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by TulliusCicero
303 days ago
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> One legitimate reason to not think supply reduces prices is because of big financial companies buying up lots of houses and having effectively free rein to price how they want. Big corporations don't have unlimited money to do this kind of thing. And in practice, the expensive areas they do it in, are usually very limited in how much new housing goes up, they're still very much supply constrained markets. If what you're suggesting was really happening, then what you'd expect to see is an area with a relatively high vacancy rate (due to all the new supply), like 8% or even higher, but stubbornly high prices in spite of that. And I can't think of any examples where that happened. Can you? |
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https://www.redfin.com/news/investor-home-purchases-stabiliz...