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Potential 'time bomb' for US economy looms as $1.5 trillion in real-estate mortgages will come due within the next two years
Some $1.5 trillion in mortgages will come due in the next two years - paving the way for a financial crisis as higher interest rates push down property values
As this event looms, big banks such as Wells Fargo are cutting their losses by preparing to offload debts at a discount even when borrowers are up to date
The phenomenon has been further compounded by office vacancies, as a sizable amount of Americans continue to work from home even after the pandemic
As this event looms, big banks such as Wells Fargo are cutting their losses by preparing to offload debts at a discount even when borrowers are up to date
Remember that Realtor contracts are written by attorneys. They want work. A new series of contract paperwork came out for CAR (Chicago Association of Realtors). It's been 6 years, but it was something like "if permits were not pulled the seller is held liable for work performed...." blah blah. These are 10-12 page contracts with 8 point font. Sooooooo much shit can be thrown in there. We'd cross that line out and initial before sending back to the buyer. Protects the seller if a previous own did shit. The attorneys WANT problems so they get more money.
Guess what, you can get out of any contract there just might be fees.
Patrick says
As this event looms, big banks such as Wells Fargo are cutting their losses by preparing to offload debts at a discount even when borrowers are up to date
Thank you for sharing, Patrick.
WF emailed me a notice about changes in their agreement this week, to go into effect in July. Buried way down in the bottom of many pages of legaleze was a summary of the newly imposed withdrawal limits (of the depositors' own money! )
For retail customers, a limit of $50k per withdrawal. For business customers, the limit is $10K.
Looks like they want some stops in place to prevent a First Republic kind of large-depositor stampede.
How much of my $130k earnest money will I potentially lose
zzyzzx says
How much of my $130k earnest money will I potentially lose
$130k in earnest money? Earnest money is typically 1% of the asking price. He is buying a home worth $13 million?
https://www.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/142ifbp/massive_tax_increase/
I noticed our escrow payment nearly doubled from $750 to ~1500 and the bank says it’s because our taxes jumped from ~6,500 to 10,000. Am I just screwed or is there someone to contact for a clear answer on why they jumped?
zzyzzx says
Not worth addressing each troll post but I bite on this one: for CA, your property taxes can’t go up by 50%. Prop 13 limits increases yoy to 2% annually. Thank god for prop13!
How much of my $130k earnest money will I potentially lose if I decide to pull out of a home purchase deal in New Jersey?
In the past week, Californians learned that two of the state’s largest insurance companies, State Farm and Allstate, have decided to stop signing new homeowner policies in the state.
Moreover, State Farm has sought significant rate hikes for its existing customers from California regulators.
Industry experts say both companies’ decisions are part of a broader trend in which insurers retreat from insuring California homeowners due to wildfire risks, climate change and construction costs that outpace inflation.
Bitcoiner, I know you mentioned something about loving tenants breaking their lease because you can charge them for an empty unit. Was reviewing some Arizona renter law yesterday, and the state has the same clause California does, that you have to make reasonable effort to re-rent, even if tenant breaks lease.
I stopped being surprised about how many tenants and landlords don't know the law some years ago.
Not worth addressing each troll post but I bite on this one: for CA, your property taxes can’t go up by 50%. Prop 13 limits increases yoy to 2% annually. Thank god for prop13!
As California becomes a Nation of Renters, repeal or reform of Proposition 13 is inevitable.
Especially as the state goes into a deficit as federal relief funds run out...
Prop 15 , the Tax on Commercial and Industrial Properties for Education and Local Government Funding Initiative (aka Split Roll) barely failed in 2020.
48.03% Yes
51.97% No
A "yes" vote supported this constitutional amendment to require commercial and industrial properties, except those zoned as commercial agriculture, to be taxed based on their market value, rather than their purchase price.
California doesn’t have tax revenue issues. It has spending issues. The more revenues the state collects, the more it spends. There’s no accountability. It’s a bottomless pit. Reform the state spending. Then I’m sure people will agree to reform Prop 13. Is that too much to ask?
California doesn’t have tax revenue issues. It has spending issues. The more revenues the state collects, the more it spends. There’s no accountability. It’s a bottomless pit. Reform the state spending. Then I’m sure people will agree to reform Prop 13. Is that too much to ask?
Eman, I do not think anything will help/change. Once enough Californiansof societyrealizesthe American dream is out of reach (economic mobility), it's too late.
GNL says
Eman, I do not think anything will help/change. Once enough Californiansof societyrealizesthe American dream is out of reach (economic mobility), it's too late.
Yes, and they'll have nothing to lose by repealing or reforming the Proposition 13 laws.
Eman says
California doesn’t have tax revenue issues. It has spending issues. The more revenues the state collects, the more it spends. There’s no accountability. It’s a bottomless pit. Reform the state spending. Then I’m sure people will agree to reform Prop 13. Is that too much to ask?
Eman, I do not think anything will help/change. Once enough of society realizes the American dream is out of reach (economic mobility), it's too late. What is your opinion on how socialism comes about?
I have a neighbor who pays more than 3x the taxes than his neighbor in the house next door.
Eman says
California doesn’t have tax revenue issues. It has spending issues. The more revenues the state collects, the more it spends. There’s no accountability. It’s a bottomless pit. Reform the state spending. Then I’m sure people will agree to reform Prop 13. Is that too much to ask?
Said the landlord.
The American dream is in reach IMO. I am an immigrant myself, I worked extremely hard to move up the ladder at the biotech company I started working for over a decade ago. I started out at rock bottom. On paper I am a millionaire today. Work hard, live frugal and invest wisely. Time and inflation will do the heavy lifting if you have assets. Rent long term in places like California and you commit financial suicide. I know there are exceptions (like Patrick). this game isn’t rock (some text omitted to shorten quote...) th sweat equity and rented it out with a nice cash flow. Did a cash out refi on this one and bought the next property. Meanwhile they were living like poor people and stashed away every penny for the next downpayment. If you want it you have to work hard for it. What really made me pause is when they said they both have social worker careers. They don’t make a ton of money. They are just willing to make sacrifices. Before you know it they will be multi millionaires and retire early.
This story sprinkled with rose petals sounds to good to be true. Wookieman has a more realistic take on real estate/life. So does Patrick. IMO
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/the-housing-market-looks-bad--except-to-these-folks-134351457.html
It's expensive, but I think general aviation is going to see an uptick.
Who here bought a house in 2010-2013?
Eman says
Who here bought a house in 2010-2013?
I did. Had to liquidate a shitload of stocks and options though and I wouldn't be surprised if these were much more $$$ than the shack when all is said and done. I dare not calculate, lol.
Back in the 1970's nearly anyone could own a plane as a new basic Cessna cost about the same as a Corvette and used planes were cheap. Then a couple of pilot error crashes and lawsuit payouts ruined everything. The price of the basic Cessna went from about $10k to $35k very quickly to cover legal costs, and then a death spiral as the high costs caused fewer sales, and now those legal costs are spread over fewer units and more price increases.
back in those 1970s, general aviation fields were everywhere and loaded with parked planes.
In those days I financed as a teenager a private pilot license and instrument rating with minimum wage jobs, and a commercial license at age 20, without borrowing.
If a jury of peers were actual pilots, the case would have been found for Cessna
B.A.C.A.H. says
In those days I financed as a teenager a private pilot license and instrument rating with minimum wage jobs, and a commercial license at age 20, without borrowing.
Impressive. That is at least 250 flight hours.
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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.