Podcast: The Impact of the Supply Chain on Home Prices
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Location Cubed
Key Points:
- The recent spike in residential home prices is partly due to supply chain interruption.
- Demand for residential housing is increasing while active listings are retracting.
- There are positive growth rates in non-metro areas in comparison to negative rates for metro areas as remote work persists.
In this episode of Location Cubed, Hosts Rob Nowak, Tax Partner with Weaver, and Howard Altshuler, Partner-in-Charge of Real Estate Services, discuss the impact of the supply chain on the recent spike in residential home prices.
Pre-COVID, everything was moving along fairly smoothly for the supply chain; however, COVID-19 brought restrictions, lockdowns and an unknown future. “It kind of started to gum up the supply chain,” Altshuler said. “Traffic internationally started slowing down, and it’s almost like it comes to a stop, and then it takes a while to start up.”
According to statistics, if you were to shut down the supply chain for a year, it takes about three to five years to set it back up to full capacity from both a production and logistics standpoint. “That’s a lot of what we are dealing with from a standpoint of materials in any type of stuff,” Altshuler said.
Not surprisingly, this relates to the recent spike in residential home prices. “Building material prices are way higher if you can get them. That’s obviously turning into higher home prices,” Altshuler said. Demand is the second component of this. Months of inventory fell to 1.4 months as active listings remained retracted while demands skyrocket, according to data from the Texas A&M’s Texas Real Estate Research Center.
The two discussed alternatives to homeownership, including the build-to-rent model being a remedy for the home supply shortages and the sustainability of positive growth rates in non-metro areas compared to negative rates for metro areas as remote work persists.
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