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Granted, I'm not in CA but I refied in 2020. Have a sub 3% 30 yr fixed. Not planning on moving, but even if something came up that I had to move I wouldn't sell; With what I pay oer month, I can rent it out and have it be cash flow positive.
I think that the hidden story. As hosing went crazy, rental prices also shot up (at least in my area). The place I rented a decade ago now is more per month than the monthly carrying cost for my house.
Granted, I'm not in CA but I refied in 2020. Have a sub 3% 30 yr fixed. Not planning on moving, but even if something came up that I had to move I wouldn't sell; With what I pay oer month, I can rent it out and have it be cash flow positive.
I think that the hidden story. As hosing went crazy, rental prices also shot up (at least in my area). The place I rented a decade ago now is more per month than the monthly carrying cost for my house.
In certain markets you would have to be a masochist to want to be a landlord, so at least some of those people will sell anyway.
I don't think housing prices will go to the moon.
Rubicon says
Rents have room to go up.
Rent prices depend on incomes not carrying costs.
GNL says
Rubicon says
Rents have room to go up.
Rent prices depend on incomes not carrying costs.
They say that about housing prices too...
Meaning demand for renting goes up. Meaning rent prices are likely to go up.
BayArea says
Never in my wildest dreams did I think that rates would go from under 3% to nearly 7% and prices would hold here in the Bay Area. But here we are.
This makes 2 of us. Simply mind boggling.
i can’t explain this insanity other than too much money floating around.
Housing and stocks should have crashed multiple times the last ten years
If inflation. Is "only" 4% then you can't expect a 5% raise, unless you have a solid union behind you.
Inflation. If your dollar goes down by % in value hard assets go up %. Housing and stocks should have crashed multiple times the last ten years but at each point market was manipulated by rates and inflation.
No desperate sellers... home builders are careful to not add a glut of housing ...
And they are being forced to lower their prices or finance with rate downs
Do you know a better economy or country than the US?
One key to success is to look at what’s possible. Aim high and work hard. Bitching and complaining is easier than getting your lazy ass up - i get that. Some
Get up in the morning blaming others. I get up in the morning seeing lots of opportunities to make it big in this awesome country. Let’s go 🇺🇸
Bitches and complainers usually do the blue collar jobs. Someone has to do it until we can replace them with robots.
One key to success is to look at what’s possible. Aim high and work hard. Bitching and complaining is easier than getting your lazy ass up - i get that. Some
Get up in the morning blaming others. I get up in the morning seeing lots of opportunities to make it big in this awesome country. Let’s go 🇺🇸
Bitches and complainers usually do the blue collar jobs. Someone has to do it until we can replace them with robots.
This country is sinking like a turd but who cares as long as its better than the rest. LMAO
Sry bud, wasn’t meant as gaslighting. Just some good advice / life lesson.
GNL says
This country is sinking like a turd but who cares as long as its better than the rest. LMAO
There are ways to notice if not measure this such as crime stats (assuming they are comprehensive and authentic) as well as standard of living metrics ike following Rent to Household Income Ratio.
Are things that we took for granted such as reliable electricity and a good doctor something of the past ?
Are there rolling blackouts ? Is it hard to get an appointment to a good family doctor ?
It's the commenters who sing about lollipops lasting forever who I look at as polyannas. No bueno. IMO
I'm generally negative, but when you look at the broad picture, our situation ain't bad.
And I'm still waiting for the car market bubble to implode.
Probably just a few elections and a generation away from losing our most important constitutional rights, our freedoms, and our national identity. It's not me I'm scared for...its my kids.
WookieMan says
I'm generally negative, but when you look at the broad picture, our situation ain't bad.
We are, however, in a rapid political and economic decline, the rate of which is both amazing and terrifying at the same time. Probably just a few elections and a generation away from losing our most important constitutional rights, our freedoms, and our national identity. It's not me I'm scared for...its my kids.
And I'm still waiting for the car market bubble to implode.
Not concerned right?
https://twitter.com/ppv_tahoe/status/1664475915886141440
To be followed up with vigilantism? Won't effect you, right?
https://twitter.com/RobberyFaiI/status/1682848614660587520
Not concerned right?
https://twitter.com/ppv_tahoe/status/1664475915886141440
To be followed up with vigilantism? Won't effect you, right?
https://twitter.com/RobberyFaiI/status/1682848614660587520
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But despite this collapse in buyer demand, home prices have remained resilient, only declining by 1% YoY on a national basis, and up to 15% in the hardest hit markets. To date, the decline in the Housing Market registers more as a modest correction rather than a crash.
This slow pace of initial price declines is now leading many homebuyers and real estate investors to believe that the Housing Market won't ever crash, and that we'll be stuck with high prices into the foreseeable future.
Is this true? Well, let's look into the data, step by step, so you as a homebuyer or investor can uncover truth about when this Housing Market will crash.
8 data points
https://www.reventure.app/blog/why-the-us-housing-market-hasnt-crashed-yet-repeat-of-2008