
Boston Not a Top Market for Real Estate Investors
While New England was represented in a recent report from Realtor.com regarding the top markets for real estate investors, Boston failed to crack the top 20.
While New England was represented in a recent report from Realtor.com regarding the top markets for real estate investors, Boston failed to crack the top 20.
Investors are getting out of the housing market even faster than buyers can be pushed out by rising interest rates, according to a new Redfin study.
With home prices spiraling upwards and stories about the growing single-family rental industry percolating in local and national media alike, concern is rising about the impact institutional investors might be having on the housing market.
It’s too early to call an end to Greater Boston’s epic building boom, even if the coronavirus has managed the turn the global economy and all our lives upside down in a few short months.
More than 600 institutional investors managing a whopping $37 trillion in client assets called Monday for governments to step up their efforts against climate change.
Even though capital markets remain liquid, there continues to be significant interest in multi-housing across the entire United States. And more capital is moving towards the Greater Boston market since the multifamily fundamentals are outpacing other primary markets in the U.S.
Institutional investors rate Boston as the world’s second-most desirable place to increase their real estate holdings, according to a new survey.