knowmansland t1_jcdzkxm wrote
They will probably be purchased with cash from foreign investors and then rented.
IchooseYourName t1_jce9ft5 wrote
Probably? Mmmm okay
vasya349 t1_jceggms wrote
Foreign buyers represent less than 2% of national home sales.
BreadItMod t1_jcfcngr wrote
That’s too much, if you’re not a permanent resident of some kind you shouldn’t be allowed to buy anything. It’s the only nationalistic view I hold
Scizmz t1_jcg2ccz wrote
I'm more concerned with corporate "investors" at this point. But if you really want to fix housing issues in America outlaw the owning of single family properties by corporations and trusts. Individuals can still own as much as they want, but nobody is going to want that much personal liability.
blankarage t1_jcgtaeu wrote
permanent residency doesn’t stop foreign investors, you can buy a path to residency fairly easily. we really need to focus on ~30% of housing being purchased by companies
vasya349 t1_jch2aaw wrote
Yeah but it doesn’t affect the larger market at that fraction…
navit47 t1_jch92kl wrote
we're aren't looking at housing on a national scale though, even then 2% is pretty high
vasya349 t1_jchjswq wrote
Feel free to find data for San Diego specifically. This weird myth that foreign buyers are influencing prices has been disproven by research in both Australia and Canada, I doubt it’s different here. Prices are bad because there’s undersupply and domestic investment groups capitalizing on that.
navit47 t1_jchtbl5 wrote
I'm not the one making the claim, its not my perogative to, also again, Australia/Canada doesn't apply to California
vasya349 t1_jchw1hp wrote
I hope you understand you are making a claim, in saying that california is different from national statistics. In any scenario this article says it’s 3% according to the california association of realtors: https://infogram.com/international-buyers-in-california-1h1749ngpedd2zj
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