In America, the great ‘South-East Migration’
is often spoken about. Families, couples, and individuals from the East and
West coast are moving to states such as Tennessee, the Carolinas, and to an
extent Texas and Florida. The reasons behind the move: Lifestyle,
affordability, climate, taxes, and easier access to healthcare and schooling.
Essentially areas where pull factors far outweigh push factors. Sound familiar?
When speaking to investors from America about
why they are looking at Portugal for investment or residence, the same reasons
are highlighted and appreciated on this side of the Atlantic. The American
population in Portugal grew 45% in 2021. Importantly, the qualities drawing the
crowd are desirable at a time of abundance or financial challenges.
Cities like Atlanta, Dallas, Raleigh, Austin, and San Antonio have been benefactors, in recent years, of significant inflows
which have impacted the cities’ real estate markets positively, bringing much
interest from single-family and multi-family developers.
However, the city many feel to be leading the
charge currently in Nashville. According to a report from leading consulting firm PwC produced for
Urban Land Institute Organization (ULI), Nashville secured the title of best overall prospect for real estate
investors heading into next year. In fact, it is the first metropolitan area
since San Francisco in 2014 to repeat the top ranking in the annual report.
ULI’s
report for 2023 is based on direct interviews with more than 2,000 real estate
professionals across the US, regarding
the markets they consider the best overall for investment in the coming year. A
third of those in the survey are private property owners or real estate
developers.
Knowing
that cities like Nashville are desirable for workers, it is unsurprising that the
E-commerce giant, Amazon, is establishing its second office there as an operations center, aiming
to employ at least 5,000 people. Over 100 families a day are
moving to Nashville.
Furthermore,
Austin-based software giant Oracle
is building a substantial campus near downtown Nashville, looking
to employ 8,000 people in
high-paying tech jobs. Nashville apartment sales this year have surpassed last
year’s record of $4.22 billion to more than $4.4 billion. Once again, this replicates
Lisbon, where tech companies are taking advantage of the well-qualified local
population, as well as the fact that digital nomads happily call Lisbon ‘home’.
Lisbon’s ‘start-up’ scene is up with the most exciting in Europe.
What
Lisbon and Nashville of course must monitor is the rate of growth. Issues such
as living
costs, traffic, housing affordability, and infrastructure quality
are regional disadvantages that came up frequently in such booming markets. That said,
at the end of the day, whether you prefer country music or Fado, these cities
both offer exceptional quality, diversity, and opportunity.
by Michael Maxwell, Head of Business Development at EQTY Capital