I mean that's fine, it's legal. But if that's the goal of real-estate, then of course it will never be affordable to the next generations. Everyone wants to do what you are doing.
> Everyone wants to do what you are doing.
As with any other asset that makes money, there are reasons why property prices are what they are, and if it's a magic ticket to free wealth, you have to ask yourself why professionals with deep pockets aren't grabbing every property and driving prices up even further. In the case of properties that are within the reach of upper-middle-class earners, professionals are not willing to pay the prices that overexcited individual amateurs are.
> isn't your tenant basically paying off each property
...and it's special logic like this that convinces people that there's free wealth to be had. But there's no magic. There is a price. There is income. There are costs. There are assets that depreciate. The land is an asset that appreciates. That all adds up to a return on the investment. Professionals calculate the return and compare that to other things they could do with their money.
Amateurs (like us) just buy and hope and feel good because we're doing something that feels like rich person stuff. We're doing fine with our properties, but we'd be doing fine putting our money into index funds, too. In case it's not clear, I don't think our properties will turn out to be great investments for us unless the speculative aspect pays off big. But my wife actually enjoys the work of finding tenants, handling building maintenance, designing and overseeing improvements, etc., so we implicitly price her time at zero.
Let me repeat that to let it sink it: I think we'd be just as well off putting our money in the stock market. The main reason we've put a significant amount of our money in real estate because my wife enjoys it and doesn't mind putting a lot of personal work into our properties for free.
But... they are.
My Experience
Ever heard of Grant Cardone? He and his ilk are filling my youtube algorithm with seminars on how to do this. I meet strangers on planes telling me about gathering together in clusters of partners and buying up real estate. Ads on the radio hawk house-flipping courses. Robert Kioysaki sells book teaching how to do this. With just a little bit of inherited wealth - and American wealth is 60% inherited - people are building multi-generational legacies.
Research
In Massachusetts:
> In 2021, business entities purchased nearly 6,600 single-family homes across the state, more than 9 percent of all single-family homes sold. That’s nearly double the rate of such purchases a decade ago, according to a GBH News analysis of data provided by the Warren Group, a real estate data analysis firm. [0]
In 2021: >corporate investors snapped up 15 percent of U.S. homes for sale in the first quarter of this year [1]
In 2020: > a company called Treehouse Group was folded into Blackstone, then renamed in 2012, Invitation Homes was on a $10 billion spree, purchasing $150 million worth of houses per week.
In 2022: > About 2.5 million households shopping for a first home will be shut out of the market this year, estimates Nadia Evangelou, senior economist with the National Association of Realtors. That amounts to 15 percent of all first-time home buyers. In an already daunting market, investor purchasing is adding to the obstacles. [3]
> “The more that investors buy up entire communities and turn them into rental communities — people don’t have a choice anymore,”
References
[0] https://www.wgbh.org/news/local-news/2022/05/16/across-massa...
[1] https://slate.com/business/2021/06/blackrock-invitation-hous...
[2] https://nypost.com/2020/07/18/corporations-are-buying-houses...
[3] https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/23/us/corporate-real-estate-...
There are a lot of naive newbies _and_ investors buying up property right now without a viable plan to ever make money on that property. This in turn drives up prices for both potential owners and "reasonable" landlords, then by extension for renters both because potential owners continue renting reducing supply and landlords need higher rent to break even let alone profit.
The worst is when investors stop maintenance on the property, it begins to deteriorate, then they write it off and bail. That turns what could have been a rehabilitation by a competent investor into a tear-down. More than a few apartment buildings are being ruined by this sort of thing, evicting all the tenants in the process.
In those cases the professionals are making money using people's dreams of becoming wealthy to sell books and seminars. Learn the One Simple Trick to turn your high salary into lasting wealth that Wall Street doesn't want you to know.
In the cases you cited where corporations are buying homes, yeah, there are firms that do a lot of quantitative research and forecasting and identify homes that they think are underpriced according to their rental value, ignoring the vast majority of properties on the market. If you're in a community they've identified as being underpriced, I guess it can look like they're buying up the whole world, but it's a selective strategy, completely different from the blanket assumption that property is an easy doorway to wealth and riches. As one of those articles notes, they don't compete against "wealthy boomers and the nation’s finance and tech bros," because we're willing to pay silly prices for property. They buy in neighborhoods where people like us aren't looking.