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cover of episode Get Ready For Another Shock to Housing Affordability

Get Ready For Another Shock to Housing Affordability

2025/1/30
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Odd Lots

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Joe Wiesenthal
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Lee Everett
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Tracy Allaway
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Joe Wiesenthal: 我关注到一个重要的议题,那就是通货膨胀,其中一个关键因素是住房成本。虽然近期的租金上涨速度有所放缓,但由于美联储加息导致新建多户住宅数量下降,供应紧张的情况可能会在2026年再次出现。 Tracy Allaway: 我也注意到租金上涨,这与整体通货膨胀息息相关。虽然租金增速有所放缓,但我们也需要关注潜在的风险,例如美联储加息对住房开发的影响。 Lee Everett: 我认为压力遍及市场各方。大型房地产公司虽然能够应对高利率环境,但其投资组合估值已大幅下降。与此同时,住房需求却创纪录地高涨,而供应方面却受到了严重影响。这使得市场状况变得非常独特。我们还看到,一些规模较小、经验不足的房地产公司正面临融资困难,而那些信誉良好的公司则能够继续获得融资。市场正在经历“优胜劣汰”的过程,一些公司由于资产估值过高、未履行合同等原因,正面临诉讼和调查。 Lee Everett: 衡量多户住宅市场健康状况的两个主要指标是租金增长率和资本化率。未来两三年内,多户住宅市场将从租户友好型市场转变为房东友好型市场,主要原因是供应减少。2024年和2025年将有超过一百万套住房投入市场,但供应高峰期将在未来六个月内到来,到2026年底,大多数主要市场的供应量将低于上一个周期。与此同时,美国租房需求持续强劲,供应减少将导致租金上涨。多户住宅建设需要达到一定的投资回报率,而高昂的建设成本和利率使得租金必须保持高位才能实现这一目标。联邦政府对可负担住房的资金支持对于降低租金至关重要,如果这些资金减少,将会导致可负担住房供应短缺。联邦政府对可负担住房资金的支持减少将主要影响大型社区投资项目和专门建造的可负担住房项目。建筑工人中约有20%是非法劳工,他们的驱逐出境将导致劳动力短缺,推高建筑成本和租金。除了利率外,保险费用的上涨也是影响多户住宅建设成本的重要因素。大型房地产公司由于能够分散风险,能够获得更有利的保险费率,而小型房地产公司则面临更高的保险成本。到2026年,租赁市场将再次对投资者有利,并可能重现上一个周期的市场状况。由于婴儿潮一代不愿放弃他们的住房,千禧一代和Z世代难以获得他们想要的住房,导致高收入人群选择居住在以前被认为质量较低的住房中。由于优质地段的住房供应减少,这些地段的租金将会上涨。多户住宅市场将出现“优胜劣汰”,小型开发商将被大型开发商收购或淘汰。由于优质地段的住房供应不足,人们将被迫居住在距离市中心更远的地方,通勤时间将增加。由于市中心优质地段的住房价格高昂,人们开始向郊区迁移,导致郊区市场发展迅速。尽管租金上涨,但由于租客收入的增加,租金收入比在2018年实际上有所下降。联邦政府难以控制地方政府的建筑审批和费用,因此难以有效地促进住房建设。“是的”运动在一些地区取得了一定进展,但在优质地段建设新房仍然面临挑战。为了保护信贷额度,债务基金正在积极处理不良资产,避免出现大规模违约。加州野火将对建筑劳动力市场产生重大影响,并推高建筑成本。住房和城市发展部(HUD)的资金对于灾后重建至关重要,如果这些资金减少,将会严重影响重建工作。

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Hello and welcome to another episode of the Odd Lots podcast. I'm Joe Wiesenthal. And I'm Tracy Allaway. Tracy, you know, one of the big themes, obviously, in American life and the most recent election was inflation. And there are a lot of things that people think of when they think of inflation. Maybe they think of egg prices. That's in the news these days. Maybe they think of gasoline prices. But a big story is like,

The cost of living is the cost of housing. Yes. Actually, it's kind of funny. Everyone has their own personal benchmarks for inflation. And mine is probably the cost of mayonnaise because I've been tracking that for a long time. Not because I eat that much of it, but I just find it interesting because it contains eggs.

and oil and packaging and labor and all that stuff and rent. And guess what, Joe? My rent's going up again. What about your mayonnaise consumption? It's funny to me. Sorry, when you said mayonnaise, I have to admit the first thing that came to my head was like just like imagining you in your apartment with a gigantic- Storing buckets of mayonnaise. A gigantic tub of Costco mayonnaise, eating it with a spoon. I'm sorry. You're really consuming a lot of mayonnaise if this is what comes to your mind when you think about the cost of living.

