by AD ➕follow (1) 💰tip ignore
« First « Previous Comments 2,224 - 2,263 of 5,613 Next » Last » Search these comments
It’s a good strategy. Thanks!
The builders in Phoenix are giving out discounts and pay closing costs but during a “normal” market I will try your strategy.
Some builders like lennar don’t even work with agents anymore.
if I hit Yosemite on a Monday and it's not on fire, it should be relatively not packed.
if I hit Yosemite on a Monday and it's not on fire, it should be relatively not packed.
It's the water you have to worry about this time around.
Congrats! I have no idea what you put into the remodel but I am sure you made a nice profit. Bought for 585k….!
Bitcoiner says
Congrats! I have no idea what you put into the remodel but I am sure you made a nice profit. Bought for 585k….!
Well, he did have to add a bedroom and bathroom (over 400 sq.ft.). Nerves of steel that Eman. Not sure I could have handled that while the Case Shiller Home Price Index was doing this... Well done sir!
is a buyers agent actually interested in working for you?
I have to admit I’m surprised with the resiliency of buyers in the current market.
When people remove their hatred for realtors from the equation, the answer becomes clear. It’s a business transaction. Why short change ourselves and leave 1% credit on the table while helping out a friend to make some easy money. That’s a lot of free lunches and dinners right there. I love eating good food so I tend to equate to meals. 😋
Eman says
I have to admit I’m surprised with the resiliency of buyers in the current market.
No such thing.
Would you please elaborate on what you meant by “no such thing”?
Eman says
Would you please elaborate on what you meant by “no such thing”?
Mortgage originations, which include refinances, dropped sharply in the first quarter of 2023 to $324 billion, the lowest level seen since 2014.
https://www.newyorkfed.org/newsevents/news/research/2023/20230515
It’s not resilence. It’s retrenchment.
The gap/premium between buy vs. rent seems too big to be a buyer
Most people are nice. Some are shady. It’s just human nature. I get to pick who I want to work with and who I don’t. No reason to hate anyone. It’s just another occupation.
And realtors are to not to blame for this imbalanced market.
Just came back from a sushi buffet in Concord. $30.99/person plus drinks. Great food and service for a reasonable price.
Eman says
Look at this flip last spring. I missed the market by a couple months. I could have gotten $100-$150k more had it hit the market sooner thanks to low mortgage rates.
https://redf.in/H28A6Z
1.7M for a 1.2 sqft shoebox. That was quite the bidding war since your list price was
1.195M ?! Did you add sqft to this house too?
You may also call it survival of the fittest. A lot of aspiring buyers are cut out of the RE market. There is a chance they will be life-long renters. I couldn’t afford to buy all the properties I own in todays market - even though my salary has gone up substantially (same for my wife). On the other hand you have people buying $1M - $2M homes in all cash. And realtors are to not to blame for this imbalanced market. Low inventory, no forced selling, low interest rates with duration and a concentration of wealth are the reason.
You know more than I do on the owner end and you can spot issues with properties having flipped and done a bunch I assume. Listing brokers are the ones that scare me the most if you're the buyer. They 100% will lie unless you spot it. I doubt you use inspectors anymore, I won't anymore as a non-licensed person and having done enough rehab. Only time would be structural concern on an older home, pre-1950's. It's easy to spot hack jobs.
Dual agency is the biggie. Ethic (some text omitted to shorten quote...) find something else. It's not like a car where you can search and get the same one somewhere else. THAT is the house you want. I know you're on the investment side, but just pointing out from previously being in the trenches why people hate Realtors. It's not wrong to hate them. And it's not wrong to like or have a "good" one. They've lied to you though, almost certainly. It's like playing football and never having an injury for 25 years. That's impossible for 99.99999% of players.
As long as your ROI is 15% or greater annually, investors will give you money.
My avg. yearly ROI in the stock market has been 20%-30%, obviously with less leverage. You need to do research though on individual stocks like you would do on any other asset, such as houses etc.
mell says
My avg. yearly ROI in the stock market has been 20%-30%, obviously with less leverage. You need to do research though on individual stocks like you would do on any other asset, such as houses etc.
Come on, are you pulling our leg? You'd be retired in 10 years.
GNL says
mell says
My avg. yearly ROI in the stock market has been 20%-30%, obviously with less leverage. You need to do research though on individual stocks like you would do on any other asset, such as houses etc.
Come on, are you pulling our leg? You'd be retired in 10 years.
Depends on the amount invested.
just_passing_through says
sushi buffet
Usually a step up from gas station sushi.
mell says
My avg. yearly ROI in the stock market has been 20%-30%, obviously with less leverage. You need to do research though on individual stocks like you would do on any other asset, such as houses etc.
Come on, are you pulling our leg? You'd be retired in 10 years.
My avg. yearly ROI in the stock market has been 20%-30%, obviously with less leverage. You need to do research though on individual stocks like you would do on any other asset, such as houses etc.
Nice, was the condo all cash or did you finance? Any advice you can give someone for buying their first vacation rental?
Right now I'm only accumulating company stock.
Or were you just talking companies in general?
« First « Previous Comments 2,224 - 2,263 of 5,613 Next » Last » 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.