Santa Fe Renters Face Trend toward Continuing Rent Hikes
The Rent Also Rises (with sincere apologies to E. Hemingway)
Santa Fe Renters Contemplate National Trend to Rising Rates
“WHY YOUR RENT CHECK JUST KEEPS GOING UP” was the headline
in CNN Money’s real estate special report
in June, which could have explained to Santa Fe renters
why it is that U.S. rents keep rising faster than home values. After all, that
doesn’t seem to make sense!
The list of reasons was long, and taken all together,
fairly convincing:
·
Millennials are renting longer
·
Housing inventory is tight and getting tighter
·
The housing crash scared those who would
otherwise have become homeowners
·
Baby Boomers are downsizing
·
Rental construction slowed when confidence sank
after the housing crisis
It all comes down to demand and supply—less of the latter,
more of the former. Although the author may have exaggerated a detail or two (“…there just aren’t enough ‘For Rent’ signs
to keep up with the demand”), more than one Santa Fe renter will probably
agree with the gist of the piece: rents have been on the rise long enough that
it makes you want to think about the alternative: buying.
Some of the more extreme cases are urban: in San Francisco
and Denver, for instance, renters have seen yearly increases of 15% and 11.6%,
respectively, according to Zillow. Santa Fe renters
can find themselves in something of a bind, though—since those higher rent
bills make saving for a down payment more difficult. It’s just one reason. Per
CNN, “There are a bunch of things keeping renters on the sidelines, meaning “the folks that would be normally making the
switch to become homeowners are still taking up the rental units.”
The result: more units remain occupied, vacancies go down;
rentable units remain scarce…so prices renters pay continue to go up.
Will this Catch-22 situation persist forever? Most likely not:
the broad economic news is that this year’s steady job growth coupled with the pronounced
turnaround in builder confidence is likely to loosen the supply stranglehold.
Last Tuesday,
there was also the kind of news that can prompt builders to really get going: government
data showed purchases of new U.S. homes surged (particularly in the Northeast
and West), with sales of new homes soaring 24% so far in 2015. That’s the best
showing since 2007.
Of
course, before supply outstrips demand, the situation puts landlords in an
advantageous position. Santa Fe investors who bought rentable properties during
the downturn can now enjoy steady returns from their properties, or decide to
sell in a robust market. If you are leaning in that direction, it’s the perfect
time to give me a call!
Leland
Titus
Qualifying
Broker
Santa
Fe Realty Ultd
505-467-8829
505-603-2435
NMRealtorLeland@gmail.com
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