Mar-24: The U.S. Rental Market

27 Mar 2024

 

The weekly 30-year fixed rate mortgage (FRM) on March 21, 2024, was 6.87%. This is an increase of 403 bps since the end of Aug-21 when it was 2.84% but just 61 bps higher than this time last year (6.26%). Concurrently, the year-over-year home price gains through Feb-24 for the 20 CBSAs tracked by this report (the CHTR 20-city index) have slowed down but remain positive at 4.27%. Table 1 shows the deceleration and now acceleration of the purchase market.

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Do changes in home prices filter into the rental market. First it must be pointed out that month-over-month rent growth (Rent3bd column 5 and RentApts, column 7 have been seasonally adjusted). We see evidence of rent appreciation (RRA) for both types of units staying above 4.0%.

 

There is evidence that growth in rents on SFR detached properties and apartments in multi-unit building are leading indicators of CPI-Shelter. The year-over-year growth in rents for 3-bedroom detached properties is now 4.97%. We also see in column 9 that YOY growth in rental rates on apartments in multi-unit structures is still positive and now growing at a very​​ fast rate (5.04% vs 5.16% last month). This information suggests the shelter cost of CPI is not going to fall below 4.00 percent anytime soon.

 

To get a micro-sense of how rents are changing with prices, Chart 1 shows both the year-over-year increases in home prices (HPA) and in rental rates (RRA) as of Feb-24 for our 20 CBSAs.

 

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The chart shows that RRA loosely rises with HPA as we move to the right. The red bars show the significant rises in rental rates for 3-bedroom property and the equally fast rise for rents of apartments in multi-unit buildings.

 

In the face of higher mortgage rates, there are some reasons for the still amazingly steady home price growth we see in Table 1.

  • Migration out of high-priced California

  • Migration out of Central and South America to Miami

  • The job market remains very strong​​ 

  • Millennials moving into their childbearing age and trying to get out of their parent’s houses.

Because vacancy rates are low, the changes in rents for 3 bedroom detached properties and apartments that we see in Table 1 and Chart 1 are probably not due to seasonality. Rents are likely to stay high because:

  • Vacancy rates are low, despite the increased purchases of homes.

  • Landlords have pricing power.

  • Apartment renters might have low earningss and weak credit and may have no other choices but to pay higher rents​​ 

Individual CBSA rental markets:

Although slowing, these still high rental prices may continue. It depends, in part, whether renters can afford these increases and on the ability of landlords to increase rents in order to offset rising purchases prices for homes. The rule of thumb is that a household should allocate about 30 percent of earnings to shelter. To partially answer this question, we show four additional charts below. The first (Chart 2) is for three-bedroom detached properties and the second (Chart 3) is data for apartment rental (all unit sizes) in multi-unit buildings.​​ 

Chart 2 shows that in major CBSAs, like Los Angeles, CA, New York, NY , Miami, FL and San Francisco, CA renters are willing to allocate more than 50 percent of their earnings to renting a three-bedroom property.​​ 

 

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Description automatically generated with medium confidenceThis suggests that renters in other cities may continue to pay up to live where they are living or choose to rent a smaller property or move to locations where rents are cheaper.​​ 

But the rental markets are changing differently in each city. Chart 4 shows the changes in RVY for renting a 3-bedroom property from Aug-21 to Feb-24 (the same values as in Chart 2 are in the numerator). We see that in the cities on the right, renters are considerably worse off than in the time before the Federal Reserve began increasing mortgage rates.​​ 

Renters are now paying more than 5 percent more of their earnings to pay their rent in at least four cities than they were on Aug-21. On the left-hand-side of the chart renters are paying less out of their earnings. In Phoenix, AZ builders have increased both the supply of houses for sale and supply of​​ apartments for rent and this has put downward pressure on rent of single family properties.​​ 

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The increased economic hardships now facing renters show up even more so in Chart 5. In that chart, we see that renters of apartments in​​ 5​​ of the 20 cities that we track are now paying 7% more of their earning towards rent than they had been paying before the rates rose in Aug-21.

 

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