National Rent Prices for New Leases Drop for the 5th Month

National rent price data from ApartmentList, OER and CPI data from the BLS, chart by Mish

Apartment List reports the fifth consecutive drop in apartment rent prices but that may not translate to your next lease renewal.

National Rent Report

Please consider the latest National Rent Report by Apartment List.

Our national rent index fell by 0.3 percent over the course of January, marking the fifth straight month-over-month decline. This month’s price dip was notably more moderate than the record-setting declines we saw from October through December. That said, January’s decline was still sharper than the usual seasonal trend, signaling the continuation of a broader cooldown in market conditions.

Year-over-year rent growth is continuing to decelerate, and now stands at 3.3 percent, its lowest level since April 2021. Year-over-year growth is now pacing just slightly ahead of the average rate from 2018 to 2019 (2.8 percent), and is likely to decline further in the months ahead.

The cooldown in rent growth is being mirrored by continued easing on the supply side of the market. Our vacancy index now stands at 6.1 percent, surpassing 6 percent for the first time since spring of 2021. With a record number of multi-family apartment units currently under construction, we expect that supply constraints will continue to soften. 2023 could be the first time in years that we see property owners competing for renters, rather than the other way around.

Widespread Rent Decreases

The recent slowdown has been geographically widespread. Rents decreased in January in 67 of the nation’s 100 largest cities. Newark, NJ saw the nation’s sharpest decline, with prices down by 2.3 percent month-over-month. San Francisco, New York City, Seattle, and Washington, D.C. all experienced monthly declines of more than double the national rate. Over the past six months as a whole, no large metro area in the country has experienced positive rent growth.

Are Rents Declining?

It’s not that the Apartment List data is wrong. Rather, it has to do with what they measure.

First, let’s consider how things look year-over-over-year.

Percent Change From Year Ago

National rent price data from ApartmentList, OER and CPI data from the BLS, chart by Mish

Chart Notes

  • The National Rent Price is from ApartmentList.Com.
  • OER stands for Owners’ Equivalent Rent, the price one would pay to rent one’s own house from oneself, unfurnished and without utilities.
  • Rent of Primary residence is just what it sound like, typical rent. That number and OER are from the BLS.

Apartment List Stated Methodology

  • “We calculate growth rates using a same-unit analysis similar to Case-Shiller’s approach, comparing only units for which we observe transactions in multiple time periods to provide an accurate picture of rent growth that controls for compositional changes in the available inventory.”
  • “We capture repeat transactions – when a single apartment gets rented more than once over time – and check whether the transacted rent price has changed between those transactions.”
  • “Rent estimates reflect prices paid by renters, not list prices for units that remain vacant.”

Three Key Difference to BLS

  1. Although Apartment List uses repeat rents of the same or similar unit and prices are are actual prices, not asking prices, it only shows new leases, not repeat leases.
  2. Because new leases on vacant units rise much more rapidly than existing leases, its year-over-year numbers rise or fall faster and in greater magnitude.
  3. The National Rent price reflects year-over-year changes, but in reality, people pay the same amount of rent for 12 months then there is one big price jump.

Point number 2 above reflects the huge 18 percent year-over-year-peak vs 7.5 percent for rent of primary residence in the previous chart.

The lead chart also shows 2.5 percent month over month growth for three consecutive months with the BLS reporting 0.2 percent growth.

Seasonal Tendencies

The strong seasonal tendencies of Apartment List are smoothed over by the BLS every year. 

To explain the magnitude change in 2022 including a record 1 percent decline in November, just look at the massive spikes this year and last that preceded it.

Remember, ApartmentList reflects new leases not renewals of existing leases. With Covid, there was a huge increase in work-at-home and huge demand from people escaping the cities to the suburbs.

Finally, note the time lag between ApartmentList and the CPI.

BLS Look Ahead

The above charts provide a needed reality check to those who think rent prices are about to plunge based off Apartment List data.

Three months ago I commented “I suspect we have strong increases in rent in the CPI despite the declines of ApartmentList for at least the rest of the year, and if so continuing into 2023.”

