NBN Online for the week of September 4, 2006

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
NAHB, NAACP Hope to Shrink Minority Homeownership Gap
The Wrong Sub Can Seriously Disrupt Your Job
Free NAHB Video Shows Members How to Deal With the Media
Play Free Builders' Pro Football for Prizes and Fun
Share Nation's Building News With Your Staff. It's Free.
Coast to Coast
Slower Housing Market Spells Project Delays
Housing Forum
Letter to the Editor: Investors Are Not Gamblers
Politics & Government
Builders Step Up Push for House Storm Water Bill
Economics & Finance
House Price Appreciation Slows in Second Quarter
Mortgage Rates Drift to Lowest Point Since April 6
Tips
Builder’s Tip: A Methodical Approach to Blocking
Business Management
Feds on Lookout for Invalid Social Security Numbers
50Plus Housing
What Do Boomer Women Want From Builders? Lifestyle.
Multifamily
Rentals on the Rise as Condo Market Settles Down
Mary Anderson Receives HCCP of the Year Award
Katrina Recovery
KB Home First Big Builder to Return to New Orleans
Education
Want to Know More About Designations? Ask an Expert
Education Calendar
Sales
Enter The Nationals Sales and Marketing Awards by Sept. 29
Green Building
Entry Period Underway for Green Building Awards
Regulation
New Regulatory ‘Listening Sessions’ Scheduled
Legal
Ask the Lawyer: About When the Clock Starts for Employees
Labor
Popular HBI Superintendent Courses Coming to IBS
Building Products
Web Links Builders and Buyers During Production Cycle
TV
NAHB-Produced Programs on HGTV & DIY This Week
Association News
September Is Associate Member Appreciation Month
Take the Solveras Savings Challenge and Save; or Make $50
GM $500 Exclusive Offer for NAHB Members
UPS Offers Up to 30% Discount to NAHB Members on Shipping
Find Key Employees Through the NAHB Online Career Center
Fall Board Meets Sept. 13-17 in Salt Lake City
Calendar of Events
NAHB Career Center

Related Articles

Mary Anderson Receives HCCP of the Year Award

Rentals on the Rise as Condo Market Settles Down

After accounting for nearly half of all multifamily housing units produced in 2005, condominium starts are trending down to more sustainable levels, according to the housing experts who participated in an NAHB press teleconference on Aug. 23.

Meanwhile, the rental apartment market has emerged from a five-year slump and is currently in the midst of a broad-based recovery.

“Condos have gone from a ‘white-hot’ market to ‘red-hot’ to normal,” said Leonard Wood, director of Marietta, Ga.-based Wood Partners, LLC, and chairman of NAHB’s Multifamily Leadership Board. “Now that investors and speculators have pulled out, the market is beginning to stabilize at levels that are sustainable over the longer-term.”

At their peak, condo starts last year accounted for a 48% share of the 350,000 multifamily units that were produced, up from 20% of the multifamily market in 2000.

“My forecast has condo starts dropping through the end of 2007, before stabilizing at about 35%” said NAHB Chief Economist David Seiders. He noted that total multifamily starts have been unusually stable and non-cyclical for almost a decade, but that the change in the composition of the starts — with condos grabbing the lion’s share while the percentage of market-rate rental starts slipped precipitously — has been extraordinary over the past five years.

Seiders’ latest short-term forecast shows some erosion in total multifamily starts this year and a further decline to about 325,000 units in 2007, reflecting a contraction in the overall housing market.

Although sales of both new and existing condos have slowed, most of the fall-off in demand has been among investors and speculators, said Bruce Menin, CEO of Crescent Heights, one of the largest condo development companies in the country.

“Condos that are well-priced and well-located are still doing well with people who are interested in them as their primary home rather than strictly as an investment,” Menin said. Menin also said that he doesn’t necessarily see the slowdown in condo price appreciation as a negative.

“Because the prices had gotten so high so fast, the price drop-off we are seeing now is relatively marginal,” Menin said, adding that the slower pace of both sales and price appreciation will help stabilize condo prices and restore equilibrium in the market.

In the meantime, the rental market — which had been in the doldrums for most of the last five years — is in the midst of a solid comeback. According to Seiders, vacancy rates in rental apartment buildings with five or more units are down considerably from record highs several years ago and absorption rates for newly completed rental apartments are on the rise.

“Rents are up and the tight supply of rental units across the country is creating good opportunities for apartment owners and developers in most markets,” said Wood, who also noted that the recent trend of converting rental apartment units to condos is over. “We’re more likely to see some planned condo projects being converted to rentals,” he said.

For an audio file of the teleconference, as well as a copy of a Powerpoint presentation by David Seiders, click here.

For more information, e-mail Ann Marie Moriarty at NAHB, or call her at 800-368-5242 x8350.


 

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