• Home
  • BUSINESS
  • ECONOMY
  • FINANCE
  • LIFESTYLE
  • MILLIONAIRE STORY
  • REAL ESTATE
  • TRAVEL
No Result
View All Result
MILLIONAIRE | Your Gateway to Lifestyle and Business
  • Home
  • BUSINESS
  • ECONOMY
  • FINANCE
  • LIFESTYLE
  • MILLIONAIRE STORY
  • REAL ESTATE
  • TRAVEL
No Result
View All Result
MILLIONAIRE | Your Gateway to Lifestyle and Business
No Result
View All Result
Home REAL ESTATE

Housing Is 150% More Expensive Than in 2019, Why Shutting Out Institutional Buyers May Backfire

January 14, 2026
in REAL ESTATE
Housing Is 150% More Expensive Than in 2019, Why Shutting Out Institutional Buyers May Backfire

The housing affordability crisis has become one of the defining economic challenges for American households. Since early 2019, the cost of buying a home has surged by more than 150%, while mortgage rates have climbed from historically low levels to above 6%. Together, those shifts have pushed homeownership beyond reach for a large majority of U.S. families, particularly first-time buyers.

You might also like

Something Big Just Changed in the U.S. Housing Market as the Mortgage Lock-In Begins to Fade

Larry Page Copies the Jeff Bezos Playbook With a $173 Million Miami Compound

Saks Global crisis shows how risky dealmaking pushed a luxury empire to the brink

Against that backdrop, President Donald Trump has proposed a blunt solution. His plan would bar large institutional investors from purchasing additional single-family homes, arguing that Wall Street ownership has driven up prices and reduced supply for everyday buyers. The proposal has drawn bipartisan praise, including supportive comments from California Governor Gavin Newsom and progressive lawmakers who see corporate landlords as a key culprit in the housing affordability crisis.

A political fix meets economic reality

The theory behind the proposal is simple. If institutional buyers are removed from the market, more homes should be available for owner-occupants, easing competition and lowering prices. The idea resonates with frustrated voters who see rising rents and shrinking options, and it fits neatly into a broader narrative of curbing corporate influence.

Yet housing economists argue the evidence does not support the claim that large investors are the primary driver of higher prices. According to research from the American Enterprise Institute, institutional owners with portfolios of more than 100 homes account for roughly 1% of the nation’s single-family housing stock. In most counties, they own none at all.

Ed Pinto, codirector of AEI’s Housing Center, says the focus on institutional investors distracts from the real cause of the affordability crunch, a chronic shortage of homes. Restrictive zoning rules, slow permitting, and years of underbuilding have left the U.S. short by an estimated 6 million homes. Easy monetary policy after the pandemic amplified demand for that limited supply, sending prices sharply higher.

Do investors raise prices or absorb pressure

Pinto’s analysis shows little correlation between institutional ownership and home price growth. Some of the fastest price increases since 2012 occurred in markets where large investors own less than 1% of homes, including Boise, Idaho and Bend, Oregon. By contrast, metros with higher investor shares, such as Memphis or Birmingham, often experienced below-average appreciation.

Institutional landlords also play a stabilizing role during downturns. During the housing collapse following the global financial crisis, large investors bought thousands of foreclosed properties when individual buyers lacked credit or confidence. That activity helped set a floor under prices and prevented deeper market damage.

More recently, as prices climbed beyond what many families could afford, institutional buyers expanded single-family rental options. For workers who need flexibility or cannot qualify for a mortgage, renting a home can provide space and stability without the long-term financial risk of ownership.

Build-to-rent and the supply question

Another overlooked factor is that institutional investors are not only buyers of existing homes. A significant share of their acquisitions comes directly from builders through so-called build-to-rent developments. In these cases, new homes are added to the housing stock specifically to meet rental demand.

When market conditions shift, those same homes often return to the for-sale market. Investors tend to sell when buyer demand improves and rental returns soften, increasing available inventory rather than permanently removing it.

Data from late 2023 through 2025 show that large landlords collectively sold slightly more homes than they purchased, resulting in a small net decline in holdings. That pattern challenges the narrative of relentless accumulation that crowds out individual buyers.