Well, as part of my research for this, I can tell you, you can buy buckets of extra heavy mayo off of Amazon. Sounds good. We're actually not doing a mayonnaise episode. We're talking about the other one. We're talking about... I tried to throw in my rent stat. Yeah, I know. To keep you on topic. But you wanted to talk about mayo. We'll do a mayo episode at some point. But rent is really interesting. Actually, in the government's measure...

There's so many moving parts with anything housing. But most recently, actually, the government's measure of rent price growth, which has been a key contributor to overall inflation, et cetera, actually has been moderating lately. We're sort of getting back to the point where we're like at pre-COVID levels of rent price growth.

Right. So it's still going up, but just not as much as it was before. But the perversity, perhaps it's a perversity, is that obviously the Fed jacked up interest rates quite aggressively to fight inflation. Inflation has come down, took a little longer than people expected, but, you know, it has come down. But one of the things that we do know that happens is that when the Fed jacks up interest rates, that really has an effect on housing development, which, of course, requires a lot of capital and leverage, etc.,

And if you look at a chart of, say, multifamily housing starts, buildings five units or more, that's come way down since its peak, like in 2022. Yeah. So we had this huge wave of supply in sort of late 2021, 2022. As you said, it's fallen quite a lot. The interesting thing that I see here is like

yields on bonds are still going up. Yeah. So we're at four point five five percent or so on the 10 year. And that is higher than when the Fed started cutting rates. So the cost of financing these projects is still going up and there's not that much activity. Well, we did an episode in November 2023 and our guest said something really interesting to me that I've

repeated probably many times, which is that for a lot of multifamily developers, they might prefer a hard landing in the economy because sure, that might mean demand for rent goes down or some of their tenants can't pay their rent. But if it means that you get a dramatic drop in interest rates because of how levered they are to the cost of money, that might actually work out better for them, which is sort of still blows my mind, but it is what it is.

And so one of the other things that we're thinking about is like, well, what's going on with all these multifamily developers carrying big debt and so forth, given the fact that rates have not come down? Yeah, let's talk about it. Well, we are going to be speaking with the same guest who commented that in 2023. We're going to be talking about all of these dynamics together.

Really the perfect guest, thrilled to welcome back onto the show, Lee Everett, Head of Research and Strategy at Cortland, which is a multifamily owner-operator, roughly 80,000 units nationwide. Lee, thank you so much for coming back on the podcast. Thank you for having me. I've actually just wanted to have you back on to talk about this specific, there's a lot we're going to talk about.

But as Tracy mentioned, rates haven't come down. I know people were like, oh, the Fed's going to start right. This is relief is in sight. How stressed out are a lot of these entities by the fact that after all this time, we haven't seen any rate relief?

It's interesting. I think stress is hitting sort of all sides of the market. You have your bigger, more well-established shops that have been managing through this, able to handle the higher rate environment, but have obviously taken a very real valuation hit on their existing portfolios, like 20 to 30%.

depending upon the portfolio composition. At the same time, you've had record demand hitting the sector because cost to buy housing is exceptionally unattainable today. And then on the other side, you're having a very material impact on the supply side. And I think that's what's really unique. If you think back to September, the 10-year was around a 3.6, I think the day Chair Powell cut us by 50 basis points.

Well, we're at almost a four, six today. And I remember that night you heard reports about developers out at like local dinners and they were calling it Fed Day and getting ready to put shovels in the ground. Drinking champagne and stuff like that. Exactly. And what you've seen instead is increased stress on both the short end and the long end of the curve that's given you

trouble on the short end to start new housing and trouble on the long end to afford longer term for ownership housing. You mentioned that some of the bigger players are better able to deal with higher rates. Can you talk about how people try to offset some of these higher rates? And is it the case that there is still an ability to refinance and term out your debt or is that starting to go away now?

