How tech jobs helped Rust Belt become
house-flipping hotspot
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[September 12, 2018]
By David Randall
PITTSBURGH, Pa (Reuters) - In the run-up to
the 2008 financial crisis, millions of amateur investors kept adding
fuel to the overheating U.S. housing market by betting on quick profits
in hotspots like Las Vegas or Miami. A decade later, house-flipping is
making a comeback, but this time in some Rust Belt cities the last boom
passed by.
Not only the scenery has changed. Today's house-flippers - those buying
properties and selling them within 12 months - are mainly contractors
and professional renovators who buy run-down properties in promising
neighborhoods and fix them up, boosting the resale value.
In contrast, those who contributed to the speculative frenzy of the
early 2000s would typically take out a mortgage to buy a home, perhaps
give it a new coat of paint, wait for prices to rise enough to cash in
and do it over again.
Today, old industrial cities such as Pittsburgh, Buffalo and Cleveland
are among those offering the greatest returns. They have struggled to
recover from the recession, but now are beginning to attract tech firms,
such as Google-parent Alphabet Inc, Uber Technologies Inc, and
Amazon.com Inc.
The influx of new workers is boosting demand for urban homes in areas
that have some of the oldest housing stock in the nation and not much
new construction, creating richer opportunities for flippers than in Las
Vegas or Miami at the height of the housing boom more than a decade ago.

"Even at their peak in terms of home flipping profits, these two markets
never came close to the potential returns available now in Pittsburgh,"
said Daren Blomquist, senior vice president at real estate tracking firm
ATTOM Data Solutions.
In Pittsburgh, home flippers made a gross profit of 162.7 percent on
average during the second quarter of this year, while in Buffalo, the
average gross return came in at 107.5 percent, according to ATTOM data.
Nationally, the average house-flipper earned a 44.3 percent gross return
on investment this year, compared with the 35.3 percent during the boom.
(Graphic: https://tmsnrt.rs/2NC6sOu)
CASH DEALS
While house-flipping is more lucrative than before, stricter lending
rules mean fewer would-be investors can afford to join the fray. Nearly
48,770 single family homes were flipped nationwide in the second quarter
of this year, about half of the number during the peak of the
house-flipping craze in 2005, according to ATTOM data.
Market statistics do not distinguish between casual investors and pros,
but the high share of cash deals in the top-performing markets suggests
they are a domain of full-time house flippers such as Kris Bennett.
The former pro BMX racer opened his Pittsburgh firm that specializes in
renovating and flipping houses in 2009 and now has a team of six and 18
projects under management.
In Pittsburgh, nearly 75 percent of flipped homes are paid for in cash
while in Cleveland cash deals account for 80 percent of house flipping
compared with 60 percent nationwide.
Real estate analysts say those numbers suggest there is little risk of a
repeat of 2008. Back then investors who financed their speculative bets
with mortgages were primarily responsible for the surge in defaults that
fueled the crisis, according a National Bureau of Economic Research
paper published last year.
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A combination picture shows before and after renovation of inside of
a home in Manchester neighborhood in Pittsburgh's historic Northside
are seen in this combination photo from 2011 and 2012 in Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, U.S., in these photos released on September 11, 2018.
Courtesy Kris Bennett/Handout via REUTERS

“We found that someone is much more likely to default on an
investment property than a residential one because it’s a purely
financial decision with no psychological costs,” said Stefania
Albanesi, one of the study’s authors and University of Pittsburgh
economics professor.
Today's flippers not only rely far less on borrowing. They also help
increase the supply of quality housing in some long- neglected
markets, analysts say.
"Pittsburgh's housing market was under-invested in for 40 or 50
years," said Aaron Terrazas, senior economist at real estate listing
firm Zillow. "The housing stock in the urban core of these cities
requires substantial investments to update these older homes and
bring them up to modern living standards."
That, however, is fuelling concerns that long-time residents may get
priced out from their neighborhoods that are now in demand. For
example, in Pittsburgh's Lawrenceville - now home to Uber's
self-driving car division - the average home price jumped from
$72,993 in 2007 to $236,951 in 2017, a gain of 224 percent,
according to RealSTATS, a local real estate listing firm.
Overall, prices are up 7.9 percent in the Pittsburgh metro are so
far this year, just below the U.S. average, according to estimates
from real estate listing firm Zillow.
In Buffalo, median home prices are up 14.9 percent over the last 12
months and are expected to rise another 12.2 percent in the year
ahead, according to Zillow. In Cleveland, prices are up 18.6 percent
over the past 12 months and are expected to rise another 7 percent
over the next 12 months. In response to affordability concerns, the
Pittsburgh authorities raised real estate transfer taxes this year
to fund a Housing Opportunity Fund designed to spend $10 million
annually on preserving and developing affordable housing in the
city.

With home prices still far below the national average, real estate
professionals in Rust Belt cities expect the influx of workers from
costlier locations and the pressure on the markets there to
continue.
The median home in Pittsburgh, for example, is now worth $141,300, a
third below the national average and about 85 percent less than the
$953,600 median in tech-heavy San Francisco, according to Zillow.
"Pittsburgh is becoming a whole different city," Bennett said.
"While locals might be surprised by the prices, almost all of the
homes I'm selling are to people who are coming from places like D.C.
or Boston who can't believe how affordable it is."
(Reporting by David Randall; Editing by Jennifer Ablan and Tomasz
Janowski)
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