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housing prices peak 2


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2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   601,810 views  5,636 comments

by AD   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

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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.

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3141   mell   2023 Aug 21, 5:10pm  

B.A.C.A.H. says

Rubicon says


This is survival of the fittest. Brutal reality. It’s still much better here compared to living in any other country though.

Said Marie Antoinette.

Certainly among the better/best countries, and it all depends on where in the country you're at, but certainly not among the top 5 in terms if quality of life on average. That being said, real estate relative to wages has become expensive in most countries worth living, mostly due to unfettered immigration from shitholes
3142   AD   2023 Aug 21, 9:17pm  

Warren Buffett's $31,500 House Is Now Worth $1.44 Million But He Says He Would Have Made Far More Money By Renting Instead

https://www.benzinga.com/real-estate/23/08/33577953/warren-buffetts-31-500-house-is-now-worth-1-44-million-but-he-says-he-would-have-made-far-more-money
3143   porkchopXpress   2023 Aug 22, 5:51am  

ad says

Warren Buffett's $31,500 House Is Now Worth $1.44 Million But He Says He Would Have Made Far More Money By Renting Instead

https://www.benzinga.com/real-estate/23/08/33577953/warren-buffetts-31-500-house-is-now-worth-1-44-million-but-he-says-he-would-have-made-far-more-money
Keep in mind Buffett is part of the WEF Schwab crew, which means they want to push people to own nothing and you will be happy. I'm not say he's wrong, but there is broader motivation at play IMO.
3144   HeadSet   2023 Aug 22, 8:04am  

Buffett continues to live in the same modest home in Omaha that he purchased in 1958 for just $31,500.

Buffet was not a billionaire when he bought that home, he was instead living on the loan from his father-in-law. At the time, that home was in Omaha's most exclusive neighborhood.

Notice how it is fenced off as if it is a museum. Unlikely he really still "lives" there.


3145   RWSGFY   2023 Aug 22, 9:05am  

HeadSet says

Buffett continues to live in the same modest home in Omaha that he purchased in 1958 for just $31,500.

Buffet was not a billionaire when he bought that home, he was instead living on the loan from his father-in-law. At the time, that home was in Omaha's most exclusive neighborhood.

Notice how it is fenced off as if it is a museum. Unlikely he really still "lives" there.





It's not that modest either. Looks pretty substantial.
3146   Eman   2023 Aug 22, 1:40pm  

ad says

Warren Buffett's $31,500 House Is Now Worth $1.44 Million But He Says He Would Have Made Far More Money By Renting Instead

https://www.benzinga.com/real-estate/23/08/33577953/warren-buffetts-31-500-house-is-now-worth-1-44-million-but-he-says-he-would-have-made-far-more-money

A couple things to keep in mind, Warren Buffett is one of the greatest investors of our time. Not many individuals can generate the same returns as he has been doing for decades. It used to be over 50% return annually when he started his career.

Buffett is frugal. He wanted to save every dollar to invest, not buying stuff. When his wife bought him a brand new Cadillac, she had to buy the cheapest/basic model. 😅

The 3rd best investment was his Laguna Beach vacation house that his wife made him buy it. He paid $150k for it in 1971 and sold it around 2017 for $7.5M.

Buffett married well. His FIL was a doctor, and also his biggest investor when he started his career.

Buffett became a millionaire at the age of 30 so buying a $31.5k house at the age of 28 seemed affordable to him at the time.
3147   Patrick   2023 Aug 22, 9:09pm  

Rubicon says

Housing only goes up in the longterm.


So does the stock market, and at a consistently faster rate.
3148   1337irr   2023 Aug 22, 11:07pm  

Patrick says

Rubicon says


Housing only goes up in the longterm.


So does the stock market, and at a consistently faster rate.

Leverage helps.
3149   AD   2023 Aug 22, 11:12pm  

Patrick says

So does the stock market, and at a consistently faster rate.


Large caps such as S&P 500 increase about 10% a year over long run. Robert Shiller stated over long that housing goes up about 4% a year.

That is why I like when you mentioned about putting the savings from rent to work by wisely investing it in stocks.

.
3150   zzyzzx   2023 Aug 23, 8:56am  

"I paid $426k for my house last year, now it's worth $370k"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6zdBKVzsIU
3151   AD   2023 Aug 23, 9:32am  

zzyzzx says

"I paid $426k for my house last year, now it's worth $370k"

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h6zdBKVzsIU


Median price for USA home has gone down about 16.5% from its recent peak and all time high.

.
3152   porkchopXpress   2023 Aug 23, 9:56am  

Rubicon says

I have nothing against stocks and invest in them myself but I don’t get how you can compare the two as if they were interchangeable. You have to live somewhere. I would never rent and invest in stocks because I think that’s a better investment.
I agree. If rents and mortgages are roughly the same, why rent if you have the down payment?
3153   mell   2023 Aug 23, 10:04am  

Rubicon says

I bought a brand new house and my PITI is lower than someone renting a 3B room
House. Imagine how the picture looks like in a decade from now. Rents keep going up while my PITI remains the same.

