From the New York website: Banks
are shying away from financing new apartment projects as supply starts to
outpace demand.
This
year more than 378,000 new apartments are expected to be completed nationwide,
according to real estate researcher Axiometrics Inc. But only 50,000 of the
88,000 apartments completed in the fourth quarter of last year were rented out,
the Wall Street Journal reported.
Developers
are increasingly turning to non-traditional lenders and small regional banks,
like the Arkansas-based Bank
of the Ozarks, to fill out their capital stacks. Bank of the Ozarks has been
one of the most visible lenders in New York City in recent years, with about $2
billion in loans as of July 2016.
“Our
business has radically changed,” Toby Bozzuto, president and chief executive of
the Bozzuto Group, which has about eight buildings in New York City, told the
newspaper. “I haven’t seen anything this seismically different since 2008, when
credit dried up.”
Meanwhile
rent growth has slowed. In New York, San Francisco and Houston, rents dropped
roughly 1 percent from 2015 to 2016.
Last
month, 31 percent of all new leases in Manhattan included some
form of concessions, nearly double what it was a year ago, according to a Douglas
Elliman report. In Brooklyn, 18 percent of leases had concessions, compared to
just 5 percent last year. [WSJ] — Kathryn
Brenzel
Original Content The Real Deal
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