Modeling an Asset Class: Why Wall Street May Be in the Single-family Rental Market for Keeps | Toptal® (2024)

Prior to 2010, the single-family rental market was largely ignored by big institutional investors, which preferred easy-to-scale multifamily properties. But since the financial crisis—and especially since 2019—that’s changed. Financial heavyweights like J.P. Morgan Asset Management, Blackstone, and Goldman Sachs Asset Management have helped bankroll an industry of more than two dozen single-family home rental companies that are snapping up existing properties—and building new ones too.

Residential real estate acquired by companies or institutions soared to 90,215 homes in the third quarter of 2021, as investors, both large and small, accounted for 18% of single-family home sales. That’s up 80.2% from the year prior, according to the online real estate firm Redfin. Nearly three-quarters of residential purchases by investors were single-family homes, while multifamily homes—a market in which investors have been significant players for decades—accounted for just a quarter of sales.

The influx of this institutional capital is one element driving the surge in single-family housing prices and rents across the US today, and despite negative media scrutiny, rising rents are attracting even more investors. While profit is clearly the investors’ goal, the evolving circ*mstances that now make single-family homes a desirable holding have implications for both the models used to make investment decisions and the way assets are allocated across their portfolios.

There are a number of reasons this market has become more attractive, including the Federal Reserve’s sustained monetary easing, which contributed to inflated real estate prices. However, having once managed a fund that invested heavily in single-family real estate, I believe the most consequential factor is an advance in big data, which significantly improves the ability of investors to conduct due diligence and forecast trends.

The dramatic increase in computing power is enabling these new home-rental firms to scale and manage their portfolios more efficiently, not only enhancing the ability to analyze the market, speed up research, and make smart decisions more quickly, but also streamlining costs associated with property management. This convergence of market conditions and increased analytic power means these investors are likely here to stay.

The Birth of a New Investment Class

This push into single-family homes initially began as an arbitrage opportunity after the global financial crisis in 2008 but has morphed into something more permanent. The real estate bust lowered the perceived risk of single-family housing relative to returns. Today, real estate investment trusts, private equity firms, insurance companies, and pension funds view rentals, which were spared the impact of pandemic-related lockdowns on offices and shops, as a relatively high-yielding hedge against inflation.

I witnessed the initial opportunity in real time. In 2010, I helped create a fund that bought a few hundred in-foreclosure single-family homes in Atlanta for between $50,000 and $60,000 each, and invested as much as $10,000 per home for upgrades before renting them. By acting quickly, we were able to earn double-digit returns from near the bottom of the cycle as valuations reverted back to the mean. We had no evictions and sold the last of the houses in 2020.

Institutional investors did much the same, pouring money into broken markets and reaping huge gains before realizing they could make single-family rentals a permanent part of their portfolios. In 2012, Blackstone, one of the world’s largest alternative asset managers, acquired Invitation Homes, which controls more than 80,000 rentals. Blackstone cashed out in 2019 after Invitation Homes went public. In 2021, Blackstone acquired Home Partners of America, a company with more than 17,000 rent-to-own units across the US, for $6 billion.

In 2020, J.P. Morgan Asset Management entered into a joint venture with a single-family rental company, American Homes 4 Rent, and is now building thousands of homes. Goldman Sachs has deployed capital in residential markets both in the US and in England. Other money managers that have jumped in include Invesco, which in 2021 announced it was backing a plan by Mynd Management to spend as much as $5 billion purchasing 20,000 single-family rental homes over the next three years.

This influx of capital is motivated, at least in part, by the returns this sector is generating. The COVID-19 pandemic led to a shift of preferences away from apartments in cities toward houses with more space. As a result, since 2019 single-family rentals have been the best-performing property class, gaining about 40% in 2021, according to the Connecticut-based firm Hoya Capital Real Estate. The three publicly traded real estate investment trusts the firm tracks—Invitation Homes, American Homes 4 Rent, and Tricon Residential—have reported double-digit rent growth and record occupancy rates in 2021, driven by historically low supply and strong demographic- and pandemic-driven demand.

Modeling an Asset Class: Why Wall Street May Be in the Single-family Rental Market for Keeps | Toptal® (1)

How Tech Is Boosting the Single-family Rental Market

Wall Street is not new to the real estate game. Multifamily rental properties have long been considered a core portfolio holding for institutional investors, along with other scalable commercial properties like office, retail, and industrial buildings. All of these can absorb the sizable capital outlays these firms deploy to acquire them. But single-family rentals were traditionally classified as non-core—grouped with other specialty properties such as data centers, medical offices, hotels, and senior housing—because they were more difficult to scale. Thanks to technology, that’s no longer the case.

