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The "1" seems to be an arbitrary base to begin with.
Right, but it's a frame of reference at least. Otherwise, what do you have to gauge whether housing is over-priced or not?
We could call that frame of reference "0.1" Now homes are under priced.
We could call that frame of reference "0.1" Now homes are under priced.
Uuuuhhhhh...you drinking JW Black or Blue? That graph would indicate housing is "over" priced.
We could call that frame of reference "0.1" Now homes are under priced.
Uuuuhhhhh...you drinking JW Black or Blue? That graph would indicate housing is "over" priced.
JW Black. The Blue costs too much.
The graph is too arbitrary. It loses any meaning.
When wealth effect is the point of quantitative easing, which money is NOT chasing an asset class?
Not only asset class, there's all kinds of different players and like I mentioned in another post somewhere I believe RE
will be an easy ride, nice and steady up trend. Building on that thought the USD is just stepping down in my opinion. It has the #'s
to be able to afford a deep retest before buyers are likely to commit and all the while SPX500 moves up. There putting cash where
Bears will be going against the trend to put it simply by the #s, you know what that means right "S/S". Realize also bonds are still
being bought and they say the same thing. Not all markets are the same some like to snap.... lol SPX500 is likely to get more volatile
From my frame of reference it has already confirmed it's heading higher and we are likely to feel it in vol. Retesting will be bear trapping,
that is the sound you will be hearing.... lol Keep an eye for price to breach and stay above 2053 for any length of time .30-.45mins., that will
be another strong conformation and more massive support with relatively 40-50 pts.2080-90 to be had. Kind of like housing up....
VIX confirmed it should go down and a pip below today's low is a 2nd confirmation and 13-12.75 is likely which is not a lot but enough,
it also closed below 14.5 1st confirmation 14.5 thru 16.5 are tense. 20pts in SPX500 would be reasonable and satisfactory.
VIX confirmed it should go down and a pip below today's low is a 2nd confirmation and 13-12.75 is likely which is not a lot but enough,
it also closed below 14.5 1st confirmation 14.5 thru 16.5 are tense. 20pts in SPX500 would be reasonable and satisfactory.
Vix also closed tight on Friday and this week will be short so I expect traders are likely to execute some trades.
Likely or not? Discuss.
The next housing crisis is here
And it is not a crash
http://www.businessinsider.com/housing-supply-crisis-is-looming-2016-3
The next housing crisis is here
And it is not a crash
Pandemonium in the streets.....
Thanks, but I'm not sure how that answers the question of whether we inevitably need to get back to a ratio of 1.0 just from a market health perspective. If the ratio is higher than 1.0, it would seem that housing is over-priced (in comparison to rents); this makes sense in times of economic boom because everyone wants to own, invest, etc in housing because there's money chasing the asset class.
No, you're reading the graph incorrectly. 1 doesn't mean renting and buying are at par, it just means that the rent/price ratio is the same as it was in January 1988.
No, you're reading the graph incorrectly. 1 doesn't mean renting and buying are at par, it just means that the rent/price ratio is the same as it was in January 1988.
I understand that. My point is that no one knows what "par" is, so all anyone has to go off of is what history tells us. If you're saying that the baseline ratio continues to increase over time, then real estate investing is becoming less and less profitable. That doesn't seem sustainable. Don't focus so much on the "technicals" of the graph as opposed to what the trends mean.
No, you're reading the graph incorrectly. 1 doesn't mean renting and buying are at par, it just means that the rent/price ratio is the same as it was in January 1988.
I understand that. My point is that no one knows what "par" is, so all anyone has to go off of is what history tells us. If you're saying that the baseline ratio continues to increase over time, then real estate investing is becoming less and less profitable. That doesn't seem sustainable.
Nope--could be that 1988 was a time when owning was much cheaper than renting. Could be you need to adjust for interest rates. My point was that you can't assume 1 is the right baseline.
There are lots of calculators out there that will tell you if a house if overpriced using rents as a guide. When I've run the numbers, the prices don't seem out of whack.
