‘Hipsters’ Fueling Rental Market

RealtyTrac and Real Capital Analytics point out that investors are increasingly turning away from prime rental markets wherein there is no room for yield growth, and are now …

RealtyTrac and Real Capital Analytics point out that investors are increasingly turning away from prime rental markets wherein there is no room for yield growth, and are now betting on so-called “hipster” neighborhoods that are up-and-coming in the eyes of the young and upwardly mobile who seek low-profile areas that cater to pedestrian commuters. Popular enclaves within Brooklyn, for example, do not make the list because they are already too hot and rents are too high, but hyper-local markets within places like Pittsburgh, Norfolk, Minneapolis and Seattle are drawing more attention from savvy investors with an eye for trendsetting neighborhoods. For more on this continue reading the following article from National Real Estate Investor.

Multifamily investors looking for acquisition opportunities might do well to follow the trail of coffee shops to hip, pedestrian-friendly neighborhoods full of young renters.

“The culture surrounding the ‘hipster’ lifestyle has a major impact on local real estate markets, and mostly in a positive way,” says Daren Blomquist, vice president for RealtyTrac. RealtyTrac recently put out a list of the top 25 zip codes where apartment investors earn high yields and the neighborhood meets some objective criteria associated with hip, young renters.

The key words here are “high-yielding.” RealtyTrac’s list highlights places where prices for apartment properties have not already been bid up to the stratosphere, depressing investment yields. Investors have begun to turn away from those more expensive real estate markets, according to experts, looking for property with a great chance of improving values. For example, the volume of properties being traded in the most expensive property markets, like New York City, is rapidly falling of, according to Real Capital Analytics.

Deals that trumpet going-in cap rates below 4 percent may look less appealing given moderate rent growth and flat-lined occupancies,” says Victor Calanog, vice president of research and economics for Reis Inc. Neighborhoods the serve the growing demographic of younger renters may also have a better chance of beating Reis’ forecast of moderate rent growth.

Don’t expect to find famous neighborhoods at the top of the list. Brooklyn, N.Y., doesn’t get mentioned until the 15th spot, and then the Brooklyn neighborhood listed is the up-and-coming Sunset Park, not more well-known neighborhoods like Park Slope or Williamsburg. That’s because the list is in order by investment yield. Hip neighborhoods where property prices have are already high turn up near the bottom of the list, if they appear at all.

RealtyTrac created its list by focusing first of zip codes where more than 20 percent of the population is between the age of 25 and 34—what RealtyTrac calls the “prime hipster age.” RealtyTrac also narrowed the list to zip codes where at least 20 percent of the population either walked to work or used public transportation.

RealtyTrac also narrowed its list to zip codes where more than half the housing units are rented, instead of being owned by the people who live in them, and where the vacancy rate of rental housing was less than 5 percent. All these filters left RealtyTrac with a list of 83 zip codes, which the data firm put in order by gross investment yields based on fair market rents and median home price. The top 25 zip codes on the list all have gross yields above 4.5 percent.

Properties located in these neighborhoods may have much more room to improve. “A neighborhood branded as hipster is likely to see property values and rental rates rise while vacancies and foreclosures decline,” Blomquist. The value of living in these neighborhood is also likely to increase as restaurants, bars, coffee shops and other amenities open to serve the neighborhood’s young residents.

These neighborhoods are extremely appealing to real estate investors, whether they plan to rehabilitate, and quickly sell their properties, or instead plan to hold the properties for long periods, according to Blomquist.

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This article was republished with permission from National Real Estate Investor.

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