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Warren Buffett's favorite bank thinks your rent may be about to go down

Jul 15, 2016, 22:56 IST

Apartment buildings are backdropped by skyscrapers of banks at Canary Wharf in London, Britain October 30, 2015.Reinhard Krause/Reuters

Wells Fargo thinks your pocketbook may be getting some relief if you rent your living space.

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During the bank's conference call after its second-quarter earnings release Friday, CEO John Stumpf was asked about the state of the commercial-real-estate market and the bank's lending to those firms after a major US bank regulator called out CRE as a danger spot for banks.

Stumpf said that while there had been a significant increase in lending for certain types of CRE, the boom in apartment and condo building over the past few years may be tapped out.

"There are other [types of CRE] that have a lot of supply that's coming on, has come on, has to be absorbed," Stumpf said during the call. "That creates a different dynamic. We're seeing that in some multifamily or luxury single-family [buildings] from market to market. And in that market, those dynamics have to play out where that gets absorbed at some clearing price."

Stumpf is correct that there has been a boom in multifamily housing builds, which have hit levels not seen in decades. In turn, that oversupply will drive down rents and prices for luxury homes.

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These kinds of declines are concentrated mostly in major metros, but in aggregate it appears that rent nationwide is at least slowing its red-hot pace of increase.

Stumpf said this wasn't going to affect Wells Fargo much, which is good news for Warren Buffett, who owns 10.012% of the bank through his firm Berkshire Hathaway. Outside of billionaires, it's also good news for anyone who is worried about increasing rents.

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