Rent-to-own home business enters the Upstate market

Oct 09, 2017

A Tennessee real estate investor has entered the Upstate market, hoping to capitalize on the shortage of affordable housing for young couples raising families and entering the workforce.

Kinloch Partners LLC of Franklin, Tenn., is buying 20 new homes for nearly $4 million in five Spartanburg area communities, the first of 100 new homes to be bought in the Greenville-Spartanburg region over the next year, according to co- founder and CEO Bruce McNeilage.

McNeilage said his rent-to-own strategy has already proven successful in Atlanta and Nashville, and he’s betting on the same success in the Upstate.

“Flat wages combined with escalating real estate prices have made home ownership more difficult today,” said McNeilage, who founded Kinloch Partners with Christopher Zachary in 2011. “Our goal is to help create more stable communities by creating a path for home ownership. Greenville/Spartanburg is an up-and-coming real estate market, and we look forward to investing in and strengthening these communities.”

Kinloch Partners has already been in contact with area home builders and has bought or plans to buy new homes in Boiling Springs, Lyman, Moore, Duncan and Greer.

Those communities are along or near the bustling Interstate 85 corridor, and the company expects that those homes are bound to only increase in value.

The dwindling dream

McNeilage said many young people and even retired seniors have been priced out of the housing market. He wants to offer homes for rent with the option to purchase in the $149,000 to $199,000 price range.

“Home ownership is one of the cornerstones of the American economy, and our rent-to-own strategy is helping more people realize this dream,” he said. “We have been very successful deploying this strategy in the Southeast and are excited to help more people in South Carolina realize this dream as well.”

The lack of affordable housing was brought up as a major issue in last year’s One Spartanburg report for the Spartanburg Area Chamber of Commerce. It was cited as a factor in “brain drain,” the emigration of young, educated people.

“In Nashville, if a millennial can’t find a place to live, we have brain drain,” McNeilage said. “When you’re young, you can take your BMW and move to another city.”

One retired couple from West Virginia who moved into a Kinloch home in Boiling Springs after three years in Florida is Jerry and Lillian Shaffer.

When they moved to Florida, they noticed that they missed experiencing all four seasons, which they had enjoyed in West Virginia. But the couple didn’t want to move that far north. So they looked at Boiling Springs, as they had previously vacationed near Lake Bowen.

“The possibility of leasing the home to buy was attractive,” said Lillian Shaffer, a retired registered nurse.

“We like the people here. They are very friendly,” said Jerry Shaffer, a retired electrical engineer. “Plus we like Lake Bowen and plan on eventually buying in the future.”

They said finding a house to rent was difficult, but they found one in the new River Rock subdivision — a one-story, three-bedroom home with large kitchen and two-car garage that was available from Kinloch. They just moved in, having to pay the first October rent of $1,625 plus a $1,625 security deposit.

“The whole process couldn’t have gone smoother,” Jerry Shaffer said.

Concept now new

Manning Lynch, a past president of the Home builders Association of Greater Spartanburg, said the idea of rent-to-own is not new. He has built homes, rented them and then sold them later at a profit. But only a few times have the renters ended up buying the homes, he said.

“Not a lot get acquired that way,” Lynch said.

But he said the business model is profitable for investors.

“His approach makes sense,” Lynch said. “If done well, it could make you some money in the long run.”

Kinloch also develops condominium projects, McNeilage said. The most recent project, Solo East, was unveiled early this year in east Nashville. It has 121 units. Prices started at $199,000, and McNeilage expects that 15 percent of them would be priced at $99,000.

“I don’t see an end to the need for this kind of housing,” he said. “I’m going to do Solo North, West and South Nashville.”

Investment returns

McNeilage started investing in real estate more than 25 years ago and has bought more than 450 properties and sold 150 throughout Georgia, Florida and Tennessee.

Zachary, a childhood friend, started in the business buying, fixing up and flipping single-family homes and then later multi-unit townhouse complexes.

They are engaged with private equity funds, hedge funds and real estate investment trusts that have an interest in buying brand new homes, McNeilage said.

He said he has consistently delivered 15 percent to 20 percent returns annually for his investors.

The rent-to-own strategy works like this:

First, the new homes have the basic amenities that most young families want — granite countertops, three to five bedrooms, hardwood floors and stainless steel appliances. Some have garages with bonus rooms above and have access to a community pool and clubhouse.

Rentals include a standard 12-month lease with no obligation to buy. Month-to-month leases are also available. Rents may run from $1,000 to $1,500 a month. If a renter decides to move, 30 days’ notice is required.

