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Rent Hikes Predicted, Investors should Buy Now!

By
Real Estate Agent with Granite Real Estate "Cool Team" 01094982

I agree with these statistic quoted from Rent.com  For some time I have been saying, "where are all the displaced people going to go after their shortsales or foreclosure?  The will only stay with family an average of less than 6 months.  I am also getting inquires from many people looking for rentals.  In many areas in our vacinity, your mortgage would be less than rents in comparable properties.  Why Rent when you could Own?

Here's the article from News Genius:   Renters beware: Double-digit rent hikes may be coming soon.

Already, rental vacancy rates have dipped below the 10% mark, where they had been lodged for most of the past three years.

"The demand for rental housing has already started to increase," said Peggy Alford, president of Rent.com. "Young people are starting to get rid of their roommates and move out of their parent's basements."

By 2012, she predicts the vacancy rate will hover at a mere 5%. And with fewer units on the market, prices will explode.

Rent hikes have averaged less than 1% a year over the past decade, according to Commerce Department statistics, adjusted for inflation. Now, Alford expects rents to spike 7% or so in each of the next two years - to a national average that will top $800 per month.

In the hottest rental markets, the increases will likely top the 10% mark annually for the next couple of years. In San Diego, Alford anticipates rents will rise more than 31% by 2015. In Seattle rents will climb 29% over that period; and in Boston, they may jump between 25% and 30%.

This is a sharp change from the recession, when many Americans couldn't afford to live on their own. More than 1.2 million young adults moved back in with their parents from 2005 to 2010, said Lesley Deutch of John Burns Real Estate Consulting. Many others doubled up together.

As a result, landlords had to reduce prices and offer big incentives to snag renters.

Now that the recession is easing, many of these young people are ready to find new digs, mostly as renters, not owners. Plus, the foreclosure crisis continues unabated, and the millions losing their homes are looking for new places to live

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Karen Anne Stone
New Home Hunters of Fort Worth and Tarrant County - Fort Worth, TX
Fort Worth Real Estate

Cathy, in addition to all the ideas you have put forth in your post, I think that as the market recovers, and as home values also recover in the areas where they were hardest hit... the rental fees will go up with them.  Just a thought.

Mar 19, 2011 01:12 PM