Charles Hugh Smith brings us a report from one of his correspondents about the impact of short-term vacation rentals on the housing market in resort towns in Colorado.
Over the past few years virtually all of the 'locals' housing in Vail, the duplexes in nearby Eagle Vail, the houses in Edwards - everything in the upper Eagle River Valley where locals lived - has been purchased - often sight unseen - by hedge funds, private capital and wealthy full and part time homeowners. It has all immediately been turned into short term rental properties (STVRs) - Airbnb, VRBO, etc.
Why rent a two bedroom apartment to a teacher for $1,500 a month when you can Airbnb the same 40 year old unit for $2,500 a week?
Except now, there are literally no housing units available.
Ok, a few pop up now and then but for $3,750 to $4,000 a month, since the work at home class has bid up the price of everything in resort towns with fast internet, and all of them have it. Even if they don't, Starlink is $120 a month for 50-200 MBPS connectivity. (I have it, it's flawless.)
Local teachers with masters degrees start at $45,000 a year, fresh out of school.
A $3,750 per month rental requires about $11,000 to move in, first and last plus the security deposit. The annual rent comes to $45,000. Thats the gross pay for new hires, which we need annually as our experienced educators retire, or sell their homes they bought a few years ago for huge gains and move elsewhere.
We can't hire teachers.
We can't hire snow plow operators, who are sort of essential in the high country.
Can't hire substitute teachers at $100 a day.
Can't hire bus drivers.
Nobody making under $250,000 can buy a house and live here anymore. Wendy's pays $19 an hour to start - but you can't work there unless you live with your folks or 4 roommates (maybe).
It's so bad in Eagle County that the school district is bringing new teachers, fresh graduates from the Philippines. The district is building 37 apartments for them to live in, dorm style. Teaching has become a job only workers imported from other countries can afford to do here, like picking vegetables.
There's more at the link. Go read the whole thing.
Mr. Smith's correspondent talks only about the situation in Colorado, but I'm sure it's manifesting itself (sorry - personfesting itself - must be politically correct, you know!) in other states as well. Coastal resorts, inland holiday destinations such as southern Missouri and the Ozarks, the hill country of Texas . . . I'm sure they're experiencing something similar, but I have no evidence to prove that. Can readers help? Do you know of similar developments in tourist/holiday destinations near you? If so, please tell us about them in Comments, with whatever details you can provide.
This is where the capitalist system stores up trouble for itself. By allowing those with capital to shut others out of the market, it condemns those without capital to miss out on those opportunities. (Mr. Smith wrote about that a week ago in his article "The Problem Isn't a Housing Shortage, It's the Concentration of Ownership by the Wealthy". Recommended reading.) I'm no socialist, and I can't support the Marxist idea of "from each according to his ability, to each according to his needs" - that's been revealed over time to be a massively destructive philosophy that ruins entire economies, let alone housing markets. Nevertheless, I know a number of younger people today, particularly younger couples, who despair of ever being able to own property in or near the areas where they work. The so-called "American dream" of owning their own home seems closed to them. That's not all STVR's, of course - the warped housing market at the moment makes it worse all round - but to them, the future looks bleak. It's little wonder that a number of younger people tend to be socialist in their outlook, because they see capitalism as "unfair" by comparison. That's not true, of course - all economic systems have their drawbacks and failings - but one can understand how they come to feel that way. The appalling education indoctrination they're receiving at our schools and universities doesn't help, of course.
Then, of course, there are the builders. They build houses that will give them the greatest return on investment; in other words, upmarket dwellings with all the trimmings. There are few, if any, lower-priced homes being built in major housing markets right now, and those that are tend to be "lower-priced" only in terms of the currently greatly inflated house prices prevailing there.
Eight years ago, my wife and I (who are not wealthy by any stretch of the imagination) moved to our present home in a small Texas town. We did so for a number of reasons, one of which was the affordability of housing. For less than half the price we'd have had to pay in the city where we previously lived, we were able to buy a three-bedroomed, ±1,300-square-foot house for an entry-level six-figure price - affordable for an older couple with limited income. Even so, today, houses on our street, all of which are very similar to ours in size and construction (brick, modern, with nice interior fixtures and fittings) are selling for well over double that - a ridiculous jump in price over so short a period, but for the fact that the housing market has become so distorted by the influx of capital from investors that it's pushed all prices out of whack.
