🚨A new CoStar/Harvard survey shows over half of U.S. renters are cost-burdened, and nearly 12 M households spend more than 50% of income on rent. Construction costs remain 20% above 2019 levels, blocking new supply despite marginal financing relief from Fed cuts. The 1.5 M-unit housing shortfall underscores that affordability challenges are structural, not cyclical. For CRE, rent-regulated and affordable deals require higher reserves, tighter underwriting, and cautious growth assumptions.

  • Cost-burdened renters: 50%+ of households in 2025

  • Severely burdened renters: ~12 M households spend >50% income on rent

  • Construction costs: +20% since 2019

  • Loan Performance. DSCR pressure from capped rents (0–3% growth). Expense inflation (4–5%) erodes margins; stress tests show risk of negative cash flow in older assets.

  • Demand Dynamics. High absorption keeps occupancy near 95%+, but delinquency risk is elevated in rent-burdened portfolios. Affordable demand outstrips new deliveries by ~240K units annually.

  • Asset Strategies. Operators should expand reserves ($450–500/unit/yr), minimize turnover through renewal incentives, and pursue grants/tax credits for capital work.

  • Capital Markets. Agency debt at 5.0–5.5% still constrains new supply. Exit caps for affordable assets trend 50–100 bps above market-rate multifamily, limiting valuations.

  • Rate cuts don’t resolve affordability gaps.

  • Affordable and workforce housing assets remain defensive.

  • Underwriting must budget high expenses and reserves.

  • Spreads wider for rent-restricted deals vs market-rate.

🛠 Operator’s Lens

  • Refi. Agencies active but coverage-driven; caps through maturity critical.

  • Value-Add. Tenant stability > max rent; manage collections, limit turnover.

  • Development. Reassess stalled deals as rates ease, but costs remain barrier.

  • Lender POV. Banks/CMBS price affordable 50–100 bps wider, cautious on leverage.

  • Potential policy inflection: LIHTC expansion, zoning reform, or voucher funding could shift supply.

  • Mortgage rates may fall further if Fed continues cutting, but affordability gap persists.

  • Rising homelessness pressures local governments toward stricter rent controls or inclusionary mandates.

Costar, PR News Wire, Pere

Keep Reading

No posts found