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How many of these ARMS are out there and when do they adjust?
The huge massive majority of homes have been owned for a very long time, with lots of equity.
mell says
GNL says
How many of these ARMS are out there and when do they adjust?
Depends, most every month, quarter or year. Some every 3 or 5 years. Not an expert on ARMs, but my friend's one already reset to his dismay
Any idea of the % increase in payment?
The total value of us real estate as north of 40 trillion dollars. 108 billion is not even a rounding error. I am not deeply alarmed, not even mildly alarmed.
Ok, but how many arms readjusting (or %) would it take to cause problems? Even in 08ish, there were tons of homes already paid off, no?
Asset based loan. 40% LTV with a private lender. The borrower can use the cash out money however, s/he wishes.
zombie apocalypse
Onvacation says
Rubicon says
zombie apocalypse
Zombies aren't real
Boy, Lemme show ya
In the financial fraud crash of ’08, before walking away from their underwater home, people were buying the same model in the same development, at the readjusted market price, then walking away from the underwater home.
Eman says
Rubicon says
Onvacation says
Rubicon says
zombie apocalypse
Zombies aren't real
Boy, Lemme show ya
These are birth persons with bonus holes, not zombies.
Ah! My bad, how confusing!
Do you have a source for this?
Prices go down when supply goes up significantly, exceeding demand. You saw 4M active listings in 2008 and prices plummeted. We are at 1M active listings currently.
Until then, let’s follow the data.
Al_Sharpton_for_President says
In the financial fraud crash of ’08, before walking away from their underwater home, people were buying the same model in the same development, at the readjusted market price, then walking away from the underwater home.
Do you have a source for this? Do you know of a single instance of this actually occurring or are you just throwing shit against the wall? The reason I ask is because your claim would suggest that banks are more ignorant about the home lending process than joe sixpack who bought more house than he could afford but somehow had the financial acumen to outsmart his lender.
There has only been one major RE bubble fueled by loose lending. Even if you had bought during the peak of 2006 you would be doing well today.
“Because you CHOOSE to ignore history, it does not disappear. Housing busts go back to the 1800's at least in this country.”
In your lifetime, besides 2008, when was there another major housing bust?
Rubicon says
Prices go down when supply goes up significantly, exceeding demand. You saw 4M active listings in 2008 and prices plummeted. We are at 1M active listings currently.
Another great example of why the market will crash. Micro-focus instead of understanding the big picture of how central banking economies run. Central banking economies are built around a myriad of lies in order to disguise the theft being perpetrated. Prussian education is a big piece of this, because unlike Austrian economics, it's creates artificial silos where the big picture, and causation are lost as people muddle in mindless details. It requires our participation to succeed for any amount of time. But, as the system is designed to boom/bust as a key method of theft, this necessitates endless crashes.
Instead of reading RE articles, try reading Rothbard...
Joe sixpack seems to be doing quite well against the Banksters. He refinanced about $2.6 trillion of mortgages in 2020 & about $2.7 trillion in 2021. He has a 30 year fixed rate loan at 3% or less. The Banksters on the other hand are sitting on unrealized losses on the loans they bought during that time frame of about $520 billion. As far as those super intelligent, manipulators at the Federal Reserve, they are sitting on unrealized losses of about $1 trillion.
There is no IQ test to be a Bankster.
Until people realize that fiat is a scam and the road to ruin...
It's theft and we have people here who celebrate it?
Anyone want to explain the significance of "The yellow brick road"?
Nope. If a TBTF fails, it's gonna get Nationalized.
Misc says
Nope. If a TBTF fails, it's gonna get Nationalized.
Do you know what happens in those situations? Shareholders, at the least the big ones are made whole, but everyone else takes a bath. And nationalized is just another way to say perpetual bail-out. Amtrak is a great example.
Thank you. Looking at the charts on your link. I see higher highs and higher lows. Are you saying any pull back on the chart is a bust?
Any yes, I think looking at a timeframe that captures your lifetime matters. I want to raise kids and my dog in my own house with a yard, good location etc. I don’t care if there was a bust in the 1800’s or if the next bust will be in 2080. I also think about retirement. The rentals I own will secure a comfortable retirement for me and provides generational wealth. Waiting for a bust like 2008 might mean I never buy.
GNL says
Until people realize that fiat is a scam and the road to ruin...
It's theft and we have people here who celebrate it?
Anyone want to explain the significance of "The yellow brick road"?
I’m not smart enough to know fiat is a scam. I’m not sure who celebrate it. I don’t know what the yellow brick road is, but I know I’m not a buyer in the current market. I will focus on what I can control. I can’t control what the market and the Fed will do.
If going by historical data and charts, all previous cycles seemed to make higher highs before a correction/drop. The current cycle hasn’t made a higher high….yet. Does this mean the housing has more upside before we see the drop NuttBoxer?
Eman says
If going by historical data and charts, all previous cycles seemed to make higher highs before a correction/drop. The current cycle hasn’t made a higher high….yet. Does this mean the housing has more upside before we see the drop NuttBoxer?
Not sure what site you used, but I see a top in April of last year, and a downward trend since then. That top was indeed higher than the top in '06. Pretty easy to see using the link I provided and the 30 year view, though you could certainly start at January 2006.
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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.