A local developer is building new homes very similar to ours less than a mile away, a few at a time. He reported that he'd been approached by a major corporate investor, offering him a huge premium if he'd sell them the entire sub-division and build all the houses at once, so they could turn them into rental properties. He's an older man who's made his pile, and doesn't want to work that hard or under those pressures, so he declined the offer; but it's telling that a small Texas town can attract that level of interest. (Yes, we're a dormitory town for a larger city not far away, which buoys up our housing market; but even so, we were surprised to hear about the scale of that offer.)
On the other hand, there are encouraging examples of people with their heads screwed on right, who are determined to work hard and make a go of it despite such obstacles. There's a young couple a few miles away who got married soon after we arrived here. They decided they were not going to chase the big money in the big city, but live in a less urban environment where they could build a future together more affordably. They bought an acre or so of lower-cost land a few miles outside town, and set up house together in a small 20-foot travel trailer. That's all they had. Within two years, they'd bought the materials and done the work themselves to erect a 30-foot-long shed structure, which they insulated and made habitable. That became their "house", with their bedroom still in the travel trailer. Over the next couple of years they built a carport on one end, then expanded the building until they could move into it altogether. The travel trailer is now parked out back, along with a second shed that's a workroom and storage area, and the main building has been expanded into a small home for the family. They're taking it one step at a time, doing the work themselves, and saving money so they can pay cash for most of what they need. Good for them! I wish more young couples showed the same common sense they're exhibiting. It's heartening and encouraging to see them set down their roots and grow together.
All the same, that approach isn't practicable for those living in or near big cities. Prices have already overtaken such opportunities.
Let us know what you've seen in your local real estate market over the past few years. How does it square with what we've discussed above?
Peter
Lived in the back end of nowhere, Texas. Bought a house in early 2019, sold it earlier this year for close to 140% of what I paid for it. And this was not a bedroom community for a big city by any means.
ReplyDeleteI don’t know about the seasonal rental market you wrote about, but I know the housing market here is astronomical. 3 bedrooms going for $700K and up. 2 bedroom condos for $400k. Many houses are on the market for only a month. I read that some houses are going for several thousand over the asking price when customers are in a bidding war. Rentals are also pricey, $2k is not unusual, out of reach for many people. I don’t how or why this continues without imploding. The rumors are many people can work from home, so they are fleeing Boston and Connecticut and New York and moving up here.
ReplyDeleteSouthern NH
"Local teachers with..." Democratic Party voter registration vote in the local county commission and zoning commission that write the rules allowing short term rentals thus giving legal incentives to utilize single family homes not as single family homes but as short-term rentals.
ReplyDeleteHow did the accumulation of all that rental housing aid the banks bailed out by Obama in the long run? Not so well as I recall. The same will happen with this. When did 'young people' ever buy homes when 'young' while having no capital to do it with?
This situation (high rental rates) reminds me of the factory workers in England during the 1700-1800's. Those folks lived in squaller while they labored "for the man" in dangerous factories. Usually in dank basements, 4-5 people, in a small 50 to 100 square foot room.
ReplyDeleteEventually, the workers, no matter which country they come from, revolt against "the man" and organize.
Mercantile free market capitalism is good.
ReplyDeletePredatory financial capitalism is bad.
There is more money sloshing around the various Wall street markets than the property value of the entire USA. Now that they've discovered that, they're not afraid of using their financial power against all the rest of us.
Short term rentals (STR) make the numbers work to pay more for a house. Basically you are making 2x to 3x the amount of a long term rental.
ReplyDeleteThe danger of owning a str, besides over supply and reduced demand (which is happening now in done markets), is government can stop allowing STR’s. Plus the issue they are basically unlicensed hotels.
The reason so many large corporate investors went into the rental market was zero interest rates. The big money is now leaving the rental market as rents are stagnant, and commercial loans have to be refinanced every 5?years, at a higher interest rates.
A problem in many markets is only building high end buildings pencils out, due to government regulations.
The str rental owners I have interacted with are not super rich.
Well, if this means the death of public education (indoctrination) because locales can't house teachers, that may be all for the good.
ReplyDeleteW here from Southern Georgia, and I can tell you its quite bad. The area I live in has about 70/80K people and is the center for our area. The "city" has been dying a slow death since around the 80s/90s Population wise we hover around 80K, but in the last 4 decades its sunk to closer to 70K. The medium income for the area is around $25K and in 2016 (When I bought my house) averages house prices ranged from $80K to $160K with a few outliers sitting at $250K.
