, from the fourth of quarter of 2016.
“The amount of commercial and multifamily mortgage debt outstanding continued to grow during the first quarter,” said Jamie Woodwell, MBA’s vice president of Commercial Real Estate Research. “Almost two-thirds of the growth came from increases in multifamily mortgage debt outstanding, and 80 percent of that growth came from portfolios and MBS held or guaranteed by federal government agencies and the GSEs. In addition, recent releases from the Federal Reserve show that during the second quarter of 2017, bank multifamily portfolios stopped growing and remain relatively flat, while their holdings of other commercial property loans have continued to grow.”
…
We’re in a corruption bubble, too.
Ahem…
‘Heather Roossien said the improvements made to her Silverdale apartment after a recent ownership change were mostly superficial. Old furnishings were painted to cover up blemishes and workers put new fronts on cabinets instead of replacing them.’
A little off topic, but why is everyone - including our President - saying that “Housing has now recovered from the bust” ??? That was a huge bubble that needed to deflate!
Housing prices in 2005 were insane. They are now back to that level - so what is going on? I am tired of renting but buying a house in the last 2 decades has been like gambling in Vegas - and I hate gambling!!
“why is everyone - including our President - saying that “Housing has now recovered from the bust” ???”
Because it’s their way of saying BOHICA! We’ve recovered, time for another!
“Housing prices in 2005 were insane.
Yep, they were insane. We sold our place in late 2005 and got out at the top (only time I’ve ever timed something like this right). And then things froze up and remained frozen for a year or two. Then we had a “bust”. Not much of bust, IMO. Yah, there was some reduction in prices, a few deals here and there, but not what I’d really call a bust. Just like today, foreclosures were held off the market. A buddy of mine lived in his home for 8 years without making a mortgage payment. And stuff was sold off in lots to investment companies. The average schmoe couldn’t really get in on it.
“They are now back to that level - so what is going on?”
No rule of law anymore, especially when it comes to banks.
“No rule of law anymore, especially when it comes to banks.”
Yep. 😀
I don’t agree with it, but 8 years of mortgage/rent free living could improve your financial situation for the rest of your life. I’m sure it probably kills your credit but other than that what happens? Do they ever come after people for back payments?
Irs will bill on amount forgiven
Has the 1099-C gravy train expired yet?
Irs will bill on amount forgiven
Dream On!
Apartment rents declining as the real economy - as opposed to the speculative casino on Wall Street - gets more hollowed out.
https://snakeholelounge.wordpress.com/2017/07/02/apartment-rents-declining-sf-still-most-expensive-1-unit-market-in-us-chicago-biggest-loser-at-18-5/
But…but…recovery!
http://themostimportantnews.com/archives/2017-is-going-to-be-the-worst-retail-apocalypse-in-u-s-history-more-than-300-retailers-have-already-filed-for-bankruptcy
“For those running our big corporations, losing these kinds of jobs is not a big deal. In fact, many corporate executives would be quite happy to replace all of their U.S. employees with technology or with foreign workers.”
Yep. Thank you everybody, for playing.
Uhh, who do they think their customers are? This can’t end well.
“Uhh, who do they think their customers are?”
The same people I think they are, which are totally dumbed-down ignorant debt-slave pukes whose only reason for existence is to serve their masters.
“This can’t end well.”
Probably so but in the meantime the gitten’ iz goot.
Bahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
High rents/mortgages + obamacare = no discretionary spending
High rents + no healthcare and medical emergency = Bankruptcy
“As CEO of New Standard Equities, a Los Angeles-area investment company, Eddie Ring is betting tens of millions of dollars that renters will be as enthusiastic about Kitsap County apartments as he is. Investors — including several large California firms — spent more than $300 million on apartment complexes in the county in 2015 and 2016 alone. Most have upgraded the properties they purchased and are charging higher rental rates. For groups looking to park money in commercial real estate, apartments are hard to beat, said Victor Targett with Windermere in Silverdale.”
This is nothing more than “drive until you qualify, REIT style.” They’re living in a fantasy if they think they can squeeze more money out of people in an area with such depressed wages. The biggest employer in the area is a shipyard, for chrissakes.
From the New Standard Equities website …
“New Standard Equities is a real estate investment and asset management firm specializing in apartment projects on the west coast. We invest in properties that require fresh capital …
… require fresh capital …
to either relieve distressed ownership groups, or cure physical deficiencies at the project level.”
“Fresh capital” translates to OTHER PEOPLE’S MONEY.
These wonderful guys convince ignorant pukes to fork over to them their hard-earned cash to throw at … at whatever and collect for themselves some very hefty fees.
If this whatever thingy doesn’t work out, well then, these wonderful guys still get to keep their fees.