New Homes Under Construction

New home sales report by stage of construction from Census Department, chart by Mish

This year there will be a huge number of apartment construction completions. That is more likely to have an impact than the seasonal tendencies of ApartmentList.

Powell’s View of Rent

During Wednesday’s press Q&A with Jerome Powell after the FOMC announcement the subject of rent came up a few times, once directly and at least twice indirectly in reference to services.

Powell noted that although prices of goods was coming down, services and especially core services have not declined as much.

Powell reiterated a couple times that the Fed’s work was not finished and that he expected rent prices to rise for a few more months. 

For more on the FOMC announcement, please see Fed Hikes by 1/4 Point as Expected, Commits to More Rate Hikes.

This post originated at MishTalk.Com.

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vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
btw, fantastic take on rental market. r/e is in first inning of a typical 5 year or more pullback, imho. the run up has been out of site. glad i’m out. i’ll wait. and use cash. signing notes on r/e is not for me.
Doug78
Doug78
1 year ago
It’s official. We will have six more weeks of winter.
FromBrussels2
FromBrussels2
1 year ago
Hey Mish , looks like you re running out of articles these days ……Why don t you share your opinion about US’ war against Russia with us ? Audience guaranteed ….. and publicity income ….
Zardoz
Zardoz
1 year ago
Reply to  FromBrussels2
Da comrade! Is filthy americanski medias not tell of glorious potato have by all Russians! And behind it all? Moose and Squirrel of course!
8dots
8dots
1 year ago
Reply to  FromBrussels2
The FBI would like it. I am already on their list after opening my big mouth for years.
Doug78
Doug78
1 year ago
Reply to  FromBrussels2
Well, you are a masochist so why not. Do you prefer carefully constructed arguments or just name calling? I can do both.
Mish
Mish
1 year ago
Reply to  FromBrussels2
Spending more time with photography
Was out all day, just got back.
Some amazing ice sheet rainbow fractals
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
Reply to  Mish
the best use of one’s time is in the liberal arts like photography. i was in sculpture class today at manhattan CC. i’ve owned hedge fund and bought 100 and 200 year old busted up homes and rehabbed them, for decades. but far and away the best thing i’ve done is taking art and science classes for the past 45 years. not a billionaire in the world lives better. i’ve always attributed my trading success to the more time i spend in art and science class.
Zardoz
Zardoz
1 year ago
Reply to  vanderlyn
The downside is, most people you meet haven’t learned anything since 11th grade, and have nothing whatsoever interesting to discuss. If you aren’t a zombie, the world is filled with them.
Sunriver
Sunriver
1 year ago
Off subject, but the NASDAQ is up 20% in one month. Three years of average NASDAQ gains in one month.
No fundamentals behind this (outside of lowball Revenue/PE expectations) and a promised FED induced pivot on yields.
This 5% yield nonsense won’t last for long. Why?
1) The Federal government can’t afford a 5% yield.
2) The market is controlled by hedge funds who like ‘sexy’ stocks like Tesla, META, AMZN. Not P&G. There is slow money in P&G. and that won’t allow a fund manager to keep their job.
3) The fund managers have to make up for last year in like 2 months.
4) All the FED knows is 0% yields and QE.
5) An ‘honest’ account of inflation is NEVER considered by the FED hence a pivot is not far off.
6) Yield inversions mean nothing when the FED will be back to a 3% FED funds rate by the end of this year. It’s already priced in.
7) in the end, FIAT will Bankrupt this country and threaten the Republic. Until then,
PARTY ON!
KidHorn
KidHorn
1 year ago
Reply to  Sunriver
This isn’t unusual for the nasdaq. One of the underlying problems with the stock market and why we have such large boom bust cycles is because of the way hedge funds are compensated. They typically get 2% of assets under management plus 20% of profits, so they have a big incentive to take huge risks. Because they only make a lot of money with huge gains. if their assets only go up a few pct, it’s not much different than losing big. Either way the 20% of profits is small. So they take huge gambles with the same momo stocks at the same time, which drives up the price for all of them.
