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zzyzzx says
Meanwhile, in the area I live (DC/Northern Virginia), most people live in their homes maybe 5 years or so.
Not a Mariner fan are you, WookieMan?
https://www.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/109fsfc/my_friends_escrow_just_went_up_525_after_2_years/
My friend’s escrow just went up $525/month after 2 years of owning the home.
Housing market enters 'deep freeze,' as half of all homes sell below list price
For most, they are technically buying monthly payments of a mortgage, home insurance, property tax, and HOA fee, instead of buying a house.
Housing market enters 'deep freeze,' as half of all homes sell below list price
The 'Housing Experts' of Patnet this time last year insisted that this would not happen! And they vilified anyone who said differently (namely, me)
Patrick says
Until there's a spike in inventory that graph doesn't mean all that much. Existing home sales decrease if there are limited number of homes for sale. Inventory is still low. Factor in the massive rise in vacation rental homes as well that may not hit the market for decades again. Flippers have a hard time finding deals, so there's minimal activity there. The graph "looks" alarming but I'm not seeing a housing crash.
What's happing is that most don't need/want to trade homes now with the increased interest rates. So they don't sell. So less homes sell. You cannot have a price crash in housing without a massive inventory increase. It took 12+ months of inventory for prices to really drop in Chicagoland area in 2006. Start worrying if it hits 9 mon...
Agreed, besides stronger corrections in obvious shithole areas I have not seen any significant price declines, it's neither a buyer nor sellers market right now, it's in an equilibrium. Sure if you want tons of money for your overpriced shack you're out of luck now, but reasonable offers are finding buyers quickly.
mell says
Agreed, besides stronger corrections in obvious shithole areas I have not seen any significant price declines, it's neither a buyer nor sellers market right now, it's in an equilibrium. Sure if you want tons of money for your overpriced shack you're out of luck now, but reasonable offers are finding buyers quickly.
Until new construction outpaces inventory (if that makes sense) prices cannot crash. Here in IL in 2005 you'd buy 80 acres, build 200 cardboard box homes and sell them to people that didn't have the finances. That's not remotely where we're at from my observation. There's not even the skilled trades people to scale it back up to building at that pace.
The snarky comments about housing are annoying though (not you). I don't think a user here is bullish on housing short term 5 years or less. There's not a crash coming without job losses. There are a...
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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.