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WOW! The UNtrustworthy are certainly in control of what information is apparent to the people!
Say hey! This was in the Wall Street Journal on March 30, 1999. Note "... how much it will buy."
Holy cow/interesting/compelling ...!
And where is it up to date??? Right here ... see the first chart shown in this thread.
Recent Dow day is Friday, February 7, 2014 __ Level is 101.2
WOW! It is hideous that this is hidden! Is there any such "Homes, Inflation Adjusted"? Yes! This was in the New York Times on August 27, 2006:
And up to date (by me) is here:
http://patrick.net/?p=1219038&c=999083#comment-999083
WOW! The UNtrustworthy are certainly in control of what information is apparent to the people!
To those that take a mortgage & then rent,how long before you build any equity? How much of the payment is interest? Oh,that's right after 5 years you paid $3.75 in principal.
Plus, you get to spend a bunch of money ripping out and replacing the carpet and appliances the tenants trashed as well as having to paint all the walls.... And that's before you have to fix/replace any of the major systems in the shack like HVAC, roof, Bathrooms, Kitchens, etc.
Yep, WINNING!!!
OH, but the landlord gets to keep the gain in equity... Sure, ask the landlords during the 2008 to 2012 time period how well that worked out...
Why in the hell would you bother with housing when you can sit behind a keyboard and ride the Dow Jones up up and away.
Why in the hell would you bother with housing when you can sit behind a keyboard and ride the Dow Jones up up and away.
Crap.... Now you tell me.....
How many rental homes did you buy?
What a relief, to know that you are never too old to steal vast sums bankster style.
Moron just didn't know how to get away with it.
Judges are kissing cousins to REALTORS, the judge probably admired his spirit, but gaviled him anyway.
Why in the hell would you bother with housing when you can sit behind a keyboard and ride the Dow Jones up up and away.
Crap.... Now you tell me.....
How many rental homes did you buy?
Ha Ha... None... I'm not that stupid...
I just bought the one I'm living in :)
I should of just put all the money I spent on down payments, closing costs and upgrades into the stock market.... I could be rich!!!!
Yep, Google and Apple when the Fed started pumping QE in would have done you well. Waste of time dealing with realtors, lier banks, lier inspectors, and sketchy tenants. Don't fight the Fed is what the big boys knew on Wall Street.
A real judge would do that anyway after accepting a massive bribe and a blow job.
Good. Eventually corporate healthcare will no longer be common. Then we can cast off the legacy of WWII and move to single payer.
4. In 5 to 10 years, house prices will remain at this exact pricing, yet incomes will double based on how the financial system is acting.
I'm pretty sure that incomes in the US aren't going to double in the next 5-10 years.
That's very strange. Every small businessperson I've talked to or read about generally seems very happy *after* implementation of the Affordable Care Act.
What used to happen is that employers' insurance premiums would skyrocket if even only one of their employees (or their spouses/kids) within the group plan got cancer or some other expensive illness. Now, under the Affordable Care Act, these premium rises don't occur.
That's not to say some of the same people didn't bitch about the ACA before it actually was implemented, but most of them are quite happy with the results.
A lot of this stuff is non-sense. I heard the CEO of an electric motor manufacturer complaining about environmental regulations that raised the cost of business. Really? If you're a quality manufacturer of electric motors, you should be ecstatic about environmental regulations that will require more people to become your customer. If you make crappy electric motors, well, you deserve to lose money anyway.
Some of these idiots read from the same script, no matter what the issue at hand is.
I think Japan's "Lost Decade" tells us a lot about violent real estate speculation and its effect on the economy at large. Since Japan had it's hay day in real estate in the late 80's the economy including the price of all goods and real estate has remained stagnant for 20+ years.
People use that example all the time. Isn't that basically what people argue it should be anyway except with a version where rising prices are offset by rising salaries? The result in terms of actual cost to individuals is the same. And the way people talk about Japan real estate makes it seem as if it's very affordable because of this drop and subsequent stagnation. The truth is very different in the metropolitan areas. You pay more and get a lot less in Japan than you do in the US. Yes their economy took a hit, but the real estate aspect is hardly analogous to the US.
donjumpsuit says
So if more rentals are built, and more investors rent properties, supply will increase, and demand will decrease bringing prices down to the level where supply meets demand.
