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housing prices peak 2


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2022 Apr 29, 9:29pm   495,941 views  4,901 comments

by AD   ➕follow (1)   💰tip   ignore  

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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.

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3038   Eman   2023 Aug 5, 1:03pm  

I don’t worry about stuff I have no control over. I focus on what I can control. As Warren Buffett said “Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.” I want value when I buy. It provides a margin of safety if/when the market takes a turn right after I purchase
3039   Eman   2023 Aug 5, 3:45pm  

Rubicon says

GNL says


Eman says



I’m pausing b/c the risk/reward is not quite there although I see people, who are very smart, are still making deals.

There’s a deal that I’d love to buy for $8M. Seller bought it a couple years ago for $13M and is willing to sell it for $10M now.

But Rubicon said RE never goes down. :)


Correct. Residential RE (condo’s and SFH’s) go only up over the long run. Yeah, sure, dips in between but they don’t matter. Most people hold RE for the long run. You don’t buy/sell RE like a stock.

Don’t know anything about commercial. And very little about multi-family.

You have a good mindset of dollar cost average when it comes to real estate investing. I honestly don’t have it so I always look for value.

My buddy also likes newer housing. All the stuff he kept are newer construction, built in 2005-2007. He flipped/sold all the older products. He regretted that decision now.

The house he lived in Dublin was a newer build, which he bought as a short sale during the housing crash. The San Jose house, which is also a newer build, was bought at a deep discount at auction in the last downturn. He also has a few newer build rentals. He wish he had held onto more of them.
3040   NuttBoxer   2023 Aug 5, 6:59pm  

Eman says

We live in an inflationary economy. Time does all the heavy lifting through inflation. The rules of the game have been established. You can choose to play, or not. It’s up to you. The same goes with the IRS tax loopholes. This is why real estate investors and business owners pay much lower taxes than W2 employees. Even Warren Buffett said it himself.


We live in a predatory economy. The most vulnerable are treated as less than human, and the rest of us aren't far behind. The design is slavery. They use inflation to appeal to our greed, as we think we make more money when the same or inferior assets go up in price(but never in value). Meanwhile we work more for less, our quality and quantity of life degenerates, but through propaganda, divisiveness, and selfishness they keep us hooked, screwing over each other, and ourselves for a place under the table hoping to catch their scraps.

I've paid 17% or less most of my life, even after I high six figures. Only recently have I gone up to about 20-21%. I know people who own property, and work for themselves, I've never found that pay less than I do.
3041   NuttBoxer   2023 Aug 5, 7:01pm  

Eman says

As Warren Buffett said


Warren Buffett is a pedo. You think the Franklin Coverup happens in his backyard without him being involved...
3042   WookieMan   2023 Aug 5, 7:44pm  

NuttBoxer says

I've paid 17% or less most of my life, even after I high six figures. Only recently have I gone up to about 20-21%. I know people who own property, and work for themselves, I've never found that pay less than I do.

You're on/near the west coast though. That's not reality East of the Mississippi where most Americans live. Not looking it up, it's on auto pay, but my mortgage is $1,300 roughly. 1/3 of an acre. In ground pool. Good schools. You can't even rent a 2/1 here for less than that. 1 hour to major airports. Not interested in Chicago, but that's close. Wisconsin is nicer than most people think with lakes and recreation.

If you own for 10 years, primary residence, you'll make money even if you buy at a peak. You have to be handy. I'm not relying on a landlord to take care of me if something breaks. They tend to do a shit job. I also like nice things. We all die at some point, enjoy it while you can. Owning you can dump and run if you really want and it's a credit hit if you hit hard times. Evictions are a double whammy. Hard to find a new place and a credit ding if they report it. I'll always choose owning. WHEN your landlord decides to sell your fucked as well.

Renting is a lose/lose if you need stability. I'm not trying to change your mind. I'm just saying as an owner, it doesn't make sense to me having done both. You do you. Fact is there are cheaper places to own by a long shot outside of CA or even AZ or any West of the Rockies state, CO included.
3043   AD   2023 Aug 6, 12:28am  

,

The invisible laws that led to America’s housing crisis

https://www.cnn.com/2023/08/05/business/single-family-zoning-laws/index.html

In the 1910s, US cities began enacting policies that would shape neighborhoods and, unintentionally, lay the roots for the severe housing shortage today: single-family zoning laws.

