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I have bought several new builds
If you look at the chart you shared, rent growth happened between 2005 to mid 2008. Mid 2008 was when rent growth went to zero and started to decline 2-3% to end 2008 to early 2009. Early 2009 to mid 2009 experienced another 3-5% rent drop before stabilizing and going back to 0% in early 2010. Then rents started to go up again. Total rent drop between 2008 to 2009 is not more than 10% compounded, which is what the data show.
The news comes shortly after insurance heavyweights State Farm and Allstate halted new business in California and Farmers Insurance placed a limit on the number of new customers it is willing to pick up. Last week, Liberty Mutual—Safeco’s parent company—also announced it would stop providing business owner coverage in California starting later this year.
All of these decisions have made it more difficult for Californians to insure their homes. But the latest policy by Safeco is slightly different: It will specifically impact the Bay Area.
Due to the Bay Area’s “significant earthquake risk and the resulting home fires they cause, and our high concentration of insurance exposure, we have taken the difficult but necessary step to further reduce our overall book of business through underwriting decisions on new and renewal homeowners policies,” a Liberty Mutual spokesperson said in an email to The Standard. “This decision impacts approximately 1 percent of our California homeowners business.”
We didn’t do anything for the rents to go up.
Oh boy.
First off, there is no loss. You don’t lose a penny until you sell.
There’s a big difference between a 2.75% and a 7% rate.
Question: is it better to buy when rates are high or when they're low?
Rubicon says
There’s a big difference between a 2.75% and a 7% rate.
Who has the bigger write off AND the most upside?
Eman says
We didn’t do anything for the rents to go up.
That was my point that you still missed. You don't have to anything, the government does it for you. If you understood what happens when free market principles are manipulated, you'd know why this is dangerous. The market will always return to a state of equilibrium, it is a law as much as gravity. The more manipulated it is, the harder the crash will be.
“Q4 2022 - Median Sales Price of Houses Sold in the US: $479,500.
Q2 2023 - Median Sales Price of Houses Sold in the US: $416,100.
Loss of 13.2% or $63,400.”
Oh boy.
First off, there is no loss. You don’t lose a penny until you sell. people don’t buy and sell shortly after. They stay put for 20years and sell for 2-3times more than what they paid for. Or never sell and rent out the property.
The first guy who paid a higher house price than the next guy in your example has a lower PITI per month.
There’s a big difference between a 2.75% and a 7% rate.
That first guy who bought the peak smiles everyday with his ~3% rate. We might not see such a low rate for a decade.
Rubicon says
Oh boy.
First off, there is no loss. You don’t lose a penny until you sell.
Rubicon - this is why I don't listen to too much of what you have to say. Of course there's a loss, a loss of that sweet sweet equity you're always yammering about. The less sweet equity means the less you can pull out for more RE or tax free income.
Guess what, there's no gain either until you sell. Right?
Question: is it better to buy when rates are high or when they're low?
He has a point with respect to the lower mortgage payments with the lower rates. These owners don’t have to refinance even if they’re underwater. Current buyers at 6-7% mortgage rates are “hoping” rates will come down in the coming years so they can refinance. Two different kinds of pain. 😅
GNL says
Question: is it better to buy when rates are high or when they're low?
Don't overpay in either case.
I’m pausing b/c the risk/reward is not quite there although I see people, who are very smart, are still making deals.
There’s a deal that I’d love to buy for $8M. Seller bought it a couple years ago for $13M and is willing to sell it for $10M now.
GNL says
Eman says
I’m pausing b/c the risk/reward is not quite there although I see people, who are very smart, are still making deals.
There’s a deal that I’d love to buy for $8M. Seller bought it a couple years ago for $13M and is willing to sell it for $10M now.
But Rubicon said RE never goes down. :)
Correct. Residential RE (condo’s and SFH’s) go only up over the long run. Yeah, sure, dips in between but they don’t matter. Most people hold RE for the long run. You don’t buy/sell RE like a stock.
Don’t know anything about commercial. And very little about multi-family.
We live in an inflationary economy. Time does all the heavy lifting through inflation. The rules of the game have been established. You can choose to play, or not. It’s up to you. The same goes with the IRS tax loopholes. This is why real estate investors and business owners pay much lower taxes than W2 employees. Even Warren Buffett said it himself.
As Warren Buffett said
I've paid 17% or less most of my life, even after I high six figures. Only recently have I gone up to about 20-21%. I know people who own property, and work for themselves, I've never found that pay less than I do.
I’ll predict, In the next 5 years I am gonna bring cash to the table
As Warren Buffett said “Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.” I want value when I buy. It provides a margin of safety if/when the market takes a turn right after I purchase
Eman says
As Warren Buffett said “Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.” I want value when I buy. It provides a margin of safety if/when the market takes a turn right after I purchase
But Rubicon says buy now, buy always, buy at any price because price and rates don't matter.
GNL says
Eman says
As Warren Buffett said “Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.” I want value when I buy. It provides a margin of safety if/when the market takes a turn right after I purchase
But Rubicon says buy now, buy always, buy at any price because price and rates don't matter.
You could have paid peak price and pay less than someone who buys at a lower price today because rates doubled.
I am glad I got both, pre Covid price and super low rates because I did the opposite of what perma bears told me: they told me the market would crash and I shouldn’t buy. Lol
Don’t be surprised to hear the market is going to crash this year. They tell you this ever year since 2014.
I understand your point about “timing the market” although most of us will try myself included. 😅
“7. Yes, of course inventory matters also but, haven't we agreed that inventory is low because people do not want to give up that sweet sweet low rate?”
No. This makes zero sense:
When a seller sells a house he is traditionally a buyer also.
You sell one: +1 to inventory
And you buy one: -1 to inventory
Net inventory doesn’t move.
Inventory increases if more people die or due to massive unemployment or due to builders building a lot more.
Another thing to consider is that a 7% mortgage rate is excellent when compared to general inflation.
Question: is it better to buy when rates are high or when they're low?
1. You personally don't have to pay those high rates.
2. The house price you pay will be lower because high rates push prices down.
3. When rates eventually fall, you should have increased equity from the falling rates pushing prices up.
And this is when you get a HELOC or cash out refi and pay yourself with other people's money (banks).
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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.