Property technology is transforming more than just single-family rentals, but the impact in that sector is particularly profound. Whereas the due diligence for multifamily properties is, by definition, already scaled, single-family properties are more idiosyncratic, making the process for potential buyers more costly per unit. What is changing is that investors are deploying big data technology that lets them filter diligence information much more quickly, making otherwise fractured markets more efficient and accessible.

Niche players like the firm Entera—backed by Goldman Sachs—have emerged, using technology to analyze property records and other data to help investors quickly identify real estate listings that match their buying criteria and help them calculate the right bids. These capabilities are enabling institutions to obtain more accurate return forecasts for their models and to scale their property holdings.

The transformation extends through single-family portfolios, with many landlords using fully digital relationships with tenants to facilitate everything from payments to maintenance requests in an effort to reduce costs, improve renter satisfaction, and fuel growth, according to Hoya Capital. The result is that institutions can achieve net operating income margins nearly on par with multifamily real estate investment trusts, the firm reports.

“We use technology in every aspect of our business, everything from acquisition all the way through maintenance and into the call center to improve our operating metrics and offer residents a much better experience,” Tricon Residential’s chief executive officer Gary Berman told the financial news service Seeking Alpha in October 2021. Tricon Residential manages 33,000 properties across North America.

Tech can’t solve every real estate problem, of course. A new class of so-called iBuyers pushed the role of automating decision making to the extreme, deploying computer algorithms to execute purchases and sales in order to flip single-family homes—a strategy that failed spectacularly for the firm Zillow. Best known for publishing real estate listings online and calculating estimated home values, Zillow was forced to shutter its new purchase-and-flip program and put 7,000 homes on the market in November 2021 after it found it had aggressively overpaid for properties.

By contrast, the fund I managed was able to sell off its properties in an orderly fashion at significant profit. At least for now, I believe some human perspective is still advisable.

Wall Street’s Real Estate Market Impact

How big an effect these Wall Street-backed firms will really have remains to be seen, however. They currently represent just 2% of the total residential market, according to analysts with broker-dealer Amherst Pierpont, which specializes in fixed-income capital markets. And there may be limitations built into this class. Single-family rental companies tend to focus primarily on faster-growing regions in Western, Southwestern, and Southeastern states, buying and building homes that target largely middle- and upper-middle-class families. Supply is a constraint too, so investors’ focus has begun shifting increasingly to build-to-rent.

Still, acquisitions by investors are continuing apace. The collective realization that due diligence efforts could scale has not only brought many financial institutions into the market, it’s also produced record issuance of debt secured by portfolios of single-family rentals, increasing liquidity for institutional financings by spreading the risks. The cumulative public issuance of so-called SFR debt reached a record $43 billion in 2021, according to Amherst Pierpont.

Modeling an Asset Class: Why Wall Street May Be in the Single-family Rental Market for Keeps | Toptal® (2)

In addition to reduced diligence costs, there are other elements that have made these SFR deals attractive to lenders. Collateral value is a key component of any securitization model, and single-family securitizations are ultimately secured by the value of the homes, which are rising significantly in the wake of growing preferences by renters for houses.

Given all these factors, I expect SFR securitizations to accelerate. 2021 was the first full cycle for this particular surge in securitizations and the performance has been stellar, trading comparably with other structured debt. Wall Street is eager to originate as many securitizations as investors can digest, and the appetite is large right now because rents are going up and investors predict that risk and interest rates will stay low for the foreseeable future.

Nonetheless, there are risks to consider, interest rates looming large among them. Unlike owner-occupied homes, which are typically financed with 30-year loans, SFR portfolios are usually financed with shorter terms, similar to commercial real estate. In the event that interest rates rise considerably, the net rental yield might be completely erased when it’s time to sell or refinance. This is similar to the inherent risks of commercial mortgage-backed securities, which is why the industry views SFR debt similarly.

Another complicating factor is the variability of maintenance and upkeep of the homes, which could also potentially eat into cash flows. Should interest rates and maintenance costs rise considerably, there’s a risk that a wave of investors selling into an illiquid market could cause prices to fall and debt to be marked down, thus creating a negative feedback loop with forced sales, as we saw in 2008.

