January 31, 2015
By Albert Fontenot
"Charleston has been a great owner's market in the last several years, and those times are nearing an end. This new supply of apartments will have an impact on the ability of pricing of our products, and it's a typical supply-and-demand thing."
~Mike Schwarz, partner at Woodfield Investments, which specializes in multi-family properties in the Mid-Atlantic and Southeastern United States
As a savvy independent Charleston landlord, it behooves you to keep abreast of any changes or trends in the local real estate investment market. It has been a boom time over the past few years, both in terms of profitable resale value for acquired properties and rising rents due to increased demand.
As I discussed in an earlier blog, the median home sale price in Charleston 4Q 2014 was $219,000, up 4.3% year-over year from 2013. During the last six months of the year, monthly rates surged by 13%. At mid-year 2014, REIS, a real estate information company, reported that Charleston had a 5.9% rent increase over 2013, ranking as the fourth-highest in the country, behind only San Francisco, San Jose, and Seattle. Out of 79 metropolitan areas analyzed in the study, the average was an increase of 3.2%.
However, there are indications that that trend may be about to level out, as the supply of apartments in the Charleston area is entering a major growth period. Outside investment companies have begun to take notice of the plethora of factors that make the city so attractive for real estate speculation.
As reported in the Post and Courier, Charleston was expected to have the highest rate of growth in new rental construction in the US in 2014. The newspaper quoted apartmentguide.com as a source, saying that the city would realize an 8% growth in apartment/multi-family residences. According to the website's projections, over 9000 units are scheduled to be built in Berkeley, Charleston, and Dorchester counties within the next few years, including approximately 4000 units currently under construction.
Major real estate investment companies are pouring money into the Charleston-North Charleston-Summerville metropolitan area.
The impact is already being felt. In June, the vacancy rate was at 5.8%, up from 4.3% the previous year. While rents aren't expected to go down, they are expected to flatten out as the supply of new apartments continues to increase.
All of this development begs the question – with so many housing options opening, how can a small independent Charleston landlord compete with these large, deep-pocketed national corporations?
On one hand, the answer is painfully obvious. On a dollar-for-dollar basis, you can't. Whenever these large real estate investment and development companies have a problem, they simply throw money at it until it goes away. You don't have that luxury.
But the truth of the matter is you don't have to. Your strengths and advantages as an owner/landlord lie elsewhere. By playing to those strengths and applying intelligent business strategies, you still can prosper within the Charleston rental/real estate market. If there's one thing that the recent statistic tells us, it is that there are plenty of present and future tenants who will be in need of a great place to live.
Your challenge is to provide them with that great place.
Let's look at a few proven strategies that will allow you to successfully compete with the larger companies –
Obviously, this doesn't mean that you can't or shouldn't rent to a single tenants or tenants without children. That type of discrimination against applicants is in violation of law. But what it DOES mean is that once you know who your renters are most likely to be, you can determine how to best attract them.
Try to think like your prospective tenants and anticipate their needs. There are a number of websites that you can use for research and inspiration.
If necessary, hire a professional to help you come up with an attractive listing that helps "sell" your property to the prospective tenants. Any fee you pay for this service is more than made up by the reduction in the length of the vacancy. Always try to include clear, well-lighted, high-quality photographs.
Remember, a paying tenant today is worth more than a prospective tenant (and a vacancy) in the future.
It is important that you regularly review rental prices within the state of South Carolina, the city of Charleston, and the specific zip code of the neighborhood. At a minimum, you want to compare and update your price whenever there is a vacancy or when it is time for your tenants to renew their lease.
If it seems to you like the biggest way to compete with the larger real estate development companies is to go above and beyond with personal service, then you are getting the message. That is exactly how you compete and win. It may seem like a lot of work, but by doing so, you provide a more personalized service that those conglomerates cannot hope to match.