Real estate agents, demographers, and car salespeople across the country are noticing that Millennials are following in the foot steps of their parents to the suburbs, just in a delayed timeframe, Reuters reports.
An estimated 4.3 Millennials will turn 30 this year, and the number is set to jump to 4.6 million by 2020, which is the greatest number of adults in their early 30s than at any other time in U.S. history, an analysis of U.S. Census data by Wells Fargo found.
According to Reuters, fund managers are “increasingly buying home builders, mortgage lenders, and baby clothes makers that stand to benefit as Millennials spend less on themselves and transition to parenthood.”