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Here’s Why New York Rents Are So Damn High

Rents in the city skyrocketed are up 19% year-over-year.

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Rents in the city skyrocketed are up 19% year-over-year.

If bragging about how much you're saving since leaving New York is your thing, there is certainly the data. A new report from New York City Comptroller Brad Lander found that, while rent prices rose 12.3% across the country between 2021 and 2022, prices skyrocketed by 19% in New York City. 

This comes on top of the fact that, as a major metropolis, New York already has significantly higher rents. While the median rent for a one-bedroom apartment is just above $1,769 nationwide, that number is at $2,106 in New York City.

In Manhattan, that number can easily surpass $4,000. 

"The average rent in Manhattan in February 2021 (when I moved into my current apartment) was $2,804," Bloomberg's Erin Lowry, who first drew attention to the situation, writes. "As of August, the average rent in Manhattan was $3,998, based on Zillow  (ZG) - Get Zillow Group Inc. Report rental index data. It's not uncommon to hear about people’s landlords asking for $700 to $1,200 more per month at a lease renewal."

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New York's Problem Is Actually Happening Everywhere

These types of statistics are often thrown around by those who don't like or were forced to leave the city, but rent has been skyrocketing in most major urban centers for years now.

The city with the steepest increases is actually, according to a recent analysis by Realtor.com, Miami--rents in the city soared by more than 37% between 2021 and 2022. In another Florida city, Orlando, rent prices rose by 23.9% year-over-year in June.

A popular destination for California transplants and others looking for pandemic-related changes of scenery, Austin recently took the third spot in the country where rent prices are rising the fastest.

An average $1,826 rent is more than 20% higher than it was a year ago.

A lot of these prices come down to supply and demand that is exacerbated at particularly popular cities with a dearth of available housing.

Cities like Austin and Phoenix are also in the midst of a new wave of popularity while New York and San Francisco have been seeing large numbers of people who left during the pandemic try to come back to the city.

Rent Where You Want to Live? Or Buy Where It's Going to Grow?

"Lower vacancies naturally lead to higher rents, because landlords know tenants are having trouble finding their next place to rent," Zillow Senior Economist Jeff Tucker recently told The Atlantic. "When every seat in the game of musical chairs is taken, landlords don't feel much competitive pressure to lower rents."

Most renters in large urban centers will eventually face the question of whether the high rent is worth the lifestyle offered by these cities--$4,000 in monthly New York rent is, multiplied by 12 months, almost a third of the $149,900 median home price in Ohio's Youngstown.

Low prices will not sway someone who needs to be in New York for work or craves its life and atmosphere, but, for others, moving away to an up-and-coming city can offer a real estate market entry point that will build equity and give more flexibility to buy somewhere else in a few years.

Two hours outside both NYC and Philadelphia, Pennsylvania's Scranton saw its home prices grow by 20% year-over-year while the median is still a below-national-average $225,000.

"So much of this analysis comes down to the size of a home that you want or need and the location," writes Lowry. "Getting into a neighborhood on the precipice of being the next hot area is where the returns can truly soar."

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Part 1: Current State of the Housing Market; Overview for mid-March 2024

Today, in the Calculated Risk Real Estate Newsletter: Part 1: Current State of the Housing Market; Overview for mid-March 2024
A brief excerpt: This 2-part overview for mid-March provides a snapshot of the current housing market.

I always like to star…

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Today, in the Calculated Risk Real Estate Newsletter: Part 1: Current State of the Housing Market; Overview for mid-March 2024

A brief excerpt:
This 2-part overview for mid-March provides a snapshot of the current housing market.

I always like to start with inventory, since inventory usually tells the tale!
...
Here is a graph of new listing from Realtor.com’s February 2024 Monthly Housing Market Trends Report showing new listings were up 11.3% year-over-year in February. This is still well below pre-pandemic levels. From Realtor.com:

However, providing a boost to overall inventory, sellers turned out in higher numbers this February as newly listed homes were 11.3% above last year’s levels. This marked the fourth month of increasing listing activity after a 17-month streak of decline.
Note the seasonality for new listings. December and January are seasonally the weakest months of the year for new listings, followed by February and November. New listings will be up year-over-year in 2024, but we will have to wait for the March and April data to see how close new listings are to normal levels.