One additional risk that’s difficult to quantify is the growing scrutiny institutions are facing after initially flooding the single-family market. Several media outlets have painted Wall Street-backed landlords as inept or even villainous, accusing some of these investors of driving up home prices, jacking up rents, or doing a poor job with maintenance and upkeep. Suffice it to say, SFR is an enterprise that needs to be conducted with great care and professionalism because it touches people’s everyday lives so deeply.

Wall Street Landlords Are Here to Stay

Although Wall Street-backed firms only account for an estimated 300,000 of the more than 128 million single-family homes in the US, SFR looks like an asset class that’s poised not only to stay, but to grow.

Near-zero interest rates and current demand in the single-family rental market add fuel to the growth. Surveys show that an increasing percentage of millennials are planning to rent for the foreseeable future, with a growing proportion opting to lease single-family homes instead of apartments. Meanwhile, the robust growth of big data suggests it will be an increasingly powerful tool for investors in coming years.

Despite the controversy, Wall Street is likely to play buyer and builder for a long time to come.

Further Reading on the Toptal Blog:

  • The State of the Music Industry in 2020
  • Real Estate Valuation Using Regression Analysis – A Tutorial
  • C Corp vs. S Corp, Partnership, Proprietorship, and LLC: What Is the Best Business Entity?
  • Millennial Branding for a Boomer Product: A Branding Case Study
  • The Looming Crisis in Continuing Care Retirement Communities (CCRCs)

Understanding the basics

  • Why is Wall Street buying up homes?

    Wall Street is buying more single-family rental homes because demand for houses is high, renters’ preferences are shifting away from apartments, interest rates are low, and big data is making it easier than ever for firms to conduct due diligence and manage these properties.

  • What company owns the most single-family homes?

    Invitation Homes is the largest single owner of single-family rental homes in the United States, managing more than 80,000 homes as of 2021.

  • What's considered a single-family home?

    A single-family home is a standalone residential structure that contains only one dwelling unit.

Modeling an Asset Class: Why Wall Street May Be in the Single-family Rental Market for Keeps | Toptal® (2024)

FAQs

Modeling an Asset Class: Why Wall Street May Be in the Single-family Rental Market for Keeps | Toptal®? ›

Wall Street has its eye on the single-family rental market. A convergence of rising home prices, changing rental preferences, and advancing technology is fueling the boom. authors are vetted experts in their fields and write on topics in which they have demonstrated experience.

Why Wall Street is snapping up single-family homes? ›

Wall Street has its eye on the single-family rental market. A convergence of rising home prices, changing rental preferences, and advancing technology is fueling the boom. authors are vetted experts in their fields and write on topics in which they have demonstrated experience.

Who is the largest owner of single-family rentals? ›

Invitation Homes Looks At Potentially Buying Firms Stuck With Smaller Inventory. Invitation Homes, the nation's largest owner of single-family rentals, has "a couple of billion dollars of dry powder" for would-be mergers or acquisitions, CEO Dallas Tanner told investors.

What are the top single-family rental companies? ›

In October 2021, the Subcommittee on Oversight & Investigations surveyed the five largest owners of single-family rental homes in the U.S. The list includes Invitation Homes, American Homes 4 Rent, FirstKey Homes (owned by Cerberus Capital Management), Progress Residential (owned by Pretium Partners) and Amherst ...

Who owns the most rental properties in the US? ›

Of the approximately 50 million rental housing units in the United States, around 41% of the rental units are owned by mom and pop landlords, also known as individual investor landlords. That means approximately 20.5 million units are overseen by mom and pop landlords.

What is the Wall Street crisis about? ›

The 2008 financial crisis began with cheap credit and lax lending standards that fueled a housing bubble. When the bubble burst, the banks were left holding trillions of dollars of worthless investments in subprime mortgages. The Great Recession that followed cost many their jobs, their savings, and their homes.

How many single-family rentals are in the US? ›

Number of households and residents renting in the U.S. 2020, by structure type. In 2020, there were 14.1 million households or 42 million residents renting single-family homes in the United States. Meanwhile, there were 19 million households or 37 million residents in multifamily buildings with more than one units.

Who is the largest landlord in us? ›

1. EMMERSON FAMILY. The nation's largest private landowners, California's Emmerson family, are a prime example of this trend. Through their Sierra Pacific Industries, the Emmersons increased their landholdings by more than 100 square miles to over 2.4 million acres.

Who is the largest private landlord in the US? ›

The 2022 Land Report 100, compiled each year by The Land Report magazine, released its annual list of landowners who own the most acres in the United States. The nation's largest private landowners are the Emmerson family in California who own over 2.4 million acres.