They can decide to buy the home at any time, he said.

“Every single house is available for sale,” he said. “We don’t accept a dollar down. Some have rented for a year; some are still there nine years later, (renting) month to month.”

He said Kinloch is one of a handful of companies using the rent-to-own strategy, which he said is surprisingly low because home ownership for many young people across the country is out of reach financially.

Not for everyone

Local real estate agent Charlianne Nestlen of Coldwell Banker Caine said the rent-to-own model is not for everyone.

“It’s a double-edged sword,” she said. “Yes it’s great for people who can’t qualify for loans or have a down payment. But a lot of our neighborhoods don’t allow that model. They don’t want rentals to be part of the neighborhood. They don’t know the tenants or know if they have background checks done.”

McNeilage said renters must not only be qualified for his homes, but are encouraged to become a part of the community’s schools and activities.

“We really feel we’re unique,” he said. “Kids play with the kids next door, wives barbecue and church together. They literally art part of the community. There is no stigma because every house is new.”

Nestlen said many people have a misconception that home ownership is out of their reach.

“Yes, not every person can run out to buy a home. Some say they’ve got bad credit, but a lot of programs accept a 600 credit score or even as low as 580. By sitting down with a qualified lender and making a financial plan with their goals, it can get them on track within six months to purchase a home.”

Meanwhile, McNeilage said he sees the Upstate as having a strong real estate market, yet with comparatively few rental units for all the new employees that companies are bringing here.

“The percentage of Americans owning homes has been going down for six decades,” McNeilage said. “Our society’s greatest failing is, if this continues on this downward spiral, it will be financially devastating.”

Original Story here: http://www.goupstate.com/news/20171006/rent-to-own-home-business-enters-upstate-market

