Home
prices and home sales have been rising over the past few years,
pointing to a recovery in the housing market, but RealtyTrac warns
that what we are seeing may not be a true recovery but instead a
mirage created by investors—a dangerous mirage that could lead to
trouble in the years to come.
Cash
purchases made up nearly half of home sales across the nation in
September, according to RealtyTrac’s data. AGoldman
Sachs study
puts the number at 57 percent.
“All-cash
is driving up home sales nationwide, which looks good on paper,”
RealtyTrac said in its most recentForeclosure
News Report.
Cash
buyers tend to fall into one of four categories: institutional
investors, “rich people,” retirees, and foreign buyers, according
to RealtyTrac.
The National
Association of Realtors recently
reported investors are making up 35 percent of cash deals, and
retirees are making up another 12 percent.
“The
outsized presence of deep-pocketed Wall Street investors is creating
a paradox in the housing recovery,” RealtyTrac said. “A housing
boom is taking place alongside a plunging rate of homeownership.”
The
high percentage of cash buyers might indicate “financing is too
costly,” according to RealtyTrac.
“It’s
very difficult for a normal buyer to compete with the corporatization
of residential real estate,” Jack McCabe, owner of McCabe
Research & Consulting in Deerfield Beach,
Florida, told RealtyTrac.
Furthermore,
McCabe said, “Once these hedge funds head for the exits, a lot of
hedge funds will lose money because of the circumstances they
created.”
Institutional
investors have spent billions in the housing market in recent years,
buying up homes and renting them out. “Leading the Wall Street
REO-to-rental pack is Blackstone, the largest private landlord in the
U.S., which has spent $7.5 billion on 40,000 houses,” according to
RealtyTrac’s Octavio Nuiry.
Foreign
buyers are also investing in the U.S. housing market. “For
Europeans it’s a no brainer to buy here,” Tilman Otto, a broker
with Gibraltar
Real Estate Group in
Henderson, Nevada, commented to RealtyTrac.
“Prices
are cheap and the taxes are low,” Otto said. “I’ve got a couple
of clients that have bought five or 10 properties. The prices have
nearly doubled since 2010 when they bought. They’re millionaires
now—and they’re very happy.”
The
current trend of institutional investors and foreign buyers snapping
up properties and turning them around for profits is not a
sustainable one, according to RealtyTrac.
In
fact, the company compares today’s trend to the last housing boom,
noting, “Then as now, market watchers shrugged off warnings of an
unsustainable housing bubble, caused in part by speculators driving
up prices and chasing short-term profits.”
Metros
with the greatest percentage of cash purchases in September included
Miami, where 69 percent of home purchases were made with all-cash, as
well as Tampa, Jacksonville, and Las Vegas, where about 62 percent of
purchases were made in cash.
For
more information contact
Jerry
Gusman
The
Gusman Group
(888)
213-4208
Jerryggroup@aol.com
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