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by eliasmacpherson
1065 days ago
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1) can you explain why I can't take national vacancy rates, as it was a hypothetical in response to an unrealistic hypothetical? Surely national averages are better than looking at Manhattan of all places? I don't know how to have a reasonable conversation about this global problem using Manhattan as the point of interest. 2) at a certain point squatting sets in. I believe the answer to your question depends on how much capital is held by the rich/poor, and how well property is protected by law enforcement and private security. If you look at the parent comment I was responding to, it mentioned not building so much that it flooded the market. |
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There's areas of the country with out-migration, lack of jobs, but tons of housing. Post industrial cities in the midwest are like this.
There's areas of the country with high paying jobs, but no housing being built. Areas of NY & CA are like this. It is then no surprise that we have 60k homeless in NYC when even people working for banks or tech can barely afford to live there.
There's also areas of the country with decent paying jobs, but lots of housing.. with lots of in-migration. Sunbelt is like this.
All three of these types of areas have vastly different vacancy rates and homeless rates. Taking national averages confuses the matter.
Quick googling points to vacancy rates of: Manhattan 2%, Boston 3%, SF 7%, Detroit (12% owner vacancy / 7% rental vacancy), Miami (3% owner / 7% rental), Austin (1% owner / 6% rental) etc.
FRED has some good charts you can see state by state the levels and even shapes are totally different in terms of trends and averages. Expensive northeast- https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/NYRVAC https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/NJRVAC https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/CTRVAC
Midwest https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MIRVAC https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MNRVAC https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/ILRVAC
Sunbelt https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/GARVAC https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/FLRVAC
Northwest https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/ORRVAC https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/WARVAC
Basically everywhere thats expensive has vacancies around 4% or less while areas that have been building its closer to 8%..
> why do you assume a wealthy family will only buy one house, or could be outbid by a poor family? I was responding to this post that seemed to assume all new housing will be bought by the rich as like extra homes..
People underestimate how much "trickle down" kind of is real in RE. In the absence of nice new construction (which seemingly always gets called "luxury"), people with money will move further and further down the market, to buy & renovate. So the option is build more homes to increase supply, or see the dollars chase existing supply & raise its value (and cost).