When you allow speculation and investment in residential real estate, you end up where every other capitalist sector ends up
If you study history, you see this happen with steel (Carnegie), railroads (Vanderbilt), oil (
Rockefeller), banking (JP Morgan), online retail (
Jeff Bezos), luxury goods (
Bernard Arnault), web search (Google+Youtube’s Larry Page and Sergey Brin), and so on.
Monopolists will not stop until they are stopped.
Obviously, up until this point in history, real estate has been a far harder market to corner because of the high upfront investment costs, but that’s changed since the invention of…
Outrageous leverage
“A privileged class of investors are allowed to utilize the Fed and private banking system to print nearly infinite quantities of money via leverage, and use that money to out-bid first-time homebuyers who had to work for years to earn their money.” —
Throop Von
This is where things get truly ugly. Once monopolies form, they utilize the power of financialization to drop an economic atomic bomb on their competition.
Let’s say a condo is for sale right now.
- A first-time buyer can afford maybe $1,200/month, so they’re able to bid up to $250,000.
- A landlord can squeeze $1,250/month in rent from a long-term tenant. If they’re expecting half their revenue to go to costs and want a 2.5% ROI. plus appreciation, they’re willing to pay up to $300,000.
- A non-resident Airbnb host can fetch $2,500/month in nightly rent, double the long-term landlord. So they’re willing to pay up to $600,000.
- A predacious hedge fund, like all monopolies, will shave those profit margins to near-nil to destroy competition. (Amazon’s profit margin was negative for seven years while they killed off competitors.) So the hedge fund is willing to pay up to $1,200,000, nearly five times what the average person can afford.
- But here’s the really insidious move: The monopoly will partner with banks that — thanks to a corporate-controlled government that constantly prints ultra-cheap money and lets them create credit out of thin air — allow them to leverage their positions to an absurd degree. The monopoly won’t be paying $1.2 million for that house — they’ll be betting <$60,000 with 20+X leverage and a 20+X return on investment. (Prior to the 2008 crash, Lehman Brothers was leveraged a whopping 31X.) A financialized hedge fund will be willing to pay many more multiples than you can ever possibly hope to afford.
- It gets worse. Just like the banks spun off millions of mortgages as CDOs during the 2008 subprime debt crisis, the new real estate monopolists will likely take thousands of their underperforming units, bundle them into shiny-looking investment packages, and get their brokers to sell them to the derivatives markets for even more leverage. Before we know it, house prices could soar to astronomical heights.
In the same way that our grandparents wouldn’t have believed where real estate prices would be today, most people today can’t fathom how expensive shelter is going to get in the years ahead.
American median house prices have
12X’d in the past 50 years, and if that trend continues, houses in 50 years will average
at least $3.7 million. But with these radical new factors at play — especially the abhorrent financialization of a human necessity — we will see
exponential house price increases unparalleled in human history.
Average house prices could easily rise to $3.7+ million, likely $5+ million, perhaps even $10+ million. It’s already happening in major cities like London and Paris, and the financialization curse will soon spread globally.
At least it won’t affect me, right?
I know what some of you are thinking. “Well that’s cool if prices rise, I already own a house so I’ll just hold onto it for a few decades and retire with ten mil!”
But you’re forgetting about land tax.
Land tax is currently 1–2% per year and rising. Where are you going to come up with $100,000–$200,000 in after-tax income per year to pay for it?
The new economic paradigm is designed to make you a renter.
If we keep on our current course, 99% of the global population will be housing insecure within two generations.
We’ll own nothing and supposedly be happier, but I don’t believe them for a second.
I don’t want to live in a world where people are forced to be homeless because they can’t afford to live in a society that’s economically engineered to impoverish them. In a civil society, human necessities like shelter wouldn’t be commodified.
The solution is simple
We need to make it illegal to turn a passive profit off basic human necessities like shelter.
There, I said it.
We need to ban for-profit residential real estate investment.
- Commercial real estate is another topic of conversation (but it’s a big part of the reason why bookshops and cinemas are closing and restaurants are getting more expensive — gotta support those hungry landlords.)
- Not-for-profits like Indwell are great. After all, even in a society with full employment at living wages (not going to happen) or a society with sustainable universal basic income (not going to happen), the bottom 10% will likely never own their own home for myriad reasons — mental illness, physical impairments, or just chronic rootlessness.
But for-profit residential real estate investment? It has to be made illegal.
Illegal to be a for-profit landlord.
Illegal to Airbnb a non-owner-occupied house.
Illegal for hedge funds to buy up neighborhoods.
Illegal to financialize houses as tradeable bulk commodities.
But don’t expect such bans to stick. Chances are, hedge funds and
Airbnb will continue to sue cities, states, and nations — and “lobby” (bribe) and “help elect” (select) puppet politicians to do their corporate will.
There’s only one thing we can do:
Make real estate investment wildly unprofitable
There are many ways to do this:
- Charge an eye-watered premium on second house purchases. Start at 250% and keep raising it until investors give up and invest in anything but residential real estate. Why should anyone be allowed to own a second house until everyone has the opportunity to buy their first? Why should a fund be able to passively extract wealth from active societal contributors?
- Issue outrageously-priced landlord licenses and zoning permits for those bent on running a commercial business in a residential neighborhood.
- Drastically increase tenant rights, safety standards, maintenance standards, and cleanliness standards so landlords have to continually invest more than they extract.
- Zone all residential neighborhoods as owner-occupied only, so real estate investors have no choice but to allocate their capital to commercial holiday properties in commercial zones.
- Start not-for-profit city, state, and federal banks that loan directly to housebuyers without the need for middle-man credit-printing banks.
- Tax passive extraction income at 90+% and use the revenue to build owner-occupied houses.
- Encourage young entrepreneurs to start blitz-building affordable, eco-friendly owner-occupied houses by the millions. We need to build 1 billion new houses in the next decade to keep up with population growth, so we should invest heavily in innovative startups who can help crush the house-as-investment market.
We can debate the exact methods by which we eliminate for-profit residential real estate investment, so long as we understand the fundamental need to do so.
I subscribe to the radical belief that safe, healthy, adequate, and affordable shelter is a universal human right. At present, a new hyper-commodification paradigm is emerging that stands in direct opposition to that human right.
Family homes or hedge fund investments.
The paradigm that prevails is ours to decide.