L.A. Apartment Rents Expected to Rise 12 Percent February 06,2003

Submitted by lusk-admin on Tue, 07/10/2012 - 16:56

Article by Dereck Andrade A predictor of Southland apartment rental unit prices indicates the average monthly rent in Los Angeles County is expected to rise by 12 percent in the coming months, according to a University of Southern California real estate study to be released today. "Tenant incomes won't increase as fast as rents, so some may have to budget more for their rent payments," said Raphael Bostic, director of the USC Casden Estate Economics Forecast released by the USC Lusk Center for Real Estate. "Apartment market conditions will remain extremely tight across the Los Angeles region well into 2004." It's more sobering news for apartment renters, some of whom are caught between not being able to afford a home because of rising prices while at the same time being squeezed by apartment owners bent on taking advantage of a statewide housing shortage. "The problem is that when new homes are being built, they are even more expensive," said Jack Kyser, a senior vice president and chief economist for the Los Angeles County Economic Development Corp. "I believe that by the end of the year, the Fed will start to increase interest rates from 1.25 percent at least a quarter point "If that happens, people will become more cautious about home prices, and the home sellers might be more willing to deal once some leaves the market." But as the affordability index for first-time homebuyers continues to fall - it's now at 35 percent - while median home prices continue to rise, apartment rental units are becoming less of an option and The minimum household income needed to purchase a median-priced California home valued at $328,310 in November was $78,630, based on a typical 30-year, fixed-rate mortgage at 6.08 percent and assuming a 20 percent down payment, according to the California Association of Realtors. G.U. Krueger, a real estate expert with the Institutional Housing Partners in Irvine, said the numbers merely reflect supply and demand. "You have a significant undersupply in the apartment housing market in Southern California. That mismatch will push up prices of rents," Krueger said. The average rental price in Los Angeles County is $1,299 for a one-bedroom unit, according to RealFacts.com, a Novato-based real estate tracking firm. Los Angeles County has the region's largest apartment market with 900,000 apartment units or nearly 71 percent of the total in the forecast's region.