I think extend and pretend, which you're referring to in the always popular looming maturity wall discussion, is what you're hitting on. And what we're seeing there is the established owners that have strong relationships throughout either Fannie and Freddie, balance sheet lenders, etc., they're able to continue to negotiate and work out loans and delays.

The people that got out really far over their skis, the syndicators, the new entrance to the place, and a lot of what we talked about last time, those players are sort of hitting the end of their window here.

And what we've seen in the financing space, actually, as we delve into this a bit more, is there's so much liquidity on the debt side that wants to come back to work. They want to be rid of these sort of balance sheet hindrances that are these unproven players in the market, and they want to get back to work with the sponsors they appreciate. And we've generally seen spreads come in about 100 basis points from their peak. So that has helped limit some of sort of the financing pressures, but...

it's certainly a far cry from a 1% 10 year to a four or five 10 years. So,

It depends a lot on who you are in the space and how this has impacted you today. Right. Because 2021, probably part of 2022, we were like in that era where Instagram influencers were posting about get in, you know, rent prices always go up. TikTok multifamily landlords. Yeah, TikTok multifamily landlords. Rent always goes up. We have a new project. It's probably called The Reserve. It's in the suburbs of Houston and it has a pool table and...

There's no kids allowed in the pool table. And you guarantee me. And a bunch of them got wiped out. What happened to them since we talked? And then how talked about it from like the more established operators and how much of a relief has it been that some of this, I don't know, new money, whatever you want. TikTok money has maybe gotten washed out. Tell us how that story ended. I would call it a thinning of the herd that we're still going through.

I don't want to necessarily call out people by name, but you can see in the news there is a certain prominent syndicator that basically doubled their positions and became a top 30 owner in 2021 or so. And banks are personally suing the founders of that company on carry guarantees today.

You've seen potential investigations and some of the debt funds being talked about in the space and that relates specifically to valuations on some of these assets that weren't maintained or taken care of by certain owner operators.

you're seeing a high level of delinquency. A lot of these properties that were these new money and TikTok landlords have a ton of liens against them because they weren't paying their contractors, they weren't executing their value add plans. And ultimately, they're going to be in a world of pain would be my sort of outcome at the end of all of this. Because as I said before, the banks are just

getting tired of carrying this on their balance sheets. Same with the debt funds. Like you can't make money with this much bad money hogging your book. I have a really basic question, which I feel kind of bad asking because I used to cover commercial real estate and I should know this since multifamily is the forgotten commercial real estate, as I sometimes call it.

But what's the best thing to look at if you want to just get a gauge of multifamily markets health? So, you know, I can look at like permits or something like that, but that number is really volatile. I'm not sure how much it's actually telling me.

Yeah, I think there's sort of two high level factors. One is going to be your rent growth, because that's going to feed your NOI growth. The other factor is going to be your cap rate, which we talked about this a little bit last time, your cap rate is essentially your yield, your income over your price.

As money is entering the space, prices go up. So you get healthier cap spaces. And that's on the sort of for sale side. And as NOI goes up, you also can get tightening of cap rates because you get a higher value on the NOI. And that also would be sort of your high level indicator. And what we've seen in cap rates is they've just started to flatten in the last few months, but they're up.

roughly 100 basis points across the board. And that's where sort of that 20 to 30% hit in valuations I mentioned has come into play. All right, let's talk about from the perspective of a renter. So I have some familiarity with the Austin, Texas housing market.

Supply and demand apparently has worked very beautifully there. A lot of people wanted to move there. And then there's just towers up everywhere, including deep into the suburbs. And then actually rent price, I believe, is actually negative for many years in Austin, which, you know, seems like good news. Overall, that's a rare story, though. But we've had this big fall. And anyone can just go on Fred and search new privately owned housing units, started units and buildings with five units or more, and see that we've had this big drop.

over the last two years, roughly, since the peak of all these developments. What's going to happen? Play this out a little bit over the next two years where supply meets demand here. And, you know, we already have these affordability. Rent is already basically expensive everywhere, even in Austin with the declines. Is it going to get worse?

