Out of state, small investors — or “laptop landlords” — accounted for 5.26% of home sales in Atlanta during the first half of 2022, according to a new Wall Street Journal analysis.
Why it matters: Most of the frustration over the rental crisis in Southern cities like Atlanta has been directed at big corporations buying up hundreds of homes and renting them out for profit.
- But smaller investors, defined as those who own between 2 and 10 homes, are also contributing to rising prices.
Details: The Journal story describes these landlords as mostly “well-paid professionals who view owning a rental as a core investment, alongside stock or bond funds.” They take advantage of technology that enables them to buy a home quickly online, without even visiting the city where the home is located.
- Data services help them “pick neighborhoods with precision,” the Journal found. The landlords can instantly see crime rates and school rankings, then use online real-estate marketplaces to connect with financing and local property managers.
The big picture: Investors bought up 28% of all single-family homes nationwide in February of this year, according to the data firm CoreLogic, the Journal reports.
- People who own 10 or fewer homes accounted for about half of the overall investor haul.
- Southern metros that have lots of low- and middle-income renters are particularly appealing to coastal investors, the Journal notes.
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