The pandemic-era investor frenzy for buying real estate appears to be starting to wane.
Investor home purchases fell in the first three quarters of 2023, dropping an average of 32.9% year-to-year year-over-year as of September, according to a new Realtor.com analysis released Wednesday.
The decline in investor activity was greater than the 25% decline in overall housing market activity over the same period.
From January to September last year, investors bought an average of 10.8% of homes sold each month, down from 12% during the same period in 2022 but still higher than pre-COVID-19 levels. The investigation revealed that.
The percentage of inventor buyers peaked in February 2022 at 13.1%.
When demand for housing soared and rents soared in the early days of the pandemic boom, large investors overtook smaller ones.
While large investors accounted for 22.3% of investment purchases in January 2020 and expanded to a high level of 34.1% of home purchases in October 2021, the analysis shows that access to equity It is believed that this may have caused a sudden increase in cash transactions. .
For perspective, in 2021 and 2022, approximately 80% of large investors purchased real estate with cash. However, with the housing market situation uncertain, large investors continue to withdraw.
“Higher prices, higher mortgage rates and lower rents have taken investors a step back in 2023,” Hannah Jones, senior economic research analyst at Realtor.com, told FOX Business.
A lack of homes for sale continues to push prices higher, and although interest rates eased slightly last fall, they remain well above the pandemic-era low of 3%.
The median U.S. home sales price rose 4.4% in December to $363,371, according to Redfin data, while the average 30-year fixed-rate mortgage rose 4.4% in December to $363,371, according to the latest data from Freddie Mac It is 6.66%.
“While we expect housing affordability to improve slightly in 2024, the market remains relatively unaffordable, making it unlikely that investor activity will return to pandemic-era levels,” Jones said. “It's low.”
FOX Business' Daniella Genovese contributed to this report.
