Study: Banning Investors From Buying Homes Leads to Higher Rents, More Gentrification
Home prices were unaffected by a ban on buy-to-rent housing in the Netherlands, but more affordable rental housing disappeared.

Institutional investors that buy and rent out single-family homes are increasingly scapegoated for driving up prices, gentrifying neighborhoods, and depriving working and middle-class Americans of the opportunity for homeownership.
They've come under fire from liberals like Sen. Jeff Merkley (D–Ore.) and conservatives like Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio).
"In every corner of the country, giant financial corporations are buying up housing and driving up both rents and home prices. They're pouring fuel on the fire of the affordable housing crisis," said Merkley last year. He's introduced a bill to tax large investors' purchases of single-family homes.
Several Georgia municipalities in suburban Atlanta have gone so far as to ban build-to-rent housing or otherwise subject it to stricter regulation.
A new study suggests this handwringing is much ado about nothing.
Last week, a team of Dutch researchers affiliated with the University of Amsterdam and Erasmus University released a study on the effects of a new law letting municipalities in the Netherlands ban buy-to-let arrangements. In Rotterdam, the country's second-largest city, officials used the new law to ban investors from purchasing homes in specific neighborhoods.
That allowed researchers to compare home sales, home prices, and the characteristics of new residents between the two types of neighborhoods.
They found that banning investors from buying and converting housing to rentals worked in one sense: The share of investor-owned rental properties in affected neighborhoods fell, and the number of properties bought by first-time homebuyers increased.
On the other hand, however, these new homeowners tended to be richer than the renters they were replacing, and the costs of rental housing increased overall.
"The ban has successfully increased middle-income households' access to homeownership, at the expense of buy-to-let investors. However, the policy also drove up rents in affected neighborhoods, thereby damaging housing affordability for individuals reliant on private rental housing, undermining some of the intentions of the law," write researchers in the study published on SSRN.
The number of homes sold and overall home prices also stayed flat, according to the study.
This cuts against common arguments against investor-owned rental housing: that it's raising prices for everyone else.
Indeed, the Dutch study suggests that institutional investors are playing a productive role in the market by providing rental housing to people who can't qualify for a mortgage.
Another 2022 study likewise found that institutional investment in real estate increases neighborhood diversity by opening up more affordable rental housing options. That study did find that these investors were raising home prices overall.
As The Atlantic's Jerusalem Demsas noted in an essay from earlier this year pushing back on the anti-investor pile-on, these institutional investors are a small portion of homebuyers, owning only about 3 percent of single-family homes.
That challenges the idea that BlackRock's homebuying business is driving major national trends in home prices.
Institutional investors are similar to Airbnb owners and foreign buyers: small, unpopular participants in the housing market that get blamed for high prices caused by a general insufficiency of supply.
Policy makers would do better to look for ways to expand housing supply through deregulation of construction and mortgage finance than passing laws restricting who's allowed to buy a house.
Rent Free is a weekly newsletter from Christian Britschgi on urbanism and the fight for less regulation, more housing, more property rights, and more freedom in America's cities.
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Fascinating interview about the prostitution game in Las Vegas.
They've come under fire from populists like Sen. Jeff Merkley (D–Ore.) and Sen. J.D. Vance (R–Ohio).
Simplified it for you.
Anybody care to weigh in?
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Gender differences are real.
Religious differences are real.
Cultural differences are real.
Racial differences are not real.
Racial differences aren’t really unless they’re the only thing that matters.
“Real”
Why is 75% of the NFL and NBA one race?
We don’t talk about that!
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I think the Olympics prove that race isn’t as important as genetics in general.
Meritocracy! Best players get paid!
That concept does not apply to any other endeavor (except maybe rap music).
I'm going to need a clearer definition of what constitutes "real". Does "Gender and cultural differences are real." connote "The pay gap in patriarchal societies is real."?
I think you know how that is going to work out.
There is only one human race (species) all else is ethnicity. This language game was won by the left generations ago. It's really fun to blow HR departments away by asking why they put race *and* ethnicity in their trainings. "Are you saying that some people are of another race? I understand people have different ethnicities, can you clarify?" Then proceed to make a farce of the training.