Yes, I think frankly we're about to transition from what has been a very renter friendly Market to again a landlord friendly market over the course of the next two to three years and that's gonna be particularly driven by what we're seeing on the supply side We're gonna have over a million units come to market over a two-year period here in 24 and 25 Okay, but peak supply is hitting in the next six months and

And if you look at relative time from a peak supply and then B to getting to a level of lower supply than you saw last cycle, every major market in the country will be there by the end of 2026. So delivering less housing units than they did on average from 17 to 19 in apartment buildings. So you're going to go below prior cycle.

supply very quickly. At the same time, we do have exceptionally strong labor markets here and the demand story has been outstanding. So 2024 is going to end the year, depending upon the data provider you use as the first or third highest year for rental demand ever.

2021 was the prior record. So we're seeing people form rental households at unprecedented rate in the U.S. And as that supply comes down, you're going to see that demand struggle to, frankly, find high quality, well-located assets to move in. And you're likely to see that relationship flip at that point. ♪

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So the other thing that affects multifamily housing construction other than interest rates has to be just general confidence, I guess, in the direction of the economy, the direction of the world. And certainly there's a lot going on right now. We're recording this on January 28th, and there's news that the Trump administration is freezing a whole bunch of federal spending. I think it's something like 20 percent of federal spending.

That includes presumably stuff like Section 8 and other affordable housing measures. Would that be expected to hit multifamily as well?

Yeah. And I think it's probably easiest to sort of start at the top, right? When you're building multifamily, you're generally trying to build to an acceptable return on cost. But frankly, what we're doing is putting an investor's money together and generating returns for them. Multifamily isn't built for free, and it can't be in this sort of economic world. And

A general rule of thumb is a 6 plus percent return on cost. So cost to build, you want to yield over 6% of that to get a building to pencil. That tracks up closer to 7, depending upon the institution.

Because you need to build to that yield on cost, you have to have rents that are high enough to generate enough rental revenue to drive that return. So in order to build today, you have to build at exceptionally high rent levels because of the cost to build, because of the cost of interest rates.

The only way to drop that is to drop the cost. And that cost drop typically comes for affordable housing from the federal government, be it HUD grants that are then deployed through the local housing agency, be it LIHTC, be it any sort of an ensemblage of ways to cut costs. That's how you can get to affordable rents on the supply side.

And then on the demand side, you can cut rents by literally giving people a rent check, which is what Section 8 is. And that, again, comes from the federal government via grant given to the local housing agencies to deploy. And if that money dries up,

you have immense problems in terms of a feeling the demand for these people because you're cutting rent on the Section 8 side and be encouraging future construction of affordable apartment buildings.

Just to be clear, though, because there are projects that have their market rate rent and then they have some allocation to what people call affordable units, right? In different cities or whatever have different rules about how much you need to allocate. Is that Section 8 housing too or is Section 8 housing, like how much does it commingle? Does this also affect development of buildings that people don't think of as, quote, affordable housing projects?

So in those sort of mixed buildings, you're going to see more of a price lock. You're going to see a supply side affordable building, be it tax credit, be it a locked price on X percentage of AMI, which is ultimately what you're going to see. What's AMI? Area Median Income, which is how Fannie, Freddie, all of them essentially set what's affordable through HUD.

So that won't be destroyed or eliminated. Frankly, usually when people are building, they understand in Massachusetts, you need X percentage of the building to be affordable. So they need the building to pencil around that. Honestly, typically, it just means higher rents in the rest of the building to fund those units. So I don't expect that to dry up. What I expect are larger scale community investment projects to expand.

revive an area within a town like a Pilsen. We looked at buildings with one of the states prior at a prior job, and that was looking at doing a massive housing development that would be entirely affordable for the community there. And this is in Chicago. So stuff like that's going to disappear. Purpose built is going to disappear. Anybody who was planning to build an entirely voucher building through Section 8, that's going to disappear. So you're going to have real pain in that stuff, at least in the short term. I mean,

I mean, in theory, this could be a quick turnaround and it's just a big wave of disruption that goes away in four weeks.