What is the most common type of rental? ›

The 3 Most Popular Types of Rental Properties
  • Single-family rental houses. ...
  • Workforce multifamily apartment buildings. ...
  • NNN property leased to a single tenant. ...
  • Market trends. ...
  • Supply and demand. ...
  • Location of property. ...
  • Cash flow and appreciation. ...
  • Landlord tenant laws.
May 15, 2020

What is top 1 percent rent? ›

The 1% rule of real estate investing measures the price of the investment property against the gross income it will generate. For a potential investment to pass the 1% rule, its monthly rent must be equal to or no less than 1% of the purchase price.

Which company is bigger Airbnb or Vrbo? ›

Airbnb has more listings.

When it comes to variety, Airbnb comes out on top. Currently holding 5.6 million worldwide listings, Airbnb provides more opportunities to find a unique reservation versus the 2 million listings on Vrbo.

What is a good profit margin on a rental property? ›

The amount will depend on your specific situation, but a good rule of thumb is to aim for at least 10% profit after all expenses and taxes. While 10% is a good target, you may be able to make more depending on the property and the rental market.

What are the most overvalued US rental markets? ›

The most overvalued markets to rent a home are mostly found in California and Florida. You'll pay the most to buy a median-price home versus renting a home in California, as well as MSAs in Oregon, Washington, Colorado, Idaho and Utah.

Who owns the most apartments in USA? ›

Leading apartment owners in the U.S. 2022, by units owned

Starwood Capital Group, which was the largest owner in 2022 with 115,000 units, is a private investment firm headquartered in Miami, Florida.

Why is Wall Street so powerful? ›

Economic Importance

As such, Wall Street's global importance is unparalleled. Wall Street consists of some of the largest financial institutions in the world and employs hundreds of thousands of people. It's home to the NYSE and Nasdaq stock exchanges, two of the largest stock exchanges in the world.

How does Wall Street impact the economy? ›

Wall Street affects the U.S. economy in a number of ways, the most important of which are as follows: Wealth Effect: Buoyant stock markets induce a “wealth effect” in consumers, although some prominent economists assert that this is more pronounced during a real estate boom than it is during an equity bull market.

What are the 5 ways that Wall Street affects the US economy? ›

Wall Street affects job growth, the well being of companies, stocks provide capital, improve products, provide companies with more access to resources. What does it mean when the experts in the film use the term "Main Street"?

Who controls Wall Street? ›

New York Stock Exchange
TypeStock exchange
LocationNew York City, New York, U.S.
FoundedMay 17, 1792
OwnerIntercontinental Exchange
Key peopleSharon Bowen (Chair) Lynn Martin (President)
7 more rows

What ended the Wall Street crash? ›

World War II had a dramatic effect on many parts of the economy and may have hastened the end of the Great Depression in the United States.

Who eventually sued Goldman Sachs after losing millions of dollars? ›

2010 SEC civil fraud lawsuit. In April 2010, the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) charged Goldman Sachs and one of its vice-presidents, Fabrice Tourre, with securities fraud.

How big is the market for single-family homes? ›

In the United States, the majority of housing units are single-family houses – about 82 million out of the total 129 million occupied units in 2021. These homes are mostly owner-occupied, but a small share is rented.

What state has the most single-family homes? ›

Only one state—New York—has a majority of its housing in the form of multi-family units, with only 46.6% single-family units. In contrast, more than half of all states have 70% or more single-family units, led by Indiana and Kansas at 78.5% apiece.

What percentage of Americans own a single-family home? ›

Homeownership Rates By State In 2022
STATEPERCENT OF HOMEOWNERSHIP
California54%
New York54%
Hawaii58%
Nevada61%
47 more rows
Feb 4, 2023

Who is the richest landlord in the world? ›

Roman Catholic Church: 70 million hectares

The largest landowner in the world is not a major oil magnate or a real estate investor. No, it's the Roman Catholic Church. According to lovemoney.com, the church owns more than 70 million hectares.

Who owns most of Florida? ›

Approximately 27.1% of land in Florida is owned by the federal government, leaving 72.9% of Florida's land to private ownership. The Bureau of Land Management oversees the largest portion of federally owned land in Florida at 39.7%.

What is the highest rent city in the USA? ›

The most expensive rental market in the US remains to be New York. The average monthly rent for a one-bedroom is roughly $3,260. This is about a $500 decrease from 2021, however as demand continues to increase prices are likely to follow.

