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Housing Crash Coming This Year


               
2016 Mar 21, 5:56pm   18,332 views  54 comments

by Dan8267   follow (4)  

www.tfKWQ0SyVlo

Likely or not? Discuss.

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41   anonymous   2016 Mar 22, 3:26pm  

tatupu70 says

donny says

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?

42   tatupu70   2016 Mar 22, 3:50pm  

donny says

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.

43   Strategist   2016 Mar 22, 4:03pm  

donny says

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.

44   anonymous   2016 Mar 22, 4:13pm  

tatupu70 says

Prices are about in line with rents.

Maybe in some locations, but certainly not California.

45   tatupu70   2016 Mar 22, 4:20pm  

donny says

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

46   anonymous   2016 Mar 22, 4:29pm  

tatupu70 says

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.

47   tatupu70   2016 Mar 22, 4:49pm  

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.

48   Done   2016 Mar 22, 5:05pm  

tatupu70 says

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.?

50   tatupu70   2016 Mar 22, 5:51pm  

Graybox says

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.

51   Bellingham Bill   2016 Mar 22, 6:41pm  

donny says

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.

52   Strategist   2016 Mar 22, 6:50pm  

donny says

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

tatupu70 says

House appreciation is assumed to be 2%/year

It's been 6%+ in California for the last 50 years.

53   epitaph   2016 Mar 28, 3:03pm  

Crash no, pullback in some markets, yeah.

54   anonymous   2016 Mar 28, 7:44pm  

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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