Title: NEW DEMOGRAPHICS: WHOS BUYING NOW
1NEW DEMOGRAPHICSWHOS BUYING NOW???
2Its All About the First Time Homebuyer
3WHO ARE THEY???
- Single Women
- Immigrants
- Minority Buyers
- Generation X Y
4Single Women
- Second largest group of homebuyers
- 20 of the market (50 growth in 8 yrs)
- 550 billion in sales volume in 3 yrs
- Make up single mothers, young singles,
middle-aged divorcees and seniors - 33 never married
- 50 live alone
- 30 single mothers
- 42 years old
- 36 are minorities
- 66 are first time homebuyers
- 32K-35K median income
- 28 of all households headed by women by 2010
5Single Women
- 15 purchased a condo
- 83 chose a non condo single family unit
- 34 of 2 BR homes (highest share)
- Proximity to friends/family drives location
- Will compromise on size/cost to get attributes
most important to them - More likely to use and value a real estate
professional - Most likely to recommend professionals to their
friends
6Future Implications of Single Women
- Showing strong signs of continued growth
expansion - Female boomers will outlive their spouses by
seven years - Younger women will continue to evolve as
homebuyers - Room for growth---30 female-headed households,
23 homeownership rate, 20 of all recent buyers
7Immigrants
- A nation of immigrants
- 1.2 million new immigrants since 2000
- 62 of foreign born live in five states
- 1990-2000 immigrants living in traditional
gateway metros fell 5 - 1990-2000 27 emerging gateways rose 5
- 38 gateways are home to 70 of foreign born
8Immigrants
- 25 of children under 10 have foreign born
parents - Newly arrived legal immigrants are expected to
contribute about 3.6 million households over the
decade - Significant impact on household growth overall.
- Nearly all of the Northeasts net growth in
households since 1996 has come from minorities.
9Immigrants
- First time buyers make larger down payments (7
versus 4 native first time homebuyers) - Allocate more of their income to housing (For 39
mortgage consumes 30 of income vs. 28 natives)
10Immigrants Future Implications
- 20 of population (25-34 age group) is now
foreign born - Will contribute immensely to household growth in
the US - Vital to the industry (14 of recent homebuyers
and 18 of renters in 2005) - Expected to hit 12 million between 2005-2015.
11Minorities
- 30 of US population by 2010 and 34 by 2020.
- 66 of household growth over coming decade (14.5
million 2005-2015) - Will offset the 3.4 million drop in white
households - 1.4 million minority headed households (ages
40-49) with Hispanics accounting for 1.1 million
12Hispanics
- Largest fastest growing minority group
- Projected purchasing power equal to the third
largest economy in the hemisphere by 2010. - 30 household growth (3x rate of rest of
population) - 2 million Hispanic owned businesses generating
350 billion annually - 50 of all U.S. Hispanic Households earn 50K
- Households earning 75K fastest growing segment
13Hispanics
- Migrating to every region in the country driven
by job opportunities affordable housing - Median age 27 vs. 36 of whole population
- 1/3 is under 18
- 72 are US citizens (Birth or naturalization)
- Homeownership rate of 50 (US born Hispanics 60)
- Prefer to communicate in Spanish or to obtain
bilingual information - Prefer high touch one-to-one relations with
trusted advisors - Prefer homes near relatives, work, schools
- Like homes with space for future growth
14Hispanic Future Implications
- Will fuel first time homebuyer market over the
next two decades. - Will dominate future business pipelines
- Will impact REO purchases
15Generational Shifts Rapidly Aging Population
- Population Growth of 26 by 2030
- 10,000 Americans per day will turn 65 starting in
2012 - Source Bureau of Labor Statistics
- 85 or older population will more than double to
6.4 million by 2020 - Source U.S. Census Bureau
16Projected Labor Shortages by 2010
- 167 million available U.S. jobs
- 157 million available in the workforce (shortage
of 10 million workers!) - Source Human Trends Alert
- Nearly 70 of new entrants into the workforce
will be women, minorities, immigrants - Source Worldwide ERC
17Ratio of Replacement Workers to Retirees Dropping
- 91 in 1944
- 41 in 1995
- 21 in 2025 (projected)
18Generation X
- Born between 1965 and 1979
- lack of trust in leadership, particularly