Zoning laws, at their most basic, follow a simple concept. In one part of town, only factories can be built. In another section of town, only apartment buildings can be built. And in a different part of town, only single-family houses can be built.

Single-family zoning laws are unknown to most Americans, but they were instrumental to the expansion of urban areas and the suburban ideal of owning a home with a front porch and backyard on a half-acre plot of land post-World War II.

,
3044   WookieMan   2023 Aug 6, 2:39am  

Rubicon says

I’ll predict, In the next 5 years I am gonna bring cash to the table

This really is the crux of RE debates. Most people aren't good at saving large sums generally needed to buy a home or investment property. Even an FHA loan at 3.5% on $400k you'd need $14k for down payment. That's not including closing costs and other fees Most of the country lives paycheck to paycheck and have little to no savings. They may just put money in a 401k if that.

I'm not saying this is nutt, but from my experience after 15 years managing a brokerage, this is the #1 issue that people stay in the renter class. Many renters in Chicago land area where I worked struggle just to come up with a security deposit. And again, I'm not saying all people, but it's the majority I've witnessed.

People also spend money on stupid shit. In my town there's a lot of people I know roughly what they make. Yet they have 2 cars, a $20k side by side UTV and other stupid stuff that they really can't afford. So on top of their $1,500/mo mortgage or rent, they have another $1k/mo in other debt payment. That's $30k after tax money. You have 3 kids. Food, groceries, going out, gas and vacation, etc. is another $1k a month at least. Kids activities, school fees, etc could be another $200-300/mo. Clothing. New shoes as kids grow. Lawnmower. Utilities. On and on.

Median household income is $70k roughly. https://www.nerdwallet.com/article/finance/median-household-income#:~:text=The%20national%20median%20household%20income,to%20over%20%24150%2C000%20in%20others.

In my above example you're looking at over $40-50k of after tax expenses. This is how half the country lives. And it's why there will always be renters. IF they can get any savings over time they're probably priced out again. The key is make more money. There's really not much else to it. In my above scenario if you wanted to get into investment property you'd definitely need to be above the $150k income range. Or hope family money falls your way. Or someone blindly gives you a loan at probably an insane interest rate. RE is not easy at the start even for a primary home.
3045   GNL   2023 Aug 7, 8:33am  

Eman says

As Warren Buffett said “Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.” I want value when I buy. It provides a margin of safety if/when the market takes a turn right after I purchase

But @Rubicon says buy now, buy always, buy at any price because price and rates don't matter.
3046   Eman   2023 Aug 7, 9:12am  

GNL says

Eman says


As Warren Buffett said “Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.” I want value when I buy. It provides a margin of safety if/when the market takes a turn right after I purchase

But Rubicon says buy now, buy always, buy at any price because price and rates don't matter.

@GNL,

Each person has their own way of investing/buying. It seems like his approach is dollar cost average. I don’t have a W2 so my approach is different. I need “value” so I can recycle my seed capital in a short amount of time.

@NuttBoxer is also looking for “value” when it comes to renting and waiting to buy. He’s willing to compromise on certain thing to get the value.

@Clambo like his freedoms and his stock dividend/growth play. Everyone is different.
3047   NuttBoxer   2023 Aug 7, 9:34am  

I would love to buy a house because it would mean a number of huge positives. Prices have corrected to what is realistic, so my exchange of labor for time gets me a fair return in a house purchase. The economy looks stable enough for me to justify the up front cost in savings I will recoup by owning. And most of all, we have found a place we are willing to commit to staying for more than a few years.
3048   Eman   2023 Aug 7, 10:24am  

Rubicon says

GNL says



Eman says



As Warren Buffett said “Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.” I want value when I buy. It provides a margin of safety if/when the market takes a turn right after I purchase

But Rubicon says buy now, buy always, buy at any price because price and rates don't matter.




You could have paid peak price and pay less than someone who buys at a lower price today because rates doubled.

I am glad I got both, pre Covid price and super low rates because I did the opposite of what perma bears told me: they told me the market would crash and I shouldn’t buy. Lol

Don’t be surprised to hear the market is going to crash this year. They tell you this ever year since 2014.

Actually, some of my friends thought real estate prices were too high in 2013, and they stopped buying. Then they thought prices were ridiculous in 2015.

