Travis Business Advisors Podcast | TBA Podcast
I’m Slava Davidenko, founder of Travis Business Advisors, ABBA, IBBA and TABB member, Accredited Business Intermediary, Chicago GSB MBA.
I have 35 years of leadership experience in investing, operations and high-stakes deals. I’m building an Austin advisory for small and medium sized businesses.
On this channel, I share insights for Austin business owners planning an exit and buyers, planning to buy business located in Austin - whether five years away from the deal or just three months.
If you own a car wash, dental or veterinary practice, private school or education center, self-storage, or senior care - selling isn’t simple. Valuation, structure, taxes, transition, real estate, growth story - every decision affects your outcome.
Most brokers oversimplify. I don’t.
DISCLAIMER: This podcast is for educational content only. It does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or investment advice. Always consult qualified professionals. Individual results vary significantly.
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travisbusinessadvisors.com
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DISCLAIMER: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, financial, or investment advice. Always consult qualified professionals. Individual results vary significantly.
Travis Business Advisors Podcast | TBA Podcast
Housing Battle Update: Boomers Gain Lead Over Millennials
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A seismic shift has occurred in the American housing market. Baby boomers have surged past millennials to become the dominant home-buying force, now commanding an impressive 42% of all purchases according to the National Association of Realtors' latest generational trends report.
This surprising reversal ends millennials' decade-long reign as the top home-buying demographic. Their market share has tumbled dramatically from 38% to 29% in just one year, while first-time buyers have plummeted to a historic low of merely 24% of the market. What's driving this fundamental transformation? The answer lies in financial capacity and purchasing power.
The boomer advantage becomes crystal clear when examining how they buy: a remarkable 51% of older boomers (ages 71-79) purchase homes entirely with cash, while 39% of younger boomers (ages 61-70) do the same. This cash-buying power, built through decades of equity accumulation and wealth building, provides a decisive edge in competitive bidding situations. Meanwhile, over 90% of millennials and Gen Z buyers require mortgage financing in a high-rate environment with historically challenging affordability metrics.
Yet the housing landscape is more complex than simply "boomers buying, millennials struggling." Many boomers continue choosing to age in place, incentivized by fully-paid mortgages, historically low fixed interest rates secured years ago, emotional attachments to their communities, and potential tax implications. Simultaneously, financial innovations like Home Equity Conversion Mortgages for Purchase (H4P loans) are emerging to help those boomers who do want to relocate.
These intersecting trends – boomer financial advantages, millennial affordability challenges, and the growth of multi-generational households – are fundamentally reshaping housing in America. What will these shifts mean for communities, wealth transfer between generations, and the very concept of starter homes? Listen as we explore the profound implications of this generational housing market transformation and what it means for the future of homeownership.
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⚠️ Disclaimer: All examples are hypothetical and for educational purposes only. This is not legal, tax, financial, or brokerage advice.
Welcome back. Today we're looking at something pretty interesting happening in the US housing market. You know, for years it felt like millennials were the story, the main group buying homes.
Speaker 2That's right, but there's been a well, a really significant shift, according to some new data.
Housing Market Generational Shift
Speaker 1OK, so let's dig into that. We're talking about the National Association of Realtors' latest generational trends report right, the one covering mid-2023 to mid-2024.
Speaker 2Exactly the NAR report and the headline finding really flips the recent narrative on its head.
Speaker 1Flips it how? What's the big surprise?
Speaker 2The big news is that baby boomers we're talking ages 61 to 79, here they've actually become the largest share of homebuyers.
Speaker 1Really the largest share? What percentage are we talking?
Speaker 2They now make up 42% of the market 42%.
Speaker 1Wow, 42%, that's huge. I mean it feels like just yesterday we were saying millennials were finally hitting their stride. So what happened to their share?
Speaker 2Well, that's where you really see the change. Millennials, so ages 27 to 45, their share actually dropped quite a bit, actually, down to 29% 29?
Speaker 1From what? What were they before?
Speaker 2They were at 38% just the year before. So yeah, a 9 percentage point drop.
Millennials' Declining Market Share
Speaker 1That's a serious decline. What about the other generations? Gen X, gen, z, gen.
Speaker 2X, that's ages 46 to 60. They're holding pretty steady actually Around 24%, Still a solid chunk.
Speaker 1Okay, stable. And the youngest buyers Gen Z, Gen.
Speaker 2Z, ages 14 to 25. Well, they're still a smaller part of the market, as you'd expect about 3%. But the real story, like you said, is that boomer surge and the millennial dip.
Speaker 1Especially since didn't millennials lead for quite a while?
Speaker 2Oh yeah, they'd been the top buying group since 2013. So this isn't just a blip, it's a notable reversal.
Speaker 1Okay. So why are millennials slowing down? It can't be that they suddenly don't want to buy homes anymore right?
Speaker 2Not at all. The desire is likely still there.
Speaker 1Yeah.
Speaker 2But the NAR report points to some, let's say, significant hurdles they're facing.
Speaker 1Like what Affordability?
Speaker 2Exactly. Sky-high home prices are a major factor. Plus, there's still limited inventory not enough houses for sale, basically.
Speaker 1Right the supply issue.
Speaker 2And then there's the challenge of just saving up enough for that down payment. It's tough.
Speaker 1Yeah, you hear that a lot. We just maybe not keeping pace with those housing costs.
Speaker 2Precisely, yeah, especially in desirable areas. So that down payment hurdle it's just much higher than it was for, say, boomers at the same life stage.
Speaker 1That really does paint a clearer picture of the difficulties. What about first-time buyers specifically? How are they faring in all this? That group is usually younger, right.
