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Miami’s Population Is Changing And That’s Making Real Estate Change, Too

A population increase of foreign-born and northerners is influencing real estate in South Florida.

About 94 new people a day moved to Miami-Dade, Broward and Palm Beach counties from July 2017 to July 2018, most of them from out of the country. Meanwhile, about 58,000 Floridians over the course of the year moved to another state, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and the U.S. Census Bureau.

The Bloomberg study credited the loss of locals in major metro areas to pricey real estate and tax law changes.

“Northerners and foreigners coming down here, that’s going to drive prices,” said Kevin Morris, a senior director for Colliers International Affordable Housing division.

Developers continue to see an international clientele, especially those from Latin America, moving to the Magic City.

“Latin American economies are not in a good place but you can expect the elite to find the right liquidity that would be required to move abroad,” said Marcelo Kingston, developer and managing director for Multiplan Real Estate Asset Management.

High-earning professionals able to work from anywhere also are moving to South Florida from Connecticut, Massachusetts and New York.

The influx of northerners is reshaping development strategies in two ways, he said.

First, it forces Kingston’s team to build for someone putting down roots.

“We see Miami as a final destination,” he said. “When we position ourselves, we try to find well-established communities in Miami Beach.”

Second, northerners are looking for interior upgrades such as fancy flooring and cabinetry.

In the case of the condo 57 Ocean at 5775 Collins Ave., Kingston said: “As the developer, you need to be flexible in customizing the right upgrades” that a permanent resident would want.

“Design has to be in the right mindset towards meeting those needs,” he said.

The affordable housing market will also benefit from the population changes. The number of renters will grow as it becomes harder for the middle class and blue-collar workers to buy. Vacancy rates will drop and rents will increase, Morris said.

“From an affordable developer’s perspective if there’s an increase in rent levels it helps them because they are going to be able to charge more rent for their properties,” he said. “The developer will reap a benefit in the market increasing in rental value.”

Increased rents in affordable housing options will still be cheaper than what else is on the market since rent is based on an area’s median prices.

So, how could offering affordable housing benefit a developer?

Take an average $1,000 monthly rent in a market as affordable property, it’s marketed at 60% of that rent, or $600. If the median rent increases to $1,200 in the area, then affordable-property owners can charge $700. So, “from an affordable housing owner’s standpoint, higher rent is actually a good thing,” Morris said. And that could mean more affordable housing being made available.

The predictions for affordable housing may mean a brighter tomorrow but, for now, Floridians are looking elsewhere as rent and the cost of living inch higher. Over half of Miami’s population, 70%, are renters, according to research by Florida International University’s Jorge M. Perez Metropolitan Center. And a good chunk of the population spends over 30% of their paychecks each month on housing, which is more than what’s recommended for housing costs.

It costs a family of four about $85,000 a year to live in Miami-Dade County, according to the Economic Policy Institute’s Family Budget Calculator. And wages aren’t keeping up.

“What I’ve seen now is that some Floridians might be leaving because the cost of living has been growing a lot,” Kingston said.

The lack of available affordable housing is such a concern that Metropolitan Center’s AICP Associate Director Ned Murray’s team is trying to solve it with an affordable housing master plan.

“The two big factors: How much are you going to get paid and where are you going to live? They are getting more difficult even for people looking to move here when you look at wages versus housing costs,” Murray said.

The mid-market is the one area in South Florida not expected to see much growth.

“That’s going away for the most part,” Murray said. “From the developer’s standpoint, they are having a hard time building at that mid-market because of the price of land and the scarcity of land that would be ideal for new housing construction for that mid-market.”

The median purchase price of a home, about $350,000 in Miami, is not affordable to 85% of all city households, Murray said.

“Miami is becoming expensive to raise a family,” said resident Mary Snow, executive director of the Coral Gables Community Foundation. “Could we move to Vero Beach or the Carolinas and live more cheaply? Yeah. And we’ve had a lot of friends do that.”

“But,” she said, “this is home.”

Besides family close by, jobs, and being second- and third-generation Miamians, the Magic City’s amenities and culture also keep Snow and her husband here.

“We always have people that move away and come back. I hope we continue to see that,” Snow said.

Real estate broker and EWM Realty International President Ron Shuffield is not concerned that the population changes will hurt the real estate market: “The community will continue to grow. Will it continue to grow with people born here? Not necessarily, but it can.”

Real estate, regardless of who is buying, is being sold and transactions are expected to continue.

