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Renter Nation Rages On As New Reality
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Thursday, 12 January 2012 22:28
From CNBC.com 
 
Despite record low mortgage rates reported today and rising affordability in most U.S. housing markets, rent is the new reality for former home owners and new households alike.
Photo by: Simon Law

 For some it is post-traumatic stress from the housing crash, for others it is the inability to get financing to buy a home. Either way, the rental market continues on its tear.

 In the last quarter of 2011, the apartment sector saw its largest quarterly increase in occupied stock of the year, according to Reis, Inc.

 The vacancy rate dropped to 5.2 percent, the lowest since 2001 and lower than the last cyclical drop in 2006.

 This bucks the historical seasonal weakness typical of the colder months of the year. The fourth quarter also tends to be a weaker leasing period, according to Reis, given that most households make moving decisions in the second and third quarters.

This surge in occupancy pushed asking and effective rents up 0.4 and 0.5 percent respectively, which Reis calls the only disappointing figures for the sector, missing expectations. Reis blames that on slow economic growth and still high unemployment.

“Higher quality properties in the most desirable locations posted rent gains in excess of 5-10 percent, while class B/C properties, catering to lower income tenants, found it relatively more difficult to raise rents,” notes Victor Calanog, head of research at Reis.

Nowhere is that more evident than in the Washington, DC metro area where rents are way up across the city, and developers are rushing to erect new multi-family buildings and rehab old ones.

“Everybody wants to be in DC,” beams Richard Key, district manager for Camden Property Trust, one of the largest publicly traded multifamily REITs in the nation. “Whereas in other markets there are deals, when you get to DC area, all the REITs want to be here, and so we're all competing for the same piece of land, and that's driving the price up. That is really is a challenge for us.”

Key is convinced that there has been a fundamental shift in attitudes toward home ownership that will last for several more years. He is not concerned that the pendulum will swing back to buying, just as all that new rental stock hits the market around 2014. Camden has seen rents on its DC properties rise over 5 percent in just the past year.

“The nice part is we haven’t seen a drop in occupancies with that rent growth, and so the hope is that we’re able to maintain our historical occupancies and continue to see that five, six, gosh, seven percent is not out of the question in the next couple of years,” says Key.

Washington, DC will likely see those higher rents because home prices didn’t fall very high during the housing crash and are already rebounding. It and Detroit were the only major markets posting annual gains on the latest S&P/Case-Shiller Home Price Index.

Other markets, like Las Vegas, where home prices are rock-bottom thanks to a huge supply of foreclosures, the rental market is tougher for developers and landlords.

As for renter society, it is also being fueled by tight mortgage underwriting. Rates may be at record lows, but only if you can get them. In a paper released Wednesday, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke noted, “Continued efforts are needed to find an appropriate balance between prudent lending and appropriate consumer protection, on the one hand, and not unduly restricting mortgage credit, on the other hand.”

Until that balance is found, potential home buyers will stay on the sidelines, those sidelines being rental apartments. A new twist to watch, however, may be that rental nation will go single family.

With so many bank owned homes left to clear, and so many in government and the private sector looking at bulk rental investments, apartments may have big competition in the same neighborhoods where they used to compete against single family buyers.

Original article:

http://www.cnbc.com/id/45887201

Last Updated on Thursday, 12 January 2012 22:34
 
For Many, No Rush to Home Ownership
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Wednesday, 14 September 2011 21:11

From CharlotteObserver.com

As market slinks to a rebound, renters increasingly focus on saving cash and enjoying a life less marked by uncertainty.

 

When Lina and Jimi Gibson moved into their 850-square-foot apartment in 2009, they figured they'd stay two years while they planned their wedding and saved for a house. Now, with the economy in another tailspin, they're on the fence.

The couple can walk to restaurants and movies from their building in southwest Charlotte.

They have a gym and a pool, and they don't have to mow the lawn or repair the roof.

Mostly, they don't have to worry - like so many of their friends - that the housing market's slide isn't over.

"I don't want to have a house that's going to be worth nothing or a neighborhood that's going to lose everything," said Lina Gibson, 27, a bank teller. "We just want to start off strong, with no debt. We're just being very careful."

For decades, Americans have aspired to own homes, and everyone from bankers to government officials have worked to make the dream accessible. But around the country, particularly in places pummeled by the real estate bust, that's changing.

Legions of homeowners remain underwater on their mortgages or unable to move because they can't sell their house. Plenty who want homes can't buy them because credit remains tight.

Look deeper, though, and the trends suggest a larger shift in how people feel about homeownership:

 Droves of potential buyers, particularly young adults, are renting longer even when they can afford to buy, stockpiling their savings or seeking investments they see as safer, real estate brokers and economists say.

