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They were much better days--50% of the population didn't expect the other 50% to support them. Also, if all you had at retirement was $100K, put in a 6% CD would produce about $500 a month risk free income that would be spent and taxed. Zero % interest rates were kept around so long no one remembers when they were 5%-6% and zero seems normal now.
passbook savings were 6%
https://www.reddit.com/r/REBubble/comments/ywrvxp/no_shame/
I just put an offer in on a house and it got accepted same day. It was an Open Door house and I got it for $70k less than what they paid for it in May ($130k less than what it was listed for in June).
https://www.reddit.com/r/REBubble/comments/ywrvxp/no_shame/
I just put an offer in on a house and it got accepted same day
RWSGFY says
https://www.reddit.com/r/REBubble/comments/ywrvxp/no_shame/
I just put an offer in on a house and it got accepted same day
hmmm no counter offer. Means they paid too much.
Why are rents going down?
Rents are starting to fall across the US — and they're set to drop even more in 2023
why is there less rental demand?
DD214 says
Rents are starting to fall across the US — and they're set to drop even more in 2023
Yes, but why is there less rental demand?
Yes, but why is there less rental demand?
(NewsNation) — Many Americans have hit a brick wall post-graduation, struggling to find jobs, even with a college degree; while others are struggling financially due to student loan debt and looking for affordable rent. This has led to an increase in “boomerang kids” moving back home with their parents.
“It’s called a ‘boomerang kid’ — that’s someone who leaves home and then comes back,” Stacy Kaiser, a psychotherapist, explained. “I am seeing more of that than ever before.”
The start of the pandemic triggered a massive wave of boomerang kids returning home, and now an estimated 67% of that group are still at home.
DD214 says
Rents are starting to fall across the US — and they're set to drop even more in 2023
Yes, but why is there less rental demand?
ad says
Mark Zuckerberg said today "he was wrong" as far as managing Meta's finances and announced layoffs of 13% of its workforce.
Meta's H-1B layoffs challenge visa holders and U.S. workers
[Laid-off H-1B workers have] virtually no bargaining power with prospective employers. And [they] will make huge sacrifices just to stay in the country legally.
Ron Hira - Associate professor of political science, Howard University
https://www.techtarget.com/searchhrsoftware/news/252527158/Metas-H-1B-layoffs-challenge-visa-holders-and-US-workers
Quiet quitting and actual quitting. "Kids" are moving back home.
Meta's H-1B layoffs challenge visa holders and U.S. workers
[Laid-off H-1B workers have] virtually no bargaining power with prospective employers. And [they] will make huge sacrifices just to stay in the country legally.
Ron Hira - Associate professor of political science, Howard University
Its not laying off H1-B visas which most likely are software engineers and coders.
Really?
You know this?
Do you have boots on the ground at Meta?
ad says
Its not laying off H1-B visas which most likely are software engineers and coders.
Really?
You know this?
Do you have boots on the ground at Meta?
Besides, regardless of whom they lay off, a large cohort of H1-s leaving the country (Bay Area) is a large cohort of renters who won't any longer be paying the high rents in the Bay Area. I could take you through neighborhoods of beautiful, pricey massive rental apartment complexes SJ that are expat communities of India. Walked through them many times on my cardio strolls around the city. You'll stand out as the haolie, bro.
People will be making fun of Facebook in time in the same way we ONCE did about Yahoo! and more recently MySpace.
I'm not haolie, boy. My family is from Colombia.
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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.