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The difference between 2008 and today is inflation, rates, and demography. The Plateauists are counting on NONE of those three having an impact.
Misc says
GDP NOW is forecasting an annualized increase in GDP of 5.4% for the 3rd quarter. So far, higher interest rates haven't slowed the economy.
Annndd....that means the Fed will raise rates higher. Because that is all they can do.
Annndd....that means the Fed will raise rates higher. Because that is all they can do.
Annndd....that means the Fed will raise rates higher. Because that is all they can do.
PumpingRedheads says
Annndd....that means the Fed will raise rates higher. Because that is all they can do.
The Fed is losing control of interest rates. They are going up irrespective of the Fed because federal government spending is way out of control, even moreso than in the past. This is rightly seen as inflationary and so rates are going up.
The Fed is losing control of interest rates. They are going up irrespective of the Fed because federal government spending is way out of control, even moreso than in the past. This is rightly seen as inflationary and so rates are going up.
Al_Sharpton_for_President says
The Fed is losing control of interest rates. They are going up irrespective of the Fed because federal government spending is way out of control, even moreso than in the past. This is rightly seen as inflationary and so rates are going up.
Yep. They have to raise rates whether they like it or not.
zzyzzx says
They can sell off all their MBS's.
I think they have been for two years now.
Misc says
GDP NOW is forecasting an annualized increase in GDP of 5.4% for the 3rd quarter. So far, higher interest rates haven't slowed the economy.
Annndd....that means the Fed will raise rates higher. Because that is all they can do.
San Jose's issues are more concentrated due to the scarce land, higher costs of labor and "bureaucratic roadblocks," Adrian Pedraza, a real estate broker who owns house flipping company The California Homebuyer, said.
REpro says
San Jose's issues are more concentrated due to the scarce land, higher costs of labor and "bureaucratic roadblocks," Adrian Pedraza, a real estate broker who owns house flipping company The California Homebuyer, said.
I read the Newsom passed some reforms as far as encouraging affordable housing: https://www.novoco.com/news/california-governor-signs-series-affordable-housing-related-bills
As far as labor, the construction industries needs to innovate and gain more productivity such as using 3D printing technology, etc.
How about constructing pre-fab homes in cheaper zip codes and then sent the pre-fab home kits to California via trucks and/or rail ?
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How about constructing pre-fab homes in cheaper zip codes and then sent the pre-fab home kits to California via trucks and/or rail ?
San Francisco, trade unions at odds over modular construction — even for homeless projects
No municipality wants "cheap" housing. Property tax money is what they want. Higher value = higher tax. Maybe?
No municipality wants "cheap" housing. Property tax money is what they want. Higher value = higher tax. Maybe?
i was thinking how a tiny home (i.e., ~120 sq foot) could be built on a trailer frame and used for basic shelter ...
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interesting as it does seem like rent is cooling down in Panama City Beach ... I noticed apartments are offering 1 month free ( https://www.urbanbluliving.com/ )
https://www.zillow.com/rental-manager/market-trends/32407/
also, Colorado Springs has cooled off
https://www.zillow.com/rental-manager/market-trends/colorado-springs-co/
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Housing market affordability is so bad that Zillow says it will take you 13.5 years to break even on a purchase from July onward
ad says
Housing market affordability is so bad that Zillow says it will take you 13.5 years to break even on a purchase from July onward
What does "break even" mean?
HeadSet says
ad says
Housing market affordability is so bad that Zillow says it will take you 13.5 years to break even on a purchase from July onward
What does "break even" mean?
I assume it means selling at a high enough price that covers all years of maintenance + transaction fees without bringing $$ to closing.
Yeah, likely to cover the operating and maintenance (O&M) costs. I view it as positive equity or book value. This would align with the use of the rent vs buy calculator.
There are too many people with high paying jobs who will always keep prices elevated in desireable areas with top public schools. Unless we have a job-loss recession, desireable areas won't drop much IMO. Areas with mediocre or bad schools? All bets are off.
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https://fortune.com/2023/10/30/housing-market-recession-1980s-higher-for-longer-mortgage-rates-outlook-wells-fargo/
Despite countless recession calls from economists, analysts, and other experts this year and last, the U.S. economy as a whole has shown remarkable resiliency. The housing market, on the other hand, is a different story.
Mortgage rates hovering around 8% coupled with home prices that rose substantially during the pandemic have deteriorated housing affordability in the U.S. and frozen activity in some cases. The longer mortgage rates remain elevated, the higher borrowing costs become, and that could tip the housing market into a recession, according to Wells Fargo.
ad says
Yeah, likely to cover the operating and maintenance (O&M) costs. I view it as positive equity or book value. This would align with the use of the rent vs buy calculator.
Yes, I guess that would include interest paid also. Which I'd bet almost no one takes into consideration.
There are too many people with high paying jobs who will always keep prices elevated in desireable areas with top public schools.
Hamptons ‘middle class’ homes priced below $5M slammed in selling frenzy
The so-called “middle class” in the Hamptons – New Yorkers with second homes in the in the $2 million to $5 million range – are frantically slashing prices to offload their properties, real estate sources said.
https://www.nasdaq.com/articles/buyers-are-backing-out-of-home-purchases-at-an-incredibly-high-rate
Buyers Are Backing out of Home Purchases at an Incredibly High Rate
My monthly HOA fee was increased by 240% since I moved in. Can someone help me understand why?
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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.