Episodios

  • What the Data Actually Says About Institutional Investors in SFR
    Apr 14 2026
    A note: this conversation was recorded on March 17, 2025, so any references to pending legislation reflect the state of the debate at that time. The debate over institutional ownership of single-family rental (SFR) homes has moved from industry trade publications to the floor of the U.S. Congress. A bill currently working its way through the legislative process would restrict large investors from buying additional SFR homes and require build-to-rent (BTR) communities to be sold off within seven years of completion. But what does the research actually say? Josh Coven, Assistant Professor of Real Estate at Baruch College's Zicklin School of Business, joined the New Home Insights Podcast to walk through his findings — and the data challenges some of the most widely held assumptions about institutional investors, housing prices, and rental supply.
    Más Menos
    41 m
  • Built to Last: How a Japanese Home Builder is Challenging American Construction
    Mar 20 2026
    Japanese firms have gone big on American housing. Sekisui House has been at the front of this line. The 65-year-old innovative Japanese builder has built a book of homebuilding brands that covers the country. Their most recent acquisition, Richmond American Homes, not only gave Sekisui a national footprint but also brought them David Viger, now the President and CEO of Sekisui House U.S. David Viger played football for both Bill Parcells and Bill Belichick, two of the most “demanding” (I’m being nice) coaches in NFL history. Now he works for Sekisui House. Sure, Sekisui once made him hold a ceramic panel with his bare hands while they scorched it with a blowtorch, but I bet he still feels like this is an upgrade. David joined us recently on The New Home Insights podcast to break down how Sekisui House U.S. is doing things differently.
    Más Menos
    50 m
  • The Year of Realignment: How Builders Should Adapt to Today's Buyer
    Jan 31 2026
    The housing market pendulum has swung back toward buyers, and understanding what consumers truly want—and will pay for—has never been more critical for builders. In this episode of the New Home Insights Podcast, JBREC's Dean Wehrli sits down with Jenni Nichols, Vice President of Design, to explore where builders can push, where they can pull back, and where they absolutely cannot compromise.
    Más Menos
    58 m
  • Smith Douglas Homes and Building Affordably by Design
    Nov 26 2025
    It seems that affordability has suddenly become the word of the day in politics, but it has been at the top of the agenda in housing for a very long time. There will always be market space at the high end—but there will also always be a need to solve for new home prices that fit into the fat part of the bell curve. That is where Smith Douglas Homes lives. Smith Douglas CEO Greg Bennett recently joined us at the New Home Trends Summit for a live podcast. Greg offers his insights on building affordably by design, with an eye on the workforce families that form the backbone of American communities.
    Más Menos
    30 m
  • The Avilla Advantage: NexMetro’s Josh Hartmann on Brand, Data, and BTR Strategy
    Nov 5 2025
    Back in the olden days (after those bikes with the one really big wheel and the one tiny wheel, but before TikTok), when we spoke about the rental market, we meant apartments. Sure, there were plenty of “mom and pop” rental homes, but no one thought about them, and no one was building new ones. But over the last decade-plus, build-to-rent (BTR) has emerged as an ever-growing part of our national housing solutions. As BTR has grown and evolved, NexMetro Communities has played a key role in these changes. On this episode of the New Home Insights podcast, CEO Josh Hartmann joins me to talk about NexMetro, its philosophy, what drives it, his view of the market, and his take on BTR and its competition.
    Más Menos
    1 h y 1 m
  • How David Weekley Homes Balances Private-Company Culture with Public-Company Scale
    Oct 10 2025
    In the new home world, we often divide builders into public and private. The idea is that the publics are the capital-rich, large-scale firms with a multi-regional presence that are gradually gobbling up market share from the smaller local private builders scattered throughout the country. But this ignores the “big privates”—homebuilders privately owned but with the size and resources to act like a “national.” David Weekley Homes is definitely a big private. The builder has spread from its Texas roots throughout the swath of the smile states (minus California, which hurts my feelings) and into the upper Midwest. On this episode of New Home Insights, Jay Brown, CEO, and Chris Weekley, President and Vice Chairman, walk us through David Weekley’s philosophy and strategy, expand on their expansion plans, and provide insight into how they view the market now and in the future.
    Más Menos
    57 m
  • The New Land Financing Playbook: Flexible Capital Meets Cautious Builders
    Sep 12 2025
    If there are two things that fuel real estate development, they are land and money. Oh, and design. Three things that—wait, the type of housing is huge, too, so product is another fundamental. So there are four—okay, there are a whole bunch of critical elements to the successful development of real estate, but let’s stick with land and money. Having those two things is indispensable, and they are also what Rodney Montag of Bedrock Land Finance is best at. Rodney understands the American real estate land market as well as anyone, and, through Bedrock, can provide builders and developers with the capital to realize their dreams. So we sat down with Rodney on the latest episode of the New Home Insights podcast and talked about exactly those things.
    Más Menos
    49 m
  • The Rental Rebound: Supply, Demand, and Demographic Shifts Driving Recovery
    Aug 15 2025
    There is no housing market; there are housing markets. We all know that, but all too often forget. Now, as mortgage rates and increasing supply challenge the for-sale sector, rental supply has tapered from its peak, and that sector is firming. Moreover, dynamics vary, often markedly, depending on geography. The nation is dotted with dozens of rental markets that sum to a whole, but each has a different story. On this podcast, Chris Nebenzahl and Zak Nyberg join Dean Wehrli to weave us through the rental market maze. Chris is JBREC’s Vice President of Rental Research, who keeps an eye on national trends. Zak is a Vice President of our consulting practice who has conducted rental feasibility work throughout the Sun Belt markets and up the Atlantic Seaboard. We cover supply and demand, rental trends, regional variations, amenities, the capital markets, and more in this episode.
    Más Menos
    55 m