Company: INVH
Filing Date: 2025-02-27
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0001687229-25-000008
Chunk: 74

Company: Invitation Homes Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-02-27
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1A
Chunk 74
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 markets;

•rules, regulations and/or policy initiatives by government and private actors, including HOAs, to discourage or restrict the purchase or operation of single-family properties by entities owned or controlled by institutional investors;

•the potential effects of climate change, related regulatory policies, legislation, and/or investor responses and expectations, and the transition to a lower-carbon economy;

•disputes and potential negative publicity in connection with eviction proceedings;

•construction of new supply;

•costs resulting from the clean-up of, and liability to third parties for damages resulting from, environmental problems, such as indoor mold;

•fraud by borrowers, originators, and/or sellers of mortgage loans;

•undetected deficiencies and/or inaccuracies in underlying mortgage loan documentation and calculations;

•casualty or condemnation losses;

•the geographic mix of our properties;

•the cost, quality, and condition of the properties we are able to acquire; and

•our ability to provide adequate management, maintenance, and insurance.

Any one or more of these factors could adversely affect our business, financial condition, and results of operations.

20

Many factors impact the single-family rental market; and if rents in our markets do not increase sufficiently to keep pace with rising costs of operations, our income and distributable cash could decline.

The success of our business model depends, in part, on conditions in the single-family rental market in which we operate. One of the possible impacts on our results of operations and key operating metrics due to limitations on our ability to increase rental rates could be a decrease in gross rental revenues and other property income. Our investment strategy is based on assumptions about occupancy levels, rental rates, interest rates, and other factors; and if those assumptions prove to be inaccurate, our cash flows may be reduced. Multiple economic and demographic factors may contribute to increases or decreases in homeownership rates resulting in fluctuating rental rates and average occupancy levels. Revenues earned from our property and asset management services are sensitive to macroeconomic conditions that negatively impact rent collections and the performance of the properties we manage. In addition, we expect that if investors like us increasingly seek to capitalize on opportunities to purchase housing assets and convert them to productive uses, competition in the market for the supply of single-family rental properties may increase and could result in a higher cost to acquire those properties. A softening of the rental market in our core areas would reduce our rental revenue and profitability.

Inflation and other macroeconomic factors could adversely affect our business and financial results.

General economic conditions in the United States have fluct