
Preserving our Common Wealth: A Policy Toolkit to Confront the Financialization of Pennsylvania's Homes
Housing is the foundation of family and community life. Residents in stable housing can put down roots, work with their neighbors to build a community, help one another and improve their neighborhood. Housing is also an asset that has long been the cornerstone of household wealth in America. Increasingly, however, housing is also being treated as a commodity – a vehicle by which financial intermediaries with access to large amounts of capital can generate robust returns and securitize as financial instruments to be traded on global markets. Unfortunately, this often prioritizes short-term gain at the expense of long-term stability, to the detriment of residents, communities and municipalities.
To ascertain the scale and impact of institutional investor acquisition of housing in Pennsylvania, RHLS conducted a review of existing research, supplemented in specific instances by our own research. Our investigation covered 3 sectors: single-family, multifamily and manufactured home communities. While there has been a great deal of research lately on the scale and impact of institutional investor participation in the single-family housing market, we believe our study is the first to address all three housing sectors.
Key Points
Corporate ownership of rental housing has long been the norm. The obscurity inherent in corporate structures makes it extremely difficult to determine whether the true, or “beneficial,” owners are institutional investors or traditional landlords. As a result, some researchers conflate institutional investment with corporate ownership.
The most valuable research on institutional acquisitions in Pennsylvania has focused on single-family housing. That research typically relies on some combination of corporate form and the number of properties acquired by a single entity as a proxy for institutional ownership – a process that is both time consuming and imprecise. Identifying investor-owned multifamily housing is even more difficult, as it requires painstaking review of news sources and property records. All researchers agree that a better system of data collection is needed.
The most prominent state and federal policy proposals to counter investor acquisitions would prohibit or penalize ownership of more than a threshold number of homes by a single entity. We believe this misses the point. The problem isn’t the number of properties – there are housing authorities, community land trusts and responsible landlords that have large, geographically dispersed portfolios that are well-managed. The problem is that well-resourced entities with an edge over more responsible real estate buyers operate under a business model that maximizes short-term returns on investment in ways that harm renters and the local community.
Private equity firms typically seek to generate 15-25% annualized returns over a 4-6 year period. This is accomplished by targeting low-value housing, making cosmetic upgrades, maximizing rents, and minimizing maintenance costs. The higher profits inflate the asset value so the property can be sold at substantial profit or borrowed against. The proceeds are then paid out to investors or used to acquire other properties, and the process repeats itself, leaving renters and the local municipality to deal with housing instability and deteriorating property conditions. Policy solutions should be designed to either thwart this business model or at least ameliorate its harmful effects.
Recommendations
Drawing upon our review of the literature, we recommend several policies that Pennsylvania and its municipalities can implement to get a better understanding of the scale and impact of investor ownership and to confront the harms that the institutional investor business model can cause. Our recommendations fall into four categories:
_______________________
Definitions
Institutional investors – Professional investors that pool capital and invest on behalf of others, typically at much higher volumes than individual investors, and typically promising high, short-term rates of return. The two most common types of institutional investors are:
Private equity firms – Privately held companies that invest capital from retail investors with the promise of high, short-term returns on investment.
Real estate investment trusts (REITs) – Companies, usually publicly traded, in which investors purchase shares of real estate and receive dividends and favorable tax treatment. Publicly traded REITs are rated based on their returns, so like private equity, they seek to maximize return on investment.