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The Fed Chair, Mr. Powell, said all the parts out loud at the annual Jackson Hole banker meet-up last week: look out below, we’ve decided to take this sucker down (in the immortal words of George W. Bush), since pretending to stoke prosperity via Modern Monetary Theory only results in, duh, ruinous inflation. This raises the question, though, as to which is more politically damaging: inflation or depression? It is really only the difference between having plenty of worthless money or having no money at all.
More price drops around Santa Cruz. Now, when that beach front 3,000 sq. ft. bungalow drops to 250K, I'm buying.
fake a dirty bomb attack
Cap rate is collapsing for San Jose market.
This means an investor would get more ROI just by parking their dough in t-bills than buying and renting housing here.
https://youtu.be/IZ65sM01K6U
Disclosure: All of the above should be outright false according to the PatNet Real Estate 'expert' community.
Eman says
Which institutions do we know who bought rentals in Denver and San Jose markets with 1.6% and 3% cap rate?
The ones who bought in those markets. Was fine when interest rates were low. But not now when they are high.
https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/x0ruq1/no_one_showed_up_at_our_open_house/
No one showed up at our open house!
It should be about time for the Washington establishment to start expanding opportunities for generational wealth building. Especially for the marginalized members of society. I mean the Blacks fell for it under Bush's "ownership society". Mortgage brokers fell all over themselves to put Blacks into subprime mortgages that shot up in payments after a year or so. Sure, they made these products available at the height of the housing bubble when prices were stupid, but the mortgagees had "character". After the bubble burst, and by golly the mortgage payments that doubled just weren't paid; the Blacks were worse off than they started as a percentage of them as homeowners.
Think they will fall for government help again ????
Their track record ain't the greatest.
Emwe're.
ys
Let’s wait and see the default rate. You’re speculating at the moment.
Default rate has nothing to do with what I was talking about.
Stop the bullshit.
OpenDoor taking another bath:
https://www.redfin.com/CA/San-Marcos/1481-Beechtree-Rd-92078/home/6311329
Alabama and Mississippi are my picks for the next hipster hotspot.
I forgot in CalfuckUornia Prop 19 limited the use of prop 13 inheritance. Heirs have to take occupancy within time limits as primary residence, or tax base valuation goes up. I doubt this will stop some from using houses as rentals under the radar, but the idea of leaving inherited houses fallow and empty for generations got harder.
https://notthebee.com/article/check-out-the-data-on-the-coming-housing-crisis-as-home-sales-tank
Eman says
Have you ever witnessed any lender calling the loan due when the borrower is not in default? Bank would cut or freeze the line of credit to reduce risks. Banks are in the business of lending.
Banks call those on all the time for institutional investors.
Eman says
The last thing they want to do is to call any loan due as foreclosing can get very expensive
This isn't about foreclosures. That only applies to 'people lending', not corporations with thousands of houses listed as assets. The bank says, "The value of your underlying assets are shit. Pay up, now." like a margin call and that firm has to get the money somewhere, so they liquidate...fast. That is what Blackrock and Zillow and all the others are doing.
See, you don't know what the fuck yo...
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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.