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There will be no housing bust. It's becoming more and more clear to me that America is moving toward 3rd world status
Bitcoiner says
That’s freakin insane….3.7k for 2b/1b, 1Sqft
That’s Alpine….35min away from San Diego…
$3750 for a 2 bedroom, 1 bath that is 35 mins from San Diego ?
Wow, you can get the same condo or apartment as far as quality for around $1300 in Panama City Florida and only about 15 to 20 minutes from the beach.
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GNL says
There will be no housing bust. It's becoming more and more clear to me that America is moving toward 3rd world status
Yeah. Maybe.
But in that case if the high inflation continues and the house prices don't crash but "stay flat" then they sort of did crash by not keeping up with the inflation.
$3750 for a 2 bedroom, 1 bath that is 35 mins from San Diego ?
Wow, you can get the same condo or apartment as far as quality for around $1300 in Panama City Florida and only about 15 to 20 minutes from the beach.
home owners are protected from higher payments.
Bitcoiner says
home owners are protected from higher payments.
Lol! In you happen to live in CA, owner can be "protected" from property taxes and become (bigger) leach in the long run on ponzi scheme of CA 1978 Prop 13.
The problem most don't understand is you literally owe nothing if debt was obtained without fraud. People have been trained that debt and leverage are bad because it could hurt your credit score. That's literally the only penalty as long as you didn't commit fraud by lying to get the loan and make sure your savings are in protected assets.
So then the bank can go after your savings and checking accounts, etc, if you default.
Probably nobody. These rentals are probably sitting empty. I mean, look at that shit and its location.
My guess someone overpaid, and is trying to cover their exorbitant mortgage. Always a sure sign of a market on the decline.
Lol! In you happen to live in CA, owner can be "protected" from property taxes and become (bigger) leach in the long run on ponzi scheme of CA 1978 Prop 13.
Basic economics, you can only charge what someone is willing to pay. Your market rental rate is determined by me(the consumer), not you. Properties that sit, sit for a reason. No one is willing to pay. That owner can spew market rates and charts out their ass all they want, they will lose money until they lower the price. That's what these rentals show. The chinks in the wishful thinking of the '06 crowd - "Rents will never drop again!!".
As your renters are squeezed mor (some text omitted to shorten quote...)
It's a lot easier to just know the values because you've been looking forever, than check the history of every rental. When I see someone asking $500 over what comparable properties in the area normally go for, I don't need to check their history to know they overpaid. Because as you said, they don't want to take a loss on their "investment", so they pray for some sucker to bail them out. But the suckers are drying up fast, and the owners will be left holding the bag in the end.
On a tangent, but former Californian homeowners who sell and move to Texas do complain about property taxes and learn to protest them. Texas puts the "taxes" in Texas. You can't spell taxes without Texas :)
It's going lower...https://www.nasdaq.com/market-activity/commodities/lbs
It's a lot easier to just know the values because you've been looking forever, than check the history of every rental. When I see someone asking $500 over what comparable properties in the area normally go for, I don't need to check their history to know they overpaid
https://www.reddit.com/r/FirstTimeHomeBuyer/comments/13c45dl/my_hoa_is_going_to_balloon_from_345_to_over_700/
My HOA is going to balloon from $345 to over $700 within my first year in my condo. Is this legal?
They deferred the maintenance and the guy didn't pay attention.
You should really never have more than $10k in a personal checking account and $10k in a savings.
If he paid 20% down and has a 5% interest rate (remember rates were lower in 2021). his mortgage is 2,800 (including property taxes and insurance).
“ When I see someone asking $500 over what comparable properties in the area normally go for, I don't need to check their history to know they overpaid”
“Overpaid” is subjective. And you don’t know how much capital someone put down on a property and how his loan is structured.
Anyways, the notion of high rent>means someone overpaid>means housing top is near seems a bit one-dimensional to me. But whatever….. you found a house in Yuma and I am happy for you. Hope it all works out and you like it there! Send us some feedback on what you like/not like in Yuma!
Sheesh Nuttboxer. Waste your time arguing on a blog
Seriously though, these kind of discussions are the bread-n-butter patnet was founded on
How does one keep not more than 10 k in checking and 10k in savings? What are the options available?
El Cajon is way too city for me. Where I live we call going to San Diego(which starts in El Cajon), "Going into town", or "Going down the hill".
I don’t know if CA allows these kind of agreements.
NuttBoxer says
When do you think people are more likely to overpay, and attempt to over-charge, at the bottom, or at the top? Unless you don't believe there will ever bet a bottom..?
You understand why I don’t believe in overpaying and why it really doesn’t matter?
Years later those prices appear as cheap.
Good! I'd rather you not have to live there it's a shit hole. Smog seems to accumulate in that valley as well. Further East IS quite nice though. I'd considered moving out that way but muh commute.
Further, as I've mentioned, my personal experience is irresponsible people certainly buy houses, and responsible people definitely rent. If I didn't know better, I'd swear you guys learned economics from realtors ;)
I've been a landlord.
Did you manage them all yourself or did you have a property manager? Did you end up selling them all?
NuttBoxer says
Further, as I've mentioned, my personal experience is irresponsible people certainly buy houses, and responsible people definitely rent. If I didn't know better, I'd swear you guys learned economics from realtors ;)
Renters are the worst to deal with. I've been a landlord. "A fucking ant is in my house come throw chemicals at it." "My dad died I need two weeks to pay rent." Fine, you're a good tenant. That's not the norm. It's not a judgement on you personally. Renters suck. It's not easy money like some portray. It's a pain in the ass and anyone saying otherwise is lying.
Even with the best of screening tenants are shit 50% of the time. This is 100% fact having rented over 1k apartment units. My evidence is beyond anecdotal. I was a good tenant when I leased. Most aren't.
Interesting data. I guess the quality of tenants is better here in the Bay Area? My biz partner and I have over 100 units. 96 units are managed by a property management (PM) company. The other could handful units, we still manage them as they’ve been our long-term tenant. Whenever these tenants leave, I’ll either sell or turn them over to the PM company.
Out of the 96 units, we had 3 evictions. They were all legacy tenants, which we evicted shortly after the purchase (some text omitted to shorten quote...) 18 units before I met my partner and scaled up to apartment buildings. At that time, I found it could be a little annoying at times as things tend to break on a Friday before the long holiday weekend. However, it’s still much much better than working a W2. What I’ve learned is that if I’m willing to pay a premium, someone will make fix it and make the problem go away. All in all, I’d rather scaled up to 200 units and be an investor than to hold down a W2. It’s a great trade for me.
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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.