They finally snapped out of it. One person “bit the bullet” and bought his house in January 2016. He’s 38 now. He went on and syndicated 27 rental units in 2021-2022. Another also snapped out of it and kept accumulating more real estate in 2017 and 2018. She was lucky and refinanced her apartment in early 2022 at 3.15% before interest rate took off. She’s quite happy and comfortable now.

I understand your point about “timing the market” although most of us will try myself included. 😅
3049   SunnyvaleCA   2023 Aug 7, 11:32am  

Eman says

I understand your point about “timing the market” although most of us will try myself included. 😅

I assume most of the interest rate timing is arbitraged out of the market already. When interest rates are 7%, people with cash may buy houses for cash instead of parking their cash in 4% bonds or in speculative stocks or commodities. With today's general inflation rates, a house offers a decent hedge.

Another thing to consider is that a 7% mortgage rate is excellent when compared to general inflation.
3050   SunnyvaleCA   2023 Aug 7, 11:39am  

Rubicon says

“7. Yes, of course inventory matters also but, haven't we agreed that inventory is low because people do not want to give up that sweet sweet low rate?”

No. This makes zero sense:
When a seller sells a house he is traditionally a buyer also.

You sell one: +1 to inventory
And you buy one: -1 to inventory
Net inventory doesn’t move.

Inventory increases if more people die or due to massive unemployment or due to builders building a lot more.

More activity does increase inventory. During that matched sell/move/buy scenario, there's a month or two when the house you are exiting is for sale and the house you are buying is also for sale. If the average person stays in a house for 7 years and the average house is on the market for a month that means 1 month out of every 84 months the house is on the market --> 1.2% of all houses are for sale at any given time. If people stay in houses for 10 years, that drops to 0.8% of houses for sale at any given time.

The numerator of that equation (months on market) also swings the numbers; if houses sit on market for months at a time, inventory will be seen as high. I've been watching the $1MM to $3MM houses in Florida for a few years. There, asking prices have been dropping as these behemoths sit vacant for many months; some, even years!
3051   SunnyvaleCA   2023 Aug 7, 11:52am  

I'm wondering if home ownership (verses renting) will follow the model of many other aspects of life over the last hundred years: mass production and specialization. In the most obvious example: We no longer grow our own food. Instead, a small number enormous farms with highly specialized equipment efficiently perform the task and have freed up 95% of the country's population to do other things.

In the case of real-estate, the specialization would take the form of more rentals and fewer owner-occupied houses.

I'm seeing more and more homeowners who are incapable of maintaining their own home (other than getting on the phone and paying someone else at great expense). If not for the (seemingly) ever-increasing price of real-estate in this area, owning a home would be much more costly than renting and letting a professional manage the maintenance more efficiently. I dated a woman who owned a dozen rentals and managed another twenty for other people. She spoke Chinese and Spanish and had a slew of personal contacts to fix or maintain at 1/2 cost just about anything related to properties.
3052   GNL   2023 Aug 7, 11:58am  

The reason I mention activity (which I also mean transactions) is because churn helps the economy.
3053   WookieMan   2023 Aug 7, 3:55pm  

SunnyvaleCA says


Another thing to consider is that a 7% mortgage rate is excellent when compared to general inflation.

Honestly it's just an average interest rate. I think many of us are 60 or under. We got spoiled.



It stings to see them go up so much, but most of all our adult lives they've been historically low. This is why I don't get some of the doom and gloom. It will pause housing inflation to an extent but there are just too many other factors. NOT BUILDING being the biggest where I'm at. Houses last days in my town still unless they're shit holes. Anyone building in town, 4 homes over the last 3 years, is moving from another home that they sold. Inventory can't increase unless it's in another town or city.
3054   Patrick   2023 Aug 7, 4:00pm  

GNL says

Question: is it better to buy when rates are high or when they're low?


@GNL If you can pay cash, it's way better imho to buy when rates are high.