First-Time Buyers Hit Historic Low
Speaker 2It's tough for them, Really tough. Their share of the market it plummeted down to a historic low, actually just 24% 24%.
Speaker 1Wow, what was it before?
Speaker 2It was 32% the previous year 24 percent. Wow, what was it before it was?
Speaker 132 percent the previous year. And, yes, first time buyers are typically younger generations, mostly millennials, maybe some Gen Z starting to come in. So this really highlights that affordability crunch. Yeah, it underlines the whole issue. Ok, so if millennials are facing these big obstacles, what's driving the boomers? What's giving them the edge right now? What's driving the boomers? What's?
Speaker 2giving them the edge right now? Well, a huge factor seems to be their financial position. The NAR report highlights that boomers, generally speaking, just have more financial capacity.
Speaker 1Meaning more savings, more equity built up.
Speaker 2Exactly, and that translates into how they buy. A really significant number of boomers are making all cash offers.
Speaker 1All cash. Ok, that avoids the whole mortgage hurdle.
Boomers' Cash Advantage Explained
Speaker 2Right, and it often comes from you know decades of owning a home, building equity, maybe downsizing from a bigger place they've owned for years. That gives them a massive advantage younger buyers just don't have.
Speaker 1So what percentage are we talking for cash buyers among boomers? Is it a lot?
Speaker 2It's pretty striking For the older boomers. So 71 to 79 years old, 51% over half are buying with cash 51%. And even for the younger boomers 61 to 70, it's still very high at 39%.
Speaker 1Wow, almost 40% for the younger group too. That's a lot of cash power. How does that compare to millennials or Gen Z?
Speaker 2Oh, the difference is huge For millennials and Gen Z buyers. Over 90% need financing. They rely on getting a mortgage.
Speaker 1Go over 90% Okay.
Speaker 2So you can imagine, in a market where houses get multiple offers, a cash offer just looks much more attractive to a seller.
Speaker 1Absolutely Less risk. Faster closing probably Makes perfect sense. Removes a lot of uncertainty. Okay, so boomers are buying more often with cash, but we also hear constantly about boomers wanting to age in place.
Speaker 2How do those two things fit together? Are they all actually moving? That's a really important counterpoint. And yes, while their buying activity has clearly increased, the desire to stay put to age in place is still very strong for many boomers.
Speaker 1So why are some buying and many staying?
Speaker 2Well, think about the ones staying. Many have paid off their mortgages entirely, or maybe they refinanced years ago and locked in incredibly low fixed rates like 3% or even less.
Speaker 1Right Rates. We probably won't see again for a while.
Aging in Place vs. New Purchases
Speaker 2Exactly so. With current mortgage rates being significantly higher, there's just less financial incentive for them to sell that paid off house and buy something else with a new, more expensive mortgage.
Speaker 1Why move if you don't have to and your current situation is cheap, got it.
Speaker 2Precisely. And then there are the emotional factors, too right Strong ties to their home, their neighborhood, their community, familiarity, friends.
Speaker 1Sure, that makes sense. Leaving a longtime home is a big deal.
Speaker 2And the NAR report also mentions things like potential tax implications, like maybe avoiding capital gains taxes on the sale of their main home. That can be another reason to stay.
Speaker 1Okay. So it's complex Increased buying from some boomers likely those downsizing or relocating but also a very strong pull for others to stay right where they are. Exactly it's not a monolithic group. Are there any new financial tools maybe emerging that cater to this demographic? Anything helping boomers buy?
Speaker 2Yeah, the report does mention something interesting A potential rise in things like home equity conversion mortgages for purchase, H4P loans they're sometimes called.
Speaker 1H4P. How do those work?
Speaker 2Well, basically they let older buyers, typically 62 and up, use the equity they have in their current home to help buy their next home, often without having the usual monthly mortgage payments. It's a type of reverse mortgage, but specifically for buying a new primary residence.
Speaker 1Interesting, so use your old home's equity for the new one, potentially without monthly payments.
Financial Tools and Market Future
Speaker 2Kind of. It could be appealing for boomers who are maybe downsizing but want to preserve their cash savings for retirement and improve their cash flow. Adoption's been kind of slow historically, but it's a tool that might gain traction.
Speaker 1Okay, something to watch. So, pulling it all together, then we have this picture of boomers having more financial clout, driving a larger share of purchases, sometimes with cash.
Speaker 2Right. But at the same time many other boomers are quite happy staying put, often for very sound financial and personal reasons.
Speaker 1While the younger generations, particularly millennials and first time buyers, are really feeling the squeeze from high prices and limited inventory.
Speaker 2Absolutely, and don't forget. The NAR report also flags another growing trend multi-generational living, More families living together under one roof, which adds another layer to housing demand.
Speaker 1Right, that's another piece of the puzzle.
Speaker 2So, yeah, it's this complex interplay boomer buying power versus aging in place, affordability challenges for the young, plus this rise in multi-generational homes. It's all intersecting.
Speaker 1It really paints a picture of a housing market in flux, driven by these shifting generational dynamics. So the big takeaway is definitely this maybe unexpected return of boomers to the top spot in home buying.
Speaker 2That's the headline, yes, but it's happening against this really complicated backdrop.
Speaker 1We've discussed and it certainly leaves you with some things to think about, doesn't it? You know what does this reshuffling mean long term for our communities, for the market itself, for how individuals plan their finances?
Speaker 2Definitely it raises big questions about the future.
Speaker 1And maybe a final thought for you to ponder Given everything we've talked about, how might our very idea of a starter home, or even what retirement living looks like, need to change or evolve in the years ahead?
Speaker 2That's a great question. The traditional pathways seem to be shifting, that's for sure. The market's definitely not static.