How Private Equity Is Making the Housing Crisis Even Worse (2024)

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How Private Equity Is Making the Housing Crisis Even Worse

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  • Written by R. John Anderson

This article was originally published on Common Edge.

America’s housing crisis is a longstanding problem.But recent reports of private hedge funds buying up detached houses and townhouses is likely to make an already difficult situation even worse.When hedge funds purchase such properties, those homes are not likely to come back on the real estate market. They are gone for now—and probably for the long term.

How Private Equity Is Making the Housing Crisis Even Worse (2)

Why? Hedge funds are likely to hold a portfolio of residential properties for 5–10 years, but when they decide to sell, it’s doubtful those homes will show up on your local real estate service platforms. Because the homes have been bundled, the hedge funds will sell to other funds. In other words, residential properties have been transformed into an asset class to be traded among institutional investors. (Something analogous is happening in cities to rental units, as private equity has been buying market-rate properties and raising rents.)

Once homes get bundled into a fungible asset, people are not going to be able to buy individual propertiesfrom that bundle.Those homes become part of the rental market and will be unavailable to prospective homebuyers. This will exasperate the shortage of new and existing homes for sale.Unfortunately,the nation cannot build quickly and inexpensively enough to make up for the gap between housing supply and housing demand.

The worst part of this structural issue is now that a market for bundled homes has been established, funds can overpay for homes on the front end, since they’re looking at appreciation of a scarce asset that generates tax-sheltered cash flow from rents and depreciation expense while they possess it. This gives hedge funds a huge competitive advantage in a hot housing market. Not only are they cash buyers who will wave an inspection, but they can pay more than individual homebuyers.

You might think this is like the financial meringue of credit default swap and the bundling of subpar mortgages into securities, which led to the real estate crash of 2008. But I don’t think equity funds pushing individual homebuyers out of the market is going to lead to some epic collapse, or even a serious correction, in the next decade. The annual demand for housing does not go away on December 31. Unmet demand carries over into the following year. People still form new households. The demographics that drive demand for housing are like gravity: inevitable and constant.

In my view, there are three colliding problems at the heart of the supply problem:

Too many people are not paid enough to afford rent or to save up for a down payment.Except for some recent increases, wages have been stagnant for the last 20 years, while housing costs have increased steadily.

The pain is not spread equitably.Even with double-digit annual increases in home prices and rents, people keep moving to dynamic metropolitan areas for jobs, education, and healthcare. The housing crisis can be observed all over the U.S., but we are still a country of regional real estate markets. Some places are seeing greater increases in costs than others.

Productivity in the housing construction sector is low due to a prolonged shortage of skilled construction labor.Skilled labor is what folks in the project management trade call a “critical resource.” Production will not increase until there is more of this resource. Local small developers and builders may find ways to be more productive with the people they can find or train, but they will be doing this out of raw necessity. For many, it will be a time to innovate or die.

Sadly, these colliding problems are going to hang around for years. And the activities of hedge funds will just be gasoline thrown on a well-established fire. Faced with the stubborn reality of those problems, the best course of action for small developers and others interested in building and rebuilding neighborhoods is to focus on modest rental properties, what some call missing middle housing: rental apartment buildings, small mixed-use or live/work buildings. As for where to do that kind of building, we should focus on distressed existing neighborhoods and stay well clear of the overheated and expensive portions of the local market. With so much speculative value baked into for-sale housing, there are a lot of places where it is expensive to build, and local rents cannot support higher construction costs. We need to work in the places where modest rental projects can pencil out. These neighborhoods are also the places to find local construction trades and folks interested in learning a trade. In other words: Find a place you care about that needs you.

