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Clown, never gives straight answers. Waste of time.
Wookie, it's clear you're from an affluent family, and good on you all. Affluent live longer, more assets, stay healthy longer.
Clown. So what do you suggest someone does who can comfortably afford to buy and wants to hold for the long run?
Do you tell him/her that now is a bad time?
I'm just trying to explain that banks aren't going to want to foreclose.
WookieMan says
I'm just trying to explain that banks aren't going to want to foreclose.
That was a genuine question. Our business is down about 30%. Is tacking arrears to the end of the loan something new?
Low inventory is killing everyone except sellers and the few agents that get the listings. Everyone is losing business from loans, attorneys, inspectors, marketing, etc.
GNL says
WookieMan says
I'm just trying to explain that banks aren't going to want to foreclose.
That was a genuine question. Our business is down about 30%. Is tacking arrears to the end of the loan something new?
Forbearance has been around forever. Banks were hit with too many loan defaults, and they panicked. After a year or so, they wised up, coordinated, and controlled the flood of REOs hitting the market. Inventory started to dried up at the courthouse steps = less foreclosures. Real estate prices started rise. The rising tide lifted all boats. They were able to get higher prices for their REOs in addition to working out loan mods/forbearance with the borrowers. Win-win for everyone.
Onvacation says
Big_Johnson says
$5 for a sandwich? An avocado toast is $15.
As a millennial I don’t remember getting a good sandwich for $5. Was that 30years ago?
Before the COVID-19 scam our local bagel shop sold a chicken breast sandwich for less than $5. They now want almost $10.
But if people are paying $10 then perhaps that should have been the price all along.
I remember when I could go to the store and buy a can of soda for a nickel.
Rather than do something positive with our lives, people are wasting their lives complaining about Prop 13. 🤣
But if people are paying $10 then perhaps that should have been the price all along.
exfatguy says
But if people are paying $10 then perhaps that should have been the price all along.
More likely the bagel shop's costs have inflated to where the shop cannot profit unless they charge $10. Same with the shop's competition, so prices rise for customers.
WookieMan says
Low inventory is killing everyone except sellers and the few agents that get the listings. Everyone is losing business from loans, attorneys, inspectors, marketing, etc.
Exactly what I pointed to above. Low economic activity can be caused by low RE movement/transactions. I am not an economist but my opinion is a recession is about the only way RE "could" have issues going forward.
Big_Pretender is a chestbeater. I like to mess with chestbeaters.
“Let’s all hope for a recession so we can load up on real estate after the bubble pops. I am loading up on cash for now.”
Wow, you hero. Hoping for people to lose their jobs and houses. If pathetic has a definition this is it. Jesus, you all had a decade to buy real estate that appears to be cheap in todays terms. But I bet you were copy and pasting Zerohedge article talking about the upcoming housing crash.
Not buying a house or more houses was a financial mistake some of you perma bears won’t recover from. You will wait another decade for this “buying opportunity” and the big crash.
I'm a hard pass on Subway. It's just so bland for a sub. Jimmy Johns, Jersey Mikes and Firehouse are the chains around me that I'd pick over Subway 100% of the time.
The clown show will be disappointed again when Americans don’t lose their jobs in mass and housing won’t crash. Pathetic losers. Lol
there are layoffs happening.
The clown show will be disappointed again when Americans don’t lose their jobs in mass and housing won’t crash. Pathetic losers. Lol
Damn, you must be in your 90’s?
And a multi millionaire (if you bought real estate)?
Don’t be ashamed of your age.
Inventory cannot be stated enough. Until more houses are built, ain't nothing changing.
Those boomers will likely be passing their homes down to their kids. Doesn't mean the kids will sell them. I rent out my inherited home.
It won’t even be a silver wave. Tsunami is a Zerohedge perma bear hype term.
Remember the forbearance foreclosure tsunami?
Let’s do this, wake us up when inventory goes back to historical trend of 2.5M first before you spread the perma bear-zerohedge nonsense.
You can like it or not like or call it something else. Nothing matters except for what’s for sale and you want to measure that and see where we headed.
Remember the shadow inventory narrative of millions of homes that are empty and might come on the market which would crash the price? Every year there is a new narrative (and then every other year an old narrative gets recycled) but none of that nonsense means anything until it actually comes online for sale.
The market decides what the price is. At any given time the price is normal.
The market decides what the price is. At any given time the price is normal. There is no speculation or loose lending standards in this current market. And there is no forced selling. This could go on forever. No homeowner is hurting. Quite the opposite. Any homeowners “feels” like sitting on a goldmine with the locked in low rates.
2004-2008 was a ONCE in a lifetime event. Anyone who could fog a mirror could buy a home back then. This will never ever be allowed in the US. We have very strict lending standards…..I know from experience….I bought several homes.
The market decides what the price is. At any given time the price is normal
At any given point in time the price is normal and 2008 was a once in a lifetime event. Forget about 2008. The world of RE couldn’t be more different than 2008.
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1. Will the bubble burst?
2. When will the bubble burst?
3. Will we ever see 300k homes again in Mexifornia?
Sam