SFR deals gaining prominence in REPE?

I was listening to IMN's REPE conference today and heard several people (who I would NEVER expect to be doing single-family deals or build-to-rent deals) all talking about how strong the asset class is looking and how they are looking for these types of deals.

Is this market completely driven by the institutions? How are REPE firms finding and buying these deals?

 
Most Helpful
thehudson

Is this market completely driven by the institutions? How are REPE firms finding and buying these deals?

No, institutions are still "minor" players in the single family rental game, still mostly mom & pop landlords who just own/manage property close to where they live. 

But, yeah, SFH rentals has been an up and coming "asset class" since Blackstone quickly followed by Starwood started buying up houses around 2011 or so. Many followed suit (I mean, the asset got the BX bump, and a lot of follow-on people followed suit). I'm sure the pandemic will accelerate the deals they want to do. How do they find them, they hire realtors and acquisition teams and just go after houses by bidding at foreclosure auctions and via deals in Realtors MLS systems. (I actually sold a rental house I owned personally to Starwood, they paid a great price and picked up a lot of my sellers closing cost, was a great transaction)

I mean Blackstone exited the field by IPO'ing Invitation Homes in 2019, then got back into it this year through a minority stake in a similar business. I suspect build-to-rent communities will be a bigger trend this decade. The demographics driving this investment thesis are hard to ignore, but it is far from a new idea (about a decade old now). 

 

Another important thing to note, the institutions are no longer buying one off homes, they buy/build with a partner whole communities. The one-offs worked during the GFC because there were thousands and thousands of foreclosed homes, that is not the case now. Also managing a community versus one-off homes is a hell of a lot easier and an institution can wrap their head around this concept better.

 

This isn’t totally accurate. I’ve worked in acquisitions for two different SFR institutional landlords (1 of them being top 4 in the country) and they primarily buy one-offs from the MLS or from iBuyers. Portfolios make up some transactions, but I personally bought 700+ homes in 2019 off the MLS. 2020 has been lower volume because of COVID. But I would say the majority of homes being added to institutional investors portfolios are coming from one-off transactions.

 

I am putting together one of these deals right now, and I can tell you that the LP (state pension fund) is completely committed to charging forward no matter how soft the underwriting is. They are really anxious to get some exposure to this asset, and are using this deal as a test case even though the underlying fundamentals are really not that attractive.

 

Working in this space now and have four deals under contract, IMO SFR is the next student housing type bubble in real estate that has already exploded and will continue to grow exponentially in the next two years. Strong fundamentals (poor aging millenials accustomed to renting who are growing families and do not have the savings to buy); tons of new capital in the space continuing to compress cap rates to a point where they are almost level with multifamily cap rates. It has been notably easy to raise capital around this platform and investors are indeed willing to accept lower returns to capture market share in the space. Feels like a rat race right now to buy and manage as much as possible before new groups that have vertically integrated development/construction start to build out supply to levels that tilt returns and cap rates back towards less intriguing figures.

 

How do these deals work? Do you buy up existing platforms of single family homes in these deals, or are you creating a platform to buy up single homes and then rent them out while you double as the operator?

 

Eaque culpa voluptatem aut maiores rerum. Pariatur officia vel earum vel illo. Magni doloribus est quod rerum libero.

Career Advancement Opportunities

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Jefferies & Company 02 99.4%
  • Goldman Sachs 19 98.8%
  • Harris Williams & Co. New 98.3%
  • Lazard Freres 02 97.7%
  • JPMorgan Chase 03 97.1%

Overall Employee Satisfaction

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Harris Williams & Co. 18 99.4%
  • JPMorgan Chase 10 98.8%
  • Lazard Freres 05 98.3%
  • Morgan Stanley 07 97.7%
  • William Blair 03 97.1%

Professional Growth Opportunities

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Lazard Freres 01 99.4%
  • Jefferies & Company 02 98.8%
  • Goldman Sachs 17 98.3%
  • Moelis & Company 07 97.7%
  • JPMorgan Chase 05 97.1%

Total Avg Compensation

April 2024 Investment Banking

  • Director/MD (5) $648
  • Vice President (19) $385
  • Associates (87) $260
  • 3rd+ Year Analyst (14) $181
  • Intern/Summer Associate (33) $170
  • 2nd Year Analyst (66) $168
  • 1st Year Analyst (205) $159
  • Intern/Summer Analyst (146) $101
notes
16 IB Interviews Notes

“... there’s no excuse to not take advantage of the resources out there available to you. Best value for your $ are the...”

Leaderboard

success
From 10 rejections to 1 dream investment banking internship

“... I believe it was the single biggest reason why I ended up with an offer...”