Where are the most renters in the US? ›

Newark, New Jersey, has the most, with more than 79% of residents renting. Three other New Jersey cities were also home to the most renters. Out of the top five, the two other cities were in Connecticut. Of the top 10 cities with the highest percentage of renters, nine out of 10 are in the Northeast.

What company owns the most real estate in the world? ›

Largest Real Estate Companies Research Summary

The largest real estate company in the world is Keller Williams Realty, with a revenue of $381.4 billion. As of 2023, the global real estate industry has a market size of $4.4 trillion.

Who has the highest rent increase in the United States? ›

Based on our review, the five states with the highest average increase from 2021 to 2022 are:
  • Florida.
  • Tennessee.
  • South Dakota.
  • New York.
  • North Carolina.
Oct 20, 2022

How do you know if a rental property is a good investment? ›

Top 10 Features to Consider
  1. Neighborhood. The neighborhood in which you buy will determine the types of tenants you attract and your vacancy rate. ...
  2. Property Taxes. ...
  3. Schools. ...
  4. Crime. ...
  5. Job Market. ...
  6. Amenities. ...
  7. Number of Listings and Vacancies. ...
  8. Average Rents.

What are the three types of rent? ›

In general one can distinguish three different kinds of rent, which can also occur together: differential, scarcity, and entrepreneurial rent.

What is the most common property type? ›

Residential Properties

Residential property is by far the most popular with both new and experienced real estate investors. Residential properties consist of single- or multi-family houses, vacation homes, duplexes, condominiums, and more.

What bills are on top of rent? ›

Your outgoings will include your rent payments, gas, electric and water bills, broadband and TV, council tax and contents insurance. To maintain a good relationship with your landlord, the local council and energy suppliers, you must pay these bills on time.

How much should I spend on a house if I make $100 K? ›

A 100K salary means you can afford a $350,000 to $500,000 house, assuming you stick with the 28% rule that most experts recommend.

What is the best pay to rent ratio? ›

As a general rule of thumb, landlords should aim for a rent-to-income ratio of no more than 30%. Meaning the tenant should earn at least three times the rent amount.

Where is the highest demand for Airbnb? ›

The Poconos, Pennsylvania

The Poconos has been rated as one of the most popular Airbnb destinations for a number of years running. One of its major attractions is that it's very accessible to travelers from multiple states which helps to ensure great occupancy rates throughout the year.

What is the most profitable Airbnb? ›

For Airbnb hosts looking to make a living on the hospitality platform, full apartment rentals are the way to go. Rates for full apartments are significantly higher than those for single rooms and income after expenses ranged from $15,000 to $31,000 in our analysis.

What are Airbnb biggest competitors? ›

Who are Airbnb's competitors? Airbnb competitors include websites like Vrbo, Booking.com, Tripadvisor, Agoda, Expedia, TUI Villas, TravelStaytion, HomeToGo, Plum Guide, and Google. Not all of them are vacation rental marketplaces.

What is the 50% rule in real estate? ›

Like many rules of real estate investing, the 50 percent rule isn't always accurate, but it can be a helpful way to estimate expenses for rental property. To use it, an investor takes the property's gross rent and multiplies it by 50 percent, providing the estimated monthly operating expenses. That sounds easy, right?

What is the 1 rule in real estate? ›

How the One Percent Rule Works. This simple calculation multiplies the purchase price of the property plus any necessary repairs by 1%. The result is a base level of monthly rent. It's also compared to the potential monthly mortgage payment to give the owner a better understanding of the property's monthly cash flow.

Is 7% ROI on rental property good? ›

A good ROI for a rental property is typically more than 10%, but 5%–10% can also be acceptable. But the ROI may be lower in the first year, due to the upfront costs of buying a home. A fixer-upper may offer more upfront savings as their average list price is 25% lower than turnkey homes.

How do you market a high end rental? ›

How To Market For Luxury Vacation Rentals?
  1. Focus on the guest experience. ...
  2. Invest in professional photography and videography. ...
  3. Spend lavishly on interior design. ...
  4. Partner with luxury brands. ...
  5. Hire the correct people. ...
  6. Ensure to supply the right amenities. ...
  7. Create an optimized website. ...
  8. Provide a Visual and Tech-Savvy Welcome Book.

Why rents across America keep rising? ›

Experts say many factors are responsible for astronomical rents, including a nationwide housing shortage, extremely low rental vacancies and unrelenting demand as young adults continue to enter the crowded market.

Are rentals better than the stock market? ›

However, if you're willing to devote a little extra time, investing in rental property can be much more profitable than stocks, and with a significantly lower level of risk: Build equity and increase your net worth with appreciation over the long term.

