Rental Property Stocks Get New Lease On Profits With Rising Interest Rates

This article was originally published by Motif Investing.

So is it too late for new investors to get into rental market stocks?

Rental Run-Up

Short-term investors probably should avoid the rental property market. Rents have leapt about 20 percent nationwide over the last five years. But some of the biggest markets, such as New York, San Francisco, Boston and Seattle, are experiencing slower growth rates.

“We’ve had a big run-up in rents, but I don’t think we’ll see any significant growth in the next couple of years,” David Schwartz of Slate Property Group told the New York Times earlier this year.

Buying and Holding

Moving Millennials into the homeownership market involves clearing two major obstacles. First, the biggest share of Millennials haven’t moved into rental housing yet; data from the U.S. Census Bureau shows 32.1 percent of 18- to 34-year-olds are living with their parents.

Even when Millennials can afford their own rental housing, a recent survey found that renters in 12 major cities would need more than a decade to save up 20 percent for a down payment, ranging from 10.1 years for a Boston dwelling to 27.8 years for a San Francisco pied-a-terre.

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