posted on March 09, 2010 14:21

It's a cold winter for apartment investors in Los Angeles County: Rents are down, prices have fallen and vacancies are way up.
Deal velocity -- broker slang for sales volume -- is a thin stream compared with the overflowing activity of 2005 and '06, the most recent boom years.
But to smaller investors like Johnny Caal, with cash in hand and a taste for risk, the weather is delightful.
This is the best market I've seen since 1994," during the previous recession, said the Van Nuys-based investor, who owns six small rental complexes in L.A. County. He is in escrow on a six-unit building in Van Nuys.
Falling apartment values bring out the so-called bottom feeders, or small investors in search of inexpensive property.
In 2009, the bottom feeders and other small investors ruled the investment market in multifamily housing.
Apartment complexes with five to 49 units captured a lopsided share of new investments in multifamily properties in Los Angeles County last year: There were 552 sales, according to figures compiled by Marcus & Millichap, a national real estate brokerage based in Palo Alto. By comparison, only 15 complexes with 50 to 100 units sold, and 16 with 100 units or more sold.
Many people think of small apartment complexes as those with fewer than 15 units. California law requires larger complexes to have an on-site manager, an added cost that some investors shun.
Overall, apartment-house prices have been falling for the last few years: They slipped to an estimated median of $128,500 a unit last year, down 4% from 2008, Marcus & Millichap data show. The median price is the point at which half sold for more and half for less.
The largest complexes are favored by institutional investors such as pension funds and insurance companies. Those big investors are sitting out the market for good reason.
Armed with professional advisors and expensive software, institutional investors want deals that conform to specific investment criteria. And owners of institutional-grade property don't want to sell in this dismal market. In other words, it's an investment stalemate.
But in the mom-and-pop market for smaller buildings, many people are eager to gain a foothold in the potentially profitable investment field. A small apartment building is often the first real estate purchase after an investor's residence.
Many small investors aren't as methodical as institutional buyers, and some are willing to accept a riskier or less profitable project so they can get into a coveted type of investment.
The current market seems almost the opposite of the boom years of 2005 and 2006.
Prices rose sharply in those years, attracting get-rich-quick investors who believed they could hold properties for short periods and sell them profitably -- regardless of the income generated by rents.
Currently, "there are more listings than buyers who are both motivated and financially qualified," says Roderick "Rick" Raymundo, a broker with the Los Angeles office of Marcus & Millichap.
Not all small rental complexes are underpriced, Raymundo says. For a small number of fully occupied, well-maintained properties in desirable locations, sellers may receive a dozen offers or more, with bids close to the asking price.
"In a market like this, there is a flight to quality, to investments that are less risky," he says.
Apartment vacancies in Los Angeles County rose to 6% in mid-2009, according to Marcus & Millichap figures. In a strong apartment market, vacancies can fall below 2%.
In a weak market, landlords cut prices to compete for tenants.
By Morris Newman, Los Angeles Times, March 7th, 2010