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What drives me crazy is that people started seeing their primary residence as an investment, rather than simply a place to live
We bought a house in Idaho. Not sure yet what to do with CA one. Can rent it out, or sell it and not have a mortgage on the new purchase.
The Federal Reserve can’t control it anymore. All they can do is stop printing money. They can’t raise rates significantly enough to control inflation. There’s too much money out there buying up things. And the national debt is 30 trillion.
If you rent it out, and for some reason you decide to return to California, you will have a place to land. Someone who posts and comments on Patrick's site relocated from California (maybe San Diego?) to relocate to Arizona only to return here.
As a real estate flipper
If you rent it out
Are We Headed Into Another Real Estate Collapse?
Is there really any doubt in your mind?
Are We Headed Into Another Real Estate Collapse?
Is there really any doubt in your mind?
For me personally the price of entry has always been too high for me to dip my toe into the waters of real estate investing.
If you want rental property do it in a red state.
zzyzzx saysAre We Headed Into Another Real Estate Collapse?
Is there really any doubt in your mind?
When? How?
When? How?
But if a tenant can pay the carrying cost
probable outcomes.
Fortwaynemobile saysWhy take equity out vs just getting a loan?
Take equity out = do a cash out refinance aka getting a new loan with cash (equity) out.
With single units, like a condo or SFH, the rent/price ratio is not favorable. Duplex to 4plex get a little better ratio. To get more favorable ratio, one has to look at 5+ unit apartment. In fact, the more units/building, the better the ratio. I’m looking to scale up to 20 units rather than staying at 6-12 units.
Congrats on the house in Idaho. 🚀🚀
WineHorror1 saysWhen? How?
IMO, the combination of the ending of the foreclosure and eviction moratoriums and higher interest rates is going to be the catalyst for a housing downturn at some point. This is going to free up a lot of units, but it will take time.
I thought the moratorium were over. If not, why not?
As a real estate flipper
Eman saysAs a real estate flipper
If I were flipping, I wouldnt be using that calc either. At least not using it conventionally.
But the calc isn't meant to aid flipping decisions - it's meant to compare renting vs buying for typical cases where the owner stays put for multiple years, and to also help you understand how heavily each of the factors influence the result. I think it works pretty well for that.
Maybe you haven't looked at it lately, but it has many inputs, and all are adjustable, so using local market parameters is not only possible, but a centerpiece of the calc.
Someone posted a house in Sunnyvale sold for $2.8M. The guesstimate is the house rents for around $4.2k/month. Let’s say the seller came to you and said he’d sell it to you for $1.8M, what would you say? Also, if the housing market were to drop/crash, do you, or anyone here, think this house would drop below $1.8M?
As long as they don't tear out your walls to get pipe and copper wire or blow up the garage with a meth lab.
Yes, this issue was discussed on the board last week. Let’s see how it goes.
Yeah, not to own rental property, but as a landing spot if he or his family changes their minds.
I believe a new law was just passed (or is about to) where in multi-family your tenants can ban together and say, "The rent is too damn high", and the state will simply take it the fuck away from you. Oh, here it is:
Somehow, this law will not apply to Blackrock.
But in California once you start renting out your place your disposition changes and you lose all sorts of rights. Like who you can sell it to for instance if you ever want to do that.
I'd consider 1.8 a big discount, and would buy it.
Big money has deep pockets, and they can win by appeal to higher courts on stupid rules established by crazy SF lefties.
I personally don't see that strategy lasting though. We're seeing tons of crazy shit at the Federal level these past few years I never would have imagined would happen.
"San Francisco to seize all rental property"
I personally don't see that strategy lasting though.
I do a cash out refinance, get all my equity out of the building, and let the tenants pay-off the building. Rinse and repeat.
Given the out of control gov. spending, its hard to expect downturn in prices for longer periods.
https://realwealth.com/learn/housing-market-predictions/?source=patrick.net
11 More Housing Market Predictions for 2022, 2023, 2024 & 2025
Looking for a real estate forecast for the next 5 years? You’re in luck. This is the only article on the web that includes real estate market predictions beyond 2022. And we go even further than that, outlining our predictions through the year 2025!
Here are my top 11 predictions for the housing market for 2022, 2023, 2024 and 2025:
Low mortgage interest rates through 2021
Home prices should continue to rise in many markets
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I see most people here now post about politics and the Wuhan Flu. I'm in agreement with most here: I'm a former liberal who voted for Bill Clinton but I voted for Donald J. Trump in 2016 and in 2020.
Today the world is in crisis and real estate prices in the US are crazy high.
I have friends who have just put their homes on the market. And others, who should know better, who are awaiting real estate lotto to be 'able to purchase' homes in communities in Arizona and Florida. I don't think I've heard people speak about waiting in line to buy up a tract house in a gated community since 2006. What gives?
https://www.realtor.com/news/trends/how-record-high-gas-prices-soaring-inflation-will-affect-homebuyers-and-owners/?source=patrick.net