Apartment Finance
Today
REGIONAL MARKETS
Southeast
Atlanta Cools Down
APARTMENT FINANCE TODAY • January/February 2010
Fundamentals are expected to stabilize by the end of the year, pointing toward rent
growth in early 2011.
BY John Leonard
Chopping Block: Marcus & Millichap is selling
Austin Creek Apartments, a 120-unit property in
Marietta, Ga., that was developed in 1983.
(Photo: Marcus & Millichap)
AS
IN MANY OF the nation’s metro
areas, 2009 was not a pretty year for
Atlanta. Rent growth and occupancy
rates fell with each passing month, and
fundamentals will soften further through
the first quarter of this year as a result of
weaker demand.
The main culprit: job loss. Roughly
91,000 positions were trimmed from local
payrolls, driving up the unemployment rate
almost 270 basis points (bps) to 10.5 percent
as of October 2009. While job losses
are expected to continue in the near term,
there is reason for optimism. The pace of
unemployment is slowing, and the pipeline
of new units coming online will significantly
tighten by mid-summer 2010.
Additionally, completions in 2009
dropped to their lowest levels since 2004,
which should help vacancy rates stabilize
toward the end of this year. And just
beyond that, in the first quarter of 2011,
effective rent growth could potentially
return to the market.
A Slowing Pipeline
Construction activity has remained
somewhat steady as builders completed
5,000 rental units during the 12-month
period ending in the third quarter of 2009,
representing a 1.5 percent increase in stock.
This was a bump up from 2008, when
rental inventory expanded by 4,500 units.
But the rate of completions is expected
to slow dramatically this year. Nearly 3,600
units are under construction in the market,
with more than 1,500 units slated for
completion in 2010.
The planning pipeline contains nearly
14,700 units, though it’s unclear how many
of these units will come to fruition. Nearly
6,000 of those units are planned in the
Midtown submarket, an area also experiencing
substantial office development.
Supply growth and weaker demand
contributed to an 11.1 percent vacancy rate
at the end of the third quarter of 2009, up
nearly 180 bps since the third quarter of
2008. Third quarter vacancy of 9.6 percent
at Class A properties was 100 bps higher
than year-end 2008. Additionally, the loss
of 27,600 construction jobs since September
2008 has helped to escalate vacancy in
the metro’s Class B and C units by 260 bps,
to 12.1 percent. The current rate is also up
160 bps from the end of 2008.
The weak job market and expanding
rental stock will likely push vacancy to
increase to 11.5 percent in the first quarter
of 2010, a 90 bps increase since the beginning
of 2009.
Concession Attention
Asking rents continue to decline in
metro Atlanta but are expected to stabilize
by the end of the year. Effective rent
growth, though, will be slower to recover
due to increasing concessions.
Asking rents averaged $849 per month
as of September 2009, a decline of 1.5 percent
from year-end 2008. Effective rents of
$756 per month were down 1.6 percent in
that time.
Meanwhile, Class B and C asking rents
fell 1.1 percent year-over-year to $722 per
month in the third quarter; a 2.5 percent
loss to $970 per month was posted in the
Class A sector.
Given the drop in demand, it’s no surprise
that owners have further increased
concessions. Concessions were 11 percent
of asking rents in the fall of 2009, up from
10.5 percent of asking rents one year
earlier.
This trend won’t likely get any better in
the near term. Asking rents are expected
to drop another 2.3 percent to $842 per
month, while effective rents will decline
4.3 percent to $749 per month in the first
quarter of 2010.
Sales Outlook
Transaction velocity is expected to
remain constrained through the beginning
of 2010, given investor caution over the
short-term direction of the market. Deal
flow has declined by more than 60 percent
over the past two quarters, and prices will
likely moderate further into 2010 due to
waning demand.
Cap rates are currently averaging in the
mid-7 percent to low-8 percent range for
Class A properties, and B and C assets are
trading at initial yields of about 100 bps
higher.
Tepid investor demand and more
conservative financing expectations
are projected to drive cap rates higher
through the first half of 2010. Investors will
continue to focus on more stable, affluent
residential pockets in the northern portion
of the metro, such as north Atlanta, Sandy
Springs, Roswell, and Alpharetta.
Transaction velocity will remain
limited in the near term due to weakened
fundamentals and the persistent expectations
gap, though stabilized properties
continue to garner interest, especially in
higher-demand residential pockets north
of downtown.
Owners looking to exit the market
should consider selling now, as prices are
likely to moderate further given projections
for increasing concessions and rising
vacancy rates.
In all, Atlanta-area owners will hope
to minimize the damage of the recession
this year while casting their eyes to sunnier
skies by the end of the calendar. Some
short-term pain is expected, but there is
renewed optimism that the bottom of the
market is near and the climb back up is
close behind.
John Leonard is a vice
president and regional
manager of the Atlanta
office of Marcus &
Millichap Real Estate
Investment Services.
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