I have been writing about algorithmic home buying on the blog since Opendoor launched back in 2014.
I don't have anything new to report on that today, but this recent article from the WSJ is interesting in that it talks about why Phoenix, in particular, has become ground zero for algorithmic home buying, as well as for institutional investors looking to buy cheap rentals.
Across Opendoor, Offerpad, and Zillow, nearly 500 homes are now being purchased -- largely by software -- in Phoenix each month:

One of the reasons why Phoenix is well suited to these platforms is that the housing stock is cheap and fairly homogenous. (The WSJ calls it "stucco sprawl.") This makes it easier for the algorithms to put a value on the homes.
A big chunk of the housing stock is also relatively new. Just over 36% of it was built in 2000 or later. And it tends to trade fairly often. Below is the percentage of homes in 2018 that were resold within a year of purchase.

It's also worth noting that Arizona is a non-recourse state, meaning you're typically not personally liable if you default on your home mortgage. You simply hand back the keys. So it's viewed as a fairly risk tolerant state, which may be one of the reasons why Phoenix's median home price chart looks like this:

I'll end with this quote from the article: “It’s the dawn of e-commerce for real estate,” said Zillow Chief Executive Rich Barton. “Phoenix is ground zero.”
Charts: WSJ
Image Source: Vancouver by Marc M on 500px
According to a recent Bloomberg article, this is where the rich are putting their money today:
“The two greatest stores of wealth internationally today is contemporary art….. and I don’t mean that as a joke, I mean that as a serious asset class,” said Fink. “And two, the other store of wealth today is apartments in Manhattan, apartments in Vancouver, in London.”
In case you wondering, Laurence Fink is the founder and CEO of BlackRock Inc., which today is the largest asset manager in the world. They have over $4.77 trillion in assets under management according to their website. That’s a mind boggling number.
And if you read the Bloomberg article cited above, you’ll see that this interest in both art and apartments represents a shift away from gold as the de facto safe haven.
“Historically gold was a great instrument for storing of wealth,” the chairman of BlackRock Inc. said at a conference in Singapore on Tuesday. “Gold has lost its luster and there’s other mechanisms in which you can store wealth that are inflation-adjusted.”
What’s interesting and probably most relevant to the Architect This City community though is this investment focus on apartments.
When people talk about a possible housing bubble in Canada they often cite house prices to median household income as a key ratio. The question then becomes: How can house prices be such a high multiple relative to local incomes?
That’s relevant, but it’s not the entire story for cities like New York, London, and Vancouver. That ratio alone assumes that real estate isn’t a global investment vehicle. And for some people people it is exactly that.
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