The risk of unintended consequences

Blocking institutional investors may have limited short-term impact, since their holdings are currently flat. The longer-term risks emerge during economic stress. Without institutional capital, fewer buyers may step in during downturns, increasing volatility and deepening price swings.

Rental supply could also tighten, pushing more households into smaller apartments and raising rents for families who cannot yet buy. At the same time, fewer aging or distressed homes would receive the large-scale renovations often funded by institutional owners.

The housing affordability crisis is real and politically urgent. But experts caution that targeting a small segment of the market may do little to solve it, and could make matters worse. Expanding supply through zoning reform, faster construction, and incentives to build remains the most direct path to restoring balance.

Share30Tweet19

Recommended For You

Something Big Just Changed in the U.S. Housing Market as the Mortgage Lock-In Begins to Fade

by Zoe
January 13, 2026
0
Something Big Just Changed in the U.S. Housing Market as the Mortgage Lock-In Begins to Fade

A quiet shift with major consequences After years of gridlock, the U.S. housing market may be entering a new phase. The mortgage lock-in effect that froze millions of...

Read moreDetails

Larry Page Copies the Jeff Bezos Playbook With a $173 Million Miami Compound

by Zoe
January 9, 2026
0
Larry Page Copies the Jeff Bezos Playbook With a $173 Million Miami Compound

Larry Page has joined the growing list of technology billionaires shifting their personal and financial footprint away from California. The Google co-founder has spent roughly $173 million acquiring...

Read moreDetails

Saks Global crisis shows how risky dealmaking pushed a luxury empire to the brink

by Zoe
January 8, 2026
0
Saks Global crisis shows how risky dealmaking pushed a luxury empire to the brink

The Saks Global crisis is rapidly becoming one of the most consequential cautionary tales in modern luxury retail. At the center of it is Richard Baker, a real...

Read moreDetails

UBS: Trump’s 50-Year Mortgage Would Save $119 a Month but Double Long-Term Interest

by Zoe
November 12, 2025
0
UBS: Trump’s 50-Year Mortgage Would Save $119 a Month but Double Long-Term Interest

A Long-Term Fix with a Long-Term Cost The Trump administration’s proposal to introduce a 50-year mortgage, a radical shift from the traditional 30-year loan, would bring short-term relief...

Read moreDetails

Where Real Estate Giants Barry Sternlicht and Scott Wallace Are Investing Now

by Zoe
November 11, 2025
0
Where Real Estate Giants Barry Sternlicht and Scott Wallace Are Investing Now

A Changing Landscape for Property Titans Two of America’s most influential real estate investors, Barry Sternlicht and Scott Wallace, are quietly reshaping their portfolios as rising interest rates,...

Read moreDetails

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Browse by Category

  • BUSINESS
  • ECONOMY
  • FINANCE
  • LIFESTYLE
  • MILLIONAIRE STORY
  • REAL ESTATE
  • TRAVEL

Recent Posts

  • California Wealth Tax Fuels Rift Among the Rich as Some Defend Paying More
  • Citigroup job cuts loom as Jane Fraser tells staff results, not effort, will define success
  • Peter Thiel Makes Biggest Donation in Years to Oppose California Billionaire Wealth Tax
  • Housing Is 150% More Expensive Than in 2019, Why Shutting Out Institutional Buyers May Backfire
  • U.S. Workers’ Share of GDP Falls to Its Lowest Level Since 1947

Recent Comments

No comments to show.

Archives

  • January 2026
  • December 2025
  • November 2025
  • October 2025
  • September 2025
  • August 2025
  • July 2025
  • June 2025
  • May 2025
  • April 2025
  • March 2025
  • February 2025
  • June 2024

Categories

  • BUSINESS
  • ECONOMY
  • FINANCE
  • LIFESTYLE
  • MILLIONAIRE STORY
  • REAL ESTATE
  • TRAVEL

CATEGORIES

  • BUSINESS
  • ECONOMY
  • FINANCE
  • LIFESTYLE
  • MILLIONAIRE STORY
  • REAL ESTATE
  • TRAVEL

About Millionaire MNL News

  • About Millionaire MNL News

© 2025 Millionaire MNL News

No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • BUSINESS
  • ECONOMY
  • FINANCE
  • LIFESTYLE
  • MILLIONAIRE STORY
  • REAL ESTATE
  • TRAVEL

© 2025 Millionaire MNL News

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?