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Investors Who Buy Single Family Homes and Mobile Home Parks Spike Rents for Low-Income Americans

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    Investors Who Buy Single Family Homes and Mobile Home Parks Spike Rents for Low-Income Americans

    Before the anti-Capitalists show up, I'd caveat this thread by saying certain industries should be regulated. Any product or service that is a basic necessity should be immune to price gouging and artificial inflation. Housing/rent should be the one industry protected from predatory investors. Many of these investors are foreign such as China, who owns combined farmland acreage equivalent to the size of Ohio.

    Big money investors and private equity firms, continuing to buy up affordable mobile home parks, are spiking rents for low-income and working-class Americans.

    Americans across New York, Iowa, Minnesota, and Montana are detailing how Wall Street-linked firms have driven up their rents while cutting their services after buying the mobile home parks where they live.

    The Associated Press (AP) :
    “All they care about is raising the rent because they only care about the money,” said Jeremy Ward, 49, who gets by on just over $1,000 a month in disability payments after his legs suffered nerve damage in a car accident. [Emphasis added]

    The plight of residents at Ridgeview is playing out nationwide as institutional investors, led by private equity firms and real estate investment trusts and sometimes funded by pension funds, swoop in to buy mobile home parks. Critics contend mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are fueling the problem by backing a growing number of investor loans. [Emphasis added]

    George McCarthy, president and CEO of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based think tank, said parks containing about a fifth of mobile home lots nationwide have been purchased by institutional investors over the past eight years. [Emphasis added]

    A resident of an Iowa mobile home park, bought up by Havenpark Communities, said his rent and fees to live have nearly doubled over the last two years. Another resident at a park bought by Impact Communities said their rent has increased 87 percent in just four years.

    The same is occurring in Minnesota where mobile home park residents said their rents have increased by up to 30 percent as private equity firms from other states have increased their buying of parks from 46 percent in 2015 to 81 percent in 2021.
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    In Montana, a resident of a mobile home park bought by Havenpark Communities said her rent every month increased from $117 to $400 in less than two years.

    Breitbart News has the rise of investors and private equity firms linked to Wall Street mobile home parks, entire neighborhoods, and of single-family housing — often would-be first-time homeowners for properties.

    In Rutherford County, Georgia, for example, officials estimate that about 1-in-10 homes are now owned by private equity firms or investors rather than individual residents.

    In a neighborhood in La Vergne, Tennessee, an investment firm owns 19 homes in a single neighborhood. The homes were once affordable $200,000 homes for middle-class families. Now, they’re renting for about $2,000 a month.

    #2
    Look at this blind-bat just being able to see.

    How about life-saving drugs?
    How about life-saving surgeries?

    Comment


      #3
      Originally posted by siablo14 View Post
      Look at this blind-bat just being able to see.

      How about life-saving drugs?
      How about life-saving surgeries?
      We have over the counter ******** pills but we can't buy antibiotics over the counter. Free Narcan for druggie's that choose to shoot up heroin but insulin isn't free. We certainly have some issues in this country with this kind of stuff.

      A lot of hospitals charge too much for stuff. Like a couple of Tylenol you get charged for what a whole bottle costs. If these costs were reduced we wouldn't have as many people talking about wanting "free universal healthcare" imo. I'm against that "free" shit because some obese lardass shouldn't make me pay more in taxes to pay their medical bills that they brought upon themselves.

      Comment


        #4
        Originally posted by GhostofDempsey View Post
        Before the anti-Capitalists show up, I'd caveat this thread by saying certain industries should be regulated. Any product or service that is a basic necessity should be immune to price gouging and artificial inflation. Housing/rent should be the one industry protected from predatory investors. Many of these investors are foreign such as China, who owns combined farmland acreage equivalent to the size of Ohio.

        Big money investors and private equity firms, continuing to buy up affordable mobile home parks, are spiking rents for low-income and working-class Americans.

