Mobile UPI  |   About UPI  |   UPI en Español  |   UPI Arabic  |   UPIU  |   My Account
Search:
Go

Net New Renters 1.4 Million, Net New Home Buyers 0

Published: Oct. 18, 2011
By Steve Cook Real Estate Economy Watch
Comments
Content Disclaimer
That's what 2011's final score will be, according to Freddie Mac's latest outlook for 2011, as vacancy rates shrivel and sales struggle to stay even with last year's tax credit boom and bust.

With the Census Bureau reporting a net increase of 1.4 million households that moved into rental housing this year, or a 4 percent rise in the number of tenants, many in single family homes converted from ownership to rental. Some 800,000 new households formed in the U.S. this year and the number of homeowners has fallen bv 600,000 homeowners. A Reis Inc. survey of professionally managed buildings in metropolitan markets found vacancy rates stood at 5.9 percent during the same quarter, the lowest since 2007 for that class of apartment. Rates for the fastest growing segment of rentals, single family homes, are more difficult to pin down.

Calling the rental market "a bright spot" in the housing sector, Freddie Mac predicts this year will end with thud for home sales, with virtually the same number of sales as last year, 4.63 million. Freddie's current 2011 sales total is the same estimate as last month, but its forecast for 2012 rose slightly from 4.80 to 4.90 million sales.

"Much of the rental demand is from young and newly formed households who have decided to postpone homeownership in favor of renting during unsettled economic times. Indeed, the decline in the homeownership rate has been sharpest for those household heads under 30 years of age: While the U.S. homeownership rate has fallen about 1.5 percent over the past year (from 66.9 percent to 65.9 percent during the second quarter of 2011), owner rates have fallen by 4.4 percent (to 21.9 percent) for those under 25 years of age and by 7.0 percent (to 34.7 percent) for those aged 25 to 29 years," said the Frank Nothaft, Freddie's chief economist.

"With rental demand rising and apartment economics improving, the multifamily sector is a positive signal for the U.S. housing industry," Nothaft concluded.

Freddie's negative signals for the housing industry can be found in its October forecast. It predicts the S&P Case Shiller Home Price Index will end the year down 3.7 percent, a point worse than last year, and prices next year will be even worse, falling an additional 4 percent, which would make 2012 the worst year for prices since the 18 percent price plunge of 2008.

From Real Estate Economy Watch

The content on this page is created and edited solely by Real Estate Economy Watch. The views and any other information expressed or made available on this page are those of Real Estate Economy Watch and are not those of UPI.

Join the conversation
Follow our UPI Real Estate experts
1 of 29
Members of the Army's Old Guard place flags at Arlington National Ceremtery
View Caption
U.S. flags are seen in the rucksack of a soldier with the Army's 3d U.S. Infantry Regiment, The Old Guard, as he places flags at gravesites in Arlington National Cemetery as part of the Flags-In Memorial Day ceremony on May 24, 2012 in Arlington, Virginia. American flags were placed at each of the more than 220,000 grave markers in honor of those who served and Memorial Day. UPI/Kevin Dietshc
fark
Researchers use invisibility cloaks to trap, taste the rainbow
Photoshop theme: If humans evolved from cats
It's time for the Fark News Quiz. The only quiz in the world that's easier to pass if you have a...
The incredibly strange but true story of invisible meth labs, dogs shot dead and John McAfee, founder...
Never seen early photos of the American West, AKA, at time when Americans had spirit, guts and balls...
Armstrong. Collarbone, not so much