Link Corkery has been tracking Bay Area job growth for over two decades. His findings have been the subject of many of his RHANAC (Rental Housing Association of Northern Alameda County) articles and analysis. We have found that by studying the trends in employment we can predict movement in the rental market.
Link predicted that rents would begin going up in 2005, and in November 2008 he accurately predicted that rents would peak that year. In November 2009 he stated that the East Bay rental market was currently going through the worst of the downturn and anticipated it would soon start a recovery.

Change in Bay Area Rents vs. Employment
(Click chart to see larger image)
Change in Bay Area Rents vs. Employment

The more closely we study job growth on both sides of the San Francisco Bay, the more a correlation emerges.
The Change in Bay Area Rents vs. Employment graph shows that in 2002 the rental market in San Francisco bottomed out and began to reverse its trend after the .com bust. We can see that as the job market began to recover on both sides of the Bay rents followed.
Link’s simple formula is “Rent growth follows job growth.” We will post the monthly job growth graph here and you are invited to visit and follow the progress of our rental market as it follows the jobs market.

Bay Area Job Growth
January 1998 through May 2011

(Click chart to see larger image)
Bay Area Job Growth January 1998 through May 2011
National Job Growth Comparison
May 2009 through May 2011

(Click chart to see larger image)
National Job Growth Comparison graph May, 2009 through May 2011 for Austin, Seattle, New Orleans, San Jose, Boston, Chicago, Phoenix, Denver, Los Angeles, San Francisco, Oakland, Atlanta

Looking forward, we expect to see a recovery in job growth, not into positive territory but a reduction in job loss through 2010. Once job growth shows signs of a steady climb we will call the bottom of the apartment sale market, an indication to buy into the apartment market in order to capitalize on trailing cap rate reductions.

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