There are always people that need to sell due to the so-called 3 D’s: Death, Divorce, and Disease. Also, in certain times, some homeowners will need to sell due to unemployment or excessive debt (neither is much of an issue right now).

And there are homeowners who want to sell for a number of reasons: upsizing (more babies), downsizing, moving for a new job, or moving to a nicer home or location (move-up buyers). It is some of the “want to sell” group that has been locked in with the golden handcuffs over the last couple of years, since it is financially difficult to move when your current mortgage rate is around 3%, and your new mortgage rate will be in the 6 1/2% to 7% range.

But time is a factor for this “want to sell” group, and eventually some of them will take the plunge. That is probably why we are seeing more new listings now.
There is much more in the article.

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Pharma industry reputation remains steady at a ‘new normal’ after Covid, Harris Poll finds

The pharma industry is hanging on to reputation gains notched during the Covid-19 pandemic. Positive perception of the pharma industry is steady at 45%…

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The pharma industry is hanging on to reputation gains notched during the Covid-19 pandemic. Positive perception of the pharma industry is steady at 45% of US respondents in 2023, according to the latest Harris Poll data. That’s exactly the same as the previous year.

Pharma’s highest point was in February 2021 — as Covid vaccines began to roll out — with a 62% positive US perception, and helping the industry land at an average 55% positive sentiment at the end of the year in Harris’ 2021 annual assessment of industries. The pharma industry’s reputation hit its most recent low at 32% in 2019, but it had hovered around 30% for more than a decade prior.

Rob Jekielek

“Pharma has sustained a lot of the gains, now basically one and half times higher than pre-Covid,” said Harris Poll managing director Rob Jekielek. “There is a question mark around how sustained it will be, but right now it feels like a new normal.”

The Harris survey spans 11 global markets and covers 13 industries. Pharma perception is even better abroad, with an average 58% of respondents notching favorable sentiments in 2023, just a slight slip from 60% in each of the two previous years.

Pharma’s solid global reputation puts it in the middle of the pack among international industries, ranking higher than government at 37% positive, insurance at 48%, financial services at 51% and health insurance at 52%. Pharma ranks just behind automotive (62%), manufacturing (63%) and consumer products (63%), although it lags behind leading industries like tech at 75% positive in the first spot, followed by grocery at 67%.

The bright spotlight on the pharma industry during Covid vaccine and drug development boosted its reputation, but Jekielek said there’s maybe an argument to be made that pharma is continuing to develop innovative drugs outside that spotlight.

“When you look at pharma reputation during Covid, you have clear sense of a very dynamic industry working very quickly and getting therapies and products to market. If you’re looking at things happening now, you could argue that pharma still probably doesn’t get enough credit for its advances, for example, in oncology treatments,” he said.

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Q4 Update: Delinquencies, Foreclosures and REO

Today, in the Calculated Risk Real Estate Newsletter: Q4 Update: Delinquencies, Foreclosures and REO
A brief excerpt: I’ve argued repeatedly that we would NOT see a surge in foreclosures that would significantly impact house prices (as happened followi…

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Today, in the Calculated Risk Real Estate Newsletter: Q4 Update: Delinquencies, Foreclosures and REO

A brief excerpt:
I’ve argued repeatedly that we would NOT see a surge in foreclosures that would significantly impact house prices (as happened following the housing bubble). The two key reasons are mortgage lending has been solid, and most homeowners have substantial equity in their homes..
...
And on mortgage rates, here is some data from the FHFA’s National Mortgage Database showing the distribution of interest rates on closed-end, fixed-rate 1-4 family mortgages outstanding at the end of each quarter since Q1 2013 through Q3 2023 (Q4 2023 data will be released in a two weeks).

This shows the surge in the percent of loans under 3%, and also under 4%, starting in early 2020 as mortgage rates declined sharply during the pandemic. Currently 22.6% of loans are under 3%, 59.4% are under 4%, and 78.7% are under 5%.

With substantial equity, and low mortgage rates (mostly at a fixed rates), few homeowners will have financial difficulties.
There is much more in the article. You can subscribe at https://calculatedrisk.substack.com/

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