SAAA May 2020 Special Edition Residence Magazine MAY_2020_DIGITAL_Magazine | Page 16

MARKET UPDATE Greater San Antonio Q1 2020 Review by Jordan Brooks Market Analyst | ALN Apartment Data, Inc. W ith the first quarter in the rearview mirror it’s time to look back and see how the multi- family industry in San Antonio performed to open 2020. The headline event in the in- dustry and beyond was, of course, COVID-19 and its far-reaching impact. At the time of this writing in early April, data is still being collected on the effects being seen at the property level in terms of rent payments being made, special arrangements being offered to residents that have been affected either medically or economically and the like. The second quarter is when these issues will come into sharper focus. All numbers below will refer to conventional properties at just under 92% after a 0.5% retraction. Average Effective Rent and Concessions with at least 50 units. Average effective rent rose 0.5% from January through Net Absorption and Average Occupancy month. This gain falls well short of the nearly 2% gain With just over 2,000 new units, more new supply was from the 0.3% appreciation from the opening quarter delivered in the San Antonio market to open 2020 than in the first quarter of 2019 or 2018. For the third straight year net absorption in the quarter failed to match the new units. About 340 previously unoccupied units were leased in the period, significantly lower than either of the two previous first quarters. The lackluster result is due to a net loss of just over 550 rented units in Janu- ary. It is only thanks to strong absorption in March that there was a positive net change in rented units for the March, bringing the average per unit to $1,016 per in Q1 2019, though it does represent an improvement of 2018. As with net absorption, it was the compara- bly solid March result that prevented rent growth from being negative for the quarter. Nationally, average ef- fective rent gained 1% in the period. More properties were offering a rent discount at the end of March this year than at the end of March in 2019 or 2018, but the increase in availability came in the latter part of 2019 rather than in the first quarter quarter. of 2020. 38% of properties were offering a lease con- The relatively high volume of deliveries combined remained essentially flat since the start of the year. The with tepid absorption left average occupancy for the Greater San Antonio area down 1% in the quarter to finish March at 89%. For the last three years, average occupancy has hovered in a tight range between 89% and 90% from January to March so current occu- pancy is within the normal bounds despite the loss. For 16 context, national average occupancy ended March MAY 2020 SPECIAL EDITION | www.saaaonline.org cession by the end of Q4 2019 and that figure has average value of the discount, calculated from only those properties offering one, declined by a little more than 3% to finish at about 5.5%. Stated another way, the average concession was approximately three weeks off a 12-month lease.