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SHOCK – People leaving big cities in BIG numbers!

Expensive-city exodus leads to massive rent declines in NYC, San Francisco

Residents moving from big cities into the suburbs are causing landlords to offer big incentives in order to lure more tenants. FOX Business’ Kristina Partsinevelos with more.

Some of the country’s largest cities are dealing with an apartment inventory glut, which is causing prices to plummet.

San Francisco saw the prices fall the furthest in September, according to data from Realtor.com, with costs for a one-bedroom unit falling by 24.2%.

Two other cities in California – San Mateo and Santa Clara – experienced the second and third largest drop in average one-bedroom rent prices, followed by Suffolk, Mass., and Manhattan.

The median rent for a one-bedroom apartment in Manhattan declined 15.4% year over year in September.

“As renters continue adapting to the pandemic, many are seeking more affordable housing, job opportunities, and are perhaps opting for less-crowded neighborhoods,” researchers wrote. “Urban centers such as the Bay Area, Manhattan, Boston, Seattle, and Washington, D.C all saw the largest declines in rents compared to last year. These markets also represent some of the most expensive cities in the country, giving rents the most room to fall.”

Overall, in the 100 largest U.S. cities average one-bedroom rents fell 1% year over year.

San Francisco’s chief economist Ted Egan said the city experienced a 43% decline in sales tax revenues between April and June, which he attributed to a flight of people from the city, rather than a decline in activity due to the pandemic.

While areas throughout California experienced a decline in sales tax revenues, other cities had an uptick in online sales, but San Francisco did not.

“In San Francisco, we saw a big drop in brick-and-mortar sales, and very little increase in online sales,” Egan said. “So it raises the question, where did that spending go?”

Some companies, like Twitter and Facebook, have given some employees the option to work from home permanently.

There has also been a well-documented flight from New York City throughout the pandemic, as Manhattanites seek refuge in nearby suburbs or in different states.

Read the rest at: Fleeing BIG Cities


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