Nick Gerli Profile picture
Jun 27, 2023 13 tweets 4 min read Read on X
The Airbnb collapse is real.

Revenues are down nearly 50% in cities like Phoenix and Austin.

Watch out for a wave of forced selling from Airbnb owners later this year in the areas hit hardest by the revenue collapse.
1) What's scary for the US Housing Market is just how many Airbnbs there are.

Data from AllTheRooms shows 1 million Airbnb / VRBO rentals.

Compared to only 570k homes for sale.

Creates huge home price downside if struggling Airbnb owners elect to sell.
2) Ground zero for this Airbnb collapse is a city like PHOENIX.

Where the number of short-term rentals (18k) is more than DOUBLE the number of for sale listings (8k).

Mix the huge Airbnb supply with revenues down -50% and you get a cocktail for massive forced selling.
3) Another area with huge exposure is Eastern Tennessee.

Particularly a vacation town called Sevierville in the Smokey Mountains.

In this county there's 10x as many Airbnbs as homes listed for sale. While the revenue per owner is down nearly 50%.

Yikes.
4) Another area to watch out for is Central Texas.

Data from AllTheRooms shows that Airbnb revenues are down 40-50% yoy across most of the area.

Particularly in Austin, San Antonio, Uvalde.
5) Another area that is getting smoked by the Airbnb Crash is the Pacific Northwest / Mountain Region.

States like Montana, Idaho, and Oregon.

Fewer people playing out their Yellowstone fantasies + way more supply = 40% declines in revenue per listing.
6) And ultimately this Airbnb crash was to be expected.

The pandemic is over. Fewer people are working from home / vacationing in states like Montana, Texas, and Tennessee.

So the demand is way down. Just as the Airbnb supply went way up. So you get a crash.
7) What will be interesting is how "stubborn" Airbnb owners are in holding their properties.

Many of them are just now seeing their revenues down 50%.

But the mainstream narrative hasn't caught up to it yet. So owners might not realize the Airbnb crash is a broader trend.
8) Some Airbnb owners might elect to do a long-term rental in their properties instead.

But the problem with that is that there has already been a huge surge in long-term rentals hitting the market.

With vacant rentals in cities like Nashville exploding over the last year.
9) So if Airbnb owners "pivot" to long-term rentals, they'll likely crash that market as well.

Especially in dense urban areas. Which is where the majority of Airbnbs are located.

Check out the Airbnb heatmap in a metro like Phoenix to see areas with most exposure.
10) I think "newbie" Airbnb owners who bought over the last 1-2 years with a mortgage are in trouble.

They got in at a high price. And have a high monthly payment. And little margin for error.

They could be some of the first to sell later in 2023 when the season ends.
11) However, some of the more seasoned Airbnb operators who got in before the pandemic likely have room to work with.

They paid less for their Airbnb. Have a cheaper mortgage rate. And more experience.

They will be less inclined to sell.
12) I'll have more content and data on the Airbnb crash in coming weeks.

The data used in this Tweet thread came from AllTheRooms. They're a short-term rental data provider who tracks Airbnb supply, rates, and revenue for every market in the country.

alltherooms.com

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More from @nickgerli1

May 8
We need to talk about Texas.

Listings just hit 123,000 in April 2025.

53% higher than normal.

And prices are now dropping across the state. Image
1) Texas, at a state-wide level, is the 4th most oversupplied housing market in America right now.

Buyer demand keeps dropping, and listings keep rising.

The only other states with more relative supply are Colorado, Florida, and Arizona.
2) The reason housing inventory is skyrocketing is threefold:

-first, home builders indundated the market with supply the last 4 years, and that supply is now getting re-sold onto the market

-second, there is a slowdown in migration into the state, with some people now leaving

-third, the local population in Texas is now priced out of buying homes, and cannot support demand
Read 15 tweets
May 7
What's going on in Denver's housing market right now is unprecedented.