“We’ll always have people moving in and out,” he said. But “we’re selling property” whether it’s through exchanging currency or welcoming someone from South Carolina.

Source:  Chicago Tribune

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The ‘Incredible’ Flow Of Capital Into Multifamily Is Expected To Increase In 2020

The U.S. multifamily sector has emerged as a top investor target during this cycle, and despite concerns of a looming recession, industry leaders expect the flow of investment to only increase next year.

Top capital markets executives, speaking Wednesday at Bisnow’s Multifamily Annual Conference New England, said they expect equity and debt flow into the sector to continue to rise. They said they see institutional investors allocating more money toward multifamily, banks aggressively competing to provide loans for apartment and condo projects, and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac beginning a new spending cycle next week with a combined $200B budget.

All of this competition to provide equity and debt for multifamily projects has narrowed the yields on these deals, but with uncertainty in other sectors of the economy, experts believe investors will be happy to accept slightly lower returns.   Gregory Bates, the chief operating officer of developer GID, said his firm manages money for some of the world’s largest pension funds and sovereign wealth funds. He said they remain bullish on the multifamily sector. GID’s portfolio comprises more than 30,000 residential units and it has a 10,000-unit construction pipeline.

“Real estate allocations are going to stay where they are or go up,” Bates said. “Apartments and industrial are at the top of everyone’s list … There are terrific tailwinds on the capital side.”

Walker & Dunlop Managing Director Andrew Gnazzo also foresees an increase in institutional investment.

“Life insurance companies this year have allocated more money to multifamily, and everything we’re hearing is they’re going to allocate more in 2020,” Gnazzo said.   In addition to large amounts of incoming equity, Gnazzo said debt providers are also clamoring to loan money on multifamily projects.   “There is an incredible amount of capital in the debt space,” Gnazzo said. “There is a really nice bucket of capital on both the debt and the equity side.”

The inflow of debt is not just seeking apartment projects, Cornerstone Realty Capital President Paul Natalizio said, but lenders are also bullish on condos, a sector they have had concerns about in the past.

“There is a surprisingly very strong market for condos,” Natalizio said. “It’s an entirely different market now. Lenders will tell you there are not enough condos … Banks have come a long way in that area, they’re very aggressive.”

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are also expected to pour more money into the multifamily space in the coming months.

The two government-sponsored enterprises pulled back on spending over the summer, experts said, but last month the Federal Housing Finance Agency announced new loan purchase caps that will allow Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac to spend a combined $200B over a 15-month period from the start of Q4 through the end of 2020.

“The clock starts Oct. 1,” National Multifamily Housing Council Vice President of Capital Markets Dave Borsos said of the Fannie and Freddie allocation. “From that point to the end of 2020, each enterprise will have $100B to purchase loans.”

Gnazzo said this is an encouraging sign for multifamily owners and developers who utilize debt from Fannie and Freddie.

“As Q4 goes on and into Q1 and Q2, I think [Fannie and Freddie] will put their foot on the gas; they have to spend $200B,” Gnazzo said. “It’s encouraging for all that have enjoyed agency debt.”

The inflow of money to real estate comes as economic indicators, such as the inverted yield curve, point to a coming recession. Investment managers and brokers said capital providers are looking to multifamily real estate as a more stable sector than other portions of the economy, and are willing to accept lower returns than they may have in previous years.   Bates said his firm, GID, believes there will be a “hitch” in the economy at some point and it will slow the net operating income growth of apartment buildings. He said this may hurt investors who buy projects with three- or- five-year sale horizons, but those with time to wait should still see positive returns. He thinks investors are adjusting their expectations accordingly and would be happy with returns in the 6% to 7% range.

“Every investor we know, they won’t tell you this today, but 10 years from now they’ll be tickled pink if they get 6[% returns],” Bates said. “They think there will be a scarcity of product and believe producing 6 or 7 is going to be incredibly attractive relative to other global options.”

The expected returns on a multifamily project vary in different markets, CBRE Capital Markets Senior Vice President Todd Trehubenko said.

In Boston, where Wednesday’s event was held, he said investors’ return expectations have dropped from the 9%-to-10% range to the 5%-to-6% range.

“The amount of money out there chasing deals is astounding, and you have groups willing to accept low returns,” Trehubenko said.

Weston Associates Head of Acquisitions Elliott White agreed that return expectations are down for the Boston market, leading his firm to look elsewhere.

“A ton of institutional capital is coming in and saying, ‘We can’t buy anything with less than [10% returns], so my advice would be don’t buy deals in Boston,” White said. “The Boston market is still strong and will stay strong, but it won’t be the same source of high-yield investments.”

