The Berkshire Hathaway housing market bet just got a lot bigger. On May 31, Berkshire Hathaway announced it would acquire Taylor Morrison Home Corporation in an all-cash deal valued at approximately $8.5 billion — one of the first major moves under new CEO Greg Abel. Warren Buffett himself called it out publicly, saying Abel executed it faster and smoother than he could have.
That kind of headline tends to get lost in the financial news cycle. For anyone who owns real estate in the San Gabriel Valley — or who is thinking about selling — it deserves a closer look.
What the Berkshire Hathaway Housing Market Move Actually Means
Berkshire agreed to pay $72.50 per share for Taylor Morrison, a 24% premium to its closing price the Friday before the announcement. Taylor Morrison is one of the country’s largest homebuilders, operating more than 350 communities across 21 markets in 12 states. The company will be taken private once the deal closes, which is expected in the second half of 2026.
This is not Berkshire’s first move into housing. The conglomerate already owns Clayton Homes, one of the nation’s largest manufactured housing companies. Abel has been explicit about where this is heading: a unified site-built homebuilding platform that combines Taylor Morrison’s scale with Berkshire’s existing operations. By one analysis, the combined entity would rank as the fourth-largest homebuilder in the United States, behind only D.R. Horton, Lennar, and PulteGroup.
Why it matters beyond the deal itself
The Berkshire Hathaway housing market signal here is hard to ignore — the company is sitting on a cash reserve approaching $400 billion and does not deploy that capital casually. When they write an $8.5 billion check into homebuilding, they are making a calculated bet that U.S. housing demand has more structural support than the current market is pricing in. The U.S. has spent years underbuilding relative to population growth. That gap does not close quickly, and well-capitalized builders with national scale are positioned to benefit when conditions normalize.
It is worth noting that Taylor Morrison’s footprint is concentrated in Sun Belt markets — Arizona, Texas, Florida, the Carolinas. They are not a significant presence in the San Gabriel Valley. So this deal does not change your immediate local market directly.
What it does is signal something important at the macro level: the smart money is not running from residential real estate. It is doubling down on it.
What this means if you are thinking about selling
Market timing is a real consideration, but it is rarely the most important one. The sellers I work with in Pasadena, Arcadia, San Marino, and Temple City are typically motivated by something more immediate than a macro bet — an estate situation, a life transition, a property that has become more work than it is worth, or simply a number that makes sense today.
What the Berkshire move reinforces is that housing as an asset class is not in structural decline. Institutional capital at the highest level is positioning for a long-term recovery in demand. That context matters when you are trying to decide whether now is the right moment or whether you should wait.
In my experience, waiting for the perfect market moment costs more than it saves. What matters more is coming in priced correctly, presented well, and represented by someone who knows how to close the kind of transaction you are dealing with.
I have been working this market for over 20 years. Independent broker, finance degree, MBA. If you want a straight read on where your property stands today, that conversation is free.
Jeffrey Kam, MBA Green Street Real Estate | DRE #01054411 | Pasadena, CA greenstreetrealestate.com

