Comment on Companies that buy up homes should be known as home scalpers

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FishFace@piefed.social ⁨4⁩ ⁨hours⁩ ago

When people are forced to spend more on necessities, they don’t cut necessities. They can’t. They’re necessities.

Well then, we’re back to some people cutting their costs by doing all the things I said above. You dismissed them all as if reasons why they’re not practical are reasons why they’re impossible.

You’re saying if all rented properties were owned by single landlords who owned no other properties, rents today would still be just as high?

All those landlords have the exact same incentives to charge as much as they can get away with, to subdivide properties and to exploit their renters as corporate landlords do. Consolidation can allow prices to increase - but it doesn’t always, and typically not by a lot, until consolidation reaches very high levels. 3-7% is what I’ve read for company mergers (note that the case studies include large market shares and companies dealing in necessities).

So I propose that corporate landlords have manipulated the market by no more than 10%. So about 6 months of house price increases at current rates, or two years at less crazy rates. Everything else is caused by low supply and such.

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