Frisco | September 2022

REAL ESTATE Higher number of DFW homes sold in 2021 went to institutions

INCREASE IN INSTITUTIONAL BUYERS

The percentage of homes bought by institutions in 2021 was higher in North Texas counties compared with the state and national figures. Institutions are defined as companies, corporations or limited-liability companies. U.S. Texas 13.2% 28%

39% 34% Collin County Denton County

BY SARA RODIA

because they offered cash, purchased the property ‘as is’ or offered a guaranteed purchase,” according to the report. More institutional buyers may also change a community. “If the investor makes high-quality repairs and updates to the properties, then it could be an improvement to a neighborhood,” said Taylor Walcik, president of the Grapevine-based MetroTex Association of Realtors. “If the investor makes lower-quality modifications to a property, it could definitely go the other way and make the neighborhood not as appealing as it should be.” Umit Gurun, the Ashbel Smith pro- fessor of accounting at The University of Texas at Dallas, researched the trend of institutional homebuyers in the Dallas-Fort Worth area. He said there were two main shifts in the marketplace with these institutional investors. “One of them is that they become a big landlord,” Gurun said. “So they become the biggest landlord in the area, which gives them pricing power, which means they can increase the rent at higher levels, so that is kind of a monopoly on pricing.” The other shift he observed is institutional owners’ ability to repair houses at cheaper prices. “If you go to an area where a majority of the houses are owned by a landlord, you end up paying higher prices, but at the same time these institutional investors help the neigh- borhood through some amenities,”

Tarrant County

Dallas County

A growing number of homes in North Texas are being purchased by institutions rather than individuals. A report released in May by the National Association of Realtors shows Collin, Dallas, Denton and Tar- rant counties had among the highest percentages of institutional buyers of anywhere in the nation when it came to residential home sales last year. The association defined institu- tional buyers as companies, corpora- tions or limited-liability companies. Tarrant County was the third highest in the nation with 52% of all home sales last year going to institu- tions, according to the report. Dallas County came in seventh with 43%, Denton County was 11th with 39%, and Collin County tied for 20th place with 34%, the report showed. Nationwide, institutional buyers made up 13% of the residential sales market in 2021, the report stated. Among states, Texas had the high- est percentage of institutional buyers with 28%, the report stated. That is a 4.6% increase from the institutional buyer share in 2020, according to the report. The association’s report found the increase in institutional buyers reduced the available housing stock, creating a more competitive real estate market for individual buyers and increasing the number of rentals. That, in turn, led to a higher turnover rate, according to the report. “The major reason homeowners sold to institutional buyers was

52% 43%

SOURCE: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS/ COMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER

TYPES OF INSTITUTIONAL BUYERS The National Association of Realtors surveyed real estate agents in residential and commercial transactions about how single-family properties purchased by institutional buyers are returned to the market. Results are based on 3,644 responses from across the country.

45%

Resell or flip

42%

List as a rental Have shared ownership /shared equity Rent to own Properties are owned by a bank or short-sale buyers Other

3%

6%

NUMBERS DO NOT ADD UP TO 100% DUE TO ROUNDING.

4%

SOURCE: NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS/ COMMUNITY IMPACT NEWSPAPER

1%

Gurun said. With institutional buyers, home prices are likely to increase, said Marissa Benat, president of the Collin County Association of Realtors. “Where buyers will win is that overpriced homes are going to stand out much more if a home doesn’t sell due to price or condition,” Benat said. “Price can overcome a lot of conditions, but consumers should question why a particular home has longer days on market than compara- ble sales.” Institutional buyers have also been

changing the way they approach purchases. Shelby Kimball, manager at Kimball Real Estate in Fort Worth, said he is seeing institutional buyers in Tarrant County take different approaches compared to previous years. “We used to see more institutional buyers come in with lower offers, but now, to me what’s really changed is that the offers from institutional buyers are [at] asking price or above and all in cash still,” Kimball said. “It’s hard for other individual buyers to compete with that.”

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FRISCO EDITION • SEPTEMBER 2022

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