There is a world where it severely impacts housing construction at the lower level. What are people in the market saying about it right now? Or is everyone just sort of in wait and see mode? I think like most things, it's wait and see mode. I think that's been the general markets approach to this entire administration transition, just because you need so much clarity to start figuring out real world impacts here.

And that very much trickles into the cost to build stuff with the tariffs, with the deportation impacts on labor and things along those lines. Let's talk about deportation impacts on labor. What are the estimates for what percentage of the multifamily workforce, whether it's construction or maintenance, whatever else, is undocumented labor? It's estimated 20% of construction workers in this country are undocumented labor.

I venture to guess it's similar for the whole multifamily industry when you look at staffing and things along those lines. And I think when you look at a combination of deportation of construction workers, as well as the sheer amount of labor it's going to require to rebuild huge swaths of California, right?

I think you could be looking at a massive deficit in labor within the construction space. And when you think about that, that's going to be your strongest lever that's going to hit your cost to build. And that's what's going to drive up those rents that are necessary is all of this immense pressure you're going to see in the labor costs.

Tracy, I hadn't even thought about the huge demand for construction labor that's going to come out of California. Oh, yeah, because of the wildfires. So we have the fires. We have deportations. We have the end of a lot of affordable housing projects, at least temporarily, and the interest rate shock all coming together. So far, this is what we've covered so far at the same time to sort of like constrain the supply of new housing in the coming year.

coming years. Well, the irony is like everyone's building at the same time after the wildfires, right? So like everything is just going to go up. Actually, that reminds me, we should talk about insurance rates because I think this is another source of pressure on multifamily, which is that insurance rates for a lot of these operators have also been going up quite a lot. And there aren't that many levers they can pull in order to reduce that particular cost.

Yeah, I think this is another situation of kind of the haves and have nots. At Cortland, we ensure our entire portfolio and when you're able to sort of spread risk over 80,000 apartment units, you can get far more beneficial rates. If you're a small owner in LA, if you're a small owner in California, Florida and Texas,

I don't know what you do today. Rates had hit an estimate of 300 per unit at one point in Florida to insure some buildings. While there's been some normalization since then, and costs have generally stopped with the massive spikes, again, pre-wildfires, but it's just a huge, huge cost that hits everyone. And it's tough at this point in time to enact in

certain markets and that includes also texas tornado alley's had as much of an increase as you've seen in florida and california to date so where does the rubber meet the road we're gonna have you back on sometime in 2026 maybe somewhere in 2026 if the pattern goes what are we talking about

I think what you're looking at in 2026 is a very investor friendly rental market again, and we sort of have returned to where we were last cycle. What I think is really interesting and what I see in the housing market today is almost a displacement of people living where they want rather than people not being able to afford housing. And

It starts at the top. The baby boomers have the vast majority of three plus bedroom homes in this country, and they aren't giving those up despite plummeting bedroom utilization rates. So the millennials can't really push into the housing they want. So millennials continue to rent or buy first time homes, things along those lines.

Gen Z at the same time is the richest earning young generation on record because of, frankly, the baby boomers exiting the labor force. They don't feel it that way, though, from what I understand. No, they do not. But the Fed strongly disagrees with their feelings. The Fed doesn't care about your feelings. Sorry. Anyway, keep going. No, it's fine. When you look at this confluence of factors, what you've seen is really...

Higher earning people living lower down what used to be considered the quality spectrum. So in our portfolio We've seen incomes jump to almost a hundred thousand dollars per unit on average Our credit scores have spiked to around 700 and our ages in the low 30s That's a well earning strong young American worker and that's across our portfolio That's primarily in the Sun Belt with some mid-atlantic and Western exposure so

You're seeing an exceptionally high quality credit worthy tenant and you're seeing huge demand for that housing. And that's because nobody's building in the well located areas. You can't build single family homes in good school districts today. The local builders are entirely out of the market. They've been absorbed by the big boys since the great financial crisis. And you're seeing starts in those high quality locations plummet at a greater rate than you're seeing them in the further out locations. So you're

you're going to have this tight labor force. Everybody is going to need to work preventing some kind of crazy AI situation.

