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It does for OpenDoor in this case.
2 price drops in 15 days? No patience at all.
Is America on the verge of a house price collapse? Prices could crash by up to 20% and homes are overvalued by as much as 72%, expert warns
Boise, Idaho; Charlotte, North Carolina and Austin, Texas were the three most overvalued areas in the United States, according to Moody's Analytics
Moody's found that found that 183 of the nation's 413 largest regional housing markets are 'overvalued' by more than 25 percent
If a recession hits, house prices in those 183 regions could plummet by as much as 20 percent, Moody's predicted
If there is not a recession, they will still fall 10-15 percent, the analysts believe - echoing other experts
The housing inventory is at its highest level since April 2009, as sellers struggle to get rid of their property because mortgages have become more expensive
Mortgage rates have nearly doubled since January, rising to 5.13 percent for a 30-year loan as of last week, according to Freddie Mac
Boise, Idaho; Charlotte, North Carolina and Austin, Texas were the three most overvalued areas in the United States, according to Moody's Analytics
Cap rate is collapsing for San Jose market.
This means an investor would get more ROI just by parking their dough in t-bills than buying and renting housing here.
https://youtu.be/IZ65sM01K6U
Disclosure: All of the above should be outright false according to the PatNet Real Estate 'expert' community.
More pain is likely coming. On its second-quarter conference call, even Chief Executive Rich Barton
In what can only be categorized as a shocking development, Zillow Group announced Thursday that Spencer Rascoff is stepping down as the company’s CEO, a position he’s held since 2010.
No. It isn't disingenuous because investor lending costs has to be deducted from that income.
ZipperTits says
No. It isn't disingenuous because investor lending costs has to be deducted from that income.
True, one way or another, the buyer has to carry the cost of buying the house.
There are two sources of income from owning a house:
1. getting rent (or avoiding paying rent)
2. land appreciation (the building itself always falls in value over time as nature rots it away)
If the land is not appreciating, then the only income is the rent. If that rent does not cover the expenses of owning, then it's a loss.
In this case, the rental income from investing in the house is 26101 / 1619785 = 0.016, which is 1.6%
If the land is not appreciating, it's a bad investment because that's a shitty return.
Income from land appreciation...
What seems weird to me, is that, what if I only have $50,000 of my own $$ invested in the house via down-payment? The return is pretty good, no?
It's very much like buying stock on margin.
I suppose the whole game comes down to how much the Fed is going to bail out land owners and the banks at the expense of people who own dollars when land values fall.
The Fed Chair, Mr. Powell, said all the parts out loud at the annual Jackson Hole banker meet-up last week: look out below, we’ve decided to take this sucker down (in the immortal words of George W. Bush), since pretending to stoke prosperity via Modern Monetary Theory only results in, duh, ruinous inflation. This raises the question, though, as to which is more politically damaging: inflation or depression? It is really only the difference between having plenty of worthless money or having no money at all.
More price drops around Santa Cruz. Now, when that beach front 3,000 sq. ft. bungalow drops to 250K, I'm buying.
fake a dirty bomb attack
Cap rate is collapsing for San Jose market.
This means an investor would get more ROI just by parking their dough in t-bills than buying and renting housing here.
https://youtu.be/IZ65sM01K6U
Disclosure: All of the above should be outright false according to the PatNet Real Estate 'expert' community.
Eman says
Which institutions do we know who bought rentals in Denver and San Jose markets with 1.6% and 3% cap rate?
The ones who bought in those markets. Was fine when interest rates were low. But not now when they are high.
https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/x0ruq1/no_one_showed_up_at_our_open_house/
No one showed up at our open house!
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https://finance.yahoo.com/news/pimco-kiesel-called-housing-top-160339396.html?source=patrick.net
Bond manager Mark Kiesel sold his California home in 2006, when he presciently predicted the housing bubble would pop. He bought again in 2012, after U.S. prices fell more than 30% and found a floor.
Now, after a record surge in prices, Kiesel says the time to sell is once again at hand.