White instead said he is looking at the Mid-Atlantic, Gulf Coast and Midwest regions as areas providing higher returns to investors. The Davis Cos. Vice President of Investments Rachel Edwards agreed that investors need to look south for better yields.

“I do have to leave [Massachusetts], and the Southeast is the place I’m focused on now, from the Mid-Atlantic to Florida,” Edwards said.

Her firm is far from alone in moving south to find yield.

“It’s getting pretty competitive down there,” she said.

 

Source:  Bisnow

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Rent Reform In New York, California Propels New Wave Of Multifamily Investors To Miami

First, it was tax reform that pushed CEOs, hedge fund managers and other high-net-worth individuals to South Florida. They were lured in by the favorable climate, luxury residential properties and most of all, substantial tax savings.

Now, it is the multifamily investors who are heading to South Florida, and for a different reason: rent control, something the Sunshine State lacks.

In June, New York state passed a sweeping rent reform law, expanding its protections for millions of rent stabilized tenants. The law dramatically limits how landlords can increase rents on stabilized apartments and opens the door for rent stabilization to expand outside of New York City. It stopped short of a rent cap, but that is expected to be on the table in some form in the next legislative session.

In Illinois, although rent control advocates lost a legislative battle earlier this year, they’re gearing up for a push to overturn the statewide ban on rent control in Springfield next year. And California is now poised to implement a statewide cap on annual rent increases.

Multifamily investors are moving quickly and making offers on properties in South Florida, brokers say. But they are also encountering a strong rental market and low supply, which have pushed up prices.

Eleventrust, a commercial brokerage in Miami, is working with investors from New York and Los Angeles who are looking to shift their focus to Florida because of the impact the new laws will have on their current investments.

Jose Ramos, a broker with Eleventrust, said at least 40 percent of the calls it’s getting have been from New York investors who want to close on properties in South Florida. “There’s a lot of confusion, a lot of focus on getting their money out of there and getting it into high-yield markets,” he said.

The brokerage is negotiating with two groups of investors to acquire apartment properties, via 1031 exchanges. One is for the River Lofts Apartments, a 43-unit complex at 500 to 522 Northeast 78th Street in Miami’s Upper East Side neighborhood, which hit the market with Ramos and Rafael Fermoselle, Eleventrust’s managing partner, earlier this year. It’s on the market for about $7.8 million.

Ramos and Fermoselle are showing investors properties in gentrifying markets like Little River, Little Havana and Allapattah. “The thing with Miami-Dade specifically is there’s not a lot of product that’s big enough,” Fermoselle said.

The investors they’re dealing with are looking for deals in the $5 million to $30 million range.

Deme Mekras, managing partner of MSP Group, has also received offers from New York buyers who plan to invest in South Florida multifamily properties because of the recent rent reform measures. New Yorkers especially, are more comfortable with properties in the urban cores, he said.

Rent reform is also becoming a national issue, as more than a third of Americans are considered rent-burdened. The problem is worse in South Florida, according to a report from Freddie Mac earlier this year, which found that Miami ranked as the most rent-burdened market in the U.S.

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, a self-described Democratic socialist, is proposing a $2.5 trillion housing plan that would cap annual rent increases at 3 percent or one and a half times the consumer price index, whichever is higher.

Searching For Yield

Multifamily investors from out of state would prefer to spend their money on one large deal but are challenged by a lack of supply, brokers said. They’re non-institutional players, looking to spend in the range of $30 million and $40 million.

But because South Florida’s rental market has remained strong, some sellers aren’t willing to part with their property. And if they are, the prices are too high. Rents have increased by 15 to 20 percent over the last eight years, according to Hernando Perez, director of multifamily investment sales for residential brokerage Franklin Street. More people are also moving to Florida, in part because of the favorable tax climate.

“There are not a lot of deals that make sense and not a lot of deals to buy,” he said.

Perez said he is seeing a number of California buyers looking to use the proceeds of 1031 exchanges to buy in South Florida. They cited the pending statewide rent control legislation, known as AB 1482, as a reason. Perez said he is working with a group that wants to spend $10 million for a multifamily building. The group, which Perez declined to identify, is looking at properties in Hallandale Beach, Fort Lauderdale and Pompano Beach.

And what if Florida was to enact similar statewide rent regulations? Simple, Perez said.

“It would crush the profitability of the real estate market.”

 

Source:  The Real Deal

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