Then:

1. You personally don't have to pay those high rates.
2. The house price you pay will be lower because high rates push prices down.
3. When rates eventually fall, you should have increased equity from the falling rates pushing prices up.
3055   WookieMan   2023 Aug 7, 4:38pm  

Patrick says

1. You personally don't have to pay those high rates.

This is true, but I'd still get a loan and save all the other cash for other opportunities and still have a roof over my head.
Patrick says

2. The house price you pay will be lower because high rates push prices down.

I don't think it will in many markets. You median home price in most of flyover country is probably $250-300k. It hits the expensive markets waaaaay worse than most of the country. Going from a 3.5% to 7.5% isn't all that big of a deal on a $300k home. And if they're not building new ones, there will be no downward pressure.
Patrick says

3. When rates eventually fall, you should have increased equity from the falling rates pushing prices up.

And this is when you get a HELOC or cash out refi and pay yourself with other people's money (banks). Obviously don't be a moron and leverage yourself to the gills, but if the payment goes down because interest rates do give yourself a tax free paycheck of $20k or whatever your equity is. That's what investors do. They then roll it into another cash flowing property or flip.

This why owning is so important in my opinion. Every 10 years you have an opportunity to cash out refi and your house pays you tax free money. You can't do that renting. I don't even care about the rent to own comparison at my stage in life. If you're going to be there 10 years, buy it. Principle is savings and it will almost certainly appreciate. Just don't go overboard buying more house than you need. Or some hipster area.
3056   HeadSet   2023 Aug 7, 5:00pm  

WookieMan says

And this is when you get a HELOC or cash out refi and pay yourself with other people's money (banks).

If you are taking this HELOC from your residence, it is not "other people's money." It is a loan you have to pay back with interest, and for most of the country that interest is not deductible because of today's high standard deduction. No different buying that new truck with HELOC than financing it through Ford Motor Credit.
3057   GNL   2023 Aug 7, 5:05pm  

HeadSet says


WookieMan says


And this is when you get a HELOC or cash out refi and pay yourself with other people's money (banks).

If you are taking this HELOC from your residence, it is not "other people's money." It is a loan you have to pay back with interest, and for most of the country that interest is not deductible because of today's high standard deduction. No different buying that new truck with HELOC than financing it through Ford Motor Credit.


If taking a HELOC for investment, it's assumed the new investment will produce enough income to repay the HELOC. Now you have 2 investments (RE) and you didn't have to come up with any cash. 2 REs going up $20k is better than only 1 RE going up $20k.

This is why I've been making fun of @Rubicon when he said he didn't care if he lost equity if/when RE goes down. Laughable because in the next breath he talks about using equity in his RE to purchase more RE. This is but one reason I think he is a chest pounder. @Wookieman and @Eman are better to listen to.
3058   Patrick   2023 Aug 7, 5:39pm  

If you can save by renting, you should rent. If it's cheaper to buy, you should buy. The calculation is not very hard, but there can be a lot of details:

https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2014/upshot/buy-rent-calculator.html

Basically, compare the rent to the current interest rate. Rent and interest are the same kind of thing. If the rent for a house is not in line with the interest payment on what the house would cost to buy, something is wrong - and there is an opportunity.

The stock market has almost always been a better bet than housing, though not leveraged. That's OK, because leverage is dangerous.

“I’ve seen more people fail because of liquor and leverage — leverage being borrowed money. You really don’t need leverage in this world much. If you’re smart, you’re going to make a lot of money without borrowing.” - Warren Buffett
3059   GNL   2023 Aug 7, 6:40pm  

Rubicon says


“This is why I've been making fun of Rubicon when he said he didn't care if he lost equity if/when RE goes down. “

You don’t lose equity just because your house price goes down. That’s like noob/rookie level. Homeowners don’t treat their house like a stock and sell shortly after they buy. Do you own a house? Do you tell you friends: my Zillow value went dont a % point. They’d laugh at you. Have you ever heard someone writing off an unrealized loss on a house?

In most cases you make money in RE if you hold on for the long run. Believe me kiddo, nobody is going to go for your “I lost equity BS statements”. Just wake up, stop renting, get yourself a house and forget the noise. No reason to overthink this and make the same noob comment over and over again.

I'm not a RE investor and I do own a mortgage. But again you missed the point. I'm pretty sure you said you shouldn't be too concerned if your investment doesn't produce enough to pay the loan even. We are unquestionably in a unique time when it comes to RE though. The government is out of control and causing all kinds of problems. I do believe most of these problems all tie together. And you keep going back and forth between homeowner and investor when I'm debating the investor position. Yes, even though I'm not an investor. LOL
3060   AD   2023 Aug 7, 7:41pm  

Patrick says

“I’ve seen more people fail because of liquor and leverage — leverage being borrowed money. You really don’t need leverage in this world much. If you’re smart, you’re going to make a lot of money without borrowing.” - Warren Buffett


Depends how you invest the money saved by renting and not buying. I'd at least put it in a 60% stock / 40% bond fund.

