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Miami rent growth keeps steady pace in 2016

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U.S. apartment rents have increased for the third-straight month, according to Yardi Matrix’s monthly survey of 119 markets. June rent rates increased by exactly $10, or 0.9 percent, to another all-time high of $1,213.

Rents were up 2.7 percent in the second quarter of 2016 and climbed 5.6 percent on an annual basis. Year-to-date rents increased 4.2 percent, which is almost to the tipping point of the forecasted total 2016 growth.

Although home prices increased pretty consistently, rental growth has slowed. Annually, rent growth dipped 30 basis points and is down 110 basis points from the most recent high reported in October. Prices have steadily risen since the start of the year.

Yardi studied the Brexit in its June report as well, but the company doesn’t believe the overseas shift will have much of an impact on the apartment market in the U.S.

On an eight-year average, rent growth was reported by Yardi at 2.8 percent. The only market of the 119 studied that saw annual rents hit a mark below that rate was Houston, where rental growth has slowed substaintially. Compared with the national annual growth of 5.6 percent, Austin and Philadelphia were the two cities closest to the average.

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Sacramento came in with the highest year-over-year growth, followed by Seattle, Portland and Los Angeles.

On a trailing 12-month basis in June, rents grew by 6.2 percent nationally. Rents fell by 10 basis points overall, which was largely due to a dip in lifestyle renters from 5.9 percent to 5.8 percent.

Miami rent conditions

Rent growth is strong in Miami, and Yardi predicts that it will continue in the same direction. According to the rent forecast, growth will reach 5.6 percent in Miami by the end of the year, putting it among the stronger growth markets in the nation.

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The occupancy rate is strong in Miami, at a firm 96.3 percent, which remains unchanged in May over the previous month. A total of 2.5 percent of total stock in June 2016 was considered completions, according to Yardi,

Year-over-year job growth was reported at 2.6 percent in Miami, which is moderate but still stronger than about half the cities reported.

Email Kimberly Manning