COLLEGE STATION, Tex. (Texas Real Estate Research Center) – Increased migration to Texas, particularly from higher-income states like California, has prompted concerns of diminished housing affordability as newcomers search and compete for housing. However, new analysis by the Texas Real Estate Research Center (TRERC) indicates migration patterns offer little explanation for the recent runup in home prices.
“There is essentially no correlation between Texas’ statewide home-price appreciation and migration patterns over the past 15 years,” said Wes Miller, senior research associate for TRERC at Texas A&M University. “The median home price rose steadily in the 2010s, with peak growth reaching 9 percent in 2013. At the same time, domestic migration was stable at around 100,000 net new residents throughout the decade.”
Although the net flow of people into and out of Texas was balanced throughout the period, the economic profile of interstate movers evolved over time. Starting in 2014, the median income of interstate movers accelerated above their Texas counterparts and has persisted at an elevated level. In contrast, the $60,000 premium in median home value between interstate and intrastate buyers remained relatively constant for at least 15 years.
“The composition of interstate movers shifted to higher income earners, but their home-purchase decisions exhibited no such change,” said Miller. “Part of this may be due to the fact that movers are often young and more likely to rent when first moving across state lines.”
The median age and homeownership rate for new Texans was 29 years and 43 percent, respectively, compared to 41 years and 73 percent for incumbent Texans based on 2019 American Community Survey data.
“Demographic differences lead interstate movers to search for different types of housing,” Miller said. “For those who purchase during their first year in Texas, their homes are often more spacious. This preference for larger homes largely explains the price premium observed between in-state and out-of-state purchasers. We see no meaningful price-per-square-foot premium.”
Distinct preferences between interstate and in-state residents may affect developers’ decisions on what type and where to build housing, choices that have long-term consequences for the state’s housing market.
While out-of-state movers do not appear to be driving annual home-price fluctuations at the aggregate level, they are more likely to affect specific neighborhoods or local markets at a smaller scale.
“For explanations of the broad-based boom in Texas housing prices over the past decade, it may be more useful to look at the expansionary business cycle, strong labor markets, and mortgage interest rates,” Miller said. “Persistently low housing inventories and supply were a major contributor as well.”
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Can you provide a link to the Texas A&M Report? Thanks.
Lila,
This article is not based on a report but rather a presentation given by Wesley Miller on staff at the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas during a February conference. Here is a link to his presentation https://www.dallasfed.org/research/events/2022/22realestate.aspx. His talk begins at the 1:35 mark of the video from the second day.
Thank you for reading!
The crash of the "Great Recession" was horrible for housing. Foreclosures were often intentionally destroyed in order to exact "pay-back" to the banks. I toured several houses where drains were intentionally cemented while the sinks, toilets, tubs, etc. were left running. Yesterday, I saw a home that displayed the same level of immaturity. But instead of being priced reasonably so that someone like myself can come in, clean up, and build sweat equity. It already had multiple offers near market value. Apparently sight-unseen bids. Bids you would expect from Zillow, OpenDoor, Orchard, and others.
These real estate websites are artificially inflating the cost of housing. They are creating the illusion of demand as they build their inventory of "future sales." It is causing a bubble. A recession is looming. That bubble is about to pop. Zillow lost $880 Million with its vending machine-style home flipping business. The others will follow. Be careful. Choose wisely. -- Your home IS NOT an asset or investment. It is a liability.