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The Rental Bubble Is Also Bursting

Tyler Durden's picture




 

Over the past year we have been closely following the slow motion bursting of the latest hot money, spec capital, and foreclosure subsidy-driven housing bubble, which has for now mostly impacted the peripheral areas like Las Vegas, where we reported housing demand has plunged by 20% while supply has exploded as everyone scrambles to cash out. The fact that the foreclosure wave has just turned and the number of California foreclosures recently exploded by 57% in one month merely is further confirmation of just how weak organic support for home prices truly was. And as the Emerging Market hot money wave turns (thank you taper) and as recyclable capital suddenly becomes scarce, look for this trend to hit the major metropolitan centers next, as even the wealthy investors finally pull back from the luxury US housing market.

However, even as the primary housing market was slowly circling the drain, the one silver lining was that the US rental market, largely dominated by several Wall Street investment firms, most notably Blackstone, was doing relatively well. It was doing so well that equity sponsors such as Blue Mountain couldn't wait to offload their prized REIT property to the public, culminating with last August's IPO of American Homes 4 Rent, the second-largest US homes-for-rent operator after Blackstone. And since the stock price of all these corporations was performing admirably or at all time highs, supported by the record fungible liquidity sloshing among the world's interconnected markets, nobody was very concerned.

It is time to get concerned.

Last night, American Homes 4 Rent (AMH) announced that Peter J. Nelson, its Chief Financial Officer, will resign his position, following a transition period, to "pursue other career interests. The company has begun the process of identifying Mr. Nelson's successor. Mr. Nelson is expected to remain with the company into the second quarter to complete the company's year-end financial reporting and to provide for an orderly transition for his replacement." That he made this announcement in such a hurry, without even having found a successor, speaks volumes about what is coming over the horizon.

For those who are confused about the significance of this departure, which may have marked the peak of the rental property bubble, here is a Bloomberg report that was released concurrently with the AMH announcement, and which confirms that the rental bubble has indeed popped.

Rents collected on the collateral for the first U.S. rental-home securities declined by 7.6 percent from October to January, according to Morningstar Inc.

 

Payments declined as expiring leases and early tenant departures left residences backing the bonds of Blackstone (BX) Group LP’s Invitation Homes vacant, Becky Cao and Brian Alan, analysts at Morningstar’s credit-ratings unit, said in a report. While 8.3 percent of the properties were vacant or occupied by delinquent renters in January, renewals on 78.5 percent of leases that expired the prior month exceeded the analysts’ expected rate of 66.7 percent.

 

The deal’s performance is being watched as Wall Street bankers and institutional property investors seek to follow Blackstone’s $479.1 million transaction in November with additional offerings. Initial lease expirations for the 3,207 homes are scheduled to peak from January through March, Morningstar said. To woo investors and rating firms in the new market, the transaction started with all of the units leased, unlike bonds backed by apartment-building loans.

 

One dealer was offering to sell top-rated notes from the Blackstone transaction for about face value today, according to Empirasign Strategies LLC, which tracks securitization-market trading. Some riskier slices were being offered by JPMorgan Chase & Co. for less than par last month, people with knowledge of trading said then.

And following today's Walmart news of yet another ugly quarter (with guidance for more to come), not to mention recent retail sales and general abysmal economic reports, we can only conclude that what was once America's middle class will soon be homeless, and using an EBT card for all their dining needs... but at least it will have unlimited and free global texting opportunities courtesy of Whatsapp, not to mention constant blasts by NSA, pardon, Facebook-hosted IP-tracking cookie enabled ads. The good news: since the polar vortex is largely over, at least sub-bridge living will be in largely balmy conditions if only for another 6-9 months.

 

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Thu, 02/20/2014 - 18:53 | 4459620 syntaxterror
syntaxterror's picture

If you like your $3500/mo 1BR, you can keep your $3500/mo 1BR. 

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 18:55 | 4459632 I woke up
I woke up's picture

Good time to propagandize the benefits of living in a FEMA camp. 

