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Blocked by Wall Street: How homebuyers are being outbid in droves by investors

This is the first in a series investigating the impact on Indianapolis homeowners and renters of corporations that buy up large numbers of homes and convert them into rentals.

First-time homebuyers Michael Wathen and his fiance thought they’d found their future home in a spacious brick three-bedroom bungalow in Decatur Township, Indiana. They’d fallen in love. She was moving from Cincinnati. He lived with his parents, saving for two years to afford a hefty down payment for their dream.

Then, like thousands of other Indianapolis families, they were outbid by a real estate investment company that bought their dream home for 5% more than the listing price of $170,000. Now, what could have been their first home as a married couple is being rented out by Progress Residential, one of Indianapolis’ largest companies that rent houses.

"There's no way you can ever succeed with this," Wathen said. "If you play by the rules, it's like somebody else has a cheat code while you have your regular cards to play with. It was very difficult."

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An investigation by the Indianapolis Star, part of the USA TODAY Network, into institutional investor-owned houses in Marion County found five of the biggest real estate investment companies and their apparent affiliated limited liability companies control at least 5,943 of Indianapolis’ homes as of February 2023, based on analysis of property tax records from Attom Data and the Fair Housing Center of Central Indiana. Another six control at least 1,521 more.

The largest owners are mostly out-of-state companies:

Indianapolis’ rental housing market has been especially affected by these mega-investors. As of June 2023, 17% of houses for rent in the Indianapolis metropolitan area are owned by investors that own more than 1,000 homes in the city, according to data from John Burns Research and Consulting, compared with just 3% nationwide.

These investors are buying up homes en masse in Indianapolis with often unbeatable cash offers, pricing out low- to moderate-income homebuyers, and flipping them to rent. That squeezes housing supply in neighborhoods on the far east side, Lawrence, the west side and the southeast side where investors are dominant and where there’s already a shortage of affordable homes.

It also makes homeownership more expensive, Ball State University economics professor Michael Hicks said. The research shows increased investor activity in neighborhoods drives up how much of someone’s income they spend on housing, especially for entry-level, lower-cost homes.