Maybe they will, maybe they won't. Maybe these rentals won't be built or at least not in the numbers you are hoping for. Maybe house prices will continue to steadily rise (it's not impossible - house prices have yet to collapse in places like the UK despite the enormous run up in prices), and so force more and more people to remain as renters. Maybe those that are built will be balanced by a rise in population.
Rents may well look better value in some areas than buying. Just look at London. But people have been saying that for nearly two decades in that city and look how well those who bought instead of rented have made out, so sticking to renting by simply looking at respective costs isn't necessarily going to be the smartest move - as has also been demonstrated to many in the BA over the last 15+ years.
Also, all this speculation on why homes are not moving off the market even though inventory is low? How about a simple answer? The prices are still too high and too risky.
Another little small detail, you need a job and income to pay for it and be able to qualify for a mortgage!!
The days of putting your down payment on your EBT card are over...
True, but we have the jobs, and we still wouldn't do it. Too risky. We worked too hard to gamble it away.
That's very strange. Every small businessperson I've talked to or read about generally seems very happy *after* implementation of the Affordable Care Act.
The article said 44% are dissatisfied, not everyone. Go back and read it again.
4. In 5 to 10 years, house prices will remain at this exact pricing, yet incomes will double based on how the financial system is acting.
I'm pretty sure that incomes in the US aren't going to double in the next 5-10 years.
I would bet significant money they won't......................Anyone want to take the other side of the bet?
Nearly one-third of firms may either terminate employees or hire fewer people in the future as a direct result of ACA.â€
Let's underscore the word MAY there.
Next year I MAY put off buying a new car, or I might not.
If 1/3rd of firms cut people or hours it will show in employment figures.
Let's underscore the word MAY there.
The impact on the real economy is astonishing. Nearly one-third of firms may either terminate employees or hire fewer people in the future as a direct result of ACA.
Yea, I was curious how the impact "IS" astonishing when people "MAY" hire fewer people. Anyone care to explain how that works?
OK Who had Cluster Fuck?! Anyone have "Cluster Fuck" for the "I bet Obamacare turns into..." Pool?
Ben and Jerry's used to have an awesome ice cream called Clusterfluff. The the censors spoke up and they changed it to the less offensive "what a cluster".
Obamacare= what a cluster
The point is a whole generation has systematically been priced out unless they are gamblers or part of the 1%. My dad had hardships, he is a boomer. He bought his house while still in his master's program and taking care of his small son who is blind and has autism. He also had to refinance his house to survive after IBM gave him "early retirement" and he was going through a divorce. No one is dismissing the previous generation's individual hardships. I would argue though that the generation before the boomers are the ones who are truly entitled to make an argument about hardships as a whole; as a generation. The point is that the last generation, like the generation before that, and the generation before that, bought for less than twice the median income. This current generation has never had that luxury. My dad was the first to admit that he would have never considered buying a home that was even four times his income, he considered that for fools and gamblers. He admits this new generation should not buy, and he feels it's a shame that a whole generation of young families have to struggle every month to make the rent or mortgage. He also thinks that it seems to him that every family needs both parents working just to survive. He only knew a couple of families that needed both parents to work in his day. My dad thinks that this whole set up is asking more of the current generation than the boomers would have felt was okay for them. That's the issue. He wants a better life for his kids and grandchildren and the new system gives him very few options to help. Like most boomers his wealth is tied up in a house that doesn't make sense to sell. He can't help his children out of this mess, like a lot of loving boomer parents. At least my dad cares what is happening to young families, its not all about him. He would trade homes going back to twice the median income (even his own home that is now worth two million something) to give young families a real chance. He only wants the same chances for this generation that he had, that is all, nothing more.
Good discussion. I have never considered buying so far, although it isn't a money issue. While rents are high as well, you can get decent deals outside of downtown for yourself and family, and you always have the possibility to move. I have put in a bid back in the earlier days (when the bubble was building up) once or twice, but when the agent told me not to offend the seller with what I think the place was worth, I severed ties with the housing cabal and haven't looked back since ;) This country would be better off without realtors (6% for what?) , without the NAR, and without section 8 housing.
