The Radix Review: Multifamily Trends Explained
The multifamily market closed out May on a note of quiet resilience. Occupancy nudged higher for the week, the year-over-year gap continued to narrow, and leasing activity held steady. The rent side remains the story that operators are watching most closely. As of May 31, the average U.S. occupancy rate was 94.22%, up 4 basis points from the prior week and down 22 basis points from a year ago. The leased percentage was 96.26%, up 5 basis points week over week and down 1.00% from last year. Both metrics have been moving in the right direction on a weekly basis throughout May, and the annual gap, while still present, is smaller than it was at the start of the month. The average number of leases signed was 2.3 per property last week, down 0.1 from the prior week and down 1.0 compared to this time last year. Leasing velocity has held in a narrow band all month. Markets on the higher end of the range are demonstrating that demand is there when supply and pricing are aligned. Net effective rent for new leases was $1,751, up 0.1% from the prior week but down 2.4% from a year ago. RevPAU was $1,650, also up 0.1% week over week and down 2.6% annually. The weekly direction is encouraging, but the annual comparisons reflect the concession activity that pulled rents lower in the second half of May. Closing out the month with two consecutive weeks of flat to positive weekly NER movement is a modest stabilizing signal heading into June. Explore our webpage for more insights and resources: https://bit.ly/Radix_Website
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