ReplyDeleteThat was in 2016 to give a base-line to look at.
2023. My house on zillow to get a number has gone from roughly $130,000 to $225,000 There are no houses for sale less that $150,000 there are no rentals for sale less than $250,000 (previously was closer to $160,000 in 2016). The "city" government despite no population growth and a very slowly shrinking population has decided in its infinite wisdom that what is needed is a batch of low income housing in the good part of town, and over that last year put in hundreds of speed cameras "for the safety of the children"
My family on all sides have rental units and have for generations so the following data I am getting from several of the management companies in the area who I'm familiar with. The average rent in the area went from about $700 for a 3 bedroom 2 bath duplex (per side) to between $1,200 and $1,500 over the course of less than a decade.
Wages have not gone up to match. Keep in mind medium income for the area is around $25,000. Food prices have skyrocketed. In 2016 I could go out to eat (Note only 1 person for this example) and get a meal plus an appetizer for about $20 including the tip. In 2023 That same meal, appetizer, and tip runs closer to $35
I drive the same route every day, every week, every year. My gas bills have gone from $32 to $58 in the last 2 years. The grocery store, my normal bill in 2016 was about $60 (again I eat the same things, I don't really change things.) In 2023 its rarely less than $100.
Last thought. I'd say probably only 1/3rd of rental units at this point are owned by individuals and families. The other 2/3rds are by companies and investment groups. This is really bad in my opinion. With so much money flooding into the real-estate market. It is causing a really bad bubble to form. The young can't afford a home which means they have to rent which drains their resources. This is compounded by rents skyrocketing which hurts even more.
(Note: part of the raised rents are justified. Property Taxes, Insurance, and Repair bills have also shot up which means rents have to go up to match that. People buy rental units as as investment. If they can't get back at least 4% return after all the bills its not worth it, but they don't want to sell it because it is maintaining the money put into it even as our dollar's value is being degraded. That being said I believe that a lot of the raised rents are due to the big companies and investment groups. They think rents should be equal across the board and and trying to raise the rates to match the big cities. So what you have is a cascade effect. They raise rents and since they own roughly 2/3rds of the rental units it makes it look like the rates are going up naturally. Which then triggers the local management groups to do the same because again rents need to be equal, just for the last 3rd its for the local area, but if 2rds of them are being raised to big city levels well. Knee jerk response. Quite frankly its insane. Personally I believe that investment firms should not be allowed to purchase property to rent.)
Basically if you got through my ramblings, I think this is all going to end badly. There are too many bubbles, too much being abused for profit/taxes(read profit) and the economy is starting to going off the rails. Frankly I think we need to look to Weimar Germany right as the Great Depression was starting to get an idea of what is ahead. - W
When enough "Free" or nearly free money is dumped into an economy since the last "economic downturn" asset prices go wild.
ReplyDeleteSomeone wiser than I said, "the cure for extreme prices (he was speaking of commodities here) was extreme prices as the natural law (like gravity even economics have laws) of "Return to Mean" and supply and demand kicks in.
Blackrock is counting on being a MAJOR Political Donator to keep them "protected" from market laws (also known as boom and bust cycles) like the politics that kept the current market bust at bay for almost a decade now?
Meanwhile the youth need to deal with living in their parents' homes like was done for eons before the "nuclear family" occurred and getting their homes from their parents.
Proverbs 19: 14Houses and wealth are inherited from fathers, but a prudent wife is from the LORD. 15Laziness brings on deep sleep, and an idle soul will suffer hunger.…
Yep, just like SFO and DC, the 'workers' can't afford to live there, so they live 20-30 miles out and 'commute' in somehow, which snarls traffic, limits parking, etc. That is known as a death spiral...
ReplyDeleteJust paid $75 to fill the SUV tank. Until the era of bidenonomics never cost more then $45-$50. Try to find a fast food joint where the burger/fry/drink doesn't cost at least $10.00. 10 years ago I paid ~$85K for my house in a very small town in central Florida. Friend who is a realtor tells me he can get me $300K for it. But where would I go? [Actually I'm giving serious consideration to selling the place and dumping the money (and me) into the kids small farm.]
