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Thursday, March 28, 2024

San Francisco Rent Drops Most On Record As People Flee For Suburbs

Courtesy of ZeroHedge View original post here.

Readers may recall, as early as March, city dwellers in California fled to suburbs and remote areas to isolate from the virus pandemic. The proliferation of remote work arrangements has led this shift to become more permanent. 

At first, the exodus out of the city was due to virus-related lockdowns, then social unrest, and now it appears a steady flow of folks are leaving the San Francisco Bay Area for rural communities as their flexible work environment (i.e., remote access) allows them to work from anywhere, more specifically, outside city centers where the cost of living is a whole lot cheaper.  

Bloomberg notes, citing a new report from rental website Zumper, the latest emigration trend out of the Bay Area has resulted in rents for a San Francisco one-bedroom apartment to plunge 12% in June compared with last year, which is one of the most significant monthly declines on record.

"Zumper has been tracking rent prices across the country for over five years but we have never seen the market fluctuate quite like this," Zumper co-founder and CEO Anthemos Georgiades said. "For example, rent prices in San Francisco have historically only gone up and typically only incrementally, yet now we are seeing double-digit percent rent reductions. This is unprecedented for this generation of renters."

Georgiades said the ability to work remotely led to the exodus of city dwellers: 

"The very real move of many mainly technology employers to a future of remote work, meaning millions of employees now looking outside of dense metropolitan areas for their next home now that their commute time is no longer a factor," Georgiades said.

"Silicon Valley hubs such as Mountain View and Palo Alto also saw rents plunge — a sign residents of the tech-heavy region are taking advantage of remote work arrangements to flee to cheaper areas," Bloomberg said. 

"This is the strangest downturn I've ever seen," J.J. Panzer with the Real Management Company told San Francisco KPIX 5.

Rental inventory in the Bay Area has increased since the pandemic began – allowing renters to renegotiate leases and ask for a 10-15% reduction in rents.  

Other factors for the steep drop in rents is mainly because of the recession and high unemployment. People can no longer afford pricey rentals in San Francisco – must leave city centers for suburbs where rents are significantly less. 

"As the pandemic persists on, the demand for rentals has continued to shift away from these pricey areas, and a significant amount of that demand seems to be moving toward neighboring, less expensive areas," Zumper said on its blog.

"Your landlord, given the widespread nature of the job loss, actually does have an incentive to negotiate a lower rent with you," said senior Zillow economist Skyler Olsen.

"Vacant units have no value coming upstream to pay their property taxes and their mortgage and that value as part of the system," said Olsen. 

Financial blog Market Crumbs notes, "with the rise of remote work seemingly inevitable at this point, this trend should continue in San Francisco as well as other major cities in the years to come."

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