Monday, August 31, 2009

Rents in Manhattan are falling as unemployment climbs

NYC Apartment Rents Fall as Tenants Gain Leverage (Update3)
By Brian Louis
Aug. 25 (Bloomberg) -- Manhattan apartment rents fell as much as 10 percent in August from a year ago as tenants gained negotiating power in the recession and forced landlords to offer concessions.

In buildings attended by doormen, rents on one-bedroom apartments dropped 10 percent from a year earlier to an average of $3,274 a month, according to a report by the Real Estate Group of New York. Studio prices fell 7 percent at those properties to $2,329 and two-bedrooms declined almost 6.9 percent to $5,161. Soho and TriBeCa were the most expensive neighborhoods.

Rents in Manhattan are falling as unemployment climbs. The number of job seekers rose to 402,200 in July, the most since 1992, New York City’s Comptroller William Thompson said yesterday. Landlords are offering incentives such as free rent and paying brokerage fees to lure tenants, said Daniel Baum, chief executive officer of the Real Estate Group.

“The concessions out there right now are pretty aggressive,” he said.

The city’s unemployment rate climbed to a 12-year high of 9.6 percent in July even as the national rate ticked down to 9.4 percent. The U.S. economy has lost 6.7 million jobs since the recession began in December 2007, making it the biggest employment slump in the last eight decades. Economists surveyed by Bloomberg predict the unemployment rate will reach 10 percent by early next year.

Rising U.S. Vacancies
That translates into less pricing power for landlords. U.S. apartment vacancies jumped to 7.5 percent in the second quarter, the highest level in 22 years, according to New York-based research firm Reis Inc. Asking rents dropped 0.7 percent from a year earlier to an average of $1,040 a month.

Rising vacancies and falling rents sent shares of real estate investment trusts that own apartments lower in the last year. The 13-member Bloomberg index of apartment landlords fell 36 percent in the 12 months through yesterday.

The Manhattan survey released today is based on data from more than 10,000 available apartment listings, according to the Real Estate Group.

In Manhattan’s non-doorman buildings, the average rent for studio apartments fell 8 percent to $1,931. One-bedrooms dropped 5.9 percent to $2,606 and two-bedrooms fell 8.2 percent to an average of $3,527.

On the Upper West Side, the average rent for a one-bedroom apartment in a doorman building was $3,236. In Greenwich Village, a similar apartment averaged $3,654.

Across Central Park on the Upper East Side, the average rent for a one-bedroom apartment in a doorman building is $3,276. In Gramercy Park, the price averages $3,656.

The least expensive average rents were in Harlem, where the monthly price ranged from $1,274 for a studio to $2,105 for a two-bedroom unit in a building without doormen.
To contact the reporter on this story: Brian Louis in Chicago at blouis1@bloomberg.net. Last Updated: August 25, 2009 14:09 EDT

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