By DEREK KRAVITZ
AP Real Estate Writer
 WASHINGTON — Builders have found a way to make money in a decrepit home market: Apartments. 
The number of permits to build apartments jumped to a three-year high last month. In 12 months, they've surged 63 percent. 
Blame  the housing bust, which left many people without the means, the credit  or the stomach to buy. More people need apartments. The demand has  driven up monthly rents. And apartment-home builders are rushing to cash  in.
That said, the overall home market remains depressed.  Builders are still struggling. They broke ground on a seasonally  adjusted annual rate of 628,000 homes last month, the government said  Thursday. That's barely half the pace that economists equate with a  healthy market. 
High unemployment, stagnant pay and waves of  foreclosures have slowed sales of single-family homes, which make up  about 70 percent of the home building market. Apartment construction may  be surging, but it's a small portion of the industry.
More  apartment building won't add enough jobs to reduce unemployment or  hasten an end to the housing crisis. Still, it's contributed to the  overall economy's growth for two straight quarters. And many economists  expect apartment construction to grow for at least the next 12 months,  as long as the economy avoids another recession.
"You're not  going to see apartments as an economic driver," said James Marple,  senior economist at TD Economics. "But it's renters who are clearly  going to drive the demand for housing."
It's also worth keeping  the increase in perspective: The growth in apartment construction is  coming off extremely low levels. Last year, for example, only 146,000  apartments were built. That was the fewest since 1993. This year's pace  isn't much more. 
By comparison, in 2005, just before the housing  market went bust, 258,000 apartments were built. Some signs suggest  that builders could match that level over the next few years.
One  such sign: Permits for apartment buildings, a gauge of future  construction, have jumped more than 60 percent over the past year. That  compares with just 6.6 percent growth in permits for single-family  construction over the same period.
"The demand is there," said  Mark Obrinsky, chief economist at National Multi Housing Council. "Rents  have recovered, much of them to where they were before the recession."
Bob  Champion, who runs a real estate company in Los Angeles, says he has  four apartment projects in development. That matches the number he had  in 2005.
It's quite a shift from 2006, when Champion's company stopped building apartments because the cost of land had skyrocketed.
Champion  has raised rents about 4 percent this year. His occupancy rate is 95  percent. As recently as last year, his rents were flat, and he was  dangling incentives, like a free month's rent, to woo tenants.
"People who can't afford to buy a home, rent," Champion said. "That's why the apartment market has stayed healthy."
Champion  won't likely be building as many apartments next year, though. Land  prices have doubled in the past two years, he said. Competition for  apartment land has intensified.
For many builders, financing for a  project remains a big obstacle. So is time. Apartment projects take an  average of 18 months to build.
Still, fewer home buyers mean more  people must rent. Nearly 4 million new renting households were created  between 2005 and 2010, according to Harvard's Joint Center for Housing  Studies. Under normal economic conditions, that's more than 10 times the  number of new renters who would be expected in a five-year span.
Homeownership  has fallen more over the past decade than in any other 10-year stretch  since the Great Depression. Roughly 65 percent of Americans own homes.  That's down from a peak of nearly 70 percent in the middle of the  decade.
As more people have become tenants, landlords have felt emboldened to raise rents.
The  average rent in the United States has risen 2.4 percent over the past  12 months to $1,004 a month, according to the real estate data firm Reis  Inc. Over the previous year, rents rose just 1 percent. Between 2008  and 2009, they actually fell 2.7 percent.
AvalonBay Communities  Inc., based in Arlington, Va., has raised rents by an average 6 percent  in the past year. The company earned 11 percent more in rental revenue  in the July-September quarter than in the previous quarter.
With  nearly 54,000 units, AvalonBay is one of the largest apartment  developers in the country. Nearly 96 percent of its apartments had been  occupied by the end of September, according to its earnings reports.
The  average rent at AvalonBay's cheapest complex under construction, in  Seattle's Ballard neighborhood: $1,715. The builder completed 1,280 more  apartments between July and September and started work on 933 others.
At  Equity Residential, whose chairman is real estate magnate Sam Zell,  rental income jumped 12.7 percent in the July-September quarter over the  same period a year before. 
Equity Residential is the nation's  largest apartment owner. Nearly 25 percent of its apartments are in  Phoenix, Orlando and South Florida, which were hammered by the housing  bust and where its average rents are the lowest.
Yet Equity's  properties there are faring well. The average rent for one of the  company's 9,300 apartments in Phoenix rose from $837 last year to $925  this year.
Zell, whose net worth is roughly $5 billion, has  publicly extolled the prospects for his apartment business over his  office and retail operations.
Sunday, 20 November 2011
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