An excellent visual walk-through on interest rates, multifamily debt markets, rate caps and the economy.
Who Holds The $2.1 Trillion In Multifamily Debt?
Debt funds and CMBS are getting all the headlines for at-risk loans, but together they represent less than 5% of the $2.1 trillion in multifamily debt. The majority of the riskiest bridge loans were concentrated within debt funds, which represent only $42 billion of the total pie.
Delinquency rates at banks (0.40%), Freddie Mac (0.29%) and Fannie Mae (0.54%) remain extremely low (so far).

Multifamily Trends Entering 2024
U.S. rents are still digesting the incredible rise during 2021 and the first half of 2022. Rents are below their peak in many markets across the country and continue to fall month-over-month, especially when concessions are taken into account.

Vacancy rates are back to pre-pandemic levels:

One million apartments are currently under construction with new deliveries set to surge throughout 2024 before starting to decline in the second quarter of 2025:

The sun belt is faced with an enormous supply surge. These are high population growth markets, but they have experienced some of the largest rent declines in the country over the last year.

Lease Concessions Are Negatively Impacting Class B Properties
Multifamily REIT CEOs have been commenting on earnings calls that the concessions (1 to 3 months of free rent) from class A buildings are now putting downward pressure on their class B property rents. This is not something they were experiencing in the first half of 2023. Many renters can now afford to move up to a class A community with these concessions in place (3 months of free rent is equivalent to a 25% drop in rents).
When the 10-year treasury hit 5% in October, builders suddenly felt pressure to hit 90% occupancy by year end to try and sell or put permanent financing on their buildings. This is creating a fire sale with rent concessions.
The greater the percentage of new supply relative to the current inventory of apartments in a city, the larger the impact on class B and C properties:

Where People Hope To Move In 2024
The general trend continues with buyers hoping to leave higher price markets in the northeast and California:

And move to less expensive and warmer regions of the country:

November 2023 Multifamily Price Indexes Decline Again
Monthly and annual price changes through October:
| Data Source: | Data Month: | MOM Change: | Annual Change | Data Release: |
| Green Street | Oct 2023 | -8.60% | -14.00% | November |
| MSCI | Oct 2023 | -1.00% | -12.60% | November |
| Average: | -4.80% | -13.30% |
November 2023 National Rent Reports Summarized
Monthly and annual rent changes through October:
| Source: | Month: | Monthly Change: | Annual Change: | Vacancy: | Data Release: |
| Apartment List | Oct | -0.70% | -1.20% | 6.40% | 10.30.23 |
| Apartments Advisor | Oct | -0.52% | -0.48% | N/A | 11.1.23 |
| CoStar | Oct | -0.47% | 0.74% | 7.15% | 11.1.23 |
| Apartments.com | Oct | -0.40% | 0.70% | N/A | 11.7.23 |
| Redfin | Oct | -1.60% | -0.30% | N/A | 11.8.23 |
| Zillow | Oct | -0.10% | 3.20% | N/A | 11.8.23 |
| Yardi Matrix | Oct | -0.20% | -0.40% | 5.10% | 11.16.23 |
| Rent.com | Oct | -1.64% | -0.29% | N/A | 11.20.23 |
| Realtor.com | Oct | -1.03% | -0.35% | N/A | 11.28.23 |
| Average: | -0.74% | 0.18% | 6.22% |
Home Price Index Reaches New Record High
The S&P CoreLogic Case-Shiller U.S. National Home Price NSA Index, covering all nine U.S. census divisions, reported a 3.9% annual change in September (which is an average of July, August and September closing prices), up from a 2.5% change in the previous month.

The month over month increase was at 0.65%. This was the eighth consecutive month-over-month increase following seven straight month-over -month decreases.

Multifamily Starts Plunge 32%
Multifamily starts fell 32.8% year over year in October, with permits pulled falling 27.8%. Completions rose to 408,000 in October, a 14.3% increase.
Construction starts peaked in May of this year and that new supply will continue to hit the market through 2024-2025. Yardi projects 487,512 new units will deliver in 2023 with 536,145 expected in 2024.

Fed’s Coincident Economic Indicators Are Slowing In Most States
Coincident indicators include employment, real earnings, average weekly hours worked in manufacturing and gross domentic product (GDP).
South Carolina is slowing the fastest at greater than 1.0%. North Carolina is slowing between 0.1% to 0.5%.
