The multifamily housing market refers to the market for properties that consist of multiple units that are intended for use as rental housing. These properties can include apartment buildings, condominiums, townhouses, and other types of multi-unit structures.
The multifamily housing market can be influenced by a variety of factors, including economic conditions, population growth and demographic trends, and housing supply and demand. In general, a strong economy and population growth can lead to increased demand for multifamily housing, while an economic downturn or oversaturation of the market can lead to declining demand.
Investors and property owners in the multifamily housing market often consider factors such as rental rates, occupancy rates, and property values when making investment decisions. They may also consider the location and amenities of the property, as well as the stability and creditworthiness of potential tenants.
Got your attention right? Despite many real estate investors and Gurus drumming up information on how hot the multifamily asset class is, there has been a subtle deadly weakness in the market since 2015. We are not talking about the rising interest rates or an increase in cap rate. There are major factors that may cause an upcoming crash.
Factor #1 – Interest Only Loans and Rent Growth Projection
The expansion market started in 2010, and from 2010 to 2015 is the golden era of Multifamily. After 2015, the prices have skyrocketed, eating up the reasonable 7-10% cash on cash return that made the multifamily a more attractive investment vehicle than other options such as Bonds, CDs, etc. The lenders knowing that the prices have gone up so much that a fully amortized loan will not continue the uptrend of a buying spree.
So, they introduced interest-only (IO) loans. The interest-only loans have grown from the first 1 year in 2015 to the first 3-6 years in 2018. The intention of interest-only loans was meant to give some time for value add sponsors to focus on deal stabilization upon takeover. The interest-only loan helps sponsors provide a 7-10% projection to their private investors to get the investment funded. However, due to lenders’ competition, the 3-6 years interest-only loan has become the de facto loan for all multifamily transactions. This means deals that are a Core type with no value add have been awarded interest-only loans.
If you know math, you know that when the Interest only period expires, a sponsor needs to start paying the principal amount. How much is that impact? Well, I can’t find a direct formula of principal paydown vs. total investment in a deal. A quick calculation of a few of my own deals reveals that in the first year, the principal payment kicks in a sponsor will lose approximately 5% of cash on cash return. That principal paydown burns out up cash on cash return by 1% every year. In short, if a deal is not making more than 5% in the year the interest only expires, then the debt can’t be serviced, thus the loan will be in default.
Many sponsors have a rent projection of 2-3% per year on their proforma that allows them to shows 5-7% cash on cash return even after the interest-only expiry date. Even today, some markets do not have rent growth anymore. Imagine now having 0% rent growth.
With the slowdown of rent growth and expiry of the interest-only period with less than 5% cash on cash return, we have a “dead nail” of the deal.[/vc_column_text][vc_column_text]
Factor #2 – Too Many New Unsophisticated Buyers
Similar to the Subprime crisis, where many non-qualified home buyers had bought many deals without proper income to back it up, we have too many unsophisticated buyers buying Multifamily late in the expansion cycle. The fact that the Multifamily is so hot, there is the rise of a class of new sponsors that are super motivated to do deals. These sponsors are less sophisticated, act as asset managers, have full-time jobs, and have high hopes on third-party property management. They are similar to taxi drivers, barbers, and nail polishers who bought many homes beyond their means in the single-family home markets during the subprime crisis.
The fact that Multifamily deals can be done using co-signers, non-recourse loans, and with attractive interest-only loan options exaggerates the braveness of doing deals that have very thin cash flow margins. They usually look at the overall returns of the deal and don’t mind having low cash flow throughout the investment period.
I polled a few credible and established passive investors that I know well, and almost all claim that 30%-50% of their passive investment deals are returning less than 5%. Ironically, these deals were originated 1.5 to 2 years ago by new sponsors who just started in 2016 onwards. If you do your math right, with a 3-year Interest only, in the next 12-18 months, their principal period will kick in, resulting in them not being able to serve the debt.[/vc_column_text][vc_column_text]
Factor #3: Multifamily Market Has Entered Hype Supply Stage in Market Cycle
At the Hypersupply stage, the potential of market appreciation is starting to diminish. So there are no more “high tides” to help deals that are bought marginal.
A combination of upcoming Interest only loan terms expiry, 30-50% of current invested deals that cash flows less than 5% and diminishing fundamentals of a Hypersupply market cycle will result in many “thin” cash flowing and non-value add multifamily deals to go underwater in the next 1-3 years when their principal payment kicks in.
A perfect storm at the peak of the market. See the problem!?