ReplyDeleteI saw a similar article a few months ago about Prague and how AirBnB has completely emptioued out the downtown touristy areas. It briefly touched on a few other European cities with the same issue, but focused Prague. Essentially said that no one lives there anymore, just all renting places out via AirBnB but the tourists just come in to sleep and spend the rest of their time in the touristy places, so the city itself is largely devoid of people anymore.
ReplyDeleteI can't seem to find that article, but there are quite a few out there asking if AirBnB is destroyign cities going back up to 5 years so.... apparently not really a new phenomenon.
This is not entirely new news. Some decades ago it was a news item that Colorado ski resort employees were living in a hot spring cave near the town. Conditions have shifted more in that direction.
ReplyDeleteThere is only one fix for housing shortages, BUILD
ReplyDeleteI'll bet these communities include lots of rules that prevent anyone from building or make it prohibitively expensive to build.
And for people working at fast food, I see nothing at all wrong with 4 people sharing a house.
these companies can only buy houses and make them short term rentals because the demand is there. If the demand isn't there, they will lose money on those properties and sell them.
Sorry, not much sympathy from me on this issue. This isn't a dark side of Capitalism, it's an example where regulation is blocking Capitalism from working by preventing people from building to satisfy the needs of others.
These companies don't force anyone to sell their house, the people selling their houses value the money they will receive more than the house they are giving up or they wouldn't sell. What right does the Government (or anyone else) have telling them that they are not allowed to sell?
Now, there can be anti-monopoly-type reasons to block any one person from owning too many properties in a given area, but that's not going to prevent anyone from selling, just force them to sell to someone else.
South Central Pennsylvania: The local high school social studies teacher/football coach settles on a house later this month. His winning bid was $25,000 over asking price. He then put his house on the market; eight offers and sold in 2 days.
ReplyDeleteThis is being done very deliberately, globally Peter. I was reading the comments above and found I was nodding to myself as I see the same thing happening here in Australia.
ReplyDeleteNow you know why the uptake of the "treatment" during the (continuing) medical "situation" was so high here in Australia.
A population up to its eyeballs in debt - is a VERY meek population. Especially with all the "doxxing" and public shaming (etc) that goes on with anyone that says no, or has a different opinion to the official "narrative".
I was threatened with being terminated for "misconduct", and complete destruction of my career for saying "No thanks" to a treatment. I'd never get another job in my field again.
The authorities discovered what a powerful tool for compliance the real estate market truly is.
"They bought an acre or so of lower-cost land a few miles outside town, and set up house together in a small 20-foot travel trailer."
ReplyDeleteYou cannot do this in Texas in the first two or three counties next to the Gulf of Mexico now. All new trailers (travel, single, double) are outlawed due to the hurricane wind damage laws. I think that the logic is that the trailers come loose easier and possibly damage another property due to wind or flooding.
My parents live in Port Lavaca, Texas on the coast (Lavaca Bay). Half of the homes in Port Lavaca are single wides dating back to the 1950s.
'younger couples despair of owning their own home.'
ReplyDeleteThis makes great copy but it is nothing new.
You know the remedy for their situation? Time.
A time will come when they will be able to own. That is if they do not give up.
This had been proven true in my grandparents time, my parents, and those after me. The bewest on the block will have their time.
Today it is wealth capitalists depriving the peasants, er, younger couples. Boo! Hiss!
But wait, who was the culprit in those past times?
Finally, what cannot withstand will not withstand. Circumstances change; this is true for society as much as for the individual.
We saw this 15 years before, it's just more widespread now. If folks can't pay, they won't buy, and the price will come down.
ReplyDeleteIf the corporate buyout of properties with the resulting rise of rents is a problem for the state, they could raise property taxes on rental housing to make it unattractive to absentee investors. To compensate the resident renters, a rebate could be given (from those taxes) to align the rents to a nominal rate. I'm sure a formula could be devised. Isn't government supposed to HELP the people, not the help the corporations? I know....I'm naive.
ReplyDeleteNaive is putting it too lightly.
DeleteGov is not to help nor hinder any of the people.
I know of a number of areas that give resident owners a tax break... But unfortunately it is usually very small, less than 5%.
DeleteJ
This has been true in some places for years.
ReplyDeleteI saw an example in Aspen CO over 20 years ago:
- 3 pages of help wanted adds, none paying over $15/ hour
- 5 pages of rentals, none of them under $5,000/ month.
