To be clear, the market this year has been difficult to read on many levels as economic policies have fluctuated, the pace of hiring slowed, and property owners have had to decide if it’s the right time for them to cash in on their equity growth of the past few years or wait for a re-stabilization of market forces. One other factor potentially influencing their thinking is that there continues to be large-scale new construction of multi-family projects being built and expected to hit the market next year, including the Aurora Apartments on Meadow Street near the new Cayuga Medical facility, The Breeze on the old Ithaca Gun Factory site, and Theory, a massive building going up on East State Street. Together, these will bring nearly 600 new market-rate apartments online. These are in addition to several hundred income-qualified units being developed around the City.
In conversations with other agents and watching the rental market this fall, it appears that rental prices are moderating and vacancy rates are growing slightly from prior years, although this data is purely empirical as occupancy data is not centralized and any federal census data is delayed by several months, even years. Will the market be able to continue to support more and more rental units and hold their value? It’s a fair question, although the resiliency of the market here regularly surprises us all. Here are some reasons for taking the long view of real estate investment in our market:
- Cornell has always grown consistently, even when the messaging might suggest otherwise.
- Naysayers about the massive number of units that came on the market over the past 10 years expected to see vacancy rates grow, and they didn’t. Other than a couple of notable failures by overextended individual investors, properties continue to fill up to a healthy and sustainable level.
- The period from 2020-2023 was a historical anomaly.
- Even with the loss of Federal funding to many local institutions and agencies, adjustments will be made to normalize budgets and investments.
- Ithaca and the surrounding communities have always offered a healthy, vibrant, diverse, and entrepreneurial environment and remain attractive to both climate refugees and those seeking a smaller, but no less inviting market.
Together, these factors suggest that we remain a reasonable, even solid place to make real estate investments, especially as we see interest rates start to drop along with market prices. |