dajo9 said:
dimitrig said:
dajo9 said:
movielover said:
Housing Sales to Institutional Investors Dropped 30% in Third Quarter
Real estate retraction in 2023?
Institutions buying fewer homes is good for Americans regardless of other factors. My recent experience is that demand is much higher than supply. We need to build more housing.
There are a lot of vacant properties out there but investors are sitting on them. That goes for commercial as well. One wonders why the investor would rather sit on the property than sell or lease it. Could it be to artificially limit supply?
Yes, and, if you have a portfolio of properties and you squeeze prices higher you get to mark up all your properties at a higher valuation.
So it is not really about building more housing but more about allocating the housing we already have.
I was talking to a friend the other day who read about an Orange County housing developer who builds housing communities to lease to residents. They are never available to buy but only to lease through their management company. This is not a new concept but it exposes the harsh reality of the housing market, which is that there is big money out there working hard to make sure a lot of people will remain renters and never become owners.
Yes, building more housing increases competition but there are a handful of these corporations (or REITs) dominating the rental market, especially when it comes to urban housing developments. In Downtown LA a bunch of new construction flooded the market with new units. The vacancy rate hit 14% and yet rents fell only 1% as investors sat on the properties and likely even made money by setting rent at higher rates than would clear the market.
In fact, one solution LA considered for this problem was to tax owners whose properties sit vacant. The issue is that it is very hard to identity vacant units. What constitutes a vacant unit? I guess the city used to determine this by looking at water usage, but they can't do that anymore (not sure why) and that can be gamed anyway. I like that idea, though, as especially in LA is lots and lots of housing being used as 2nd, 3rd, 4th homes for the wealthy and investor-owned luxury property sitting vacant, being used as corporate office space, or for short-term rentals.