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I disagree with a lot in this article from personal experience. Perhaps there's truth for kids fresh out of college, but not for productive, experienced workers. I suppose it depends on the person as well.
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/bosses-fed-remote-4-main-193500794.html
Bosses are fed up with remote work for 4 main reasons
Who is deagal and what is he saying?
Also, you hope for people to die for inventory to rise?!
I think where remote work falls down is in a hybrid scenario because people use their "off days" to slack off. If you're held accountable to get work done, the slackers will eventually be caught.
Secondly, the 70% rule for flippers. I use 55% rule. Others are aggressive.
Eman says
Secondly, the 70% rule for flippers. I use 55% rule. Others are aggressive.
In other words be extremely obnoxious and try to exploit and Jew them down more on the price, assuming there is no illegal behavior like sabotage property to get a lower price or engaging in collusion or antitrust ??????
Don’t have to chew anyone.
I recently saw an investor paid $20M for a 60-unit building in Palo Alto
Properties listed at top of Yuma rental market continue to sit, and drop in price hundreds of dollars before they're rented. When we were viewing I was told by property manager for two of the properties they had tried to sell first, didn't get what they wanted, so switched to rental. First one set for over a month before they found a tenant. Second one is still on the market.
Another great example of the greed an insanity that gripped housing in this current bubble. House inJulianBorrego Springs listed for over $600k a year ago. Finally sold a year later for nearly $150k UNDER original asking price. Now listed for rent for $3,900. Still vacant. No one from here would ever pay that much to live in Julian...
https://www.zillow.com/homedetails/1831-Hunter-Dr-Borrego-Springs-CA-92004/16645537_zpid/
It is summertime in Yuma. Yuma has the highest seasonal migration of any city in the US.
When you spell it all out it becomes clear why inflation is considered your friend if you are a homeowner.
With inflation, income and rents go up. And when you own assets and debt, inflation is a tailwind for you. Your debt “loses” in value because it’s fixed but your income goes up. And as a bonus your asset value increases over time. When you spell it all out it becomes clear why inflation is considered your friend if you are a homeowner.
I wouldn’t say it fixes everything for you but it certainly helps.
With inflation, income and rents go up. And when you own assets and debt, inflation is a tailwind for you. Your debt “loses” in value because it’s fixed but your income goes up. And as a bonus your asset value increases over time. When you spell it all out it becomes clear why inflation is considered your friend if you are a homeowner.
Bitcoiner says
With inflation, income and rents go up. And when you own assets and debt, inflation is a tailwind for you. Your debt “loses” in value because it’s fixed but your income goes up. And as a bonus your asset value increases over time. When you spell it all out it becomes clear why inflation is considered your friend if you are a homeowner.
This is not quite accurate. During inflationary periods nominal wages may rise, but real wages may not. And there are numerous examples of home prices going down during inflationary periods.
Cry me a river. Your rents went up and you don’t think you covered the increased expenses….forgot to mention your house values went to the moon over the past decade? Bottom line, you are way wealthier today compared to 5 years ago.
In 15 years from now people will say how cheap houses were in 2023. That’s the brutal reality.
Bitcoiner says
In 15 years from now people will say how cheap houses were in 2023. That’s the brutal reality.
Unfortunately, this is true. They will also say "In 2023, most families did not have to double up to afford rent/mortgage."
Bitcoiner says
Cry me a river. Your rents went up and you don’t think you covered the increased expenses….forgot to mention your house values went to the moon over the past decade? Bottom line, you are way wealthier today compared to 5 years ago.
So far I think it's a wash at best. Glad I have them or I would have fallen behind but I don't think this round of inflation is helping much of anyone. Value doesn't matter much if I don't plan to sell for 30 years. I'd rather it stay flat then suddenly spike at year 29!
For this reason, I went all in and bought as much as I could afford, borrowed and financed between 2009-2013.
Onvacation says
Bitcoiner says
When you spell it all out it becomes clear why inflation is considered your friend if you are a homeowner.
Or a sociopath that likes war and hates people.
Bitcoiner says
Onvacation says
Bitcoiner says
When you spell it all out it becomes clear why inflation is considered your friend if you are a homeowner.
Or a sociopath that likes war and hates people.
But he's right.
Inflation is an attack on both the middle and lower class. The way inflation works is that it makes you a slave to the banking system, it's also used to pay for war as a hidden tax, and it's used to make savings as difficult as possible.
Debt isn't wealth, but that's what our Keynesian system makes you think.
Eman says
For this reason, I went all in and bought as much as I could afford, borrowed and financed between 2009-2013.
Smart choice and a product of your age...opportunity + preparedness. And there is always at least just a bit of luck involved.
Bitcoiner says
Can you point to moment in time where house prices dipped during inflation?
This is the downfall of being a landlord rather than letting the property management company handle it. We’ve been getting record rents on our apartments while a handle units, that I still manage, the tenants are still paying way below market rents. They’ve been with me for too long to raise rent too much on them.
With inflation, income and rents go up.
Don’t see inflation as good or bad. It’s part of our system. The RE owners got a lot richer in the past few years
Never. I said, with inflation income and rents rise.
If we lose the middle class there is no one to protect the wealthy from the poor that have nothing to lose.
It wouldn’t make sense to pay off my primary with a rate of 2.75%. If the money would sit in my bank account to pay off the house I would rather buy another house on debt. You are rewarded for accumulating housing debt. There is bad debt like credit card debt (unless you pay it off right away) and then there is good debt (housing).
Of course, inflation is outpacing income. You are making my point. You need to own assets otherwise you lose. Someone who rents out houses gets a tailwind on the appreciation of the asset plus ever increasing rents.
Your income is increasing but it doesn’t keep pace with inflation. You lose.
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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.