You'll have repairs and all kinds of other shit, utilities increasing etc. Generally you have more leverage in RE if you are a risk taker, and more safety as you mentioned if you just want to live in your primary home and pay off the mortgage. However that assumes you have stable income, if you can't pay your mortgage, downsizing a rental is easier than your home, and incurs no losses. It's different than stock trading for sure, hard to compare.
3154   AD   2023 Aug 23, 10:22am  

mell says

It's different than stock trading for sure, hard to compare.


Its interesting as housing over the last 20 years particularly has been viewed as an investment asset. I wonder if this, combined with zoning policies is what has caused housing to become unaffordable as compared to the 1940's to 1990's.

For me, my home is just a roof over my family's head and a monthly payment of PITI, HOA fee, and maintenance & repair (M & R).

Who on Patrick.net views housing / residential real estate as their only income and retirement savings ? Who views housing equally as stocks as being an asset ?

Eman seems like he is only in housing / residential real estate and knows how to work with banks to maximize leverage.

.
3155   GNL   2023 Aug 23, 11:01am  

ad says

Its interesting as housing over the last 20 years particularly has been viewed as an investment asset. I wonder if this, combined with zoning policies is what has caused housing to become unaffordable

Don't forget the AirBnB effect.
3156   AD   2023 Aug 23, 11:51am  

GNL says

Don't forget the AirBnB effect.


Yes, where there is a lot of tourism like Colorado mountains towns, beach towns in the Florida panhandle, etc.

And it has not done anything as far as lower the nightly rates for hotels.

I remember the claim that more AirBnB homes means that people will be able to afford a vacation since the increase in vacation rentals or units will drive down the cost to vacation.

.
3157   zzyzzx   2023 Aug 23, 11:54am  

GNL says

Don't forget the AirBnB effect.



3158   Eric Holder   2023 Aug 23, 11:57am  

zzyzzx says

GNL says


Don't forget the AirBnB effect.






I'm not buying this one. Sure, it may be true in places like Sedona or South Lake Tahoe, but your average Elko, NV or Boomfuck, AZ? No way, Jose.
3159   Eman   2023 Aug 23, 3:44pm  

Look what just hit my inbox. Looks like CalFHA down payment assistance program was a hit. More money is coming to help buyers with the down payment.


3160   Eman   2023 Aug 23, 4:50pm  

“The average number of occupants in each home fell, while the average size of a new single-family home ballooned - from just 909 square feet in 1949 to 2,480 square feet in 2021. In 1950, 15.7% of U.S. homes were overcrowded; by 2000 that number had fallen to 5.7%.” - Interesting statistics

https://www.ahs.com/home-matters/real-estate/the-2022-american-home-size-index/#
3161   AD   2023 Aug 23, 5:05pm  

Eman says

“The average number of occupants in each home fell, while the average size of a new single-family home ballooned - from just 909 square feet in 1949 to 2,480 square feet in 2021. In 1950, 15.7% of U.S. homes were overcrowded; by 2000 that number had fallen to 5.7%.” - Interesting statistics


Look at the housing starts and the typical as well as minimum size per square foot. Seems like I've not seen a detached home or a townhome less than 1500 square feet.

If not the developers deciding this, then the local government (i.e., zoning) is the reason for this.

.
3162   GNL   2023 Aug 23, 7:20pm  

ad says

Look at the housing starts and the typical as well as minimum size per square foot. Seems like I've not seen a detached home or a townhome less than 1500 square feet.

If not the developers deciding this, then the local government (i.e., zoning) is the reason for this.

There are many places where you cannot build a home, per regulations, smaller than X. I believe it's to keep home prices, and therefore property taxes, high.
3163   AD   2023 Aug 23, 8:15pm  

GNL says

There are many places where you cannot build a home, per regulations, smaller than X. I believe it's to keep home prices, and therefore property taxes, high.


Yep, which economically forces people to live in rental apartments or if they buy, force them into townhomes or condos.

,
3164   Patrick   2023 Aug 23, 8:25pm  

1337irr says

Leverage helps.


Leverage works both ways.

If you put 5% down and the market goes down 5%, you just lost 100% of your deposit.

Actually, considering the 6% commission, with 5% down you're underwater from the start.
3165   AD   2023 Aug 23, 8:34pm  

Patrick says

1337irr says

Leverage helps.


The premise is the landlord investor will never lose out as far as applying leverage.

They'll never get foreclosed on and they'll earn an ROI that rivals what they would earn investing in the stock market.

That is there is very little chance to fail as a residential landlord.

.
3166   Patrick   2023 Aug 24, 9:12am  

ad says

That is there is very little chance to fail as a residential landlord.


It depends on whether the rent covers the cost of owning. If someone pays more than the rent can cover, they are likely to fail.
3168   GNL   2023 Aug 24, 9:15am  

Patrick says

ad says


That is there is very little chance to fail as a residential landlord.


It depends on whether the rent covers the cost of owning. If someone pays more than the rent can cover, they are likely to fail.

Wasn't there a commenter here that bragged about buying cash flow negative properties?
3169   AD   2023 Aug 24, 9:50am  

Patrick says

It depends on whether the rent covers the cost of owning. If someone pays more than the rent can cover, they are likely to fail.