institutional leadership - Rampant political apathy
- Increase in mothers in the workplace
- Concerns on environmental destruction and
ecological issues - Inception of the Internet
- The end of the Cold War
19Gen Ys Different than the Boomersand Gen X
- Born between 1980 and 1994
- Gen Y-ers are becoming engaged parents
embarking on careers - Previously stereotyped as rebellious slackers
- Key traits
- More ambitious than boomers/Gen X
- Very brand oriented
- More focused on their family
- Tend to move jobs more often
- Over half are children of divorce
- Are more peer-oriented
- Place a premium on workplace culture
20Gen Y and Technology (College Students)
- 97 own a computer
- 94 own a cell phone
- 76 use Instant Messaging
- 15 of IM users are logged on 24 hours a day/7
days a week - 34 use websites as their primary source of news
- 28 author a blog and 44 read blogs
- 49 download music using peer-to-peer file
sharing - 75 of college students have a Facebook account
- 60 own some type of portable music and/or video
device such as an iPod - Source Connecting to the Net.Generation 2007
21Communicating with Gen Y
- Not comfortable with communicating on the phone
- Dont verbalize their needs well
- Prefer to state their needs/requirements online
or texting - Used to and comfortable with establishing and
maintaining friends and social relationships
online
22Impact on the Workplace
23Gen Y Different Values
- Very tuned into their value on the job market
- Limited loyalty to any particular employer
- Insist on working in a stimulating job environment
24The Gen Y View The Point of Work is to Create
Leisure
- Want jobs that provide
- Flexible work schedules
- Telecommuting options
- Ability to work part-time
- Able to leave the workforce temporarily to handle
family issues
25Dual Income Households Dropping
- More mothers or fathers now choose to stay at
home rather than work - 22 of Gen-X Y mothers not employed, versus 14
of Boomer mothers - Source Roper Report 2006
26Real Estate and Generation X Y
27First Homes Reasons for Buying
- BABY BOOMERS
- Average age first time buy 29
- Purchase typically based on life event (e.g.
marriage/baby) - Key Driver safe investment
- Spend on average 21 of HH income
- Source Century 21 survey
- GENERATION X/Y
- Average age first time buy 26
- Purchase based on appreciation value
- Key driver Family reasons
- Spend on average 25 of HH income
28Key Concerns In Buying
- BABY BOOMERS
- Price 51
- Proximity to work 4
- Length of time to buy first home 4.3 months
- Source Century 21 survey
- GENERATION X/Y
- Price 39
- Proximity to work 10
- Length of time to buy first home 5.4 months
29Generation Y Buyers
- Do not typically prefer a hot suburb like their
boomer parents - Do not limit themselves to major metros
- More likely to prefer urban infill locations/high
rises - Want to live in culturally diverse neighborhoods
- Gravitating to second and third tier cities with
strong entertainment and recreational amenities - Source Urban Land Institute
30Generation Y Buyers
- More likely to be attracted towards designs that
emphasize - Bright, open spaces
- Plenty of windows
- Flexible use of rooms and spaces
- Wireless Internet is indispensable
- More inclined/attracted to urban life
- Source Urban Land Institute
31Is there still money out there??
32Available Financing
- FHA recent overhaul makes it attractive
- Citi Mortgage 97 mortgage with closing cost
assistance. Also providing grants to revitalize
12 communities distressed by foreclosures - Countrywide still offering 1st time buyer
products - Federal Home Loan Bank of San Francisco
- Interest rates still low
33We might be ignoring them because
- They take too much time
- Low Price Point
- Lower GCI
- I dont understand them
- Until recently lack of affordable housing
34Turning Lemons into Lemonade
- Highest inventory in years
- REO properties flooding the market
- Builders unloading inventory
- Auctions
35Why should I care?
- This collective group represents significantly
over 50 of the market - Pipeline
- Boomers are making the last few purchases
- Could you use the money????
36Sources
- NAR
- Harvard Joint Center for Housing Studies, Buying
for Themselves An Analysis of Unmarried Female
Homebuyers, June 2006 - US Census Bureau
- Hispanic Market Weekly
-