Talk Back
Post a Comment
|
HousingZone Most Popular Stories
- Kitchen & Bath Trends for 2010
- 2009 Best in American Living Awards Reveal What's Ahead for Residential Design
- Record 2009 Foreclosures Despite Aid
- FinestExperts Ranks Top 2010 Real Estate Investment Markets
- 2010 Brings New Lows in Home Price Reduction Levels
- Short sales unlikely to harm housing market
- Earth Advantage Institute Selects Top 10 Green Building Trends For 2010
- U.S. Apartment Vacancy Rate Hits 30-Year High
- Remodelers' Exchange: Rental properties can be a road to success
- 100 Best New Products 2009
The Case to Accommodate the Latino Market
Latinos value homeownership, and their population is only going up. Have you positioned your company to use this opportunity?
Henry Cisneros, CityView
August 25, 2008
GIANTS
The current housing market has prompted U.S. home builders across the nation to look to the rapidly growing Latino population as an expansion to their traditional home buyer market.
The growth of the Latino market will increase business for those home builders poised to respond to the demand. More than 2 million Latino families will enter the housing market by 2010. The growth and size of this population will drive the new home market for years to come. Beyond affordability, the demands from the Latino housing market requires all types of new housing: single-family and multifamily; rental and purchased homes; urban and suburban; workforce and upscale. The Latino population in the United States is growing rapidly via both immigration and the birth of new family members.
Home builders must also consider that this new home construction is no longer confined to one area of the country. Latino families are settling in large numbers within established Latino communities in coastal cities and border regions, the north and the south, as well as in interior cities and rural areas, which are experiencing relatively recent Latino expansion. Are you prepared to respond to the dynamic Latino market?
The Fastest Growing Minority SegmentConsider the size of the Latino market. Latinos are the fastest growing segment of America's population and accounted for 40 percent of the total U.S. population increase from 1990 to 2000. Recent U.S. Census Bureau updates conclude that Latinos are now the largest minority group in the U.S., and every projection indicates that the momentum of that population growth will continue.
Census Bureau projections from 2000 to 2050 make clear that the fastest growing segment of the nation's population across that period is expected to be the Latino population. During a time when the white non-Hispanic population will grow by 18 million people, the African-American population by 25 million, and the Asian population by 27 million, the Latino population in America will grow by 63 million.
New arrivals will most commonly enter through states like California, Texas and Florida; however, from there families migrate north, south, east and west. Latino populations are flourishing beyond the traditional southwest into places such as Atlanta; Charlotte, N.C.; Boston; and Little Rock, Ark. These emerging markets are also experiencing a greater demand for housing. As a home builder, responding to the needs of the Latino home buyer can grow your business into these new areas.
Home builders must understand that reaching the Latino market is much more than producing Spanish-language marketing materials or hiring Spanish-speaking sales representatives. Consider developing strategies that offer solutions to support the unique homeownership challenges Latinos face. Neighborhoods and home designs, which embrace the strong family values within the Latino population, will make those communities more attractive.
Latinos are hardworking families who see homeownership as the path to the middle class to live-out out their American dream. Latino homeownership is vital for strong communities and vibrant cities. Home builders, you are a key part of the solution to respond to this market demand. It makes sense to care about the Latino market if you want your business to grow.
| Author Information |
| Henry Cisneros is the chairman of CityView, a real-estate investment firm and developer that specializes in workforce housing. He served as the Secretary of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and was also a four-term mayor of San Antonio. |
© 2010, Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All Rights Reserved.









Digg This