The impression I get from Eman is that the risk of this is very small. And I see the same in the Florida panhandle.

That is residential rental property is a very safe investment especially given the trends with rental rate increases each year.

.
3170   fdhfoiehfeoi   2023 Aug 24, 10:44am  

WE JUST NEED TO BUILD MORE HOUSES! WHY CAN'T YOU UNDERSTAND THAT!? WHAT'S WRONG WITH YOU :PEOPLE!!!

https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/problem-isnt-housing-shortage-its-concentration-ownership-wealthy
3171   AD   2023 Aug 24, 10:50am  

NuttBoxer says


WE JUST NEED TO BUILD MORE HOUSES! WHY CAN'T YOU UNDERSTAND THAT!? WHAT'S WRONG WITH YOU :PEOPLE!!!

https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/problem-isnt-housing-shortage-its-concentration-ownership-wealthy


Yeah, I just look at the Florida panhandle such as all the homes (i.e., condos, townhomes, detached homes, etc.) on or near the beach, and at least 90% are not homestead exemption (based on review of the county appraiser websites).

That means they are not the primary residence as they cannot claim homestead exemption to pay lower property tax.

I wonder nationwide what percentage of homes are not occupied by a full time renter or their owner (i.e., vacation/short term rentals, a second home get away, etc.) ?

Wolfman at Wolf Street website has been making references to this topic of home ownership, new housing starts, etc.

.
3172   Eman   2023 Aug 24, 10:56am  

NuttBoxer says

WE JUST NEED TO BUILD MORE HOUSES! WHY CAN'T YOU UNDERSTAND THAT!? WHAT'S WRONG WITH YOU :PEOPLE!!!

https://www.zerohedge.com/personal-finance/problem-isnt-housing-shortage-its-concentration-ownership-wealthy

The problem with California is a few folds:

1) NIMBYism - which drives the cost up astronomical as developers have to pay all kinds of fees to do studies and impacts

2) the city permit fees in the six figures if you want to build a SFH

Once you factor in 1 and 2, it’s already $200k before the cost of land, labor and materials
3173   Eman   2023 Aug 24, 10:59am  

And I haven’t talked about the city made us installed a new sprinkler system when we remodeled the house. That’s $25k right there, not including Fire Marshall inspection fee, etc…

They made us installed new sidewalk when it was never there in the first place. That’s another $20k. It’s ridiculous
3174   AD   2023 Aug 24, 11:31am  

Eman says

Once you factor in 1 and 2, it’s already $200k before the cost of land, labor and materials


Where do the working class live there ? Where do those who work the restaurants, the landscaping jobs, etc. live ?

They live 6 people in a 2 bedroom apartment ? They can't reasonably live more than 90 minutes travel distance away from their jobs.

.
3175   Eric Holder   2023 Aug 24, 11:58am  

Eman says

Look what just hit my inbox. Looks like CalFHA down payment assistance program was a hit. More money is coming to help buyers with the down payment.





Also yesterday I tuned into NPR (after a long time) and caught some cunt speaking about plans to basically subsidize ALL renters in AlCo with state money. What that would do to housing prices is obvious.
3176   GNL   2023 Aug 24, 12:10pm  

Under what economic conditions do you think allows communism to raise its ugly head? Think about that.
3177   Eman   2023 Aug 24, 12:30pm  

“If you want a car and house and health insurance for everyone you need to find a communist country that provides that.”

@Rubicon,

Please share which communist country provides these?
3178   RWSGFY   2023 Aug 24, 12:30pm  

GNL says


Under what economic conditions do you think allows communism to raise its ugly head? Think about that.


Communism is only possible through violent insurrection or foreign occupation. It has never been introduced in any other way.

Russia, China, Cuba, Nicaragua, Albania, Vietnam, Yugoslavia - insurrection.

Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Belarus, Ukraine, multiple stans in Central Asia, Georgia, Armenia, Azeri, North Korea, Poland, Hungary, Czechoslovakia, East Germany - occupation.

I don't know any instance where Commies were voted into power in a free election.
3179   Eman   2023 Aug 24, 12:32pm  

Eric Holder says

Eman says


Look what just hit my inbox. Looks like CalFHA down payment assistance program was a hit. More money is coming to help buyers with the down payment.





Also yesterday I tuned into NPR (after a long time) and caught some cunt speaking about plans to basically subsidize ALL renters in AlCo with state money. What that would do to housing prices is obvious.

In general, the intention is good, but they haven’t figured out the consequences of their intention.
3180   RWSGFY   2023 Aug 24, 12:34pm  

Eman says

Eric Holder says


Eman says



Look what just hit my inbox. Looks like CalFHA down payment assistance program was a hit. More money is coming to help buyers with the down payment.





Also yesterday I tuned into NPR (after a long time) and caught some cunt speaking about plans to basically subsidize ALL renters in AlCo with state money. What that would do to housing prices is obvious.


In general, the intention is good, but they haven’t figured out the consequences of their intention.


The road to hell is paved with good intentions.

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