Who owns most homes in America? ›

Homeowner rates by race and ethnicity

Homeownership statistics by race show that the highest rates of homeownership are held by White households. Although homeownership rates for both Asian and Hispanic homeowners are above or around 50%, respectively, the rate for Black homeownership remains lower at just above 43%.

Who is the largest landlord in US? ›

1. EMMERSON FAMILY. The nation's largest private landowners, California's Emmerson family, are a prime example of this trend. Through their Sierra Pacific Industries, the Emmersons increased their landholdings by more than 100 square miles to over 2.4 million acres.

Is 1 out of 7 homes owned by Wall Street investors? ›

If you allow for-profit investment in residential real estate, it is mathematically inevitable that monopolists will eventually consume the entire sector. And now that reality is starting to be borne out. One in seven family homes sold this year is now owned by Wall Street. 1 in 7.

What is causing housing crunch? ›

The Housing Shortage Is Significant. It's Acute For Small, Entry-Level Homes. And that's the main reason we've ended up millions of homes short -- builders for many years just weren't building enough to keep up with demand. That lack of supply has pushed home prices to record levels — up nearly 20% last year alone.

What caused the housing market crisis? ›

The housing market crash of 2008 remains one of the most significant events in the history of the United States housing market. It was caused by a combination of factors, including the subprime mortgage crisis, high levels of debt, and a lack of regulation in the financial sector.

What is BlackRock doing with houses? ›

BlackRock is invested in several programs that are providing financing to build new homes and add to U.S. housing supply. Most recently, we began investing in new construction, purpose-built for-rent housing developments that add supply to the market and address the increasing demand we see for this property type.

Who are the biggest investors on Wall Street? ›

The list includes John Paulson, Warren Buffett, James Simons, Ray Dalio, Carl Icahn, and Dan Loeb. Buffett is by far the richest person of these six famous investors, with a net worth of $116 billion.

Who owns most homes in USA? ›

Among racial demographics, White Americans had the country's highest home-ownership rate, while African Americans had the lowest home-ownership rate. One study shows that home-ownership rates appear correlated with higher school attainment.

Who is the biggest Wall Street investor right now? ›

Warren Buffett

Following the principles set out by Benjamin Graham, he has amassed a multibillion-dollar fortune mainly through buying stocks and companies through Berkshire Hathaway.

Will inflation cause housing crash? ›

However, as high inflation costs press down on buyers, it could depress home values. Although he doesn't expect a major housing market crash, Buehler says he sees home values flattening out as inflation nestles into the housing market.

Why doesn t California have enough housing? ›

Several factors have together caused constraints on the construction of new housing: density restrictions (e.g. single-family zoning) and high land cost conspire to keep land and housing prices high; community involvement in the permitting process allows current residents who oppose new construction (often referred to ...

Is there really a housing shortage in the US? ›

As a result, there is a sizable shortage of new homes after more than a decade of under-building relative to population growth, according to a new analysis from Realtor.com released Wednesday. The gap between single-family home constructions and household formations grew to 6.5 million homes between 2012 and 2022.

Who caused the housing market crash? ›

The growth of predatory mortgage lending, unregulated markets, a massive amount of consumer debt, the creation of "toxic" assets, the collapse of home prices, and more contributed to the financial crisis of 2008.

Why the US housing market won't crash? ›

When will the housing market crash? Actually, economists do not think it will. Housing economists point to five main reasons that the market will not crash anytime soon: low inventory, lack of new-construction housing, large amounts of new buyers, strict lending standards and a drop in foreclosures.

What happens to mortgages during a recession? ›

Mortgage Rates Typically Fall During Recessions

Looking at recessions in this country going all the way back to 1980, the graph below shows each time the economy slowed down mortgage rates decreased.

Why is BlackRock buying up homes? ›

1. The company can build equity. If the company has borrowed money to purchase the house, it can build equity over time, essentially increasing the percentage of the home it owns outright and can then borrow against later on.

How many homes in the United States does BlackRock own? ›

BLACKROCK AND SINGLE-FAMILY HOMES

Invitation Homes, for example, has approximately 80,000 homes for lease across the country and is the largest landlord for single-family homes in the United States (here) (here).

What percentage of US homes are owned by investors? ›

According to data reported by the PEW Trust and originally gathered by CoreLogic, as of 2022, investment companies own about one fourth of all single-family homes. Last year, investor purchases accounted for 22% of American homes sold. This is significantly down from the 80% number in 2020-2021, why is this?

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