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You guys are way out of touch with reality when it comes to our(almost everyone else's) experience.
What I recounted is all SoCal, but last time I checked, California has one of the worst public school systems, so "flyover" is probably kicking your ass. In fact, I went to school in Indiana and Michigan, and my education and quality of instructors was vastly superior to what I've seen on the coast.
Are you aware California mandated curriculum change in 2013 to push perverted authors, and expend sex-ed to include un-natural acts? That currently they are attempting to usurp school boards and control all curriculum decisions from Sacramento(likely to due to pushback over same perverted, and hatred spewing indoctrination attempts). That a Riverside county school board expelled a high ranking state rep when he went over his time fighting to prevent parents from being informed when their kids express a desire to perform self-mutilation via evil plastic surgeons?
Your good public school is a unicorn, and one that will soon be shot if the state gets their way.
Reagan was right. Eliminate federal funding of education, and let communities decide for themselves
Here it is:
The question would be why new houses sell for less than existing.
I read somewhere that buyers tend to be on the market because they are looking at a lot of properties. This was said be true both in rising and falling markets. In rising markets you see a ton of bids on a house which may indicate that the seller could have listed it for more. In falling markets you see a lot of sellers turning down offers or sitting on a property for months trying to get the price that the place down the street sold for a year or two ago.
The argument would be that the new home builder being a forced seller, if they are taking less than the home owner who is not a forced seller, is a leading indicator of a falling market.
The question would be why new houses sell for less than existing.
Again, in my East Coast FL area, the stubborn ass old home owners - and I'm talking 1200 sq ft early-mid 60s spacerace boom houses on 1/5th acre, carport (no garage), a 2 bedroom with the sunroom enclosed (badly), with HVAC often added later and poorly (ie enclosed sunroom only has one small vent, will be 5-10F hotter than the rest of house) - $280-299k.
VERSUS
Brand new DR Horton $281-306k for genuine 3 bedrooms with another 200 sq ft under air (1400-1600) a decent sized master suite with walk-in closets, new everything inc. built in USB ports, brand new and not undersized later added Central HVAC, roof, etc. AND the Builders unlike the homeloaners/inheritance kids are covering closing costs. Granted, they're zero lots, maybe 6000 sq ft total, but they come with 2-car garages.
I still just can't imagine paying north of $2000/month for a 3 bedroom/2 bath house or having to come up with ~$50-60k down.
Here ya go
I saw a plot on PDW showing the median price of new houses dropped below the median price of used houses for the first time ever.
I can't find it now and am not sure if it was legit.
Patrick says
Good. It is about time that borrowers, and not savers, pay the price for all that irresponsible borrowing.
https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/15b8lwk/tales_from_a_401k_administrator/
TL;DR- Hardship withdrawals are up to pay mortgages.
1337irr says
https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/15b8lwk/tales_from_a_401k_administrator/
TL;DR- Hardship withdrawals are up to pay mortgages.
What makes you think these people don’t use hardship as an excuse to take money out of their 401k and gamble on the stock market options?
Eman says
1337irr says
https://www.reddit.com/r/wallstreetbets/comments/15b8lwk/tales_from_a_401k_administrator/
TL;DR- Hardship withdrawals are up to pay mortgages.
What makes you think these people don’t use hardship as an excuse to take money out of their 401k and gamble on the stock market options?
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/foreclosures-rising-experts-means-housing-180030618.html
It’s sad that our Fed is reactive rather than proactive. The next time we hit recession, they’ll cut Fed fund rate down to 1% again, and the cycle continues. That’s my bet.
It’s sad that our Fed is reactive rather than proactive. The next time we hit recession, they’ll cut Fed fund rate down to 1% again, and the cycle continues. That’s my bet.
Knew I wasn't crazy
Cardboard box sales have dropped 20% in the first two quarters, most since 2009. But I'm sure those house prices are fine...
Could you please expand on that? What kind of cardboard boxes sales have dropped? CPG? Moving? Industrial? Budweiser?
“Seeing plenty of price drops” is like “I think it’s going to rain at some point.”
That’s the first rookie mistake. No crash ever happens in the same fashion as circumstances/parameters change. Tired of explaining for the millionth of time why this time is different. Sadly, you will likely never own an house and remain a life long renter stuck in the “but it has to crash” circle.
NuttBoxer says
1337irr says
Could you please expand on that? What kind of cardboard boxes sales have dropped? CPG? Moving? Industrial? Budweiser?
The number is from companies who make boxes for everything and anything. Boxes are used to ship products. Less products ordered, less boxes. If you want more than that:
https://www.zerohedge.com/economics/big-drop-cardboard-box-sales-scream-recession
Zerohedge….aka the sky is falling….ALWAYS!
Yet, at the same time, year-over-year sales of new homes surged by 23.8% while existing-home sales sagged.
“With low existing home inventory, new home inventory is becoming competitive, and new homes are now competitive on price,” said Robert Frick, corporate economist with Navy Federal Credit Union, in an emailed statement. “The premium for a median-priced new house versus an existing house is now only $5,000.
In October 2022, the median sales price for a new home was $496,800, while the median existing-home sales price was $378,800—a difference of $118,000. This gap has since narrowed by roughly 96%.
Rubicon says
“Seeing plenty of price drops” is like “I think it’s going to rain at some point.”
I have no detailed analysis, just see lots of these:
Smaller house. Built on tiny zero lot line with no driveway. Sold for $1.95M last month, and with $336/month HOA dues too.
https://redf.in/oI7Edl
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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.