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Key is the will. So if you die tomorrow there's not family infighting over your assets. My dad was an attorney and that shit destroys families after someone with solid finances dies without a will. It gets messy.
If they decide to fight over large amounts, it's usually the lawyers who win the estate through endless fees and procedures, while the relatives are left with their insane rages.
U.S. MORTGAGE RATES RISE FURTHER FROM 6%
The story above illustrates how much depends on a good inspection.
That sounds like an expensive nightmare to me.
https://www.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/113sx2c/just_a_rant_wish_we_never_bought_a_house_and_just/
Just a rant — wish we never bought a house and just continued renting forever.
https://www.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/113sx2c/just_a_rant_wish_we_never_bought_a_house_and_just/
Just a rant — wish we never bought a house and just continued renting forever.
https://www.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/113sx2c/just_a_rant_wish_we_never_bought_a_house_and_just/
Just a rant — wish we never bought a house and just continued renting forever.
There better be a halfway decent spring selling season, which is supposed to already have started in San Francisco and Silicon Valley, because this is getting pretty bad, pretty fast. But it’s hard to imagine just how good the spring selling season can be amid countless reports of layoffs, working from home somewhere else, with big numbers being thrown around about how many people have left Silicon Valley and San Francisco. The City of San Francisco alone lost about 56,000 residents, or about 6.3% of its population, in the period of 2020 through 2022, according to Census data, even as about 12,000 new housing units were completed over the same period.
The median price in the nine-county Bay Area plunged by another 8% in January from December, by 17% year-over-year, and by 35%, or by $540,000, in 10 months from the crazy peak in March 2022, from $1.54 million to $1.00 million, according to the California Association of Realtors.
I'm sorry people lost 10, 20, 30% on a $2M property, we simply don't give a shit. Wa wa
Sick of CA being essentially the dictator of the country. It is NOT how the rest of the country works.
WookieMan says
If SFBA is your market, sorry. Most of the country is completely fine.
Cut the 'Housing Expert' crap.
Ahem, Patrick is a long-time resident of the SF Bay Area, his blog has a focus on his back yard. Wolf Richter, the author of the piece, is a resident of SF who sometimes writes about housing in the region. How does this make California dictator of the country? If you're sick of it maybe you will feel better if you don't read a Bay Arean's blog that has a linked article by a different Bay Arean.
You can buy them through your broker. You can also buy them direct from the gubberment. (https://www.treasurydirect.gov). I've only purchased through a broker, like Schwab, so I have no experience with buying direct.
I am slightly worried about a US default though. Could happen. All Treasury holders could get a "haircut" as they say.
Rest of the country in most places is stable and fine.
Closing the gold window was a default.
I am slightly worried about a US default though. Could happen. All Treasury holders could get a "haircut" as they say.
And that's not including all the auto loans that are so upside down they defy gravity. As long as some people can afford the payment, it doesn't matter if the loan extends into the next millennium.
https://www.wxyz.com/news/us-foreclosure-filings-are-up-36-michigan-is-in-the-top-3
I’m shocked that investors bought 18% of the real estate inventory in the current market environment. It made sense when they couldn’t earn much yield in treasury and had to settle for real estate at 4-5 cap with borrowing cost around 3%. Given today’s borrowing cost and the cap rates, it’s negative leverage. 🤔
Eman says
I’m shocked that investors bought 18% of the real estate inventory in the current market environment. It made sense when they couldn’t earn much yield in treasury and had to settle for real estate at 4-5 cap with borrowing cost around 3%. Given today’s borrowing cost and the cap rates, it’s negative leverage. 🤔
If you have cash flow, can earn income on a property you want to buy, there's not much out there. Result, prices go higher.
High interest rates are meant to make people NOT want to sell to control inflation. So they don't. Most are locked in at low interest rates outside of the last 18 months, but with qualified and solid underwriting. I can piss in a 360º circle in my backyard and get a $50k+ a year job. Coastal cities are going to drag it down as the exodus continues. Move from the $1M condo to the rural/suburban home on 1/2 acre for $500k. Median ...
Interestingly, markets experiencing the most drawdown in investors activity are the cheaper markets w
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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.