,
Bubbles, bubbles everywhere nor any home to buy…
Opinion
Monday 3 July 2017
Deflating housing bubble must bring realistic prices
Politicians need to be honest over remedies for the dysfunctional property market
Problems building: With few properties available in many parts of Dublin for much under €350,000, home ownership is becoming a distant dream for today’s younger generation. Stock photo: Deposit photos
Colm McCarthy
July 2 2017 6:29 PM
Friday’s report from Daft.ie, urging changes in the regulation of the housing market to counter the latest jump in prices, should have come as no surprise at RTE’s sprawling Donnybrook campus in leafy Dublin 4. The State broadcaster has just concluded a deal to sell an 8.6-acre portion of the site, which is 6km from the city centre, for the astonishing figure of €108m, without planning permission.
The developers hope to build 500 residential units, almost all of which will be apartments. The price works out at €12.5m per acre and equates to €216,000 site cost per unit before a planning adviser has been engaged, much less a sod turned. It will be many years before the first home is occupied and hard to see how the cheapest will sell for under half a million.
…
wonder how long it takes to go through plan to build in eu countries?
2 yrs
3?
Another FB discovers mortgage lenders are “unsympathetic.” And yes, they expect you to honor your contractual obligations, the bastards….
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/jessica-investigates/mortgage-provider-demanding-193000-do-really-have-pay/
What an ignorant puke.
When I took out a loan in 2006 with Mortgage Express I had no idea it would be so unsympathetic.
It implied that at the end of the 10-year mortgage term I could simply renew my arrangement. That was not to be so. Can you change this for me?
The stupid, it burns. Apply this on a mass scale - millions of FBs who are deluded enough to think banks should bend over backwards for them - and the coming train wreck is going to be one for the books.
Yet nobody could’ve seen it coming….
How many of these idiots are going to blame everyone but themselves when their “investment” goes pear-shaped?
Here’s an article you’re gonna love:
http://www.standard.co.uk/news/politics/londonbased-eu-employees-could-be-set-for-daily-brexit-commute-to-dublin-a3578336.html
In a nutshell, after the Brexit is executed, some EU equivalent of the FDA, which is currently based in London, will have to leave. There is talk of moving it to Ireland, that way they current employees could remain living in London and … hold onto your hats … commute everyday from London to Ireland on budget airline Ryanair, which would cost starting from 40 pounds for a round trip (though it could cost more).
WTF…Amazon crashes 87% after-hours.
http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2017-07-03/nasdaq-triggers-market-wide-circuit-breaker-amzn-crashes-87-after-hours
I think there should be a new movement to take away healthcare from lawmakers, and force them to buy their own.
We’re past the peak on multifamily. Actual rent prices to drop 10% by the end of the year.
https://twitter.com/mrmarkhanson/status/882082960345714688
If I may continue on the predictions from yesterday…
I think a slowdown in housing prices happens in late ‘18 and accelerates in 2019. Here are the canaries in the coal mine:
- Auto sales have declined for 6 straight months
- US stocks have under-performed Europe and Japan (who are still enthusiastically printing)
- Commodities have been dramatically declining (using the CRB, from 320 in 2014 to 176 now - an almost 50% decline).
To use an airplane analogy, this plane is so laden with debt that the amount of newly printed money needed to prevent stall speed just keeps increasing. According to Bank of America, there was $1.5 trillion of QE or newly printed money in the first half of 2017 (see http://creditbubblebulletin.blogspot.com/2017/07/weekly-commentary-one-gargantuan-trade.html). Yellen said in Feb that she hoped they would not have to do QE again. 6 days ago, “Draghi Hints ECB May Stop Or Even Reverse QE” (https://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2017/06/27/draghi-hints-ecb-may-stop-or-even-reverse-qe-euro-bounces-in-response/#63ed15dae1d6)
I keep hearing the idea that they will keep printing (maybe they will) but what credibility will they have left after reversing such public pronouncements so soon after making them?
I think the nascent slowdown has been kept at bay by a $3T QE annual run rate. I see the end of 2017, early 2018 as a critical juncture. Either resume printing (and lose credibility) or let the markets do, well, what markets do.
typo in there meant…
late ‘17 and accelerates in 2018
Agree. Everyone knows housing is in trouble by 2017. Declines widespread in 2018. Bottom falls out in 2019.
IL will now have a 50% higher income tax rate than IN
winner IN
also has lowest debt per capita
when yellen offers to drain her swamp does she mean
a 50% sell off w 10% mbs/cdswaps and 90% treasuries?
so a “unit” may sell for 3.5% ?
today is my estimated “peak” day
enjoy the inventory boost