Hi Firas,
first of all I would ask the interviewer to clarify whether the market size is in
- Dollar term
- Number of house sold (volume term)
Also when we say real estate, I would ask whether this include only new houses sold around the country or also the rent market.
Let us assume no rent market included
One approach ("top down") could be
- Start from US population
- Come up with a # of people x household
- # of houses = US population / # of people x household * (I am assuming a tiny percentage of people lives under a bridge etc... not uber precise)
- Now you should make an hypothesis about the % of house ownership in the US (lower than europe I guess) to segment the market of people that have a house
- YOu can now use the "useful lifetime" rule and come up with an avg. number of years in which people stick with the same house (you can segment population if a single number is too rough)
- House sold / bought every year = Total House owned in US (see above) / avg. # of years people stick with the same house
This is just the "real estate - buy a house" market. I think you can now imagine how to size the rent part
Alternative possibility is to start with population, segment by age and assing a # of house per age bracket (e.g. no age below 18) and the once again go through the house ownership / house renting % to get to the market size.
Hope this helps.
Write me if not super clear.
Regards,
Paul