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House price increases and low interest rates


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2012 Oct 9, 5:59am   10,044 views  35 comments

by SkyPirate   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

http://www.doctorhousingbubble.com/future-american-housing-mcmansion-withdrawal-housing-commutes-subsidized-housing-history/

Interesting article which cites much of the real estate "bounce" (whether you believe it's real or dead-cat) to low interest rates which, combined with the bubble popping prices, has cut the monthly costs of home ownership in half (in some areas, buying is now cheaper than renting).

#housing

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1   Mick Russom   2012 Oct 9, 7:52am  

We are a consumer economy. Brutal monthlies to support brutal property taxes and brutal mortgages will never work.

The printing press being on is our end. Food, rent, tuition, gas, cost of commuting, tolls, food, commodities, building materials, software prices, media, books, cars, phone and internet, medicine, medical care - all the costs have skyrocketed.

There is less and less disposable income in the inflationist model.

2   Patrick   2012 Oct 9, 8:57am  

Mick Russom says

There is less and less disposable income in the inflationist model.

Sure, that's true for you and me and the rest of the 99.9%.

But for the 0.1%, disposable income continues to skyrocket. Woohoo!

Where do you think your money went, after all?

3   David9   2012 Oct 9, 9:03am  

Right On Patrick !!

4   taxee   2012 Oct 9, 6:17pm  

You can't compete with people who print money. You can't compete with their cronies. You can't even compete with the people they lend it to that don't pay it back.

5   SkyPirate   2012 Oct 10, 12:52am  

Mish does a good job explaining why hyperinflation fears are nonsense and why the rich and powerful do NOT want hyperinflation:

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/05/hyperinflation-nonsense-in-multiple.html

Hyperinflation by definition would destroy the currency and thus the banks
Hyperinflation would destroy the wealthy and all their corporate bond holding
Hyperinflation would destroy the Fed
Hyperinflation would destroy the wealthy political class

6   noodlesphilly   2012 Oct 10, 3:35am  

IMHO Low rates our making another housing bubble. I been saying this for awhile now on other blogs If I BEEN SEEING THIS WHAY NOT ANYTHING ON THE TV.

7   Goran_K   2012 Oct 10, 3:42am  

The question to ask is how long can this government keep up the can kicking?

Human beings only live so long. I sold my condo at the beginning of the bubble (2002-2003). Since then I've been renting a home in a gated community (albeit for almost half of the PITI it would cost to buy it), but at some point does it make sense to wait 20 years for things to return to normal?

That's one of the things I've been debating as I see the FED eat away the value of our liquid cash.

8   bubblesitter   2012 Oct 10, 3:48am  

Goran_K says

(albeit for almost half of the PITI it would cost to buy it), but at some point does it make sense to wait 20 years for things to return to normal?

If it is half the PITI why not keep renting the same place vs buying the same for 20 years? Even with rock bottom rate you can't bring the suckers rally back,meaning no price appreciation for years to come. We may some appreciation to low end properties - comfort zone most for lenders,but not for mid to high end properties.

9   Goran_K   2012 Oct 10, 3:59am  

See that's the problem I'm talking about. Sure we could wait 20 years, but that would put most of us at 50-70 years old.

Is it worth it to wait until we are basically senior citizens then say, okay the market has corrected, time to buy.

I don't know if it does.

10   bubblesitter   2012 Oct 10, 4:17am  

What's the difference? you rent the same or buy the same? You are still staying in the same place.

11   Patrick   2012 Oct 10, 4:19am  

Owning a house isn't everything. Live well on the money you save every month by renting: eat the best food, go out, travel, have experiences that you couldn't if you were wasting the money on an overpriced house. Do not wait until you're a senior citizen for those things, because you may not be able to do them then!

For me, living the dream is working on Patrick.net every day. I could not do that if I had a mortgage.

Or if you really want to own something now, how about a cheap little house in a beautiful place that you can go to on the weekends, and maybe retire to later?

