comment 1

A worsening housing shortage is expected

Last month we spoke about how our current economic environment is going to negatively impact housing supply in the short-term. Now here’s some further evidence for this argument (via Bloomberg):

“As rates started ticking up, the faucet started to turn off,” says Jonathan Gertman, senior vice president for development at the NRP Group, one of the largest multifamily housing developers in the country. “The number of projects starting this year already has been cut significantly. Anything that started in 2022, in most of the country, comes online 18 to 24 months later. So by the middle of 2025, you see that new supply start to go down significantly.”

This is also being reflected in Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loan applications for new multi-family housing:

Or put another way: FHA multifamily loan applications are on track to total as much as $18 billion for FY 2023, compared with $29 billion for FY 2022, $51 billion for FY 2021 and $45 billion for FY 2020.

The above article is specifically talking about a looming affordable housing shortage. But these exact same headwinds are also impacting new market-rate housing. Of course, there’s always a lag when it comes to development. So it’ll likely be a few years until we really feel the impacts.

1 Comment so far

  1. Hope you’re well my friend.

    There are forces at play here I don’t understand. What are your thoughts on getting housing demand to become balanced with supply? If higher interest rates dampen demand but also dampen supply, we’re in a vicious cycle and ever-increasing bubble. No?

    Liked by 1 person

Leave a comment