If virtue-signaling liberals were to really believe that that racial differences are not real, those same liberals would be forced to concede that the NFL and the NBA are as racially biased as they claim the justice system and Ph.D. programs are. (Should there not be some quotas imposed?) Such logic is not to be expected from liberals, for whom the signaling of their virtue and purity is the prime directive.
The Libertarian case for owning nothing and being happy.
The year 2023, when government, nearly every corporation and media outlet suddenly believed all the same things.
Just rent your home from Amazon.
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Remember when Rep @CawthornforNC hinted there were sex orgies in GOP politics & then the NC GOP machine went after him led by @SenThomTillis?
Turns out he was right
NC House Speaker caught exchanging political favors for “group sex”
What did @SenThomTillis know?
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That’s fucking wild.
I used to think republicans were stupid and boring, but I might have been wrong about the second part.
They're not called the stupid party for nothing.
Conservative women are better looking, so I can see this as being a thing.
That may well be true, and there's research* on this. The better looking someone is, the more they're inclined to think that the world is generally fair, according to the research - hence they have a vested interested in maintaining the status quo, ergo...
And the argument applies in the other direction as well.
* I'll see if I can dig this up later.
And here it is: The Influence of Physical Attractiveness on Belief in a Just World
So how ugly are you?
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The Koch Network put out kits to big donors saying they’re planning on spending all their time and energy to prevent Trump from becoming the nominee by spending 100 million in Iowa, New Hampshire, South Carolina and Nevada
I Honestly hope RJF Jr wins the Presidency...I'll take the left anti-corportist if it is actually based on ethical concerns and not grifting (The Clinton democratic way)..and the end of the neocon and neolib control over our foreign policy. End the Fed, raise taxes and cut spending to end deficits. And
Why in the world would you trust RFK?
We're reluctantly voting for him.
What difference, at this point, does it make?
I hope the remaining Koch dies like his brother.
Sorry, but I need to vent/bitch.
Topic 1: The WSJ goes woke
I recognize that the WSJ newsroom is left of the editorial group. Today, they published a news bit about transgender teens and US regulations compared to European nations. They included this statement:
"Democrats say Republicans are attacking transgender youth to score political points and are backing dangerous bans and restrictions on treatments that will cause children harm."
I submitted this comment:
"What about Democrats? Do you thing they might promote questionable health policies to score political points?"
But that was rejected for violating community guidelines.
Looking for redress, I submitted this comment to a current editorial piece:
"Going off topic, but in the spirit of free speech, I think the WSJ news room has been lost . In the article about transgender treatments and legal restrictions, there is this statement:"Democrats say Republicans are attacking transgender youth to score political points and are backing dangerous bans and restrictions on treatments that will cause children harm."I submitted a comment that suggested that Democrats might also pursue health policies in order to score points. But the presumably live censor (the comments section had a notice that someone would vet all submissions) decided that my comment was unsuitable. Which side is the WSJ supporting?"
Guess what? This also violated community guidelines. Wanna bet which community?
Topic 2: The Post Office sucks, and also lies about it
Last weekend, they claimed to deliver a small package on Saturday (later revised to Sunday). I did not see it. By Wednesday it still had not appeared and I tried twice to call my local Post Office, let the phone ring for 5-10 minutes, and then gave up. Late Wednesday, the package showed up in my box.
Today, take 2. I just got a notice that another package was delivered to my "front door or porch". Nothing there, and nothing in the street box.
Last year, in a moment of candor (or don't give a fuck) a postal staff person told my wife (after a similar episode) that sometimes the carriers just scan a bunch of packages as delivered but toss them in the back of the truck. Do you think this violates community guidelines?
The WSJ hires the same type of people the NYT and WaPo do...and their editorial board is made up of trotsky neocons...(it would be nice if at least one "corporate media" paper actually hired Irish, and Italian and other ethnic Americans...not the usual NYC wealthy Ivy League bolshies.
Ban Ivy Leaguers from newsrooms and ideological diversity would increase 1000%.
They outsource their moderation to ChatGPT.