.
3061   SunnyvaleCA   2023 Aug 7, 8:40pm  

Rubicon says


“More activity does increase inventory.”

More activity gives you more choice. It means more for sales signs. It’s a good thing but it doesn’t move the active inventory number higher. I don’t care if there is a month or two delay in selling and buying. Often, you purchase while you haven’t sold your house yet.

Taking one off the market and adding one doesn’t increase inventory, no matter how you spin it.

Right from the NARs website: "NAR’s reported inventory indicates the number of properties marked as “active” on the market, as well as pending sales. When a seller lists a property, it becomes counted as inventory. When it goes under contract, it becomes a pending sale. Inventory is calculated monthly by taking a count of the number of active listings and pending sales on the last day of the month."
https://www.nar.realtor/blogs/economists-outlook/inventory-and-months-supply

So, more For Sale signs means more inventory, assuming more For Sale signs doesn't also mean a reduction of time the house is listed for sale. More For Sale signs on the last day of the month is, by NARs specific calculation of the figure, more inventory. Even if you purchase a house before selling your existing, that house you purchased was counted as "Inventory" before the sale went through. I think we're merely arguing at the definition of "Inventory," but without further information, I'll side with the NAR with respect to the common meaning of that word in real estate.
3062   Eman   2023 Aug 7, 10:46pm  

I see the misunderstanding on Rubicon. I’ve come across similar people locally and on BiggerPockets. He’s likely a high income earner and buys investment property with his savings, one rental at a time. If he gets equity from appreciation, it’ll help him scale up and buy more rentals at a faster pace. If not, he’ll just hold and buy another one whenever he has enough capital for the next down payment. For this reason, most retail investors only own a handful or less rentals by the time they’re retired. Theres only so much we can save from our W2. There’s no scale.

Real estate is about control and leverage. Control the asset and leverage the debt with bank’s money. If we buy a $10M worth asset and be all-in at $7.5M through value-add and/or appreciation, we can refinance it and essentially have it 100% financed. Take our seed capital and put toward the next project. Rinse and repeat.

If history is any indication, a $10M asset will worth $20M in 15 years and $40M in 30 years. The $2.5M sweat equity has grown to $40M. Scale it and do one building every 3 years, how much would we would in 30 years? How much would the cash flow be then?

One penny, which compounds every day for a month (30 days), will be over $1M. The power of compound interest. The power of control and leverage. Let time do the heavy lifting. It’s like planting a tree. It’s a one time effort while we get to harvest it for the rest of our lives.
3063   AD   2023 Aug 8, 12:32am  

SunnyvaleCA says


NAR’s reported inventory


It is all based on the number of full-time and non-vacant (i.e., not AirBnb) homes versus the population.

Are we creating a nation of boarding houses where some working class individual is force to live in a boarding house instead of being able to buy their own cottage or small home ?

There are a lot of empty homes that are second homes and some are vacation homes.

I see a lot of homes going up in Panama City Beach that are AirBnB or vacation homes. Hopefully the growth of these type of homes will slow or stop, and some owners may find it economically better to just rent these homes full-time.

What percentage of the housing starts are for vacation homes or second homes owned by the rich or upper middle class ?

,
3064   Eman   2023 Aug 9, 1:53pm  

My friend sent this to me. $750k for this fixer upper in East San Jose, blue collar working class neighborhood. These houses were selling for $250k during the last downturn. I’m sure someone will buy it.

https://redf.in/0DhS69
3065   AD   2023 Aug 9, 4:19pm  

Eman says

My friend sent this to me. $750k for this fixer upper in East San Jose, blue collar working class neighborhood.


Its appreciated about 5% annually since 1998. I recall Professor Shiller stating the long term (+50 years) median annual appreciation is 4%.



.
3066   Eman   2023 Aug 9, 4:55pm  

ad says

Eman says


My friend sent this to me. $750k for this fixer upper in East San Jose, blue collar working class neighborhood.