        Americans across New York, Iowa, Minnesota, and Montana are detailing how Wall Street-linked firms have driven up their rents while cutting their services after buying the mobile home parks where they live.

        The Associated Press (AP) :
        “All they care about is raising the rent because they only care about the money,” said Jeremy Ward, 49, who gets by on just over $1,000 a month in disability payments after his legs suffered nerve damage in a car accident. [Emphasis added]

        The plight of residents at Ridgeview is playing out nationwide as institutional investors, led by private equity firms and real estate investment trusts and sometimes funded by pension funds, swoop in to buy mobile home parks. Critics contend mortgage giants Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are fueling the problem by backing a growing number of investor loans. [Emphasis added]

        George McCarthy, president and CEO of the Lincoln Institute of Land Policy, a Cambridge, Massachusetts-based think tank, said parks containing about a fifth of mobile home lots nationwide have been purchased by institutional investors over the past eight years. [Emphasis added]

        A resident of an Iowa mobile home park, bought up by Havenpark Communities, said his rent and fees to live have nearly doubled over the last two years. Another resident at a park bought by Impact Communities said their rent has increased 87 percent in just four years.

        The same is occurring in Minnesota where mobile home park residents said their rents have increased by up to 30 percent as private equity firms from other states have increased their buying of parks from 46 percent in 2015 to 81 percent in 2021.
        SUBSCRIBE

        By subscribing, you agree to our & . You will receive email marketing messages from Breitbart News Network to the email you provide. You may unsubscribe at any time.

        In Montana, a resident of a mobile home park bought by Havenpark Communities said her rent every month increased from $117 to $400 in less than two years.

        Breitbart News has the rise of investors and private equity firms linked to Wall Street mobile home parks, entire neighborhoods, and of single-family housing — often would-be first-time homeowners for properties.

        In Rutherford County, Georgia, for example, officials estimate that about 1-in-10 homes are now owned by private equity firms or investors rather than individual residents.

        In a neighborhood in La Vergne, Tennessee, an investment firm owns 19 homes in a single neighborhood. The homes were once affordable $200,000 homes for middle-class families. Now, they’re renting for about $2,000 a month.
        I would never rent from anything other than an individual person. F**k these firms and investors. There should be a limit on how many properties firms/investors can own and what kind of property they can own. That would stop them preying on people for profit like this.
        siablo14 siablo14 likes this.

        Comment


          #5
          Mobile Homes are a very poor investment. The upkeep is crazy expensive and future returns suck.

          Comment


            #6
            I didn’t know China owned so much in the US. How was that even possible? And all that belongs to some Chinese businessmen?

            Comment


              #7
              No ****? This is news? Same problems over here of course, and cos we're a much smaller country property and most especially rental prices are insane. Of course institutional investors (including major asset mangement companies) also have huge influence within Government at both local and National level which is one reason - although there is others - why promised projects to build more affordable housing never get off the ground.

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by JohnnyRebel View Post

                I would never rent from anything other than an individual person. F**k these firms and investors. There should be a limit on how many properties firms/investors can own and what kind of property they can own. That would stop them preying on people for profit like this.
                And who would impose such a limit? The politicians who make the laws are often property investors themselves or have investments with (or donations from) the asset management companies that do.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Put a price on a thing and there will be people willing to buy it.
                  Why is ''art'' worth millions ?
                  Obviously ''art'' is not a necessity, but it has the price of one.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Originally posted by Citizen Koba View Post
                    No ****? This is news? Same problems over here of course, and cos we're a much smaller country property and most especially rental prices are insane. Of course institutional investors (including major asset mangement companies) also have huge influence within Government at both local and National level which is one reason - although there is others - why promised projects to build more affordable housing never get off the ground.
                    The current real estate boom is being driven by Wall St investors, foreign investors like China, Russia and Saudi, and big tech. They buy up entire neighborhoods of vacant homes and sit on them. Rent them out for higher rates once they create the housing shortage. Construction can't keep up with demand and many cities won't allow new single home construction, they want us all stacked on top of one another in tiny apartments like China.

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