Slowdown in housing market is helping landlords raise rents

The housing slowdown is turning out to be a gift to apartment landlords. After all, those people who aren't buying still need somewhere to live.

Data from Zillow released Thursday shows that home-price appreciation continued to slow in April from a year earlier, driven in part by softening West Coast metros like San Jose and Seattle.

Apartments
NEW YORK, NY - AUGUST 16: A view of a new residential building under construction in the Hudson Yards development, August 16, 2016 in New York City. Home construction in the U.S. accelerated in July to the fastest pace in five months. While housing starts were up 2.1 percent nationally, new construction was up 15.5 percent in the Northeast, led by a surge in new apartment and condo construction. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

The company also reported the first nationwide monthly price dip in more than seven years — albeit just 0.1%. At the same time, rent growth accelerated, climbing by 2.6% on an annual basis, after a lull in 2018.

Americans pulled back from home purchases last year after mortgage rates spiked, exposing the underlying affordability problem in the property market. Many people piled into rentals, where landlords were offering concessions after a period of overbuilding higher-end units. That increased demand helped drive up what people were willing to pay for an apartment.

Rents and home values tend to move together over the long-term, said Skylar Olsen, Zillow's director of economic research. "But, in this case, what we're seeing is a little different."

More broadly, the challenge for the housing market is scarcity. As millennials — one of the largest U.S. generations — reach prime home buying age, they're finding that the supply of entry-level houses hasn't nearly kept pace with their numbers. That could force them to rent for longer as they save up to buy the homes that are available, Olsen said.

Bloomberg News
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