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https://www.redfin.com/news/homeowners-selling-at-a-loss-2023/
1 in 8 San Francisco Home Sellers Is Losing Money—the Highest Share in the Nation
https://www.reddit.com/r/realestateinvesting/comments/16bxxs6/this_guy_purchased_a_home_and_is_now_renting_it/
This guy purchased a home and is now renting it out $800 less then what the mortgage is!
1 in 8 San Francisco Home Sellers Is Losing Money—the Highest Share in the Nation
San Francisco Home Sellers Losing Most Money in the Nation, Report Says
Written by Lydia You
Published Sep. 07, 2023
San Franciscans lead the nation in home sales losses and are four times as likely to lose money when selling a home as the national average, according to a Redfin report.
Roughly one in eight, or 12.3%, of home sellers in San Francisco lost money on home sales in the three-month period ending July 31, according to the report.
It's going to be so much FUN when the boomers have to sell to retire or they pass and their kids sell off these places they don't want to move to. When it goes, it's going to collapse.
Higher interest rates have shot the affordability outta reach for the same properties for people with similar incomes.
We may think it is overpriced, but some Chinese commie thinks damn I gotta get all the money I can out of mainland China before it goes to zero.
Misc says
We may think it is overpriced, but some Chinese commie thinks damn I gotta get all the money I can out of mainland China before it goes to zero.
Yeah, there are a few on Patnet who think that foreign investors (Chinese, Indian, etc.) are going to continue to prop up the California real estate market.
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Demographically we're growing and not building at pace to keep up. Higher home prices. That's all there is to it.
hatred comes out against landlords and mom-and-pop investors
In San Francisco the homeownership rate is 35%. The average San Francisco home value is $1,269,632, down
Instead of spending money to help Americans with housing, another $1B will go to Ukraine. Of course, 10% for the big guy.
These are Pukin's money, relax. We can't spend them on ourselves - that would be illegal. Besides, "help Americans " how? Are you proposing Soviet-style public housing projects built by the government? With 10% for the Big guy? Such an wholesome conservative you are!
Eman says
Instead of spending money to help Americans with housing, another $1B will go to Ukraine. Of course, 10% for the big guy.
These are Pukin's money, relax. We can't spend them on ourselves - that would be illegal. Besides, "help Americans " how? Are you proposing Soviet-style public housing projects built by the government? With 10% for the Big guy? Such an wholesome conservative you are!
- eliminate foreign investment in residential real estate
- eliminate all tax breaks for rental properties and any residential property that's not a primary residence
Abolish prop13, take away tax subsidies for landlords / Re investors. Change laws to make evictions nearly impossible. The list goes on and on and on.
Here's a plan to start:
- eliminate foreign investment in residential real estate
- eliminate all tax breaks for rental properties and any residential property that's not a primary residence
- for CA, eliminate Prop 13
Yeah, there are a few on Patnet who think that foreign investors (Chinese, Indian, etc.) are going to continue to prop up the California real estate market.
It’s a business that diminishes someone from owning a home, so perhaps it’s a business that should diminish as well. Is lining landlords pockets more important than a human’s livelihood? My proposal would make renting more expensive as it should be and free up inventory.
porkchopXpress says
- eliminate foreign investment in residential real estate
- eliminate all tax breaks for rental properties and any residential property that's not a primary residence
I don't think it is fair to a landlord if they cannot deduct expenses (i.e., tax breaks) such as for operating and maintenance expenses from plumbing repair to property management company services. It is a business after all, so they should be allowed to deduct expenses from their revenue.
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I don't think it is fair to a landlord if they cannot deduct expenses (i.e., tax breaks) such as for operating and maintenance expenses from plumbing repair to property management company services. It is a business after all, so they should be allowed to deduct expenses from their revenue.
Hate is a bit of a strong word. Wishing taxes to increase for others because you don’t benefit from them is (insert a word). Higher taxes are almost never a good thing. Governments work inefficiently. The day a renter buys his first house in CA is the day he/she will love prop 13.
Big_Johnson says
Hate is a bit of a strong word. Wishing taxes to increase for others because you don’t benefit from them is (insert a word). Higher taxes are almost never a good thing. Governments work inefficiently. The day a renter buys his first house in CA is the day he/she will love prop 13.
I know some people won't like my plan, but you can't make an omelet without breaking some eggs. I still think it would free up inventory, bring prices down, and allow people to more easily buy a primary residence. It would certainly piss off landlords but I go back to what's more important, landlords making money or people being able to buy a home?
The homeless encampments of today are in some ways like the Hoovervilles of the Great Depression. But back then people were evicted or lost their homes due to the stock market and banking crash. Today it’s due to the purposeful Globalist strategy of making housing unaffordable and everyone’s life miserable. “You will own nothing.”
First, my proposal wouldn't apply to apartments, only single family homes. So, students and families, etc. could always rent an apartment. Second, rental homes would still exist but it would just be less prevalent and more expensive to operate. This is how it used to be...renting more expensive than owning. But because of financialization of housing, that paradigm is gone.
It would be quite unfair to force all people incapable of saving enough money for a roof leak or hot water tank leak to be permanently homeless; or for that matter students and people early in their career in a phase of high relocation probability.
This is how it used to be...renting more expensive than owning.
They're also using the stock market with bizarre price distortions where money losing tech trannies get pumped to 1000 x revs in market cap while outstanding companies turning profitable get shorted to 1-2 x rev mkt cap.
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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.