Landlords have pushed renters to their limit
In the long tradition of serfdom and slumlords, it seems that we've finally reached the point where renters cannot pay anything more for the privilege of not living on the street.
Rent gains are finally starting to slow in many parts of the US, cooling a years-long boom that sapped affordability from coast to coast. Landlords have little choice but to ease off big increases: Demand from tenants is suddenly sinking.
...Rents nationally increased 7.5% in September from a year earlier, above pre-pandemic levels, but down from a peak jump of nearly 18% at the start of the year, when vacancies also were lower, according to Apartment List. Preliminary October data show a dropoff that’s faster than the typical seasonal decline and would be the steepest in month-over-month data dating back to 2017, said Igor Popov, the listing platform’s chief economist.A cooldown has yet to show up in the consumer price index that’s closely watched by the Fed, about a third of which is tied to the cost of shelter. That measure of rents rose at a record annual pace last month.
While rent hikes are finally slowing down, evictions are going up. In New York, landlords have kept 60,000 rent-controlled apartments off the market.
All of this is happening just as home prices have reached their peak.
At the national level, home values stayed roughly steady from August to September after dropping slightly in the previous two months. The typical home value is $358,283, up 12.9% from last year and nearly $110,000 (43.5%) above 2019.
New pending home sales fell 18% month over month and are down 29.3% from last year.
The price of anything rising 43.5% a year is an unsustainable bubble. The fuel of that bubble came from deep-pocketed investors. Investor purchases of residential homes as rental properties as a share of all residential home sales, rose from 10.5% in May 2021 to nearly 18% in May 2022.
The bursting of that bubble has come from rising mortgage rates. Monthly mortgage payment on a typical home bought in 2022 has almost doubled since 2019, going from $897 to $1,643.
"it would mean the euthanasia of the rentier, and, consequently, the euthanasia of the cumulative oppressive power of the capitalist to exploit the scarcity-value of capital. Interest today rewards no genuine sacrifice, any more than does the rent of land. The owner of capital can obtain interest because capital is scarce, just as the owner of land can obtain rent because land is scarce. But whilst there may be intrinsic reasons for the scarcity of land, there are no intrinsic reasons for the scarcity of capital..."
- John Maynard Keynes
Comments
How far backwards and painful can it go? n/t
Until
people stop thinking we are progressing.
As an example, when people get a raise they think they are moving forward. But the raise does not keep up with the declining value of the dollar, presented as inflation to confuse.
They/we are moving backwards in small increments, but always back.
IMHO
Neither Russia nor China is our enemy.
Neither Iran nor Venezuela are threatening America.
Cuba is a dead horse, stop beating it.
This country is a hellhole
After one serious adverse event, like a serious illness, a death in the family, or a natural disaster, the standard of living and stability to which one may be accustomed disappears. One discovers the true avaricious and deceitful nature of business people, doctors, insurance people, landlords, real estate agents and the like. Hopefully, I'm not offending anyone here, but they are dishonest scum.
(edit) On reflection, I will say it's a rebuttable presumption, that also includes lawyers, judges, and legislators.
語必忠信 行必正直
Very true
We only notice things are bad when we can't afford that one thing less out of all the things we need to live. Capitalism is a cancer that's eating us alive, it's methods are ruthless, and "our" government encourages it.
I'm no longer in the comfort zone
語必忠信 行必正直
Yup. Agonizingly true.
And it doesn't take long after a disaster to realize that whatever insurance you thought you had wasn't enough. I'm now putting a lot of our personal property on stated-value policies as we replace what we lost. We won't see any payment from the insurance company until March 19, 2023, at 11:59PM (364 days after the fire), although all of the various bloodsuckers (cleanup/"restoration" people) have already been paid. After which our insurance carrier will certainly cancel us, and we'll have to start the whole search for new scumbags again.
One this I can say: take pictures and videos of whatever you have that you care about *now*, and save them offsite somewhere, so that you'll have something to give the insurance people when they say "Prove it!". Which they will.
If we weren't both employed in decent jobs, childfree, and pretty much asset-free, we would be shit out of luck. The US financial food chain regards all of us as "food".
Twice bitten, permanently shy.
The first and only (hopefully) time we had to file a claim
on our house due to an extreme weather event which moved trees
into the roof, I must say the insurance company ( a small outfit in New Hampshire)
was very forthcoming and covered most our losses at what I would consider as
being a minimal hassle. Just posted the expenses incurred and was soon
reimbursed. So, I guess it depends on your carrier, underwriter and agent.
It does work sometimes. Sorry it is not the case with you.
Very similar circumstances here
About the lease and landlord problem- my lease was nominally 41 pages long, each page really containing 4 pages of legal conditions to fulfill. So a 164 page lease? Really, this to me is evidence of bad faith, an onerous contract, an adhesion contract. But when you have no place to live what choice is there. The place is a dump, smells, water leaks everywhere and other damage. Landlords suck, and their corporate lawyers suck, too.
語必忠信 行必正直
All the nice "enviromentalists" think --
"oooh we're going to mitigate climate change and everything will be net zero." And they think this when all they're doing is siding with the super-rich in the class war.
https://caucus99percent.com/content/carbon-tax-thing-dead-yet
“One of the things I love about the American people is that we can hold many thoughts at once” - Kamala Harris
All this takes us to the question, why?
Rents are already way beyond the sweet spot. Yes, if landlords made their empty units available rents would decline, like how if employers actually hired the people they actually needed they would have to pay a living wage. (no, not really - most "jobs" today are unnecessary, but that's another rant) But that implies the losses landlords accept holding units vacant does not exceed the profits they would make if they rented them. (Yes, but only because the bribes they pay to keep governments from confiscating their units and freeing them are not counted, or the cost of funding propagandists, or police to enforce evictions, or judges to legitimize them, or a thousand other secret costs) See what happens?
On to Biden since 1973
Big Tech is really to blame
RealPage's YieldStar to maximize return, even by allowing more units to sit empty (provided the high-paying occupied units more than make up the difference).
for this rental market that keeps going skyward. More and more landlords use rental software likeThis creates a default cartel, especially as more big landlords use it.
Some numbers
Some numbers
Some numbers from just a few years ago