And you're going to have these high incomes and everyone's going to want to live in the same well-connected, good areas. And you're likely to see rents in those areas begin to pop because that's where this supply wave is winding down the quickest. And that's where starts aren't going to backfill the current supply. Just to be clear, though, the expected increase in rents, is that enough to offset all of the pressures from higher interest rates? Yeah.

I think you're likely to see what's happened in the single family sector after the GFC happened a little bit in the multifamily sector where there is a thinning of the herd. I don't think it'll get to the point where I think four home builders have 50% of new home listings today or some crazy number like that. But

But you're likely to see the small developers end up consumed by the bigger developers that can handle it better. And you're likely to see continued pressure in the multifamily space where smaller funds, smaller operators, people that can't afford interest rate caps, that can't ride out long term, hire for longer, are going to have to exit or ultimately be absorbed into a larger player. So to answer your question, it would be much easier for the industry on the whole to have lower rates.

I think a three to a three, five, the industry is just fine. Three to three, five on the 10 year, to be clear. I don't know how soon we can get there. And I think in the meantime, we're going to see a calling of the herd, if you will.

I'm very bullish on driverless cars, but assuming that they're not in mass production or mass deployment in the next couple of years, talk to us about like how far people are going to be having to commute. If it sounds like the desirable places, there's no building. People are having to build further and further out. What are we talking about? What are some of the places? What are the hot spots, you know, three hours outside of Charlotte or whatever? You're literally describing my house in Connecticut. Yeah, right. I mean, that's really what you're seeing here.

The places right now getting the highest out migration from Atlanta where I relocated for Cortland are Gainesville, which is a separate MSA an hour and a half outside of the city. You're seeing it

in all of these sort of tertiary markets because that's where people can afford to build. And that's home builders and apartment developers chasing cheaper land basis and cheaper tax. People don't commute from Gainesville to Atlanta. If you have a hybrid job, you might commute to North Atlanta once in a while or you work remote. But driverless cars, that's a place you could see benefit from that. It's a place trying to grow.

because it's exceptionally difficult to get a home in North Buckhead today or even in some of the closer in suburbs. It's exceptionally expensive. So I think you're going to see people commuting further and further out because that's the accessible product, but also...

I don't know if demand for that product is frankly as high as it is for the better located product. We run independent renter surveys, things along those lines, and it seems location matters more to people today than space to a degree. And I do think that favors multifamily investment in the longer term. 89% of business leaders say AI is a top priority, according to research by Boston Consulting Group.

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Tracy, I just want to be clear that if you have to commute even part-time from Gainesville to Atlanta, or if you have to live in some small multifamily development, I do not blame Gen Z for thinking things aren't great, even if nominally on paper their incomes are high. Well, yeah. Thank you, Joe. I'm sure they'll appreciate that. I just want to be clear on that. One point I do want to put on that, though.

Our internal rent to income ratios today are actually 30 basis points lower than they were in 2018. Hmm. Huh. Okay. So our apartment buildings today, despite 30% post COVID rent gains, that's interesting, are more affordable because since COVID we've had a 34% increase in our new renter incomes.

But it's a different cohort. Anyway, sorry. Tracy, go. So we're talking about the desirability of cities and everyone wants to live there, but you can't really build. One of the other things that Trump promised in addition to mass deportation and things like that, a reduction in federal spending, was permitting reform.

And I guess I'm curious, like, have you seen any action on that? Or is there an expectation that maybe the federal government will in some way be able to ease up the bureaucracy around building new construction? I don't know how he has any impact there. It's just they're so local driven. He can't touch impact fees on local areas. You can't start touching fire and safety fees. So

I don't know how in a federal system the federal government can control local impact fees. And I just I can't connect the dots there. Well, setting aside what the federal government can do, do you see there's the Yimby movement all around? Do you see them having an effect as the dial being turned anywhere in a meaningful way outside of Austin?

I think it's unfortunate they've gained the most traction and possibly the hardest turn into build environment possible.

In theory, you've seen some government elected officials change. You've seen some positions change. I think there's probably some more momentum in San Francisco than there's ever been before. You obviously have the South that's just build, build, build. But it's hard to put pen to paper on if they're actually achieving things when you can't pencil new buildings in high quality locations today.

