America’s Road To Serfdom: 51% Of Renters Are Over-40 Years Old

December 9, 2015 in Economy, News by RBN Staff


Zero Hedge
 | Tyler Durden | 12/09/2015 14:45 -0500

Submitted by Mike Krieger via Liberty Blitzkrieg blog,

Today’s story from the Associated Press perfectly illustrates how millions of Americans were reduced to neo-feudal serfs by the financial crisis, and how those who ruined the economy profited handsomely from the process.

While popular perception holds that debt-ridden, broke millennials are the ones driving the rental market, the truth is far more nuanced. As the AP reports:

WASHINGTON (AP) — The majority of U.S. renters are now older than 40, a fundamental shift over the past decade that reflects the lasting damage of the housing crash and an aging population.

 

This finding in a report released Wednesday by Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies overturns the assumption that the rental boom is only the result of twenty-somethings flocking to hip urban centers. Single-family houses are a growing share of rentals. And affordability problems are mounting as rents rise faster than wages, while apartment construction increasingly targets tenants with six-figure incomes.

 

Nearly 51 percent of renters have celebrated their 40th birthday, according to the report’s analysis of Census Bureau data. That amounts to 22.4 million households.

 

A decade ago when the housing bubble peaked in 2005, 47 percent of renters — or 16.4 million households — were older than 40. Their share was 43 percent in 1995.

 

The increase in older renters corresponds with a surge in foreclosures after the housing bubble popped. Since the 2008 financial triggered by the housing bust, there have been roughly 6 million completed foreclosures, according to CoreLogic, a property data firm.

 

Many of these are former owners transitioned to renting.

 

Rents increased 7 percent between 2001 and 2014 after adjusting for inflation, while incomes fell 9 percent, the report said.

 

The result is that a larger number of Americans must devote more than 30 percent of their income to rent, a level that the government considers to be financially burdensome. Over the past decade, that number has jumped from 14.8 million to 21.3 million, or 49 percent of all renters.

The worst part about all this, is that a small segment of the population made a fortune off the crash and subsequent rental rebound. These people were some of the same Wall Street players who the U.S. taxpayer was forced to bail out with the ruse of “saving Main Street.” One of these individuals is an ex-Goldman Sachs banker named Donald Mullen, who also happens to be a huge Hillary Clinton donor. Here’s what we learned from last weeks’ post, Ex-Goldman Banker Who Profited from Housing Crash and Subsequent Bailout Donates $100k to Hillary SuperPAC:

Mullen, while a Goldman Sachs employee, pioneered the trades that allowed the mega-bank to profit from the collapse of the housing market. Mullen’s team utilized financial instruments called collateralized debt obligations to essentially bet against subprime mortgages.

 

In 2012, Mullen left Goldman Sachs to do the opposite of what he did in 2007: He started a hedge fund whose purpose was to buy up foreclosed homes and rent them out. New York magazine’s Kevin Roose described the career change this way: “A guy whose most famous trade was a successful bet on the full-scale implosion of the housing market is now swooping in to pick up the pieces on the other end.”

 

Mullen gave $100,000 to Priorities USA Action on June 30. According to Federal Election Commission data, this is the largest single contribution he has made to any soft money organization in his giving history. (In total, he has given $220,000 to soft money groups and $529,621 in individual contributions).

 

This guy literally profited from people losing their homes, then profited on the other side from the government bailout by buying these same homes from the victims who lost them. This is precisely how Wall Street makes money. 

And this is the man who made it all possible:

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