Santa Fe New Mexican

Rise of build-for-rent

With builders struggling to create entry-level housing, more turning to rental model

- By Alex Veiga

HLOS ANGELES omebuilder­s and other real estate companies are increasing­ly betting that would-be homebuyers frustrated with a shortage of homes for sale and runaway prices will settle for renting their slice of the American Dream.

While individual homeowners and mom and pop investors still account for the vast majority of single-family rental homes, homebuilde­rs have stepped up constructi­on this year of new houses being built for rent.

In the third quarter, builders broke ground on 16,000 single-family homes slated to become rentals. That’s the highest quarterly total of housing starts for built-to-rent homes going back to at least 1990, according to an analysis of U.S. Census data by the National Associatio­n of Home Builders. The trade associatio­n’s analysis includes only homes that builders are going to hang onto and rent out. That excludes homes being built to be sold to real estate investment trusts or investors planning on renting the properties.

While those rental homes accounted for only 5.4 percent of all single-family housing starts in the third quarter, builders are doubling down on the build-for-rent model, with some already aiming to build more homes for rent for investors or corporate landlords eager to capitalize should potential homeowners continue to struggle to find affordable properties.

“Traditiona­l builders are finding it very hard to do entry-level housing,” said Ali Wolf, chief economist at Zonda Economics, a real estate industry tracker. “The build-to-rent space kind of serves its purpose as being entry-level housing in a market where new homes at a reasonable price point are few and far between.”

Rising home prices and fierce competitio­n

Traditiona­l builders are finding it very hard to do entry-level housing.

The build-to-rent space kind of serves its purpose as being entry-level housing in a market where new homes at a reasonable price point are few and far between.”

Ali Wolf, chief economist at Zonda Economics, a real estate industry tracker

for relatively few affordable homes for sale are stretching the limits of affordabil­ity for many would-be buyers. The median price of a previously occupied U.S. home jumped to $353,900 in October, a 13.1 percent increase from a year earlier, according to the National Associatio­n of Realtors. Homes sell within days of being put up for sale.

These trends have been good news for landlords, however. Rents for U.S. single-family homes jumped 10.2 percent in September from a year earlier, according to real estate informatio­n company CoreLogic. The firm excludes apartments from its single-family home rental data, though it includes condominiu­m and townhome rentals.

CoreLogic expects rents to continue climbing through at least the end of this year, citing strong demand, low supply of homes for rent and a strengthen­ing job market.

Recent quarterly earnings from the nation’s two largest publicly traded owners of single-family houses for rent underscore the favorable outlook.

Invitation Homes and American Homes 4 Rent both reported strong third-quarter results, boosted by rising rents and occupancy rates near all-time highs.

BTIG analyst James Sullivan reiterated his “Buy” rating for both real estate investment trusts, or REITs, noting that housing market trends, including the supply chain challenges and rising labor and material costs that are slowing the pace of constructi­on for homebuilde­rs, remain “very favorable” for single-family rentals.

Constructi­on of new U.S. homes was running at a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.52 million units as of October, according to the Commerce Department. That’s an increase of 0.4 percent from the rate a year earlier. But single-family home starts fell 3.9 percent from September to October and were down more than 10 percent from last year.

The number of housing starts for built-for-rent houses remains small relative to newly started homes slated for sale. All told, builders broke ground on 47,000 homes for rent over the last four quarters, a year-over-year increase of 17.5 percent, according to the NAHB. In the same period, builders broke ground on 1.14 million single-family homes.

Some of the nation’s largest homebuilde­rs are looking to take advantage of the demand for build-for-rent homes.

Some sell houses to investors or companies looking to take over communitie­s already packed with tenants. In July, PulteGroup announced a deal to build and sell roughly 7,500 homes over the next five years to Invitation Homes.

D.R. Horton has been building

CoreLogic expects rents to continue climbing through at least the end of this year.

apartment complexes and also single-family rental home communitie­s. This month, it estimated that its rental operations will generate more than $700 million in revenue from rental property sales during its current fiscal year. Horton also said it expects to increase its investment in its rental business by more than $1 billion in the same period.

This spring, Lennar formed a venture with several institutio­nal investors that aims to spend more than $4 billion to buy new single-family homes and townhomes from the homebuilde­r and, potentiall­y, other builders, and then rent them.

“It’s really evolved over time, but the star of the real estate show today is the build-to-rent space,” Wolf said.

 ?? PHOTO BY JOSH OLALDE ON UNSPLASH ?? Some of the nation’s largest homebuilde­rs are looking to take advantage of the demand for build-for-rent homes.
PHOTO BY JOSH OLALDE ON UNSPLASH Some of the nation’s largest homebuilde­rs are looking to take advantage of the demand for build-for-rent homes.

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