Real Estate Investors Pull Back, Buying 45% Fewer Homes Than A Year Ago
- Limited inventory and cooling housing market deter investors
- Investors' share of new listings is falling
- Small and low-priced homes attract investors
- Investor home purchases fell 45% YoY in Q2
- Investors bought $36.4 billion worth of homes in Q2, down 42% YoY
- Investors bought 15.6% of homes sold in Q2, down from 19.7% YoY
Redfin reports that investor market share is down to
The drop in purchases has brought the total number of homes bought by investors below pre-pandemic levels. Real estate investors bought roughly 50,000 homes in the second quarter, the fewest of any second quarter in seven years, with the exception of the start of the pandemic. The data in this report is from 39 of the most populous
This marks a retreat from a boom in investor activity during the pandemic, which was driven by record-low mortgage rates and huge homebuying and rental demand, creating opportunities for investors to make a lot of money.
“Offers from hedge funds have dried up; I haven’t received an offer from one in a long time, except unrealistically low offers,” said Las Vegas Redfin Premier agent Shay Stein. “From mid-2020 until early 2022 when interest rates started going up, hedge funds bought up a ton of properties and immediately turned them into rentals, pricing out local buyers. Now a big portion of our homes are owned by investors, but they’re not adding to their portfolios.”
Investor purchases declined
In dollar terms, the drop in investor purchases is almost as big. Investors bought a total of
In terms of market share, investors bought
Limited inventory, limited demand deter investors even more than individual buyers
The outsized drop in purchases by investors helps explain why their market share is coming down: Investors backed off from the housing market faster than individual homebuyers in the second quarter.
Stubbornly high home prices and mortgage rates, limited inventory and widespread economic uncertainty have dampened housing demand and suppressed overall home sales. Those factors are an even bigger deterrent for investors, because they’re in it purely for the potential to make money by flipping homes or renting them out. When housing demand is down, investors are less motivated.
Additionally, investors themselves were deterred by high home prices and high interest rates. Roughly 7 of every 10 (
“Moving forward, the investors who do come back may be more focused on scooping up rental properties than flipping homes,” said Redfin Senior Economist Sheharyar Bokhari. “All signs point to the rental market remaining relatively strong. Home prices and mortgage rates are high enough to motivate would-be first-time homebuyers to continue renting. The typical
“Home flippers may be slower to come back,” Bokhari continued. “That’s mainly because mortgage rates are unlikely to decline significantly in the short term, which will keep homebuying demand relatively low and discourage flippers. Plus, investors have lower-risk places to park their money right now than real estate, with high yields in the bond market.”
Even if investors’ market share does pick back up, their purchase volume is likely to remain low. Like other buyers, they’re limited by a severe lack of listings, with homeowners locked in by relatively low mortgage rates.
Investors’ share of new listings is falling–but those who are selling are seeing big gains
Homes owned by investors are making up a smaller share of new listings on the market. Investors owned
Most investors who are still flipping homes are making money. The typical home flipper who sold a home in June sold for
Just
Investors most commonly buy low-priced homes
Investors bought
Investors are attracted to low-priced homes for the same reason as other homebuyers: They cost less, which is especially attractive when home prices and interest and mortgage rates remain elevated. Investors who are buying homes to flip and re-sell are doing so in hopes that they can buy low and sell higher. Small homes—those with 1,400 square feet or less—made up
In that same vein, low-priced homes make up a substantial piece of investors’ homebuying pie. Low-priced homes made up
Single-family homes represent nearly 7 in 10 investor purchases
Single-family homes made up
Next come condos, which made up
But in terms of market share, investors have the highest when it comes to multi-family properties. Real estate investors purchased
Investors purchased
To view the full report, including charts, methodology and metro-level data, please visit: https://www.redfin.com/news/investor-home-purchases-drop-Q2-2023
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Source: Redfin