According to data from First American Data & Analytics, investor purchases of residential homes as rental properties as a share of all residential home sales[1], have increased sharply in the last year, rising from 10.5 percent in May 2021 to nearly 18 percent in May 2022. Increasing investor participation in the residential housing market has coincided with remarkable growth in house prices, leading some to attribute the worsening housing affordability crisis to the increase in investor participation.
However, an equally plausible explanation is that rapid house price appreciation enticed greater investor participation in the market. Given the ongoing affordability crisis, understanding this dynamic can provide helpful insight into what we can expect as the market transitions.
So, Which Came First?
It turns out, as one might expect, that house price growth and investor participation are positively correlated. While there is substantial variation from city to city, we found cities with a larger investor share of sales generally experienced greater house price growth over the last year. For example, Phoenix, Atlanta and Jacksonville had the largest investor share in May as well as some of the fastest year-over- year house price growth rates in the country.
The top five cities by investor share in May 2022 were:
However, as the adage goes, correlation is not causation. Investor purchases could be driving price appreciation, or it could be the other way around, or both. There could also be a third factor driving both the growing investor share of purchases and house price appreciation simultaneously – a pandemic-driven surge in housing demand against a limited supply of homes for sale. It’s difficult to know with a high degree of certainty, but recent history provides some insight.
Pandemic-Priced Properties
The recent growth in demand to own residential properties is, in part, a consequence of a pandemic-induced flight away from densely populated cities and corresponding increase in demand for remote working space. This migration to more suburban cities and the search for more space accelerated demand in key markets, contributing to record house price appreciation. As people became priced out of the purchase market, they turned to the rental market, which in addition to ongoing new rental household formation, contributed to rents growing at a record pace. The combination of rapid rent growth and house price appreciation attracted even more investors flush with capital. This explanation is compelling in part because annual house price growth was already in the double digits before the investor share picked up in the second half of last year. In other words, there’s a strong case to be made that house price growth was influential in driving up the investor share.
Rising investor participation in the residential housing market created additional competition for the already-limited number of homes available for purchase, compounding the already-rapid pace of price growth. One estimate for the current national shortage in housing units is 3.8 million units. This pre-existing shortage made house prices highly responsive to the increased demand from investors.
Permanent Phenomenon or a Passing Phase?
If greater investor participation continues to contribute to elevated demand relative to limited supply, then house prices are likely to remain positive despite rising interest rates. If house price growth is enticing greater investor participation, then we would expect to see declining investor participation in the residential housing market as house prices decelerate. Currently, investor participation remains near all-time highs, but mortgage purchase applications were down 16 percent year-over-year in a late-July report, indicating a declining buyer pool for potential homes that may translate to slower price growth in the near term. However, the ongoing housing shortage will continue to make home prices particularly responsive to changes in demand. So, which came first, greater investor participation or faster house price growth? Perhaps, neither. It seems that both were predated by pandemic-accelerated demand amid a historic supply shortage.
[1] The investor share is the share of all residential sales to buyers whose name includes keywords such as Corp, Inc, LLC, Trust, or other identifiable business names.