“Why Homeowners And Renters Are Struggling In The U.S.” by CNBC examines three major factors contributing to the housing crisis and financial strain on residents: the power of Homeowners Associations (HOAs), the insurance crisis due to climate change, and algorithmic rent pricing.
1. The Power and Problems of HOAs
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Scale: 84% of newly built single-family homes in 2022 were part of an HOA.
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Function: HOAs act as “hyperlocal governments,” managing amenities (pools, landscaping) and enforcing rules. They often supersede local laws via covenants.
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Financial Burden: Typical fees range from $200–$300/month. HOAs have the power to levy fines that can accrue interest and legal fees.
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Case Study (The Inestrosas): A family in Georgia faced over a decade of legal battles. An initial debt (inherited from previous owners) snowballed into wage garnishment and liens. Despite paying ~$112,000 in fines and legal fees, the HOA claims they still owe money.
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Lack of Oversight: There is very little government regulation. Only seven states have an HOA Ombudsman office, and often these offices lack the power to intervene, leaving civil court as the only (expensive) option for homeowners.
2. The Home Insurance Crisis
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The Issue: Major insurers like State Farm and Allstate are pulling out of markets like California, Florida, and Louisiana due to increasing climate risks (wildfires, floods) and inflation making rebuilding too expensive.
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Impact on Homeowners:
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Non-Renewals: Long-time homeowners are losing coverage after decades of paying premiums.
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Property Value: Receiving a non-renewal notice can instantly devalue a property by ~12%.
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Cost: Homeowners forced onto “insurer of last resort” plans (like California’s FAIR plan) face massive premiums (e.g., jumping from $2,000 to $12,000/year) for less coverage.
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Economic Threat: Since mortgages require insurance, this crisis threatens the entire housing market, which accounts for ~15-18% of US GDP.
3. Algorithmic Rent Pricing (RealPage)
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The Allegation: A lawsuit by the DC Attorney General accuses landlords and software company RealPage of forming a “housing cartel.”
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How It Works: RealPage’s software (YieldStar/AI Revenue Management) uses non-public data from landlords to recommend rent prices.
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Critics argue this allows landlords to collude and artificially inflate rents, removing “empathy” from the equation.
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Landlords allegedly adopt the software’s pricing recommendations over 90% of the time.
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Impact: Rents have skyrocketed (e.g., one tenant faced a 23% increase), forcing long-term residents out of their communities.
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Defense: RealPage claims landlords are not obligated to use their suggestions and that the software can suggest price drops when appropriate.
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Legal Status: The DOJ has filed a statement of interest, arguing the behavior may violate the Sherman Antitrust Act.
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