Data: ATTOM; Note: Among states with at least 100 institutional investor sales; Map: Kavya Beheraj/Axios
Nearly 10% of houses sold last year in Dallas-Fort Worth were bought by institutional investors, down from 2023, per a new ATTOM report.
The big picture: Nationwide, institutional investors — any non-lending group that purchased at least 10 properties in a calendar year — have backed off the last three years as housing affordability has plummeted, the report shows.
Why it matters: Investors bet on growth. They want to see strong population and job growth, solid rental yields, landlord-friendly regulations, affordability, and long-term appreciation potential, ATTOM CEO Rob Barber tells Axios.
Though investors bought fewer houses last year, they're still drawn to southern states like Texas.
By the numbers: D-FW saw the largest share of houses bought by investors of the major metro areas in the state with 9.8% last year. The Austin metro had the least with 6.6%.
8.2% of houses sold in Texas last year were bought by institutional investors, down from 9.6% in 2023.
That's well above the national average. Investors bought up 6.3% of houses sold nationwide last year.