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 19:52 | 4459837 August
August's picture

FEMA camps are happenin' places, it's true.  But I'd rather be living at the beach, outside The Homeland.

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 19:18 | 4459719 NihilistZero
NihilistZero's picture

Oh Housing Bubble 2.0, we hardly knew ya...

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 19:20 | 4459728 Carl Popper
Carl Popper's picture

People need to have some common sense.  When these corporations or other groups are offering equity for cash, then clearly they believe the cash is more valuable. 

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 19:39 | 4459794 buzzsaw99
buzzsaw99's picture

Some riskier slices were being offered by JPMorgan Chase & Co...

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 20:11 | 4459901 daxtonbrown
daxtonbrown's picture

Yeah, but does this mean I shouldn't go back to being a realtor here in Las Vegas? I mean my broker is bullish (he's always bullish).

I'm so confused. Is handwriting on the wall really on the wall, or on a sign on my back that says "kick me"?

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 21:57 | 4460286 omi
omi's picture

Well, not really. Most of money in real estate is made in property appreciation. So it makes sense that if they got properties for X and sold them for 1.5-2X, they made money and can now deploy it towards other strategies, even buying gold :D

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 22:37 | 4460360 Kasperfx
Kasperfx's picture

i'm in South Florida and a have been renting the past 5 years I always keep my eyes on the rental market to see what my monthly could get elcewere and trust assured theirs 100X the inventory on the market then last year!!,and guess what their all very negotiable I even see about 20x more for rent by owner " mainly to try cutting the greedy broker out in hopes to get some cash flow in.. I Predick their will soon be " reverse tenets bidding wars" just to get tenets in to help pay the monthly these buy to rent funds and Donald trumps  wannabes are all GOING TO CRASH BIG TIME 

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 22:24 | 4460384 q99x2
q99x2's picture

There go the plumbing.

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 22:29 | 4460414 robertocarlos
robertocarlos's picture

If you can't pay the rent then you can live under a bridge. landlord doesn't care, he'd rather leave the place empty.

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 22:45 | 4460500 earl swagger
earl swagger's picture

judicial FC states & AG's are not doing their voting public any favors. The 95% paying on time ,as agreed, will learn that the value of their home is that of the last three REO sales in bubble markets.

current FC / REO disposition best practices are resulting in a proposed recovery

avg age experienced appraiser is 53. Min experience 5 yrs. Apprentice worthless for 5 yrs = no appraisers in the pipeline.

appraisers extinct 10 yrs between demos , regs, & new GSE. Blacklists..

2800 Homeowners turned out in Houston for hearing 600 unit apt complex...

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 23:03 | 4460572 CheapBastard
CheapBastard's picture
Plan to divide California into 6 states advances

 

http://news.yahoo.com/plan-divide-california-6-states-advances-003356451...

Thu, 02/20/2014 - 23:06 | 4460590 harleyjohn45
harleyjohn45's picture

Out of 23 rentals, I'm over 90% occupied.  My rent is cheap, buildings in good shape, I owe nothing, I have mainenance, insurance, and taxes only.  I make over 20% return on investment.  I actually see nothing changing in the near future.  I've been doing this for 25 years.  The problem with most landlords, is they are lazy and greedy.  That is a sure sign for failure. 

Fri, 02/21/2014 - 04:54 | 4461123 Kasperfx
Kasperfx's picture

again here is another guy boosting how great he is doing renting and not providing the locations where he is, most of these kind of post all over the web are full of it from realtors.. 

Fri, 02/21/2014 - 01:12 | 4460899 Amil Muzz
Amil Muzz's picture

I have a buddy that is an area manager for AMH and can report that their underwriting of these acquisitions is an absolute joke. If I were an equity analyst, I'd pay special attention to the real estate tax line item as the assumptions they make on their acquisitions are laughably low. Underwritten rents are also a joke, but I guess that's expected when you're just trying to push money out the door as quickly as possible and worrying about execution later. $2,000+ asking rents in Belvidere, IL.... best of luck with that!

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