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https://nakedemperor.substack.com/p/this-weeks-must-reads-15-21-january
Patrick says
https://nakedemperor.substack.com/p/this-weeks-must-reads-15-21-january
Last cycle peak sales in 2006 before the drop. This cycle peak sales 2021. The difference is that inventory was building up and most people were on ARMs leading up and into it in 2006 cycle vs people are on 30-year fixed mortgages for this cycle coupled with low inventory.
If the current trajectory plays out, there’s some money to be made in the interest rate and cap rate arbitrage between now and 2025-2026. Whoever has the balls to buy investment assets now will get rewarded in the coming years.
indc,
Based on history and Piper Sandler’s prediction of the economic cycle, I believe there’s a high probability we’ll see 3% 30-year fixed mortgage rate again after 2030.
This is beyond fucked up. We do not have a free market. Manipulation of interest rates is criminality.
Eman says
indc,
Based on history and Piper Sandler’s prediction of the economic cycle, I believe there’s a high probability we’ll see 3% 30-year fixed mortgage rate again after 2030.
~10 year cycle ?
.
The talkng heads believe a 5% mortgage rate will be the magic number that enables current mortgage holding owners to sell, i.e., that breaks the logjam.
But keep in mind that real estate prices continued to fall after the financial fraud crisis, in spite of decreasing mortgage rates.
GNL says
This is beyond fucked up. We do not have a free market. Manipulation of interest rates is criminality.
There is free market, in theory. Manipulation of interest rates is an implicit government function.
There is free market, in theory. Manipulation of interest rates is an implicit government function.
I don't believe there is a free market.
D.R. Horton’s stock dives as lower prices for new homes hurt profits
There never was a free market, there won't be one in the future. Everything is rigged and manipulated.
Do you give a damn about your progeny? If I remember correctly, you are an immigrant. Maybe that's why you think the way you do. You aren't a real American. That isn't a knock on you, I'm just making an observation.
The solution is Georgism, the single tax on land values and no tax on anything else, especially not income or sales.
The solution is Georgism, the single tax on land values and no tax on anything else, especially not income or sales.
zzyzzx says
This is true.
House prices, which are mostly land prices, cannot rise forever. Eventually there will be a revolt, or just demographic devastation as young couples find they simply cannot afford to have children because they have nowhere to live.
The solution is Georgism, the single tax on land values and no tax on anything else, especially not income or sales.
homeowners will begin renting out their homes to retain the properties on which they have low mortgage rates
AD says
homeowners will begin renting out their homes to retain the properties on which they have low mortgage rates
Renting out a house financed with a homebuyer mortgage used to trigger a balance due clause on that mortgage. Has that changed?
Renting out a house financed with a homebuyer mortgage used to trigger a balance due clause on that mortgage. Has that changed?
With the National Association of Realtors (NAR) reporting a slump in existing home sales and a surge in median sales prices last week, Schiff, on his The Peter Schiff Show podcast, pointed to a potential trend in the real estate market in which homeowners will begin renting out their homes to retain the properties on which they have low mortgage rates versus selling on the open market, which would cause them to take on a new mortgage with a higher interest rate.
Once the inevitable demographic shift begins - the Boomers becoming infirm or dead due to old age and the need to downsize or have the kids that live several states away inherit - the rental stuff will stop working.
How would they find out?
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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.