This country would be better off without realtors (6% for what?)
This is a valid question that I have asked before. At this point with the online tools available we can buy and sell just as we do with automobiles.
I have to laugh when people will hire agents to sell their homes in places like the bay area where housing is typically hot. Why would you dish out 6% on a 1 million + home sale when the place will basically sell itself due to the market?
You're missing the key point which is that housing prices have risen faster than wages for several decades. As it happened, most people who bought a house during that time saw their equity increase and therefore were able to upgrade to more expensive homes. That's especially true for boomers.
That makes no sense. If house prices go up, then the price of more expensive houses goes up too. Prices going up does not help "move up" buyers at all. In fact, it discourages move up buyers, at least in CA. When they sell, they will lose their low Prop 13 limited tax assessment.
Can you all spell MISpricing?
What do you all call this?
http://www.showrealhist.com/yTRIAL.html
Intellectual honesty is lacking. I think that the dominant use of the term is here: "What is intellectual honesty's cash flow?"
Do you know folks who had kids to have somebody to sell bubble-high to?
Her Royal Highness,
Think you have it bad? Think the young new-comers from the heartland America, or even just inland California, or from overseas . . . all having no old man, from whom the lucky ones like you can inherit a house in coastal California.
High real estate price is fundamentally a transfer of wealth from new-comers to those who are already there. Your family, having the older generation already bought the house decades ago, is the beneficiary.
IMHO, except for the few notable coastal metro markets that people are obsessed with, much of the country's real estate price has corrected.
The low ownership rate among the younger generation is not mostly due to house sale price per se (outside the nutty coastal metro markets, they are justifiable by rents), but probably due to:
1. career mobility; people switch jobs more frequently nowadays. Paying 6% every time gets expensive and gets old fast.
2. other bills to pay: student loans, cell phone bills, cable bills, etc.
3. parents have spare bedrooms, and are willing to provide housing for free or collecting rent from kids. The stigma of becoming dependent is going away in the society
4. of course, if one is a dependent of the state, collecting Supplemental Income etc. from government aid, then owning a house is out of the question.
Car ownership rate among the young is also way down.
Her Royal Highness,
Ah, so that's what hrh stands for? And people say you cannot learn a thing on patnet!
IMHO, except for the few notable coastal metro markets that people are obsessed with, much of the country's real estate price has corrected.
What's your definition of "corrected"??
Having reverted to mean. Of course, sometimes over-corrections can take place, and it did for some/many parts of the country. Do we get another chance at buying at over-corrected prices before the next bubble phase? We shall wait and see.
Of course this doesn't apply to the select coastal metro market that never really corrected.
WARPED, DISTORTED, MANIPULATED, FLIPPED HOUSING MARKET
Not that we need anymore evidence that you’re screwed if you bought a house in the last 14 years.
Her Royal Highness,
Think you have it bad? Think the young new-comers from the heartland America, or even just inland California, or from overseas . . . all having no old man, from whom the lucky ones like you can inherit a house in coastal California.
High real estate price is fundamentally a transfer of wealth from new-comers to those who are already there. Your family, having the older generation already bought the house decades ago, is the beneficiary.
I don't think I have it bad, I think a whole generation of young families have it bad. I think the system is a mess and the inflated housing market is a mess. A lot of my generation live with their parents, but not because they are dependent, but because they have no choice. Both parents work at decent paying jobs in most cases and can not afford the insane rent around here or a mortgage.
IMHO, except for the few notable coastal metro markets that people are obsessed with, much of the country's real estate price has corrected.
It is not corrected until it is less or about twice the median income.
The low ownership rate among the younger generation is not mostly due to house sale price per se (outside the nutty coastal metro markets, they are justifiable by rents), but probably due to:
1. career mobility; people switch jobs more frequently nowadays. Paying 6% every time gets expensive and gets old fast.
Career mobility is not always about the luxury of changing to a new job. This generation is rarely offered a pension or any incentive to stay in a job. Most of my friend's career mobility is based on downsizing within the company and not their choice.
2. other bills to pay: student loans, cell phone bills, cable bills, etc.
Except for the student loans, these wouldn't even make a noticeable dent. I went to school on scholarship and choose not to have a cell phone or cable. I know a lot of other people from my generation in the same situation.
