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Business & Money
Wall Street sets its sights on renters
By Samuel Oakford
Updated Jun 18, 2014 - 8:11:07 AM

NEW YORK - Six years after the financial crisis, Wall Street’s housing alchemy engine is revving up again—only this time it’s coming for your rental.

Right as housing prices bottomed out around January 2012, large institutional investors began buying distressed properties in regions hit hard by the foreclosure crisis; they’ve purchased at least 200,000 to date.

In only a year, private equity giant Blackstone Group went from owning no single-family rental properties (SFRs) to being the U.S.’ single largest landlord.

Now, several companies, including Blackstone, are packaging their SFRs into bonds similar to the mortgage backed securities that fueled the financial crisis.

Like those securities, SFR bonds are backed by homes; but this time rental payments, rather than mortgage payments, pay the interest. Securitization frees up money, allowing big buyers to purchase more properties with less capital by increasing their leverage—and risk.

Issuances thus far are small—less than $3 billion. But wary housing advocates are pushing regulators to increase supervision. Wall Street’s role as a proprietor is unprecedented, and no one knows what to expect, least of all the families renting the homes.

Last year, two senior Federal Reserve economists warned institutions could “have difficulties managing such large stocks of rental properties or fail to adequately maintain their homes.”

Indeed, this May, a couple in Sun Valley, California filed suit against Blackstone subsidiary Invitation Homes for allowing their home to descend into a slum, where they allege toxic mold caused “nose bleeds, headaches, fatigue, memory loss, inability to concentrate, chronic runny nose, respiratory issues and other chronic flu-like symptoms.”

In January, California Congressman Mark Takano called for hearings on the issue, but they have yet to take place.

“Securitization allows for bad practices to flourish exponentially,” Kevin Stein, associate director of California Reinvestment Coalition, told IPS. “We don’t know what kind of property manager is available, and we don’t know if there will be pressure to raise rents.”

Last October, Deutsche Bank marketed the first ever bond backed by SFRs—$479.1 million in expected rental payments on 3,207 units owned by Invitation Homes.

The deal was only a drop in the bucket of 44,000 homes Blackstone owns nationwide. This summer, they aim to package a billion dollars worth of units.

Collectively over the past three years, large investors have spent an estimated $20 billion on homes. The thought of capturing more of the $3 trillion single-family market has Wall Street frothing at the mouth.

Their entrance into the housing market comes amid historic inequality in the U.S., where extracting wealth from the poorest has become normalized.

The financialization of everyday life means that something as commonplace as the landlord banging on your door for rent now involves thousands of investors, thousands of miles away, all urging that landlord to extract greater profits.

“Single family rental is not new,” Sarah Edelman, policy analyst at the Center for American Progress, told IPS. “Previously you had individual ‘mom and pop’ landlords, but now you have companies that have large portfolios that span multiple states—[will] the systems that they are putting in place work—will they be able to keep up?”

Because institutional investors can pay more than the asking price—in cash—for multiple properties, they’ve edged out local would-be homeowners and driven up prices in several hot markets. The percent of all-cash buyers has doubled in only a year, to over 40 percent of all home sales.

Tight credit for personal mortgages—from the same lenders that liberally dished out dangerous subprime loans before 2008—has only worsened the picture for renters looking to move into a home of their own.

That has resulted in homeownership rates at two-decade lows and rising rents in practically every region. Income, however, is moving in the opposite direction. Between 2000 and 2012, rents rose 12 percent in real dollars; over that same period, the median income of renters fell 13 percent.

SFR-backed securities do theoretically open up funding for an expansion of the rental market. Though there is an immediate need for affordable housing, seeing Wall Street renting out homes that its own malfeasance forced owners to abandon makes for a bitter image.

“Millions of families lost their homes during the foreclosure crisis and now as a result we have millions of families that are looking for homes to rent,” said Ms. Edelman. “We do need an increased supply of rental housing, but we also need to make sure those are stable.”

But as SFRs, like seemingly every financial instrument becomes increasingly inevitable, housing advocates don’t want regulators to be playing catch up.

“The industry doesn’t have much of a track record—it’s important that the industry establishes best practices and that state and local policymakers revisit their landlord-tenant policies,” said Ms. Edelman.

Issuances are picking up. In April, Colony American homes sold bonds totaling $513 billion. The next month, American Homes 4 Rent, the largest publicly traded single-family landlord, sold $481 million worth.

More than half of the properties in the American Homes 4 Rent deal were located in Atlanta, Dallas, Las Vegas, Tampa and Phoenix—some of the cities hit hardest when the housing bubble collapsed.

“Securitization just provides a mechanism to increase the volume of this activity,” Stein told IPS. “It’s not surprising people have found out a way to make money out of this.” (IPS)

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