But if you commit financial suicide now just to say you own an overpriced wooden box, then you give up your other options.

12   bubblesitter   2012 Oct 10, 4:23am  


But if you commit financial suicide now just to say you own an overpriced wooden box, then you give up your other options.

Correct. Again, buy if the PITI makes sense and the calculator indicates buying is cheaper then renting.

13   taxee   2012 Oct 10, 4:32am  

The dream is to own a lot of property gotten without working, without producing, and because some are just so much 'smarter' than most people. And then being a dynasty that can lord over the lower classes like in the good old days. We are witnessing the end of property rights for the middle class.

14   mell   2012 Oct 10, 4:36am  

SkyPirate says

Mish does a good job explaining why hyperinflation fears are nonsense and why the rich and powerful do NOT want hyperinflation:

http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com/2011/05/hyperinflation-nonsense-in-multiple.html

Hyperinflation by definition would destroy the currency and thus the banks

Hyperinflation would destroy the wealthy and all their corporate bond holding

Hyperinflation would destroy the Fed

Hyperinflation would destroy the wealthy political class

Sorry that's nonsense. Nothing stops a wealthy person from moving their assets into other currencies or overseas. It would be more correct to say that wealthy people unwilling to live elsewhere but in the United States or for whatever reason heavily invested in US-only assets do not want hyper-inflation.

15   anonymous   2012 Oct 10, 4:39am  

If you and your family need change in California, you have to vote the democrats out of office. You have to strip them from power, take away their funding, and break their networks down.

16   Goran_K   2012 Oct 10, 4:40am  

bubblesitter says

What's the difference? you rent the same or buy the same? You are still staying in the same place.

Until the owner decides to sell, or gets foreclosed on.

17   Goran_K   2012 Oct 10, 4:42am  

taxee says

We are witnessing the end of property rights for the middle class.

This makes sense to me.

I think in effect, the government has made it so that owning a property is essentially serfdom, unless you become a multi-millionaire.

18   bubblesitter   2012 Oct 10, 4:43am  

Goran_K says

Until the owner decides to sell, or gets foreclosed on.

If you want to be in the same place for 20 years then buying makes sense for you,even if costs you way more - financial sacrifice vs flexibility,your choice.

19   Patrick   2012 Oct 10, 4:49am  

bubblesitter says

If you want to be in the same place for 20 years then buying makes sense for you,even if costs you way more - financial sacrifice vs flexibility,your choice.

There's a big risk there too though: the median ownership of a house is only six years.

The odds that you stay put for 20 years are much lower than you think.

20   mell   2012 Oct 10, 4:53am  


bubblesitter says

If you want to be in the same place for 20 years then buying makes sense for you,even if costs you way more - financial sacrifice vs flexibility,your choice.

There's a big risk there too though: the median ownership of a house is only six years.

The odds that you stay put for 20 years are much lower than you think.

Reminds me of marriage - everybody will be the one easily beating the statistics ;)

21   Goran_K   2012 Oct 10, 4:58am  

bubblesitter says

If you want to be in the same place for 20 years then buying makes sense for you,even if costs you way more - financial sacrifice vs flexibility,your choice.

Look we're all here on Patrick.net.

I'm not going to throw $500,000 cash into a shack and wish for the best.

But taxee has brought up an incredible point. Unless you choose serfdom to a bank, or you are a multi-millionaire, hasn't the government pretty much taken away home ownership from the middle class? The government that is supposed to work for us, not against us?

22   Patrick   2012 Oct 10, 5:10am  

Goran_K says

But taxee has brought up an incredible point. Unless you choose serfdom to a bank, or you are a multi-millionaire, hasn't the government pretty much taken away home ownership from the middle class? The government that is supposed to work for us, not against us?

The government is working spendidly for us, if by "us" you mean the 0.1% that rules America:

http://www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html

Unfortunately, I'm not part of that "us" and you probably aren't either.