It's an over leveraged asset class with huge speculative cash movement. The demand is an illusion, just as it was before. Affordability also makes the high end perilous, because wage inflation pressure is ignored for as long as possible. Top that with the fact that these "safe investments" are simply shacks on tiny bits of land in a world where it is decreasingly important for proximity to affect trade, and you have a massive leverage problem at the banks.
Nope--could be that 1988 was a time when owning was much cheaper than renting. Could be you need to adjust for interest rates. My point was that you can't assume 1 is the right baseline.
So you're admitting that real estate (as rentals) is becoming less attractive (when compared to history) as a means of investment.
There are lots of calculators out there that will tell you if a house if overpriced using rents as a guide. When I've run the numbers, the prices don't seem out of whack.
I agree and their lucky the dollar is carrying strength so in essence that equals cheaper housing over all...
So you're admitting that real estate (as rentals) is becoming less attractive (when compared to history) as a means of investment.
Maybe. I'd have to see the details behind their calculation to say for sure. I don't think you can ignore the effect of low interest rates on the equation.
I don't think you can ignore the effect of low interest rates on the equation.
So are you saying that higher interest rates would negatively impact the price component of the equation?
So are you saying that higher interest rates would negatively impact the price component of the equation?
I'm saying that low interest rates make the cost of money cheaper. And they reduce the opportunity cost of down payment/purchase price.
But I see where you're going to go with this. Historically, nominal prices rise in conjunction with interest rates because rising rates usually indicate a strong economy and strong wage gains. So let's not rehash this again.
But I see where you're going to go with this. Historically, nominal prices rise in conjunction with interest rates because rising rates usually indicate a strong economy and strong wage gains. So let's not rehash this again.
Have you and I talked about this before? I don't believe we have.
Anyway, I'm confused because you first say interest rates matter to house prices but then you say they're only a symptom of what is going on and not a contributing factor. Which is it? Do interest rates only affect house prices when rates are low but not when they're high?
Anyway, I'm confused because you first say interest rates matter to house prices but then you say they're only a symptom of what is going on and not a contributing factor. Which is it? Do interest rates only affect house prices when rates are low but not when they're high?
Didn't mean to imply you and I specifically had talked about it, just that it had been discussed frequently in the past.
What I said was interest rates matter (quite a bit) to the rent/buy decision which is a much different statement than what you attribute to me. Given price x and rent y--the decision whether to buy or rent is dependent on interest rates. Now, interest rates certainly have an effect on house prices, but that effect is typically drowned out by other effects that have an opposite effect (wage gains).
Does that help?
Anyway, I'm confused because you first say interest rates matter to house prices but then you say they're only a symptom of what is going on and not a contributing factor. Which is it? Do interest rates only affect house prices when rates are low but not when they're high?
Donny, I realize your question probably was rhetorical, but here goes anyway. I'm going to give a VERY sarcastic answer: When interest rates are low, housing prices go up because payments are cheap due to the low interest rates, even if "the economy" is bad. When interest rates are high, that must be because "the economy" is good, and therefore housing prices go up, then, too. Conclusion: Housing prices always go up, no matter what!!
The above is how some people think about it, but of course it is wrong. As we all know by now (2008), housing prices do NOT always go up. People who adhere to the above view completely ignore a whole bunch of factors, the biggest of which is the rampant forcing down of interest rates that is being performed to inflate housing prices at ANY cost. We have now been at zero interest (essentially zero) on bank deposits for the last 8 years. A new bubble has inflated, and it will burst, too, unless a serious round of wage inflation can be ignited. But as we all know, the Fed hates wage inflation (because it makes the rich poorer). The Fed only loves asset inflation (because it makes the rich richer).
The above is how some people think about it, but of course it is wrong. As we all know by now (2008), housing prices do NOT always go up. People who adhere to the above view completely ignore a whole bunch of factors, the biggest of which is the rampant forcing down of interest rates that is being performed to inflate housing prices at ANY cost. We have now been at zero interest (essentially zero) on bank deposits for the last 8 years. A new bubble has inflated, and it will burst, too, unless a serious round of wage inflation can be ignited. But as we all know, the Fed hates wage inflation (because it makes the rich poorer). The Fed only loves asset inflation (because it makes the rich richer).