Not sure I buy the author's take. I grew up in a working class part of a small village outside of Rochester NY surrounded by an upper middle class suburban town. Recently the house across the street from where I grew up sold to a hedge fund for $380K..it was built in 1910 and is less than 1,400 sq feet. Little back yard in a not so nice part of town (across the streen from a public housing apartment complex)..the house itself looks like crap...when my Dad died about 10 years ago his house which my parents built in 1950 sold for $130K. But the village is becoming gentrified with high end "loft" apartments on the water front (Erie canal, I kid you not..the scummy erie canal is now highly sought after water front). At least in this one case the "blackrocks" are pushing up prices.
The solution is to stop easy money from flowing from the Fed to the banks and then to hedge funds. Mortgages should ONLY come from savings not the Fed's printing press. And banks should have to hold on to mortgages not sell them off just like the old days when houses cost a hellva lot less.
You got upzoned, homey.
What has the current price of a home got to do with one sold 10 years ago?
How does the $380K compare to other sales that month?
I will never for the life of me understand how anyone can seriously argue against "gentrification". How is making a neighborhood nicer, safer, and providing more opportunities and resources to it ever a bad thing? Yes, when places become more desirable rents go up. That is how basic economics works and it's not a bad thing. Literally the only argument that can be made for resisting "gentrification" is that poor people not only deserve to live in shitholes, they require shitholes to live in. In this worldview, certain places must be kept artificially shitty so that a particular type of person can afford to live there, as if gang violence and crack houses are the only thing that keep a roof over certain people's heads.
Gentrification tends to demonstrate that the reason the neighborhood was shitty was because the people already living there didn't seem to care if it was shitty or had no interest in trying to do anything to make it better. Getting called out on the inability to make the neighborhood a better place pisses people off.
It will end far worse than that. It’s a form of price-fixing. When the next recession hits and housing bankruptcy runs wild all those people will be out in the street entirely BECAUSE of that ban.
Seems like Reason did a good job on an article not too long ago explaining well during the COVID shortages on how the “hoarders” were the market “buffers” that saved the day when sh*t hit the fan. This legislation purposely eliminates those buffers so now when the sh*t hits the fan its going to hit super hard.
Then again; That's the very point of this legislation. To legislate demand. You might think you demand access to a roof over your head but the almighty Gov-Guns think otherwise.
I'm going to disagree with this completely. The problem with them buying homes is that they're not creating any value. Large-scale residential investors quickly become slumlords who care more about volume than they do value.
I have a landlord/tenant file where the landlord charged the exiting tenant for improving the property. The tenants upgraded the appliances and added fixtures. And they did so with no expectation of reimbursement - just so they could enjoy them during the tenancy, and maybe enjoy a little offset when it came to exiting costs. (This was after about a year of maintenance requests that went ignored or deemed "not covered" by the lease.) After a seven year tenancy (when their youngest was out of the school that was in proximity to their rental), they elected not to renew and vacated - at which point the landlord ripped the improvements out, and charged the tenant for restoring it back to what it originally was.
Slumlords don't care about the property value. And giving them a monopoly on available homes simply because they have immediate purchasing power while a would-be homeowner has to save before they're in a position (to borrow!) - there's a problem there.
I did an assessor search of the property I described above. Almost the entire neighborhood is owned by FOUR investment companies. And they will NEVER give those properties up for people to buy and make their own.
I'm at the point where I think every lease agreement should come with a Rent-to-Buy provision. At least for SFRs. Not quite sure how that might work, but if the goal is to encourage home ownership and to keep megacorps from sucking up available residential property and effectively removing it from the market - well, there's got to be a solution there.
And I’m going to disagree with your disagreement. You used one example (your own experience) to support a general statement about “slum lords” which is unsupported by any evidence. You then went on to generalize own-to-rent people as slum lords – again without any evidence, and in contradiction of the evidence reported in this article about the research results. The fact that you found one neighborhood that was owned to rent by companies says nothing about the general housing market or the general impact of for-profit ownership on rental housing. While it may be your goal to encourage home ownership, it’s not MY goal and I want government in general to stay out of private transactions as much as possible. Just one example: in the same way that government regulation of employment with minimum wage laws trying to help lower wage earners eliminates jobs for people who want part-time temporary employment, regulation of the housing market trying to encourage home ownership ends up eliminating rental housing for people who only want to rent a house for a year or two during a temporary relocation. The unintended (or intended?) consequence of government “helping” is to reduce the range of options for everyone else.
