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Week of April 14, 2003

Front Page

President's Message

* Housing Have-Nots Deserve a Boost From Congress

Housing Forum

* Letters to the Editor

Environment

* Pygmy Owl Data Sets Precedent for Landowners

Housing Politics

* House Passes Major Home Energy Bill
* Health Plan Bill Advances in Congress
* Bill Would Speed Up Apprenticeship Program Reviews

Housing and Economics

* Spotlight on: Chicago
* Eye on the Economy
* Economists to Examine How Housing Is Holding Up

For Consumers

* High Ceilings a Trend in Reshaping American Homes

Member Dividends

* NAHB Team Helps Builders Win Political Challenges

Green Building

* New Mexico Builder Slashes Construction Waste Costs
* Construction Debris Diverted From Landfills in Milwaukee
* Soy-Bean Based Insulation Wins Green Product Award

Multifamily

* Multifamily Sector Looking at a Mixed Picture
* Job Growth Key to Apartment Market
* Slowdown Expected in Multifamily Lending
* Tax Credit Legwork a Must for Success

Business Management

* Know Your Technology Needs Before You Invest

Construction Safety

* Toolbox Talk: Don’t Overlook Scaffold Safety

Housing Finance

* Discussions on Rural Housing Needs Continue

Labor

* HBI Helping Builders Find Skilled Workers

Building Products

* Performance of CPVC Piping System Unmatched

Building News Coast To Coast

Association News & Events

* NAHB Board to Meet in Early May
* May 5 Is National Membership Day

NBN Back Issues

 

Slowdown Expected in Multifamily Lending

The multifamily market holds plenty of promise, but it won't reach that potential for several more years, according to one of Fannie Mae's top apartment executives.

“We really don't see great origination years again until 2007,” Richard Lawch said at NAHB's annual Pillars of the Industry Conference in Boca Raton last month. Until then, he told the apartment industry conference, lending in the multifamily sector will be unspectacular at best.

Lawch, who is senior vice president of multifamily production and capital markets for Fannie Mae, said “now that everybody who could possibly refinance has,” apartment lending will top out at a mere $55 billion this year.

(Fannie Mae gobbled up nearly half that amount all by itself last year, when it all but equaled its 2001 volume even though the overall multifamily market slipped by some 30%. And Freddie Mac invested $14.3 billion in 2002.)


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But volumes in subsequent years will be even worse, he predicted: Just $45 billion in 2004 and $48 billion in 2005.

“Things are going to be pretty slow for a while,” Lawch ventured. Noting that the apartment sector tends to lag the general economy, the Fannie Mae executive said multifamily lending won't return to last year's levels until the economy improves and the market catches up.

The market's fundamentals are “profoundly terrible” right now, he told the conference. “Only after the economy gets going will apartment lending pick up.”

Lawch said the only reason lenders have remained in the market this long is that apartments are the only investments that offer any kind of decent return. “Multifamily is one of the prettiest pigs in the barn,” he said. “Capital is looking for a home and multifamily is just swell. In fact, it looks pretty good when compared to other investments. But capital is fickle, and the only question is how long it will stay in multifamily housing.”

He added, however, that over the longer haul, the demographic trends suggest “nothing but positive markets are ahead for those who can wait out the current doldrums. With 78 million echo boomers age 18-35 on the horizon and 700,000 immigrants coming to U.S. shores every year,” he said, “a great decade lies ahead of us.”
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