23   taxee   2012 Oct 10, 5:14am  

It is an old con run by some corrupt people in the money printing business. Jefferson in a letter to John Taylor in 1816 wrote, "And I sincerely believe, with you, that banking establishments are more dangerous than standing armies; and that the principle of spending money to be paid by posterity, under the name of funding, is but swindling futurity on a large scale."

24   taxee   2012 Oct 10, 5:20am  

But letting successful gold miners, polluting industrialists, kings, military strongmen, etc., control things doesn't work any better.

25   taxee   2012 Oct 10, 5:28am  

Maybe we're all 'Oakies' now.

26   Goran_K   2012 Oct 10, 5:30am  


The government is working spendidly for us, if by "us" you mean the 0.1% that rules America:

http://www2.ucsc.edu/whorulesamerica/power/wealth.html

Unfortunately, I'm not part of that "us" and you probably aren't either.

It's frustrating Patrick. This website, and a few others are seriously my only outlet. It feels like an entire group of people have been victimized.

27   Goran_K   2012 Oct 10, 5:31am  

taxee says

Maybe we're all 'Oakies' now.

Maybe this is the last step before an apocalyptic future. I need to buy more guns and ammo.

28   bg   2012 Oct 10, 5:34am  

Goran_K says

Is it worth it to wait until we are basically senior citizens then say, okay the market has corrected, time to buy.

I don't know if it does.

I have been thinking lately that I may never buy a house. I am not sure how I feel about that. I am 42 now. I make good money. I save a lot of it. I live in a 2 bedroom apartment that I fixed up to my liking. Maybe I will retire to the middle of the country and buy something. I think I might like that, but only if it makes financial sense.

bubblesitter says

What's the difference? you rent the same or buy the same? You are still staying in the same place.

I feel a little transient sometimes. I don't like that. I wonder what it will be like for my son who starts to catch on that most of the kids at school live in houses. We have lived in this apartment for 5 years. I think we easily have another 5 years here. Maybe longer. I worry about the value of the cash I save dropping more quickly than the value of houses. I don't *think* we are there yet, but I do wonder.

I have started to think that maybe later I will retire to one of the Tiny houses. Hope I can still climb into that loft bed :-)

29   bubblesitter   2012 Oct 10, 6:05am  

bg says

I wonder what it will be like for my son who starts to catch on that most of the kids at school live in houses.

Why do you hate your kids? Just buy! LOL.

30   Patrick   2012 Oct 10, 6:24am  

I think it all really comes down to our corrupt political system, where the 0.1% can use money to buy laws, and then those laws are used to transfer more of our money to the 0.1%.

When money = speech, then democracy is dead.

31   fil   2012 Oct 10, 6:40am  


living the dream

Living the dream!!!

32   taxee   2012 Oct 10, 6:51am  


I think it all really comes down to our corrupt political system, where the 0.1% can use money to buy laws, and then those laws are used to transfer more of our money to the 0.1%.

When money = speech, then democracy is dead.

when a few can control the printing of money then those who can't are at their service

33   taxee   2012 Oct 10, 8:25am  

As someone who did productive work and is older and no longer commercially viable I can attest to the need for a monetary system that can guarantee the preservation of purchasing power accumulated during a persons productive years. The only real way to guarantee this is a system that can print and distribute legal tender. It appears that the rewards of high- jacking such a system are so great that it will always be accomplished eventually by the worst actors in the system.

34   everything   2012 Oct 10, 10:04am  

They had an article about this in the newspaper saying it was $771 cheaper to buy than rent, well, lol, my rent is only $575 including heat/electricity. I can't afford all the extra dough it takes to put up a wife/kids so as to save the $771 by buying over renting. I'm better off living in squalor and gunning for an earlier retirement where I may travel and work in more interesting places than being tied down with a risky investment such as marriage in a feminist cultured society which can really tie a man down in more ways than one.

35   Raw   2012 Oct 10, 1:17pm  

Yup says

Man what a depressing thread...

Why are you guys so pessimistic? Just have more sex.

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