Twin Cities residential real estate has been slowly reshaped over the past few years by national buyers who turn single-family houses into rentals, but the numbers appeared small against the overall market, and the effects marginal.
Now, data show that some neighborhoods in Minneapolis and the entire suburbs of Fridley and Hopkins are being transformed by corporate ownership, a phenomenon that shows no signs of letting up.
And the effects — including higher prices throughout the market, greater competition at time of sale, and out-of-state landlords showing less care for properties and renters — are becoming harder to ignore. On top of all that: fewer opportunities for people trying to get their first house.
"It's an unfair market for the first-time home buyer," said Henry Rucker, a broker with Twin Cites-based Banneker Realty. "We're not paying attention to who the buyers are. We're only looking at how much the seller will net."
Investor-owners, defined as those with two more properties they don't live in, now own about 4% of the single-family houses across the metro, twice the share since 2006, according to a new database developed by the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis.
And in a half dozen neighborhoods and suburbs, they own more than 20% of the single-family houses.
Turning houses into rentals boosts the housing options for people who don't want to buy a house or rent an apartment. But it also makes it more difficult for people to build wealth through homeownership, especially in areas that are affordable to working-class buyers.
"Investors who are able to make cash offers are quickly limiting options for families that want to buy single-family homes, making it harder to get into homeownership," said Libby Starling, director of community development and engagement at the Minneapolis Fed.