Wall Street hedge funds are buying whole neighborhoods, driving up home prices (2024)

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Wall Street hedge funds are buying whole neighborhoods, driving up home prices (1)

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Ask average Americans why they’re grumpy—why, for example, they don’t credit Joe Biden with a good economy—and lack of affordable housing comes high on the list.

An important but little understood reason home prices and rents have skyrocketed across America—causing so many young people, in particular, to feel frustrated with the economy—is Wall Street’s takeover of a growing segment of the housing market.

The biggest reason home prices and rents have soared in the U.S. is the lack of housing. Supply isn’t nearly meeting demand.

But here’s the thing: Americans aren’t just bidding against other Americans for houses. They’re also bidding against Wall Street investors—who account for a large and growing share of home sales.

Democrats in Congress are finally beginning to give this trend the attention it deserves.

Let me explain.

The Street’s appetite for housing began after the 2008 financial crisis, when many homes were in foreclosure—homeowners found they owed more on them than the homes were worth. As you recall, Wall Street created that crisis with excessive and risky lending, too often in the form of mortgages to people unable to pay them when they became due.

When the crisis pushed the economy into deep recession and millions of Americans lost their jobs, many additional homeowners were unable to pay up. They, too, discovered that they owed more on their homes than their homes were then worth.

Wall Street became a double predator—first causing a housing bubble, which burst. Then buying up many of the remains at fire-sale prices, and selling or renting them for fat profits.

The predation continues. America’s soaring demand for housing has made houses terrific investments—if you’ve got deep enough pockets to buy them.

Partly as a result, homeownership—a cornerstone of generational wealth in the United States, and a big part of the American dream—is increasingly out of reach of a large and growing number of Americans, especially young people.

All over America, hedge funds (in the form of corporations, partnerships, and real estate investment trusts that manage funds pooled from investors) have bought up modestly priced houses, frequently in neighborhoods with large Black and Latino populations, and converted the properties torentals.

In one neighborhood in east Charlotte, N.C., Wall Street-backed investors boughthalfof the homes that sold in 2021 and 2022. On one block, all but one of the homes sold during these years went for cash to an investor that then rented it out.

By last March (the most recent data available), hedge funds accounted for27%of all single-family home purchases in the United States.

Now for some good news.

Democrats have introduced abillin both houses of Congress to ban hedge funds from buying and owning single-family homes in the United States.

It would require that these funds sell off all the single-family homes they own over a 10-year period and would eventually bar them from owning any single-family homes at all.

During the decade-long phaseout, the bill would impose stiff tax penalties, with the proceeds reserved for down-payment assistance for individuals and families looking to buy homes from corporate owners.

If signed into law, the legislation could potentially increase the supply of single-family homes available to individual buyers—thereby making housing more affordable.

I have no delusions that the bill will become law anytime soon. But along with many other pieces of legislation Democrats have introduced in this Congress, the bill provides a roadmap of where the country could be heading under the right leadership.

So many Americans I meet these days are cynical about the country. I understand their cynicism. But cynicism can be a self-fulfilling prophesy if it means giving up the fight for a more equitable society.

The captains of American industry and Wall Street would like nothing better than for the rest of us to give up that fight, so they can take it all.

I say we keep fighting. This bill is one reason.

As with all op-ed articles published by People’s World, the views expressed here are those of the author.

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Tags:

  • capitalism
  • Economics
  • elections2024
  • profits
  • Wall Street

CONTRIBUTOR

Robert Reich

"I’ve spent much of the last half century pushing for positive social change — from the inside: as Secretary of Labor, representing the U.S. before the Supreme Court, advising presidents. And from the outside: author of eighteen books and co-creator of two documentaries, chair of Common Cause, co-founder of The American Prospect, the Economic Policy Institute, and Inequality Media, and teacher of several generations of students. Also a cartoonist, not an artist."

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Wall Street hedge funds are buying whole neighborhoods, driving up home prices (2024)

FAQs

Are hedge funds buying all the houses? ›

Investors Have Been Busy Gobbling Up Homes

Investor-owned homes hit their peak in December 2022, accounting for 28.7 percent of all home sales in America. Per MetLife Investment Management, institutional investors may control 40 percent of U.S. single-family rental homes by 2030.

Why are investors buying up all the houses? ›

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.

Why are private equity firms buying single-family homes? ›

Institutional investors in single-family homes are driven by “kicking up dividends back to their shareholders, so they can get their return,” said Chris Noble, policy director at the Private Equity Stakeholder Project, a watchdog group.

How many US houses are owned by hedge funds? ›

Institutional investors — such as hedge funds, private equity firms, and endowments — owned an estimated 574,000 properties as of June 2022, according to the Urban Institute.

How many homes does BlackRock own? ›

Originally funded by the private equity giant Blackstone, the company has since become its own publicly traded company. The company owns 84,567 homes, of which 11,862 are in California, according to its most recent filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

What is the bill to end hedge funds buying homes? ›

The Merkley/Smith bill as written would force large corporate owners to divest from their current holdings of single-family homes over 10 years. An applicable entity that manages investor funds, is a fiduciary of the funds, and purchases new homes would be taxed half the cost of each additional home.

Is private equity ruining the housing market? ›

By any objective standard, private equity landlords such as Blackstone are making California's (and the nation's) affordability crisis worse.

Why are people in private equity so rich? ›

Private equity owners make money by buying companies they think have value and can be improved. They improve the company or break it up and sell its parts, which can generate even more profits.

What company owns the most homes in the US? ›

1. Invitation Homes. Background and Strategy: Invitation Homes, a subsidiary originally founded by the private equity giant Blackstone Group, has become one of the largest owners and operators of single-family rental homes in the United States.

Why is Wall Street buying homes? ›

Companies that buy single-family homes say their businesses provide renters the opportunity to live in desirable neighborhoods where they otherwise couldn't afford to buy.

Did Warren Buffett own a hedge fund? ›

In the 1950s and early 1960s, Buffett ran investment partnerships that did charge hedge-fund-like fees (including a 25% cut of any annual return in excess of 6%, but no management fee). But Buffett understood that structure should follow strategy, not the other way around.

Which city has the most hedge funds? ›

New York City

New York is home to major investment banks, hedge funds, and law firms. It's also a central global player in asset management, with firms managing trillions of dollars in assets, as well as major firms in foreign exchange, financial technology, insurance, and private equity.

What percentage of US homes are owned by investors? ›

In the first quarter of 2024, the share of homes purchased by investors was 19%, according to Redfin. “That implies that around 81% of homes, by our measurement, are being purchased by people who are not investors, so they're probably buying their homes to make them their primary residence,” said Zhao.

Are hedge funds buying or selling? ›

Hedge funds are actively managed by professional managers who buy and sell certain investments with the stated goal of exceeding the returns of the markets, or some sector or index of the markets. They take the greatest risks while trying to achieve these returns.

What percentage of homes are owned by private equity? ›

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.

What's a hedge fund and why are they bad? ›

Hedge funds are risky in comparison with most mutual funds or exchange-traded funds. They take outsized risks in order to achieve outsized gains. Many use leverage to multiply their potential gains. They also are unconstrained in their investment picks, with the freedom to take big positions in alternative investments.

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