Rent Grows in Cities
of All Sizes
Mar 10, 2015
Bendix
Anderson
The biggest gains
in rents are no longer limited to the biggest cities in the
country— and that’s a big change from just a few years ago. “Three years ago,
rent growth was primarily happening in the six or seven largest metro areas,”
says John S. Sebree, vice president and national director of the national
multi-housing group for Marcus & Millichap’s Chicago office.
Today, the
difference between the cities with the strongest and weakest rent growth no
longer has mostly to do with job growth and how many new apartments are coming
to town. And in most markets, the numbers look very good for both 2015 and
2016.
“The stories tend
to be similar across markets of all sizes: Job production is solid, helping
support substantial apartment demand that equals or exceeds the meaningful
construction volumes,” says Greg Willett, vice president of research and
analysis for MPF Research, based in Carrollton, Texas.
Job growth spreads
to smaller cities
Many secondary and
tertiary markets now benefit from the economic recovery that started in the top
six or seven apartment markets, but is no longer limited to those largest U.S.
cities. “Job growth has moved into secondary and tertiary markets,” says Sebree.
Smaller cities like
Houston, Dallas and San Jose, Calif., still topped the list of job-creating
metros in 2014 with employment growth of more than 4 percent. But a number of
smaller metro areas also grew their employment base, including Jacksonville,
Fla., where the number of jobs grew 3.7 percent; Salt Lake City, where jobs
grew 3.1 percent and Indianapolis, Ind., where jobs grew 2.7 percent. All of
these cities are expected to create more jobs in 2015, along with healthy
growth in apartment rents, says Sebree.
New apartments open
in the largest cities
Developers are also
opening new apartments, mostly in the largest markets that were the first to
benefit from job growth. The metro areas where experts expect the most new
apartments to open in 2015 are the same biggest cities that had the first
significant job growth of the recovery, according to Marcus & Millichap’s
projections. New York City, for example, which saw a great deal of job growth
early in the recovery, should produce 92,000 new jobs in 2015—an increase of 2
percent to the city’s giant employment base. Developers will open a stunning
12,500 new apartments in 2015, according to Marcus & Millichap.
Top cities for rent
growth come in all sizes
In the core real
estate markets, rent growth averaged 4.3 percent in 2014, according to figures
by MPF Research, a national multifamily research firm. Those core markets are
the 10 metro areas that have about 500,000 or more existing apartment
units—that includes areas like South Florida, Boston and Atlanta, which each
have 450,000 apartment units, according to MPF. In Northern California, the Bay
Area, which includes San Francisco, San Jose and Oakland, had the highest rent
growth of these 10 biggest metros, at 10.5 percent. New York City had the
lowest rent growth of the leading cities, at 1.4 percent.
Throughout the
recovery, these leading cities have a disproportionate share of new
investment—including new development. But secondary markets were not far behind
in 2014, with rent growth of 3.9 percent, according to MPF, which defines
secondary markets as metro areas with 100,000 to 350,000. That ranges from a
high of 9.7 percent rent growth in Denver and Boulder, Colo., to a low of 1.3
percent in Virginia Beach, Va.
Even tertiary
markets joined in the rent growth of 2014 with 3.1 percent, according to MPF,
which included all metro areas with fewer than 100,000 units as tertiary. That
ranges from a high of 10.4 percent in Honolulu, Hawaii, to a low of negative
0.2 percent in Whichita, Kan. “Markets across the spectrum tend to be
performing well,” says MPF’s Willet.