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3 February 2017 | 63 replies
(at least to certain target markets, especially younger millennial folks, who are more likely to be renters).Also, when looking at rental markets, I try to find places where it would cost substantially more to rent a single family home than it is to rent an apartment.
28 February 2015 | 1 reply
This is not to say there isn't subset of, say, Millennial renters who wouldn't pay a premium for this type of space, but I'd guess they would be in the city and/or on the coasts rather than in the flyover zone.
18 August 2019 | 3 replies
I did hear that population in Us is starting to go down so in future there may be less people to sell houses to as millennials are now a days not looking to start families.
30 December 2019 | 15 replies
Currently, an entire third of San Diego’s population consists of millenials, making it the second most millennial-populated city in the country.3.
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23 July 2020 | 92 replies
.- Too much pent up demand - Only 1 in 3 Millennials own homes.
1 June 2016 | 13 replies
I'm thinking that these will hold value well as far as the eye can see:Vacation houses, the sort coveted by trophy-hunting buyers, which are on the waterfront or similar "prime" locations in the warmer climates.Starter homes in demand by Millennials, will be in demand for some time to come.
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16 January 2017 | 4 replies
Think rust belt to sun belt (a super cycle), think east/west coast high company costs looking to relocate to Dallas to reduce employee costs and be close to key strategic transportation routes (DFW, interstates) linking coast to coast in a few hours.The long term trend of more renters has a lot of legs left (millennials, boomers), cost of a house is going up as well as higher rates so that will continue to keep people renting as well.
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17 January 2017 | 5 replies
I wrote a detailed overview of what to expect for the market here on Bigger Pockets which will quickly bring you up to speed:https://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/621/topics/396725-millennial-migration-to-sacramento-2017---here-comes-the-rushFor the Bay Area, I would suggest checking out their forums too here: Oakland, San Francisco, and San Jose.
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27 February 2017 | 39 replies
From an article I read yesterday in: https://www.memphisdailynews.com/news/2017/feb/20/sector-by-sector-highlights-of-the-commercial-property-forecast-summit/Multifamily:Tom Grimes, MAA’s executive vice president and COO, said that millennials and their tendency to prefer rental properties are partly responsible for an increase in demand.
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11 May 2022 | 13 replies
Sincerely,Millennial Renter