 People who do buy are increasingly opting for more modest houses. Recent data show new homes are smaller - and sport fewer pricey extras, such as fireplaces and patios - than in years past.

Homeowners are staying in their houses longer. Just 11 percent of sellers surveyed by the National Association of Realtors last year had owned their home for three years or less, down from 30 percent in 2006.

Increasingly, consumers seem to be viewing their houses simply as places to live, instead of lucrative investments.

It's not yet clear whether the shift is permanent. Memories of past recessions can fade quickly, economists say, and government policies encouraging homebuying aren't likely to disappear, because the housing market remains a critical part of the U.S. economy.

What's more, the reasons to buy, from the appeal of a long-term investment to the simple desire to own property, might outweigh even consumers' worst fears.

For now, though, some experts say the American Dream has taken a back seat to economic realities.

"We've gone through 50 years of homeownership being the American Dream, and in those 50 years, homes didn't do anything but appreciate," said Bill Miley of real estate research firm Metrostudy. "The American Dream today is job security and being able to afford gasoline to get to work. It's certainly not buying a home."

From long shot to too easy

Homeownership is a long-held dream for many Americans, but a century ago, it wasn't accessible for most. Often, the only way to buy was to pay cash or take out a pricey loan with a large down payment.

Government policy helped change that. From the beginning of the federal income tax, people have been allowed to deduct their mortgage interest. In 1938, the government established the Federal National Mortgage Association, known as Fannie Mae, to provide local banks with federal money to finance home mortgages, creating the 30-year mortgage with fixed interest and leading to more housing loans.

After World War II, the G.I. Bill helped veterans secure low down-payment loans with low interest rates. Suburbs sprang up, and the U.S. homeownership rate climbed above 60 percent from 45 percent in the first half of the century.

The U.S. had become a nation of homeowners.

Meanwhile, the government continued to encourage home buying through tax breaks and programs that push homeownership for low-income earners.

Then came the real estate boom. Credit was cheap and easy to obtain, risky products such as adjustable-rate mortgages crowded the market, and by the mid-2000s, homeownership rates had spiked to nearly 70 percent after decades in the low- to mid-60 percent range.

"If you had a pulse," Miley said, "you could get a loan."

Consumers kept buying, landing bigger mortgages and borrowing against their homes for other purchases: second homes, boats, college tuition.

Investors bought and sold homes quickly, reaping huge profits.

We know what happened next.

Still sore from 'black eye'

Since the meltdown, the housing market continues to struggle, despite record-low interest rates and attractive prices.

Prices have fallen by more than they did during the Great Depression, research firm Capital Economics reported recently. The nation's homeownership rate has dropped back below 66 percent.

Part of the reason the market remains weak is that some people who want to buy can't get loans. The National Association of Realtors, for one, is calling on banks to bring back "common-sense standards" in lending, loosening what the association considers to be too-strict requirements, spokesman Water Molony said.

That would boost sales 15 percent to 20 percent, he said. He said a homeownership rate of around two-thirds of U.S. households, closer to the pre-boom norm, is more realistic than the boom-years peak, and that some people simply shouldn't be homeowners. But, Molony added, there's a pent-up demand among other potential buyers that could help bolster the anemic economic recovery.

"Housing got a black eye," he said. "But it doesn't really take away the American Dream. People still aspire to it."

Consumers and real estate experts say attitudes about owning real estate are changing. A recent report from Morgan Stanley, for instance, found that the U.S. homeownership rate has fallen below 60 percent when delinquent borrowers are excluded, a sign of the country's move toward a "rentership society."

John Bradford of Park Avenue Properties, a Cornelius real estate and property management firm, said he's seeing more consumers hold off on buying homes while they wait for a recovery.

"I've seen cases of $400,000 and up, lake-front, golf community," he said. "Some renters are thinking, why would I buy when I can rent and invest my money in other things?"

Charlotte real estate broker Matthew Tringali began to see greater demand for rentals in 2008.

Since then, managing rental properties for homeowners who can't sell has become one of the biggest parts of his job.

"People are naturally afraid that home prices are still falling," he said.

Even longtime homeowners have begun to doubt the security of their investment.

"When I was younger, I always wanted to have a house," said Edwin Tetenbaum, 52, a Mint Hill homeowner who tutors, writes and does homeowners association administrative work. "If I was just starting out now, I would be kind of concerned about, well, why would I want to buy a house now if 1 1/2 years, two years down the road it may lose another 20 percent of its value?"

Hope alive for 'millenials'

Consumers still view buying a house as a foundation of the American Dream, though, a recent Wells Fargo & Co. survey found

The study, conducted with The Futures Co., found 36 percent of "millenials" - the largest potential first-time homebuyer group - reported owning a home. Two-thirds of millenials believe they will be homeowners within the next five years.