I'd lay down $100 it's "Shit that didn't happen."
Give the addresses of the former tenants, list the improvements made, list the fees assessed for alterations made or GTFO.
Otherwise, nobody cares that your (their) friend wanted an avacado green refrigerator with an ice maker and the landlord refused to buy it for them and then charged them when they left their refrigerator on the property and didn't put the original one back.
"...Slumlords don’t care about the property value..."
Ignoring your pejorative:
You.
Are.
Full.
Of.
Shit.
Do small-scale landlords? I know people that own one or two or three properties, locally, and rent them out. Nice little houses that they bought, fixed up, and rent out to families.
At what point does one become a large-scale investor and hence automatically obtain the slumlord moniker?
This isn’t an economics problem.
This is a “pandering to poor people and giving them a scapegoat” problem.
Literally no minimum wage worker is ever going to understand or believe the argument that institutional investors might make rentals cheaper.
Just like they don’t believe that a drastic hike in the minimum wage for their crappy job will attract better workers who replace them.
“believe the argument that institutional investors might make rentals cheaper.”
They might, but they generally haven’t.
Not making a judgement call on this, just wanted to point that out.
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It is possible for two things to simultaneously be true:
– big corporations buying out large numbers of SFHs is a bad thing
– taxing/prohibiting such purchases does not address the issue
In fact, increasing corporate ownership of SFHs is the result of loose monetary policy, tax policy, government overregulation, and government-created shortages.
It’s nearly impossible for private home owners to get contractors to fix things, building takes years of dealing with city governments and bizarre regulations, and all of those costs need to be paid in after-tax dollars by private individuals.
Corporations, on the other hand, can efficiently spread regulatory, compliance, and maintenance costs for large numbers of homes over dedicated staff, and most of the expenses become operating expenses of the corporation and result in tax savings.
But leave it to Reason to give us this b.s. article that contains no meaningful analysis and shows no understanding of the subject.
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As is too often the case at Reason, this article is absolute crap. A study in Netherlands? Dutch housing market is not American housing market. There is really no correlation. But that said, a little common sense (which oddly seems to be sorely lacking at Reason the past couple years)
First, investment firms have cash on hand. They do not need a mortgage. That gives them a huge advantage from the get go. If I am in the market to buy a $500k home, an investment firm can come right in out-bid me. At some point in the bidding war, I can longer afford or obtain financing. They win. This battle will also aid in raising surrounding property values, making other homes in area more expensive.
Next, an investment firm would not be an "investment firm" if they were not receiving a return on that investment. Therefore, an investment firm is going to take the mortgage rate and add 5% or more. So instead of paying a mortgage and owning, you are paying a mortgage plus 5%, and have nothing to show for it at the end of the day.
There are a plethora of solutions to our housing problems, but allowing Blackrock to compete against John Q. Public is not one of them.
" . . . and have nothing to show for it at the end of the day."
At the end of the day (and all night, and all the next day) you are warm/cool and dry. There is nothing magical about home ownership.
Just ask any homeowner with an adjustable rate mortgage.
Oh? It’s not? So do please explain exactly what law prevents you from starting an investment firm?
Every/Any persons success to a socialist is thought to be evil.
Unless the success comes at the end of a poking Gov-Gun.
Because socialists don’t believe in *EARNING* anything just STEALING it.
The Conquer and Consume Party.
As well demonstrated by Socialist and Communist nations compulsive need to conquer new territory.
Funny how they don’t seem to realize there’s only so much STEALING they can do before there is nothing left to STEAL.
“Throw away justice, Throw away Liberty… Our [WE] mob and criminal actions for the WIN!!!!!!”, touts the left day in and day out.
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It would be nice to find investors, of course, who would help me with the renovation. I'm kidding ofc. This is my responsibility, and gradually I'll bring my house into full order. Also, I mainly use online services, and you can check the cost of water main installation near me, for example. This is very convenient in planning the budget for repairs.
I'm pretty sure that if you need to rent a house, you're already not in the best condition. In general, I believe that in the UK, the situation is similar, so I just hope that there won't be any restrictions on construction. I've been planning to get Loft Extension services for a while, and I think it's better to do as soon as possible
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Koch really wants Biden to win.
They are going after Trump because they think Trump is the most likely to beat Biden.