By Dmitry Kalinovsky @ Shutterstock.com

Big banks and investors are putting a lot of money into a house flipping boom that is eerily familiar to anyone who survived the carnage of the financial crisis. Ryan Dezember reports in The Wall Street Journal:

Wall Street has made a mountain of money available to house flippers, and selling move-in-ready rehabs has rarely been easier. The challenge is finding beat-up and out-of-date properties that can be renovated and resold for a profit.

โ€œInvestors like me, weโ€™re like ants on a sugar hill all fighting for the same projects,โ€ said Ed Stock, who startedย fixing and flipping housesย on New Yorkโ€™s Long Island after the 2008 mortgage meltdown. โ€œItโ€™s the greatest time to be in this market; itโ€™s just hard to find the inventory.โ€

Foreclosure moratoriumsย have shut off a big source of fixer-uppers since last springโ€™s lockdown. Meanwhile, competition is stiff from regular home buyers armed with superlow mortgage rates and inspired byย cable-TV renovators. Rising costs and limited availability of labor andย building materials, such as lumber, cut into profits and stretch out jobs.

Just 2.7% of home sales were flipsโ€”sales within a year of a prior saleโ€”during the first quarter, according to property data firm Attom. That is the lowest portion of sales since at least 2000, when Attom started counting flips. The number of flipped houses and condos were the fewest in a quarter since 2003.

That was two housing booms back and long before measured-in-months loans to house flippers became some of the hottest properties on Wall Street.ย Mortgage trusts, pensions, hedge funds, private-equity firms,ย investment banksย and insurance companies all want so-called flip loans, drawn by yields in the range of 8% to 12% at a time when one-year Treasurysย pay less than 0.1%.

Mr. Stockโ€™s lender, Roc360, last week received a $2 billion infusion from insurerย Athene Holdingย Ltd.ย to make more loans to house flippers as well as landlords, who buy a lot of rehabbed houses. Arvind Raghunathan, Roc360โ€™s chief executive, said his firm would have little trouble raising several billion more given the hunt for yield that has sent investors into less-familiar pockets of fixed income.

Action Line: Big money, rushing into a small market, creates at least the potential for a bubble to emerge. Be careful. Many times, you invest, and they win.

ย Originally posted on Your Survival Guy.