SPORTS BUSINESS: Big Ten praises Spire Institute after track championships. PAGE 5
CRAIN’S LIST Largest commercial real estate brokerages. PAGE 14
CRAINSCLEVELAND.COM I MARCH 7, 2022
Homeowners
FLOODED
with investor inquiries Northeast Ohio’s housing market has become a mecca for investors, spurring a flood of solicitations to homeowners, landlords and tenants. Some of those messages come from real estate agents, fixand-flip investors or iBuyers. But many allcash overtures are the work of wholesalers, who put properties under contract and then market those contracts for sale, with the goal of earning a fee. Page 10
Rita Knight-Gray stands outside her home in Cleveland’s Glenville neighborhood, not far from University Circle. She’s started responding to unwanted real estate solicitations by saying that her asking price is $3.5 million. | GUS CHAN FOR CRAIN’S CLEVELAND BUSINESS
Here’s how you can help Ukraine from Cleveland
Investors eagerly buying Cuyahoga County homes
BY JUDY STRINGER
BY MICHELLE JARBOE
Igor Djurin was a “just a little baby” when his parents fled war-torn Yugoslavia in 1990 but said growing up as a refugee in a family stripped of its homeland makes him hypersensitive to the plight of Ukrainians. Djurin also operates Schnitz Ale Brewery in Parma, home to Ohio’s largest population of Ukrainians. So, when Parma’s Pokrova Ukrainian Catholic Church said late last month it would be collecting emergency items for refugees fleeing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, he didn’t hesitate to help. He hopped on Facebook and of-
fered up Schnitz Ale Brewery as a collection site. Community members responded by bringing in boxes and bags of warm clothes, food and medical supplies, which Djurin passed on to Pokrova volunteers for shipment to Poland refugee centers. “We will be looking for ways [we can] do more,” he said, “but this was our little part for now.” People and business all over Northeast Ohio are asking how they can do their “little part” as well, according to Andy Fedynsky, director of the Ukrainian Museum-Archives in Tremont. See UKRAINE on Page 17
NEWSPAPER
VOL. 43, NO. 9 l COPYRIGHT 2022 CRAIN COMMUNICATIONS INC. l ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
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Displaced Ukrainians disembark a train at a railway station in Lviv, Ukraine. | BLOOMBERG
THE
LAND SCAPE
Investors are snapping up a growing share of homes in Cuyahoga County, where various business entities accounted for one in five residential property purchases in 2020. A new research paper shows fundamental shifts in the real estate market, particularly in Cleveland and its close-lying suburbs. The housing collapse of 2007 to 2010 left Northeast Ohio awash in vacant and distressed properties. Now many of the places hit hardest during the Great Recession are ex-
periencing a surge in investor activity, fueled by cheap prices and strong rental demand. The Vacant and Abandoned Property Action Council, a civic group formed in the crucible of the foreclosure crisis, is sounding the alarm. Though members say they welcome responsible investors, they’re fed up with a rash of bad behavior — neglect that falls heavily on low-income, minority neighborhoods. “This is not an anti-investor paper. Period. What this is, I think, is a See INVESTORS on Page 16
A CRAIN’S CLEVELAND PODCAST
3/4/2022 2:12:28 PM