This is very helpful, thank you. So do you believe the price-to-rent ratio today is still too high base based on the graph that was presented earlier? It would seem that low interest rates would cause it to rise and that there's a correlation there. If that's true, then I would imagine someone should NOT invest in the housing market (I'm generalizing...I know markets are local) because it's over-priced and needs to drop down to gain proper equilibrium at some point.
What I said was interest rates matter (quite a bit) to the rent/buy decision which is a much different statement than what you attribute to me. Given price x and rent y--the decision whether to buy or rent is dependent on interest rates. Now, interest rates certainly have an effect on house prices, but that effect is typically drowned out by other effects that have an opposite effect (wage gains).
Does that help?
It does. You mentioned that higher interest rates mean the economy is doing well. Does that mean really low interest rates (like what we have today) signify a poor economy?
It does. You mentioned that higher interest rates mean the economy is doing well. Does that mean really low interest rates (like what we have today) signify a poor economy?
I think you're playing games now, but I'll bite
Yep--in general.
It does. You mentioned that higher interest rates mean the economy is doing well. Does that mean really low interest rates (like what we have today) signify a poor economy?
Yep--in general.
So is it fair to say that really low interest rates have artificially propped up housing prices then? If rates are low and that means the economy is bad, why else would house prices be so high?
So is it fair to say that really low interest rates have artificially propped up housing prices then? If rates are low and that means the economy is bad, why else would house prices be so high?
I don't know what you mean by "artificially". House prices fell as rates fell in 2008/9, probably too far as asset prices usually do after a bubble. They've recovered as the economy has improved.
There's nothing to indicate that anything "artificial" is going on now. Prices are about in line with rents.
Prices and rents are high because there's not enough supply.
So is it fair to say that really low interest rates have artificially propped up housing prices then?
It would be more accurate to state - low interest rates prevented a complete collapse in the economy and housing market in 2008.
Home prices were low compared to the cost of construction, which is why home building dried up. Home prices are still low, but making a comeback.
Prices are about in line with rents.
Maybe in some locations, but certainly not California.
Maybe in some locations, but certainly not California.
I think CA is the exception. And I bet even in CA, prices are in line with rents for most of the state.
Post a few examples and let's examine them
Post a few examples and let's examine them
Here's a few in a nice area of north San Diego:
https://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Diego/18122-Chieftain-Ct-92127/home/6266619
https://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Diego/10266-Prairie-Springs-Rd-92127/home/6456004
https://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Diego/11924-Acacia-Glen-Ct-92128/home/4782268
My guess is these would likely rent for around $3500-$3800/month, but I'm not 100% sure.
Just ran the numbers on NYT rent vs buy calculator (assume 2% growth in rent, home price and inflation, 4% investment gains, 10 years in the house) and an $850K house should rent for $3200/mo. If you pay $3500-3800, it's better to buy.
Just ran the numbers on NYT rent vs buy calculator (assume 2% growth in rent, home price and inflation, 4% investment gains, 10 years in the house) and an $850K house should rent for $3200/mo. If you pay $3500-3800, it's better to buy.
I have to question 4% steady gain which maybe the case however most will finance so how much does that figure
when the interest cost are calc.?
No opinion on this, but this is interesting:
http://www.cnbc.com/2016/03/21/national-association-of-realtors-reports-existing-home-sales-for-february-2016.html
I have to question 4% steady gain which maybe the case however most will finance so how much does that figure
when the interest cost are calc.?
I'm not sure what you're asking. The 4% is gain on investments made--money NOT used to buy a house. Opportunity cost.
House appreciation is assumed to be 2%/year
Interest costs are included in the calculation.
So is it fair to say that really low interest rates have artificially propped up housing prices then? If rates are low and that means the economy is bad, why else would house prices be so high?
Low rates aren't just propping up prices, but allowing real per-capita consumer debt:

to be bearable.
My guess is these would likely rent for around $3500-$3800/month, but I'm not 100% sure.
This is a good site in figuring rent.
rentometer.com
House appreciation is assumed to be 2%/year
It's been 6%+ in California for the last 50 years.
I would like a pullback. I don't know if Austin will be one though, however, I did see a sign for a crawfish boil at a housing community on 183. That's a sign of fishing for buyers.
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Likely or not? Discuss.