The Hello Bar is a simple notification bar that engages users and communicates a call to action.

Is The American Dream of Homeownership Dead? | Huge Increase In Rental Demand

What has happend to the (so-called) American Dream of homeownership?

If the statistics in this article are accurate, we are in the midst of a huge social shift away from homeowner-ship. Being an ‘owner’ had been an adult rite of passage. Now, owning a home is something that is purely optional.

Lets be honest, renters for a long time have been seen as second class citizens. There has been almost 2 classes of Americans..owners and renters.

But, what happens when members of the ‘owner-class’ themselves are forced to become renters because they ‘lost their homes to foreclosure’. What happens when obtaining a mortgage becomes so onerous (higher downpayments etc) that vastly fewer qualify. What happens when real estate is seen as…risky?

Looking at ownership from a pure dollars and cents perspective..the illusion of ‘home appreciation’ has evaporated. If ownership offers no clear and significant financial advantages over renter-ship…why buy?

Fact is, renters have all the benefits of an owner without the risk. Same schools, same parks, same community.

Agents, going forward people will buy for the traditional reasons. But, even those ‘traditional reasons’ are in flux:

Point: The home is ‘owned’..its theirs, no one will tell them to move out.

Counter Point: Assuming they make their property tax payments, HOA payments…etc. Even a 100% paid off home is never without some form of payment.

Point: Owners can do as they please to the house.

Counter Point: Assuming the various overseers of neighborhood review committees OK the changes. Architectural review committees etc.

Point: Homes are a great investment and have always increased in value.

Counter Point: yeah, right. Not only can homes lose value when market forces shift..recent history has proven how harsh these forces can be. Homes have lost MORE value during this housing crash vs ANY TIME in History. Yes, even The Great Depression.

The meltdown of the U.S. mortgage market and rising foreclosures have wiped out more homeowners than were created in the 2000-07 housing boom, some industry watchers say, the latest indication of the severity of the housing bust.

In the fourth quarter of 2010, 66.5% of Americans owned homes, down from 67.2% a year earlier and the lowest rate since the end of 1998, according the Census Bureau. During the boom, when easy credit made mortgages available with less regard for income or ability to pay, the ownership rate surged to a record 69.2% in 2004′s second and fourth quarters and stayed near that level until the recession deepened.

Some industry watchers expect the rate to slip below 65% as the housing market meltdown forces millions more Americans to give up their homes.

That “shows how big the bubble was and how catastrophic the bursting has been,” said Paul Dales, senior U.S. economist with Capital Economics. “We have pretty much reversed all of the increases in the home-owner rate generated by the housing boom.”

The nation’s homeownership rate gained 0.8 percentage points from 2000 to 2007, but has lost 1.3 percentage points since 2007, erasing the boom’s gains, said Stephen East, a Ticonderoga Securities housing analyst.

The first wave of trouble struck several years ago as borrowers took out so-called subprime mortgages with low interest rates that later reset, often with much higher payments that they couldn’t afford. The problem spread as the recession led to high unemployment. Now, as declining real-estate values leave many borrowers owning more than their homes are worth, more Americans are simply walking away.

The changes in the market are taking a toll on minority ownership. Just 44.8% of black-only households were homeowners in the fourth quarter of 2010, down from 46% a year earlier. The rate for Hispanics also fell, to 46.8% from 48.4%, the Census showed. The rate for white, non-Hispanic households slipped to 74.2%, from 74.5%.

The downturn is most pronounced in the West, which was dramatically overbuilt during the market boom and continues to see high foreclosure rates. It registered the nation’s lowest ownership rate, at 61%, down from 62.3% a year earlier. The Midwest had the highest percentage of homeowners among regions, but it also saw a year-over-year decline, to 70.5% from 71.3%.

The vacancy rate for rental housing fell to 9.4%, from 10.7% a year earlier. Housing experts say each 1% decline in the home-ownership rate represents the movement of one million households to rentals.

With demand expected to surge, developers are ramping up apartment construction. CoStar Group, a commercial real-estate data and analysis provider, expects about 23,000 multifamily units to be completed this year, followed by nearly 95,000 in 2012 and more than 109,000 in 2013.

“Americans are going through a fundamental transition in the way they look at rental housing,” said Greg Kraus, senior director of acquisitions with Invesco Real Estate, which has spent more than $1 billion on apartment communities in the last 15 months. “Historically, there’s almost been a subtle disdain in many markets if you’re a renter. That stigma is going to go away.”

Source: WSJ.com

Comments Closed

3 Responses to “Is The American Dream of Homeownership Dead? | Huge Increase In Rental Demand”

Read below or add a comment...

  1. I think the big advantage is point #1–it is YOUR home, no landlord to say they’re selling the property displacing the tenant to find yet another place to hang their hat. To me, having your own home gives YOU more power and control, and what a great time to buy (for those fortunate enough to get a loan), prices are at historical lows and interest rates are low. What about the old adage of paying off the mortgage? Sure would be nice to retire without a mortgage! Might as well pay your own mortgage instead of your landords–especially true for the echo boomers. All and all–I still believe in “the American dream.”

  2. buying a home is still an American Dream! There are just so many reasons why! you will always have to pay to live somewhere, you might as well pay “yourself” by purchasing a home now, at a serious low interest rate, and the deals out there are outrageous – if you purchase correctly and at a fair market value, and you plan on staying in your home long term, you will not lose. Not only that, each mortgage payment you make is reducing your debt, when it is all paid off – you have the advantage of no more payments in your retired years, or selling it and downsizing, or doing a reverse mortgage, etc. etc. Sure, the last few years have been a hard lesson, but lesson learned! We are back to basics with lending…..I even feel that in order to further stimulate the economy the banks should lighten UP a bit in their lending again….particularily for small business owners who get hit the hardest because of income fluctuations. And landlords can be a total pain – you can’t paint, or have pets, or add comfort features to your taste, and then they don’t fix things when they are supposed to, etc. etc. When you have pride of homeownership, it’s a great feeling – you are in charge….

Trackbacks

  1. [...] The FTC has created strict guidelines that will ultimately be used to implicate some poor unsuspecting real estate agent that try’s to help a homeowner in need of assistance with their short sale. Yes…that agent now faces federal implication (Jail Time) if a mistake is made…remind you that Angelo Mozillo is walking around a “free man” despite his heinous, egregious and despicable crimes against “The American Dream” [...]



Real Estate Coaching
Harris Real Estate University. Copyright 2011. All Rights Reserved. No portion of this website may be reproduced or reprinted for any reason.
Harris Real Estate University 2620 S Maryland Parkway Las Vegas, Nevada 89109. 14-856 Submit Referral | Help

Harris Real Estate University (HREU) designations, designation logos and names are trademarks of Harris Real Estate University.
HREU designations are not recognized by the National Association of Realtors or any state association of Realtors.

Earnings Disclaimer | Privacy Statement | Warranties, Disclaimers, Legal Rights | Sitemap | WordPress Development by Scarlett's Web®