Jon Wilkinson, 25, planned to buy a home this spring, after his wife, Linda, finishes school at UNC Charlotte.

Given the low interest rates and prices, though - their mortgage wouldn't be much more than their current monthly rent - they decided to buy earlier.

"We've always rented, but we always thought we would buy a house one day," said Wilkinson, an accountant. "That's the No. 1 reason."

Buyers are increasingly taking a long-term view of their investment, according to a November 2010 survey from the National Association of Realtors. The survey found that typical sellers had been in their home eight years, up from seven years in 2009 - and that first-time buyers plan to stay in their new house for 10 years. Repeat buyers, meanwhile, plan to hold their property 15 years.

Personal-finance guru Suze Orman endorses the strategy in her new book, "The Money Class," reminding readers that a home is not a stock - and that buying with the intent to flip for a profit or to fund other goals through home-equity loans was never wise.

"The deflated home values have put an end to the prospect of home as retirement fund or college fund and raised the question of whether homeownership in fact even makes sense anymore," she wrote. "I am shocked by the number of people I talk to who ... regret the day they thought a home purchase was a great idea."

Buyers are drifting toward different kinds of homes, too, particularly smaller, more affordable properties closer to their jobs, data from the National Association of Home Builders show.

A study last year by the group found the median size of new single-family homes has dropped to 2,100 square feet, for instance, from a peak of 2,268 square feet in 2006.

"It's going to be a long, long time before we start seeing custom builders building very expensive homes," said Miley of Metrostudy, the real estate research firm. "It is not an investment. It is a shelter. It is a place to raise a family. It's a backyard."

A season of uncertainty

Most economists and industry experts expect the housing market to rebound, though they acknowledge recovery could be a long road.

Some say that once credit standards loosen and the economy improves, consumers will turn more readily to homeownership - and that, eventually, young adults who chose to rent for convenience and security will want to buy a house and settle down.

Experts suspect the government will always encourage ownership through the mortgage interest deduction, too.

"When they talk about tax reform, that's always on the table, as it should be, in my mind," said John McIlwain, a senior resident fellow at the Urban Land Institute, a nonprofit research organization based in Washington, D.C.

"But it's one thing to mention the possibility, and it's another thing to move forward. People say, 'Are you going to vote against homeownership?' It's like being against apple pie, motherhood, etc."

But whether potential homebuyers opt to buy in coming years or continue to hold off depends on the housing market's strength, some say.

The Gibsons of southwest Charlotte still think they'll probably buy a home someday. They got married last year and hope to start a family in the next few years, and they've already been preapproved for a home loan.

Still, they worry: One friend, unable to sell her townhome when she had to move, was forced to let it fall into foreclosure. Another owes more on his home than it's worth. The couple are looking at homes, but they wonder if many are still priced too high.

In the meantime, Lina Gibson and her husband, who works for Carolinas HealthCare System, are contributing more to their retirement accounts and padding their savings.

They clip coupons and shop at consignment stores, a dramatic shift from a few years ago. They don't have any debt, and they like the freedom that brings.

"We both have an American Dream that we focus on every day," said Lina Gibson, whose parents immigrated to the U.S. from Colombia.

"We want to work hard and then actually live the dream later."

Original article:
Last Updated on Thursday, 12 January 2012 22:34
 
Residents Lose Everything Without Renter's Insurance
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Wednesday, 16 February 2011 18:12

From 11Alive.com

 

SMYRNA, GA -- An apartment blaze in an Atlanta Road complex Friday night was a grim reminder of the necessity for renters to have renters insurance.

Twelve apartments were destroyed. Nothing was left.

"I never imagined I would be someone that I see on television all the time losing all their things and having to start over like this," said Daphne Adams, a tenant who lost everything.

"Everything. Everything. My children have lost everything. My furniture. Pictures of my kids. Everything could be replaced." Adams said. "But we are starting from square one."

For Adams and her neighbors, renters insurance could have made all the difference.

It costs less than $1 a day and provides up to $20,000 in coverage. Pay a little more, and the coverage goes higher. It doesn't cover everything.

"It doesn't cover flood. It doesn't cover death. It's not a life policy. It doesn't cover earthquakes," said State Farm Agent John Martin.

But it does cover all of your personal property.

"Go through the house or apartment and just film everything and take pictures," Martin said.

Adams said she is taking his advice to heart.

"Don't think it would never happen to you, it could," she said. "I've never had anything happen. No break-ins, no fires, and no floods in my while life, and this period when I didn't have any, this one occurred."

"If you don't have a renters policy, that's all she wrote," Martin said. "It's done."

"I would recommend it to everyone, everyone," Adams said.

