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Originally Posted by mhays
Those can be converted too, subject to local laws.
The only way prices will drop is if population growth shuts off or developers severely mistake the market. The current boom is happening despite a lot of people in roommate and extended family situations.
You say land prices and construction costs have risen. All true. How do you reconcile that with falling rents? In a growing market, rents will stay close to replacement costs. If rents go too high, supply will be added. If rents get too low, supply will slow, and since Denver is growing quickly, the gap will fill up pretty quickly.
Did Denver see falling rents in 2008? My city sure didn't, despite similar economic conditions. Instead they flattened, plus some moderate lease concessions. Condos were the problem. In both cities, rental construction picked up a couple years later.
I haven't heard any predictions that condos would really boom in either city, even if the defect legislation improves in Denver's case. You'd still have condo values that might not be high enough to justify construction, a general lack of buyer desire (much of the industry believes this is a mindset reset), and high hurdles for financing. Absent some changes across that board, it doesn't suggest a ton of condo construction. Construction will probably continue to be only cases that can finance without presales, who get the added benefit of building at today's prices but selling after the recovery is further along.
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Condos are not being built in significant numbers in US (and Canadian) metro areas where the internationals do not want condos. This is a major reason so much big money is being invested in condo construction in NYC, Toronto, Miami, San Francisco, and, Vancouver. If big money is flowing into higher end condos, then the ripple effect of real estate appreciation naturally extends down the "food chain" and "cheaper" condos are built.
I think that real estate interests are masking the economic reality of the lowering of the standard of living for the majority of us here in the US, with propaganda about what young people want. The reality is that an increasing percentage of young people in the US cannot afford to buy a new home*(money required down, etc.). I think, too, the young people are no dumber than their parents, and, have shared their parents angst as the mortgage balances often became greater than the market value of their childhood homes. I think younger people are more wary of the risks of committing themselves to a long term debt, due to realistic fears that someday they might have to walk away (or run) from an upside down mortgage.
Apartment living is here to stay. H*** or high water, apartment complexes will continue to be built. The trend towards less square footage will continue, while apartment rent increases, outside of "hot" markets, will tend to follow the real rate of inflation.
*college debt is not helping either. A "good" university where students graduate and get a well paying job can leave a young person saddled with many tens of thousands of debt.