So a lot of multifamily loans have found their way into either CMBS, so commercial mortgage-backed securities, or CLOs, collateralized loan obligations. But the defaults on those have, I think the last numbers I saw, they're still pretty low. Like on CLOs, I'm pretty sure it's in the like low single figures for U.S. CLOs.

Why haven't we seen like greater waves of distress make their way into the end product of multifamily?

I think people are doing everything they can to protect their warehouse lines in the CLO and CMBS market. You don't want to lose access to capital if you're a debt fund today by having toxic assets. So people are picking them off the CLO book. They're internalizing them. If you're one of the debt funds that has a housing operator wing, you can start operating properties on your own.

I think it's protect credit at all costs. So people are doing everything they can to protect that credit. The distress is there. You see every week on the pipeline report of what's on market, the same syndicators looking for bailouts. You see the same people that hit the overbuilt nodes and overpaid in 21 looking for help. And you see them not getting the prices that even hit the debt levels they need. So

It's working out, but I think ultimately nobody's willing to sacrifice their credit levels to work it out quicker. Can you just say anything more about the impact of Los Angeles? I hadn't thought about that fires in terms of like estimates for how much resources that's going to suck up, so to speak, for construction and development.

Yeah, it's interesting. I think our CEO made an off the cuff comment last week, we were looking at a building in a location in Atlanta that is where heavily, heavily populated by construction workers. And his remark was going to have trouble getting rent growth there for the next year and a half, because I expect all those people to end up in California in the short term. And

It's another, actually, to sort of wrap one other question you asked in there, is the HUD side of things. HUD is typically vital in these rebuilding efforts, and that's a funding channel that if the government turns off is...

going to have severe impacts there as well. So, A, I think you could see demand move within communities because of L.A. I think it's going to have a material impact on cost to build in our country. And B, you could see it dampened by some of the recent movements by the administration. Well, FEMA is also a really big protection layer for like Fannie Mae and entities like that. So fun times.

Lee Everett, looking forward to having you back again in 2026 when we talk about how badly constrained the market is. Really appreciate your coming back on OddLock. Thank you for having me. It's always great.

So it's funny, we got like 10 minutes of housing supply relief and then we're just heading right back to constraints and shortages. And it sounds like rent growth and investor friendly environments and so forth. We got a glimpse of what could be. Yeah.

It's also funny, Tracy, thinking like, oh, this was the renter-friendly market? I missed it, right? Yeah, seriously. Well, I also thought his characterization of like, people are living in houses. It's just a lot of them are not living in the houses, in the places that they would prefer to be. Yeah. I mean, that's certainly part of my experience. And one reason why I don't own a house in New York, but I own one elsewhere. Yeah.

The other thing I was thinking about is his characterization of, I guess, the haves and the have-nots in the market. And I think this is really important because this is like, you could say this about the entire corporate world. Like, if you are a

big company that can access the bond market. The past few years probably have not been that bad for you. If you are a smaller player and you have to take out bank loans, it's been a lot more constrained. So a lot of the financing environment has just led to a situation where the big get bigger. And, you know, Lee was talking about how you might see more consolidation in multifamily operators. And that's just an extension of that trend. And of course, we've talked about this

In the past, the great financial crisis and what it did to the single family homebuilders. And there are just a lot fewer single family homebuilders today than there were several years ago. You know, I always think back to last year when we traveled to Mount Airy, North Carolina, the idea that the community has to put together a roadshow to pitch the homebuilder.

Yeah.

And that's consolidating the multifamily developers. Yeah. All right. Shall we leave it there? Let's leave it there. This has been another episode of the All Thoughts Podcast. I'm Traci Allaway. You can follow me at Traci Allaway. And I'm Joe Weisenthal. You can follow me at The Stalwart. Follow our producers, Carmen Rodriguez at Carmen Arman, Dashiell Bennett at Dashbot, and Kel Brooks

at Kale Brooks. For more Odd Lots content, go to bloomberg.com slash oddlots. We have transcripts, a blog, and a newsletter. And you can chat about all of these topics 24-7 in our Discord, discord.gg slash oddlots.

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