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MReport January 2022

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52 | M REPORT O R I G I NAT I O N S E R V I C I N G DATA G O V E R N M E N T S E C O N DA R Y M A R K E T THE LATEST DATA How Are Opportunity Zones Faring During the Pandemic? Low-income Opportunity Zones have generally been keeping up with the market; two-thirds of properties in these zones saw an increase in value during Q3. A welcome sign—which points to a continuous- ly improving econo- my—is that homes in low-income Opportunity Zones are keeping pace with the real- estate market as properties in 62% of these areas saw an increase in values during the third quarter. Low-income Opportunity Zones were established by Congress in the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. This created a collection of 5,402 economic zones consisting of census tracts and low-income neighborhoods that meet requirements for rede- velopment as designated by the Internal Revenue Service and the U.S. Census Bureau. These eco- nomic zones are in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. In a quarterly report released by ATTOM on the status of these areas, it found that median single-family home and condo prices increased from the second quarter of 2021 to the third quar- ter of 2021 in 62% of Opportunity Zones around the country. Furthermore, in 47% of the zones prices have risen by at least 20% annually. The report notes that while prices have increased in these zones, they still trailed values seen by the market as a whole; only about 25% of the zones are priced at or above the national average of $310,500. "Median values also re- mained under $200,000 in 53% of Opportunity Zones in the third quarter of this year," the report said. "But that was down from 57% in the second quarter of 2021 and 63% a year earlier as values inside some of the nation's poor- est communities kept up with broader national housing market gains despite the Coronavirus pandemic remaining a threat to the U.S. economy." To put the data a different way, prices spiked by at least 25% in the third quarter, measured year over year, in four of every 10 Opportunity Zones, compared to three of every 10 communities in the rest of the country. "The third quarter of 2021 was just like the second, which was pretty much like the first when it came to home prices in some of the more distressed neighbor- hoods around the United States. Values in markets scattered through so-called Opportunity Zones kept rising at around the same pace seen in more upscale areas, as the housing-market boom kept lifting fortunes just about everywhere," said Todd Teta, Chief Product Officer with ATTOM. "Home values in Opportunity Zones are still very low relative to other areas. But the ongoing gains showed that lots of households are buying in those areas—something that should lure the attention of inves- tors looking to take advantage of Opportunity Zone tax breaks." Other key findings from the report include: • Median prices of single-family houses and condominiums rose from the second quarter of 2021 to the third quarter of 2021 in 3,136 (62%) of Opportunity Zones with sufficient data to analyze and increased in 3,416 (78%) of the zones from the third quarter of last year to third quarter of this year. By comparison, median prices rose quarterly in 65 percent of census tracts outside of Opportunity Zones and annu- ally in 82%. • Measured year over year, me- dian home prices rose at least 20% in the third quarter of 2021 in 2,055 (47%) of Opportunity Zones with sufficient data. Prices rose that much during that time period in 53% of other census tracts throughout the country. • Opportunity Zones again did even better when comparing areas where prices rose at least 25% from the third quarter of 2020 to the third quarter of 2021. Measured year over year, medi- an home prices rose that much in 1,696 (39%) of Opportunity Zones but in only 31% of census tracts elsewhere in the country. • Typical single-family home values in roughly half of all Opportunity Zones increased annually in the third quarter of 2021 by more than the 15.9% increase in the overall national median home price. • Among states that had at least 20 Opportunity Zones with sufficient data, those with the largest percentage of zones where median prices rose, year over year, during the third quarter of 2021 were Idaho (where median prices were up, year over year, in 97% of the zones); Arizona (94%); Massachusetts (91%); Delaware (90%); and Utah (89%). • Of all 5,402 zones in the report, 1,951 (36%) still had median prices in the third quarter of 2021 that were less than $150,000 and 913 (17%) had medians rang- ing from $150,000 to $199,999. The total percentage of zones with typical values below $200,000 was down from 63% in the third quarter of 2020 to 53% in the third quarter of 2021. • Median values in the third quarter of 2021 ranged from $200,000 to $299,999 in 1,186 Opportunity Zones (22%) while they topped the national me- dian of $310,500 in 1,250 (23%). • The Midwest continued in the third quarter of 2021 to have the highest portion of Opportunity Zone tracts with a median home price of less than $150,000 (60%), followed by the South (42%), the Northeast (35%), and the West (5%). • Median household incomes in 87% of the Opportunity Zones analyzed were less than the medians in the counties where they were located. Median incomes were less than three- quarters of county-level figures in 56% of zones and less than half in 16%.

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