Inventory just shot up to 99.6% above the long-term average for April.

Meaning the market has entered a sharp correction. There were 10,345 listings on the market in April 2025, compared to 5,158 in a normal April.

Values in Denver are now dropping on a monthly basis, and could drop significantly over the rest of 2025 if this inventory spike holds.

Reventure is forecasting values in Denver to drop -9.1% over the next 12 months.Image
1) Inventory in Denver's housing market is spiking due to constrained buyer demand and a sudden surge in new listings from sellers.

This surge in listings has been so big that Denver is now the most oversupplied housing market in the U.S.
2) Denver's 99.6% inventory surplus is the highest of any large metro in the U.S. (min. pop 250k).

Meaning it is the most oversupplied housing market in the country right now. Image
Read 10 tweets
May 5
Will homebuyer demand improve in Spring 2025?

One metric to watch is mortgage applications to buy a house.

They're down about 40% from their pre-pandemic norm. And are showing no signs of increasing.

This metric tends to "lead" home sales by 1-2 months. And its continued underperformance suggests a weak housing market in May and June 2025.Image
1) Mortgage applications have been down for over 2 years now, scraping at the lowest level since the mid-1990s.

Americans seem really hesitant to buy a house right now, and don't feel comfortable assuming a large amount of mortgage debt to do it.
2) The main reason why Americans are hesitant to buy is sky-high prices.

Over 70% of the homebuyers surveyed in the Reventure 2025 buyer survey said 'high prices' were stopping them from buying.

Far outweighing any other reason. Image
Read 10 tweets
May 1
I don't think people understand what's happening in housing market right now.

Florida now has 177,00 listings. Highest level on record.

Entire Northeast U.S. has 79,000 listings. Lowest level on record.

People are leaving Florida. And moving back north. A structural trend that will likely last years, and cause Florida's housing market to decline for an extended period.Image
1) The entire housing market got this wrong. Builders, investors, and 2nd/3rd homebuyers flocked to Florida during pandemic thinking it was a stable, safe place to invest.

Where they actually should have been buying and building is the Northeast.
2) Now Florida's housing market is in a housing downturn. Prices are dropping all across the state, and will likely continue to drop for years due to an oversupply of housing combined with record lack of affordability.
Read 14 tweets
Apr 26
One reason home builders could continue to struggle in 2025 is by looking at their inventory levels by stage of construction.

For houses that are Permitted, but not started, builders have 16.5 months of supply (record high).

For houses actively under construction, builders have 13.0 months (one of highest levels ever).

For houses completed, it's 4.0 months (roughly normal).

What this means it that builders have a ton of future inventory that isn't being sold, which will turn into completed homes in the next 3-6 months.

If the pace of buyer demand on completed homes drops off at all, then things could get very ugly, very quickly.Image
1) To put more data to this, look at the breakdown below.

There are 493,000 total homes for sale from builders as of March 2025.

118,000 are already completed (24%)
263,000 are under construction (53%)
112,000 are not yet started (23%)

So what drives the bus on future builder performance is what happens on houses under construction.
2) The continued weakness in demand for homes under construction, as well as those permitted but not started, signals that there will be lots of inventory on builder lots for a while.
Read 9 tweets
Apr 20
The first market to bottom in this housing downturn will be Austin, TX.

Prices are already down 20% from peak.

And the market has shifted from being 46% overvalued to now only 8% overvalued.

Buy the end of this year, Austin will be a "buy". Image
1) The way Austin has become more fairly valued is through two mechanisms.

First - prices have dropped 20.4% from their peak in 2022. Returning affordability.

Second - the median income in the metro has continued rising, and is now up to $102,000, increasing relative affordability.
2) To understand this point clearer: the typical home value in Austin is $449k right now. Which is 4.4x the area's median income.

This 4.4x Home Value/Income Ratio is now almost back down to the long-term, 20 -year average.

Which is how you know Austin will soon be a "buy". Image
Read 8 tweets

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