Its appreciated about 5% annually since 1998. I recall Professor Shiller stating the long term (+50 years) median annual appreciation is 4%.



.

@ad,

This is Rubicon’s point about buying and dollar cost averaging as we don’t know where the top and bottom are. For me, as long as the numbers penciled out, I would be a buyer regardless of where we are in the cycle of the housing market be it high or low interest rates. Do you remember if real estate in the Bay Area was expensive in 1998 with 8% or so mortgage rate?

From an owner’s POV, 20% down payment with 5% annual appreciation = 25% ROI given it’s leveraged 5:1. Also, the monthly mortgage payments are fixed for the next 30 years, which means no rent increases.

From an investor’s POV, the ROI is 20% with 25% down payment given it’s leveraged 4:1.

This is why the mom and pop investors are more comfortable with real estate investing. They can understand the numbers more easily.

For my partner and I, we try to use this formula with some scale to own more rentals. The value-add/forced appreciation is where it allows us to recycle our seed capital. That’s all there is to it. It’s not rocket science.
3067   AD   2023 Aug 10, 9:46am  

Eman says

That’s all there is to it. It’s not rocket science.


Yes, I see as far as the banks willing to lend money and just require the landlord investor to provide only a 25% down payment.

The landlord increases their portfolio of rentals each with only a 25% down payment (or use of collateral).

Total net income and equity nearly exponentially increase as the size of the landlord's portfolio of rental properties steadily increases.

The closest I'd ever come to this is to use a HELOC to invest in the S&P 500 for at least 7 years and earn an average real annual return (i.e., S&P 500 index fund annual return minus the HELOC interest rate) of around 4%.

That is the closest I'd come as far as earn money off OPM (others people money), or through leverage.

With interest rates likely to decrease by 2024, I'd look into maybe a bond fund like Vanguard Total Stock Market Bond fund or ETF also, such as invest 70% in the bond fund and 30% in the S&P 500. This seems like a safe gamble to make easy money off leverage or borrowed money.
.
3068   Eman   2023 Aug 10, 12:19pm  

“The closest I'd ever come to this is to use a HELOC to invest in the S&P 500 for at least 7 years and earn an average real annual return (i.e., S&P 500 index fund annual return minus the HELOC interest rate) of around 4%.”

@ad,

In the last decade, I know folks in the Bay Area, who used their HELOC money @ 3%…ish and lent it out at 10-12% through a private mortgage broker and made the spread. The broker charged 1-2%, aka points, for the loan to the borrower. Most of these loans were short-term 6-18 months.

With HELOC at 8%…ish now, it no longer makes sense to take the risk. This puts a liquidity constraint to the real estate market.
3069   AD   2023 Aug 10, 1:04pm  

Eman says

With HELOC at 8%…ish now, it no longer makes sense to take the risk. This puts a liquidity constraint to the real estate market.


Yes, but there is at least a 4% spread between HELOC rate and the S&P 500 index annual return.

Its free money essentially as there is no collateral or cost basis. Its like winning $20,000 with a $1 lottery ticket for a HELOC with a 2 year term.

I see as some investors like you would want a larger spread than 4%.

.
3070   porkchopXpress   2023 Aug 11, 10:03am  

WookieMan says


Renting is a lose/lose if you need stability. I'm not trying to change your mind. I'm just saying as an owner, it doesn't make sense to me having done both. You do you. Fact is there are cheaper places to own by a long shot outside of CA or even AZ or any West of the Rockies state, CO included.
This. I rented my whole life until last year. I'll NEVER go back. Owning is bomb but I also bought beneath my means in an amazing area and I have lots of cash to do stuff to the house. I get to modify my castle just the way I want it and no one (landlord) can easily take it away from me as long as I pay my fixed payments. Being a landlord's bitch is emasculating.
3071   SunnyvaleCA   2023 Aug 13, 1:58pm  

Eman says

One penny, which compounds every day for a month (30 days), will be over $1M. The power of compound interest. The power of control and leverage. Let time do the heavy lifting. It’s like planting a tree. It’s a one time effort while we get to harvest it for the rest of our lives.

Actually, it's 10 million! But what's an extra zero between friends? :-)
3072   Eman   2023 Aug 13, 2:31pm  

SunnyvaleCA says

Eman says


One penny, which compounds every day for a month (30 days), will be over $1M. The power of compound interest. The power of control and leverage. Let time do the heavy lifting. It’s like planting a tree. It’s a one time effort while we get to harvest it for the rest of our lives.

