A standard-issue The influx of out-of-towners with big budgets is contributing to the rise in home prices in popular migration destinations, pricing out many locals. Nashville home prices remain lower than many expensive coastal cities, but were up 22.6% in December from the year before. So while Nashville may be a good deal for someone coming from Los Angeles, many locals are stuck renting. Money.com put an exclamation point on the transplants vs. locals data with its conclusion on the trend. Transplants with higher salaries from places with higher costs of living, like California, have been able to expand their home searches to lower-cost areas if their employers allow them to work remotely from any location. Even if they pay over asking price in their new city, [local Nashville real estate agent] Geyer says, “in their eyes, they’re getting a deal.” There’s little reason to think that this imbalance will regain equilibrium anytime soon. Tech- and business-enabled distributed- and remote work macro trends, age demographic household and family formation forces, and “the-rent’s-too-damned-high” price levels in coastal urban cores – not to mention evolved omnichannel digital marketing initiatives by homebuilders and masterplanned communities – remain as crucial drivers homebuilders continue to count on to help clear both backlogs and spec starts under construction without giving up too much on pricing. Hometowners – especially younger ones, as yesterday’s release from the National Association of Home Builders of its Housing Opportunity Index illustrate, face bleak prospects if their aspirations are to buy locally. According to the National Association of Home Builders (NAHB)/Wells Fargo Housing Opportunity Index (HOI), just 42.8% of new and existing homes sold between the beginning of April and end of June were affordable to families earning the U.S. median income of $90,000. This is a sharp drop from the 56.9% of homes sold in the first quarter that were affordable to median-income earners. While builders, developers, and – by the way, build-to-rent construction, development, and investment players – get a tailwind benefit in the near-term from “pricing-in” transplants fleeing unreasonably high housing costs and a host of other less desirable factors of gateway city or coastal-market urban areas, they’re also adding to the pool of “have-nots,” priced-out of ground-up homeownership in their hometowns. Given the tensions and cross-purposes builders and developers grapple with at the local community level homebuilders might consider effort to turn a negative narrative into a positive one for a longer-term opportunity, especially where they may have standing inventory to try to move. Why not focus “pricing-in” promotions, incentives, and sales efforts on a narrowed local basis, with every intention to ensure that hometown residents get their best shot at ground-up construction in or near neighborhoods their friends and family members occupy? If the only local option locals get in new market-rate residential real estate is a built-to-rent neighborhood, that may represent that immediate-term win for developers. But who ever feels all that happy with a “better-than-nothing” option? The hard work builders and developers have ahead of them – whether it’s now, or in the mid-term future, or over the long haul – is to “price-in” people who’re part of making these “hottest market” destinations the reason they’re so hot – walkable, pleasant, roomy, peaceful, culturally rich, food-friendly, and neighborly towns and cities – in the first place.Join the conversation
Locals Got Hammered In ’20 to ’22 Housing Boom … How About Now?
August 12, 2022, 3:35pm