8dots
8dots
1 year ago
Reply to  Sunriver
The Nasdaq is up because 10 stocks are up. AH GOOGL, AAPL… the big whales misses. NQ reached June 3 high and plunged. June 3 high is a bitch. Aug high is a failed UT > May 4.
8dots
8dots
1 year ago
JP : we know what to do in a downturn, if it happen. Dumping RRP cannot cure exogenous causes. Bibi fell into Ukraine trap. RRP might form a bubble. Dec high @$2.5T/ Jan low @$2,0T might be RRP backbone. The Fed cannot save Bibi. The Fed will charge the primary banks rent for parking more than $5T in Excess Reserves and RRP.
8dots
8dots
1 year ago
COLA is up 8.7%, but new rent, not renewed rent, is down m/m, rising y/y at lower speed. The dbl McC will deflate entitlements. Biden will blame the Rs. The x3 CB’s : hike, hike, hike ==> SPX take a hike. // Aug high was a failed Upthrust > Apr 28 high. It led to Oct low, a lower low. Oct spring might be a failed spring if it can’t exceed May & Aug highs and move up > Mar 29 high. The next failed spring, – not the last one – under Feb 2020 high.
Salmo Trutta
Salmo Trutta
1 year ago
The 12 boom/busts in real estate since WWII were entirely the FED’s fault.
Link Richard Werner:
Prof. Werner brilliantly explains how the banking system and financial sector really work. – YouTube
Avery
Avery
1 year ago
The government to the rescue! This was posted on a twitter of a Chicago busybody-who-knows-what-we-all-need to-do Tribune columnist –
If state lawmakers want tenants protected, state lawmakers will have to protect tenants – Nevada Current
snip –
Among some of the new policies and actions announced last week, the Federal Trade Commission and Consumer Finance Protection bureau will begin to investigate and seek information on unfair practices in the rental market, and the Federal Housing Finance Agency will examine proposed actions aimed at increasing protections for renters and introducing limits on egregious rent increases.
With pandemic eviction relief funding running out, and evictions back to pre-pandemic levels, it is imperative that the federal government and states take action to stabilize the national rental market.
snip-
What’s really going on is the Blackrocks will be fine and monopolize the rental market, after all, the U.S. Government is the best that money can buy. On the other hand, Ma & Pa landlord in the Berwyn 2- to 4- flat are becoming extinct. Ironic because that’s what got many – landlord and tenant alike, – through the Depression. I picked that town because it was on the doorstep of Western Electric Hawthorn Works, the site of which is now multiple strip malls.
Lisa_Hooker
Lisa_Hooker
1 year ago
Reply to  Avery
Ah, Hawthorne, where the messengers wore roller skates and the Bell System was benevolent.
KidHorn
KidHorn
1 year ago
Wonder how the stoppage of rent moratoriums is effecting the price. if I were a landlord of someone who skipped rent for a couple of years, I would jack up their rent if for no other reason than to not rent to a deadbeat.
Avery
Avery
1 year ago
Let me know when county property taxes are coming down in the locales with bloated government pensions.
KidHorn
KidHorn
1 year ago
Reply to  Avery
When have they ever come down?
Maximus_Minimus
Maximus_Minimus
1 year ago
Reply to  KidHorn
Entropy of the system can only increase. Law of nature.
Doug78
Doug78
1 year ago
Entropy is an emergent property.
Esclaro
Esclaro
1 year ago
Reply to  Avery
Which locale is that? Texas property taxes have skyrocketed and it’s not unusual to see houses with property taxes equal to 4% of the property value. On a $500k house the taxes are $20,000. The property insurance is another $6000 to $8000. Low tax Texas? The real beneficiaries are the 1%!
vanderlyn
vanderlyn
1 year ago
Reply to  Esclaro
IT’S A load of rubbish that TX sold folks about how cheap life is there. most forget there are 2 sides of a ledger. what you pay in enerby costs, insurance, taxes and fees…….and what you get back in the way of good local providers of community colleges, HS, garbage and water and utilities and health care……… TX gets a D minus, imho. i’ve lived in many states. as a homeowner and landlord and as a renter. i’d say AZ was the best value all around that i experienced.

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