Quote:
Originally Posted by mhays
Despite that 30% number, if rents dropped even a little relative to costs, that would probably slow construction substantially.
Lots of concept analysis for projects that never go beyond that stage, or even going most of the way through design and entitlements for projects that may or may not pencil, depending on whether the team can squeeze out another few bucks per square foot. It's the natural order of things, and has been for the three up-cycles during my involvement.
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I have a hard time believing that, and would be willing to take that chance. I think there are enough constraints affecting our ability to deliver enough units to meet demand in a timely fashion, that we'd get exactly the same number of units constructed if costs went up 5%. And I'd be willing to chance that those units would be delivered at exactly the same rents - or at least, no more of an increase than the 15% we're already seeing on an annual basis.
I just don't think raw development costs are the main constraint right now on new project delivery right now. It is very easy for 15,000 people to move here in the next 12 months, and they will. There is nothing at all that the development industry can do in response to that in the same timeframe, unless they happened to have started two or three years earlier. There is not that stock of ready, acquired, and entitled properties sitting around in central Denver anymore. (There also is not that supply of finished lots in the suburbs anymore.) So, if we're a few years behind already, and pure demand is driving costs up 15% per year, there is little downside, as I see it, in eating into that by 5% when we do get around to catching up, to get some of the things the public wants and needs. Because raw costs are not increasing at the same rate, rents are sticky, and a temporary shortage is just creating gravy for developers as they catch up. (Land prices are not increasing at the same rate, because land is not the constraint either - finished housing units are the constraint.)
Alternatively, we could just shut down the community planning and development and building departments for a few years. 24 months - build whatever you want, wherever you want, however you want, no fees, no permits. That would be a fun experiment. And I bet both rents would drop and development would pick up its pace. But that's not realistic.