January 18, 2025 Your Source for Brentwood News

Affordability Answer: A New Tax on Housing Speculators?

By Tom Elias, Columnist

The TV commercials and online ads are fast becoming ubiquitous: “We’ll buy your house as is,” they trumpet. “No need to spend any money fixing it up.”

That’s commonly the message from housing speculators, often institutional investors including real estate investment trusts less interested in preserving or maintaining housing than cashing in as land values rise. It’s the land, not the houses, that interests them most.

Says a Northern California citizens group called United Neighbors, “Non-wage capital, especially institutional and private equity, is entering the single-family market in unprecedented amounts.”

That’s a big reason why, the group contends, “California housing costs have inflated at such a rate that housing costs have completely decoupled from their historical wage-based income basis.”

That, they say, is the root cause of the affordability crisis. It is furthered by the fact that institutional investors, including pension funds like CalSTERS (the California State Teachers’ Retirement System) and CalPERS (the California Public Employees Retirement System) keep many purchases vacant while they await land value increases. This frees them from dealing with tenants and evictions when they decide to sell or to demolish existing homes and turn them into multi-unit properties.

United Neighbors claims institutional buyers, including Wall Street investment banks, spent a record $77 billion on single-family California homes over the last six months of 2021.

That makes them the ultimate house flippers, people or companies buying homes to hold for awhile before they resell at a hefty profit.

It creates large vacancy rates in some places at a time when California supposedly has a housing shortage. The actual shortage is in affordable housing, as 73 percent of houses permitted in 2020, for just one recent year, were affordable only to households with incomes well over $100,000.

All this has also seen vacancy rates rise among housing units built since 1970 – more than 50 years’ worth. Statewide, the vacancy rate on these “newer” units was 12.4 percent in late spring. In Los Angeles County, it was 16.3 percent, while San Francisco had an overall vacancy rate of 8.7 percent and more than 40,000 vacant units.

All of which suggests none of the controversial housing bills passed with alacrity by the Legislature in recent years can be effective, including last year’s Senate Bills 9 and 10, which essentially did away with R-1 single-family zoning statewide and allow subdividing of almost all lots in those areas.

The problem, it appears, is less a lack of housing – especially while California’s population is relatively stable and not growing fast, if at all – than the fact that wages and home prices have gotten out of the usual synch, partly because of institutional investments.

This year, Democratic state assemblyman Chris Ward of San Diego, which recently “won” the ranking as America’s least affordable city, proposed a bill to tax the profits of house flipping, especially by corporations and pension funds. It died in committee, but deserves resurrection.

His bill, known as AB 1771, aimed to place a 25 percent levy on after-capital-gains-tax profits from reselling any house within three years after it’s bought. After that, the rate would have dropped to 20 percent and then declined steadily before disappearing after seven years.

Taxes collected would have gone to cities, counties and affordable housing funds, said Ward, whose purpose, he told a press conference, was to create a disincentive for equity investors, thus opening more opportunities for people who plan to live in homes they buy.

This would especially help mid-priced housing availability, because institutional buyers are more likely to buy that type of housing than high-end homes, whose appreciation rates are far less steady and predictable, often selling for millions less than their asking prices.

The bill was opposed by building trades unions, whose workers don’t much care whether or when the places they build are occupied, so long as paychecks arrive on schedule.

Those unions and the developers with whom they work have been the main drivers behind the Legislature’s recent spate of unwise, unneeded new housing laws.

The bottom line: Yes, there is a housing crisis, but it’s at least as much a matter of hoarding and waiting for profit as it is of supply.

Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, “The Burzynski Breakthrough, The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It,” is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, visit www.californiafocus.net

Related Posts

State Farm Reverses Decision, To Renew Policies for Wildfire Survivors in Los Angeles

January 15, 2025

January 15, 2025

California Homeowners Impacted by Recent Wildfires Will Receive Policy Renewals State Farm, California’s largest insurer, has announced it will renew...

Mayor Bass Updates Emergency Order to Accelerate Wildfire Recovery in Los Angeles

January 14, 2025

January 14, 2025

RVs Approved as Temporary Housing; Streamlined Permitting and Task Forces Approved Mayor Karen Bass has updated the executive order of...

Los Angeles and Orange County DAs Propose Tougher Looting Penalties During Disasters

January 14, 2025

January 14, 2025

New Legislation Would Increase Punishments, Close Legal Loopholes Los Angeles County District Attorney Nathan Hochman and Orange County District Attorney...

Officials Warn of Scams and Price Gouging Amid Los Angeles Wildfires

January 13, 2025

January 13, 2025

Leaders Share Price Gouging Reporting and Scam Safety Tips  California Attorney General Rob Bonta joined local leaders in Los Angeles...

Gov. Newsom Deploys Firefighting Resources to Southern California During Severe Windstorm

January 7, 2025

January 7, 2025

State Pre-Positions Crews, Aircraft, and Equipment To Los Angeles County  Because of the Red Flag and severe windstorm warning issued...

LA CENTA Opens New Brentwood Office, Led by Facial Aesthetics Expert Dr. Cong Ivy Ran

January 5, 2025

January 5, 2025

New Location Expands Access to University-Caliber Ent and Cosmetic Procedures The Los Angeles Center for Ear, Nose, Throat, and Allergy...

Mortgage Rates Hit 6-Month High, Housing Market Faces Affordability Challenges

January 5, 2025

January 5, 2025

Freddie Mac Reports a Continued Rise in Mortgage Rates, Nearing 7% Mortgage rates inched closer to the 7% mark, hitting...

Los Angeles Launches New Initiative Meant to End Veteran Homelessness

January 5, 2025

January 5, 2025

Streamlined Processes and New Partnerships Aim to House More Veterans Mayor Karen Bass, U.S. Secretary of Veterans Affairs Denis McDonough,...

HUD Report Reveals Record 18% Surge in U.S. Homelessness in 2024

December 29, 2024

December 29, 2024

Despite the Rise, Veteran Homelessness Hits Record Low The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) released its 2024...

Vietnam War Veteran Killed in Santa Monica Hit-and-Run on Wilshire

December 25, 2024

December 25, 2024

Police Seek Public’s Help in Identifying Suspect After Fatal Collision The life of a Vietnam War veteran was extinguished in...

LA County Launches Pilot Program to Help RV Residents Transition to Permanent Housing

December 22, 2024

December 22, 2024

New Initiative Offers Safe Parking, Support Services, and a Pathway To Stable Housing Los Angeles County has launched the Pathway...

LA Sheriff’s Department Seeks Public’s Help to Find West Hollywood Man John Joseph Mallon III

December 20, 2024

December 20, 2024

Missing West Hollywood Man Needs Medication and Is Considered At Risk The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department’s Missing Persons Unit...

Alexander Brothers, Luxury Real Estate Moguls, Arrested on Sex Trafficking and Assault Charges

December 15, 2024

December 15, 2024

The FBI Asks For Public Assistance and Victims or Witnesses to Come Forward Tal and Oren Alexander, prominent luxury real...

Actor Jim Carrey Sells Brentwood Mansion After $10 Million Price Drop

December 15, 2024

December 15, 2024

2-Acre Los Angeles Estate, Listed at $19.75 Million, Finds a Buyer Actor Jim Carrey has sold his sprawling Brentwood estate...

LA City Council Approves New Housing Regulations Excluding Single-Family Zones

December 15, 2024

December 15, 2024

Rezoning Program Aims to Tackle Housing Shortages but Faces Feasibility Concerns The Los Angeles City Council voted unanimously on Tuesday...