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How Private Equity Is Making the Housing Crisis Even Worse (3)

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Cite: R. John Anderson. "How Private Equity Is Making the Housing Crisis Even Worse" 03 Jun 2022. ArchDaily. Accessed . <https://www.archdaily.com/983096/how-private-equity-is-making-the-housing-crisis-even-worse&gt ISSN 0719-8884

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How Private Equity Is Making the Housing Crisis Even Worse (2024)

FAQs

Why are private equity firms buying all the houses? ›

Accelerating this trend has been market power of private equity firms and hedge funds – massive, multibillion-dollar financial instruments buying up housing units with cash, then raising rents, evicting tenants and skimping on things like ordinary maintenance and pest control in order to maximize returns for ...

What percentage of homes were bought by private equity firms? ›

44% of flipped single-family home purchases were by private investors in 2023. Private equity firms have been carving out an increasingly substantial share of single-family home purchases, raising concern about the potential consequences for housing affordability and market competitiveness.

Are investors causing the housing shortage? ›

Large investors purchased more than 8 percent of homes on the market as recently as December 2022 — the highest December share of investors on record, according to a 2023 report from Realtor.com. That removes those units from the pool of availability for individual buyers.

Why are private investors buying homes? ›

Investors Are Buying More Homes in California and Chicago

The market offers high average daily rates and occupancy rates for short-term rental properties, according to AirDNA, thanks to being the home of Disneyland.

What are the disadvantages of private equity real estate? ›

One disadvantage of investing in PERE is that it's less liquid. Unlike REITs, which are publicly traded like stocks, real estate cannot be easily converted to cash at its fair market value. Selling an apartment complex or office building, for example, may take months or years to secure the optimum market rate.

Why not to go into private equity? ›

Past performance is not a reliable guide to future returns. Don't invest unless you're prepared to lose all the money you invest. Private equity is a high-risk investment and you are unlikely to be protected if something goes wrong.

How many homes are owned by private equity? ›

Less than 2% of single-family homes are owned by investors with 10 properties or more, statewide, according to the California Research Bureau. What institutional investor-friendly markets have in common: Rapidly growing populations and relatively low real estate prices compared to rents.

Who owns the most single-family homes in America? ›

We're passing through something of an institutional homebuyer freeze. On Wednesday, we learned that Invitation Homes—the country's largest owner of U.S. single-family homes—sold off more homes (378) than it acquired (276) in the second quarter of 2023.

Why is BlackRock buying houses? ›

The truth is that Blackrock has not bought one house. They do not buy houses but there is a similar fund that does buy houses by the name of Blackstone. These are not the same funds nor are they controlled by the same people.

What is causing the housing crisis in America? ›

High prices, high mortgage rates and a shortage of homes: Combined, they've created today's crisis of affordability.

Is BlackRock responsible for the housing crisis? ›

In a summer report to the Berkeley City Council, city officials said large financial companies like BlackRock are some of the largest real estate owners in the country and may have a detrimental influence on the Bay Area market.

Is BlackRock buying up all the houses? ›

So, while BlackRock does not buy individual properties, it does “make capital available to individuals and families seeking to purchase homes.”

What percent of US homes are owned by investors? ›

The sizable U.S. home investor share seen over the past two years held steady going into the summer. In March 2023, investors accounted for 27% of all single-family home purchases; by June, that number was almost unchanged at 26%.

What private equity firms are buying homes? ›

Institutional investors like Blackstone, Invitation Homes and others do own hundreds of thousands of homes.

What do private equity firms do with homes? ›

REPE firms usually focus on commercial real estate – offices, industrial, retail, multifamily, and specialized properties like hotels – rather than residential real estate. If they do operate in residential real estate, the strategy is usually to buy, hold, and rent out homes to individuals (see: Blackstone).

What do private equity firms do with the houses they buy? ›

The main strategies are “Core” (buy an existing, stabilized property, change very little, and sell it again), “Core-Plus” (similar but make minor upgrades), “Value-Added” (acquire an existing property, renovate or greatly improve it, and then sell it again), and “Opportunistic” (develop or re-develop a property and ...

Do private equity firms buy real estate? ›

Types of private equity real estate investments

These funds tend to invest in high-quality, high-value real estate assets, such as fully-leased multifamily properties. They offer predictable cash flow but often bring lower returns because of the low level of risk.

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