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March 26th, 2026

Insight

Exodus from New York and San Francisco is far from over

Conor Sen

By Conor Sen Bloomberg View

Published September 26, 2024


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The big migration story of the pandemic was the emptying out of major US cities. As more employees return partly or fully to their offices, people have begun to talk about a rejuvenation. Don't believe it.

The housing trend of the pandemic had people leaving big, expensive cities and moving to destinations that were some combination of cheaper, warmer or more scenic. People left Northeast cities such as New York for Florida and Texas, and they left the West Coast for Montana, Idaho and Arizona.

That migration slowed down in 2022 as companies called workers back to the office and, importantly, as the housing market began to sputter.

We can expect to see a further slowing in the 2023 population numbers from the Census Bureau, due in December, in line with what's showing up in the change-of-address data from the US Postal Service. This doesn't mean the coastal-city exodus that we saw during the pandemic is over, just that elevated mortgage rates and the sluggish resale housing market are holding back moves that people will make once activity picks up again.

Interstate migration and the level of existing home sales go hand in hand. Transactions in existing homes rose from an annualized rate of around 5.25 million a year prior to the pandemic to 6.5 million in late 2020 and early 2021 at the height of the migration boom, the fastest in 15 years.

Now, homes aren't selling so homeowners aren't moving. Since the pandemic boom, existing home sales have collapsed by 40% as of last month.

We have some confirming data courtesy of the USPS, which began publishing monthly change-of-address statistics at the ZIP code level during the pandemic so researchers could track migration trends.

The USPS has complete monthly data through May 2023, which covers most of the period we'll get population numbers for in December. The data show, for instance, that requests for change of address to the popular destinations of Florida, Idaho and Texas fell by 9.5%, 13.9% and 10.9% respectively - matched by slowdowns in moves away from California and New York - in the first five months of 2023, compared with the first five months of 2022. Existing home sales have fallen even more since May, suggesting even less interstate migration in the second half of the year.

Civic leaders in big cities like New York, Chicago and San Francisco that saw a lot of outmigration during the pandemic shouldn't be lulled into a false sense of security by the slowing of these outflows. While the peak of pandemic migration may have been unsustainable and due for some giveback, current low levels of migration and existing home sales aren't a new normal as much as a temporary friction while the market adjusts to higher interest rates.

Even before the pandemic hit, the 2020s were destined to be a period of higher migration as the two biggest generations - baby boomers and millennials - both found reasons to move. Baby boomers were retiring, following a long-established pattern of retirees moving to places like Florida. Millennials were entering their family-formation ages, which historically has meant moving from cities to suburbs and from the north to the south. The dispersion of knowledge jobs and the rise of remote and hybrid work make mid-career moves even more attractive than they were five years ago.

There's history of a surge in interest rates and slump in home sales temporarily slowing population migration. In the 1980s, Nevada had the fastest population growth of any state in the US and was the most popular destination for domestic migration. The growth was interrupted by a slump in the housing market in the early 1980s in response to high mortgage rates. Nevada's population growth fell from over 6% a year in 1978 and 1979 to just 2.3% in 1983 before rebounding to more than 5% by the end of the 1980s.

I am not convinced by all the pessimism around how long home sales will be depressed because of elevated mortgage rates. John Burns Research & Consulting's survey of real estate agents nationally shows buyers still outnumber sellers, signaling lack of inventory is a bigger constraint on transactions than the impact from high rates on affordability. It is why home prices have remained so resilient.

Yet, as I've noted, inventories are now rising at a time of the year when they typically don't, suggesting 2024 could be a year of more inventory, more transactions and a pick-up in interstate migration.

History suggests that rising interest rates aren't enough to permanently impair housing transactions. Rising mortgage rates in the late 1970s and early 1980s temporarily slowed housing activity, but the market found its footing once inflation settled down and interest rates stabilized. Housing activity and Americans being on the move may be on pause for now, but don't bet on it lasting.

(COMMENT, BELOW)


Previously:
09/17/24 U.S. 'Battery Belt' will be a new kind of job magnet
09/10/24 Americans have a new piggy bank to raid --- their houses
10/03/23 America's greatest public policy success is now in jeopardy
09/12/23 The housing market is tilting in favor of renters
08/18/23 RIP recession. Is it time to worry about
05/24/23 This Goldilocks economy has an end date
05/24/23 Bye-Bye, New York. Hello, Fayetteville
04/04/23 What makes this economic slowdown different from the others?
02/15/23 Higher mortgage rates is what the housing market needs now
01/06/23 The January inflation bump Americans should welcome
01/04/23 Why millennials are following boomers to the South
10/24/22 Two bright spots in a cooling housing market
08/18/22 Future remote workers need to network more --- in college
06/17/22 Housing market cooldown will only lead to more dysfunction
05/27/22 Welcome to our be-careful-what-you-wish-for economy
05/04/22 The Amazon economic indicator says inflation is easing
01/20/22 Don't call me on Friday. That's my 'me time'
01/06/22 2022 is the year to buy your first luxury electric car
06/03/21 The post-pandemic boom will have a sequel in 2022
05/31/21 Florida may lose some of its boomer shine
01/11/21 Colleges bet on football in their own K-shaped recovery
12/31/20 Just send the bigger bucks already
08/24/20 Young people can't buy homes until older owners . . . move on
08/18/20 Our pandemic love affair with e-commerce could soon sour
08/10/20 Booming 'zoom towns' should ease city housing costs
07/11/20 With a Biden economy, will America be condemned to relive the '70s?
07/14/20 Renting and homebuying swap roles in the covid-19 market
07/13/20 Markets may have a reason to rise along with covid-19 cases
04/27/20 U.S. economy may have hit the coronavirus bottom
11/12/19 The 2020 economy should feel a lot better: What to, realistically, expect
04/23/19: Gen Z is likely to temper aging socialist millennials
03/25/19: All signs point to a housing boom ahead
02/19/19: Trump's economic gamble might make sense
02/15/19: Scaring off Amazon will backfire for the Left
01/29/19: The 2020 election will shred the Obama coalition
11/15/18: Amazon proving the 'rich get richer'?
11/13/18: How gerrymandering can reduce the partisan divide
10/22/18: The politics of the next recession will be a disaster
08/02/18: The future of the US looks a lot like ...
05/05/18: Brick-and-mortar stores may start to make sense again
05/05/18: College admissions season is about to get much easier
05/03/18: Changing housing needs of millennials will change economic development
02/13/18: The big idea for Middle America is to think small
02/07/18: Dems are caught in a tax bill trap this year
10/25/17: Good times have come to Trump-leaning states

Sen is a portfolio manager for New River Investments in Atlanta and has been a contributor to the Atlantic and Business Insider.

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