Apartment Finance
Today
REGIONAL MARKETS
Southeast
Huntsville’s Silver Lining
APARTMENT FINANCE TODAY • January/February 2010
Job growth spurred by the military’s BRAC initiative will help turn the tide of
apartment fundamentals.
BY Neil Victor
Affordable Deals: Whispering Hills Apartments,
a 12-building, 112-unit tax-credit deal in Huntsville,
Ala., went on the market in December 2009, with
an asking price of $1.6 million.
(Photo: Sperry Van Ness)
WHILE THE HUNTSVILLE, Ala., market
has weakened and slowed over the past
year, it is in better condition than many
similarly-sized markets in the nation.
Rents trended down and concessions
increased in 2009, but the apartment
market is banking on the military’s Base
Realignment and Closure (BRAC) initiative.
In north Alabama, BRAC has added
roughly 2,100 jobs, with 8,000 to 15,000
new jobs expected in the next three years.
Government and contractor positions will
cause growth in every sector of the region’s
economy and will be filled largely by recent
grads, a demographic that tends to rent.
What’s more, Huntsville is one of the
strongest communities in the nation. Forbes
and Kiplinger’s recently recognized the
city as one of the best places to live, and the
Milken Institute consistently ranks it as
one of the nation’s best performing MSAs.
“We’ve been impacted by the recession, but
we have a silver lining,” says Rick Davis,
director of Cummings Research Park for
Huntsville/Madison Chamber of Commerce.
“We’re in growth mode to accommodate
BRAC, and the future looks good.”
Still, the BRAC announcement has been
tempered by recent boom-bust economics,
which keeps fundamentals on the seesaw.
Pipeline Overflows
For the past 15 years, David Wilson with
Birmingham, Ala.-based Rock Apartment
Advisors has surveyed the Huntsville apartment
market. According to his mid-year
2009 report, occupancy is 91.3 percent, and
rents for Class A properties are down
2.5 percent from the previous year. Of these
complexes, nearly half (49 percent) offer
rent concessions. “There is definitely an
oversupply of new product here,” Wilson
says. “But it will correct in 2010 with the
growth from BRAC.”
Wilson reports that, before the recession
took hold, 4,107 units (14 projects)
were in the pipeline, plus a 400-bed student
complex being built for the University of
Alabama-Huntsville slated to be complete
in August 2010. Of those units, 300 were
delivered in 2009. Plus, five deals (1,270
units) are coming out of the ground and in
lease-up now, and another 640 units are in
due diligence. Land for 2,000 more units is
held in inventory for future need.
Most of the new multifamily construction
is happening in west Huntsville,
which has caused increased concessions in
this traditionally-strong community. The
southeast submarket is the most stable and
is reflecting above-average rent growth.
Madison, Ala., follows as the second-best
performing market in greater Huntsville.
Class C Buying Frenzy
Once BRAC was made public, investors
and developers worldwide targeted Huntsville
as an emerging market. Intensified
by the real estate boom, the buying frenzy caused local units to trade well-above historical
prices in the small Class C market.
Between 2002 and 2006, the average
asking price for a Class C unit rose from
$23,000 per door to $38,000 per door.
Average effective monthly rents rose from
$0.45 per square foot to $0.61 per square
foot, according to Jim Packard, president of
Huntsville-based Eagles Management Co.
Today is a different story. “Per-door
prices have fallen,” Packard says. “Gone
are the days when a seller could secure
financing by backing into cash flow with
creative numbers and a growth forecast.
[Now], buyers look for proven historical
performance.”
For investors, Class A and B opportunities
fluctuate between slim and none.
When such product is available, prudent
buyers look for cap rates ranging between
8 percent and 8.75 percent. This is about
200 basis points higher than 18 months
ago. Instead, most of the market’s trades
have occurred in smaller Class C complexes.
At year-end 2009, the MLS listed
116 Huntsville-area apartment properties
for sale, only 11 of which had more than
12 units.
Banking On It
Funding sources for stabilized properties
include local banks, Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, and the FHA. Recently,
the FHA financed the 136-unit Governor’s
House, which dry closed (without
funding) in December 2008 but finally
received an FHA 8 percent cap rate deal.
Huntsville lender Superior Bank will
consider investors that have good local
management in place and meet underwriting
guidelines. Rates from banks can
be as low as 6 percent interest-only or offer
amortization schedules up to 25 years,
depending on the property’s class. Loanto-
value (LTV) ranges from 80 percent
for Class B assets to 85 percent for Class A
assets, according to Darlina Bray, a senior
vice president at Superior Bank.
Similarly, Huntsville’s Bryant Bank at
year-end 2009 was quoting a floating rate
as low as 5 percent and would consider
funding for all four-unit or larger properties
with a 75 percent LTV and a debt
service coverage ratio of 1.30x. “With the
BRAC move mitigating layoffs, projections
look good here,” says Scott Seeley, president
of Bryant Bank.
NEIL VICTOR is a senior
advisor and associate broker
for Sperry Van Ness/Avat
Realty, specializing in the sale
and leasing of multifamily
properties. He is a member
of the National Association of
Realtors, the Huntsville Board
of Realtors, and the Institute of
Real Estate Management.
|