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25 April 2024

Cash transactions on the rise in US housing market

Home purchases made by investors climbed to 17 per cent in January, up from 15 per cent in December. (AFP)

Published
By Staff Writer

More home buyers in the US are snapping up properties with cash, a trend driven in large part by investors returning to the market after four years of falling prices around the country, according to a media report.

The share of home sales involving all-cash transactions was 26 per cent in January, up from 18 per cent a year earlier, according to the National Association of Realtors (NAR). The figures come from a survey of members about their most recent transactions. Many home buyers also are paying cash, but investors are largely using cash so they can avoid paying interest charges on loans and get a larger return on their investment, according to USA Today.

Other NAR data also show a pickup in investment activity. Home purchases made by buyers identified as investors climbed to 17 per cent in January, up from 15 per cent in December and 12 per cent in November.

"We bottomed out in 2008, and in late 2009, prices stabilised and investors have returned," says Mark Fleming, Chief Economist at First American CoreLogic. "It's a different type of investor going after foreclosed properties and expecting to hold on for longer time frames."

Many investors say they are financing their purchases with cash on hand, rather than borrowing.

Evan Spinrod of San Francisco bought three rental properties in November and February and now owns 21 in four states. The rent he collects gives him an 8.5 per cent annual return on his investment. Some of his homes are worth about $165,000 (Dh605,550). "I'm still looking," Spinrod says. "You can't build these houses for the prices they're selling them. I've always seen that the real wealth was in real estate. People have been sitting on cash, and there's no interest from the bank [to pay]," says Spinrod.

Leonard Baron, a real estate professor at San Diego State University, has bought three homes with cash in the San Diego area in the past eight months, ranging in price from $100,000 to $130,000. He rents the properties.

Baron says now is an ideal time to make such purchases. "It's because prices have dropped so much and rents really haven't," he says. "The deals were unbelievable."

"Flippers, rehabbers, investors are, in fact, buying," says Lisa Johnson, with Coldwell Banker

Residential Brokerage in Haverhill, Massachusetts. "I'm getting builders who have stopped building and are instead buying up condos and single-family homes to fix them up and sell them. It's a neat change I haven't seen in four years."

All-cash purchases also reflect a growing number of investors buying higher-end properties without credit, says NAR spokesman Walter Molony. That is a sign that some investors see real estate prices as having nowhere to go but up. All-cash offers give buyers a competitive edge on rival offers – even higher ones – that are dependent on financing.

Cash deals can close faster and are less likely to fall through.

"You have to have cash to be able to close quickly and have negotiating power. Cash is king," says Tanya Marchiol, President of Phoenix-based Team Investments, which buys about 70 properties a month with cash it raises from investors. "We do want to flip it or generate cash flow [through renting it out]. Now is the time to buy for cash flow. We know the market is going to rebound."

Some investors say the current real estate market is an ideal time to buy because homes are so low priced, they are bound to hold their value. That is the philosophy of Jim McClelland of Tinley Park, Illinois. He is buying about 120 to 150 entry-level homes in the Chicago area this year and owns a total of about 300 properties.

He says now is a good time to buy because properties going into foreclosure are no longer just one-bedroom, fixer-uppers but nicer, split-level brick homes with more bedrooms that will probably appreciate to a higher value.

That is because so many prime-rate borrowers who bought more expensive homes have gone into foreclosure. He puts about $60,000 into upgrading a property, then rents it out.

"Do I think this year will be a better time to invest than in 2009? Yes," McClelland says.

"There have always been foreclosures. The difference now is you get a better home for the same kind of money."