3. parents have spare bedrooms, and are willing to provide housing for free or collecting rent from kids. The stigma of becoming dependent is going away in the society
.
Because people realize that it's insane to buy a home ten times your income. If living with family keeps a young couple working two good jobs out of the homeless shelter I have no cause to judge them, or label them dependent.4. of course, if one is a dependent of the state, collecting Supplemental Income etc. from government aid, then owning a house is out of the question.
People living with their parents are far from welfare leeches. They are often professionals, teachers or other skilled workers.
5.Car ownership rate among the young is also way down.
So what? I have a lot of friends who bike to work? That's a bad thing? I know a lot of couples who have one car between them, seems terribly inconvenient to me, but they are trying to save, so more power to them. We save by not buying much and not having cable or a cell phone, they save by not having a car; when the cost of living is tight, and the housing market is inflated and rents are insane, then it's save or be left out in the cold, literally.
Can you all spell MISpricing?
What do you all call this?
http://www.showrealhist.com/yTRIAL.html
Intellectual honesty is lacking. I think that the dominant use of the term is here: "What is intellectual honesty's cash flow?"
Do you know folks who had kids to have somebody to sell bubble-high to?
Overpricing of homes and stocks has evidently supported a LOT of overconsuming, see here:
http://patrick.net/?p=1230886
The people have been drunk. Now they have sobered up a bit. The 'establishment' speaks little truth, but does seek to pass the people more bottles. Wise up!
2. Even when they can theoretically save for downpayment, they choose to spend money on entertainment/going out and as a result don't save.
Some do, but the majority don't. The biggest spenders I know, especially on frivolous entertainment and eating out are over 55.
Well, maybe in the SFBA but what I'm seeing in Texas is if the young get a spare dime - they spend it and spend it FAST. Eating out, because preparing dinner at home has become a lost art. Got to go see the latest movie, because ... well, I'm bored and just because I can. Buying DVD's, because ... well, because I like to watch the same movie 50 times (boy, that one I never figured out). Spending it on iTunes. A newer car, even though the one you've got is fine and fixing it would cost 1/20th (or less) of what a new car costs. Going to concerts, sports games, clubbing, you-name-it, all of which cost from $50 and go up, but we're bored and ... we just want to. Lots of shills out there crying, singing, competing for your money - and young people fall for it. PT Barnum, said there is one born every minute; I think the new reality is there are several dozen born every second.
If you own a house and profited these past few years, the question for you is: why do you hate young people?
The way this system works is very immoral.
Nonsense!!!! The way this system works is called LIFE. The system doesn't owe you ANYTHING. I got my teeth kicked in, more than once. And I did what I had to do to pick myself up off the ground and face life and take it on again. I lost a good paying job (due to recession), had to sell my house (twice). Had to move 2500 miles, had to moving in with relatives while I got back to getting an upper hand on life. I've had to live on less than $100 for two weeks for food AND gas. I've had to decide to not go to a doctor and not take meds because the choice was that or rent.
My life still is far from ideal, but it's also far from those conditions. I picked up a house that was at the bottom of its assessed value cycle; and it has since appreciated to 50% more. BUT, I'm also driving two (paid off) vehicles which are 14 and 12 years old and have over 200K miles on them.
We make choices. If you're choice is to stay in the SFBA area for WHATEVER the reason, then good for you, but don't say the playing field isn't level. Circumstances change, the world changes, we DON'T owe you (or anyone else) ANYTHING just because you take up space.
Sounds fair - how could he have known that they weren't robbing him? unfortunately, he'll be found guilty of the lesser charges and get as much jail time. Unless they can find a reason to get the charges tossed out.
Also, all this speculation on why homes are not moving off the market even though inventory is low? How about a simple answer? The prices are still too high and too risky.
Bingo!!!
I rent a condo in San Jose for 2k a month. The same condo is selling for 500K, plus you have a $350/month HOH. Why buy? Even with 20% down it is way cheaper to rent per month and you dont have to worry about losing your down payment or ending up upside down in the house.
It's a good thing we have these no-knock SWAT raids to prevent someone flushing a marijuana plant down the toilet right?
Gah, what idiot judges approve these warrants? Oh right.... Texas.
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