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Metro Detroit Rents Begin to Soften Amidst All-Time High

Although metro Detroit’s average rent growth is 5.14% annually, and metro Ann Arbor’s is 7.14%, metro Detroit’s rent market is beginning to soften.  According to CoStar Group Inc., asking rents are $1,214 a month in the metro area. In Ann Arbor, the average asking rents are up to $1,443 a month. The largest annual increase between both areas was in Saline, with rents up 26.56% which equates to $1,311 a month. Birmingham/Bloomfield area averages $1,815 a month, which is down from $1,857. Detroit’s west side has the most affordable rent at $726 a month. According to CoStar’s director, inflation, rising interest rates and home sales prices, increasing maintenance costs and a rush of renters wanting t lock in rates contributed to increasing rents.

 

Vacant WBJK Building To Become Midnight Golf Headquarters

On August 5, the deed to the former WJBK-TV Studios building was transferred to another entity called 7441 MGP Properties LLC. The building, located in Detroit’s New Center area, will become the new headquarters for the Midnight Golf Program nonprofit. James Jacob, CEO of Ajax Paving Industries Inc. bought the building through his family foundation and donated it to the nonprofit. He has not disclosed the price he paid for the building. According to the founder and president of Midnight Golf, Renee Fluker, the organization is readying a capital campaign to raise the $10-12 million needed to retrofit the property. The program provides college coaches, life skills training and mentoring to about 1,500 students, mostly first-generation college students.

 

Metro Detroit’s Fair Market Rents Increase

The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development is predicting rent hikes for the 2023 fiscal year in metro Detroit. It published fair market rents at a 11.9 percent increase for a two-bedroom apartment. The rate is increasing from $1,084 to $1,213, beginning October 1. This increase is higher than the Michigan and national averages which hover around 10.3 to 10.4 percent. Metro Ann Arbor rates are 9.7 percent higher. Kalamazoo County wins the prize for the highest fair market rent increase at 19.3 percent. Private sector data was used to estimate changes. The figures are used to determine rent ceilings for certain low-income and emergency grants, as well as the worth of housing vouchers and the maximum award amounts for Continuums of Care.

 

Jefferson Chalmsers’ Apartment Building Revived

The renovated Marlborough Apartments in the Jefferson Chalmers neighborhood have opened. Jefferson East Inc. and its subsidiary, East Jefferson Development Corporation are responsible for the renovation of the 1927 building that houses. 8 unit apartments. They are also renovating another circa 1929 property on the north side of Jefferson. It will have 15 units. According to Mayor Mike Duggan, the second property has stood vacant for 50 years.  The two properties will reserve a total of 13 units for tenants with incomes between 50% and 60% of the area median income. The two and three bedroom units will range from $848 to $914 a month.

 

 

Some Question Bedrock’s 10-Year Tax Break

A month ago, Detroit City Council Members stressed that stricter requirements for affordable housing are part of the $60 million tax break deal given to Bedrock’s Hudson’s site project. However, Bedrock LLC is almost completely in compliance with those requirements already.  As a result, the company won’t have to change much of anything in exchange for the 10-year tax break deal, including not having to add any affordable units to the project.  Some question if the city’s requirements for Bedrock are stringent enough. The Hudson’s site project is expected to be finished in 2024.

 

 

Corktown Receives A $50 Million Facelift

The Michigan Department of Transportation and the city of Detroit are co-funding a $50 million renovation of the Corktown neighborhood.  The makeover will include dedicated lanes for autonomous vehicles, raised bike lanes and the removal and repurposing of its red brick pavers. The goal is to tie into Ford Motor Company’s renovation of Michigan Central Station and the vision of creating a connected corridor from Detroit to Ann Arbor. Corktown’s old brick will be removed, restored and reincorporated into other aspects of the roadway’s design. It will be replaced with new red concrete pavers. MDOT will fund $42.7 million, and the city will fund $7.32 million.

 

New Report Offers Insight into Detroit’s Rental Housing

Information on the number of rental properties in Detroit is limited and creates issues concerning improvements to housing conditions and reduction of lead exposure. Most landlords in Detroit own one or two properties, making up about 50% of the units in the city.  Of that number, only 2% have registered properties within the city’s formal rental system. The think tank, Detroit Future City, released an analysis on Wednesday that breaks down landlords into categories using the assessed value of the property, corporate ownership, blight violations, taxpayer’s location, property acquisitions and the number of units they own. Tenant advocates continue to raise concerns about evictions and unaffordable housing. The goal is to support landlords and enable them to become compliant with healthier housing conditions.

 

Southeast Michigan’s Housing Market Is Stabilizing

Southeast Michigan’s housing market is becoming more stable. The number of buyers is decreasing due to growing interest rates and high home prices. Sales of homes in southeast Michigan in July were down by almost 20 percent from July of last year. Pending sales are declining rapidly, and properties are sitting longer on the market. According to the Realcomp report, the costs of buying a home is 80 percent more expensive now than three summers ago. Detroit is ahead of the rest of the region for growing housing prices. The median price of a home in Detroit has grown 38 percent since last year, having surpassed $100,000 for the first time in history.

 

Pilot Program Pays Storefront Owners to Renovate Upstairs Apartments

Southwest Detroit Business Association’s pilot program grants $8,500 per unit to renovate apartments above commercial spaces. In an effort to expand the number of affordable homes and apartments for city residents, empty and derelict second-floor units are an untapped market. According to Elaina Peterson, a program analyst on the policy and implementation team for the city’s housing and revitalization department, there could be as many as 12,000 unoccupied apartments above stores and restaurants in Detroit. If they were updated and made livable, they would make a huge impact on the number of affordable apartments as rents and sale prices continue to increase. The program is one part of a $203 million housing plan that intends to create new rental housing, help renters to become homeowners, and improve the quality of existing rental units.

 

 

Rocket Mortgage’s Issues Forecasted for Other Mortgage Lenders

Rocket Mortgage’s struggles are evident in the earnings report released Thursday evening by Rocket Companies Inc., and they are not likely to be unique as other mortgage companies face challenges. According to Rocket CFO, Julie Booth, the rise in rates had a big impact on rate and term refinance demand. The 30-year fixed mortgage rate has experience its steepest and fasted rise in 50 years. While drastic, Rocket’s diminished earnings were not surprising. Henry Coffey, an analyst with Wedbush Securities, says the same will most likely be true for United Wholesale Mortgage and Home Point Financial when they report earnings next Tuesday and Thursday. Detroit’s Rocket Mortgage is the nation’s largest mortgage lender, generating a record $351 billion in closed loan volume in 2021.