Original article:

http://www.11alive.com/rss/rss_story.aspx?storyid=177746

 

Last Updated on Thursday, 05 May 2011 01:18
 
5 Tricks for Moving Furniture
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Tuesday, 25 January 2011 13:41

From ApartmentTherapy.com

2011_1_18-move.jpg


That's me. And that's my credenza. which probably weighs in somewhere around 300 pounds, maybe more. I'm not kidding — it's a monster. And I weigh about 105 wet. But I was able to move it from one end of the room to the other without breaking much of a sweat and without ending up in the hospital or with residual back pain. How'd I do it? I have a few tricks up my skinny arms.

  • Slide don't lift: Unless it's a small piece of furniture, slide it across the room. Most of us don't know how to lift things properly and though we may end up with a beautiful room, we also end up with a bad back. If you do have to lift something, use your legs not your arms and shoulders and keep your back relatively straight.
  • Use towels and cardboard: Try slipping something underneath your furniture's legs. Instead of lifting the piece to do this, rock your piece forward or backwards slightly to slide the material underneath the legs. The furniture will move easily across the room. On carpet, try smooth cardboard; on bare floors, towels or dishrags are a good bet.
  • Magic Sliders are my favorite go to product. I converted to these a few years ago at the suggestion of my friends at Koontz Hardware. Now I put them on all of my furniture as soon as I get it (instead of using felt pads). Though they're significantly more expensive than the felt pads, they have them beat by a mile for many reasons: they're durable and they make even the heaviest pieces of furniture slip across the room like the Three Stooges on a banana peel.
  • Push or Pull: While it seems natural to push a heavy piece, I've actually found pulling to be more effective than pushing on certain pieces of furniture. Place an arm on either side of a piece of furniture and, with your feet a few inches away and using your arms as a brace, lower your body as if you were going to sit, then scooch backwards.
  • Empty everything out of it first: Most of us forget to do this and try to move everything when it's all loaded up. Take the time to empty your furniture out. Not only will it make it lighter, it'll prevent something from falling out accidentally and creating a big mess.

Original article:

http://www.apartmenttherapy.com/la/painting-fixing-repairs/5-tricks-for-moving-furniture-around--135925

Last Updated on Thursday, 05 May 2011 01:18
 
Become a Local: Get to Know Your New City
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Saturday, 22 January 2011 00:43

From Rent.com | The Shared Wall

Regardless of whether or not you’re new to a city, few renters truly consider themselves to be “locals.” Just think about it:  how often do you truly take the time to explore your city? It’s no secret that since so many of us are constantly in a rush to get from point A to point B, we sometimes overlook the excitement and wonder that our cities have to offer. So, why not pledge to take a “day-cation” this year – and truly get to know your stomping grounds? Here are a few great ways to get you acquainted with all your city has to offer!

Consider alternate forms of transportation. If you regularly travel the city via public transit, consider touring through town on a bike if your city is bike-friendly. In addition to providing exercise, a bike will allow you to navigate yourself through a different route, allowing you to take in new surroundings. If biking isn’t for you, walking is another reliable alternative to help discover hidden gems and explore with your senses! Smell the bread as you pass by bakeries, listen to talented street performers and view parts of the city that you might not have noticed before. From smaller paths that you never knew existed, to hole-in-the-wall restaurants, you might be surprised at where the city will take you!

As you probably know, one of the best ways to become a local is to actually learn from the locals themselves. Rather than visiting chain restaurants and shops, consider locally-owned boutiques and mom-and-pop restaurants, which will provide exposure to your city’s unique style. Purchasing items from the farmers market within your area will also allow you to connect with locals and introduce you to the food products that your city is best known for.

Although a city’s architecture and landmarks might make it attractive, the people of the city are what truly makes it one-of-a-kind. Therefore, get to know your neighbors! Consider joining local clubs, or volunteering at an organization. Not only will your community benefit, but doing so also presents an excellent opportunity to meet other locals who might share similar hobbies or interests. Attending block parties, street fairs, and festivals are other fantastic ways to participate in your city’s celebrations and get to know your neighbors.

Lastly, reading local newspapers will allow you to stay up-to-date with recent events in your neighborhood or city. Read local blogs and reviews about shops around you to get a better feel for what’s nearby! Local bloggers can also provide you with honest opinions in addition to reviews and feedback about places that you might be unsure of yourself. For all you know, the best places in town could possibly just be around the corner!

The cities that we live in are all filled with delicious culinary delights and fascinating people. However, it’s up to you to explore your city and see what it has to offer! So, the next time that you decide to take a stroll around town, consider the famous idiom: When in Rome, do as the Romans do.

Original article:

http://www.rent.com/blog/become-a-local-get-to-know-your-new-city/

Last Updated on Thursday, 05 May 2011 01:19
 
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