By Bruce McNeilage 14 Dec, 2023
In my interview with Seana Smith & Brad Smith from Yahoo Finance today we discussed single-familiy rental rates and my thoughts on mortgage rates going into 2024.
By Bruce McNeilage 14 Dec, 2023
Owner's equivalent rental prices rose 0.5% in November , a pervasive factor in US inflation as limited housing inventory continues to squeeze homebuyers out of tightened real estate markets. Kinloch Partners CEO Bruce McNeilage joins Yahoo Finance Live to weigh in on the outlook for renters and home purchases in 2024. Home prices are "not going to go down, that's for sure. And mortgage rates might go down, but if the cost of a house goes up $10-20,000, it's a wash," McNeilage states. For more expert insight and the latest market action, click here to watch this full episode of Yahoo Finance Live. 
By Bruce McNeilage 08 Nov, 2023
Original Story can be found here: https://www.tennessean.com/story/money/real-estate/2023/11/08/renters-seek-new-options-in-nashvilles-tight-housing-market/70652968007/ Charlene and Timothy Stratton traded in their 4-acre Illinois ranch for a rental home in the Nashville suburb of Spring Hill and, so far, they love the new low-maintenance lifestyle. Like a growing contingent of Americans, they chose to rent a single-family house rather than buy a home or rent in multifamily apartment buildings. "We lived in the country all of our lives with horses and cows," said Timothy Stratton, a retired airline mechanic. "But we wanted to rent because we’re looking at our age. We did a lot of research and decided this will work out for the time being." Families like the Strattons increasingly want the mobility and limited commitment of a rental, with the privacy and space of a single-family home. Meanwhile, many families are also being pushed out of the tight housing market. Housing affordability plummeted to historic lows this year, with only 23% of U.S. listings in April considered affordable to households earning $75,000 or less, according to the National Association of Realtors. In response, real estate investors are betting heavily on new rental properties and, increasingly, on standalone units — especially in the South. More than 61,000 fully and semi-detached single-family rental units are under construction in Southern states as of September. In comparison, 28,000 units are in production in the Western U.S., the next-busiest region, according to RealPage Market Analytics. Those units include single-family homes, townhomes, rowhomes, quadruplexes and duplexes. Single-family rental communities are increasingly concentrated in subdivisions with on-site maintenance, rather than in homes nestled in for-sale housing neighborhoods. The Nashville market has the ninth-highest number of in-construction, build-to-rent homes with 2,745 units in the pipeline. Phoenix tops the list with 21,676 units underway, a RealPage analysis in August found. "Construction isn't going fast enough in Nashville. If they built four or five new build-to-rent communities, they would fill them up immediately," said Doug Ressler, the business intelligence director of Yardi Matrix, a real estate data firm. "We really expect Nashville to continue to see growth here." Rent vs. own: 'More house for your money' Charlene Stratton filled the three-bedroom house with festive seasonal crafts and artwork she creates in her home studio. Renting isn't perfect, but there are real perks — like, when the air conditioner stalled on a Saturday afternoon in the middle of summer, the landlord offered to put them in a hotel until maintenance could fix it that Monday. "When something goes wrong, we just call them," Charlene Stratton said. "It's great." The Strattons live at DerryBerry Estates, one of the first of its kind, built in 2019 by Kinloch Parners. The 34-home community sits on former pastures with views of Spring Hill's rolling green landscape and rose bushes in the front yard. Local development companies like Kinloch Partners of Nashville and Franklin-based Chartwell Residential and Barlow Builders have made stakes in the industry. "In 2008, I had no competition. Now there are six or seven players in the market," said Kinloch Partners Co-founder Bruce McNeilage, who sold much of his inventory to American Homes 4 Rent and expanded to South Carolina. "We're 99% leased out." McNeilage said he prioritizes creating a calm, supportive community with competitive prices. Rents at DerryBerry Estates ranged from $2,300 to $2,600 for homes with three to five bedrooms in September. "People are starting families later in life and COVID-19 has allowed people to work out of their houses so people are moving farther out," McNeilage added. "Housing prices are going up and interest prices just doubled. You can get more house for your money if you get farther out." Housing in Nashville area: 'Can't build them fast enough' Chartwell Residential, a local real estate firm specializing in multifamily apartments, is now building out its first single-family rental home community. https://www.tennessean.com/story/money/real-estate/2023/11/08/renters-seek-new-options-in-nashvilles-tight-housing-market/70652968007/ https://www.tennessean.com/story/money/real-estate/2023/11/08/renters-seek-new-options-in-nashvilles-tight-housing-market/70652968007/ https://www.tennessean.com/story/money/real-estate/2023/11/08/renters-seek-new-options-in-nashvilles-tight-housing-market/70652968007/ https://www.tennessean.com/story/money/real-estate/2023/11/08/renters-seek-new-options-in-nashvilles-tight-housing-market/70652968007/ https://www.tennessean.com/story/money/real-estate/2023/11/08/renters-seek-new-options-in-nashvilles-tight-housing-market/70652968007/ https://www.tennessean.com/story/money/real-estate/2023/11/08/renters-seek-new-options-in-nashvilles-tight-housing-market/70652968007/
By Bruce McNeilage 15 Jul, 2023
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — High prices and high-interest rates have kept many from buying a single-family home in a quiet suburban neighborhood. But what if you could rent one? Developers say they are seeing a big demand for build-to-rent communities. Upon first glance at the DerryBerry Estates subdivision, you might assume the single-family homes are for sale, but they are not—each one is a rental. “People are very happy with what we are providing,” said Bruce McNeilage, CEO/co-founder, Kinloch Partners. Bruce McNeilage built DerryBerry Estates in Spring Hill a few years ago. He saw some families struggling to afford a single-family home in the suburbs, but still craving that lifestyle. “Their kids are getting older, they want to be in good schools, you want to ride a bike around, and you just can’t do that in an apartment complex.” No sharing walls at DerryBerry Estates, or Fairview Station, the other rental home community Kinloch Partners built in western Williamson County. DerryBerry Estates subdivision has 41 single-family homes with 3 and 4 bedrooms and rents in the $2,300 to $2,500 range; and all the trappings of the suburban lifestyle. “They have front porches, they have covered back porches, two-car garage. They have all the amenities and appointments on the interior that one would want in a house for sale, but these are available for rent.” Who would be interested in an all-rental community? McNeilage said his tenants are often folks new to town testing out the neighborhood, young families who can’t afford just yet to buy, those looking for a low-maintenance lifestyle, and senior citizens, which make up 10% of his tenants. “They don’t want to live in an apartment and share walls with someone. They want to live in a single-family home in the suburbs to probably be real close to their grandchildren.” McNeilage has a couple of rental communities in Middle Tennessee, as well as out of state. And with housing prices staying high, he sees the popularity of rental communities sticking around “I could build 100 houses. I could build another 100 houses. I really have a demand that I can’t keep up with.” McNeilage said that his tenant turnover is lower than an apartment complex. People will stay in his homes 3-4 years on average, but for apartment complexes, it’s 1.5 years. 
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