story
In the more irrationally-hot markets, why assume that housing is even being purchased on a mortgage by your average home-buyer, rather than being purchased cash-in-hand by a private or corporate investor looking to park wealth they've already generated? (Even if that isn't the majority of houses in those markets, the sales like that that do happen would still have an impact on property values in the affected neighbourhoods.)
If big institutional money is going to cause a frenzy it would need to be irrational money managers that somehow clear their purchases through a panel and none of them say anything. Some point out that blackrock is on the other side of this zillow unloading but they have trillions in assets and only 60 billion in real estate. This is the largest money manager in the world and thats all the exposure they have.
lol.
2007 was the end of a long road, paved by unsophisticated "money managers" and doubly unsophisticated "bank regulators" and even more unsophisticated "politicians" since WW2.
There are people buying houses for more than their rental value right now where I live. Because there's one crime-ridden trailer park maintained on the freeway nearby to make them all within a certain distance of a "disadvantaged zone" and thus every former manufacturing country factory boss looking to move to the US only has to lose $400-$500 dollars a month to buy his way to the top of the green card list.
> Under regulations ... an EB-5 investor would need to invest ... a minimum of $1 million normally or $500,000 in economically disadvantaged areas...
> You'll need to plan on having your money tied up in the business for several years. When you first get your green card, your permanent resident status will be conditional for two years. During the 90-day period before the end of the two-year conditional residency, you'll need to submit a petition to remove the conditions—to show you invested the required amount and created ten jobs. These two years and government processing times result in your money being parked until you finally get your unconditional permanent residency.
https://www.alllaw.com/articles/nolo/us-immigration/investme...
Edit: Not OP, just guessing
You can always just stick your money in an ETF.