by AD ➕follow (1) 💰tip ignore
« First « Previous Comments 5,683 - 5,715 of 5,715 Search these comments
Ignore national median is all I'll say.
Where do we from here? Is this stagflation? I paid $16 for a sandwich yesterday. In Cleveland!
What are all the real estate agents, brokers, mortgage officers, home inspectors etc. doing and are going to be doing in the next few years? Layoffs in IT are happening and outsourcing is booming.
So, when do the wheels fall off?
.
https://www.newsweek.com/us-housing-market-mirroring-2008-bubble-real-estate-analyst-2005520
.
if it’s on a news it’s opposite of reality. news are always selling pump and dump schemes for the wealthy. they were screaming “buy now or price out forever” during actual bubble. and “it’ll never recover” when it collapsed. so that’s my opinion from life experience.
AD says
.
https://www.newsweek.com/us-housing-market-mirroring-2008-bubble-real-estate-analyst-2005520
.
if it’s on a news it’s opposite of reality. news are always selling pump and dump schemes for the wealthy. they were screaming “buy now or price out forever” during actual bubble. and “it’ll never recover” when it collapsed. so that’s my opinion from life experience.
Or it's normal. Also 50-70% less houses were built in most places as builders went under in 2006-08. Takes a decade to build up a new business like home building. No one wanted to after the crash and then covid hit. Boomer builders are retiring as well. Our house is our builders last house.
It's been over a million most of the 21st Century.
Demographics cannot be changed for at least a generation if the change was to start today. There's going to be a housing collapse nationally, an IL, CA, NJ, NY, etc. will be ground zero for the Demographic Neutron Bomb.
As it stands now, Milennials will be well below their replacement rate.
I live outside of Nashville in a high-end area. Houses here are still selling and prices have stayed relatively flat. People are still moving here, so demand is high. Just an observation.
Nashville area is going to get the shit beat out of it in my opinion.
WookieMan says
Nashville area is going to get the shit beat out of it in my opinion.
I live outside of Nashville in a high-end area. Houses here are still selling and prices have stayed relatively flat. People are still moving here, so demand is high. Just an observation.
AmericanKulak there’s a flaw in your argument. it assumes society will not readjust itself. it will. we lived as species for thousands of years without needing permanent inflation to keep going. So i think you worry too much over something that’s not actual danger.
FortwayeAsFuckJoeBiden says
AmericanKulak there’s a flaw in your argument. it assumes society will not readjust itself. it will. we lived as species for thousands of years without needing permanent inflation to keep going. So i think you worry too much over something that’s not actual danger.
Casey-Shiller research the opposite: there has always been inflation as far back as reliable records are available. Yes, even when money was made out of fancy metals.
Chicago will fold. IL as a whole is solid. Two income earners in my town can easily stay under the 3x's rule. $250-300k is the pricing here. You'd have to be a retard not to make $100-150k as a couple. If you can't do that you just rent. It's not complicated.
Can you cite your source for this?
I'm referring to the birthrate of Millennial women.
Japan is the poster child for the 'demographic time bomb', but I look at that country with a little bit of envy. 99% homogenous culture, low crime, high tech, high standard of living. They've been in deflation since I was a kid, but are still an economic power. Shit, last person to leave turn off the lights - is it really so bad?!?
Maybe some of the things we've been sold are bull shit.
You'd have to be a retard not to make $100-150k as a couple
WookieMan says
You'd have to be a retard not to make $100-150k as a couple
The world WookieMan lives in is truly amazing.
What world is that?
I don't really know anyone making less than $70-80k/yr where I live on an individual basis. So a dual income home should easily pull $120k
WookieMan says
What world is that?
I don't really know anyone making less than $70-80k/yr where I live on an individual basis. So a dual income home should easily pull $120k
That world ^^^.
« First « Previous Comments 5,683 - 5,715 of 5,715 Search these comments
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.