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Yes financing shit homes for his family to make money. That's a real winner you want latch to?
Only the drop in prices is likely to happen.
Owners and Builders will try anything except cutting prices until there is no other option.
There are now 0 down builder incentives in Florida, Texas, and Tennessee as the largest number of new single families goes unsold since the Financial Crisis, and the 2nd highest inventories since the Crisis generally.
Note there is a mandate that a person available to inspect the property or handle any issues be located within 1 hour of the property at all times
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Data from Professor Shiller's research
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Yes also the $200 a night is the base rate plus there is a total of 12% tax and also likely a $30 a night cleaning fee so it comes out to $254 a night to rent a 2 bedroom townhome within a couple minutes walk of the white sand beach and emerald water of the Gulf of America.
WookieMan says
Yes financing shit homes for his family to make money. That's a real winner you want latch to?
YOU SAID "I dislike bankers, but someone from a building background at minimum should not be in charge of any finance department", not me.
Stop your projecting.
More expensive than a hotel most of the year!
Feb 2025: sold for $280,000
(a 24% drop from 21 April 2022 price, and about a 5.5% annual appreciation since 2020)
What is a "typical home" versus a "typical apartment?" Are we comparing a 1500 sqft 3-bedroom house on a suburban lot to a 900 sqft 2-bedroom flat in a highrise?
HeadSet says
What is a "typical home" versus a "typical apartment?" Are we comparing a 1500 sqft 3-bedroom house on a suburban lot to a 900 sqft 2-bedroom flat in a highrise?
You're just broke 95% of the time. Owning you have to save. Renting you don't. You're an anomaly if you rent AND save. That rarely exists.
I would say if you're not handy I probably wouldn't own. I can fix and figure out 99% of things wrong in a house. Owning is the way to go unless your employment has you moving frequently. Even then you could just rent the place out if you bought it and pay down the equity via a renter.
Patrick might be an outlier, but no one rents and then saves. Maybe 1% of them if that. They get a cool pad and are broke.
Patrick might be an outlier, but no one rents and then saves. Maybe 1% of them if that. They get a cool pad and are broke.
Yeah when I first saw Patrick on 20/20 many years ago talking about the housing bubble
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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.