It's only gotten worse since then. Some resort areas have zoning for locals only; South Lake Tahoe has so much trouble getting hospitality workers that they are doing this.
As the saying goes, bad money chases out good - free money from the government is being turned into assets, inflating their prices. This isn't capitalism - it's essentially an oligarchy, where some companies get favors (free money) and others don't.
All part of the plan to replace us pesky free thinking whiteys with compliant brown people from the world countries. Starve us out, force us into homelessness, poison us with faux vaccines... whatever it takes.
ReplyDeleteI suspect this is a boom/bust cycle, but the problem is that people can't just 'go dormant' until it is over. The high prices/rents will drain them so they can't take advantage of the opportunities when the bust occurs.
ReplyDeleteGrowing up, I thought I would never afford a house after the runup of the 70s and 80s. Was able to buy in the bust in the 90s. In the last month, the smaller house next door sold for 5x what I paid for mine back then.
You're playing the game Monopoly, but you don't realize the bank player has a shoebox packed full of 500's under his chair. Nothing about this is honest free market capitalism; fiat currency and fractional reserve are official counterfeiting. Meanwhile, the boomer parents who voted for all this still have the "Spending my child's inheritance" bumpersticker on their bus-sized RV. Boomers are working hard to make their genes go extinct.
ReplyDelete> I know of a number of areas that give resident owners a tax break
ReplyDeleteThat makes a lot of sense.
I could also go along with a tax break to owners who have fewer than X rental properties in the area (support the "we lived there, then moved but kept the old place as a rental" types
David Lang
I'll try and stay out of the political weeds.
ReplyDeleteMyrtle Beach, SC, in the heart of the Redneck Riveria, has had this problem for a decade if not longer. The front desk and custodial staff all commute in from 20+ miles out. Same for anyone who works there at a low-paying job.
In my area of the Piedmont Triad, NC I haven't seen the AirBNB issues. However, a starter house 5 years ago was 1200 SF +/- and usually consisted of 3 BR, 1-2 baths and that's it. It probably needed some work and sold for $125,000-150,000. Now, those houses are rarely seen at that price unless they are in a crappy neighborhood, need a lot of work or usually both. Starter houses are now 1400-1600 SF, 3 BR, 2-2 1/2 baths with a garage and cost $250,000.
Our house was $152,000 when we bought it as a foreclosure in 2006. It needed some work but was livable as it was. Zillow says it's now worth over $300,000, although the value has dropped a bit lately. It's what I would think of as a middle-middle class home in a middle-middle class neighborhood.
I don't think this will end well.
This will eventually lead to charging non-resident owners confiscatory property taxes on any home they aren't living in full-time, or adding on a rental surcharge that makes it impossible to hold the properties with what they can get in rentals.
ReplyDeleteCapitalism eventually becomes predatory, and government (which is the people who are residents there) has no choice but to intervene.
Probably harshly, and ham-fistedly.
Boo hoo.
This would be a local solution.
DeleteNationally, old banking laws (still on the books, still enforced to the best of my knowledge) prevent chartered banks from holding real estate investments or foreclosures beyond a specified period of time without special, property-by-property time-limited permission.
This law exists to prevent to accumulation of real estate by financial corporations (chartered banks being the only powerful financial corporations at the time).
I don't consider tighter regulation on companies that do not produce tangible goods to be incompatible with the underlying principles of capitalism.
Not quite the same thing but it's happening everywhere. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/travel/travel_news/article-12433411/Comporta-portugal-town-hamptons-western-europe.html
ReplyDeletePort Aransas, TX has issues attracting police, firemen, and teachers since few of those make enough to afford anything in that community. I'm not sure about South Padre, TX, but probably the same.
ReplyDeletePersonally, I believe that the bloat of investment rental property is a self-correcting problem caused by too-low interest rates. We had a bunch of investment rental property in Central Kentucky in 2008. Eventually, they end up renting to subsidized people who are rough on the place, and run up thousands of dollars of damages. If they leave the place empty, 4-8% interest rates on loans eat their lunch. A round or two on this cycle, and the houses are getting fixed up and shipped back out to the market, usually at a loss.
ReplyDeleteMost of the excesses we see are companies and the rich searching for return in a low-interest wasteland, and if they can just get it parking their money in deposit-like investments, we're all better for it. Don't keep interest artificially low, and they'll stay out of markets where they have no business.