| November 3, 2004 |
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Renters, you were warned and now you are slipping behind the eight ball. There's probably some, but not much, time left for you to take action and lock in rents in some markets. Otherwise, if you plan to stay put in the same apartment in 2005, there's a good chance your rent will rise more than it has in recent years. Higher rent payments could take a bite out of your savings plan to buy a home. What's worse, home prices will continue to rise and mortgage interest rates are also forecast to follow suit and that could push the American Dream of home ownership even further out of your grasp. Year-old forecasts of rents rising and vanishing concessions by the end of 2004 appear to be on target as landlords rejoice about raising rents and pulling back on special deals. Across the board increase in indicators that reveal an improving market for landlords clearly point to recovery in the multifamily housing market says the National Multi Housing Council. For only the second time in the five-year history of the council's quarterly Survey of Apartment Market Conditions, all four indexes lit up like a Christmas tree, yielding numbers better than the previous quarter's. Chiming in were M/PF Research which reported the rental market recovery was well underway in the Southeast and RealFacts, Inc., which said 25 of the top 29 metropolitan areas it surveys in the West were finally showing signs of rent increases. Even in Silicon Valley where rents have fallen since 2001, tenants were experiencing slightly higher rents. Every quarter, the multi housing council surveys dozens of chief executive officers and other senior executives of apartment-related firms nationwide who serve on the council's Board of Directors or Advisory Committee. For the third quarter, the council found:
The year for the apartment market started slow and gave renters ample warning that change was afoot. Now you'll have to move fast to cash in on remaining rental deals. "The combination of modest economic growth, strong demographic trends, and the rising cost of home ownership compared with renting is leading to greater demand for apartment residences. Right now the only thing holding the industry back is the still-weak labor market," said NMHC chief economist Mark Obrinsky. |
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