Actually, it's 10 million! But what's an extra zero between friends? :-)

@SunnyvaleCA,

You’re absolutely correct. You actually took the time to do the math. It seemed outrageous to me when I first heard of this concept too so I also did the math. 🤣

It goes to show the power of compound interest. I’m glad I figured this out early enough and coupled it with the opportunity of the housing crash, which had allowed us to grow our little pile of savings exponentially in a short amount of time.

My wife asked me what would it take for me to go back to a W2. I said at least an 8-figure salary. 7 figures won’t do it. I’m at that point in my life where I realize our time on this earth is finite, and we can’t buy our time back once it’s gone. The pay scale is based on how much we believe our time is worth.
3073   Eman   2023 Aug 13, 8:49pm  

Interesting observation as housing accounts for 33-42% of the CPI. OER = Owners’ Equivalent Rent.

https://x.com/joecarlasare/status/1690715526211817472?s=46&t=5lEEPaezr6Ic-W4Z6huZ5Q
3074   AD   2023 Aug 13, 11:43pm  

.

Morningstar predicts a 5% rate for 30 year mortgage in 2024. Goldman Sachs predicts 5.9%.

I figure peak prices in early 2022 were based on a locked-in mortgage rate of 4%.

So prices need to drop 20% if the 30 year mortgage rate is 6% based on housing affordability, that is a 10% drop in price for a 1% increase in the 30 year mortgage rate.

The price drop may be 18.2% by discounting for wages and income rising about 6% in 2022 and 3% in 2023.

20% x .94 x .97 = 18.2%

.

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/housing-market-outlook-where-expect-162543246.html

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3075   AD   2023 Aug 14, 12:41am  

Eman says


Interesting observation as housing accounts for 33-42% of the CPI. OER = Owners’ Equivalent Rent.

https://x.com/joecarlasare/status/1690715526211817472?s=46&t=5lEEPaezr6Ic-W4Z6huZ5Q


I notice rent is at same price level as 2022. As housing may stay flat for a few years, while income rises about 2.5% to 3% a year. I am hoping income catches up more to housing.

3 bedroom, 2 bath, 2 car garage townhome about 2 miles from the beach in Panama City Beach rents on average for $2150. Rent was around $1500 back in 2016 for the same type of townhome.

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3076   AD   2023 Aug 14, 1:05am  

.

https://traffic.americanmilitarynews.com/2023/08/us-debt-downgrade-means-mortgages-just-got-more-expensive/

For 30-year rates, however, the most relevant benchmark is the 10-year Treasury yield.

That brings up a quirk of post-pandemic mortgage rates: The gap between 30-year mortgage rates and the 10-year yield is unusually wide.

This interval, known to economists as “the spread,” typically runs between 1.5 and 2 percentage points. If the 10-year yield sits at 4%, for example, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate should track close to 6%.

However, the spread has jumped to more than 3 percentage points — the highest level since the darker days of 2009, according to Bankrate research. That means that instead of a 4% yield translating to a 6% mortgage rate, borrowers are paying 7% for 30-year loans.

,
3077   Patrick   2023 Aug 15, 7:51pm  

https://sfstandard.com/2023/08/15/over-50000-to-lose-coverage-as-two-home-insurers-exit/


Two more insurance companies will exit the California homeowners market, further narrowing options for people seeking to insure their home or to purchase a house with a mortgage.

AmGUARD Insurance—a subsidiary of Berkshire Hathaway GUARD Insurance Companies—will withdraw its homeowners and personal umbrella programs in California, while Falls Lake Insurance will also end its homeowners program.

Both companies made the announcements in little-noticed filings submitted to the state regulator on July 21.

The two companies are the latest insurers to rush for the exits in California or limit their business in the state during the past year. But unlike heavyweights State Farm and Allstate, which declined to sign new homeowners business in the state, AmGUARD and Falls Lake will drop their existing policyholders.

That will force tens of thousands of California homeowners to seek new coverage at a time when the available options are growing fewer.


True, mortgages are often contingent on insurance coverage, and that just got harder to get.

This seems certain to add downward pressure to house prices in California.

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