The state's No. 1 ranking in projected population growth through 2025, coupled with its physical barriers to expansion — the Pacific Ocean and mountains, for example — are
forcing apartment investors toward infill locations in densely populated areas.
Not exact matches
When Jon Brandt bought two condos at The Element in MetroWest five years ago, the last thing he said he expected was to be
forced to sell them to
investors intent on turning them into
apartments.
This concept called
forced appreciation is what makes
apartment investing and commercial real estate for that matter so powerful and is little understood by the average
investor.
For
investors, those swelling income streams will bring robust demand from private buyers who will be
forced to forage among San Francisco's depleted inventory of for - sale
apartment properties for acquisitions, according to Linwood Thompson, senior vice president and managing director of the national multi-housing group at Marcus & Millichap.