Investors Become Net Sellers
Large institutional investors are selling single-family rental homes across the United States as policy pressure and market volatility reshape the housing sector.
Research from Parcl Labs shows that major investors are now net sellers of homes across major metropolitan markets.
The trend comes as proposed legislation backed by President Donald Trump seeks to restrict large investors from purchasing additional single-family homes.
Listings Rise in Key Cities
In several cities, investors now represent a disproportionately large share of homes listed for sale.
In Dallas, investors own about 9.2 percent of the housing stock, yet they account for 22.8 percent of newly listed homes.
Philadelphia and Houston are experiencing similar selling patterns.
FirstKey Homes Leads Sales Activity
Among large investors, FirstKey Homes appears to be selling most aggressively.
The company currently holds more than twice as many listings as competing investors and is offering average price cuts of around 10 percent.
Analysts say the company has been adjusting listing prices roughly every 20 days to accelerate transactions.
Rental Returns Losing Appeal
Parcl Labs says declining rental returns are pushing investors to sell properties and redeploy capital elsewhere.
Analysts note that the current housing environment remains volatile, encouraging investors to reduce risk.
Shift Toward Build-to-Rent
While investors sell existing homes, many are redirecting capital toward build-to-rent housing developments.
This model allows investors to construct new rental homes instead of competing for resale properties.
Major companies such as Invitation Homes and AMH have expanded partnerships with homebuilders and launched large-scale development projects.
Institutional Ownership Still Limited
Despite growing attention on large investors, they remain a small part of the housing market.
Single-family rentals account for roughly 10 percent of U.S. housing stock.
About 80 percent of those homes are owned by small landlords, while large institutional investors control only about 3 percent of the sector.
Policy Could Accelerate the Shift
The White House has proposed legislation that would prevent investors owning more than 100 single-family homes from purchasing additional properties.
Existing holdings would not be affected.
If passed, the law could accelerate the current trend of investors reducing exposure to resale homes and focusing instead on purpose-built rental developments.
For the housing market, the shift signals a broader transition in how institutional capital participates in residential real estate.
In an aerial view, two-story single-family homes line the streets on Jan. 14, 2026, in Thousand Oaks, California.
Kevin Carter | Getty Images
Source: CNBC



