By Arthur Jones, Senior Director, Global Research and Strategy
The U.S. multifamily housing sector faces challenges from both overdevelopment and capital market pressures, with ongoing issues anticipated through 2025.
However, solid macroeconomic fundamentals and sustained demand, particularly from younger generations favoring rentals, offer potential opportunities in the medium term for well-capitalized investors to exploit distress in the market.
Total outstanding and potential real estate distress per sector
Distressed assets, $ billions
Note: Distressed properties refer to assets that face financial and/or legal challenges, which might lead to foreclosure.
Source: Real Capital Analytics, Principal Real Estate. Data as of Q3 2023.
The multifamily housing real estate sector currently faces a slew of challenges stemming from high levels of development, lower transaction volume, declining values, and a wall of upcoming maturities that have created the potential for pockets of distress. However, it’s this distress, alongside stable demand, that is creating a unique entry point to the sector for well-positioned investors.
Notably, while the sector accounts for less than 10% of the total commercial real estate distress, potential distress looms large, representing nearly a third of the market.
Additionally, distress is likely to persist in 2024 and 2025 as rents continue to trend lower, vacancy rises, and $470 billion in multifamily loans mature during a period when less well-capitalized operators are facing difficulty refinancing on favorable terms.
However, despite rental market fluctuations and challenges in loan refinancing, the sector is buoyed by strong demand. In particular, younger generations are extending their rental periods, influenced by the unfavorable economics in the for-purchase market, mobility needs, and lifestyle choices that prioritize experiences over homeownership.
For investors, despite its near-term challenges, the strong fundamentals underpinning the multifamily sector’s demand profile suggest a promising recovery in the medium term.
Investors with substantial capital are well-positioned to leverage these conditions, with the market anticipated to bounce back within three to five years, offering a strategic window for investment in the coming 12 to 18 months.
Editor’s Note: The summary bullets for this article were chosen by Seeking Alpha editors.