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The housing market’s underlying fundamentals remain compelling despite recent volatility, according to industry veterans who continue to focus on long-term demographic trends rather than short-term fluctuations. With over 90 million Americans aged 25-39 competing for just 800,000 homes listed for sale nationwide, the supply-demand imbalance presents both challenges and opportunities for developers and investors.
Scott Clark, Chairman and CEO of The True Life Companies, emphasizes the importance of maintaining perspective amid market noise. “We’re a forever company. We look at long-term demographics, 80 million plus, really 90 million plus 25 to 39-year-olds where we try to focus,” Clark explains. “There’s nowhere near enough supply to meet existing demand, let alone the millennials and Gen Z coming after.”
This supply shortage varies by region, creating sharp contrasts in market conditions. Recent data shows Dallas Metro delivering 89% of all units being delivered in California during 2025, highlighting the disparity between markets. California ranks 49th nationally in housing units per individual, a statistic Clark believes impacts affordability for younger generations.
The relationship between market conditions and builder acquisition patterns has become increasingly evident. After slower absorption rates in April, May, and June, many builders reduced land acquisition activities, creating opportunities for firms focused on land development and entitlement.
“They’ll say ‘I know we’ll overpay later, but right now they base everything on 90 days,'” Clark notes. “If they’re not selling as many, they slow purchases because they have to satisfy Wall Street.”
July and August showed gradual improvement, with mortgage applications increasing 7% over a three-week period in September, suggesting renewed buyer interest as rates begin to decline.
Despite concerns about tariffs and labor shortages affecting construction costs, industry data suggests these fears may be overstated. Major builders including Lennar have reported construction cost decreases of approximately 8%, while lumber and labor costs have both declined from previous peaks.
“Tariffs have had, from what our research tells us and what’s happening on the ground, zero effect on pricing,” Clark observes. “Labor pricing is down. Overall cost of construction is down. That whole issue about labor shortages just hasn’t materialized in pricing.”
The labor market reality differs from media narratives, with subcontractors seeking work and reducing prices. This has created favorable conditions for builders and developers who can secure projects and maintain construction schedules.
California’s recent modifications to the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA) represent a significant shift. These changes have streamlined approval processes for smaller multifamily developments, expanding CEQA streamlining to projects of 20 acres or less and establishing time limits for municipal approval processes. If cities fail to act within specified timeframes, approvals are automatically granted, reducing regulatory uncertainty.
“These CEQA modifications will be incredibly effective to our strategy,” Clark explains. “A typical deal for us is 5, 7, 8, 10 acres or less because we’re trying to do multifamily so younger folks can afford them.”
The distinction between attainable housing and government-subsidized affordable housing programs is increasingly important. While affordable housing programs may generate political support, they often fail to attract sufficient private capital due to limited economic returns.
“The challenge with affordable programs is that capital requires a return for capital to be invested,” Clark notes. “For private capital, you have to have returns. Unfortunately, those affordable programs offer no economic returns for the investor.”
Attainable housing, by contrast, focuses on maximizing the number of people who can afford market-rate housing through site selection, density optimization, and cost management. This approach allows developers to serve moderate-income buyers while maintaining viable investment returns.
The strategy involves targeting sites where density can be maximized to achieve specific price points. In high-cost markets like Silicon Valley, even modest reductions in per-unit costs can significantly expand the pool of potential buyers.
Land development increasingly focuses on markets with strong demographic fundamentals and manageable regulatory environments. State capitals have emerged as attractive targets due to their combination of educational institutions, government employment, and STEM job growth.
“We’re often in state capitals by design,” Clark explains. “The more political opposition, the better we can create investment returns for our investors, because we know how to navigate political opposition.”
This has led to focus on markets like Raleigh-Durham, Austin, Sacramento, and Denver over larger metro areas with less regulatory predictability. The Research Triangle region exemplifies this, with major investments like Toyota’s $9 billion battery factory creating sustained demand for housing.
Property type selection emphasizes repositioning underperforming assets rather than competing for premium sites. Retail properties, especially strip centers that have lost anchor tenants, offer attractive prices enabling competitive end-user pricing.
“We like retail so much because strip centers are worthless,” Clark notes. “There’s too many of them. That whole world has changed. We like a low basis price so we can deliver a low price to the builder, who can deliver a lower price to the end user.”
The current environment has reduced competition from publicly traded builders, creating opportunities for specialized developers with patient capital. The typical approach of making offers on 180 properties to close 15 deals reflects the disciplined underwriting required.
Due diligence focuses heavily on environmental issues and realistic pricing expectations from sellers. Many property owners maintain unrealistic expectations based on peak market comparables, requiring patient negotiation and education.
“You hang around the rim until they get realistic, and then we’ll typically bring it into our portfolio,” Clark explains. This approach has proven effective during the current market slowdown, when reduced competition allows for more selective acquisition strategies.
The Federal Reserve’s monetary policy remains a critical factor for housing market recovery. Industry participants expect continued rate reductions, though excessive decreases could signal broader economic problems.
Recent mortgage application increases suggest buyer sensitivity to rate changes, with even modest decreases generating renewed activity. This responsiveness indicates pent-up demand that could drive significant market recovery as rates normalize.
The combination of demographic pressure, supply constraints, and improving financing conditions supports optimism for sustained housing demand. However, success will likely depend on maintaining focus on fundamental market drivers rather than short-term volatility.
For real estate professionals and investors, the current environment presents both challenges and opportunities. Markets with strong demographic fundamentals, manageable regulatory environments, and undervalued assets offer the best prospects for long-term success. The key lies in maintaining perspective on underlying demand drivers while navigating short-term market fluctuations with patience and discipline.
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