2) Ordinarily in this phase of the business cycle, debt is expensive and difficult to obtain. Again, this is currently not the case. Interest rates are still at historically low levels and although lenders are tightening underwriting criteria, financing for apartment investment is readily available. Seventy-five percent to 80 percent leverage is easy to obtain.
Low interest rates have supported the drop in capitalization rates because there is still positive financial leverage (and cash flow) with a 7.5 percent cap deal if you are borrowing 80 percent of the money at 6 percent. Also worthy of mention is that current financing is very flexible compared to the locked-in conduit debt that was placed on a large amount of apartments during the early to mid-1990s.
3) In the past, during a downturn in the cycle there were relatively few buyers in the market. During the early 1990s there were less than half the number of buyers in the market than during the height of the previous cycle of 1985 and 1986. Even though we are two years into the recession, there are more buyers in the market today than at the height of the cycle.
4) And while capitalization rates tend to increase during this phase of the business cycle, they have actually decreased during this recession.
5) Finally, the multifamily market is use to seeing a fair amount of desperation in the industry during a downturn. However, the desperation in the trough of the last cycle resulted in the formation of the Resolution Trust Corp.
Although certain markets have been affected more than others, in the aggregate the apartment market is relatively healthy. This has been a comparatively mild recession by any metric.
Markets in Southern California are among the healthiest of the nation, with vacancies below 5 percent. This is due to positive job growth, high demand from investors and not enough supply of available properties to meet the demand, and low interest rates.
Demand for apartments will remain high and should support current prices. In the event some unforeseen variable negatively impacts apartment operations, it will probably have more effect on lowering the velocity of transactions, not prices. Due to the lack of desperation in the market, most sellers will elect to hold their assets rather than accept a lower price. Current conditions in the San Francisco Bay area support this theory. Although most industry veterans are predicting a relatively flat 2003, most believe we are through the worst of times and that the recovery will begin during late 2003 or early 2004.
As is the case most of the time, whether an investor should hold, sell, or purchase apartment assets and in which markets this activity should occur should have more to do with an individual’s specific situation, overall investment strategy, and time constraints than general market conditions. Apartments are selling for record-setting prices but those buyers believe that prices will only increase in the future.
–Linwood Thompson is managing director of the national multi housing group at Marcus & Millichap.