Past Due?

Discussion in 'Wall St. News' started by dealmaker, Apr 9, 2020.

  1. dealmaker

    dealmaker

    PAST DUE
    When paying the rent is too damn hard
    The rent came due, and the picture ain’t pretty.

    New numbers released on Wednesday showed that nearly ⅓ of American apartment renters didn’t pay any rent during the first week of April.

    Just 69% of tenants paid any of their rent in the first 5 days of the month, compared to 82% in the same period last year.

    Jimmy McMillan had a point
    The numbers are another sign of how far -- and how quickly -- the economy has cratered, with 10m Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits in the last 2 weeks of March.

    The jobs crisis led to a crazy cash crunch for both renters and their landlords:

    • The head of Common Bond Properties, a nonprofit developer that manages affordable housing and has about 6k apartments in the Midwest, told The New York Times that she expected as many 40% of tenants to fall behind.
    The feds -- and local governments -- are trying to help by easing eviction rules.

    The $2T coronavirus relief package signed by President Trump last month suspended evictions for some federally subsidized housing and federally backed mortgages. But the Urban Institute estimated that just 28% of rental units were covered under the law.

    Homeowner requests to delay mortgage payments are skyrocketing, and people are reporting trouble getting the help they were promised in the stimulus package.

    Things aren’t much prettier at your local mall
    Some retailers simply told their commercial landlords: no way, no how, no rent check, not this month. (If only it were so easy for the rest of us!)

    Axios reported Wednesday that Staples was the latest big chain to refuse to pay rent. In late March, Subway, Mattress Firm, and others told their landlords not to expect a check.

    Some landlords are taking it easy…
    ...like Walmart, which waived rents for businesses that operate within its Supercenters and Sam’s Clubs.

    And some heroes don’t wear capes: Last week, a landlord in Brooklyn who manages 18 apartment buildings wiped away April rents for hundreds of tenants.

    from Hustle
     
  2. Props to Walmart for doing the right thing.
     
    dealmaker likes this.
  3. Handle123

    Handle123

    This shows me that people have no emergency savings or savings period. They spend spend spend, credit cards maxed out, they seldom know how to cut back, won't get better jobs or go to school or extra jobs. At a minimum, should have 6 months of savings that never should be touched.
     
    FrankInLa and gowthamn like this.
  4. They should also eat healthy, get enough sleep, etc.
     
  5. They should also not make $7.25 / hour before FICA taxes etc. etc. You all have any idea how the finances of households barely holding together 2 minimum wage jobs with hours restricted to barely 30 hours so the employer doesn't have to offer even the shittiest of health coverage looks like? Do the math traders. We are good with numbers, aren't we?
     
    FrankInLa likes this.
  6. wrbtrader

    wrbtrader

    They all will want payment next month (May 1st). If not, I figure they can go about 2 - 3 months without payment.

    wrbtrader
     
    nooby_mcnoob likes this.
  7. That's the point. World isn't ideal.
     
    wrbtrader likes this.
  8. FrankInLa

    FrankInLa

    Not the world. But I digress.

     
    DarthSidious likes this.
  9. R1234

    R1234

    This includes businesses. A friend of mine who manages a portfolio of commercial properties in and around NYC told me he is unable to collect rent from about 50% of tenants right now.
     
  10. FrankInLa

    FrankInLa

    shithole-trump-hotel-955px.jpg

     
    #10     Apr 9, 2020