Another quarter of the national apartment market has passed, and with it comes data for Q2 2016 suggesting that effective rent growth continues to grow but less so than last year new research finds.
Another quarter of the national apartment market has passed, and with it comes data for Q2 2016 suggesting that effective rent growth continues to grow but less so than last year new research finds.
Just like the weather over the last few days, San Diego has seen economic markets heating up.
Markets in the Western states continue to predominate in the high end of the rent growth ranking on a trailing 12-month basis, Yardi Matrix report.
Occupancy, Average Rent Higher This article was originally posted by Chuck Ehmann discusses the costs and averages in the large apartment market. Increasing moderation in larger markets pushed national annual effective rent growth down to 3.9% in April 2016, the first time the rate has been below 4.0% since July 2014, a period of 20 months. Even […]
Experts at the Casden Multifamily Forecast say that Southern California can expect two more years of growth.
Sky-high apartment rents in Southern California are expected to climb further in coming years, as construction fails to keep up with population.
Despite moderation from the peaks of 2015, the national apartment market continued to show strength in the first quarter of 2016, says Axiometrics.
Average rent was $1,618 a month in San Diego County in March and the vacancy rate was the lowest in at least five years.
The rent growth of asset classes — especially Class A — could predict movement for an entire apartment market.
National apartment market performance continued to moderate in February, as annual effective rent growth was 4.1%, lower than February 2015’s 5.1%.