Episode Details
Back to EpisodesWhy Investors Are Leaving Sunbelt Boomtowns For Stable Cash Flow
Description
The hottest real estate markets used to be the ones with the loudest growth story. Phoenix. Tampa. Austin. Nashville. Fast appreciation made the strategy feel simple: buy, wait, sell into the wave. That wave looks different in 2026, and I break down why serious investors are rethinking where they put capital to work and how they build portfolios for the next part of the cycle.
I walk through the shift toward what analysts are calling refuge market portfolios, concentrated in the Midwest and Northeast, where the goal is not a speculative price surge but cash flow, stability, and demand that holds up when conditions get choppy. I explain the three traits that define a refuge market right now: affordability relative to local income, supply constraints that do not disappear, and strong employment anchors that keep people rooted even during downturns. Along the way, I call out examples like Indianapolis, Cleveland, Kansas City, Columbus, and Pittsburgh to make the framework concrete.
This matters even more if you are involved in secured real estate lending. Loan geography is not trivia. It affects collateral durability, the predictability of borrower exits, and how much “cushion” sits underneath a loan across market cycles. If you want a clearer way to evaluate market risk beyond headlines and hype, this is a tight, practical listen. Subscribe for more, share this with an investor who still thinks only appreciation matters, and leave a review with the market you consider a true refuge right now.