North Las Vegas homes have a Wall Street problem

November 13, 2023

Residents in a suburban North Las Vegas neighborhood, Kings Crossings, are grappling with the challenges posed by large corporate landlords dominating the single-family rental market. The landscape is marked by U-Haul moving trucks, eviction notices, and vans from American Homes 4 Rent, one of the nation’s major corporate landlords. Amid a backdrop of beige, cookie-cutter homes, the residents, like 29-year-old Deja Bordenave, express frustration at the diminishing affordability of the American dream. During the pandemic, Wall Street-backed companies and hedge funds substantially increased their presence in Southern Nevada’s single-family rental market, driving up property prices and leaving tenants vulnerable to rent hikes. Housing experts, including Rutgers University’s Eric Seymour, highlight the impact of these corporate landlords, who often outbid individual homebuyers and contribute to the unattainability of homeownership for many.

Seymour’s analysis reveals that these corporations, including American Homes 4 Rent, have more than doubled their holdings in Clark County, owning over 13,000 homes, compared to fewer than 8,000 in 2019. The situation is particularly acute in North Las Vegas, where explosive growth has led to a fivefold increase in American Homes 4 Rent’s presence. Critics argue that the influx of corporate landlords disproportionately affects minority communities, prompting calls for federal investigations into potential artificially inflated rent and property costs. Despite this scrutiny, efforts at housing reforms face challenges at both the federal and state levels, leaving working-class individuals like Deja Bordenave feeling that the traditional American dream of homeownership is slipping away.

Review Journal, November 13, 2023

Related articles:

Las Vegas Review-Journal, December 5, 2019, Investigative process

Full investigative series

Recent Posts

Wolff and Lewis Pen Chapter on PSD and Trauma-Informed Care

Posttraumatic Stress Disorder and Trauma-Informed Care Introduction Prison and jail populations have dense and patterned concentrations of childhood and adult trauma (Wolff, 2022). The maturing effects of childhood trauma have been extensively studied for decades,...

EJB Talks: Alumnus Helps Rethink Jersey City’s Public Spaces

Alumnus Helps Rethink Jersey City's Public Spaces: A Conversation with Barkha Patel MCRP '15 Dean Stuart Shapiro talks to alumnus Barkha Patel, MCRP '15 this week on EJB Talks. Initially a sociology undergraduate at Rutgers, Barkha discusses how a chance visit by Dean...

NJSPL Report: Equity Initiatives in the United States

Report Release: Equity Initiatives in the United States Read Report The New Jersey State government proactively advances equity through its Office of Equity in the Office of the Governor, and through budget initiatives such as the “Cover all Kids” program ensuring...

Adrian Ponichtera is recipient of Ververides Scholarship

Adrian Ponichtera (MCRP '26) is the recipient of the New Jersey County Planners Association's George Ververides Honorary Scholarship. The scholarship is open to New Jersey residents entering their third or fourth year of undergraduate study or advanced degrees at a...

Bhuyan & Broom Publish New Healthcare Management Textbook

  Soumitra Bhuyan, Executive Director of Health Administration Programs and Associate Professor at Rutgers University-New Brunswick’s Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy, is the co-editor of a new textbook Fundamentals of Healthcare...